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Imam al-Mahdi will have a long occultation until Allah, the Exalted, allows him to emerge
By: Ayatullah al-Uzma Lutfullah as-Safi al-Gulpaygani
Comprised of one-hundred traditions
608. Kifāyat al-athar1: Aḥmad b. Ismāâīl, from Muḥammad b. Hammām, from `Abd-Allah b. Ja`far al-Ḥimyarī, from Mūsā b. Muslim, from Mas`ada who said: I was with (Imam) al-Ṣādiq, peace be on him, when an old manâbent and leaning on his staffâcame to him and greeted him. Abū `Abd-Allah replied to his greetings and the old man said, âO son of Allahâs Messenger! Stretch your hand for me so that I may kiss it.â So he stretched his hand and he kissed it (and) then started to cry.
(Imam) Abū `Abd-Allah, peace be on him, said, âWhy are you crying, O old man?â He answered, âMay I be sacrificed for you [O son of Allahâs messenger]! I have been waiting for your Qāâim for the last one hundred years, saying [to myself that he will come] this month or this year. Now, I have become old, my bones have turned fragile [thin], and my death is approaching me, but I donât see what I would like to see [and I see concerning you what I dislike]. I see you [Ahl al-Bait] being disdained and turned away. On the other hand, I see your enemies freely doing what they want. Why shouldnât I cry?â
The eyes of Abū `Abd-Allah, peace be on him, filled with tears and he said, âO old man! If Allah allows you to live until you see our Qāâim, you will be with us on the highest pinnacle. And if death comes to you, you will come on the Day of Judgment along with the weight (thiql) of Muḥammad, Allahâs blessings be upon him and his family, and we are his weight. For indeed, he has said, âI leave amongst you two weighty things (thiqls); so fasten to them and you will never be deviated: the Book of Allah and my progeny, my Ahl al-Bait.ââ
The old man said, âAfter hearing this tradition, I will no longer be concerned.â He said, âO old man! Our Qāâim will be from the loin of al-Ḥasan; al-Ḥasan will be from the loin of `Alī; `Alī will be from the loin of Muḥammad; Muḥammad will be from the loin of `Alī; `Alī will be from the loin of this son of mineâhe then pointed to (Imam) al-Mūsā, peace be on himâand he is from my loin. We are twelve and all of us are infallible (ma`ṣūmūn) and purified (muṭahharūn).â
The old man asked, âO my master! Are some of you nobler than the others?â He answered, âNo. We are equal in nobility but some of us are more knowledgeable than the others.â Then he said, âO old man! If nothing remains from the world except one day, Allah will certainly prolong that day until the Qāâim from us Ahl al-Bait emerges. Know that our Shias will be inflicted with a fitna and bewilderment during his occultation. Then, [Allah] will make the sincere ones steadfast in his guidance. O Allah! Help them in [being steadfast].â
609. Kamāl al-dīn2: Narrated to us Muḥammad b. al-Ḥasan, may Allah be satisfied with him, from Aḥmad b. Idrīs, from Ja`far b. Muḥammad b. Mālik al-Fazārī al-Kūfī, from Isḥāq b. Muḥammad al-Ṣairafī, from Abū Hāshim, from Furāt b. Aḥnaf, from Sa`d b. Ṭarīf, from al-Aṣbagh b. Nubāta, from Amīr al-Muâminīn `Alī, peace be upon him, who mentioned the Qāâim, peace be on him, and said: âHe will certainly have an occultation [that will continue] until the ignorant will say, âThe family of Muḥammad are unimportant for Allah.ââ
610. Kamāl al-dīn3: Narrated to us Muḥammad b. Aḥmad al-Shaibānī, may Allah be satisfied with him, from Muḥammad b. Ja`far al-Kūfī, from Sahl b. Ziyād al-Ādamī, from `Abd al-`Aẓīm b. `Abd-Allah al-Ḥasanī, may Allah be satisfied with him, from Muḥammad b. `Alī b. Mūsā b. Ja`far b. Muḥammad b. `Alī b. al-Ḥusayn b. `Alī b. Abī Ṭālib, from his father, from his forefathers, from Amīr al-Muâminīn, peace be on them all, who said: Our Qāâim will have an occultation whose duration will be prolonged. It is as if I am seeing the Shias during his occultation who are wandering like livestock in search of pasture but will not find it. Know that whoever remains steadfast from amongst them in his religion, and his heart does not hardenâdue to the prolonged occultation of his Imamâthen he will be with me in my rank on the Day of Judgment. When our Qāâim rises, he will not have pledged allegiance to anybody. Because of this, his birth will be concealed and he will be hidden.
The exact same tradition has been narrated to us by `Alī b. Muḥammad b. Aḥmad b. Mūsā, may Allah be satisfied with him, from Muḥammad b. Ja`far al-Kūfī, from `Abd-Allah b. Mūsā al-Rūyānī, from `Abdul `Aẓīm b. `Abd-Allah al-Ḥasanī, from Muḥammad b. `Alī al-Riḍā, from his father, from his forefathers, from Amīr al-Muâminīn, peace be on him.
611. Kamāl al-dīn4: Narrated to us my father, may Allah be satisfied with him, from `Abd-Allah b. Ja`far al-Ḥimyarī, from Aḥmad b. Hilāl, from `Abd al-Raḥmān b. Abī Najrān, from Faḍālat b. Ayyūb, from Sadīr, in a tradition from Abū `Abd-Allah, peace be on him, who said: The brothers of Yūsuf were the grandsons and children of prophets, [yet,] they traded Yūsuf and sold him whilst they were his brothers and he was their brother. They did not recognize him until he said to them, âI am Yūsuf.â Then, why does this umma deny the fact that Allah, Mighty and Majestic be He, might intend to conceal His Proof #7717;ujja) at a specific time?
Indeed, Yūsuf, peace be on him, was the King of Egypt and the distance between him and his father was a journey of eighteen days. Had Allah, Mighty and Majestic be He, intended to inform him of his place, He could have done so.
By Allah! On hearing the good news, Ya`qūb and his sons traveled the distance in nine days from the time they started the [journey] to Egypt. So, why does this umma deny that Allah, Mighty and Majestic be He, might do with His Proof what He did with Yūsuf; he will walk in their markets and set foot on their carpets and they will not recognize him until Allah, Mighty and Majestic be He, allows him to introduce himself, just as He allowed Yūsuf who said to them, âDo you know how you treated Yūsuf and his brother when you were ignorant? They said: Are you indeed Yūsuf? He said: I am Yūsuf and this is my brother . . .â5â
612. Kamāl al-dīn6: Narrated to us `Abd al-Wāḥid b. Muḥammad b. `Abdūs al-`Aṭṭār, may Allah be satisfied with him, from `Alī b. Muḥammad b. Qutayba al-Nīsābūrī, from Ḥamdān b. Sulaimān, from Muḥammad b. Ismāâīl b. Bazī`, from Ḥayyān al-Sarrāj, from al-Sayyid b. Muḥammad al-Ḥimyarī in a long tradition in which he said: I asked al-Ṣādiq Ja`far b. Muḥammad, peace be on him, âO Son of Allahâs Messenger, Allahâs blessings be upon him and his family! Traditions from your forefathers have been narrated to us about the occultation and that it will truly occur. Inform me for whom will this occur?â He replied, âIt will occur for my sixth descendant and he is the twelfth guided Imam after the Messenger of Allah, Allah\'s blessings be on him and his family. The first of them is Amīr al-Muâminīn `Alī b. Abī Ṭālib and the last of them is the one who will rise with the truth, Allahâs remnant on the earth, and the master of the time. By Allah! If he remains in occultation equal to the time Noah remained in his nation, he will not depart the world until he appears and fills the earth with fairness and justice just as it will be filled with injustice and unfairness.â
613. Kamāl al-dīn7: Narrated to us Aḥmad b. Muḥammad b. Yaḥyā al-`Aṭṭār, may Allah be satisfied with him, from his father, from Ibrāhīm b. Hāshim, from Muḥammad b. Abī `Umair, from Ṣafwān b. Mihrān al-Jammāl, from al-Ṣādiq, Ja`far b. Muḥammad, peace be on him, who said: âBy Allah, your Mahdī will become hidden from you to the extent that the ignorant from amongst you will say, âThe family of Muḥammad are unimportant for Allah.â Then, he will come like a shining meteor and will fill [earth] with justice and fairness just as it will be filled with injustice and unfairness.â
