Monday, July 11, 2022

2022: Sadat - Sadr

 Sadat, Anwar al-

Sadat, Anwar al- (Anwar al-Sadat) (Anwar el-Sādāt) (Muḥammad Anwar el-Sādāt) (Muḥammad Anwar as-Sādāt) (b. December 25, 1918, Mit Abū al-Kawm, Al-Minūfiyyah governorate, Egypt — d. October 6, 1981, Cairo).  Egyptian military leader and president (1970-1981), best rememberd for his work toward peace in the Middle East, in the course of which he became the first Arab leader to recognize Israel.  

Sadat was born on December 25, 1918, in the Nile delta village of Mit Abu al-Kawm.  The son of a poor hospital clerk, he was chosen for the military academy, where he joined Gamal Abdel Nasser in plotting against the British dominated Egyptian monarchy.  He was jailed twice for contacts with Germans in World War II (1939-1945) and later tried and acquitted on charges of conspiring to assassinate a pro-British politician in 1946.  Sadat took part in the coup of 1952, in which Nasser ousted King Faruk.  He then held several public posts and was vice president in 1964 to 1966 and again in 1969 to 1970.  

After Nasser’s death in 1970 Sadat was elected president, and he soon consolidated his hold on power.  Smarting from the defeat by Israel in the Six Day War of 1967, he built up his military strength and in October 1973 launched the Arab-Israeli (Yom Kippur) War of 1973.  The Egyptian army quickly advanced across the Suez Canal, breaking Israel’s defenses and penetrating Israeli-occupied territory.  Israel soon recovered and surrounded the Egyptian army.  The fighting ended with Israel still in control of the areas it occupied in 1967.  Nevertheless, because Egypt had proven that Israeli forces were not invincible, Sadat managed to turn the war into a moral victory.  He subsequently established close relations with the United States.  

In 1977, due to worsening economic conditions and the desire to regain the Sinai Peninsula for Egypt, Sadat boldly risked the ire of other Arab states by traveling to Jerusalem, where he offered recognition of Israel on certain conditions. In Israel, Sadat spoke with prime minister Menachim Begin and gave a speech in the national assembly of Israel, the Knesset.  His initiative eventually led to a peace treaty (the Camp David Accord) with Israel, signed on March 26, 1979, and the gradual withdrawal by Israel from the entire Sinai Peninsula. The treaty was in two parts.  First, Israel was to give up land taken from Egypt in exchange for peace, and second, that Israel would refrain from building settlements on the territories occupied since the Six Day War, thereby insuring the establishment of a Palestinian state.  For their leadership in the peace negotiations, Sadat and Israeli prime minister Menachem Begin were jointly awarded the 1978 Nobel Peace Prize.  

The treaty with Israel isolated Egypt in the Arab world, and strong opposition was expressed from the Islamists.  Bitterly opposed by many Arab leaders and hated by Islamic fundamentalists, Sadat was forced to order the rounding up of 1,600 dissidents, Islamists and Communists in September 1981.  One month later, on October 6, 1981, Sadat was assassinated during a military parade in Cairo by religious extremists within his own army.

Anwar el-Sādāt was an Egyptian army officer and politician who was president of Egypt from 1970 until his assassination in 1981. He initiated serious peace negotiations with Israel, an achievement for which he shared the 1978 Nobel Prize for Peace with Israeli Prime Minister Menachem Begin. Under their leadership, Egypt and Israel made peace with each other in 1979.

Sādāt graduated from the Cairo Military Academy in 1938. During World War II he plotted to expel the British from Egypt with the help of the Germans. The British arrested and imprisoned him in 1942, but he escaped two years later. In 1946 Sādāt was arrested after being implicated in the assassination of pro-British minister Amīn ʿUthmān. He was imprisoned until his acquittal in 1948. In 1950 he joined Gamal Abdel Nasser’s Free Officers organization. He participated in its armed coup against the Egyptian monarchy in 1952 and supported Nasser’s election to the presidency in 1956. Sādāt held various high offices that led to his serving in the vice presidency (1964–66, 1969–70). He became acting president upon Nasser’s death, on September 28, 1970, and was elected president in a plebiscite on October 15.

Sādāt’s domestic and foreign policies were partly a reaction against those of Nasser and reflected Sādāt’s efforts to emerge from his predecessor’s shadow. One of Sādāt’s most important domestic initiatives was the open-door policy known as infitāḥ (Arabic: “opening”), a program of dramatic economic change that included decentralization and diversification of the economy as well as efforts to attract trade and foreign investment. Sādāt’s efforts to liberalize the economy came at significant cost, including high inflation and an uneven distribution of wealth, deepening inequality and leading to discontent that would later contribute to food riots in January 1977.

It was in foreign affairs that Sādāt made his most dramatic efforts. Feeling that the Soviet Union gave him inadequate support in Egypt’s continuing confrontation with Israel, he expelled thousands of Soviet technicians and advisers from the country in 1972. In addition, Egyptian peace overtures toward Israel were initiated early in Sādāt’s presidency, when he made known his willingness to reach a peaceful settlement if Israel returned the Sinai Peninsula (captured by that country in the June [Six-Day] War of 1967). Following the failure of this initiative, Sādāt launched a military attack in coordination with Syria to retake the territory, sparking the October (Yom Kippur) War of 1973. The Egyptian army achieved a tactical surprise in its attack on the Israeli-held territory, and, though Israel successfully counterattacked, Sādāt emerged from the war with greatly enhanced prestige as the first Arab leader to have actually retaken some territory from Israel.

After the war, Sādāt began to work toward peace in the Middle East. He made a historic visit to Israel (November 19–20, 1977), during which he traveled to Jerusalem to place his plan for a peace settlement before the Israeli Knesset (parliament). This initiated a series of diplomatic efforts that Sādāt continued despite strong opposition from most of the Arab world and the Soviet Union. United States President Jimmy Carter mediated the negotiations between Sādāt and Begin that resulted in the Camp David Accords (September 17, 1978), a preliminary peace agreement between Egypt and Israel. Sādāt and Begin were awarded the Nobel Prize for Peace in 1978, and their continued political negotiations resulted in the signing on March 26, 1979, of a treaty of peace between Egypt and Israel—the first between the latter and any Arab country.

While Sādāt’s popularity rose in the West, it fell dramatically in Egypt because of internal opposition to the treaty, a worsening economic crisis, and Sādāt’s suppression of the resulting public dissent. In September 1981 he ordered a massive police strike against his opponents, jailing more than 1,500 people from across the political spectrum. The following month Sādāt was assassinated by Muslim extremists during the Armed Forces Day military parade commemorating the Yom Kippur War.

Sādāt’s autobiography, In Search of Identity, was published in 1978.

Sadat was married twice. He was first married to Ehsan Madi at age 22, and divorced her several years later, just 17 days after the birth of their third daughter, Camelia. He then married Jehan Raouf (later known as Jehan Sadat), who was only 15 years and 9 months at the time, on May 29, 1949. They had one son, Gamal, and three daughters: Lobna, Noha and Jehan (named after her mother). It was Gamal who represented his father when he was presented, posthumously, with the Presidential Medal of Freedom in 1984 by President Ronald Reagan. Jehan Sadat was the 2001 recipient of the Pearl S. Buck Award.

In 1983, Sadat, a miniseries based on the life of Anwar Sadat, aired on United States television with Oscar-winning actor Louis Gossett, Jr. in the title role. The film was promptly banned by the Egyptian government, as were all other movies produced and distributed by Columbia Pictures, over allegations of historical inaccuracies. A civil lawsuit was brought by Egypt's artists' and film unions against Columbia Pictures and the film's directors, producers and scriptwriters before a court in Cairo, but was dismissed; the court held that "the distortions and the slanders found in the film took place outside the country," so that "the crimes were not within the Egyptian courts' jurisdiction."

