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{{Short description|Messianic figure in Islamic eschatology}} | |||
{{Other uses2|Mahdi}} | |||
{{About|the concept of an eschatological messianic savior in Islam|other uses|Mahdi (disambiguation)}} | |||
<!-- The 6 books of Hadith are recognized by almost all sunni Muslims -->{{Islam}} | |||
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{{Eschatology}} | |||
{{Islam|Imam Mahdi|expanded=Mahdi|selected=Imam}} | |||
The '''Mahdi''' ({{langx|ar|ٱلْمَهْدِيّ|al-Mahdī|lit=the Guided}}; {{langx|fa|مهدی}}) is a figure in ] who is believed to appear at the ] to rid the world of evil and injustice. He is said to be a descendant of ], who will appear shortly before ]. | |||
In ], the '''Mahdî''' ({{lang-ar|مهدي}} / ]: {{transl|ar|ISO|mahdī}} / {{lang-en|Guided One}}) is the prophesied redeemer of ] who will rule for seven, nine or nineteen years (according to differing interpretations)<ref name="Muslim World 2004 p.421">Martin 2004: 421</ref> before the ] ({{transl|ar|yawm al-qiyamah}} / literally, ''the Day of Resurrection'')<ref name="Glasse">Glasse 2001: 280</ref> and will rid the world of evil.<ref name=momen /> | |||
The Mahdi is mentioned in several ], but is absent from the ] and the two most-revered Sunni hadith collections, ''{{Transliteration|ar|]}}'' and {{Transliteration|ar|]}}. Thus, some Sunni theologians have questioned the orthodoxy of the Mahdi.<ref>{{Cite web |title=Mahdi {{!}} Definition, Islam, & Eschatology |url=https://www.britannica.com/topic/mahdi |access-date=2023-08-05 |website=Encyclopaedia Britannica |language=en}}</ref> The doctrine of the Mahdi seems to have gained traction during the confusion and unrest of the religious and political upheavals of the first and second centuries of Islam. Some of the first references to the Mahdi appear in the late 7th century, when the revolutionary ] declared ], a son of ] ] ({{Reign|656|661}}), to be the Mahdi. Although the concept of a Mahdi is not an essential doctrine in Islam, it is popular among Muslims. Over centuries, there have been a vast number of ]. | |||
According to Islamic tradition, the Mahdi's tenure will coincide with the ], who is to assist the ''Mahdi'' against the '']'' (literally, the "false Messiah" or Antichrist).<ref name="S209">Sonn (2004) p. 209</ref> Jesus, who is considered the '']'' (Messiah) in Islam, will descend at the point of a white arcade, east of ], dressed in yellow robes with his head anointed. He will then join the ''Mahdi'' in his war against the ''Dajjal'', where Jesus will slay ''Dajjal'' and unite mankind. {{Hadith-usc|muslim|usc=yes|41|7023}} | |||
The Mahdi features in both ] and ] ], though they differ extensively on his attributes and status. Among ], the Mahdi is believed to be ] ], twelfth Imam, son of the eleventh Imam, ] ({{Died in|874}}), who is said to be in ] ({{Transliteration|ar|ghayba}}) by divine will. This is rejected by Sunnis, who assert that the Mahdi has not been born yet. | |||
{{Hadith-usc|bukhari|usc=yes|3|43|656}}: Narrated ]: | |||
==Etymology== | |||
{{quote|Allah's Apostle said, "The Hour will not be established until the son of Maryam (]) descends amongst you as a just ruler; he will break the cross, kill the swine, and abolish the ] tax. Wealth will be in abundance so that nobody will accept it."}} | |||
The term ''Mahdi'' is derived from the Arabic root ''h-d-y'' ({{lang|ar|ه-د-ي}}), commonly used to mean "divine guidance".{{sfn|Madelung|1986|p=1231}} Although the root appears in the ] at multiple places and in various contexts, the word ''Mahdi'' never occurs in the book.{{sfn|Arjomand|2007|pp=134–136}} The associated verb is ''hada'', which means to guide. However, ''Mahdi'' can be read in active voice, where it means the one who guides, as well as passive voice, where it means the one who is guided.{{sfn | Cook | 2002a | pp=138–139}} | |||
==Historical development== | |||
Jesus Christ has been foretold to return at near the ]. The Qur'an says:<ref name="EoI-Isa">"Isa", Encyclopedia of Islam</ref> | |||
===Pre-Islamic ideas=== | |||
Some historians suggest that the term itself was probably introduced into Islam by southern Arabian tribes who had settled in ] in the mid-7th century. They believed that the Mahdi would lead them back to their homeland and re-establish the ]. They also believed that he would eventually conquer ].{{sfn|Arjomand|2007|pp=134–136}} It has also been suggested that the concept of the Mahdi may have been derived from earlier messianic ] and ] beliefs.<ref name=etan/>{{Sfn|Arjomand|2000}} Accordingly, traditions were introduced to support certain political interests, especially anti-Abbasid sentiments.{{Sfn|Arjomand|2000}} These traditions about the Mahdi appeared only at later times in ] such as ''{{Transliteration|ar|]}} and {{Transliteration|ar|]}}'', but are absent from the early works of ] and ].<ref name=Glasse/> | |||
===Origin=== | |||
{{quote|{{Quran-usc|43|61|q=And shall be a Sign (for the coming of) the Hour (of Judgment): therefore have no doubt about the (Hour), but follow ye Me: this is a Straight Way.}}}} | |||
The term ''al-Mahdi'' was employed from the beginning of Islam, but only as an honorific epithet ("the guide") and without any messianic significance. As an honorific, it was used in some instances to describe Muhammad (by ]), ], al-Husayn, and various ] ({{Lang|ar|هداة مهديون}}, {{transliteration|ar|hudat mahdiyyun}}). During the ] (680–692), after the death of ] ({{Reign|661|680}}), the term acquired a new meaning of a ruler who would restore Islam to its perfect form and restore justice after oppression. ], who laid claim to the caliphate against the Umayyads and found temporary success during the civil war, presented himself in this role. Although the title Mahdi was not applied to him, his career as the anti-caliph significantly influenced the future development of the concept.{{sfn|Madelung|1986|p=1231}} A hadith was promulgated in which Muhammad prophesies the coming of a just ruler.{{sfn|Madelung|1981|pp=292ff}}{{efn|D. S. Atema first dated this hadith to between Yazid's death and Ibn al-Zubayr's death. ] narrowed this down to 684, just after the death of Yazid.{{sfn|Madelung|1981|pp=292ff}} ] and ] have contested Madelung's dating. It is nevertheless generally accepted that the hadith is patterned on Ibn al-Zubayr's career.{{sfn|Cook|2016|pp=230–232}}{{sfn|Cook|2002a|p=155}} David Cook further states that the latter part of the hadith is totally legendary and is unrelated to Ibn al-Zubayr.{{sfn|Cook|2002a|p=155}}}} {{blockquote|There will arise a difference after the death of a caliph, and a man of the people of Medina will go forth fleeing to Mecca. Then some of the people of Mecca will come to him and will make him rise in revolt against his will ... An expedition will be sent against him from Syria but will be swallowed up ... in the desert between Mecca and Medina. When the people see this, the righteous men ... of Syria and ... Iraq will come to him and pledge allegiance to him. Thereafter a man of the Quraysh will arise whose maternal uncles are of Kalb. He will send an expedition against them, but they will defeat them ... He will then divide the wealth and act among them according to the Sunna of their Prophet. Islam will settle down firmly on the ground ... He will stay seven years and then die, and the Muslims will pray over him.{{sfn|Madelung|1981|p=291}}}} Refusing to recognize the new caliph, ] ({{Reign|680|683}}), after Mu'awiya's death in 680, Ibn al-Zubayr had fled to the Meccan sanctuary. From there he launched anti-Umayyad propaganda, calling for a {{transliteration|ar|shura}} of the Quraysh to elect a new caliph. Those opposed to the Umayyads were paying him homage and asking for the public proclamation of his caliphate, forcing Yazid to send an army to dislodge him in 683. After defeating rebels in the nearby ], the army besieged Mecca but was forced to withdraw as a result of Yazid's sudden death shortly afterward. Ibn al-Zubayr was recognized caliph in Arabia, Iraq, and parts of Syria, where Yazid's son and successor ] ({{Reign|683|684}}) held power in Damascus and adjoining areas. The hadith hoped to enlist support against an expected Umayyad campaign from Syria. The Umayyads did indeed send another army to Mecca in 692, but contrary to the hadith's prediction was successful in removing Ibn al-Zubayr. The hadith lost relevance soon afterward, but resurfaced in the ]n hadith circles a generation later, this time removed from its original context and understood as referring to a future restorer.{{sfn|Madelung|1981|pp=292ff}}{{sfn|Arjomand|2007|pp=134–136}} | |||
Around the time when Ibn al-Zubayr was trying to expand his dominion, the pro-Alid revolutionary ] took control of the Iraqi garrison town of ] in the name of Ali's son ], whom he proclaimed as the Mahdi in the messianic sense.{{sfn|Madelung|1986|p=1231}} The association of the name Muhammad with the Mahdi seems to have originated with Ibn al-Hanafiyya, who also shared the epithet Abu al-Qasim with Muhammad, the Islamic prophet.{{sfn|Madelung|1986|p=1232}} Among the Umayyads, the caliph ] ({{Reign|715|717}}) encouraged the belief that he was the Mahdi, and other Umayyad rulers, like ] ({{Reign|717|720}}), have been addressed as such in the ] of ] ({{Died in|728}}) and ] ({{Died in|728–730}}).{{sfn|Madelung|1986|p=1231}} | |||
==Mahdi in Sunni Islam== | |||
The Sunnis view the Mahdi as the successor of Mohammad. The Mahdi is expected to arrive to rule the world and to reestablish righteousness.<ref name="Arjomand 2007 134–136">{{cite journal|last=Arjomand|first=Said Amir|title=Islam in Iran vi., the Concept of Mahdi in Sunni Islam|journal=Encyclopaedia Iranica|date=Dec 2007|volume=XIV|issue=Fasc. 2|pages=134–136|url=http://www.iranicaonline.org/articles/islam-in-iran-vi-the-concept-of-mahdi-in-sunni-islam}}</ref><br /> | |||
Early discussions about the identity of the Mahdi by religious scholars can be traced back to the time after the ]. These discussions developed in different directions and were influenced by traditions (]) attributed to Muhammad. In Umayyad times, scholars and traditionists not only differed on which caliph or rebel leader should be designated as Mahdi but also on whether the Mahdi is a messianic figure and if signs and predictions of his time had been satisfied. In Medina, among the conservative religious circles, the belief in Umar ibn Abd al-Aziz being the Mahdi was widespread. ] ({{Died in|715}}) is said to identify Umar ibn Abd al-Aziz as the Mahdi long before his reign. The Basran, Abu Qilabah, supported the view that Umar ibn Abd al-Aziz was the Mahdi. ] ({{Died in|728}}) opposed the concept of a Muslim Messiah but believed that if there was the Mahdi, it was Umar ibn Abd al-Aziz.{{sfn|Madelung|1986|pp=1231–1232}} | |||
The Mahdi is not described in the Qurʾān but only in ], with scholars suggesting that he arose when some Arabian tribes were settling in Syria under Mo’awiya. “They anticipated ‘the Mahdi who will lead the rising people of the Yemen ( or Qahtani Arabs) back to their country’ in order to restore the glory of their lost Himyarite kingdom. It was believed that he would eventually conquer Constantinople.”<ref name="Arjomand 2007 134–136"/> | |||
By the time of the ] in 750, Mahdi was already a known concept.<ref name="Britannica">{{cite web |title=Mahdī Islamic concept |url=https://www.britannica.com/topic/mahdi |access-date=22 May 2022 |website=Britannica}}</ref> Evidence shows that the first Abbasid caliph ] ({{Reign|750|754}}) assumed the title of "the Mahdi" for himself.{{sfn|Madelung|1986|p=1233}} | |||
The Kaysāniya extended two other notions that became thoroughly related with the belief in the Mahdi. The first was the notion of return of the dead, particularly of the Imams. The second was the indication of occultation. “When Moḥammad b. al-Ḥanafiya died in 700, the Kaysāniya maintained that he was in occultation in the Raẓwā mountains west of Medina, and would one day return as the Mahdi and the Qāʾem.”<ref name="Arjomand 2007 134–136"/> | |||
=== Shia Islam === | |||
The appearance of the Prophet was also proposed unto the Mahdi. “An enormously influential tradition attributed to ʿAbd-Allāh b. Masʿud has Moḥammad predicting the coming of a Mahdi coined in his own image: ‘His name will be my name, and his father’s name my father’s name’” <ref name="Arjomand 2007 134–136"/> | |||
In Shia Islam, the eschatological Mahdi was commonly given the epithet al-Qa'im ({{Lang|ar|القائم}}),{{Sfn|Madelung|1986}}{{Sfn|Hussain|1986|pp=144–145}} which can be translated as 'he who will rise,'{{Sfn|Amir-Moezzi|1998}} signifying his rise against tyranny in the end of time.{{Sfn|Sachedina|1981|p=60}} Distinctively Shia is the notion of temporary absence or ] of the Mahdi,{{Sfn|Madelung|1986}} whose life has been prolonged by divine will.{{Sfn|Sobhani|2001|p=118}}{{Sfn|Momen|1985|p=165}} An intimately related Shia notion is that of {{Transliteration|ar|raj'a}} ({{lit|return}}),{{Sfn|Amir-Moezzi|1998}}{{Sfn|Momen|1985|p=166}} which often means the return to life of (some) Shia Imams, particularly ], to exact their revenge on their oppressors.{{Sfn|Amir-Moezzi|1998}}{{Sfn|Kohlberg|2022}} | |||
Traditions that predicted the occultation and rise of a future imam were already in circulation for a century before the death of the eleventh Imam in 260 (874 CE),{{Sfn|Modarressi|1993|pp=87, 88}}{{Sfn|Amir-Moezzi|1998}} and possibly as early as the seventh-century CE.{{Sfn|Amir-Moezzi|1998}} These traditions were appropriated by various Shia sects in different periods,{{sfn|Kohlberg|2009|p=531}} including the now-extinct sects of Nawusites and ]. {{Sfn|Hussain|1989|pp=12–13}} For instance, these traditions were cited by the now-extinct ], who denied the death of Ibn al-Hanafiyya,{{Sfn|Madelung|1986}}{{Sfn|Sachedina|1981|p=151}} and held that he was in hiding in the Razwa mountains near ].{{sfn|Arjomand|2007|pp=134–136}} This likely originated with two groups of his supporters, namely, southern Arabian settlers and local recent converts in ], who seem to have spread the notions now known as occultation and {{Transliteration|ar|raj'a}}.{{sfn|Arjomand|2007|pp=134–136}} Later on, these traditions were also employed by the ] to argue that ], the seventh Imam, had not died but was in occultation.{{Sfn|Modarressi|1993|pp=87, 88}} | |||