614. Al-Kāfī8: `Alī b. Muḥammad, from Ja`far b. Muḥammad, from Mūsā b. Ja`far al-Baghdādī, from Wahb b. Shādhān, from al-Ḥasan b. Abī l-Rabī`, from Muḥammad b. Isḥāq, from Umm Hānī who said: I asked Abū Ja`far Muḥammad b. `Alī, peace be on him, about the saying of Allah, the Exalted: âI swear by [the planets] that disappear. Those that move in their orbits.â9 He replied, â[It is about] an Imam who will disappear in the year 260 AH. Then, he will appear like a meteor glowing in the dark night. If you reach his time, your eyes will be soothed (qarrat `ainuk).â
615. Kamāl al-dīn10: Narrated to us Muḥammad b. Mūsā b. al-Mutawakkil, may Allah be satisfied with him, from `Alī b. Ibrāhīm b. Hāshim, from Muḥammad b. `Īsā b. `Ubaid, from Ṣāliḥ b. Muḥammad, from Hānī al-Tammār who said: â(Imam) Abū `Abd-Allah, peace be on him, said to me, âThe master of this affair will certainly have an occultation. Thus, [Allahâs] servant[s] should fear Allah and fasten to his religion.â
616. Al-Kāfī11: Muḥammad b. Yaḥyā, from Ja`far b. Muḥammad, from Isḥāq b. Muḥammad, from Yaḥyā b. al-Muthannā, from `Abd-Allah b. Bukair, from `Ubaid b. Zurāra, from (Imam) Abū `Abd-Allah, peace be on him, who said: âPeople will not find their Imam. He will be present during the Hajj season and he will see them but they will not see him.â
617. Al-Kāfī12: Muḥammad b. Yaḥyā and al-Ḥasan b. Muḥammad have both narrated from Ja`far b. Muḥammad al-Kūfī, from al-Ḥasan b. Muḥammad al-Ṣairafī, from Ṣāliḥ b. Khālid, from Yamān al-Tammār who said: We were sitting with (Imam) Abū `Abd-Allah, peace be on him, when he said to us, âThe master of this affair will certainly have an occultation. The one who fastens to his religion during this period is like someone one who pulls the qatād (a plant full of extremely sharp thorns) in his closed fist like this.â Then, he showed with his hands and asked, âWho amongst you has grasped the thorns of the qatād tightly with his hands?â He then said nothing for a while said then continued, âThe master of this affair will certainly have an occultation. Thus, [Allahâs] servant[s] should fear Allah and fasten to his religion.â
618. Kamāl al-dīn13: Narrated to me my father and Muḥammad b. al-Ḥasan, may Allah be satisfied with them, both from Sa`d b. `Abd-Allah and `Abd-Allah b. Ja`far al-Ḥimyarī and Aḥmad b. Idrīs, who all narrated from Aḥmad b. Muḥammad b. `Īsā and Muḥammad b. al-Ḥusayn b. Abī al-Khaṭṭāb and Muḥammad b. `Abd al-Jabbār and `Abd-Allah b. `Āmir b. Sa`d al-Ash`arī, from `Abd al-Raḥmān b. Abī Najrān, from Muḥammad b. al-Musāwir, from al-Mufaḍḍal b. `Umar al-Ju`fī, who said: I heard (Imam) Abū `Abd-Allah, peace be on him, say, âKeep away from fame (tanwīh)14! By Allah, your Imam will disappear for many years and you will be sifted until it is said, âHe has died or he has perished or no one knows where he is?â The eyes of the believers will weep for him. You will overturn like ships which overturn in the waves of the ocean. No one will be saved except those whose covenant Allah has taken and has inscribed faith in their hearts and has assisted them by a Spirit from Himself. Indeed, twelve ambiguous flags will be raised, and you wonât know which belongs to who.â
I started crying [on hearing this] and he said to me, âWhy are you crying, O Abū `Abd-Allah?â I replied, âWhy shouldnât I cry when you are saying that there will be twelve ambiguous flags and none will be distinguished from the other? What should we do [in these circumstances]?â [He] looked at the sunshine in the room and remarked, âO Abū `Abd-Allah! Do you see this sunshine?â I replied in the affirmative. He said, âBy Allah, our affair is more apparent than this sunshine.â
619. Kamāl al-dīn15: Narrated to us Muḥammad b. `Alī b. Ḥātim al-Naufalīâknown as al-Kirmānīâfrom Abū l-`Abbās Aḥmad b. `Īsā al-Washshā al-Baghdādī, from Aḥmad b. Ṭāhir [al-Qummī], from Muḥammad b. Bahr b. Sahl al-Shaibānī, from `Alī b. al-Ḥārith, from Sa`īd b. Manṣūr al-Jawāshinī, from Aḥmad b. `Alī al-Budailī, from his father, from Sadīr al-Ṣairafī who said: I, al-Mufaḍḍal b. `Umar, Abū Baṣīr, and Abān b. Taghlib went to meet our master Abū `Abd-Allah al-Ṣādiq, peace be on him. We saw him sitting on the earth while he was wearing a Khaibarī cloak that was fastened to his neck that didnât have a collar and had short sleeves. He was crying like someone whose child had died and whose heart was burning.
Grief was visible from his face, change was apparent in him, tears had filled his eyes, and he was saying, âMy master! Your occultation has taken away my sleep, strained my resting place, and seized the comfort of my heart. My master! Your occultation has made my calamities reach proportions of eternal misfortune. The loss of one after the other has destroyed us all. I no longer feel the tears flowing from my eyes and the moaning sounds from my heart on account of past afflictions and bygone calamities. [All] I see is the great tragedy that is before me which is greater, more sorrowful, more severe, and inhospitable [than all tragedies]. [They are] harsh calamities that are mixed with your anger and afflictions that are mixed with your wrath.â
Our minds were terrified with perplexity and our hearts were cleft asunder with impatience about a great disaster and a terrible misfortune. We thought that a knocking calamity had struck him or a misfortune had afflicted him. We asked, âO Son of the best of creatures! May Allah not make your eyes weep! What has made your tears flow and your eyes rain teardrops? What tragedy has brought you this sorrow?â
(Imam) al-Ṣādiq, peace be on him, took [a deep] breath which filled his stomach and intensified his panic and then said, âWoe to you! This morning, I looked in the Book of Jafr which is comprised of the knowledge about [the times] of death, examinations, and afflictions and the knowledge about whatever existed/occurred and will exist/occur until the Day of Judgment, which Allah specifically gave to [the Prophet] Muḥammad and the Imams after him.
I pondered over the birth of the one from us who will disappear, his occultation, his delay, his longevity, the examination/calamities of the believers during this time, the doubts that will arise in their hearts due to his prolonged occultation, and them becoming apostates and taking off the rope of Islam from their necksâwhich Allah, Holy be His Remembrance, says, âAnd We have made every personâs deeds cling to his neck,â16 which refers to [our] Mastership (al-wilāya). [On reading this,] I was filled with sympathy and overcome by grief.â
We said, âO Son of Allahâs Messenger! Please honor us and do us a favor by sharing with us some of what you have learned from this knowledge.â He said, âSurely Allah, Blessed and Exalted be He, will repeat for our Qāâim three things which He had done for three of His prophets. He made his birth like the birth of Moses, peace be on him; He made his occultation like the occultation of Jesus, peace be on him; and made His delay like the delay of Noah, peace be on him. Then, He made his age like that of the Righteous Servantâ meaning al-Khiḍr, peace be on himâas a proof of his long life.â
We asked, âO Son of Allahâs Messenger! Uncover for us the aspects of these meanings.â He said, âAs for the birth of Moses, peace be on him, when the Pharaoh found out that the downfall of his kingdom was at [Mosesâ] hands, he asked for the fortune-tellers who guided him to the lineage [of Moses] and [told him] that he would be from the Israelites. Then, he ordered his followers to rip apart the stomachs of the pregnant women from the Israelites until he killed more than twenty-thousand babies. But he did not succeed in killing Moses, peace be on him, because he was under the protection of Allah, Blessed and High be He.
The same thing happened with the Umayyads and the Abbasids; when they found out that the destruction of their kingdoms and the [destruction] of the government of the oppressors and tyrants from them would be at the hands of our Qāâim, they established enmity against us and drew their swords to kill the family [or Ahl al-Bait] of the Messenger of Allah, Allahâs blessings be on him and his family, and to destroy his generation in the hope of killing the Qāâim. But Allah, Mighty and Majestic be He, has refused to make evident His affair to any of the oppressors and He will make perfect His Light even if the polytheists detest it.