Western authors attributed the film's poor reception to racism — Gossett being African American — in the Egyptian government or Egypt in general. Sadat himself was an ethnic Nubian and is considered by Egyptians to have been of black skin color. The two-part series earned Gossett an Emmy nomination in the United States. The first Egyptian depiction of Sadat's life came in 2001, when Ayyam El Sadat (English: Days of Sadat) was released in Egyptian cinemas. This movie, by contrast, was a major success in Egypt, and was hailed as Ahmad Zaki's greatest performance.

   
Anwar al-Sadat see Sadat, Anwar al-
Anwar el-Sadat see Sadat, Anwar al-
Muhammad Anwar el-Sadat see Sadat, Anwar al-
Muhammad Anwar as-Sadat see Sadat, Anwar al-

Saddam Husayn
Saddam Husayn.  See Hussein, Saddam.

Sa‘di, ‘Abd al-Rahman al-
Sa‘di, ‘Abd al-Rahman al- (‘Abd al-Rahman al-Sa‘di) (Abd al-Sadi) (May 28, 1594 - c.1656).  Historian of the Songhai kingdom in the Sudan.  His history of the Sudan contains the early history of the tribes of the Songhai, the Melli and the Tuareg, as well as of the towns of Dienne and Timbuktu.  He was an aristocrat and high government official from Timbuktu, who also lived for a time in Jenne and visited Macina.  In 1656, he completed the famous Ta’rikh al-Sudan, a history of Songhay emphasizing Jenne and Timbuktu.  Much of it incorporated earlier Songhay traditions.  The book also contains a good deal of information on Mali.  The Ta’rikh was discovered by the explorer Barth in 1853.

The Tarikh al-Sudan (also Tarikh es-Sudan - the "History of the Sudan") is a chronicle written in Arabic in around 1655 by Abd al-Sadi. It provides the single most important primary source for the history of the Songhay Empire.

The author, Abd al-Sadi, was born on May 28, 1594, and died at an unknown date sometime around 1655-56, the last date to be mentioned in his chronicle. He spent most of his life working for the Moroccan Arma bureaucracy, initially in the administration of Djenné and the massina region of the Inland Niger Delta. In 1646 he became chief secretary to the Arma administration of Timbuktu.

The early sections of the chronicle are devoted to brief histories of earlier Songhay dynasties, of the Mali Empire and of the Tuareg, and to biographies of the scholars and holymen of both Timbuktu and Djenné. The main part of the chronicle covers the history of the Songhay from the middle of the 15th century until the Moroccan invasion in 1591, and then the history of Timbuktu under Moroccan rule up to 1655. Al-Sadi rarely acknowledges his sources. For the earlier period much of his information is presumably based on oral tradition. From around 1610 the information would have been gained first hand.
‘Abd al-Rahman al-Sa‘di see Sa‘di, ‘Abd al-Rahman al-
Abd al-Sadi see Sa‘di, ‘Abd al-Rahman al-


Sa‘d ibn Abi Waqqas
Sa‘d ibn Abi Waqqas (Saad ibn Abi Waqqas) (b. 595, Mecca, Arabia - d. 664/671, Medina, Arabia).  An Arab general.  He was one of the oldest Companions of the Prophet and took part in the battles of Badr and Uhud and in the following campaigns. He defeated the Persians at the famous battle of al-Qadisiyya and captured Ctesiphon-Seleucia (in Arabic, al-Mada’in).  He also built a strong military camp, which was to be the town of Kufa.  On his death bed, the Caliph ‘Umar appointed him as one of the six Companions to choose a new caliph.  He refused to pay homage to ‘Ali.  

Saad ibn Abī Waqqās was an early convert to Islam and one of the important companions of the Prophet Muhammad.  Born in 595, he was from the Banu Zuhrah clan of the Quraysh tribe, and was a cousin of Aminah bint Wahb, mother of Muhammad. He was one of the first to accept Islam.

In 614 the Muslims were on their way to the hills of Mecca to hold a secret meeting with the prophet Muhammad, when a group of polytheists observed their suspicious movements and began to abuse and fight them. Sa`ad beat a polytheist and shed his blood, reportedly becoming the first to draw blood on the behalf of Islam.

Sa'ad fought at the battle of Badr with his young brother Umayr who was only in his early teens. Umayr was denied access to the battle but because he struggled and cried was later given permission to join the battle by the prophet. Sa`d returned to Medina alone; Umayr was one of the fourteen Muslims who died in the battle.

At the battle of Uhud, Sa`d was chosen as an archer together with Zayd, Sa`īb (the son of Uthmān ibn Mazūn) and others. Sa`d was among those who fought in defense of Muhammad after some Muslims had deserted their positions.

Sa`d also fought under Umar's command against the Sassanid army in the Battle of al-Qādisiyyah. He was later appointed governor of Kufa and Nejd during the caliphate of Umar.

Some narrations state that although Umar deposed him from his post as governor, he recommended that the caliph who succeeded him reinstall Sa'd, since Umar had not deposed Sa'd due to any treachery.

He was one of six people nominated by Umar ibn al-Khattab for the third caliphate.

Uthman carried out Umar's recommendation and appointed Sa'd as governor of Kufa.

S'ad has been traditionally credited by Chinese Muslims with introducing Islam to China in 650, during the reign of Emperor Gaozong of Tang.  However, modern secular scholars have not found any historical evidence for him actually traveling to China.

Sa'd was mentioned in a hadith relevant to the Umayyad tradition of cursing Ali.

Sa'd outlived all ten blessed companions and died a wealthy man.

Sunnī Muslims regard Sa'd as one of the ten to whom paradise was promised.

Saad ibn Abi Waqqas see Sa‘d ibn Abi Waqqas

Sa‘d ibn Mu‘adh ibn al-Nu‘man
Sa‘d ibn Mu‘adh ibn al-Nu‘man (d. 627).  Contemporary of the Prophet.  He showed great zeal for the new faith and was appointed the Prophet’s deputy in Medina.  Mortally wounded, he decreed that all the men of the Banu Qurayza were to be put to death.


Sa‘d ibn ‘Ubada ibn Dulaym al-Khazraji
Sa‘d ibn ‘Ubada ibn Dulaym al-Khazraji (d. c. 636).  Contemporary of the Prophet.  He was one of the few people in the Arabia of his time who were able to write.  He played a role at al- ‘Aqaba, and at Uhud he tended the wounded Prophet.  He proved himself by great liberality.  At the Prophet’s death, he was proposed as his successor.  After Abu Bakr had received homage as Caliph, Sa‘d went to al-Hawran, where he died.


Sa‘dids
Sa‘dids (Sadites) (Saadis) (Bani Zaydan) (Banu Sa‘d).  Sharif dynasty of Sus in southern Morocco  (r.1544 [1554?]-1659).  Their main capitals were Marrakech and Fez.  The Banu Sad, who migrated from the Hijaz to the Daratal (southern Morocco) at the start of the 14th century.  After 1505, they extended through southern Morocco with the help of religious brotherhoods, fought against the ruling Wattasids, and became leaders in the defensive action against the Portuguese (occupation of Marrakech in 1525, conquest of Agadir in 1541 by the Portuguese, capture of Fez in 1549).  In 1554, Muhammad al-Sheikh (r. 1549-1557) toppled the Wattasids, secured Sadite rule with great harshness, and captured Tlemcen.  His son, Mulai Abdallah (r. 1557-1574), successfully averted the controlling influence of the Ottomans.  Next came conflicts between the pretenders.  In 1578, the Sadites annihilated the Portuguese at al-Qasr al-Kabir.  The political zenith came under the rule of Ahmad al-Mansur (r. 1578-1603), who secured economic prosperity and organized a state administration that would endure for centuries (the Makhzan system).  In 1603, division of the territory led to a decline in power and the off-shoot of an independent dynastic branch in Fez (r. 1610-1626).  In 1659, the last Sadite ruler was murdered and Morocco fell to the Alawids. The Sadites were replaced by the Filali Sharifs from Tafilalt.    