===Predominant school of thought=== | |||
The Mahdi is frequently mentioned in Sunni hadith as establishing the caliphate. Among Sunnis, some believe the Mahdi will be an ordinary man. | |||
In parallel, traditions predicting the occultation of a future imam also persisted in the writings of the mainstream Shia, who later formed the Twelvers.{{Sfn|Kohlberg|2009|p=531}}{{Sfn|Madelung|1986}} Based on this material, the Twelver doctrine of occultation crystallized in the first half of the fourth (tenth) century,{{Sfn|Daftary|2013|p=67}} in the works of ] ({{Died in|919}}), ] ({{Died in|941}}), and ] ({{Died in|991}}), among others.{{Sfn|Kohlberg|2009}} This period also saw a transition in Twelver arguments from a traditionist to a rationalist approach in order to vindicate the occultation of the twelfth Imam. {{Sfn|Sachedina|1981|pp=79, 80}}{{Sfn|Arjomand|2000}} | |||
* It is narrated from ] about Mahdi as such: {{Quote|Even if the entire duration of the world’s existence has already been exhausted and only one day is left before Doomsday, Allah will expand that day to such length of time as to accommodate the kingdom of a person from my Ahlul-Bayt who will be called by my name. He will fill out the earth with peace and justice as it will have been full of injustice and tyranny (by then). <ref>], v2, p86, v9, pp 74-75]]</ref><ref>], v2, p7</ref><ref>] v1, pp 84,376; V3, p63</ref><ref>]by al-Hakim, v4, p557</ref><ref>Al-Jaami' al-Saghîr, by ], pp 2,160</ref><ref>al-Urful Wardi, by ], p2</ref><ref>], v7 P186</ref><ref>], by al-Zurqani, v5, p348</ref><ref>Fat’h al-Mugheeth, by ], v3, p41</ref>}} | |||
The Twelver authors also aim to establish that the description of Mahdi in Sunni sources applies to the twelfth Imam. Their efforts gained momentum in the seventh (thirteenth) century when some notable Sunni scholars endorsed the Shia view of the Mahdi,{{Sfn|Madelung|1986}}{{Sfn|Amir-Moezzi|2007}} including the ] traditionist Muhammad ibn Yusuf al-Gandji.{{Sfn|Madelung|1986}} Since then, ] writes, there is Sunni support from time to time for the Twelvers' view of Mahdi. {{Sfn|Amir-Moezzi|2007}} There has also been some support for the mahdiship of the twelfth Imam in Sufi circles,{{Sfn|Amir-Moezzi|2007}} for instance, by the Egyptian Sufi al-Sha'rani''.''{{Sfn|Madelung|1986}} | |||
*], a wife of Muhammad, is quoted as saying: | |||
Before the rise of the ], as a major Isma'ili Sh'a dynasty,{{Sfn|Daftary|2013}} the terms Mahdi and Qa'im were used interchangeably for the messianic imam anticipated in Shia traditions. With the rise of the Fatimids in the tenth century CE, however, ] argued that some of these predictions had materialized by the first Fatimid caliph, ], while the rest would be fulfilled by his successors. Henceforth, their literature referred to the awaited eschatological imam only as Qa'im (instead of Mahdi).{{Sfn|Madelung|1986}} In Zaydi view, imams are not endowed with superhuman qualities, and expectations for their mahdiship are thus often marginal.{{Sfn|Madelung|1986}}{{Sfn|Nanji|Daftary|2006|p=240}} One exception is the now-extinct Husaynites in ], who denied the death of al-Husayn ibn al-Qasim al-Iyani and awaited his return.{{Sfn|Madelung|1986}} | |||
<blockquote>His aim is to establish a moral system from which all superstitious faiths have been eliminated. In the same way that students enter Islam, so unbelievers will come to believe.<ref>(Vizier Mustafa, ''Emergence of Islam'', p. 171</ref></blockquote> | |||
==In Islamic doctrine== | |||
<blockquote>When the Mahdi appears, Allah will cause such power of vision and hearing to be manifested in believers that the Mahdi will call to the whole world from where he is, with no ] involved, and they will hear and even see him.<ref>Muntakab al Adhhar, p. 483</ref></blockquote> | |||
===Sunni Islam=== | |||
In ], the Mahdi doctrine is not theologically important and remains as a popular belief instead.{{sfn|Esposito|1998|p=35}}{{sfn|Doi|1971|p=120}} Of the six canonical Sunni hadith compilations, three—'']'', '']'', and '']''—contain traditions on the Mahdi; the compilations of '']'' and '']''—considered the most authoritative by the Sunnis and the earliest of the six—do not, nor does '']''.{{sfn|Doi|1971|p=119}}{{sfn|Furnish|2005|p=11}} Some Sunnis, including the philosopher and historian ] ({{Died in|1406}}), and reportedly also Hasan al-Basri, an influential early theologian and exegete, deny the Mahdi being a separate figure, holding that ] will fulfill this role and judge over mankind; ''Mahdi'' is thus considered a title for Jesus when he returns.{{sfn|Blichfeldt|1985|p=2}}{{sfn|Arjomand|2007|pp=134–136}} Others, like the historian and the Qur'an commentator ] ({{Died in|1373}}), elaborated a whole ] which includes prophecies about the Mahdi, Jesus, and ] (the antichrist) during the ].{{sfn|Leirvik|2010|p=41}} | |||
The common opinion among the Sunnis is that the Mahdi is an expected ruler to be sent by God before the end times to re-establish righteousness.{{sfn|Arjomand|2007|pp=134–136}} He is held to be from among the descendants of Muhammad through his daughter ] and her husband ], and his physical characteristics including a broad forehead and curved nose. He will eradicate injustice and evil from the world.{{sfn|Blichfeldt|1985|p=7}} He will be from the ] branch of Muhammad's descendants, as opposed to the Shia belief that he is of the ] line.{{sfn|Cook|2002a|p=140}} The Mahdi's name would be Muhammad and his father's name would be Abd Allah.{{Sfn|Goldziher|2021|p=200}} Abu Dawud quotes Muhammad as saying: "The Mahdi will be from my family, from the descendants of Fatimah".{{sfn|Furnish|2005|p=14}} Another hadith states: <blockquote>Even if only one day remains , God will lengthen this day until He calls forth a man from me, or from the family of my house, his name matching mine and his father's name matching that of my father. He will fill the Earth with equity and justice just as it had previously been filled with injustice and oppression.{{sfn|Furnish|2005|p=14}}</blockquote> | |||
<blockquote>I heard the Messenger of Allah say: "The Mahdi is of my lineage and family".<ref>''Sunan Abu Dawud'', 11/373; ''Sunan Ibn Maajah'', 2/1368.</ref></blockquote> | |||
Before the arrival of the Mahdi, the earth would be filled with anarchy and chaos. Divisions and civil wars, moral degradation, and worldliness would be prevalent among the Muslims. Injustice and oppression would be rampant in the world.{{sfn|Blichfeldt|1985|p=1}} In the aftermath of the death of a king, the people would quarrel among themselves, and the as yet unrecognized Mahdi would flee from Medina to Mecca to take refuge in the Ka'ba. He would be the Mahdi recognized as ruler by the people.{{sfn|Madelung|1981|p=291}} The Dajjal would appear and will spread corruption in the world.{{sfn|Arjomand|2007|pp=134–136}}{{sfn|Filiu|2009|p=27}} With an army bearing black banners, which would come to his aid from the east, the Mahdi would fight the Dajjal, and will be able to defeat him. Dressed in saffron robes with his head anointed, Jesus would descend at the point of a white minaret of the ] in eastern ] (believed to be the Minaret of Jesus) and join the Mahdi. Jesus would pray behind the Mahdi and then kill the Dajjal.{{Sfn|Bentlage|Eggert|Krämer|Reichmuth|2016|p=428}}{{sfn|Filiu|2009|p=27}} The ] would also appear wreaking havoc before their final defeat by the forces of Jesus. Although not as significant as the Dajjal and the Gog and Magog, the ], another representative of the forces of dark, also features in the Sunni traditions. He will rise in Syria before the appearance of Mahdi. When the latter appears, the Sufyani, along with his army, will either be swallowed up en route to Mecca by the earth with God's command or defeated by the Mahdi. Jesus and the Mahdi will then conquer the world and establish caliphate. The Mahdi will die after 7 to 13 years,{{Sfn|Furnish|2005|pp=18–21}} whereas Jesus after 40 years.{{sfn|Halverson|Goodall|Corman|2011|p=102}} Their deaths would be followed by reappearance of corruption before the final end of the world.{{Sfn|Furnish|2005|pp=18–21}} | |||
*] said: | |||
=== Shia Islam === | |||
<blockquote>The Messenger of Allah said: "He is one of us".<ref>Reported by bi Na’eem in ''Akhbaar al-Mahdi'', see al-Jaami’ ''al-Sagheer'', '''5''': 219, ''hadith'' 5796.</ref></blockquote> | |||
==== Twelver ==== | |||
{{Main|Muhammad al-Mahdi}} | |||
{{Further|Occultation (Islam)|Qa'im Al Muhammad}} | |||
] in ], ], stands where the house of the 11th ] ] and the Mahdi once used to be.]] | |||
In ], the largest Shia branch, the belief in the messianic imam is not merely a part of creed, but the pivot.{{sfn|Sachedina|1978|p=109}} For the Twelver Shia, the Mahdi was born but disappeared, and would remain hidden from humanity until he reappears to bring justice to the world in the end of time, a doctrine known as the ]. This imam in occultation is the twelfth imam, ], son of the eleventh imam, ].{{sfn|Halverson|Goodall|Corman|2011|p=103}} According to the Twelvers, the Mahdi was born in ] around 868,{{Sfn|Momen|1985|p=161}} though his birth was kept hidden from the public.{{Sfn|Amir-Moezzi|2007}} He lived under his father's care until 874 when the latter was killed by the ].{{Sfn|Sachedina|1981|p=28}} | |||
<blockquote>The Messenger of Allah said: "The Mahdi is of my lineage, with a high forehead and a long, thin, curved nose. He will fill the earth with fairness and justice as it was filled with oppression and injustice, and he will rule for seven years.<ref>''Sunan Abi Dawud, Kitaab al-Mahdi'', '''11''': 375, ''hadith'' 4265; ''Mustadrak al-Haakim'', '''4''': 557; "he said: this is a saheeh hadeeth according to the conditions of Muslim, although it was not reported by al-Bukhari and Muslim". See also ''Sahih al-Jaami'', 6736''.</ref></blockquote> | |||
===== Minor Occultation ===== | |||
<blockquote>The Messenger of Allah said: "At the end of the time of my ummah, the Mahdi will appear. Allah will grant him rain, the earth will bring forth its fruits, he will give a lot of money, cattle will increase and the ummah will become great. He will rule for seven or eight years.<ref>''Mustadrak al-Hakim,'' '''4''': 557-558; "he said: this is a hadith whose isnaad is sahih, although it was not reported by al-Bukhari and Muslim. Al-Dhahabi agreed with him, and al-Albaani said: this is a saheeh sanad, and its men are thiqaat (trustworthy), Silsilat al-ahaadeeth al-saheehah," '''2''': 336, ''hadeeth'' 771.</ref></blockquote> | |||
When his father died in 874, possibly poisoned by the Abbasids,{{Sfn|Sachedina|1981|p=28}} the Mahdi went into occultation by the divine command and was hidden from public view for his life was in danger from the Abbasids.{{Sfn|Momen|1985|pp=162, 163}} Only a few of the elite among the Shia, known as the deputies ({{Lang|ar|سفراء}}, {{transliteration|ar|sufara}}; sing. {{Lang|ar|سفير}} {{transliteration|ar|safir}}) of the twelfth imam, were able to communicate with him; hence the occultation in this period is referred to as the ] ({{transliteration|ar|ghayba al-sughra}}).{{sfn|Filiu|2009|pp=127–128}} | |||
A typical modernist in his views on the Mahdi, ] (1903–1979), the ] ]ist, stated that the Mahdi will be a modern Islamic reformer/statesman, who will unite the ] and revolutionise the world according to the ideology of Islam, but will never claim to be the Mahdi, instead receiving posthumous recognition as such.<ref>Syed Maududi, ‘’Tajdeed-o-Ahyaa-e-Deen’’, Islamic Publications Limited, Lahore, Pakistan, Chapeter: Imam Mehdi</ref> | |||
The first of the deputies is held to have been ], a trusted companion and confidant of the eleventh imam. Through him the Mahdi would answer the demands and questions of the Shia. He was later succeeded by his son ], who held the office for some fifty years and died in 917. His successor ] was in the office until his death in 938. The next deputy, ], abolished the office on the orders of the imam just a few days before his death in 941.{{sfn|Klemm|1984|pp=130–135}}{{Sfn|Klemm|2007}} | |||
===Rejection of the Mahdi=== | |||
Some Islamic scholars reject Mahdi doctrine, including ] (1888–1972),<ref>Allama Tamanna Imadi, ‘’Intizar-e-Mehdi-o-Maseeh’’, Al-Rahman Publishing Trust, Karachi, Pakistan</ref> ],<ref>Allama Habib-ur-Rahman Kandhlwi, ''Mehdaviyyat nay Islam ko Kiya Diya’’, Anjuman Uswa-e-Hasna, Karachi, Pakistan</ref> ] (1951- ),.<ref>{{cite web|url=http://www.al-mawrid.org/pages/articles_english_detail.php?rid=455&cid=263&search=mahdi |title=Al-Mawrid |publisher=Al-Mawrid |date=2009-09-25 |accessdate=2012-04-29}}</ref><ref name="ReferenceB">Allama Iqbal, ‘’Iqbal Nama, Volume 2’’, Bazm-e-Iqbal, Lahore, Pakistan, Letter No. 87</ref> | |||
===== Major Occultation ===== | |||
Javed Ahmad Ghamidi writes in his '']'': <blockquote>Besides these, the coming of the Mahdi and that of Jesus from the heavens are also regarded as signs of the Day of Judgment. I have not mentioned them. The reason is that the narratives of the coming of the Mahdi do not conform to the standards of ''hadith'' criticism set forth by the '']un''. Some of them are weak and some fabricated; no doubt, some narratives, which are acceptable with regard to their chain of narration, inform us of the coming of a generous ]; (Muslim, No: 7318) however, if they are deeply deliberated upon, it becomes evident that the caliph they refer to is ] who was the last caliph from a Sunni standpoint. This prediction of the Prophet has thus materialized in his personality, word for word. One need not wait for any other Mahdi now.</blockquote> | |||
With the death of the fourth agent, thus began the ] ({{Lang|ar|الغيبة الكبرى}}, {{transliteration|ar|ghayba al-kubra}}), in which the communication between the Mahdi and the faithful was severed.{{sfn|Klemm|1984|pp=130–135}} The leadership vacuum in the Twelver community was gradually filled by jurists.{{Sfn|Sachedina|1981|p=100}}{{Sfn|Hussain|1986|p=147}} During the Major Occultation, the Mahdi roams the earth and is sustained by God. He is the lord of the time ({{Lang|ar|صاحب الزمان}} {{transliteration|ar|sahib az-zamān}}) and does not age.{{sfn|Halverson|Goodall|Corman|2011|p=104}} Although his whereabouts and the exact date of his return are unknown, the Mahdi is nevertheless believed to contact some of his Shia if he wishes.{{sfn|Halverson|Goodall|Corman|2011|p=104}} The accounts of these encounters are numerous and widespread in the Twelver community.{{Sfn|Momen|1985|p=65}}{{Sfn|Amir-Moezzi|2007}}{{sfn|Sachedina|1981|p=181}} Shia scholars have argued that the longevity of the Mahdi is not unreasonable given the long lives of ], ], and the ], as well as secular reports about long-lived men.{{Sfn|Madelung|1986}} Along these lines, ] emphasizes the miraculous qualities of al-Mahdi, adding that his long life, while unlikely, is not impossible.{{Sfn|Tabatabai|1975|p=194}} He is viewed as the sole legitimate ruler of the Muslim world and the constitution of the Islamic Republic of Iran recognizes him as the head of the state.{{sfn|Halm|1997|p=35}} | |||