âAs for the occultation of Jesus, peace be on him, the Jews and the Christians unanimously agreed that he had been killed. But Allah, Majestic be His Remembrance, falsified what they had said by His saying, âAnd they did not kill him nor did they crucify him, but it appeared to them so.â17 The occultation of the Qāâim is also like this and the umma will deny it due to its elongation. One will speak nonsense that he has not been born yet; another will say he has passed the age of thirteen or more, and yet another will disobey Allah, Mighty and Majestic be He, by saying, âSurely, the soul of the Qāâim speaks from the body of someone other than himself.â
âAs for the delay of Noah, peace be on him, when he sought punishment on his people from the sky, Allah, Mighty and Majestic be He, sent the Trusted Spirit (Rūḥ al-Amīn), peace be on him, with seven seeds. He said, âO Prophet of Allah, Allah, Blessed and High be He, says to you, âThese are My creations and My servants. I will not destroy them with a thunderbolt from my thunderbolts except after emphasizing [My] call and establishing [My] proof. So, continue your struggles in preaching to your people and I will definitely reward you for it. Plant these seeds, for in their growth, maturity, and fruition is relief and salvation. Give glad-tidings by these to those believers who follow you.ââ
When the trees grew, became [covered with leaves], grew stems and branches, and dates began to grow on themâand this was after a long period of timeâNoah, peace be on him, asked Allah, Purified and High be He, to fulfill His promise. Allah, Blessed and High be He, ordered him to plant the seeds of these trees [that had fully grown] and to continue his patience and struggles and to emphasize His proofs upon his people. So he informed the groups who believed in him about this and [on hearing this], three hundred people became apostates, arguing, âIf what Noah had claimed was true, His Lord wouldnât have violated His Promise.â Then, Allah, Blessed and High be He, continued to order him to sow the seeds [of the new full-grown plants] one after the other until he had sowed them seven times. And each time, a group from the believers became apostates until only a little more than seventy men remained from them.
So then, Allah, Blessed and High be He, revealed to him and said, âO Noah, dawn has pierced the night and the affair has become pure from filth by the apostasy of those who had wicked essence. Had I destroyed the unbelievers and allowed those groups from your nation who turned apostatesâafter having earlier believed in youâto survive, I would not have fulfilled My earlier promise to the believers from your tribe whose belief in monotheism was pure and who had fastened to the rope of your prophethood. [The promise I had made to them] that I would make them the successors on earth, establish for them their religion, and convert their fear into security, so they would purely worship Me with the removal of doubts from their hearts. How could I make them successors, establish [their religion], and convert their fear into security when I knew about the weak faith of those who had become apostates, the wickedness of their essence, the evilness of their hidden secrets and their deviation which was the consequence of hypocrisy?
Had they smelled the fragrance of My Kingdom which would be given to the believers when they become the successors [of my Kingdom] after I destroy their enemies, they would have taken away its serenity (lanaqishū rawāâiḥa ṣifātih), their secret hypocrisy would have become stronger, the ropes of their hearts deviation would have become eternal, they would have openly shown hostility towards their brothers, and would have fought against them to become the leaders and sole commanders and prohibiters. So, how can religion be powerful and the affairs be at the hands of the believers whilst there is unrest and war? It shall never be like this, âSo, make the ark before Our eyes and [according to] Our revelation.â18â
âThe same thing will occur for the Qāâim. His occultation will be prolonged until the truth becomes clear and faith becomes purified from darkness (al-kadir) by the apostasy of all those from the Shias who have wicked essence; those whom might become hypocrites when they sense the succesorship, power, and widespread security during the Qāâimâs reign.â I said, âO Son of Allahâs Messenger! The enemies of the Ahl al-Bait (al-nawāṣib) think that this verse was revealed in favor of Abū Bakr, `Umar, `Uthmān, and `Alī, peace be on him.â
He answered, âMay Allah not guide the hearts of these enemies! Has the religion which Allah and His Messenger were satisfied with which had power to spread security in the umma, dispel fear from their hearts, and remove skepticism from their chests, ever been present during the reign of any one of these [three Caliphs] or during the reign of `Alī, peace be on him, whilst so many Muslims became apostates, fitnas arose during their times, and wars took place between them and the infidels?â Then he recited the following verse, âUntil the messengers despaired and thought that they were indeed told a lie, [then] Our help came to themâ19
As for the Righteous Servantâmeaning al-Khiḍr, peace be on himâthen surely Allah, Blessed and High be He, did not prolong his life because of a prophethood that he had destined for him, nor for a Book that he wanted to send down unto him, nor for a religion that would abrogate the religion of the prophets that [lived] before him, nor because of an Imamate whose following He would make compulsory for His servants, nor for an obedience that He would make obligatory for him. Rather, Allah, Blessed and High be He, knew from His prior Knowledge that He would [prolong] the age of the Qāâim during his occultation and He also knew that His servants would deny [him] because of his age, therefore, He prolonged the age of the Righteous Servant without any obvious reason for this longevity except for the fact that it be used to prove the age of the Qāâim and to severe the arguments of those who opposed him so that the people will not have any argument against Allah.â
620. Kamāl al-dīn20: Narrated to us Aḥmad b. Ziyād b. Ja`far al-Hamdānī, may Allah be satisfied with him, from `Alī b. Ibrāhīm b. Hāshim, from his father, from Muḥammad b. Khālid al-Barqī, from `Alī b. Ḥasan, from Dāwūd b. Kathīr al-Riqqī who said: âI asked Abū l-Ḥasan Mūsā b. Ja`far, peace be on him, about the Master of this affair. He replied, âHe is the exiled, the lonely, the stranger, the one who will be absent from his family, and the one whose father has not been avenged.ââ
621. Kamāl al-dīn21: Narrated to me my father, may Allah be satisfied with him, from Sa`d b. `Abd-Allah, from Ja`far b. Muḥammad b. Mālik al-Fazārī, from `Alī b. al-Ḥasan b. Faḍḍāl who heard al-Rayyān b. al-Ṣalt say: â(Imam) Abū l-Ḥasan al-Riḍā, peace be on him, was asked about the Qāâim. He replied, âHe will not be seen and he will not be called by his name.ââ
622. Kamāl al-dīn22: Narrated to us al-Muẓaffar b. Ja`far b. Muẓaffar al-`Alawī al-`Umarī al-Samarqandī, may Allah be satisfied with him, from Ja`far b. Muḥammad b. Mas`ūd, from his father Muḥammad b. Mas`ūd, from Ja`far b. Aḥmad, from al-Ḥasan b. `Alī b. Faḍḍāl, from Abū l-Ḥasan `Alī b. Mūsā al-Riḍā, peace be on him, who said: Al-Khiḍr, peace be on him, drank from the water of life (māâ al-ḥayāt) and he will live and not die until the Trumpet is blown #7717;attā yunfakh fī l-ṣūr). He comes to us and salutes us. We hear his voice but we donât see him. He appears wherever he is mentioned and whoever from you mentions him should salute him. He is present during the [Hajj] season every year and performs all the [Hajj] rituals. He stands in `Arafa and says amen to the supplications of the believers. Through him, Allah will soothe our Qāâimâs solitude during his occultation and dispel his loneliness.
623. Ghaybat al-Nu`mānī23: Narrated to us `Alī b. al-Ḥusayn, from Muḥammad b. Yaḥyā, from Muḥammad b. Ḥasan al-Rāzī, from Muḥammad b. `Alī al-Kūfī, from `Īsā b. `Abd-Allah b. Muḥammad b. `Umar b. `Alī b. Abī Ṭālib, from his father, from his grandfather, from his father Amīr al-Muâminīn `Alī b. Abī Ṭālib, peace be on him, who said: âThe master of this affair is from my descendants. He is the one about whom it will be said, âHe has died or perished. No one knows where he is.ââ
624. Kamāl al-dīn24: Narrated to us Muḥammad b. Mūsā b. al-Mutawakkil, may Allah be satisfied with him, from `Alī b. Ibrāhīm, from his father, from `Abd al-Salām b. Ṣāliḥ al-Harawī, from (Imam) Abū l-Ḥasan `Alī b. Mūsā al-Riḍā, from his father, from his forefathers, from `Alī, peace be on them all, from the Messenger of Allah, Allahâs blessings be on him and his family, who said: By the One Who raised me with the truth as a giver of glad-tidings! Certainly, the Qāâim from my progeny will have an occultation because of a covenant between me and him. [His occultation will continue] until most of the people will say, âThe family of Muḥammad are unimportant for Allah!â Others will doubt he was born. Whoever reaches his era should fasten to his religion and must leave no path for Satan to reach him by being skeptical [about the Qāâim]. [If Satan reaches him] he will put him aside from my nation and bring him out of my religion, for he previously brought out your parents from Paradise. Surely, Allah, Mighty and Majestic be He, has made the devils the guardians of those who do not believe.
