Qa'im Al Muhammad
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In Shia Islam, Qāʾim Āl Muḥammad (Template:Langx) is an epithet for the Mahdi,Template:SfnTemplate:Sfn the eschatological figure in Islam who is widely believed to restore the religion and justice in the end of time.Template:Sfn The term was used as early as the eighth century to refer to a future member of the family of the Islamic prophet Muḥammad who would rise against tyranny in the end of time and restore justice.Template:Sfn This term was already common by the end of the Umayyad caliphate and largely replaced the term Mahdi in Shia literature.Template:Sfn The term was often qualified as al-Qa'im bi 'l-sayf (Template:Lit) or al-Qa'im bi-amr Allah (Template:Lit).Template:Sfn
Twelver Shia
Twelver eschatology is dominated by the figure of the twelfth Imam, Muhammad al-Mahdi, the son of the eleventh Imam.Template:Sfn The twelfth Imam is also known by the titles al-Mahdi (Template:Lit), al-Qa'im (Template:Lit), and Saheb al-Zaman (Template:Lit).Template:SfnTemplate:Sfn It is believed that he was born around 868,Template:SfnTemplate:Sfn and has been concealed by God from the humanity after the death of his father in 874,Template:Sfn who was possibly poisoned by the Abbasids.Template:Sfn
During the Minor Occultation (874–941), it is held that the twelfth Imam remained in contact with his followers through Four Deputies.Template:SfnTemplate:Sfn During the Major Occultation (941-present), his life has been prolonged by divine will until the day he manifests himself again by God's permission to fill the earth with justice.Template:Sfn In particular, there is no direct communication during the Major Occultation,Template:SfnTemplate:SfnTemplate:Sfn though it is popularly held that the twelfth Imam occasionally appears to the pious in person or, more commonly, in dreams and visions.Template:SfnTemplate:SfnTemplate:SfnTemplate:Sfn He is also viewed responsible in Twelver belief for the inward spiritual guidance of humankind (whereas his outward role begins with his reappearance).Template:Sfn
Identification with the Mahdi
As early as the Minor Occultation (874–941),Template:SfnTemplate:Sfn or possibly much earlier,Template:Sfn Twelver sources identify the twelfth Imam with the messianic figure of Mahdi in Islam,Template:Sfn though he is often referred to as al-Qa'im and less frequently as al-Mahdi.Template:SfnTemplate:Sfn Al-Nu'mani, for instance, lived during the Minor Occultation and preferred the title al-Qa'im to al-Mahdi in his writings or joined the two as "al-Qa'im al-Mahdi."Template:Sfn There is also a tradition ascribed to Ja'far al-Sadiq (Template:Died in), the sixth Imam, which explicitly identifies the promised al-Mahdi with al-Qa'im, which might indicate some confusion among the Shia about this.Template:Sfn
Significance
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Sachedina notes that the titles al-Qa'im has more of a political emphasis than the eschatological title al-Mahdi.Template:Sfn More specifically, the title al-Qa'im signifies the rise of the twelfth Imam against tyranny,Template:Sfn though a Script error: No such module "lang". (Template:Lit) hadith from Ja'far al-Sadiq connects this title to the rise of al-Qa'im after his death. As a Script error: No such module "lang". hadith, this report is not viewed as reliable by experts, writes Majlesi, especially because it contradicts the Twelver belief that the earth cannot be void of Imam at any time, as the Script error: No such module "lang". (Template:Lit). Majlesi instead suggests that death is meant figuratively in this hadith, referring to the forgotten memory of al-Qa'im after his long occultation.Template:Sfn
Isma'ilism
One of the titles of the Ismaili Imam is Script error: No such module "lang"., conveying that it is the Imam who ushers in the resurrection (Script error: No such module "lang".).Template:Sfn According to Nasir Khusraw, a senior dignitary of the Fatimid Ismaili Imams, the line of Imams from among Ali's descendants though Husayn will eventually culminate in the arrival of the Lord of the Resurrection (Script error: No such module "lang".). This individual is believed to be the perfect being and the purpose of creation, and through him the world will come out of darkness and ignorance and "into the light of her Lord" (Quran 39:69). His era, unlike that of the enunciators of divine revelation (Script error: No such module "lang".) who came before him, is not one where God prescribes the people to work, rather, his is an era of reward for those "who laboured in fulfilment of (the prophets') command and with knowledge." Preceding the Lord of the Resurrection is his proof (Script error: No such module "lang".). The Quranic verse stating that "the night of power (Script error: No such module "lang".) is better than a thousand months" (Quran 97:3) is said to refer to him, whose knowledge is superior to that of a thousand Imams, though their rank, collectively, is one. Nasir Khusraw also recognizes the successors of the Lord of the Resurrection to be his deputies (Script error: No such module "lang".).Template:Sfn
People claiming to be the Qa'im
- al-Saffah (d. 754), Abbasid Caliph who is known today as Saffah but the truth that al Saffah title was given to his uncle but his title according to Ibn al Kathīr and ibn al Athīr was al Qaim, he claimed to be al Qaim who will avenge the death of Imam Ali, Imam Hussein, Zayd ibn Ali ibn al Hussein and Yahiya ibn Zayd, and according to the 8th-9th century book Akhbar al Abbas wa Wildihi by unknown author Muhammad ibn Ali ibn Abdallah the father of caliph said about him : this is the lord of Bani Hashem al Qaim al Mahdi not the son of Abd Allah al-Mahd ibn al Hassan.
- Alí Muḥammad (Báb) (1819-1850), claimed to be prophet, Qaim and the physical manifestation of Twelfth Imam in 1844 and went to Mecca to proclaim himself as Mahdi and Qaim and from there promised his devotees of Shia to gather them in Karbala and Najaf in 10th of Muharram, Saturday, 1845 ad (1261 Islamic Hijri calendar) which means 1000 years after death of Imam Hasan al-Askari and the occultation of Twelfth Imam to begin the holy war but he changed the plan (Bada'), he has fulfilled many prophecies about Qaim then he was imprisoned in Iran after return from Mecca by Qajars and executed in year 1850 but his movement the Babism is still alive today and have two sects Azali and Baha'i Faith they believe that what happened to him was similar to what happened to Jesus in Adam's Cycle and that Muslims and Shias were similar to Jews and he is al Qaim al Mahdi, the true and physical Twelfth Imam.
- Ahmed al-Hasan (21 March 1968), an Iraqi Shia preacher, he claimed to be al-Yamani, descendant of Twelfth Imam and 1st Mahdi then in 2008, 10th of Muharram, Saturday, he proclaimed Zuhur and started a battle in Basara but disappeared and later, the largest sect of Ansar, the White banners claimed that he appeared from first occultation in 2015 and he is Qa'im not Mahdi (Twelfth Imam) and that he is the savior of mankind, they claimed that he has an official page of Facebook which have 1 million Followers worldwide especially in Iraq.
- Abdullah Hashem (27 July 1983), an Egyptian-American who is a disciple of Ahmed al-Hasan, announced himself as the Qa'im Al Muhammad in 2015 and founded the Ahmadi Religion of Peace and Light (AROPL).[1]
See also
- Al-Yamani (Shiism)
- Muhammad al-Mahdi
- al Qaim
- Great Disappointment
- Babism
- Occultation (Islam)
- Yahya ibn Umar
- Qiyama (Nizari Isma'ilism)
- al-Saffah
- Abbasid Caliphate
References
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Sources
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