- Hadith of the pond of Khumm
:"This is a sub-article to the
Succession to Muhammad The Hadith of the pond of Khumm ( _ar. غدير خم) refers to the saying (i.e.Hadith ) about a historical event crucial to Islamic history. This event took place onMarch 10 632 AD at a place calledGhadir Khumm , which is located near the city of al-Juhfah,Saudi Arabia . InMuslim literature, Ghadir Khumm is often referred to as an oasis with a watering hole or pond. Ghadir Khumm is alternately written simply as Khumm, Khur, or Khu'.Shi'a Muslims believe it to be an be an appointment ofAli byMuhammad as his successor, whileSunni Muslims believe it to be Muhammad's defense of Ali in the face of unjust criticismFact|date=July 2008.Background Context
A few months before his death, Muhammad- living at the city of
Medina - made his last religious pilgrimage toMecca in a trip referred to asThe Farewell Pilgrimage . There, atopMount Arafat , he addressed the Muslim masses in what came to be known asThe Farewell Sermon . After completion of theHajj , or religious pilgrimage, Muhammad turned back towards his home in Medina.On the trip there, he stopped at the pond of Khumm and praised Ali. The exact meaning of the praise is a matter of much dispute; not only do Sunni and Shi'a Muslims disagree as to which staements about the pond are authentic, but they also disagree on the interpretation.
unni and Shi'a Concordance
Generally, Sunni and Shi'a Muslims both accept that Muhammad said the following at the pond:
“Whomsoever’s
mawla I am, this Ali is also his "mawla". O Allah, befriend whosoever befriends him and be the enemy of whosoever is hostile to him.”However, there is disagreement as to what was said after that. There is also disagreement over the definition of the word "mawla." The Sunni position is that the word translates to "beloved friend," whereas the Shi'a position holds that it translates to "master."
hi'a Viewpoint
Shi'a Muslims believe that after the pilgrimage, Muhammad ordered the gathering of Muslims at the pond of Khumm and it was there that Muhammad nominated Ali to be his successor, arguing that it wouldn't have made sense to stop those traveling back to Medina to solely defend Ali from criticism. [cite web | title=The 54th letter in Al-Muraja'at: A Shi'i-Sunni dialogue | url=http://www.najaf.org/english/book/12/54.htm]
unni Viewpoint
The Sunni version of the hadith states that a group of soldiers under the command of Ali were complaining to Muhammad about Ali, and Muhammad defended Ali by praising him. The Sunnis believe that Muhammad's intention behind the praise was not at all to nominate Ali as his successor but rather it was only to defend Ali against the slander being said against him. [
Musnad Ahmad ibn Hanbal ofImam Ahmad volume 5, pg. 347, #22,995]Scholars of Sunni Islam reject a number of further additions as being fabricated and unacceptable. They believe that Muhammad praised Ali, but that this cannot be construed as a prophetic nomination due to the fact that Muhammad similarly praised others from amongst the
Sahaba .Non-Muslim Viewpoint
Non-Muslim historians appear to ignore the incident described in this hadith.
The Translation of the Word "Mawla"
The word "mawla" is found in a number of verses from the
Qur'an . With reference to classical Arabic language itself, both Sunni and Shi'a scholars acknowledge that the wordmawla has been used in different ways. The Sunni scholarIbn al-Athir maintains that the word can be translated as any of the following words: lord, owner, benefactor, liberator, helper, lover, ally, slave, servant, brother-in-law, cousin, or friend.Fact|date=November 2007 The Shi'a organization Thaqalayn Muslim Association stated in one of its leaflets that it can mean master, friend, slave, or even client.Fact|date=November 2007It is accepted by both Sunni and Shi'a that the proper translation revolves around the context. However, the two groups have very differing views as to what was said at the pond of Khumm and for what purpose those words were said; it is because of this difference that the two groups translate the same word in a different manner.
The word "Mawla" and the entire question of the waliate is discussed in a non-Muslim fashion in a book edited by Monique Bernards and John Nawas called "Patronate and Patronage in Early and Classical Islam" [ Brill 2005 ISBN 978-9004144804 ] . This book sheds light on the word "maula" but does not resolve the tension between the two interpretations.
Notes
ee also
*
Hadith of the two weighty things
*Hadith of the Twelve Successors
*Hadith of Mubahela
*Hadith of the Cloak External links
* [http://www.khetabeghadir.com/ خطابه غدیر]
;Shia
* [http://roshd.org/eng/beliefs/index.asp?BEL_CODE=100 Ghadir, the Greatest Eid of All Religions]
* [http://www.al-islam.org/ghadir/ The Event of Ghadir Khumm in the Qur'an, Hadith, History]
* [http://www.slideshare.net/bahlool/ghadeer-khum/ Ghadir Khumm - Interesting Aspects of a Unique Event]
*http://www.utm.thaqalayn.org/files/ghadeer.pdf
*cite web | title=Al-Muraja'at: A Shi'i-Sunni dialogue | url=http://www.najaf.org/english/book/12/ (letters 55-58)
* [http://www.askshia.com/ Ghadir Khumm] ;Sunni
*http://www.ahlelbayt.com/articles/rebuttals/ghadir-khumm
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