625. `Ilal al-sharāâi`25: Narrated to us al-Muẓaffar b. Ja`far b. al-Muẓaffar al-`Alawī, may Allah be satisfied with him, from Ja`far b. Mas`ūd and Ḥaidar b. Muḥammad al-Samarqandī, both of them from Muḥammad b. Mas`ūd, from Jabraâīl b. Aḥmad, from Mūsā b. Ja`far al-Baghdādī, from al-Ḥasan b. Muḥammad al-Ṣairafī, from Ḥanān b. Sadīr, from his father who said: (Imam) Abū `Abd-Allah, peace be on him, said, âThe Qāâim from us will have an occultation whose duration will be long.â I asked, âWhy is it so, O Son of Allahâs Messenger?â He replied, âSurely, Allah, Mighty and Majestic be He, has wanted naught except to carry out in him the customs of the prophets, peace be on them, during their occultations. O Sadīr! It is necessary that the periods their occultations are completed. Allah, Mighty and Majestic be He, says, âYou will most certainly embark one stage after anotherâ26 meaning tradition upon tradition of those before you.â
626. Ghaybat al-Nu`mānī27: Narrated to us Muḥammad b. Hammām, from Ja`far b. Muḥammad b. Mālik, from Isḥāq b. Sinān, from `Ubaid b. Khārija, from `Alī b. Uthmān, from furāt b. Aḥnaf, from (Imam) Abū `Abd-Allah Ja`far b. Muḥammad, from his forefathers, peace be upon them, who said: The river Euphrates overflowed during the reign of Amīr al-Muâminīn, peace be on him. He and his two sonsâal-Ḥasan and al-Ḥusayn, peace be on themâmounted and passed by [the neighborhood] of al-Thaqīf. The [locals] said, â`Alī has come to drive away the water.â `Alī, peace be on him, answered, âBy Allah, I and these two sons of mine will be killed. Then, Allah will definitely raise a person form my progeny in the end of times who will demand our blood. He will go in occultation until the people of deviation are distinguished from the [rightly guided]. [This situation will continue until] the ignorant will say, âThe family of Muḥammad are unimportant for Allah.ââ
627. Ghaybat al-Shaykh28: Abū Baṣīr narrated: â (Imam) Abū Ja`far, peace be on him, said, âThe Qāâim has a similarity with [the Prophet] Yūsuf.â I asked, âAnd what is it?â He replied, âBewilderment and occultation.ââ
628. Kitāb tārīkh Qum29: From Muḥammad b. Qutayba al-Hamdānī and al-Ḥasan b. `Alī al-Kashmārjānī [al-Kamshārjānī], from `Alī b. al-Nu`mān, from Abū l-Akrād `Alī b. Maimūn al-Ṣāâigh, from (Imam) Abū `Abd-Allah, peace be on him, who said: Surely, Allah has used [the city of] Kūfa as an argument over all other cities and the faithful from its inhabitants over the inhabitants of other cities. [Similarly,] he has used Qum as an argument over all other cities and its inhabitants over the inhabitants of the East and the West from the Jinn and the humans. Allah has not left Qum and its inhabitants as weak. Rather, he has made them successful and assisted them.
The religion and its followers in Qum are lowly. Had it not been so, people would have hurried towards it [to inhabit it] and consequently, Qum would have been spoilt and its inhabitants would have become the people of falsehood, resulting in it not being an argument/proof over all other cities. If this happened, then the heavens and the earth would have become dislocated and they would not have been reprievedâeven a moment.
Verily, calamities have been warded off from Qum and its people. Soon, there will come a time when the city of Qum and its inhabitants will be an argument over the creatures. This will occur during the occultation of our Qāâim, peace be upon him, until he reappears. Had it not been so, the earth would have swallowed its inhabitants.
Surely, the angels dispel the calamities from Qum and its inhabitants. No tyrant ever intends something bad for Qum but that the destroyer of tyrants [i.e. Allah] destroys him and keeps them away from it either by a disaster or a calamity or an enemy. The tyrants forget about Qum during their rein just as they forget [the remembrance of] Allah.
629. Al-Kāfī30: `Alī b. Ibrāhīm, from his father, from ibn Abī `Umair, from Abū Ayyūb al-Khazzāz, from Muḥammad b. Muslim, from Abū `Abd-Allah (al-Ṣādiq), peace be on him, who said: âIf you hear that the master of this affair is in occultation, donât deny it.â
630. Al-Kāfī31: A group of our companions, from Aḥmad b. Muḥammad, from al-Ḥasan b. `Alī al-Washshā, from `Alī b. Abī Ḥamza, from Abū Baṣīr, from Abū `Abd-Allah (al-Ṣādiq), peace be on him: âThe master of this affair will definitely have an occultation and he will definitely have an isolation during his occultation. Ṭībba is a great dwelling and thirty people will not feel lonely.â
631. Ghaybat al-Shaykh32: A group narrated to me from Abū Ja`far Muḥammad b. Sufyān al-Bazaufarī, from Aḥmad b. Idrīs, from `Alī b. Muḥammad b. Qutayba, from al-Faḍl b. Shādhān, from `Abd al-Raḥmān b. Abī Najrān, from Ṣafwān b. Yaḥyā, from Abū Ayyūb, from Abū Baṣīr, from (Imam) Abū `Abd-Allah, peace be on him, who said: âIf the news of the occultation of your master reaches you, donât deny it.â
The following traditions also prove the above concept: 205, 242, 244, 245, 254, 257, 261, 305â308, 317, 465, 497, 498, 499, 511, 535â539, 541, 547, 549â557, 559â564, 574, 575, 580, 589, 595, 599â607, 632â635, 637, 641, 643, 644, 645, 647, 649, 653, 669, 685, 686, 688â691, 806, 810, 1104, and 1105
Notes:
1. Kifāyat al-athar, chap. 34, pp. 260â262, no. 3; Biḥār al-anwār, vol. 36, chap. 46, pp. 408â409, no. 17; al-`Awālim, vol. 15, chap. 7, pp. 280â281, no. 17; Ithbāt al-hudāt, vol. 1, chap. 9, p. 603, no. 586; Tabyīn al-maḥajja, pp. 336â337, no. 31; al-Inṣāf, chap. on the letter al-Mīm, pp. 294â296, 269.
2. Kamāl al-dīn, vol. 1, chap. 26, p. 302, no. 9; Ghaybat al-Shaykh, pp. 340â341, no. 290; Taqrīb al-ma`ārif, p. 189; I`lām al-warā, chap. 2, sect. 2; Dalāâil al-imāma, chap. âMa`rifat man shāhad al-Ṣāḥib al-Ẓamān, `alayhi al-salām,â no. 14; Biḥār al-anwār, vol. 51, chap. 2, p. 119, no. 19, and vol. 52, chap. 21, p. 101, no. 1; Ithbāt al-hudāt, vol. 3, chap. 32, p. 463, no. 110, and p. 464, no. 116, and p. 510, no. 333.
3. Kamāl al-dīn, vol. 1, chap. 26, p. 303, no. 14; Biḥār al-anwār, vol. 51, chap. 2, pp. 109â110, no. 1; Ithbāt al-hudāt, vol. 3, chap. 32, p. 464, no. 115.
4. Kamāl al-dīn, vol. 2, chap. 33, p. 341, no. 21; `Ilal al-sharāâi`, chap. 179, p. 244, no. 3; Dalāâil al-imāma, chap. âMā warada min al-akhbār fī wujūb al-ghayba,â p. 290; al-Kāfī, vol. 1, chap. 138, p. 336, no. 4; Mir`āt al-`uqūl, vol. 4, pp. 37â39, no. 4; I`lām al-warā, chap. 2, sect. 2; Biḥār al-anwār, vol. 51, chap. 6, p. 142, no. 1.
5. Quran 12:89â90.
6. Kamāl al-dīn, vol. 2, chap. 33, p. 342, no. 23; Ithbāt al-hudāt, vol. 3, sect. 5, pp. 458â459, no. 96.
7. Kamāl al-dīn, vol. 2, chap. 33, pp. 341â342, no. 22; Ithbāt al-hudāt, vol. 3, chap. 32, sect. 5, p. 472, no. 149; Biḥār al-anwār, vol. 51, chap. 6, p. 145, no. 11.