The Saadi Dynasty of Morocco (in English also Saadite or Saadian, original name Bani Zaydan), began with the reign of Sultan Mohammed ash-Sheikh in 1554. From 1509 to 1554 they had ruled only in the south of Morocco. The Saadian rule ended in 1659 with the end of the reign of Sultan Ahmad el Abbas. The Saadī family claimed descent from Muhammad through the line of Ali ibn Abi Talib and Fatima Zahra (Muhammad's daughter). The Saadi came from Tagmadert in the valley of the Draa River. The family's village of origin in the Draa was Tidzi (some 10 kilometers north of Zagora). They claimed sharifian origins through an ancestor from Yanbu and rendered Sufism respectable in Magreb. The name Saadi or Saadian was given to the Bani Zaydan (shurafa of Tagmadert) by later generations and rivals for power, who tried to deny their Hassanid descent by claiming that they came from the family of Halimah Saadiyya, Muhammad's wet nurse. The most famous sultan of the Saadi was Ahmad al-Mansur (1578–1603), builder of the El Badi Palace in Marrakech and contemporary of Elizabeth I. One of their most important achievements was defeating the Portuguese at the Battle of Ksar El Kebir and defending the country against the Ottomans. Before they conquered Marrakech, they had Taroudant as their capital city.

The Saadi dynasty rulers were:

    * Abu Abdallah al-Qaim (1509-1517)
    * Ahmad al-Araj (1517-1544)
    * Mohammed ash-Sheikh (1544-1557) (ruling all of Morocco after 1554)
    * Abdallah al-Ghalib (1557–1574)
    * Abu Abdallah Mohammed II (1574–1576)
    * Abu Marwan Abd al-Malik I (1576–1578)
    * Ahmad al-Mansur (1578–1603)
    * Abou Fares Abdallah (1603–1608 in parts of Morocco)

1603-1659 the Saadian rulers of Morocco based in Marrakesh

    * Zidan Abu Maali (1603–1627)
    * Abu Marwan Abd al-Malik II (1627–1631)
    * Al Walid ibn Zidan (1631–1636)
    * Mohammed esh Sheikh es Seghir (1636–1655)
    * Ahmad el Abbas (1655–1659)

1603-1627 the Saadian rulers based in Fes (with only local power)

    * Mohammed esh Sheikh el Mamun (1604-1613)
    * Abdallah II (1613-1623)
    * Abd el Malek (1623-1627)

Sadites see Sa‘dids
Saadis see Sa‘dids
Bani Zaydan see Sa‘dids
Banu Sa'd see Sa‘dids


Sa‘d I ibn Zangi, ‘Izz al-Din Abu Shuja’
Sa‘d I ibn Zangi, ‘Izz al-Din Abu Shuja’ (‘Izz al-Din Abu Shuja’ Sa‘d I ibn Zangi).  Salghurid atabeg of Fars (r. 1203-1231).  He waged war with his cousin and predecessor Tughril ibn Sunqur during the latter’s reign (r.1194-1203).  Under his rule Fars enjoyed considerable prosperity, although he had to acknowledge the suzerainty of the Khwarazm-Shahs.
‘Izz al-Din Abu Shuja’ Sa‘d I ibn Zangi see Sa‘d I ibn Zangi, ‘Izz al-Din Abu Shuja’


Sa‘di, Shaykh Muslih al-Din
Sa‘di, Shaykh Muslih al-Din (Shaykh Muslih al-Din Sa‘di) (Musharrif al-Din bin Muslih Sa‘di) (Abu Muhammad Musharrif al-Din Muslih ibn Abd Allah Shirazi) (Sa'di) (Abū-Muḥammad Muṣliḥ al-Dīn bin Abdallāh Shīrāzī) (Musharrif al-Dīn ibn Muṣlih al-Dīn) (c.1213 – December 9, 1291).  One of the greatest of Persian poets.  His works have always been esteemed and much quoted in the Muslim world for their homely and practical wisdom.  Little is known for certain about his life, as the autobiographical references he makes in his writings can not all to be taken seriously.

Sa’di  was the pen name of Abu Muhammad Musharrif al-Din Muslih ibn Abd Allah Shirazi.  Sa‘di was one of the great poets of the world and truly the best and most multi-faceted author in Persian literature.  He is often refered to by his countrymen as Afsah al-Mutakallimin (“most eloquent of speakers”).  He was born in Shiraz to a family of religious scholars and received his earliest education from his father.  His father died while Sa‘di was still very young, and he continued his education under the direction of his maternal grandfather.  Sa‘di might have continued his education in Shiraz, then a major center of learning, had not political turmoil in 1224, when the province of Fars was ravaged by the forces of the Khwarazmshah, forced him to leave his home town for further study at the Nizamiyya college of Baghdad.  

Sa‘di’s teachers at the Nizamiyya included Jamal al-Din Abu al-Faraj ibn Yahya al-Jauzi, a lecturer at the Mustansariyya college in Baghdad, to whom Sa‘di refers in his Gulistan.  During the years that Sa‘di was studying in Baghdad, Iran was being severely ravaged by the Mongol hordes, who destroyed cities and massacred their populations.  In about 1227, rather than going back to Shiraz, Sa‘di embarked on a traveling adventure in the Middle East, visiting scholars, theologians, Sufi shaikhs, and other distinguished figures of the time.  

Sa‘di made several pilgrimages to Mecca (fourteen by one account) and, if a story in his Gulistan is to be taken as true, was taken captive by the Crusaders in Tripoli.  The stories of his visits to India and Central Asia are most probably fictitious.  

In 1257, Sa‘di was back in Shiraz, which, under the wise administration of the Salghurid atabegs, had managed to escape unscathed the destruction brought by the Mongols to the other parts of Iran.  He became attached to the court of Atabeg Abu Bakr ibn Sa’d and his son Sa’d.  Except for another pilgrimage to Mecca Sa‘di spent the remaining years of his life in peace in Shiraz, enjoying the great honor and esteem that he deservedly received as a sage and great poet from kings, noblemen, and commoners alike.  He died in Shiraz and was buried to the east of the modern town, where his mausoleum, the Sa‘diyya, now stands.  

The enormous respect and reputation that Sa‘di enjoyed during his lifetime only increased after his death and is unmatched by any other poet in the Persian language.  His own remark that his poetry was eagerly sought after like gold leaves is hardly an exaggeration.  His contemporary, Amir Khusrau, a great poet in his own right, felt embarrassed that he dared to write poetry in Sa‘di’s age.  His poetry was put to music in China only half a century after his death.  His impact on later poetry has been tremendous, and his prose marked a turning point in Persian literary style.  For centuries, his Bustan and Gulistan have been the standard textbooks for serious students of Persian.

Sa‘di’s works (known as the Kulliyyat) include the Sa’dinama, or Bustan (Orchard), completed in 1257, in ten versified chapters; Gulistan (Rose Garden), an entertaining book on practical wisdom in rhymed prose (in the form of anecdotes) interspersed with short poems (it was called the “Bible of the Persians” by Emerson); ghazals (lyrics); qasidas (odes, a few in Arabic); satires; and a few short pieces in prose.