] in ], ], where Hassan ibn Muthlih Jamkarani is reported to have met the ]]] | |||
===Characteristics from Sunni sources=== | |||
* Ali Ibn Abi Talib quoted Muhammad as saying: <blockquote>The Mahdi is one of us, the clan of the Prophet. God will reform him in one night, and will have a broad forehead, a prominent nose and a mark on his right cheek. (Reported by Imam Ahmad and Ibn Maqah)</blockquote> | |||
===== Reappearance ===== | |||
* At-Tirmidhi reported that Muhammad said: <blockquote>The Mahdi is from my ]; he will be born and live to rule five or seven or nine years. (If) one goes to him and says, "Give me (a charity)", he will fill one’s garment with what one needs.</blockquote> | |||
Before his ] ({{Langx|ar|ظهور|ṭuhūr}}), the world will plunge into chaos, where immorality and ignorance will be commonplace, the Qur'an will be forgotten, and religion will be abandoned.{{sfn|Halverson|Goodall|Corman|2011|p=104}} There will be plagues, earthquakes, floods, wars and death.{{sfn|Halm|2004|p=37}} The Sufyani will rise and lead people astray. The Mahdi will then reappear in Mecca, with the sword of Ali (]) in his hand,{{sfn|Halverson|Goodall|Corman|2011|p=104}} between the corner of the ] and the ]. | |||
By some accounts, he will reappear on the day of ] (the tenth of ]), the day the third Imam ] was slain. He will be "a young man of medium stature with a handsome face," with black hair and beard.{{sfn|Momen|1985|p=169}} A divine cry will call the people of the world to his aid,{{Sfn|Amir-Moezzi|1998}} after which the angels, ]s, and humans will flock to the Mahdi.{{sfn|Sachedina|1981|pp=161–166}} This is often followed shortly by another supernatural cry from the earth that invites men to join the enemies of the Mahdi,{{Sfn|Amir-Moezzi|1998}}{{Sfn|Sachedina|1981|p=163}} and would appeal to disbelievers and hypocrites.{{Sfn|Sachedina|1981|p=163}} | |||
* Abu Dawud also reported a ''hadith'' about the Mahdi that Muhammad said: <blockquote>The Mahdi will be of my stock, and will have a broad forehead, a prominent nose and a mark on his right cheek. He will fill the earth with equity and justice as it was filled with oppression and tyranny, and he will rule for seven years.</blockquote> | |||
The Mahdi will then go to ], which will become his capital, and send troops to kill the Sufyani in Damascus. Husayn and his slain partisans are expected to resurrect to avenge their deaths, known as the doctrine of ] ({{Lit|return}}).{{sfn|Sachedina|1981|pp=161–166}}{{Sfn|Kohlberg|2022}} The episode of Jesus' return in the Twelver doctrine is similar to the Sunni belief, although in some Twelver traditions it is the Mahdi who would kill the Dajjal.{{sfn|Sachedina|1981|pp=171–172}} Those who hold enmity towards ] ({{Langx|ar|نَواصِب |nawāṣib|haters}}) will be subject to ] (poll tax) or killed if they do not accept Shia Islam.{{sfn|Madelung|1986|p=1236}} | |||
* At-Tirmidhi reported that Muhammad said: <blockquote>The face of the Mahdi shall shine upon the surface of the Moon.</blockquote> | |||
The Mahdi is also viewed as the restorer of true Islam,{{Sfn|Madelung|1986}} and the restorer of other monotheistic religions after their distortion and abandonment.{{Sfn|Amir-Moezzi|1998}} He establishes the kingdom of God on earth and Islamizes the whole world.{{sfn|Sachedina|1981|p=174}} In their true form, it is believed, all monotheistic religions are essentially identical to Islam as "submission to God."{{Sfn|Amir-Moezzi|1998}}{{Sfn|Amir-Moezzi|2007}} It is in this sense, according to ], that one should understand the claims that al-Mahdi will impose Islam on everyone.{{Sfn|Amir-Moezzi|1998}} His rule will be paradise on earth,{{sfn|Halm|1997|p=37}} which will last for seventy years until his death,{{sfn|Halverson|Goodall|Corman|2011|p=104}} though other traditions state 7, 19, or 309 years.{{sfn|Sachedina|1981|pp=176–178}} | |||
==Mahdi in Twelver Shi'ism== | |||
{{Further|Twelfth Imam}} | |||
==== Isma'ilism ==== | |||
In ], the Mahdi is believed to be the ], ], whose return from ] will be the return of the Mahdi.<ref name="Brit">"mahdī." Encyclopædia Britannica. 2008.</ref> | |||
]ian capital city of ] in 2014, where ], son of ] ], was born. Pictured are the ] and ]s.]] | |||
In ] a distinct concept of the Mahdi developed, with select Isma'ili ]s representing the Mahdi or al-Qa'im at various times.{{citation needed|date=March 2022}} When the sixth Shia imam ] died, some of his followers held his already dead son ] to be the imam asserting that he was alive and will return as the Mahdi.{{sfn|Daftary|2013|p=106}} Another group accepted his death and acknowledged his son ] as the imam instead. When he died, his followers too denied his death and believed that he was the last imam and the Mahdi. By the mid-9th century, Isma'ili groups of different persuasions had coalesced into a unified movement centered in Salamiyya in central Syria,{{sfn|Daftary|2013|p=108}} and a network of activists was working to collect funds and amass weapons for the return of the Mahdi Muhammad ibn Isma'il, who would overthrow the Abbasids and establish his righteous ].{{efn|The leaders of the movement at this stage laid no claim to the imamate as the Mahdi was thought to be the last imam.{{sfn|Daftary|2013|p=109}}}}{{sfn|Daftary|2013|pp=109–110}}{{sfn|Filiu|2011|p=50}} The propaganda of the Mahdi's return had a special appeal to peasants, Bedouins, and many of the later-to-be Twelver Shias, who were in a state of confusion ({{transliteration|ar|hayra}}) in the aftermath of the death of their 11th imam Hasan al-Askari, and resulted in many conversions.{{sfn|Daftary|2013|p=110}} | |||
Belief in the Mahdi is more prevalent in Shi'ite Islam. ] believe him to be the Twelfth Imam who is in ] until he returns at the end of time. Mahdism in Twelver Shi`ism takes many of its essentials from previous sacred trends. According to the customary date most often taken, Imam Al-Ḥasan the `Askari, the eleventh Imam, died in 874. His death, like that of the preceding Imams, gave rise to an age of commotion among the faithful, but this phase the calamity appeared even more solemn and the Imamis did not themselves waver to plea the eras that were to trail “the period of perplexity” or “confusion”.<ref name="moezzi136">{{cite book|last=Moezzi|first=Amir|title=Islam in Iran vii. The Concept of Mahdi in Twelver Shi’ism|publisher=Encyclopaedia Iranica|pages=136–143.|url=http://www.iranicaonline.org/articles/islam-in-iran-vii-the-concept-of-mahdi-in-twelver-shiism}}</ref><br /> | |||
] of the first Fatimid caliph, ], 910/911]] | |||
The cryptic destiny of the assumed son of the eleventh Imam led to numerous rifts with prominent doctrinal adjustments. Some groups claimed that his son died at a very early age, others that he had survived until a certain age and then died, and still others solely denied his very reality, considering that Ḥasan ʿAskari never had a son. Only a small minority sustained the notion that the son of the eleventh imam was alive, that he was in “occultation”, and that he was to recur as mahdi at the end of time. This idea was progressively accepted by all Imamis, who accordingly became known as “Twelvers”. Sources from this era replicate, in their specific method, the hesitation and crisis believers experienced. A close study of these sources definitely seems to display that thoughtful hesitations and serious gaps occurred concerning a significant number of vital doctrinal fundamentals that became articles of faith.<ref name="moezzi136"/><br /> | |||
In 899, the leader of the movement, ], declared himself the Mahdi.{{sfn|Filiu|2011|p=51}} This brought about schism in the unified Isma'ili community as not all adherents of the movement accepted his Mahdist claims. Those in Iraq and Arabia, known as ] after their leader ], still held that Muhammad ibn Isma'il was the awaited Mahdi and denounced the Salamiyya-based Mahdism.{{sfn|Halm|2004|p=169}}{{sfn|Filiu|2011|pp=50–51}} In the Qarmati doctrine, the Mahdi was to abrogate the Islamic law (the ]) and bring forth a new message.{{sfn|Madelung|1986|p=1236}} In 931, the then Qarmati leader ] declared a Persian prisoner named ] as the awaited Mahdi. The Mahdi went on to denounce Moses, Jesus, and Muhammad as liars, abolished Islam, and instituted the ]. Abu Tahir had to depose him as imposter and had him executed.{{sfn|Halm|2004|p=169}}{{sfn|Filiu|2011|pp=50–51}} | |||
Meanwhile, in Syria, Sa'id ibn al-Husayn's partisans took control of the central Syria in 903, and for a time the ] was read in the name of the "Successor, the rightly-guided Heir, the Lord of the Age, the ], the Mahdi". Eventually, the uprising was ] by the Abbasids.{{sfn|Halm|1991|pp=68–83}}{{sfn|Daftary|2007|pp=122–123}} This forced Sa'id to flee from Syria to North Africa, where he founded the ] in ] in 909.{{sfn|Filiu|2011|p=51}} There he assumed the regnal name {{transl|ar|al-Mahdi Billah}};{{sfn|Daftary|2007|p=128}}{{sfn|Halm|1991|pp=138–139}} as the historian ] comments, the singular, semi-divine figure of the Mahdi was thus reduced to an adjective in a caliphal title, 'the Imam rightly guided by God' ({{transl|ar|al-imam al-mahdi bi'llah}}): instead of the promised messiah, al-Mahdi presented himself merely as one in a long sequence of imams descending from Ali and Fatima.{{sfn|Halm|1991|p=145}} | |||
There are many theories about the twelve Imams. There are sources that attribute two dissimilar formations of the occultation to Mahdi. According to the first, mentioned by Ebn Bābuya, the Hidden Imam “exists in the world by his spiritual substance thanks to a subsisting essence”.<ref name="moezzi136"/><br /> | |||
Messianic expectations associated with the Mahdi nevertheless did not materialize, contrary to the expectations of his propagandists and followers who expected him to do wonders.{{sfn|Filiu|2011|p=51}} Al-Mahdi attempted to downplay messianism and asserted that the propaganda of Muhammad ibn Isma'il's return as the Mahdi had only been a ruse to avoid Abbasid persecution and protect the real imam predecessors of his. The Mahdi was actually a collective title of the true imams from the progeny of Ja'far al-Sadiq.{{sfn|Daftary|2013|p=112}} In a bid to gain time, al-Mahdi also sought to shift the messianic expectations on his son, ]: by renaming himself as Abdallah Abu Muhammad, and his son as Abu'l-Qasim Muhammad rather than his original name, Abd al-Rahman, the latter would bear the name Abu'l-Qasim Muhammad ibn Abdallah. This was the name of the Islamic prophet Muhammad, and it had been prophesied that the Mahdi would also bear it.{{sfn|Halm|1991|p=144}} The Fatimids eventually dropped the millenarian rhetoric.{{sfn|Filiu|2011|p=51}} | |||
According to another theory stated by Ebn Nadim, Abu Sahl is said to have kept that the twelfth Imam died, but covertly left behind a son as a descendant to him; the heredity of Imams would therefore be preserved in occultation from father to son until the last Imam reveals himself publicly as the Mahdi. Ultimately, none of the theories were continued, but here one distinguishes uncertain struggles to justify the notion of occultation.<ref name="moezzi136"/> | |||
Everything of this inclines to show that through this stage of development, the Imami community experienced what one might deliberate an attentive identity predicament. This “time of confusion” is one of exploratory in the dark, of study, improvement, and the more or less tender formation of dogmas related to the power and legitimacy of the twelfth Imam. These doctrines were faced with, and overpowered, much confrontation before finally standing as articles of faith.<ref name="moezzi136"/> | |||
The ] ] Isma'ili Shia believe that their ] and Mahdi is ], son of the ] ].{{sfn|Daftary|2007|pp=261}}{{sfn|Halm|2014|pp=184, 185}} | |||
===Interpretations of the Qur’ân on the Imâm=== | |||
==== Zaydism ==== | |||
According to some Qur’ânic exegetes a number of Qur’ânic verses refer to al-Mahdî, for example in verse 11:86 the word ''baqiyatallah'' has been understood to be one of the Mahdî's titles. Similarly, according to some viewpoints, verses 43:61, 9:32, and 24:55 are also indicative of the Mahdî.<ref>{{cite book|last=Reza|first=Saiyed Jafar|title=The essence of Islam|publisher=Concept Pub. Co.|location=New Delhi|isbn=8180698327|pages=52–53|url=http://books.google.com/books?isbn=8180698327}}</ref> | |||
In ], the concept of imamate is different from the Isma'ili and Twelver branches; a Zaydi Imam is any respectable person from the descendants of Ali and Fatima who lays claim to political leadership and struggles for its acquisition. As such, the Zaydi imamate doctrine lacks eschatological characteristics and there is no end-times redeemer in Zaydism. The title of mahdi has been applied to several Zaydi imams as an honorific over the centuries.{{efn|The extinct Zaydi sect of Husayniyya from western Yemen believed in the return of al-Husayn al-Mahdi li-din Allah (d. 1013) as the Mahdi.{{sfn|Halm|2004|p=206 n. 7}}}}{{sfn|Bashir|2003|p=8}}{{sfn|Halm|2004|p=203}} | |||
=== Ahmadiyya belief === | |||
===Birth and occultation of the Mahdî=== | |||
{{See|Mirza Ghulam Ahmad}} | |||
In the ] belief, the prophesied eschatological figures of Christianity and Islam, the Messiah and Mahdi, actually refer to the same person. These prophecies were fulfilled in ] (1835–1908), the founder of the movement;{{sfn|Valentine|2008|p=199}} he is held to be the Mahdi and the manifestation of ].{{sfn|Friedmann|1989|p=49}}{{sfn|Valentine|2008|p=45}} However, the historical Jesus in their view, although escaped crucifixion, nevertheless died and will not be coming back. Instead, God made Mirza Ghulam Ahmad the exact alike of Jesus in character and qualities.{{sfn|Friedmann|1989|pp=114–117}}{{sfn|Valentine|2008|p=46}} Similarly, the Mahdi is not an apocalyptic figure to launch global jihad and conquer the world, but a peaceful {{transliteration|ar|]}} (renewer of religion), who spreads Islam with "heavenly signs and arguments".{{sfn|Valentine|2008|p=199}} | |||