8. Al-Kāfī, vol. 1, p. 341, no. 22, and similar to it no. 23; Ghaybat al-Nu`mānī, p. 150, no. 6, from one of his two chains and no. 7 citing al-Kulainī, similar to it using another chain in chap. 10, p. 149, no. 6; Ghaybat al-Shaykh, p. 159, no. 116, similar to it; Yanābī` al-mawadda, p. 430, similar to it; al-Ṣadūq has recorded in Kamāl al-dīn vol. 1, p. 330, no. 14: âThrough his chain of narrators from Ibrāhīm b. `Aṭiyya, from Umm Hānī al-Thaqafiyya who said, âOne morning, I went to my master, Muḥammad b. `Alī al-Bāqir, peace be on him, and said to him, âMy master! A verse from the Book of Allah, Mighty and Majestic be He, came to my mind and made me restless to the extent that I did not sleep the whole night.â He said, âAsk, O Umm Hānī.â I said, âMy master! It is the saying of Allah, Mighty and Majestic be He, âI swear by [the planets] that disappear. Those that move in their orbitsâ (Quran 81:15â16).â He said, âYes. The question you have asked, O Umm Hānī, is about the one who will be born in the end of times. He is the Mahdī from this progeny. He will have a bewilderment and an occultation in which some groups will be deviated and others will be guided. Salvation is for he who reaches him.ââ
Ithbāt al-waṣiyya, p. 201: âThrough his chain of narrators from Umm Hānī who said, âI met Imam Abū Ja`far, peace be on him, and asked him about this verse, âI swear by [the planets] that disappear. Those that move in their orbits.ââ He replied, âIt is about an Imam who will disappear in the year 260 AH, then he will appear like a glowing meteor. If you reach his time, your eyes will be soothed.ââ; Ithbāt al-hudāt, vol. 3, chap. 32, sect. 5, p. 469, no. 136; Biḥār al-anwār, vol. 51, chap. 5, p. 51, no. 26; Taâwīl al-āyāt al-ẓāhira, citing the Tafsīr of Muḥammad b. al-`Abbās, Tafsīr nūr al-thaqalain, Tafsīr al-burhān, al-Maḥajja, Tafsīr al-Ṣāfī, and etc. under the verse.
9. Quran 81:15â16.
10. Kamāl al-dīn, vol. 2, chap. 33, p. 343, no. 25.
11. Al-Kāfī, vol. 1, chap. 138, p. 337, no. 6; Ghaybat al-Nu`mānī, p. 175, no. 14; Mir`āt al-`uqūl, vol. 4, p. 42, no. 6; Kamāl al-dīn, vol. 2, chap. 33, p. 346, no. 33; Dalāâil al-imāma, chap. âMa`rifat wujūb al-Qāâim,â p. 259, no. 64, and chap. âMa`rifat mā warada min al-akhbār fī wujūb al-ghayba,â p. 290, no. 6; Ghaybat al-Shaykh, p. 161, no. 119; Biḥār al-anwār, vol. 52, chap. 23, p. 151, no. 2; Ḥilyat al-abrār, vol. 2, chap. 11, p. 546, and chap. 29, p. 606; Ithbāt al-hudāt, vol. 3, chap. 32, sect. 1, p. 485, no. 205, and sect. 12, p. 500, no. 279. Al-Nu`mānī has recorded through another chain of narrators from `Ubaid: âThe people will not find the Imam who will be present during the Hajj season. He will see them but they will not see him.â
12. Al-Kāfī, vol. 1, chap. 138, pp. 335â336, no. 1; Mir`āt al-`uqūl, vol. 4, p. 33, no. 1; Kamāl al-dīn, vol. 2, chap. 33, p. 346, no. 34; Ghaybat al-Nu`mānī, chap. 10, p. 169, no. 11; Ithbāt al-waṣiyya (al-Maktabat al-Murtaḍawiyya), p. 226; Dalāâil al-imāma, p. 290, using another chain; Ithbāt al-hudāt, vol. 6, chap. 32, sect. 5, p. 411, no. 153, with minor variations.
13. Kamāl al-dīn, vol. 2, chap. 33, p. 347, no. 35; al-Kāfī, vol. 1, chap. âFī l-ghayba,â pp. 338â339, no. 11, similar to it from where he says: â. . . he will definitely have an occultationâ; Ghaybat al-Nu`mānī, chap. 10, pp. 151â152, no. 9, similar to it with the difference that it says: âBy Allah! He will go into occultation for a period of time,â instead of âyearsâ or âsome time,â which seems more probable and appropriate; Ghaybat al-Shaykh, pp. 204â205; Ithbāt al-waṣiyya, p. 200; Dalāâil al-imāma, p. 292.
14. Al-Majlisī writes in Biḥār al-anwār, vol. 52, p. 282: âAl-tanwīh means fame. That is, donât make yourselves famous and donât invite people to your religion. Or, donât expose what we say to you about the affairs of the Qāâim, peace be on him, and other issues that must be concealed from those who oppose [us]. âYou will be siftedâ means you will be tested and examined . . . âThose who Allah has taken their covenantâ might mean those who accepted him on the Day that Allah took the covenant about His Prophet, Allahâs blessings be on him and his family, and his Ahl al-Bait along with the covenant of His Lordship which has been mentioned in the traditions. âWritten faith in his heartâ is a referral to the verse, âYou will not find a group of people who believe in Allah and the Last Day, whilst they love those who have enmity towards Allah and His Messenger, even though they were their [own] fathers, or their sons, or their brothers, or their kinsfolk. These are those into whose hearts He has inscribed faith, and whom He has assisted by a Spirit from Himselfâ (Quran 58:22). âSpiritâ refers to the âSpirit of faithâ as we already mentioned. They will be âambiguousâ for the peopleâ or they will be ambiguous because some . . . of them will resemble others and it will not be known which one is the truth and which one is false; and this is an interpretation for âambiguous.â Some have suggested it means that it will not be understood which side these flags belong to: truth or falsehood. Others say it means âit will not be understood which man belongs to which flag . . .â The first interpretation is more probable.â
Ithbāt al-hudāt, vol. 6, chap. 32, sect. 5, p. 411, no. 154 (short version).
15. Kamāl al-dīn, vol. 2, chap. 33, pp. 352â357, no. 50; Ghaybat al-Shaykh, pp. 167â173, no. 129; Biḥār al-anwār, vol. 51, chap. 13, pp. 219â223, no. 9; Yanābī` al-mawadda, p. 444, short version citing al-Manāqib; Ithbāt al-hudāt, vol. 3, chap. 32, sect. 5, p. 475, no. 162 (only a part of it has been mentioned). It has also been recorded partially or wholly in al-Ṣirāṭ al-mustaqīm, Tafsīr nūr al-thaqalain, I`lām al-warā, al-Īqāẓ min al-ḥaj`a, Ghāyat al-marām, Ḥilyat al-abrār, and etc.
16. Quran 17:13.
17. Quran 4:157.
18. Quran 11:37.
19. Quran 12:110.
20. Kamāl al-dīn, vol. 2, chap. 34, p. 361, no. 4; Ithbāt al-hudāt, vol. 3, chap. 32, sect. 5, pp. 476â477, no. 167.
21. Kamāl al-dīn, vol. 2, chap. 35, p. 370, no. 2; Biḥār al-anwār, vol. 51, chap. 13, p. 33, no. 12.
22. Kamāl al-dīn, vol. 2, chap. 38, p. 390, no. 4; Ithbāt al-hudāt, vol. 3, chap. 32, sect. 5, pp. 480, no. 181 (short version).
23. Ghaybat al-Nu`mānī, chap. 10, p. 156, no. 18; Ghaybat al-Shaykh, p. 425, no. 409: âFrom Faḍl b. Shādhān, from Aḥmad b. `Īsā al-`Alawī, from his father, from his grandfather, from Amīr al-Muâminīn `Alī, peace be on him, who said, âThe master of this affair is from my descendants about whom it will be said, âHe has died or he has been killed or he has perished or to which land has he goneââ; Biḥār al-anwār, vol. 51, chap. 2, p. 114, no. 11; Ithbāt al-hudāt, vol. 3, chap. 32, sect. 27, p. 533, no. 468.
24. Kamāl al-dīn, vol. 1, p. 51; Biḥār al-anwār, vol. 51, chap. 1, p. 68, no. 10; Ithbāt al-hudāt, vol. 3, chap. 32, sect. 5, p. 459, no. 97.
25. `Ilal al-sharāâi`, vol. 1, chap. 179, p. 245, no. 7; Ithbāt al-hudāt, vol. 3, chap. 32, sect. 5, p. 487, no. 212, citing Kamāl al-dīn and `Ilal al-sharāâi`; al-Maḥajja, p. 246 (short version).
26. Quran 84:19.
27. Ghaybat al-Nu`mānī, chap. 10, p. 140, no. 1; Ithbāt al-hudāt, vol. 3, chap. 32, p. 532, no. 462.
28. Ghaybat al-Shaykh, pp. 163â164, no. 125; Ithbāt al-hudāt, vol. 3, chap. 32, sect. 5, p. 501, no. 284.
29. Biḥār al-anwār, vol. 57, chap. 36, pp. 212â213, no. 22.
30. Al-Kāfī, vol. 1, chap. 138, p. 338, no. 10, and chap. 138, p. 340, no. 15: âFrom a group of our companions, from Aḥmad b. Muḥammad, from `Alī b. al-Ḥakam, from Abū Ayyūb al-Khazzāz, from Muḥammad b. Muslim . . .â ; Mir`āt al-`uqūl, vol. 4, pp. 46 & 50, no. 10 & 15; Ithbāt al-hudāt, vol. 3, chap. 32, p. 444, no. 22.