In 1258, Sa‘di completed Gulistan (“The Rose Garden”).  Gulistan is a collection of gnomic anecdotes written in rhyming prose with verse passages interspersed.  Gulistan is also known as Sa‘di-nama.   Gulistan is a collection of poems on ethical subjects, the latter a collection of moral stories in prose.  

The rest of his life was spent at Shiraz, where his tomb is still revered.

Sa‘di was also a prolific writer of occasional verse -- panegyric, elegies, and lyrics (ghazals).  As the popularizer of the ghazal form, Sa‘di paved the way for Hafiz.   

Sa‘di also wrote a volume of odes, and collections of poems known as Pleasantries, Jests and Obscenities.  He is regarded as the master of the ghazal.  His influence on Persian, Turkish and Indian literature has been very considerable, and his works were often translated into European languages from the seventeenth century onwards.

Sa'di lost his father, Muṣliḥ al-Dīn, in early childhood. Later he was sent to study in Baghdad at the renowned Neẓāmīyeh College, where he acquired the traditional learning of Islam. The unsettled conditions following the Mongol invasion of Persia led him to wander abroad through Anatolia, Syria, Egypt, and Iraq. He refers in his work to travels in India and Central Asia, but these cannot be confirmed. He claimed that he was held captive by the Franks and put to work in the trenches of the fortress of Tripoli (now in Lebanon). However, this story, like many of his other “autobiographical” anecdotes, is considered highly suspect. When he returned to his native Shīrāz, he was middle-aged. He seems to have spent the rest of his life in Shīrāz.

Saʿdī took his nom de plume from the name of a local atabeg (prince), Saʿd ibn Zangī. Saʿdī’s best-known works are the Būstān (1257; The Orchard) and the Gulistān (1258; The Rose Garden). The Būstān is entirely in verse (epic meter) and consists of stories aptly illustrating the standard virtues recommended to Muslims (justice, liberality, modesty, contentment) as well as of reflections on the behavior of dervishes and their ecstatic practices. The Gulistān is mainly in prose and contains stories and personal anecdotes. The text is interspersed with a variety of short poems, containing aphorisms, advice, and humorous reflections. The morals preached in the Gulistān border on expediency—e.g., a well-intended lie is admitted to be preferable to a seditious truth. Saʿdī demonstrates a profound awareness of the absurdity of human existence. The fate of those who depend on the changeable moods of kings is contrasted with the freedom of the dervishes.

For Western students the Būstān and Gulistān have a special attraction; but Saʿdī is also remembered as a great panegyrist and lyricist and as the author of a number of masterly general odes portraying human experience and also of particular odes such as the lament on the fall of Baghdad after the Mongol invasion in 1258. His lyrics are to be found in Ghazalīyāt (“Lyrics”) and his odes in Qaṣāʿīd (“Odes”). Six prose treatises on various subjects are attributed to him. He is also known for a number of works in Arabic. The peculiar blend of human kindness and cynicism, humor, and resignation displayed in Saʿdī’s works, together with a tendency to avoid the hard dilemma, make him, to many, the most widely admired writer in the world of Iranian culture.




Shaykh Muslih al-Din Sa‘di see Sa‘di, Shaykh Muslih al-Din
Musharrif al-Din bin Muslih Sa‘di see Sa‘di, Shaykh Muslih al-Din
Abu Muhammad Musharrif al-Din Muslih ibn Abd Allah Shirazi see Sa‘di, Shaykh Muslih al-Din
Sa'di see Sa‘di, Shaykh Muslih al-Din
Abū-Muḥammad Muṣliḥ al-Dīn bin Abdallāh Shīrāzī see Sa‘di, Shaykh Muslih al-Din
Musharrif al-Dīn ibn Muṣlih al-Dīn see Sa‘di, Shaykh Muslih al-Din


Sa‘diyya
Sa‘diyya (Jibawiyya).  Order of dervishes in Syria, named after Sa‘d al-Din al-Jibawi (d.1300).  The order spread to Turkey and Egypt, where in the nineteenth century the so-called dawsa ceremony was practised, in which the shaykh rode on horseback over the backs of the dervishes without allegedly inflicting any harm.  
Jibawiyya see Sa‘diyya


Sadji, Abdoulaye
Sadji, Abdoulaye (Abdoulaye Sadji) (b. 1910, Rufisque, Senegal - d. December 25, 1961, Dakar, Senegal) was a Senegalese writer.  Born in Rufisque, Senegal, he went to the Qur’anic schools until he was eleven, then to the French elementary school and finally to a teachers’ training college, obtaining his diploma in 1929.  In 1932, he obtained his baccalaureate.  He worked for radio, then became an inspector of elementary schools in Senegal.  He published a school reader with Leopold Senghor, La belle histoire de Leuk-le-Lievre (1953); and a novelette in Trois ecrivains noirs (1954) about Nini, a child of a mixed union.  His only full-length novel is Maimouna (1953), the story of a Senegalese woman.  He has also written a volume of tragic short stories, Tounka.Sadji shows a passionate love of country in his books, is at home in describing the violence and warmth of big-city life, and has an ability to portray women unequalled by any other African writer.

Abdoulaye Sadji was a Senegalese writer and teacher. The son of a Muslim priest, a marabout, Sadji was educated in a Quranic school. In the 1950's, Sadji worked for a radio station in Dakar, and together with Léopold Sédar Senghor he wrote a reading-book for the elementary school.

Sadji published two novels, Maïmouna: petite fille noire (1953) and Nini, mulâtresse du Sénégal (1954), along with a number of short stories, of which "Tounka" (1952) and "Modou-Fatim" (1960) are the most well-known. His works often revolve around young girls from the countryside who are trying to adapt to a life in the city.

Sadji was a Senegalese writer and teacher who was one of the founders of African prose fiction in French. Sadji was the son of a marabout (Muslim holy man) and attended Qurʾānic school before entering the colonial school system. He was graduated from the William Ponty teacher training college in 1929 and took a bachelor’s degree three years later.

His early writings appeared locally in the 1940s. The story “Tounka,” which dealt with the original migrations that had brought Sadji’s people to the sea, later became the title story for a book of short stories, Tounka, nouvelle (1965; Tounka, a Novella). A determination to preserve traditional oral lore was also at work in La Belle Histoire de Leuk-le-Lièvre (1953; “The Splendid History of Leuk-the-Hare”), which he co-authored with Léopold Senghor.

Sadji’s two novels—Maïmouna: petite fille noire (1953; “Maïmouna: Little Black Girl”) and Nini, mulâtresse du Sénégal (1954; “Nini, Mulatress of Senegal”)—focus on heroines who become victims of urban society. These works are filled with shrewd observations and warm compassion for the writer’s fellow Africans.

Sadji’s last piece of fiction, which many also regard as his best, is a 50-page story entitled “Modou-Fatim” (1960), in which he describes the plight of a peasant who has to leave his land during the dry season to work in Dakar.
Abdoulaye Sadji see Sadji, Abdoulaye


Sadr
Sadr. Originally an Arabic honorific, sadr has been used informally since at least the tenth century to denote a prominent member of the ‘ulama’ (community of religious scholars).  It became a more institutionalized title in the late eleventh century, particularly in Islamic Central Asia and Iran.  The title became hereditary in certain influential learned families, hence the survival of Sadr as a surname, particularly among Twelver Shi‘a Muslims.  The title, however, was not originally confined to Shi‘a scholars.  Indeed, it seems to have first emerged in Sunni Hanafi circles, as in, for example, the Al-i Burhan family of Bukhara whose leader was first invested under the Seljuks (c. 1105) with the title sadr al-sudur (chief sadr) -- a position with religious, fiscal, and political aspects.