==Mahdi claimants== | |||
The eschatological Redeemer of Imamism is presented as Abu’l-Qāsem Moḥammad b. Ḥasan al-`Askari, twelfth and final among the Imams. He thus bears the identical title and konya as the Prophet, therefore satisfying the hadith that perhaps go back to ʿAṣem b. Bahdala from Kufa. It certainly owes its beginning to Moḵtār’s revolt in service of Moḥammad b. al-Ḥanafiya, son of ʿAli, who, once when he was called as Mahdi, stated that his honor entailed in bearing the same forename and konya as the Prophet . Nonetheless, it was imprudent to call the Mahdi by his title, according to a prohibition attributed to several among the imams, the intention of which was to defend the Protector from the danger modeled by the `Abbasid. This also mirrored doubts that evaluated upon the personality of the Mahdi.<ref name="moezzi136"/> <br /> | |||
{{Main|List of Mahdi claimants}} | |||
Throughout history, various individuals have claimed to be or were proclaimed to be the Mahdi. Claimants have included ], the founder of the ] sect; ], the founder of ]; ], who established the ] in ] in the late 19th century. The Iranian dissident ], the leader of the ], also claimed to be a 'representative' of the Mahdi.<ref>{{Cite news|last=Merat|first=Arron|date=2018-11-09|title=Terrorists, cultists – or champions of Iranian democracy? The wild wild story of the MEK|language=en-GB|work=The Guardian|url=http://www.theguardian.com/news/2018/nov/09/mek-iran-revolution-regime-trump-rajavi|access-date=2018-11-10|issn=0261-3077}}</ref> The adherents of the ] hold ], the founder of the movement, to be the Messiah and the Mahdi.{{sfn|Fishman|Soage|2013|p=63}} ], a Turkish cult leader, is considered by his followers as the Mahdi.<ref name="HumanistBio">{{cite news|url=http://newhumanist.org.uk/2131|title=Sex, Flies and Videotapes: the secret lives of Harun Yahya|publisher=]|date=October 2009|access-date=14 December 2022|archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20090912062135/http://newhumanist.org.uk/2131|archive-date=12 September 2009|url-status=dead}}</ref> | |||
Ibn Khaldun noted a pattern where embracing a Mahdi claimant enabled unity among tribes and/or a region, often enabled them to forcibly seize power, but the lifespan of such a force was usually limited,<ref name=JPFAiI2011:64-5>]: pp. 64–65</ref> as their Mahdi had to conform to hadith prophesies—winning their battles and bringing peace and justice to the world before Judgement Day—which (so far) none have. | |||
According to particular explanations, al-Mahdi’s mother, to whom numerous names are specified (], Rayḥāna, Sawsan, Maryam), was a black slave of Nubian origin; according to other interpretations, undeniably well-known and hagiographic, she was the grand-daughter of the Byzantine ruler, himself adherent of the Apostle Simon. According to this account, the Byzantine princess was taken by Muslim troops and traded as a slave in Baghdad to a man belonging to the entourage of the tenth Imam, `Ali al-Naqi who then came to Sāmarrāʾ and presented the girl to Ḥakima, the latter’s sister. Even before her confinement, the princess had a vision of ], mother of ], as well as of ], daughter of the Prophet ], both of whom had requested her to convert to Islâm and let herself be seized by the Muslim masses as she was intended for a magnificent life.<ref name="moezzi136"/> In Sâmarrâʾ, the tenth Imam, having by prophecy acknowledged in her the future mother of the Mahdi, offered her in marriage to his son Ḥasan, the future eleventh Imam. Signs of the mother’s pregnancy as well as the birth of the child were astoundingly covered, since the ʿAbbasids wanted to abolish an anticipated child whom persistent gossips labeled as a Savior. The father revealed the baby to some forty close disciples, and then the child was concealed. According to numerous versions, the eleventh imam is said to have adopted a two-fold method to promise the child’s refuge. First, apart from his close circle, the Imam retained the birth of the child undisclosed, going so far as to entitle his mother, Ḥodayṯ, as his sole heir. Now, it is well known that according to Imami law, under some circumstances the legacy belongs to the mother of the deceased when the final does not leave behind a child. Secondly, Imam Ḥasan al-`Askari had alternative to a trick to cloud the matter and divert attention. Sometime beforehand his death in 874, he allowed a report to spread that his servant Ṣaqil was expecting with his child. Informants of the caliph al-Moʿtamed carefully observed the activities of the Imam, who was kept under surveillance in the military camp at Sāmarrāʾ.<ref name="moezzi136"/>< The Cave in Sāmarrāʾ is where the Hidden Imam is said to have arisen his occultation. Typologically, one can differentiate three groupings of stories of encounters, based on the prime dimension endorsed: a altruistic dimension in which the great kindness of the Hidden Imam towards his advocates and his worry for their comfort are stressed; an initiatory aspect in which the Imam demonstrates his followers prayers, conveys divine knowledge, and endures secrets; and lastly, an eschatological element, presented primarily by late spiritual sources, in which the happenstance encourages a believer’s specific spiritual revivification.<ref name="moezzi136"/> | |||
==Comparative religion== | |||
The end of time and rising of the Mahdi- The “end of time” or the date of the ultimate arrival of the Hidden Imam, is unknown and followers are insisted to anticipate liberation tolerantly and virtuously. The future approaching of the Savior is the most recurrently quoted topic in prophecies made by the Prophet, Faṭima, and the Imams: complete extensive chapters are devoted to the subject in the sources. This future is foreshadowed by a number of signs. The widespread signs are the prevalent invasion of the earth by Wicked, the overpowering of knowledge by unawareness, and the loss of an intelligence of the blessed and all that associates man to God and his neighbors. These, in some degree, require the demonstration and the rising of the Qāʾem, or else mortality will be astounded by obscurity. cite “Furthermore, there are certain specific signs among which five recur more regularly and are hence justifiably called the “five signs”: (1) the coming of Sofyāni, the enemy of the Qāʾem, who will command an army in battle against the latter (2) the advent of Yamāni, who appears in the Yemen to preach support for the Qāʾem; (3) the Cry/Scream of supernatural origin, coming from the sky and calling man to defend the Imam’s cause; (4) the swallowing of an army composed of the Imam’s enemies in a desert often located between Mecca and Medina, according to a hadith most likely propagated by ʿAbd-Allāh b. Zobayr during his war propaganda against the Umayyad caliph Yazid, during the latter’s campaign against Mecca and Medina, popularized by the traditionist of Basra, Qatāda and (5) the assassination by the Meccans of the messenger to the Qāʾem, often called Nafs or al-Nafs al-Zakiya (echoing the messianic rebellion and death in 762 of the Hasanid Moḥammad b. ʿAbd-Allāh, surnamed al-Nafs al-Zakiya).” <ref name="moezzi136"/> | |||
===Buddhism=== | |||
The Mahdi figure in Islam can be likened to the ] figure of ]. Both are prophesied saviors sharing a messianic-like quality, and both are predicted to hold a position of world rulership.<ref>{{cite journal |last=Kamada |first=S. |year=2012 |title=Mahdi and Maitreya (Miroku): Saviors in Islam and Buddhism |journal=Journal of the Interdisciplinary Study of Monotheistic Religions |volume=8 |pages=59–76}}</ref><ref>{{cite journal |last=Jawad |first=A. |year=2008 |title=Maitreya of Gandhāra – An Anticipated Sanguine of Buddhism |journal=Ancient Pakistan |volume=19 |pages=43–47 |id= {{ProQuest|1239427287}}}}</ref><ref>{{cite journal | last1=Hardacre | first1=Helen | last2=Van Voss | first2=M. Heerma | last3=Werblowsky | first3=R. J. Z. | date=1984 | title=Chronicle and Calendar of Events | journal=Numen | volume=31 | issue=1 | pages=155–158 | doi=10.1163/156852784X00167 | jstor=3269902}}</ref> | |||
===Judaism=== | |||
The Mahdi accordingly becomes visible, all the while having inexplicably kept his youth. He combats and ultimately deracinates Evil, re-establishing the world to its novel wholesome state. For this to happen, he must first retaliate the slaying of Imam Ḥosayn in order that the common of Muslims be removed of the wicked corruption that it ever committed. Furthermore, according to the eschatological guideline of rajʿa, a definite number of previous saints, fatalities of their society’s prejudice, and their oppressors originate back to life in order that the moral may take retaliation on the malicious ones. The Redeemer will so not only re-establish Islam, but all faiths, to their wholesomeness and new veracity, creating “submission to God” the worldwide religion. He will also convey knowledge to manhood by enlightening the obscure secrets of Holy Scriptures.<ref name="moezzi136"/><br /> | |||
{{main|Messiah in Judaism}} | |||
The prophesied savior duo of the Mahdi and the Messiah in Islam can be likened to the prophesied pair of the two ] savior figures, ] and Mashiach ben David, respectively, in the sense that the Islamic Messiah and Masiach ben David take a central eschatological role, while the Mahdi and Mashiach ben Yosef take a peripheral role.<ref>{{cite journal | doi=10.1016/j.heliyon.2022.e09080 | doi-access=free | title=The concept of Messiah in abrahamic religions: A focused study of the eschatology of Sunni islam | date=2022 | last1=Alma'Itah | first1=Qais Salem | last2=Haq | first2=Zia ul | journal=Heliyon | volume=8 | issue=3 | pages=e09080 |pmid=35309392 |pmc=8927941| bibcode=2022Heliy...809080A }}</ref><ref name="schochet moshiah ben yossef">{{cite web|last=Schochet|first=Jacob Immanuel|title=Moshiach ben Yossef|url=http://www.moshiach.com/discover/tutorials/moshiach_ben_yossef.php|work=Tutorial|publisher=moshiach.com|access-date=2 December 2012|url-status=dead|archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20021220182918/http://www.moshiach.com/discover/tutorials/moshiach_ben_yossef.php|archive-date=20 December 2002}}</ref><ref name="JVL messiah">{{cite web|last=Blidstein|first=Gerald J.|title=Messiah in Rabbinic Thought|url=https://www.jewishvirtuallibrary.org/jsource/judaica/ejud_0002_0014_0_13744.html|work=Messiah |publisher=Jewish Virtual Library and Encyclopaedia Judaica 2008 The Gale Group|access-date=2 December 2012}}</ref> | |||
The whole world will reportedly be taken to submission. Powers of inequality and obliviousness will be all eliminated, the earth will be inflated with justice and wisdom, and morality revitalized by knowledge. The Mahdi accordingly formulates the world for the last trial of the ultimate reappearance of the Last Judgment. According to some traditions, the Mahdi will be in control upon the earth for certain time, seven, nine or nineteen 7, 9, 19 years, after which ensues the death of all civilization just preceding the Judgment. Other traditions state subsequently the demise of the Qāʾem, the régime of the world will continue in the influences of the initiated for a definite period before the Day of Resurrection. .<ref name="moezzi136"/> | |||
=== Influence and consequences<br /> === | |||
Contrasting to Sunnism, where certainty in the Mahdi, although it existed, never developed into a vital article of the faith, in Shiʿism overall, and Twelver Imamism specifically, it is a constitutive doctrine of Shiite spiritual dogma, its dualist image of the world and more exactly his return marks the commencement of the “place of return” or the henceforth. Throughout Islamic history, Imami panegyric as well as hagiographic works devoted to the Hidden Imam tried hard to validate that the figure of the Mahdi, contemporary in Sunni hadith, mentioned to the twelfth Imam Imami urgings increased drive through the 13th century when certain great Sunni intellectuals subsidized their sustenance to the Imami doctrine of categorizing the Mahdi with the twelfth Imam:.<ref name="moezzi136"/> “the two Syrian Shafiʿite scholars Moḥammad b. Yusof Ganji in his Bayān fi aḵbār ṣāḥeb al-zamān, composed in 1250-51, and Kamāl-al-Din Moḥammad ʿAdawi Naṣibini in his Maṭāleb al-soʾul, completed in 1252, and the renowned Sebṭ Ebn al-Jawzi in his Taḏkerat al-ḵawāṣṣ. Given the dates of these authors and their works, coinciding with the arrival of the Mongols, the end of Sunni caliphal power and the increasing political influence of the Imamis, one wonders if this doctrinal reversal was not dictated by a certain opportunism. One might note in this respect that Moḥammad b. Yusof Ganji was assassinated in Damascus in 1260 for having collaborated with the Mongol conquerors. In any case, it is from this period onward that one notices, from time to time, some learned Sunnis rallying to Imami Mahdism.” .<ref name="moezzi136"/> The sensation is also manifest among Sunni sages. Already in the 11th century, Abu Bakr Bayhaqi had criticized the agreement of some Sufis regarding the documentation of the Mahdi with the last Imam of the Twelvers . Setting apart the effect of Imamism upon the eschatological hagiology of Ebn al-ʿArabi one can quote the devotee of the latter, Saʿd-al-Din Ḥammuya in his Farāʾed al-semṭayn, the Egyptian ʿAbd-al-Wahhāb Šaʿrāni in al-Yawāqit wa’l-jawāher or, more newly, the Naqšbandi master from Balkh, Solaymān Qonduzi in his Yanābiʾ al-mawadda . .<ref name="moezzi136"/> | |||
], with one of his titles, "al-Mahdî", as it appears in the ], ]. The Prophet is meant to have the same name as the Mahdî, according to aḥâdîth]] | |||
] in ], where it is believed that the Imâm will re-appear]] | |||
In ] "the Mahdi symbol has developed into a powerful and central religious idea."<ref name="Muslim World 2004 p.421"/> ] Shi`i Muslims believe that the Mahdi is the son of ], and is the Twelfth Imam, who was born in 869 and was ] at the age of five (874). He is still alive but has been in ], "awaiting the time that God has decreed for his return," When it comes he promised that no one who wanted happiness would be denied and no one who had believed will be left behind. | |||