31. Al-Kāfī, vol. 1, chap. 138, p. 340, no. 16; Mir`āt al-`uqūl, vol. 4, p. 50, no. 16. Al-Majlisī writes: âIn some versions [it has been narrated like this]: âDuring his occultation, he will not be away from the people. Rather, he will be amongst them but they will not recognize him.â The first is more probable and is in accordance with what is found in other books. âṬībbaâ is the name of Medina and âThirty people wonât feel lonelyâ means that thirty of his close followers and special companions will be with him.â Biḥār al-anwār, vol. 52, chap. 23, p. 157, no. 20. He also writes: ââṬayyibaâ is the name of a city. It indicates that he will mostly be there or around it and that there will be thirty of his special followers and companions with him. If anyone from them dies, he is replaced with another.â; Ghaybat al-Nu`mānī, chap. 10, p. 188, no. 41; Similar to it in Ghaybat al-Shaykh, p. 162, no. 121, through his chain of narrators from `Alī b. Abī Ḥamza, from Abū Baṣīr, that he, peace be on him, said: âThe Master of this affair will definitely have [a period of] isolation and there will definitely be strength during his isolation. With thirty people, there will be no loneliness and Ṭayyiba is a great dwelling.â Ithbāt al-hudāt, vol. 3, chap. 32, p. 445, no. 27.
32. Ghaybat al-Shaykh, pp. 160â161, no. 118; Biḥār al-anwār, vol. 51, chap. 6, p. 146, no. 15, a similar narration has already been mentioned from Muḥammad b. Muslim.
The traditions that indicate the reason behind his occultation
Comprised of nine traditions1
632. Kamāl al-dīn2: Narrated to us `Abd al-Wāḥid b. Muḥammad b. `Abdūs al-`Aṭṭār, may Allah be satisfied with him, from `Alī b. Muḥammad b. Qutayba al-Nīsābūrī from Ḥamdān b. Sulaimān al-Nīsābūrī, from Aḥmad b. `Abd-Allah b. Ja`far al-Madāâinī, from `Abd-Allah b. al-Faḍl al-Hāshimī who said: I heard al-Ṣādiq Ja`far b. Muḥammad, peace be on him, say, âThe master of this affair will definitely have an occultation in which every liar will become doubtful.â I asked, âWhy, may I be sacrificed for you?â He replied, âBecause of an affair that we have not been given permission to disclose to you.â I asked, âWhat is the rationale behind his occultation?â He answered, âThe rationale behind his occultation is the same rationale behind the occultations of the Proofs of Allah, High be His Remembrance, who preceded him; Surely, the rationale will not be disclosed until he reappears, just as the rationale behind al-Khiḍrâs acts of drilling a hole in the ship, killing the boy, and erecting the wall were not disclosed to Moses, peace be on him, except at the time of their separation. O son of Faḍl! This affair is from the affairs of Allah, the Exalted, a secret from Allahâs secrets, and an unseen from Allahâs unseens. Once we know that He, Mighty and Majestic be He, is wise, then, we will acknowledge that all His actions are wisdom even if their reason is not disclosed [to us].ââ
633. Kamāl al-dīn3: Muḥammad b. Muḥammad b. `Iṣām al-Kulainī, from Muḥammad b. Ya`qūb al-Kulainī, from Isḥāq b. Ya`qūb, from the Master of Time #7778;āḥib al-Zamān), Allahâs blessings be on him, in his last signed letter (al-tauqī`) which was in reply to a question asked from him by Muḥammad b. Uthmān b. al-`Amrī: As for the reason behind the occultation, then surely Allah, Mighty and Majestic be He, says, âO you who believe! Do not ask about things which if disclosed to you will upset you.â4 Verily, all my forefathers had the allegiance of the tyrant of their time on their necks [i.e. were forced to pledge allegiance to them] but when I reappear, I will not have the allegiance of any oppressive king on my neck. As for benefiting from me during my occultation, then indeed, it will be like benefiting from the sun when the clouds conceal it from the eyes. I am security for the inhabitants of earth just as the stars are security for the inhabitants of the sky. So, donât ask about things that you donât need and donât strain yourself in learning the knowledge of things that you will not be questioned about. Pray as much as you can for the hastening of the relief (al-faraj) because it is your relief. Peace be on you, O Isḥāq b. Ya`qūb, and [on] whoever follows guidance.
634. `Uyūn akhbār al-Riḍā5: Muḥammad b. Ibrāhīm b. Isḥāq, from Aḥmad b. Muḥammad al-Hamdānī, from `Alī b. al-Ḥasan b. `Alī b. Faḍḍāl, from his father, from Abū l-Ḥasan `Alī b. Mūsā al-Riḍā, peace be on him, who said: âIt is as if I am with the Shias who are [wandering] like livestockâduring the occultation of my third descendantâin search of pasture, but will not find it.â I asked, âAnd why will it be so, O Son of Allahâs Messenger?â He answered, âBecause, their Imam will be concealed from them.â âWhy?â I asked again. He answered, âSo that he will not have the allegiance of anyone on his neck when he rises with the sword.â
635. Ghaybat al-Shaykh6: Al-Ḥusayn b. `Ubaid Allah, from Abū Ja`far Muḥammad b. Sufyān al-Bazaufarī, from Aḥmad b. Idrīs, from `Alī b. Muḥammad b. Qutayba, from al-Faḍl b. Shādhān al-Nīsābūrī, from al-Ḥasan b. Maḥbūb, from `Alī b. Ri`āb, who said: âZurāra said, âThe Qāâim will have an occultation before he appears.â I asked, âWhy?â He replied, âHe will fear for his life.ââ
The following traditions also prove the above concept: 337, 626, 654, 656, and 669.
Notes:
1. Even though the reason behind the occultation is concealed from us, this cannot be used as a pretext to deny it hasnât occurred or the existence of a benefit in its occurrence. For, Allahâs customs regarding this event and other events that occur by Allahâs Wisdom are one. Just as there is no way to deny the benefits in some of His actions whose rationale and advantage are not known to us, likewise, there is no way one can deny the benefits in His Assigned-Guardian (walī) and Proofâs occultation. Surely, our senses and intellect fall short of perceiving the benefits of most things including Allahâs customs in his creations and religious laws. We have not even been given the power to comprehend many of the unknown things. Thus, it is best to acknowledge the deficiency in our understanding.
It has been narrated from our master, (Imam) Abū `Abd-Allah Ja`far b. Muḥammad al-Ṣādiq, peace be on him: âO son of Adam! If a bird eats your heart, it will not be satiated and if your eye is poked with a needle you will become blind; Yet, you intend to recognize through these two [i.e. heart and eye] the kingdom of the heavens and the earth!â Thus, basically, we shouldnât ask about these matters after the Prophet and the Infallibles from his Ahl al-Bait, Allahâs blessings be on them all, informed us about their occurrence, and the indication of correct traditions about them, and such things occurring in the previous nations, just as the Imam mentioned in the long tradition narrated by Sadīr. Al-Mufīd says in al-Fuṣūl al-`ashara: âOne of Allahâs friends travels in the earth while worshipping his Exalted Lord and keeps away from the oppressors through his actions and distances himself from the abode of the criminals. Through his religion he stays far away from the place of the disobedient. None of the creatures is aware of his residence and no human from them can claim to have met him or to have been in his company. He is Khiḍr, peace be on him, who lived before the time of Moses [and still lives] today. This is a universally accepted fact amongst the traditionists and completely agreed on by historians and narrators. He travels in the earth and no one knows his abode and no one can claim to be in his company except what has been mentioned in the Holy Quran about Moses, peace be on him. Some people mention that he sometimes appears but he is not recognized. Some who have seen him think that they have met a God-fearing and abstentious person and when he leaves, they assume him to be Khiḍr even though they are neither sure nor convinced about it. Sometimes, he believes that he is one of the people of this time.â Then, he mentions the occultations of Moses, Joseph, Jonah, and others. (Imam) Abū `Abd-Allah, peace be on him, has explicitly stated that the reason for his occultation will not be revealed except after his reappearance and it is a divine secretâas has been discussed in the first tradition of this chapter from `Abd-Allah b. al-Faḍl al-Hāshimī. On this basis, it will be correct if we say: the real reason (for his occultation) is concealed from us in His Wisdom and it will not be revealed completely except after his reappearance.