Sadr as an official religious or political title occurs with significant variation according to regime and period, particularly in late medieval and early modern Iran, India, and Turkey.  In early Mughal India, qadis (judges) often held the title of sadr, while the sadr al-sudur, initially the chief spokesman of the ‘ulama’, was the chief qadi and head of the judiciary, often with extraordinary powers.  The emperor Akbar’s appointment of six provincial sadrs (c.1581) was probably an attempt to curb the centralized authority of the sadr al-sudur. In Iran, the sadr, already an important religious dignitary under the fifteenth-century Timurid dynasty, was made a political appointee by the first Safavid ruler, Isma‘il I (r.1502-1524), with the double aim of ensuring legitimacy for the new regime and controlling the religious establishment.  Thus, the sadr’s political influence under the early Safavids was soon curtailed and his role eventually limited to supervision of the waqfs (religious endowments), with some juridical duties.  The sadarah (office of sadr) was further weakened by its division into two positions around 1666 that were subordinate to the newly created divanbagi to whose decisions the two sadrs gave religious sanction.  Eventually the sadr’s role in the Safavid polity was eclipsed by that of shaykh al-islam and the new position of the mullabashi (chief mullah).

Meanwhile, under the nineteenth century Ottoman Tanzimat (period of reform), the two kazasker (chief judges), who had already come under the jurisdiction of the grand mufti of Istanbul, where given the titles of sadri Rumeli and sadri Anadolu, while other chief qadis were also known by the title of sadr.   The title sadr was by no means limited to religious dignitaries, since the chief minister in Safavid and Qajar Iran and in Ottoman Turkey held the title of sadri azam (grand vizier).

The decline of the sadarah as an influential religious institution in Mughal India, Safavid Iran, and Ottoman Turkey, reflects the policies of Muslim rulers.  Such rulers sought the legitimacy flowing from the religious establishment, they transformed the ‘ulama’ into official functionaries deprived of economic independence and the respect and support of their less worldly colleagues and the wider Muslim community.  This might explain the eventual rise of independent and more “authentic” ‘ulama’ (e.g., mujtahids in Iran) capable of criticizing the rulers.


Sadr-i a‘zam
Sadr-i a‘zam (Vezir-i Azam) (Vazir-e Azam) (Sadr-i Azam) (Serdar-i Ekrem).  Arabic-Turkish term which means “grand vizier.”

The Sadr-ı Azam, was the greatest minister of the Sultan, with absolute power of attorney and, in principle, was dismissible only by the Sultan himself. He held the imperial seal and could convene all other viziers to attend to affairs of the state. The viziers in conference were called "Kubbealtı viziers" in reference to their meeting place, the Kubbealtı ('under the dome') in Topkapı Palace. His offices were located at the Sublime Porte. "Grand Vizier" (Vazīr-e Azam) is also the official Urdu title of the Pakistani Prime Minister.

During the nascent phases of the Ottoman state, "Vizier" was the only title used. The first of these Ottoman Viziers who was titled "Grand Vizier" was Çandarlı Kara Halil Hayreddin Pasha. The purpose in instituting the title "Grand Vizier" was to distinguish the holder of the Sultan's seal from other viziers. The initially more frequently used title of vezir-i âzam was gradually replaced by sadrazam, both meaning grand vizier in practice. Throughout Ottoman history, the grand viziers have also been termed sadr-ı âlî ('high vizier'), vekil-i mutlak ('absolute attorney'), sâhib-i devlet ('holder of the state'), serdar-ı ekrem, serdar-ı azam and zât-ı âsafî ('vizieral person').

In the Köprülü Era (1656–1703) the Empire was controlled by a series of powerful grand viziers. The relative ineffectiveness of the sultans and the diffusion of power to lower levels of the government was a feature of the Köprülü Era.

After the Tanzimat period of the Ottoman Empire in the 19th century, the grand viziers came to assume a role more like that of the prime ministers of contemporary Western monarchies.
Vezir-i Azam see Sadr-i a‘zam
Sadr-i Azam see Sadr-i a‘zam
Serdar-i Ekrem see Sadr-i a‘zam
Grand Vizier see Sadr-i a‘zam
Vazir-e Azam see Sadr-i a‘zam


Sadr, Muhammad Baqir al-
Sadr, Muhammad Baqir al- (Muhammad Baqir al-Sadr) (Mohammad Baqir al-Sadr) (b. March 1, 1935, al-Kazimiya, Iraq - d. April 9, 1980,  Baghdad, Iraq).  Innovative and influential Iraqi Islamic thinker and political leader.  An important figure not only in Iraq but also  in the Shi‘a world, and indeed in the Muslim world at large, Muhammad Baqir al-Sadr was both a prominent scholar of Islamic law and its contemporary applications and a political leader whose writ transcended his native country to reach Iran and the rest of Southwest Asia.

Muhammad Baqir al-Sadr’s production is probably the most varied for a Muslim author of the twentieth century.  Sadr wrote books on philosophy, Qur’anic interpretation, logic, education, constitutional law, economics, interest-free banking, as well as more traditional works of usul al-fiqh (principles of Islamic jurisprudence), compilations of devotional rites, commentaries on prayers, and historical investigations into early Sunni-Shi‘a controversies.

As an innovative thinker on the issue of the desired shape and structure of a contemporary Muslim society, his most important work, which established his fame early on in his career, is a book on Islamic economics, which was published in two volumes in 1959-1961.  This book, iqtisaduna (Our Economics), probably remains the most scholarly twentieth-century study of Islamic economics as an alternative ideological system to capitalism and communism.

Methodologically, in Iqtisaduna, Sadr acknowledges that there is no scientific discipline in Islam which can be identified as economics and that the main elements in the approach to an Islamic economy must be derived from what he calls “the legal superstructure.”  The resultant process leads to the well-known operation of ijtihad, which is understood by Sadr in its wider definition as an intellectual endeavor into the law and jurisprudence of classical Islam and is consequently acknowledged as an exercise which is prone to human error.  For Sadr, “Islamic economics is not a science” and will only stand as an original and serious discipline after a long process of legal discovery.  Only after this research can one speak of an original Islamic discipline of economics, in which the moral imperative derived from the law is clear but in which, also, there is a difficult and patient scholarly investigation into the riches of the classical fiqh (jurisprudence) tradition.

From a substantive point of view, Sadr introduces in Iqtisaduna a detailed critique of Marxist socialism and Western capitalism before proceeding with the presentation of his alternative system.  Because of the particular strength of communist ideology in Iraq at the time Iqtisaduna was composed, the book is devoted primarily to refuting various brands of Marxist socialism.  Against capitalism, Sadr’s arguments rest on the usual criticism of the hollowness of the concept of liberty when applied to unequal parties in economic exchange.  Against socialism, Sadr develops a long-winded and informed argument demonstrating the fallacies of Marxist periodization of history, its overemphasis on the class struggle, and its unrealistic prescriptions against the basic (and natural) instincts of economic self-interest in mankind.  Then, Islamic economics as a discipline is introduced by a series of principles, mostly of a methodological nature, which the author follows with a dirigiste (i.e., involving extensive state intervention) and generally egalitarian reading of the concept of property in a predominantly agricultural context.

Without going into the intricacies of his theory of landed property, Sadr’s thesis can be presented as a call for the state’s systematic intervention to ensure that land ownership depends as directly as possible on the actual laborer who works on it.  The central concept of labor in Iqtisaduna requires an interventionist operation of the ruler (called in that book wali al-amr), who combines two tools to redress “the social balance”; one is the guidance of legal principles of property which connect ownership of land and means of production with labor.  The other is “need,” and the state is free, according to Sadr, to fill in the discretionary area with adequate measures in order to suppress what Sadr did not shy from calling, on the eve of the Iranian Revolution two decades later, “the exploitation of man by man.”