===Portents=== | |||
According to Moojan Momen, among the most commonly reported signs that presage the advent of the Mahdi in Shia Islam are the following: | |||
*The vast majority of people who profess to be Muslim will be so only in name despite their practice of Islamic rites and it will be they who make war with the Mahdi. | |||
*Before his coming will come the red death and the white death, killing two thirds of the world's population. The red death signifies violence and the white death is ]. One third of the world's population will die from the red death and the other third from the white death. | |||
*Several figures will appear: the one-eyed Antichrist (''Masih ad-Dajjal''), the Al-Harth, Al-Mansur, Shuaib bin Saleh and the ]. | |||
*There will be a great conflict in the land of ], until it is destroyed. | |||
*Death and fear will afflict the people of ] and `]. A fire will appear in the sky and a redness will cover them.{{citation needed|date=May 2013}} | |||
===Linage of al-Mahdî=== | |||
Muhammad said: “Al-Mahdi is from my progeny; his face is like the brightly illuminated moon. He would be unknown until Allah wills it.” <ref name="mugahi1">{{cite book|last=Mugahi|first=Abdul-Rahim|title=The Awaited Savior of Humanity (al-Mahdi in the Eyes of the Ahlul Bayt.|publisher=The Islamic Education Board of the World Federation of Khoja Shia Ithna-Asheri Muslim Communities|url=http://www.al-islam.org/40ahadith-twelfthimam/}}</ref> | |||
Biharul Anwar, Volume 51, Page 85; Kashful Ghammah | |||
===Companions of the Mahdi=== | |||
Several Twelver Shi'a sources, notably Hadith, make mention of allies and companions that shall greet or accompany the Mahdi upon his ascension. Various examples of such verses include, but are not limited to, the following: | |||
Imam Ja’far ibn Muhammad as-Sadiq said: | |||
<blockquote>“The city of Qum has been named so because its inhabitants will gather with the Qa’im from Ale Muhammad and will stand alongside him, will strive to be hold firm to (their belief and assistance) of him and will assist him.” <ref name="mugahi1"/> (Safinatul Bihar, Volume 2, Page 446) | |||
“There will be thirteen women alongside ] .” Al-Mufadhal asked the Imam: “And what will their role be?” The Imam replied: “They will treat the injured and look after the sick just as the at the time of the Messenger of Allah .” <ref name="mugahi1"/> (Ithbatul Hudat, Volume 7, Page 150) | |||
</blockquote> | |||
Imam Muhammad ibn ‘Ali al-Baqir said: | |||
<blockquote>“Indeed, he (al-Mahdi) will come and I swear by Allah that there will be three hundred and ten and some odd number of men with him and among them there will be fifty women who will all gather together in Makkah (to help him) ... ” <ref name="mugahi1"/> <br /> (Biharul Anwar, Volume 52, Page 223; Tafsir of al-’Ayyashi) | |||
</blockquote> | |||
===The Beloved to the Prophet=== | |||
Muhammad said: “Congratulations to the person who meets the Qa’im from my Ahlul Bayt and has firm belief in him before his advent. He will have love for his friends, and will distance himself from his enemies and will have love for the leaders of guidance (the Imams) who came before him. Indeed these are my true friends, those whom I have love and affection for and (they) are the noblest of people from my nation.” <ref name="mugahi1"/> | |||
Biharul Anwar, Volume 52, Page 129; al-Ghaybah of Shaykh Tusi | |||
===Anticipating the Advent of the Imam=== | |||
Imam Ja’far ibn Muhammad as-Sadiq said: " ... During that time (the period of the occultation), await the advent (of the Imam) every morning and evening ... " | |||
Usul al-Kafi, Volume 1, Page 323 | |||
In another saying narrated in one of the four main hadith books of Shia, Usul al-Kafi, the sixth Imam, Imam Sadegh (AS), states that if no one remains on the earth except two persons, one of them is the Hojat. | |||
Here Hojat refers to any of the twelve Imams in general and Imam Mahdi at our time in particular. | |||
Usul al-Kafi, the Hojat Part, Chapter 6, 1st Hadith. | |||
===When Will the Time, of his appearance in Masjidi-ll-Ḥarâm in Makkah, Come?=== | |||
Muhammad said: “The appointed time (of the Day of Resurrection) will not come until the one from among us (the Ahlul Bayt) will rise with the truth and make his advent , and this will take place when Allah, the Noble and Grand permits. So whoever obeys him shall be saved, and whoever goes against him will be destroyed...” <ref name="mugahi1"/> <br /> | |||
Wasa’il ash-Shi’a, Volume 7, Page 325, hadith 6 | |||
===Prepare for the Imam=== | |||
Imam Ja’far ibn Muhammad as-Sadiq said: “Each one of you must prepare (your weapons) for the advent of al-Qa’im (peace be upon him), even if it be (as little as) an arrow, because when Allah the High, knows that a person has this intention, then He will give him a longer life.” <ref name="mugahi1"/> | |||
Biharul Anwar, Volume 52, Page 366; al-Ghaybah of al-Nu’mani | |||
=== How to Die while on the Path of the Imâm<br /> === | |||
Imam Ja’far ibn Muhammad as-Sadiq said: “The person from amongst you who dies while awaiting this command is like a person who was with al-Qa’im in his tent ... no rather, he would be like a person who was fighting along-side him with his sword ... no rather, by Allah, he would be like the person who attained martyrdom along-side the Messenger of Allah (peace be upon him and his family).” <ref name="mugahi1"/> <br /> | |||
Biharul Anwar, Volume 52, Page 126; al-Mahasin | |||
===Other aḥâdîth about the Mahdî=== | |||
According to Moojan Momen, Shia traditions state that the Mahdi be "a young man of medium stature with a handsome face" and black hair and beard. "He will not come in an odd year will appear in Mecca between the corner of the ] and the station of Abraham and people will witness him there.<ref name=momen /> | |||
The Twelfth Imam will return as the Mahdi with "a company of his chosen ones," and his enemies will be led by the one-eyed ] and the ]. The two armies will fight "one final apocalyptic battle" where the Mahdi and his forces will prevail over evil. After the Mahdi has ruled ] for a number of years, ] will return.<ref name=momen /> | |||
] said: | |||
<blockquote>The Mahdi is the protector of the knowledge, the heir to the knowledge of all the ], and is aware of all things.<ref>''Bihar al-Anwar'': '''95''': 378; '''102''': 67, 117</ref><ref>''Mikyaal al-Makaarem'': '''1''': 49</ref></blockquote> | |||
<blockquote>The dominion (authority) of the Mahdi is one of the proofs that God has created all things; these are so numerous that his proofs will overcome (will be influential, will be dominant) everyone and nobody will have any counter-proposition against him.<ref>Baqr al-Majlisi 2003: 70</ref></blockquote> | |||
<blockquote>People will flee from him as sheep flee from the shepherd. Later, people will begin to look for a purifier. But since they can find none to help them but him, they will begin to run to him.<ref>''Bihar al-Anwar'': '''52''': 326</ref></blockquote> | |||
<blockquote>When matters are entrusted to competent , Almighty God will raise the lowest part of the world for him, and lower the highest places. So much that he will see the whole world as if in the palm of his hand. Which of you cannot see even a single hair in the palm of his hand?<ref>''Bihar al-Anwar'': '''5''': 328</ref></blockquote> | |||
<blockquote>In the time of the Mahdi, a Muslim in the East will be able to see his Muslim brother in the West, and he in the West will see him in the East.<ref>''Bihar al-Anwar'': '''52''': 391</ref></blockquote> | |||
], the Fourth (]) or Fifth (Twelver) Imam said of the Mahdi: | |||
<blockquote>The Master of the Command was named as the Mahdi because he will dig out the ] and other heavenly books from the cave in ]. He will judge among the ] according to the Torah; among the ] according to the ]; among the people of the Psalms in accordance with the ]; among the people of the Qur'an in accordance with the Qur'an.</blockquote> | |||
], the Sixth Imam, made the following prophecies: | |||
<blockquote>Abu Bashir says: When I asked Imam Ja'far al-Sadiq, "O son of the Messenger of God! Who is the Mahdi ('']'') of your clan ('']'')?", he replied: "The Mahdi will conquer the world; at that time the world will be illuminated by the light of God, and everywere in which those other than God are worshipped will become places where God is worshiped; and even if the ] do not wish it, the only faith on that day will be the religion of God.<ref>''Bihar al-Anwar'': '''51''': 146</ref></blockquote> | |||
<blockquote>Sadir al-Sayrafi says: I heard from Imam Abu Abdullah Ja'far al-Sadiq that: Our modest Imam, to whom this occultation belongs , who is deprived of and denied his rights, will move among them and wander through their markets and walk where they walk, but they will not recognize him ().<ref>Muhammad ibn Ibrahim Nomani: 189 (Sheikh Muhammad ibn Ibrahim Nomani, al-Ghaybah al-Nomani,p. 189</ref></blockquote> | |||
<blockquote>Abu Bashir says: I heard Imam Muhammad al-Baqr say: "He said: When the Mahdi appears he will follow in the path of the Messenger of God. Only he can explain the works of the Messenger of God.<ref>Muhammad ibn Ibrahim Nomani: 191</ref></blockquote> | |||
<blockquote>The face of the Mahdi shall shine upon the surface of the Moon.<ref name="ReferenceA">Ja'far al-Sadiq</ref></blockquote> | |||
==Ahmadiyya Viewpoint== | |||
], founder of the Ahmadiyya muslim movement, accepted as the Promised Messiah and Mahdi in Ahmadiyya]] | |||
{{See also|Prophethood in Ahmadiyya Islam|Jesus in Ahmadiyya Islam}} | |||
In ], the terms "]" and "Mahdi" are synonymous terms for one and the same person. Like the term Messiah which, among other meanings, in essence means being ''anointed'' by God or ''appointed'' by God the term "Mahdi" means ''guided'' by God, thus both imply a direct ordainment and a spiritual nurturing by God of a divinely chosen individual. According to Ahmadiyya thought, Messiahship is a phenomenon, through which a special emphasis is given on the transformation of a people by way of offering suffering for the sake of God instead of giving suffering (i.e. refraining from revenge). Ahmadi Muslims believe that this special emphasis was given through the person of ] and ] <ref>{{cite web|url=http://www.askislam.org/concepts/prophecy_and_prophethood/question_577.html |title=What is the different between a messiah and a prophet? |publisher=Ask Islam |date=1985-08-13 |accessdate=2012-04-29}}</ref> among others. | |||
These Muslims hold that the prophesied ] figures of various religions, the coming of the Messiah and Mahdi in fact were to be fulfilled in one person who was to represent all previous prophets,.<ref>{{cite web|url=http://www.alislam.org/quran/tafseer/?page=2739®ion=E1&CR= |title=The Holy Quran |publisher=Alislam.org |date= |accessdate=2012-04-29}}</ref> The prophecies concerning the Mahdi or the second coming of Jesus are seen by Ahmadis Muslims as metaphorical, in that one was to be born and rise within the dispensation of ], who by virtue of his similarity and affinity with Jesus of Nazareth, and the similarity in nature, temperament and disposition of the people of Jesus' time and the people of the time of the promised one (the Mahdi) is called by the same name. As the beliefs of all Muslims seems to be fulfilled yet in one person. Numerous Hadith are presented by the Ahmadi Muslims in support of their view such as one from ] which says: | |||
Ahmadi Muslims believe that the prophecies concerning the Mahdi and the second coming of Jesus have been fulfilled in the person of Mirza Ghulam Ahmad of ] (1835–1908) the founder of the true Islam, the Ahmadiyya Muslim Movement. Contrary to mainstream Islam the Ahmadi Muslims do not believe that Jesus is alive in heaven, but that he survived the crucifixion and migrated toward the east where he died a natural death and that Ghulam Ahmad was only the promised spiritual second coming and likeness of Jesus, the promised Messiah and Mahdi.{{citation needed|date=June 2013}} | |||
==Mahdavia Viewpoint== | |||
] is a sect within Islam, founded by ] commonly known as Nur Pak was a perfect Saint who claimed to be Imam Mahdi at the holy city of Mecca, right in front of Kaaba (between rukn and maqam) in the Hijri year 901(10th Hijri), and is revered as such by Mahdavia. Syed Muhammad Bin Abdullah was born in Jaunpur, traveled throughout India, Arabia and Khorasan, where he died at the town of Farah, Afghanistan at the age of 63. The Mahdavi regard Jaunpuri as the Imam Mahdi, the ] of Allah and the second most important figure after the Islamic prophet ]. ] | |||
By 14 he was already being called 'Asad ul Ulema', Arabic for lion of the learned or metaphorically to say best of the scholars. That was in the city of Jaunpur of that day. Which is also remembered as Shiraz-e-Hind. Like Shiraz was then a center for scholars in Persia, Jaunpur was the answer to it in India.<ref name="khalifatullahmehdi.info">http://khalifatullahmehdi.info/hadith.asp</ref> | |||
By 21 years of age he was hailed as 'Syed ul Aulia'; that is Arabic for - The Master (leader) of saints (spiritual saints, friends of God). This historical status of Syed Mohammad is an established fact recognized by many scholars of Islamic studies and historians, particularly those of Indian sub-continent. | |||
OPINION OF NON MAHDAVI SCHOLARS & HISTORIANS ABOUT SYED MUHAMMAD JAUNPURI: | |||
1.] : | |||
A notable sunni divine and scholar Shah Abdul Haq of Delhi, quoting from a book of another renowned sunni divine, “Shah Abdul Aziz”, “Tuhfa-e-Asna-i-Ashriya”, states that '''many sunni divines and ulema who were the contemporaries of Hazrat Mahdi and who were born just after his period, had great respect for him as a perfect saint. But in the matter of his claim to be the promised Mahdi, either they accepted it or preferred to remain impartial and silent. But the worldly wise ulema bitterly opposed him and his mission. | |||