Of course, there are numerous benefits and obvious advantages other than this. Some of these are: The people will be tested by his occultation and the level of their submission, recognition, and belief in what was revealed to the Holy Prophet, Allahâs blessings be on him and his family, will be examined. Indeed, it is the custom of Allah, the Exalted, to test the people. The creation of people, sending of Messengers, and ascension of divine scripts was naught but for testing. Allah, the Exalted, says: âWe have created man from a mixed semen [and] We [will] test himâ (Quran 76:2). He, Honorable is His Glory, also says: â[He] Who created death and life to test you as to which of you is the best in conductâ (Quran 67:2), and âDo the people think that they will be left alone if they say âwe have believedâ and they will not be testedâ (Quran 29:2). From the traditions that you will be acquainted with in this book, it can be understood that testing using the medium of occultation is one the most difficult of tests and fastening to religion in this period is like pulling thorns through your fist.
This is in addition to the fact that there is a special test and examination for acknowledging, believing from the depth of the heart, and being bound by what the Prophet, Allahâs blessings be upon him and his family, has informed about the hidden affairs. The fruit of these will be internal purification and a strength to practice the religion of Allah, the Exalted. Through his occultation, the peoples actions, beliefs, and knowledge will be tested. As for their actions, during the occultation severe and intense fitnas will take place and the people will be placed in great dilemma in a way that the most difficult of things will be to remain steadfast in performing oneâs religious duties. As for knowledge and belief, then believing in the occultation is believing in the unseen (al-ghayb) and no one will believe in it except he whose faith has been perfected, his recognition strengthened, and his intentions purified.
To sum it up, the people will be tested for belief in Allah and their submission and acknowledgement regarding the Holy Prophet, Allahâs blessings be on him and his family, and what he has said. It is likely that the tests regarding having faith in the unseen affairs is more severe than the other tests. Such believers have been clearly described in Allahâs saying: âThat Book which there is no doubt in, is guidance for the God-fearing, those who believe in the unseenâ (Quran 2:2â3). This is because believing in everything that is hidden from usâfrom the things that the Holy Prophet, Allahâs blessings be on him and his family, has informed aboutâis not possible except for those who possess certitude and are God-fearing. Those who have been saved from the darkness of temptations and satanic doubts. Those who illuminated their souls with the light of recognition, certitude, and complete belief in Allah, His Messengers, and His Books.
The perfection of human preparedness for his reappearance; because his advent is not like that of others from the Divine Proofs and Prophets and it is not based on apparent and normal causes. His actionsâas you will observe in the coming chaptersâwill be based on realities and he will judge relying on actualities. In his government, dissimulation (taqiyya) and tolerance will be done away with in religious affairs. He will be very strict regarding the governors and sinners. Such affairs will only be achieved when the world reaches a special capacity and mankind progresses in the fields of science, recognition, thought, ethics, and morality; so that they become prepared to accept his superb teachings and reformative programs.
Fear of being killed: History bears witness that apparently, the cause of his occultation is fear of being killed, because his enemiesâas you will see in the coming chaptersâwere determined to kill him and to extinguish his light. They desired to eliminate this holy and blessed generation, but Allah wanted nothing except the perfection of His Light.
Other reasons which have been mentioned in books specially authored on this subject.
If someone objects and says: What is the use of an Imam who cannot be seen? There is no difference between him existing or not! Then I will answer: The benefit in the presence of a divine proof is not confined to his authority in apparent affairs. Rather, the greatest advantage of his existence is the survival of the universeâby the permission of Allah, the Exaltedâand his order. Just like what he, Allahâs blessings be on him and his family, has said: âMy Ahl al-Bait are a cause of safety for the inhabitants of earth. If my Ahl al-Bait cease to exist, the inhabitants of the earth will also cease to exist.â He also said, âThis religion will continue to survive while twelve leaders from the Quraish exist in it. When they pass away, the earth will swallow its inhabitants.â Amīr al-Muâminīn `Alī b. Abī Ṭālib, peace be on him, has said: âYes, by Allah! The earth will not become empty of Allahâs ProofâŠâ In the next chapter, we will mention some of the traditions about how people will benefit from him during his occultation.
If he is not doing anything, it is not because this is what he wants. The people are themselves the cause of this problem. Al-Ṭūsī has pointed to two aspects in his book âal-Tajrīdâ using the following words: âHis existence is a grace and his authority is another grace, and we are the cause of his absence (`adamuhū minnā).â
We donâtâ claim with certainty that he is concealed from all his special followersâlike it has been recorded in al-Shāfī and Tanzīh al-Anbiyāââand hence, some important affairs are performed by him through his followers and special companions and they will benefit from him.
What is certain and clear is the fact that he is concealed from the people and no one has access to him during his occultation except some of his special companionsâand occasionally others, because of special reasonsâbut this does not mean that the people are also concealed from him. For, according to what can be derived from the traditions, he attends the Hajj pilgrimage every year and visits the shrines of his grandfather and infallible forefathers, accompanies the people, attends their gatherings, helps the distressed ones, visits some of the sick, and etc. Perhaps, he even fulfills their needs himself, may Allah sacrifice me for him. The impossibility of having access to him during the occultation means it is impossible to see him.
It is not compulsory for the Imam to execute his authority. Rather, he implements his authority through others just as he did during his minor and major occultations. Thus, he appointed the jurists and the just scholars who were learned about the laws of judgment. He made them as proofs upon the people. So, during the occultation, they apparently protect the sharia, explain the Islamic laws, spread Islamic sciences, dispel the doubts, and take care of anything which the affairs of the people are maintained with. A detailed discussion can be found in the books on jurisprudence. If you seek more elaboration, refer to the books of our great scholars like al-Mufīd, Sayyid al-Murtaḍā, al-Ṭūsī, al-Ṣadūq, al-Majlisī, etc. May Allah reward them on account of religion the best of rewards.
2. Kamāl al-dīn, vol. 2, chap. 11, pp. 481â482, no. 44; `Ilal al-sharāâi`, pp. 245â246, no. 8; Biḥār al-anwār, vol. 52, chap. 20, p. 91, no. 4; Ithbāt al-hudāt, vol.3, chap. 32, sect. 5, p. 488, no. 217 (short version).
3. Kamāl al-dīn, vol. 2, pp. 483â485, no. 4; Ghaybat al-Shaykh, pp. 290â293, no. 247; I`lām al-warā, chap. 3, sect. 3; Kashf al-ghumma, vol. 2, pp. 530â532; al-Kharāâij wa l-jarāâiḥ, vol. 3, pp. 1113â1117, no. 30; al-Iḥtijāj, vol. 2, pp. 281â284; Biḥār al-anwār, vol. 53, chap. 31, pp. 180â182, no. 10, and vol. 75, chap. 30, p. 380, no. 1, citing al-Durrat al-bāhira.
4. Quran 5:101.
5. `Uyūn akhbār al-Riḍā, vol. 1, chap. 28, p. 273, no. 6; Kamāl al-dīn, vol. 2, chap. 44, p. 480, no. 4; Biḥār al-anwār, vol. 51, chap. 8, p. 152, no. 1. I say: The third means Imam Abū Muḥammad al-Ḥasanâthe father of al-Ḥujja, peace be on himâand the concealed Imam refers to his son, al-Ḥujja, peace be on them both.
6. Ghaybat al-Shaykh, p. 332, no. 274; similar to it in al-Kāfī, vol. 1, chap. 138, p. 338, no. 9, from ibn Bukair from Zurāra; Ghaybat al-Nu`mānī, pp. 176â177. Similar to it through numerous chains of narrators and similar wordings can be found in numbers 19â22 from ibn Bukair; `Ilal al-sharāâi`, p. 246, no. 9; Kamāl al-dīn, vol. 2, chap. 44, p. 481, no. 9, and similar to it from ibn Bukair and Khalid b. Najīḥ al-Jawwān and ibn Bukair from Zurāra in numbers 7, 8, and 10; similar to it in Ithbāt al-hudāt, vol. 6, p. 359, no. 23, with a difference in the narrators and minor differences in meaning.
The traditions that indicate some of the benefits of his existence and how people benefit from him during his occultation and how he manages the affairs
Comprised of nine traditions
636. Nahj al-balāgha1: Yes, by Allah! The earth will not become empty of a person who establishes Allahâs proofâeither apparently [while they are] known or afraid [while they are] hidden; so that Allahâs proofs and clear arguments are not nullified. How many are they and where [are they]? By Allah, they are few in number but have great stature before Allah. Through them, Allah guards His proofs and clear arguments until they entrust them to others who are like themselves and sow its seeds in the hearts of those who are similar to them.
Knowledge has led them to real understanding and they have blended themselves with the spirit of certainty. They regard as easy what the extremely wealthy regard as hard. They find peace in what the ignorant have fright of. They live in this world with bodies whose souls are hanging in the highest place. They are the Successors of Allah on His earth and the callers to His religion. Oh, oh, how I yearn to see them!2
637. Yanābī` al-mawadda3: Citing Nahj al-balāgha: From us is the Mahdī. He will move in the world while carrying a radiant lamp and will tread on the path of the virtuous, in order to unfasten knots, free slaves, divide the united and unite the divided. He will be in concealment from the people. The stalker will not find his footprints even though he pursues with his eyes.