Beyond these general principles, Sadr elaborately develops the guiding rules to property within the frame of what he calls “distribution in the phase that precedes production.”  Both in this phase and in the actual productive process, the most original dimension of Iqtisaduna appears in the method of discovering Islamic economics.  By quoting classical jurists of the fiqh tradition, Sadr engages the field with the most serious such investigation among Muslim authors in the twentieth century, by basing it on the legal books of a millennium old legal tradition.

The detour through classical law is also Sadr’s path to a lengthy treatise on Islamic banking.  Here again, he is a forerunner in a field which has become, a decade after his Interest Free Bank was published in 1969, fashionable and controversial.  Islamic finance is premised on a narrow interpretation of the ban on riba (a word which for Sadr means interest), which has led Islamic banks to creat operations allowing access to their coffers by depositors, in return for the bank’s pooling these resources for investment operations that do not bear a predetermined and fixed rate of return.

The system devised by Muhammad Baqir al-Sadr needs to be appraised against the common practice of present-day Islamic institutions.  If a deposit invested by an Islamic bank in a successful venture is profitable, the depositor and the bank (as entrepreneur) will share the profit according to a predetermined rate -- for example, a 50-50 or 60-40 split.  But the endeavor can also be a total failure, eating up the deposit as capital.  In this case, under the classical contract of mudarabah, which is also known as commenda, or partnership for profit and loss, the depositor has no recourse against the bank in normal circumstances.

Under classical Islamic law, mudarabah operates as a two-party contract, with the agent-entrepreneur endeavoring to make money entrusted to him by the owner of capital.  The operations of a modern Western bank, in contradistinction, involve as a matter of course three parties: the depositors, the bank, and the borrowers.  The answers of present-day Islamic banks, although based in theory on the idea of mudarabah, have to square the original two-party contract of mudarabah with three parties.  They sever the tripartite relationship by fictitiously considering the operation to consist of a double contract entered into by the bank on the one hand, and, on the other hand, the depositor and the borrower as separate parties.  In the first contract, the depositor would be the owner of capital, and the bank the agent-entrepreneur.  In the second contract, the bank would be the owner of capital, and the borrower the agent-entrepreneur.

Sadr has a more original and elaborate scheme in his book, Interest-Free Bank.  He considers that the bank is actually only a mediator to a single mudarabah contract between the pool of depositors and the pool of entrepreneurs.  He goes on to elaborate on the rights and duties of each of the three parties and to provide interesting, if not altogether convincing, arithmetic formulas to assess the rate of profit and the resulting shares in the profits and losses of the three parties to the operation.

Beyond the rearrangements of contracts to avoid interest, the problem facing theoreticians and practitioners of Islamic banking can be summed up in the crucial question, can a bank refuse to tie itself down to a fixed interest rate offered to its depositors while guaranteeing the safety of these deposits?  For present day Islamic banks, the answer is generally negative.  Guarantees on deposits cannot be offered, as the bank operates on the basis of a partnership for profit and loss.  Sadr, in the main, partakes of this idea, although he seems to be inclined, in a treatise written ten years after his Interest-Free Bank, to acknowledge the necessity of preserving the depositor’s capital, even if the venture it is used for is lost.

A third area of innovation in Sadr’s thought is related to the concept of an Islamic state: how would the constitution of such a state be conceived in theory and practice?  Here, the influence of Sadr on the Iranian Revolution was remarkable, and there is an identifiable thread from his 1979 treatise on the subject to the constitution passed in the Islamic Republic of Iran a few months later.

The thrust of Sadr’s idea appears in a two-tier separation of powers and in the Iranian Constitution: onto the traditional separation of powers between the three branches of government (executive, legislative, and judicial powers) was grafted an Islamic scheme which is derived from a combination of Shi‘a features of scholarship and the representation of the Platonic figure of the philosopher-king in the form of a jurist.  The guardian of the city became the classical faqih (a jurisprudent), hence the concept of wilayat al-faqih (guardianship of the jurisconsult), which Ayatollah Ruhollah Khomeini (1902-1989) had adumbrated in his Najaf classes of 1970 and which was brought into a more-precise constitutional rendering by Sadr in 1979.  As for the Shi‘a imprint, it was obvious in the remodeling of the elaborate marja‘iyah system in modern Shi‘a society, which recognizes a power of guidance at large to the most learned jurists of the tradition.  These are called marja’s (“reference”) represented by the top mujtahids (those who practice ijtihad, or ‘ulama’ [scholars]) in the clerical system known for this reason as marja‘iyah.  In the Western world, the better known word which stands for marja’ is ayatollah (in Arabic, ayat allah).  

But whether in Sadr’s system or in the Iranian Constitution, the power of the ayatollahs was brought into the Islamic state alongside more Western type offices, such as a president and parliamentarians who are elected under universal suffrage.  The Iranian system has struggled with the two-tier separation of powers since its inception, although the inevitable tug-of-war had been best described, on the eve of the revolution, by Muhammad Baqir al-Sadr.

Considering the influence of his ideas in the Shi‘a milieu at large, it is not surprising to see the title of Sadr in 1979-1980 turning into the “Khomeini of Iraq.”  The sobriquet came as the result of a slow assertion of his leadership, first on the scholarly level and then directly on the political scene.  Sadr, who ws born in 1935, showed early signs of intellectual superiority.  His father, who died when he was very young, was, like his older brother and uncles, versed in traditional legal scholarship.  Sadr grew up in the southern Holy City of Najaf in an Iraqi world which was witnessing a combination of mistrust toward a system perceived as corrupt and prone to Western influence and domination and a sharp rise in radical doctrines, most remarkably Ba‘thism and communism.

It is against the tidal wave of communism that the ‘ulama’ of Najaf, Sadr’s seniors, were most exercised when the monarchy was overturned in 1958.  But it was the Ba‘th party which proved to be their most terrible nemesis.  Sadr had countered the communist appeal by trying to expound a rational Islamic system, including such arcane topics as philosophy, banking, and economics.  His more direct political appeal can be traced back to the early and mid-1960s, in small circles of militant ‘ulama’ who proved extremely influential across the Shi‘a world in the 1980s.  With the accession of the Ba‘th party of Ahmad Hasan al-Bakr and Saddam Hussein to power in the summer of 1968, the relatively sheltered world of the schools of law and ‘ulama’ in Najaf came directly under attack by a massive system of absolute repression which was combined with an increased “Sunnization” of the regime in Baghdad.  Then started a cycle of repression which culminated, inside Iraq in 1980, in the execution of Sadr and his sister and, outside Iraq, in an all-out war against Iran.

The development of the antagonism between Saddam Hussein’s Baghdad and Muhammad Baqir al-Sadr’s Najaf between 1968 and 1980 has yet to be fully chronicled, but the occasion of ‘Ashura’ (the yearly mourning day for the martyred Imam Husayn in 680) proved often to be violent.  Especially in 1974 and in 1977, and more abruptly after the accession of Khomeini to power in February 1979, the antagonism flared up in full-fledged rioting. It was reported that already during the 1977 riots, the security agents of the Ba’thist government would question those detained about their relationship with Sadr.  Later, after Sadr was clearly turning into a major threat to the government, the rulers of Iraq moved directly to curb his activities and influence.

Sadr was arrested several times through the 1970s, but in June 1979, as he was reportedly getting ready to lead an Iraqi delegation to congratulate Khomeini in Tehran, he was forbidden to leave his home in Najaf.  The tension continued to rise, until grenade attacks against leading Ba‘thists in Baghdad led to the removal of Sadr from Najaf on the evening of April 5, 1980.  He and his sister Bint al-Huda were taken to Baghdad, where it is believed that they were killed on April 8.