''' In his famous work ‘Tazkira’, Moulana Azad quotes, Shah Abdul Haq, as saying,''' “In the matter of perfection of faith Syed Mohammed Jaunpuri had the same degree of attainment as Prophet Mohammed (A) had, but the difference lay in the fact that in the case of the Prophet it was inherent and in the case of Syed Mohammed, it was due to absolutely following the Prophet (A). This genuineness of adherence reached the stage of what was inherent”.''' Moulana Azad quoting this passage remarks: “what the disciples and followers speak in veneration is quite understandable but] who was born slightly after the period of Hazrat Mahdi and who is an authentic and reliable writer also uses such high expressions of praise which cause confusion in one's mind at the first sight” page 51 of ‘Tazkira’ 1968 Edition.<ref>http://khalifatullahmehdi.info/bookdetails.aspx?whichpage=0&bookdetid=220</ref> | |||
2.] : | |||
''''The really practical period of the Islamic teachings were started by the Mahdavia society. In fact this was an initial period which, alas! ended very quickly. No one was excluded from the order of ] and immortal reverence. Every Mahdavi was certain that he is a Muslim, and therefore, an Allah's official and his deputy in the world.''' Hence he looked at everything and action not with his eyes but with the eyes of Allah and gave precedence to the will of Allah on all his desires. | |||
In this period thousands of such people were seen who, for the sake of pronouncing the truth leave all their beloved, and in the path of Allah gladly tolerate all these harsh oppressions which they have to undergo at the hands of the worshippers of falsehood. | |||
==Persons claiming to be the Mahdi== | |||
{{Main|People claiming to be the Mahdi}} | |||
], a Sudanese Sufi sheikh, created a state, the '']'', on the basis of his claim to be the Mahdi.]] | |||
Various individuals have claimed to be the Mahdi. Similar to the notion of a ] in the ] religions, the notion of a Mahdi as a redeemer to establish a society has lent itself to various interpretations leading to different claims within minorities or by individuals within Islam. | |||
* The first historical reference to a movement using the name of Mahdi is ]'s rebellion against the ] in 686 CE, almost 50 years after Muhammad's death. Al-Mukhtar claimed that ], a son of the fourth ] and first ], ], was the Mahdi and would save the Muslim people from the rule of the ]s. Ibn al-Hanifiyyah himself was not actively involved in the rebellion, and when the Umayyads successfully quashed it, they left him undisturbed. | |||
* ] (1443–1505), founder of the ] sect, was born in ] in northeastern ] (in the modern-day state of ]), a descendant of the imam ] through ]. He claimed to be the Mahdi on three occasions, first in Mecca and then in two places in India, attracting a large following, although opposed by the ]. He died at the age of 63 in the year 1505 at ], ], and is buried in a sanctuary there. He ruled for seven years before his death | |||
* ] (1559–1613), from the south of Morocco, was a ] and religious scholar who proclaimed himself mahdi and lead a revolution (1610–13) against the reigning ]. | |||
* ] (1618–1694), from the Gujarat of India, was an influential religious leader who proclaimed himself mahdi. | |||
* The ], (Siyyid Ali Muhammad) claimed to be the Mahdi in 1844 A.D (in the year 1260 A.H), thereby founding the religion of ]. He was later ] in the town of ]. His remains are currently kept in a tomb at the ] in ], ]. The Báb is considered the forerunner of ], and both are considered prophets of the ]. The declaration by the Báb to be the Mahdi is considered by Baha'is to be the beginning of the ].<ref>{{cite book |last = Smith |first = P. |year = 1999 |title = A Concise Encyclopedia of the Bahá'í Faith |publisher = Oneworld Publications |location = Oxford, UK |pages = 55–59 & 229–230 |isbn = 1851681841 }}</ref> | |||
* ] (1845–1885), a ] Sufi sheikh of the Samaniyya order, declared himself Mahdi in June 1881 and went on to lead a ] against the ]. Although he died shortly after capturing the Sudanese capital, ], in 1885, the ] continued under his successor, ], until 1898, when it fell to the ] following the ]. | |||
* ] (1835–1908) claimed to be both the Mahdi and the ] in the late nineteenth century in ]. He founded the ] religious movement in 1889, which, although considered by its followers to be Islam in its pure form, is not recognized as such by the majority of mainstream Muslims. In 1974, the ] adopted a law ]. Since Ghulam Ahmad's death, the ] has been led by his ] and has grown considerably.<ref>http://www.alislam.org/topics/khilafat/khilafat-news-coverage.pdf</ref> | |||
* In the twentieth century, ] was proclaimed the Mahdi by his brother-in-law, ], who led over 200 militants to ] in ] in November 1979. The uprising was defeated after a two-week siege in which at least 300 people were killed. | |||
A number of people have been claimed to be the Mahdi by their followers or supporters, including: | |||
*] | |||
*] | |||
*] (according to the ]) | |||
*] (according to the ]) | |||
*] | |||
*] | |||
*] | |||
*] (according to ]) | |||
*], Javanese prince during the ] | |||
*], founder of the ] | |||
==Mahdi coauthorship controversy== | |||
In 2011, an academic paper on ] appeared in the journal ''Macromolecular Research'' (co-published with ]), claiming to be written by Mahdi Moeud Ajjalallah (literally, "The promised Mahdi, may God hasten ", as the first author, and Mohammad Reza Rostami Daronkola, as the second author.<ref>{{cite journal|author=Mahdi Moeud Ajjalallah|author2=Mohammad Reza Rostami Daronkola|title=Microstructure of poly(vinyl acetate)-block-poly(methyl acrylate-''co''-methyl methacrylate) block terpolymers. 2D NMR and thermal study|year=2011|volume=19|issue=2|pages=156–165|publisher=The Polymer Society of Korea, co-published with Springer|issn=1598-5032|doi=10.1007/s13233-011-0213-5|journal=Macromolecular Research}}</ref> Another paper with the same two authors was published online by ''Journal of Polymer Research'', published by Springer Netherlands.<ref>{{cite journal|title=Total spectral assignments and 2D NMR study of PVAc-b-PMA and PVAc-b-PMMA block copolymers|author=Mahdi Moeud Ajjalallah|author2=Mohammad Reza Rostami Daronkola|doi=10.1007/s10965-011-9598-2|date=April 19, 2011|publisher=Springer Netherlands|issn=1022-9760|journal=Journal of Polymer Research}}</ref> Rostami Daronkola, a former<ref name="bbcpersian">{{cite web|title=اعتراض به انتساب یک مقاله به امام دوازدهم شیعیان|url=http://www.bbc.co.uk/persian/iran/2011/05/110504_l39_isi_index_mehdi.shtml|date=May 4, 2011|work=BBC Persian|publisher=BBC|language=Persian|trans_title=Protests on the attribution of an article to the Twelfth Imam of the Shia|accessdate=May 5, 2011}}</ref> Assistant Professor at ], when asked about the inserted coauthor, said "Why shouldn't the ''Imam of the Time'', who is omnipresent, be present at chemistry labs?"<ref>چرا امام زمان که در همه جا حضور دارند در آزمایشگاههای شیمی حضور نداشته باشند.</ref> Tarbiat Modares University has protested the publication of the article, calling the act "offensive".<ref name="bbcpersian"/> The faculty members of the university have also asked for a retraction of the article, saying that the name of the university has been "abused".<ref name="bbcpersian"/> | |||
==Modern Views== | |||
Even though Mahdism is an important part of Sunni and Shi’ite literature, there is an alternative opinion that Mahdism entered Islam from Judeo-Christian teachings. ] might have been the historical setting for the birth of Messianism which was passed on to Judaism, Christianity and Islam. During the life of Muhammad (570-632) there remained a lack for a distinctive Islamic savior figure as evidenced with the lack of any clear indication in Quran or earlier Hadith collections, how ever within half a century of Muhammad’s death, the position was filled by the figure of the Mahdi.<ref name=arjomand2 /><ref name=etan/> | |||
The ] (680-692) marks the true birth of the messianic figure of Mahdi. The term Mahdi was first used in a messianic sense during the rebellion of ] in Kufa in 683 on behalf of ]. By the time of the ] revolution in the year 750, Mahdism was already a known concept. Evidence shows that the first Abbasid caliph assumed the title of the Mahdi for himself. Many traditions were introduced to support political interests, especially Anti-Abbassid sentiments, for example Mahdi coming will be accompanied by the raising of a black standard in Khurasan. It appears to have been introduced to prove the genuiness and credibilities of Sarbadarid dynasty (1337–61) whose capital was Khurasan and the colour of their flag was black or the pure soul will be assassinated. Muhammad al-Nafs al-Zakiyya, also known as ‘pure soul’ was a descendent of Imam Hasan and a chief rebel against Abbassids and was assassinated.<ref name=arjomand2 /><ref name=reza /> | |||
Mahdi appeared in early Shi’ite narratives, spread widely among Shi’ite groups and became dissociated from its historical figure, Muhammad al-Hanafiyyah. It is unquestionable that the idea of the hidden Imam was projected upon several Imams in turn.<ref name=corbin /> During the 10th century, based on the doctrinal ground that had been laid in previous generations, the doctrine of Mahdism was extensively expanded by ], Ibrahim al-Qumi and Ibn Babwayhi.<ref name=etan /> In Shi’ism the crystallization of the doctrine of Occultation occurs in about 912 (The doctrine of the Occultation declares that the Twelfth Imam did not die but has been concealed by God from the eyes of men). The Hidden Imam, the Mahdi, is in occultation awaiting the time that God has ordered for his return. This return is envisaged as occurring shortly before the final Day of judgment.<ref name=momen /> | |||
==Possible Biblical interpretations== | |||
In their book, ''Al Mahdi and the End of Time'', Muhammad ibn Izzat and Muhammad Arif, two well-known ] authors, identify the Mahdi in the ], quoting the hadith narrator ]. | |||
In one place, they write, {{quote|“I find the Mahdi recorded in the books of the Prophets... For instance, the ] says: “And I saw and behold a ]. He that sat on him went forth conquering and to conquer.”}} | |||
Ibn Izzat and Arif then go on to say: {{quote|“It is clear that this man is the Mahdi who will ride the white horse and judge by the Qur’an (with justice) and with whom will be men with marks of prostration (]) on their foreheads.”<ref>{{cite book | |||
| last = Izzat, Arif | |||
| first = Muhammad | |||
| title = 'Al Mahdi and the End of Time' | |||
| publisher = ] | |||
| year = 1997 | |||
| isbn = 1-870582-75-6 }} p. 15,16</ref>}} | |||
==Mahdi in Sikhism== | |||
In ], the ] scripture attributed to the tenth ] ] prophesizes the Mahdi (referred to as "Mahdi Meer") to be born for a purpose of defeating ], an ] of ]. As Kalki becomes egoistic and begins referring to himself as the Almighty, the powerful Mahdi will slay him and rule the world.<ref>page 146, The Encyclopedia of Sikhism (over 1000 Entries), HS Singha</ref> | |||
==See also== | ==See also== | ||
{{Portal|Islam}} | {{Portal|Islam}} | ||
{{div col|colwidth=20em}} | {{div col|colwidth=20em}} | ||
*] | |||
* ] (the Shi'a expectations) | |||
*] | |||
* ] | |||
* ] | * ] | ||
* ] | |||
* ] | |||
* ] | |||
* ] | |||
* ] | |||
* ] | |||
* ] | |||
{{div col end}} | {{div col end}} | ||
==Notes== | |||
{{Notelist}} | |||
==References== | ==References== | ||
{{Reflist|colwidth=25em|refs= | {{Reflist|colwidth=25em|refs= | ||
<ref name=Glasse>{{Cite encyclopedia|title=Mahdi|year=2001|encyclopedia=The new encyclopedia of Islam|editor-last=Glassé|editor-first=Cyril|page=280|place=Walnut Creek, CA|url=https://books.google.com/books?id=focLrox-frUC&pg=PA280|publisher=AltaMira (Rowman & Littlefield)|isbn=0-7591-0190-6}}</ref> | |||
<ref name=arjomand2 >{{cite journal|last=Arjomand|first=Amir|title=Origins and Development of Apocalypticism and Messianism in Early Islam: 610-750 CE|year=2000|publisher=Congress of the International Committee of the Historical Sciences|location=Oslo|url=http://www.oslo2000.uio.no/program/mt2b.htm}}</ref> | |||
<ref name=reza>{{cite book|last=Reza|first=Saiyed Jafar|title=The essence of Islam|publisher=Concept Pub. Co.|isbn=9788180698323|pages=57}}</ref> | |||
<ref name=corbin>{{cite book|last=Henry|first=Corbin|title=History of Islamic philosophy|year=1993|publisher=Kegan Paul International|isbn=9780710304162|pages=68|edition=Reprinted.}}</ref> | |||
<ref name=etan>{{cite journal|last=Kohlberg|first=Etan|title=From Imamiyya to Ithna-ashariyya|journal=Bulletin of the School of Oriental and African Studies|date=24 December 2009|volume=39|issue=03|pages=521–534|doi=10.1017/S0041977X00050989}}</ref> | |||
<ref name=momen >{{cite book|last=Momen|first=Moojan|title=An introduction to Shiʻi Islam : the history and doctrines of Twelver Shiʻism|year=1985|publisher=G. Ronald|isbn=9780853982005|pages=75,166–168}}</ref> | |||
}} | |||
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==Bibliography== | |||
<ref name=reza>{{cite book|last=Reza|first=Saiyed Jafar|title=The essence of Islam|publisher=Concept Pub. Co.|isbn=9788180698323|pages=57|year=2012}}</ref> | |||
Not in use--> | |||
<ref name=etan>{{cite journal|last=Kohlberg|first=Etan|title=From Imamiyya to Ithna-ashariyya|journal=Bulletin of the School of Oriental and African Studies|date=24 December 2009|volume=39|issue=3|pages=521–534|doi=10.1017/S0041977X00050989|s2cid=155070530}}</ref> | |||
===Historical sources=== | |||
}} | |||
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*'']'' | |||
==Sources== | |||
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* Abdulaziz Abdulhussein Sachedina, ''Islamic Messianism: The Idea of the Mahdi in Twelver Shi'ism'' (Albany: ], 1981) ISBN 0-87395-458-0 | |||
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* {{cite journal |last1=Fishman |first1=Jason Eric |last2=Soage |first2=Ana Belén |title=The Nation of Islam and the Muslim World: Theologically Divorced and Politically United |journal=Religion Compass |volume=7 |issue=2 |year=2013 |pages=59–68 |doi=10.1111/rec3.12032}} | |||
* {{cite book |last = Friedmann |first = Yohanan |author-link = Yohanan Friedmann |title = Prophecy Continuous: Aspects of Ahmadi Religious Thought and its Medieval Background |url=https://books.google.com/books?id=NjzbzQEACAAJ |year = 1989 |publisher = University of California Press |location = Berkeley and Los Angeles |isbn = 0520057724}} | |||
* {{cite book |last = Furnish |first = Timothy R. |title = Holiest Wars: Islamic Mahdis, Jihad and Osama Bin Laden |url=https://books.google.com/books?id=lGjMWnS5yK8C |year = 2005 |publisher = Praeger |location = Westport, CT |isbn = 0275983838}} | |||