Also in Nahj al-balāgha ([Egypt], vol. 2, p. 47, no. 146): O people! This is the time for the occurrence of every promised event and the approach of things which you do not know. Whoever from among us will be during these days will move through them with a burning lamp and will tread on the footsteps of the virtuous, in order to unfasten knots, free slaves, divide the united and unite the divided. He will be in concealment from the people. The stalker will not find his footprints even though he pursues with his eyes. Then a group of people will be sharpened like the sharpening of swords by the blacksmith. Their sight will be brightened by revelation, the [delicacies of the Quranâs] commentary will be put in their ears and they will be given drinks of wisdom, morning and evening.4
638. Farāâid al-simṭain5: Informed us Abū Ja`far, ibn Bābawayh, may Allah be satisfied with him, from Muḥammad b. Aḥmad al-Simnānī, from Aḥmad b. Yaḥyā b. Zakariyyā al-Qattān, from Bakr b. `Abd-Allah b. Ḥabīb, from Faḍl b. al-Ṣaqr al-`Abdī, from Mu`āwiya, from Sulaimān b. Mihrān al-Aâmash, from al-Ṣādiq Ja`far b. Muḥammad, peace be on him, from his father Muḥammad b. `Alī, peace be on him, from his father `Alī b. al-Ḥusayn, peace be on him, who said: We are the leaders of the Muslims, Allahâs Proofs upon the worlds, the masters (sādat) of the believers, the chiefs of those who will have shiny faces [on the Day of Judgment], and the masters (mawālī) of the faithful. We are security for the inhabitants of the earth just as the stars are security for the inhabitants of the sky. We are those due to whom the sky is withheld from falling on the earth except with His permission; due to us, the earth is withheld from shaking its inhabitants; due to us it rains and mercy is spread and the blessings of the earth come out.
If someone from us didnât exist on earth, the earth would have swallowed its inhabitants. Ever since Allah created Adam, the earth has not been empty of Allahâs Proofâ[who has been] either apparent and known or hidden and concealedâand it will not become empty until the Hour [i.e. Judgment Day] is established. Had it not been so, Allah would not have been worshipped.
Sulaimān says, âI asked (Imam) al-Ṣādiq, peace be on him, âHow will the people benefit from a hidden and concealed proof?â He answered, âJust like they benefit from the sun when the clouds cover it.6ââ
639. Kamāl al-dīn7: Narrated to me my father, may Allah be satisfied with him, from Sa`d b. `Abd-Allah, from Hārūn b. Muslim, from Sa`dān, from Mas`adat b. Ṣadaqa, from Abū `Abd-Allah [al-Ṣādiq], from his forefathers, from `Alī, peace be on them all, who said: O Allah! There must exist on Your earth Your Proof upon Your creatures, who guides them to Your religion and teaches them [from] Your knowledge, so that Your argument is not negated and the followers of Your friends are not deviated after You guide them. [This proof must exist] regardless of him being apparent and not obeyed, or hidden and fearing [for his life]. Even though he is hidden from the peopleâwhile they are guidedâhis knowledge and his customs are firmly established in the hearts of the believers and they act upon them.
640. Kitāb Faḍl b. Shādhān8: Narrated to us Muḥammad b. Abī `Umair and Ṣafwān b. Yaḥyā, from Jamīl b. Darrāj, from (Imam) al-Ṣādiq, from his father, from his forefathers, from Amīr al-Muâminīn, peace be on them all, who said: Islam and a just ruler are two brothers who are always together. One will not be corrected without the other. Islam is the foundation and the just ruler is the protector. What is without a foundation will be destroyed and what is without a protector will be spoiled. It is because of this that when our Qāâim departs from this world, nothing will remain this world.
The following traditions also prove the above point: 245 and 609
Notes:
1. Nahj al-balāgha, p. 497, saying no. 147; Tadhkirat al-ḥuffāẓ, vol. 1, p. 11; Dastūr ma`ālim al-ḥikam, chap. 4, pp. 82â85, through his chain of narrators from Kumail; al-Ghārāt, vol. 1, p. 153; Tuḥaf al-`uqūl, section on his sayings to Kumail b. Ziyād, p. 170; al-Khiṣāl, chap. 3, p. 187; al-Amālī, pp. 19â20, no. 23; Biḥār al-anwār, vol. 23, chap. 1, pp. 44â46, no. 91; al-Mufīd, al-Amālī, session 29, p. 250; Kamāl al-dīn, vol. 1, chap. 26, p. 289, no. 2; Also see al-Bidāya wa l-nihāya, vol. 9, p. 46, and many other sources.
2. Nahj al-balāgha, saying no. 147.
3. Yanābī` al-mawadda, p. 437; Sharḥ nahj al-balāgha by Ṣubḥī al-Ṣāliḥ, Sermon 150, p. 208.
4. Nahj al-balāgha, trans. Sayed Ali Reza (Iran: Sayed Mujtaba Musavi Lari Foundation), sermon 149 (with some minor changes in the translation);
5. Farāâid al-simṭain, vol. 1, chap. 2, pp. 45â46, no. 11; Yanābī` al-mawadda, p. 477.
6. Al-Majlisī, may Allah have mercy on him, has mentioned some aspects of his similarity with the sun when it is covered by the clouds: The lights of existence, knowledge, and guidance reach the people through him; since it has been established through many traditions that they are the ultimate cause for the creation of the creatures. Was it not for them, the light of existence would not have reached anything other than them [i.e. no one would have come into existence]. Because of their blessings, us asking them for intercession, and by asking them for help, the sciences and knowledge have become manifest for the people and calamities have been dispelled from them. If it was not for them, the people would have [been punished with] various punishments due to their hideous deeds. As Allah, the Exalted, declares, âAllah will not punish them while you are with themâ (Quran 8:33). We have experienced many times in affairs which we reached a dead end, in difficult issues, in times when we became distant from [Allah], the Exalted, and when the doors of grace were closed, then, when we sought their intercession and implored [through] their lightsâproportional to our spiritual connection with them in that timeâthe problems were solved. This has been experienced by those whom Allah has decorated the eyes of their hearts with the light of faith. We have already explained this in the Book of Imamate [in Biḥār al-anwār].
Just as the people long for the sun to be uncovered so that they benefit more from it compared to when it is covered with clouds, likewise, during his occultation, the sincere Shias await his reappearance every moment and second, and donât lose hope in him.
Those who deny he exists, even with the many clear signs [from him], are like those who deny the sun exists when the clouds hide it from the eyes.
Sometimes, it is better for the people that the sun hides behind the clouds. Similarly, his occultation is better for them in these times, hence, he is concealed from the people.
One who is staring at the sun cannot stare at it if it is not covered with clouds. One who looks at it can even become blinded due to the eyesâ weakness in encompassing it. Likewise, the sun of his holy existence might be harmful for their power of discernment and can make them become blind regarding the truth. Thus, their power of discernment can tolerate having faith in him during his occultation just as man looks towards the sun from beneath the clouds and [his eyes] will not be harmed.
The sun emerges from the clouds while one person can see it and another canât. Likewise, it is possible that during his occultation, he shows himself to some people but not to others.
They [i.e. the Ahl al-Bait] are like the sun which is benefited by all, but, he who is blind cannot benefit from them. This has been mentioned in the traditions which explain the verse, âHe who is blind in this [world], he will [also] he blind in the hereafter and in a more deviated pathâ (Quran 17:72).
The sunâs rays enter the houses proportional to the windows and hatches that they have and proportional to the number of obstacles that have been removed. Similarly, people benefit from the lights of their guidance proportional to the number of obstacles which they have removed from their senses and perceptions which form the windows of their heartsâthings like their desires or physical interestsâand also proportional to what they remove from their hearts from the evil coverings to the extent that they reach the position where they are like those who are beneath the sky and enveloped by the sunâs rays from all sides without any veil. Indeed, eight doors from this spiritual paradise have been opened for you and Allah, on account of His grace, has opened for me another eight [doors], which cannot be discussed here. Hopefully, Allah will open for us and for you a thousand doors [which lead] to their recognition, which a further thousand doors open from each door.â
7. Kamāl al-dīn, vol. 1, chap. 27, p. 302, no. 11; Ithbāt al-waṣiyya, p. 251; Ithbāt al-hudāt, vol. 6, chap. 32, sect. 2, p. 363, no. 112.
8. Kifāyat al-muhtadī (al-Arba`īn), pp. 222â223, under no. 39; Kashf al-Haqq (al-Arba`īn), p. 203, no. 35, with the following wording: âWhen our Qāâim departs nothing will remain from Islam and when nothing remains from Islam, nothing will remain from this world.â
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