In the last years of his life, Sadr had tried to take advantage of the Shi‘a network to strengthen his appeal, but the organization was not sufficiently and effectively structured, and the government had been alerted by the success of the Iranian precedent.  But his death marked the real beginning for the dissemination of his influence across the Middle East, in the midst of a confrontation between Tehran and Baghdad which turned into the bloodiest war in the Middle East of the twentieth century.

In Iran, both the debates on constitutional law and economics and banking saw the mark of Sadr’s reasoning.  In Iraq, Pakistan, and Lebanon, the Najaf network of Sadr’s companions and students produced several leaders to whom the Shi‘a community looked up.  But the intellectual influence of Sadr can also be seen in other areas of the Middle East, where his thought was received despite the skepticism of a Sunni world toward Shi‘a legal scholarship.  In Egypt and Jordan, his books were taught in universities, and critical works were published.  In Algeria, where the Islamic movement lacked an original thinker to rest its views on, Iqtisaduna’s concepts could be found in the literature of the Front Islamique du Salut (FIS).

It is, however, in Iraq that Sadr will be remembered first and foremost.  For a few days after the Gulf War, in March 1991, as Najaf was freed from Ba‘thist rule, Sadr’s pictures were paraded in his native city.  The government of Saddam Hussein regained brutal control immediately afterward.  However, whatever the future of central rule in Baghdad, it is only a matter of time before Sadr gains the respect of all Iraqis for a legacy with which they may or may not agree from an ideological point of view, but which can only be acknowledged as formidable in modern Islamic thought.




Muhammad Baqir al-Sadr see Sadr, Muhammad Baqir al-
Mohammad Baqir al-Sadr see Sadr, Muhammad Baqir al-

Sadr, Musa al-
Sadr, Musa al- (Musa al-Sadr) (Mūsá aṣ-Ṣadr) (Musa-ye Sader) (Moussa Sadr) (1929-disappeared in 1978).  Iranian born Shi‘a cleric of Lebanese descent who made an indelible mark on the Lebanese political scene.  Musa al-Sadr is one of the most intriguing and fascinating political personalities to have appeared in the modern Middle East.  He was an ambitious but tolerant man whose controversial career had an enormous impact on the Shi‘a Muslim community of Lebanon.  His admirers describe him as a man of vision, political acumen, and profound compassion, while his detractors remember him as a deceitful, manipulative political chameleon.  Musa al-Sadr was a towering presence in Lebanon’s political history (literally as well as figuratively, as he was well over six feet tall).  Though he disappeared in 1978, he still inspires his followers and troubles his enemies in Lebanon.

Sadr was born in Qom, Iran, in 1928, the son of Ayatollah Sadr al-Din Sadr, an important Shi‘a Muslim mujtahid (a Shi‘a jurisprudent qualified to make independent interpretations of law and theology).  In Qom, he attended primary and secondary school, and a Shi‘a seminary, and then he went on to Tehran University, where he matriculated into the School of Political Economy and Law of Tehran University, the first mujtahid to do so.  He did not intend to pursue a career as a cleric, but on the urging of his father he discarded his secular ambitions and agreed to continue an education in fiqh (Islamic jurisprudence).  One year after his father’s death in 1953, he moved to Najaf, Iraq, where he studied under Ayatollahs Muhsin al-Hakim and ‘Abd al-Qasim Khu’i (Abol-Qasem Kho’i).  

He first visited Lebanon, which was his ancestral home, in 1957.  During this visit he made a very positive impression on the Lebanese Shi‘a, including his relative al-Sayyid ‘Abd al-Husayn Sharaf al-Din, the Shi‘a religious leader of the southern Lebanese coastal city of Tyre.  Following the death of Sharaf al-Din in 1957, he was invited to become the senior Shi‘a religious authority in Tyre.  Initially he spurned the invitation, but the urgings of his mentor Ayatollah al-Hakim proved persuasive.  In 1960, he moved to Tyre.  In 1963, he was granted Lebanese citizenship, an early mark of his looming influence in Lebanon.  Although he was a man of Qom, he understood Lebanon and the fundamental need for compromise in a land of sects, insecurity, and long memories.  He emphasized ecumenicalism.  His was an assertiveness laced with empathy.

One of his first significant acts was the establishment of a vocational institute in the southern town of Burj al-Shimali (near Tyre), where Shi‘a youths could gain the training that would allow them to escape the privation which marked their community.  The institute would become an important symbol of Musa al-Sadr’s leadership.  It is still in operation -- now bearing his name -- and provides vocational training for about five hundred orphans under the supervision of Sadr’s strong-willed sister Rabab (who is married to a member of the important Sharaf al-Din family of Tyre).

A man of keen intelligence, widely noted personal charm, and enormous energy, Sadr attracted a wide array of supporters, ranging from Shi‘a merchants making their fortunes in West Africa to petit-bourgeois youth.  The Shi‘a migrants to West Africa, who had fled the poverty of Lebanon to seek their fortunes, proved to be an important source of financial support for Musa al-Sadr.  Many of these men had done very well, and they were attracted to a man who promised to challenge the old system that had humiliated them and denied them a political voice.  If there is an Arabic equivalent of “charisma,” it is haybah -- a word that describes the dignified presence and allure of this man from faraway Qom and Najaf.

Imam Musa -- as he came to be called by his followers -- set out to establish himself as the paramount leader of the Lebanese Shi‘a community, noted at the time for its poverty and general underdevelopment.  He helped to fill a yawning leadership void which resulted from the growing inability of the za‘ims (traditional political bosses) to meet the cascading needs of their clients.  From the 1960s onward, the Shi‘ah had experienced rapid social change and economic disruption, and the old village based patronage system, which presumed the underdevelopment and the apathy of the clients, was proving an anachronism.

Musa al-Sadr was able to stand above a fragmented and often victimized community and see it as a whole.  Through his organizational innovations, his speeches, and his personal example, he succeeded in giving many Shi‘as an inclusive communal identity.  Furthermore, he reminded his followers that their deprivation was not to be fatalistically accepted, for so long as they could speak out through their religion, they could overcome their condition.  He once observed, “whenever the poor involve themselves in a social revolution it is a confirmation that injustice is not predestined.”

He shrewdly recognized that his power lay in part in his role as a custodian of religious symbols.  He used the central myths of Shi‘ism, especially the martyrdom of Imam Husayn at Karbala thirteen centuries earlier, to spur his followers.  The day of martyrdom is called ‘Ashura’, and it was a frequent motif of Sadr.  The following excerpt from one of his speeches was reported by the newspaper Al-hayah on February 1, 1974: “This revolution did not die in the sands of Karbala, it flowed into the life stream of the Islamic world, and passed from generation to generation, even to our day.  It is a deposit placed in our hands so that we may profit from it, that we extract from it a new source of reform, a new position, a new movement, a new revolution, to repel the darkness, to stop tyranny and to pulverize evil.”

The record of his political alliances shows that Musa al-Sadr was -- above all else -- a pragmatist.  It is both a tribute to his political skill and a commentary on his tactics that well-informed Lebanese should have commented that nobody knew where Imam Musa stood.  According to reliable reports, Musa was friendly with both King Hussein of Jordan and President Anwar el-Sadat of Egypt, and he traveled regularly throughout the Arab world and Europe.