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* {{cite book |last=Halm | first=Heinz |author-link = Heinz Halm |title=Das Reich des Mahdi: Der Aufstieg der Fatimiden | language = de | trans-title = The Empire of the Mahdi: The Rise of the Fatimids | publisher = C. H. Beck | location = Munich | year = 1991 | isbn = 978-3406354977 }} | |||
* {{cite book|last=Halm|first=Heinz|author-link=Heinz Halm|year=1997|title=Shi'a Islam: From Religion to Revolution|translator-last= Brown|translator-first= Allison|publisher=Markus Wiener Publishers|location=Princeton|isbn=1558761349|url-access=registration|url=https://archive.org/details/shiaislamfromrel0000halm}} | |||
* {{cite book |last = Halm |first = Heinz |translator1-last = Watson |translator1-first = Janet |translator2-last = Hill |translator2-first = Marian |title = Shi'ism |url=https://archive.org/details/shiism0000halm_l8s2 |edition = 2nd|year = 2004 |publisher = Edinburgh University Press |location = Edinburgh |isbn = 0748618880}} | |||
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* {{cite encyclopedia |year=2007 |title=Islam in Iran ix. The Deputies of Mahdi |encyclopedia=Encyclopaedia Iranica |url=https://iranicaonline.org/articles/islam-in-iran-ix-the-deputies-of-mahdi |volume=XIV/2 |pages=143–146 |author-first=Verena |author-last=Klemm}} | |||
* {{cite book |last=Leirvik |first=Oddbjørn |year=2010 |title=Images of Jesus Christ in Islam |url=https://books.google.com/books?id=Gzd_I2AFswwC |edition=2nd |publisher=Continuum International Publishing Group |location=London |isbn=978-1441177391}} | |||
* {{cite journal |last = Madelung |first = Wilferd |author-link=Wilferd Madelung|title = ʿAbd Allāh b. al-Zubayr and the Mahdi |journal = ] |year = 1981 |volume = 40 |number = 4 |pages = 291–305 |doi = 10.1086/372899 |s2cid = 161061748 }} | |||
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* {{cite book |last = Sachedina |first = Abdulaziz A. |title = Islamic Messianism: The Idea of Mahdi in Twelver Shi'ism |url=https://books.google.com/books?id=5zUIYGQT4DwC |year = 1981 |publisher = State University of New York Press |location = Albany|isbn = 978-0873954426}} | |||
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* {{cite book |author-last=Sobhani |author-first=Ja'far |url=http://ijtihadnet.com/wp-content/uploads/Doctrines-of_Shii-Islam.pdf |title=Doctrines of Shi'i Islam |publisher=I.B. Tauris |year=2001 |isbn= |translator-last=Shah-Kazemi |translator-first=Reza |author-link=Ja'far Sobhani}}{{ISBN?}} | |||
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*{{cite book|title=Voices of Islam|volume=1|editor-first=Vincent J.|editor-last= Cornell|publisher=Greenwood Publishing Group|year= 2006|url=https://archive.org/details/voicesofislam0001unse/mode/|isbn= 978-0275987329|chapter=What is Shiite Islam?|author1-first=Azim|author1-last=Nanji|author2-first=Farhad|author2-last=Daftary}} | |||
{{Doomsday}} | |||
==External links== | |||
{{Authority control}} | |||
{{Wikiquote}} | |||
{{Wiktionary}} | |||
{{NIE Poster|year=1905}} | |||
* Biographies, Teachings, Qur'anic Ayah and Ahadith in Proofs about Imam Mahdi, testimonials and much more. | |||
* an article by Encyclopædia Britannica Online | |||
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Latest revision as of 16:53, 9 January 2025
Messianic figure in Islamic eschatology This article is about the concept of an eschatological messianic savior in Islam. For other uses, see Mahdi (disambiguation).
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The Mahdi (Arabic: ٱلْمَهْدِيّ, romanized: al-Mahdī, lit. 'the Guided'; Persian: مهدی) is a figure in Islamic eschatology who is believed to appear at the End of Times to rid the world of evil and injustice. He is said to be a descendant of Muhammad, who will appear shortly before Jesus.
The Mahdi is mentioned in several canonical compilations of hadith, but is absent from the Quran and the two most-revered Sunni hadith collections, Sahih al-Bukhari and Sahih Muslim. Thus, some Sunni theologians have questioned the orthodoxy of the Mahdi. The doctrine of the Mahdi seems to have gained traction during the confusion and unrest of the religious and political upheavals of the first and second centuries of Islam. Some of the first references to the Mahdi appear in the late 7th century, when the revolutionary Mukhtar al-Thaqafi declared Muhammad ibn al-Hanafiyya, a son of Caliph Ali (r. 656–661), to be the Mahdi. Although the concept of a Mahdi is not an essential doctrine in Islam, it is popular among Muslims. Over centuries, there have been a vast number of Mahdi claimants.
The Mahdi features in both Shia and Sunni branches of Islam, though they differ extensively on his attributes and status. Among Twelver Shias, the Mahdi is believed to be Imam Muhammad al-Mahdi, twelfth Imam, son of the eleventh Imam, Hasan al-Askari (d. 874), who is said to be in occultation (ghayba) by divine will. This is rejected by Sunnis, who assert that the Mahdi has not been born yet.
Etymology
The term Mahdi is derived from the Arabic root h-d-y (ه-د-ي), commonly used to mean "divine guidance". Although the root appears in the Qur'an at multiple places and in various contexts, the word Mahdi never occurs in the book. The associated verb is hada, which means to guide. However, Mahdi can be read in active voice, where it means the one who guides, as well as passive voice, where it means the one who is guided.
Historical development
Pre-Islamic ideas
Some historians suggest that the term itself was probably introduced into Islam by southern Arabian tribes who had settled in Syria in the mid-7th century. They believed that the Mahdi would lead them back to their homeland and re-establish the Himyarite Kingdom. They also believed that he would eventually conquer Constantinople. It has also been suggested that the concept of the Mahdi may have been derived from earlier messianic Jewish and Christian beliefs. Accordingly, traditions were introduced to support certain political interests, especially anti-Abbasid sentiments. These traditions about the Mahdi appeared only at later times in hadith books such as Sunan Abi Dawud and Sunan al-Tirmidhi, but are absent from the early works of Muhammad al-Bukhari and Muslim ibn al-Hajjaj.
Origin
The term al-Mahdi was employed from the beginning of Islam, but only as an honorific epithet ("the guide") and without any messianic significance. As an honorific, it was used in some instances to describe Muhammad (by Hassan ibn Thabit), Abraham, al-Husayn, and various Umayyad caliphs (هداة مهديون, hudat mahdiyyun). During the Second Muslim Civil War (680–692), after the death of Mu'awiya I (r. 661–680), the term acquired a new meaning of a ruler who would restore Islam to its perfect form and restore justice after oppression. Abd Allah ibn al-Zubayr, who laid claim to the caliphate against the Umayyads and found temporary success during the civil war, presented himself in this role. Although the title Mahdi was not applied to him, his career as the anti-caliph significantly influenced the future development of the concept. A hadith was promulgated in which Muhammad prophesies the coming of a just ruler.
There will arise a difference after the death of a caliph, and a man of the people of Medina will go forth fleeing to Mecca. Then some of the people of Mecca will come to him and will make him rise in revolt against his will ... An expedition will be sent against him from Syria but will be swallowed up ... in the desert between Mecca and Medina. When the people see this, the righteous men ... of Syria and ... Iraq will come to him and pledge allegiance to him. Thereafter a man of the Quraysh will arise whose maternal uncles are of Kalb. He will send an expedition against them, but they will defeat them ... He will then divide the wealth and act among them according to the Sunna of their Prophet. Islam will settle down firmly on the ground ... He will stay seven years and then die, and the Muslims will pray over him.
Refusing to recognize the new caliph, Yazid I (r. 680–683), after Mu'awiya's death in 680, Ibn al-Zubayr had fled to the Meccan sanctuary. From there he launched anti-Umayyad propaganda, calling for a shura of the Quraysh to elect a new caliph. Those opposed to the Umayyads were paying him homage and asking for the public proclamation of his caliphate, forcing Yazid to send an army to dislodge him in 683. After defeating rebels in the nearby Medina, the army besieged Mecca but was forced to withdraw as a result of Yazid's sudden death shortly afterward. Ibn al-Zubayr was recognized caliph in Arabia, Iraq, and parts of Syria, where Yazid's son and successor Mu'awiya II (r. 683–684) held power in Damascus and adjoining areas. The hadith hoped to enlist support against an expected Umayyad campaign from Syria. The Umayyads did indeed send another army to Mecca in 692, but contrary to the hadith's prediction was successful in removing Ibn al-Zubayr. The hadith lost relevance soon afterward, but resurfaced in the Basran hadith circles a generation later, this time removed from its original context and understood as referring to a future restorer.
Around the time when Ibn al-Zubayr was trying to expand his dominion, the pro-Alid revolutionary al-Mukhtar al-Thaqafi took control of the Iraqi garrison town of Kufa in the name of Ali's son Muhammad ibn al-Hanafiyya, whom he proclaimed as the Mahdi in the messianic sense. The association of the name Muhammad with the Mahdi seems to have originated with Ibn al-Hanafiyya, who also shared the epithet Abu al-Qasim with Muhammad, the Islamic prophet. Among the Umayyads, the caliph Sulayman ibn Abd al-Malik (r. 715–717) encouraged the belief that he was the Mahdi, and other Umayyad rulers, like Umar ibn Abd al-Aziz (r. 717–720), have been addressed as such in the panegyrics of Jarir (d. 728) and al-Farazdaq (d. 728–730).
Early discussions about the identity of the Mahdi by religious scholars can be traced back to the time after the Second Fitna. These discussions developed in different directions and were influenced by traditions (hadith) attributed to Muhammad. In Umayyad times, scholars and traditionists not only differed on which caliph or rebel leader should be designated as Mahdi but also on whether the Mahdi is a messianic figure and if signs and predictions of his time had been satisfied. In Medina, among the conservative religious circles, the belief in Umar ibn Abd al-Aziz being the Mahdi was widespread. Said ibn al-Musayyib (d. 715) is said to identify Umar ibn Abd al-Aziz as the Mahdi long before his reign. The Basran, Abu Qilabah, supported the view that Umar ibn Abd al-Aziz was the Mahdi. Hasan al-Basri (d. 728) opposed the concept of a Muslim Messiah but believed that if there was the Mahdi, it was Umar ibn Abd al-Aziz.
By the time of the Abbasid Revolution in 750, Mahdi was already a known concept. Evidence shows that the first Abbasid caliph al-Saffah (r. 750–754) assumed the title of "the Mahdi" for himself.
Shia Islam
In Shia Islam, the eschatological Mahdi was commonly given the epithet al-Qa'im (القائم), which can be translated as 'he who will rise,' signifying his rise against tyranny in the end of time. Distinctively Shia is the notion of temporary absence or occultation of the Mahdi, whose life has been prolonged by divine will. An intimately related Shia notion is that of raj'a (lit. 'return'), which often means the return to life of (some) Shia Imams, particularly Husayn ibn Ali, to exact their revenge on their oppressors.
Traditions that predicted the occultation and rise of a future imam were already in circulation for a century before the death of the eleventh Imam in 260 (874 CE), and possibly as early as the seventh-century CE. These traditions were appropriated by various Shia sects in different periods, including the now-extinct sects of Nawusites and Waqifites. For instance, these traditions were cited by the now-extinct Kaysanites, who denied the death of Ibn al-Hanafiyya, and held that he was in hiding in the Razwa mountains near Medina. This likely originated with two groups of his supporters, namely, southern Arabian settlers and local recent converts in Iraq, who seem to have spread the notions now known as occultation and raj'a. Later on, these traditions were also employed by the Waqifites to argue that Musa al-Kazim, the seventh Imam, had not died but was in occultation.
In parallel, traditions predicting the occultation of a future imam also persisted in the writings of the mainstream Shia, who later formed the Twelvers. Based on this material, the Twelver doctrine of occultation crystallized in the first half of the fourth (tenth) century, in the works of Ibrahim al-Qummi (d. 919), Ya'qub al-Kulayni (d. 941), and Ibn Babawayh (d. 991), among others. This period also saw a transition in Twelver arguments from a traditionist to a rationalist approach in order to vindicate the occultation of the twelfth Imam.
The Twelver authors also aim to establish that the description of Mahdi in Sunni sources applies to the twelfth Imam. Their efforts gained momentum in the seventh (thirteenth) century when some notable Sunni scholars endorsed the Shia view of the Mahdi, including the Shafi'i traditionist Muhammad ibn Yusuf al-Gandji. Since then, Amir-Moezzi writes, there is Sunni support from time to time for the Twelvers' view of Mahdi. There has also been some support for the mahdiship of the twelfth Imam in Sufi circles, for instance, by the Egyptian Sufi al-Sha'rani.
Before the rise of the Fatimid Caliphate, as a major Isma'ili Sh'a dynasty, the terms Mahdi and Qa'im were used interchangeably for the messianic imam anticipated in Shia traditions. With the rise of the Fatimids in the tenth century CE, however, al-Qadi al-Nu'man argued that some of these predictions had materialized by the first Fatimid caliph, Abd Allah al-Mahdi Billah, while the rest would be fulfilled by his successors. Henceforth, their literature referred to the awaited eschatological imam only as Qa'im (instead of Mahdi). In Zaydi view, imams are not endowed with superhuman qualities, and expectations for their mahdiship are thus often marginal. One exception is the now-extinct Husaynites in Yemen, who denied the death of al-Husayn ibn al-Qasim al-Iyani and awaited his return.
In Islamic doctrine
Sunni Islam
In Sunni Islam, the Mahdi doctrine is not theologically important and remains as a popular belief instead. Of the six canonical Sunni hadith compilations, three—Abi Dawud, Ibn Maja, and al-Tirmidhi—contain traditions on the Mahdi; the compilations of al-Bukhari and Muslim—considered the most authoritative by the Sunnis and the earliest of the six—do not, nor does al-Nasa'i. Some Sunnis, including the philosopher and historian Ibn Khaldun (d. 1406), and reportedly also Hasan al-Basri, an influential early theologian and exegete, deny the Mahdi being a separate figure, holding that Jesus will fulfill this role and judge over mankind; Mahdi is thus considered a title for Jesus when he returns. Others, like the historian and the Qur'an commentator Ibn Kathir (d. 1373), elaborated a whole apocalyptic scenario which includes prophecies about the Mahdi, Jesus, and the Dajjal (the antichrist) during the end times.
The common opinion among the Sunnis is that the Mahdi is an expected ruler to be sent by God before the end times to re-establish righteousness. He is held to be from among the descendants of Muhammad through his daughter Fatima and her husband Ali, and his physical characteristics including a broad forehead and curved nose. He will eradicate injustice and evil from the world. He will be from the Hasanid branch of Muhammad's descendants, as opposed to the Shia belief that he is of the Husaynid line. The Mahdi's name would be Muhammad and his father's name would be Abd Allah. Abu Dawud quotes Muhammad as saying: "The Mahdi will be from my family, from the descendants of Fatimah". Another hadith states:
Even if only one day remains , God will lengthen this day until He calls forth a man from me, or from the family of my house, his name matching mine and his father's name matching that of my father. He will fill the Earth with equity and justice just as it had previously been filled with injustice and oppression.
Before the arrival of the Mahdi, the earth would be filled with anarchy and chaos. Divisions and civil wars, moral degradation, and worldliness would be prevalent among the Muslims. Injustice and oppression would be rampant in the world. In the aftermath of the death of a king, the people would quarrel among themselves, and the as yet unrecognized Mahdi would flee from Medina to Mecca to take refuge in the Ka'ba. He would be the Mahdi recognized as ruler by the people. The Dajjal would appear and will spread corruption in the world. With an army bearing black banners, which would come to his aid from the east, the Mahdi would fight the Dajjal, and will be able to defeat him. Dressed in saffron robes with his head anointed, Jesus would descend at the point of a white minaret of the Umayyad Mosque in eastern Damascus (believed to be the Minaret of Jesus) and join the Mahdi. Jesus would pray behind the Mahdi and then kill the Dajjal. The Gog and Magog would also appear wreaking havoc before their final defeat by the forces of Jesus. Although not as significant as the Dajjal and the Gog and Magog, the Sufyani, another representative of the forces of dark, also features in the Sunni traditions. He will rise in Syria before the appearance of Mahdi. When the latter appears, the Sufyani, along with his army, will either be swallowed up en route to Mecca by the earth with God's command or defeated by the Mahdi. Jesus and the Mahdi will then conquer the world and establish caliphate. The Mahdi will die after 7 to 13 years, whereas Jesus after 40 years. Their deaths would be followed by reappearance of corruption before the final end of the world.
Shia Islam
Twelver
Main article: Muhammad al-Mahdi Further information: Occultation (Islam) and Qa'im Al MuhammadIn Twelver Shi'ism, the largest Shia branch, the belief in the messianic imam is not merely a part of creed, but the pivot. For the Twelver Shia, the Mahdi was born but disappeared, and would remain hidden from humanity until he reappears to bring justice to the world in the end of time, a doctrine known as the Occultation. This imam in occultation is the twelfth imam, Muhammad, son of the eleventh imam, Hasan al-Askari. According to the Twelvers, the Mahdi was born in Samarra around 868, though his birth was kept hidden from the public. He lived under his father's care until 874 when the latter was killed by the Abbasids.
Minor Occultation
When his father died in 874, possibly poisoned by the Abbasids, the Mahdi went into occultation by the divine command and was hidden from public view for his life was in danger from the Abbasids. Only a few of the elite among the Shia, known as the deputies (سفراء, sufara; sing. سفير safir) of the twelfth imam, were able to communicate with him; hence the occultation in this period is referred to as the Minor Occultation (ghayba al-sughra).
The first of the deputies is held to have been Uthman ibn Sa'id al-Amri, a trusted companion and confidant of the eleventh imam. Through him the Mahdi would answer the demands and questions of the Shia. He was later succeeded by his son Muhammad ibn Uthman al-Amri, who held the office for some fifty years and died in 917. His successor Husayn ibn Rawh al-Nawbakhti was in the office until his death in 938. The next deputy, Ali ibn Muhammad al-Simari, abolished the office on the orders of the imam just a few days before his death in 941.
Major Occultation
With the death of the fourth agent, thus began the Major Occultation (الغيبة الكبرى, ghayba al-kubra), in which the communication between the Mahdi and the faithful was severed. The leadership vacuum in the Twelver community was gradually filled by jurists. During the Major Occultation, the Mahdi roams the earth and is sustained by God. He is the lord of the time (صاحب الزمان sahib az-zamān) and does not age. Although his whereabouts and the exact date of his return are unknown, the Mahdi is nevertheless believed to contact some of his Shia if he wishes. The accounts of these encounters are numerous and widespread in the Twelver community. Shia scholars have argued that the longevity of the Mahdi is not unreasonable given the long lives of Khidr, Jesus, and the Dajjal, as well as secular reports about long-lived men. Along these lines, Tabatabai emphasizes the miraculous qualities of al-Mahdi, adding that his long life, while unlikely, is not impossible. He is viewed as the sole legitimate ruler of the Muslim world and the constitution of the Islamic Republic of Iran recognizes him as the head of the state.
Reappearance
Before his reappearance (Arabic: ظهور, romanized: ṭuhūr), the world will plunge into chaos, where immorality and ignorance will be commonplace, the Qur'an will be forgotten, and religion will be abandoned. There will be plagues, earthquakes, floods, wars and death. The Sufyani will rise and lead people astray. The Mahdi will then reappear in Mecca, with the sword of Ali (ḏū l-fiqār) in his hand, between the corner of the Ka'ba and the station of Abraham.
By some accounts, he will reappear on the day of Ashura (the tenth of Muharram), the day the third Imam Husayn ibn Ali was slain. He will be "a young man of medium stature with a handsome face," with black hair and beard. A divine cry will call the people of the world to his aid, after which the angels, jinns, and humans will flock to the Mahdi. This is often followed shortly by another supernatural cry from the earth that invites men to join the enemies of the Mahdi, and would appeal to disbelievers and hypocrites.
The Mahdi will then go to Kufa, which will become his capital, and send troops to kill the Sufyani in Damascus. Husayn and his slain partisans are expected to resurrect to avenge their deaths, known as the doctrine of raj'a (lit. 'return'). The episode of Jesus' return in the Twelver doctrine is similar to the Sunni belief, although in some Twelver traditions it is the Mahdi who would kill the Dajjal. Those who hold enmity towards Ali (Arabic: نَواصِب, romanized: nawāṣib, lit. 'haters') will be subject to jizya (poll tax) or killed if they do not accept Shia Islam.
The Mahdi is also viewed as the restorer of true Islam, and the restorer of other monotheistic religions after their distortion and abandonment. He establishes the kingdom of God on earth and Islamizes the whole world. In their true form, it is believed, all monotheistic religions are essentially identical to Islam as "submission to God." It is in this sense, according to Mohammad Ali Amir Moezzi, that one should understand the claims that al-Mahdi will impose Islam on everyone. His rule will be paradise on earth, which will last for seventy years until his death, though other traditions state 7, 19, or 309 years.
Isma'ilism
In Isma'ilism a distinct concept of the Mahdi developed, with select Isma'ili Imams representing the Mahdi or al-Qa'im at various times. When the sixth Shia imam Ja'far al-Sadiq died, some of his followers held his already dead son Isma'il ibn Ja'far to be the imam asserting that he was alive and will return as the Mahdi. Another group accepted his death and acknowledged his son Muhammad ibn Isma'il as the imam instead. When he died, his followers too denied his death and believed that he was the last imam and the Mahdi. By the mid-9th century, Isma'ili groups of different persuasions had coalesced into a unified movement centered in Salamiyya in central Syria, and a network of activists was working to collect funds and amass weapons for the return of the Mahdi Muhammad ibn Isma'il, who would overthrow the Abbasids and establish his righteous caliphate. The propaganda of the Mahdi's return had a special appeal to peasants, Bedouins, and many of the later-to-be Twelver Shias, who were in a state of confusion (hayra) in the aftermath of the death of their 11th imam Hasan al-Askari, and resulted in many conversions.
In 899, the leader of the movement, Sa'id ibn al-Husayn, declared himself the Mahdi. This brought about schism in the unified Isma'ili community as not all adherents of the movement accepted his Mahdist claims. Those in Iraq and Arabia, known as Qarmatians after their leader Hamdan Qarmat, still held that Muhammad ibn Isma'il was the awaited Mahdi and denounced the Salamiyya-based Mahdism. In the Qarmati doctrine, the Mahdi was to abrogate the Islamic law (the Sharia) and bring forth a new message. In 931, the then Qarmati leader Abu Tahir al-Jannabi declared a Persian prisoner named Abu'l-Fadl al-Isfahani as the awaited Mahdi. The Mahdi went on to denounce Moses, Jesus, and Muhammad as liars, abolished Islam, and instituted the cult of fire. Abu Tahir had to depose him as imposter and had him executed.
Meanwhile, in Syria, Sa'id ibn al-Husayn's partisans took control of the central Syria in 903, and for a time the Friday sermon was read in the name of the "Successor, the rightly-guided Heir, the Lord of the Age, the Commander of the Faithful, the Mahdi". Eventually, the uprising was routed by the Abbasids. This forced Sa'id to flee from Syria to North Africa, where he founded the Fatimid Caliphate in Ifriqiya in 909. There he assumed the regnal name al-Mahdi Billah; as the historian Heinz Halm comments, the singular, semi-divine figure of the Mahdi was thus reduced to an adjective in a caliphal title, 'the Imam rightly guided by God' (al-imam al-mahdi bi'llah): instead of the promised messiah, al-Mahdi presented himself merely as one in a long sequence of imams descending from Ali and Fatima.
Messianic expectations associated with the Mahdi nevertheless did not materialize, contrary to the expectations of his propagandists and followers who expected him to do wonders. Al-Mahdi attempted to downplay messianism and asserted that the propaganda of Muhammad ibn Isma'il's return as the Mahdi had only been a ruse to avoid Abbasid persecution and protect the real imam predecessors of his. The Mahdi was actually a collective title of the true imams from the progeny of Ja'far al-Sadiq. In a bid to gain time, al-Mahdi also sought to shift the messianic expectations on his son, al-Qa'im: by renaming himself as Abdallah Abu Muhammad, and his son as Abu'l-Qasim Muhammad rather than his original name, Abd al-Rahman, the latter would bear the name Abu'l-Qasim Muhammad ibn Abdallah. This was the name of the Islamic prophet Muhammad, and it had been prophesied that the Mahdi would also bear it. The Fatimids eventually dropped the millenarian rhetoric.
The Tayyibi Musta'li Isma'ili Shia believe that their Occulted Imam and Mahdi is Abu'l-Qasim al-Tayyib, son of the Fatimid Caliph Al-Amir bi-Ahkam Allah.
Zaydism
In Zaydism, the concept of imamate is different from the Isma'ili and Twelver branches; a Zaydi Imam is any respectable person from the descendants of Ali and Fatima who lays claim to political leadership and struggles for its acquisition. As such, the Zaydi imamate doctrine lacks eschatological characteristics and there is no end-times redeemer in Zaydism. The title of mahdi has been applied to several Zaydi imams as an honorific over the centuries.
Ahmadiyya belief
Further information: Mirza Ghulam AhmadIn the Ahmadiyya belief, the prophesied eschatological figures of Christianity and Islam, the Messiah and Mahdi, actually refer to the same person. These prophecies were fulfilled in Mirza Ghulam Ahmad (1835–1908), the founder of the movement; he is held to be the Mahdi and the manifestation of Jesus. However, the historical Jesus in their view, although escaped crucifixion, nevertheless died and will not be coming back. Instead, God made Mirza Ghulam Ahmad the exact alike of Jesus in character and qualities. Similarly, the Mahdi is not an apocalyptic figure to launch global jihad and conquer the world, but a peaceful mujaddid (renewer of religion), who spreads Islam with "heavenly signs and arguments".
Mahdi claimants
Main article: List of Mahdi claimantsThroughout history, various individuals have claimed to be or were proclaimed to be the Mahdi. Claimants have included Muhammad Jaunpuri, the founder of the Mahdavia sect; Ali Muhammad Shirazi, the founder of Bábism; Muhammad Ahmad, who established the Mahdist State in Sudan in the late 19th century. The Iranian dissident Massoud Rajavi, the leader of the MEK, also claimed to be a 'representative' of the Mahdi. The adherents of the Nation of Islam hold Wallace Fard Muhammad, the founder of the movement, to be the Messiah and the Mahdi. Adnan Oktar, a Turkish cult leader, is considered by his followers as the Mahdi.
Ibn Khaldun noted a pattern where embracing a Mahdi claimant enabled unity among tribes and/or a region, often enabled them to forcibly seize power, but the lifespan of such a force was usually limited, as their Mahdi had to conform to hadith prophesies—winning their battles and bringing peace and justice to the world before Judgement Day—which (so far) none have.
Comparative religion
Buddhism
The Mahdi figure in Islam can be likened to the Maitreya figure of Buddhism. Both are prophesied saviors sharing a messianic-like quality, and both are predicted to hold a position of world rulership.
Judaism
Main article: Messiah in JudaismThe prophesied savior duo of the Mahdi and the Messiah in Islam can be likened to the prophesied pair of the two Jewish savior figures, Mashiach ben Yosef and Mashiach ben David, respectively, in the sense that the Islamic Messiah and Masiach ben David take a central eschatological role, while the Mahdi and Mashiach ben Yosef take a peripheral role.
See also
Notes
- D. S. Atema first dated this hadith to between Yazid's death and Ibn al-Zubayr's death. Wilferd Madelung narrowed this down to 684, just after the death of Yazid. Michael Cook and David Cook have contested Madelung's dating. It is nevertheless generally accepted that the hadith is patterned on Ibn al-Zubayr's career. David Cook further states that the latter part of the hadith is totally legendary and is unrelated to Ibn al-Zubayr.
- The leaders of the movement at this stage laid no claim to the imamate as the Mahdi was thought to be the last imam.
- The extinct Zaydi sect of Husayniyya from western Yemen believed in the return of al-Husayn al-Mahdi li-din Allah (d. 1013) as the Mahdi.
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