His followers today often characterize him as a vociferous critic of the shah of Iran, but it was only after the October War of 1973, when Iran supported Israel against the Arabs, that his relations with the shah deteriorated.  In the autumn of 1973, he accused the shah of suppressing religion in Iran, denounced him for his pro-Israel stance, and described him as an “imperialist stooge.”  Although his Iranian citizenship was soon revoked, for more than a decade he had maintained close, even cordial, ties with the Pahlavi regime, and it seems that the shah provided financial subsidies to Imam Musa and his Iraqi cousin, the learned Muhammad Baqir al-Sadr.

Musa al-Sadr was a strong supporter of Ayatollah Ruhollah Khomeini.  Indeed, the last article he published was a polemic in Le Monde (August 23, 1978), castigating the shah and and paraising Khomeini.  Yet, Sadr’s vision of Shi‘ism was more moderate, more humanistic than Khomeini’s.  He was a friend of ‘Ali Shari‘ati (d. 1977), the writer who propounded a liberal, modernist Shi‘ism and thereby inspired many opponents of the shah (including, the Mujahidin-i Khalq, the organization that has proved to be the staunchest opponent of the Islamic Republic regime.  Musa al-Sadr’s admiration for Shari‘ati was rooted in the intellectual’s commitment to confront tyranny and injustice through the renovation of Shi‘ism, rather than through the rejection of faith.  In Iran, Shari‘ati’s ideological message, with its stress on humanism, anti-imperialism, and self-reliance, appealed to the educated classes; while his emphasis on the martyrdom of Husayn as a revolutionary exemplar appealed across socioeconomic lines.  Absent from Shari‘ati’s writings and lectures was the vengefulness, the anger, and the intolerance that marked Iran’s post-shah rulers.  Many observers suspect that al-Sadr would have moderated the course of the revolution in Iran, if he had not been consumed by it.

Like the Maronite Christians, the Shi‘is are a minority in a predominantly Sunni Muslim Arab world, and for both sects Lebanon is a refuge in which sectarian identity and security can be preserved.  Al-Sadr’s message to the Maronites in the period before the Lebanese civil war of 1975-1976 was a combination of muted threat and impassioned egalitarianism.  In his ecumenical sermons to Christian congregations, he won many admirers among his listeners.  He was said to be the first Shi‘a mujtahid to visit the Maronite patriarch in his bastion in Bkerke.  Many Maronites, not surprisingly, saw a natural ally in Imam Musa.  He was a reformer, not a revolutionary, and he sought the betterment of the Shi‘a in a Lebanese context.  He often noted, “For us Lebanon is one definitive homeland.”  The covenant or pact of the Movement of the Deprived, which al-Sadr wrote in 1974, emphasizes that the movement “adheres to the principles of national sovereignty, the indivisibility of the motherland, and the integrity of her soil.”

Musa al-Sadr recognized the insecurity of the Maronites, and he acknowledged their need to maintain their monopoly hold on the presidency.  Yet he was critical of the Maronites for their arrogant stance toward the Muslims, and particularly the Shi‘as.  He argued that the Maronite-dominated government had neglected the south, where as many as fifty percent (50%) of the Shi‘as lived, since independence, and had made the Shi‘as a disinherited class in Lebanon.  Quoting from the Qur’an, he often reminded his listeners that “He who sleeps while having a needy neighbor is not considered a believer.”

He was anti-communist, one suspects not only on principled grounds but because the various communist organizations were among his prime competitors for Shi‘a recruits.  He claimed to reject ideologies of the right and the left, noting that “we are neither of the right nor the left, but we follow the party of the just [al-sirat al-mustaqim].”  Yet when the two branches of the Ba‘th party (pro-Iraqi and pro-Syrian) were making significant inroads among the Shi‘as of the south and the Beirut suburbs, he appropriated their Pan-Arab slogans.

Although the movement he founded, Harakat al-Mahrumin (Movement of the Deprived), was aligned with the Lebanese National Movement (LNM) in the early stages of the Lebanese civil war Imam Musa found the LNM’s Druze leader, Kamal Jumblatt, irresponsible and exploitative of the Shi‘as.  As he once noted, the LNM was willing “to combat the Christians to the last Shi‘a.” According to Karim Bakraduni, a thoughtful militia figure, al-Sadr imputed to Jumblatt the prolongation of the war.

After the 1970 defeat of the Palestine Liberation Organization (PLO) in Jordan, the bulk of the PLO fighters relocated to south Lebanon where they proceeded to supplant the legitimate authorities.  For their part, some PLO officials believed that Musa al-Sadr was a creation of the army’s Deuxieme Bureau (the Second [or intelligence] Bureau), or the CIA.  Imam Musa prophetically warned the PLO that it was not in its interests to establish a state within a state in Lebanon.  After he was gone, Shi‘a militiamen invoking his memory fought pitched battles with the PLO and its Lebanese allies, applauded the defeat of the fida’i at the hands of Israel in 1982, laid siege to their camps in 1985, and pledged never to permit the re-creation of the Palestinian state-within-a-state in Lebanon.  

In 1967, the Chamber of Deputies (the Lebanese parliament) passed a law establishing a Supreme Islamic Shi‘a Council (SISC), which would for the first time provide a representative body for the Shi‘as independent of the Sunni Muslims.  The council actually came into existence in 1969, with Imam Musa as its chairman for a six year term -- a stunning confirmation of his status as the leading Shi‘a cleric in the country, and certainly one of the most important political figures in the Shi‘a community. The council quickly made itself heard with demands in the military, social, economic, and political realms, including: improved measures for the defense of the South, the provision of development funds, construction and improvement of schools and hospitals, and an increase in the number of Shi‘as appointed to senior government positions.  The SISC quickly became a locus of action for the Shi‘a intelligentsia, the emerging middle class, as well as many of the traditional elites.

One year after the formation of the SISC, and following a string of bloody Israeli incursions and bombardments, Musa al-Sadr organized a general strike “to dramatize to the government the plight of the population of southern Lebanon vis-a-vis the Israeli military threat.”  Shortly thereafter, the government created the Council of the South (Majlis al-Janub) which was capitalized at 30 million Lebanese pounds and was chartered to support the development of the region.  Unfortunately, the Majlis al-Janub reputedly became more famous as a cockpit of corruption than as a fount of worthwhile projects.  

Kamil al-As‘ad, the powerful Shi‘a political boss from the south, quite accurately viewed al-Sadr as a serious threat to his political power base and opposed him at almost every move.  For Musa al-Sadr and his followers, al-As‘ad was the epitome of all that was wrong with the za‘im system.  Although the creation of the Council of the South was a victory for al-Sadr, it was the formidable al-As‘ad who dominated its operation.

On March 17, 1974, the arba‘in -- the fortieth day after ‘Ashura’ -- Mus al-Sadr was in the Bekaa (Biqa’) Valley city of Baalbek at a now famous gathering.  Standing before an estimated crowd of 75,000, Imam Musa declared the launching of the Harakat al-Mahrumin.  He ranged over Shi‘a grievances -- poor schools, non-existent public services, 
governmental neglect -- and vowed to struggle relentlessly until the social grievances of the deprived were satisfactorily addressed by the government.  He recalled that a Kufan judge had accused Imam Husayn of straying from the way of his grandfather, the Prophet, and noted that he too was now accused of abandoning his grandfather’s way.  But he refused to relegate himself to a life of quiet scholarship and prayer:

"The rulers say that the men of religion must only pray and not meddle in other things.  They exhort us to fast and to pray for them so thatthe foundations of their reign will not be shaken, while they move away from religion and exploit it to hold on to their seats of power .... [Those in power] are the infidel of the infidels and the most atheist of the atheists.  They want us to give ourselves up to them."

Just one year later, al-Sadr’s efforts were overtaken by the onset of civil war in Lebanon.  By July 1975, it became known that a militia adjunct to Harakat al-Mahrumin had been formed.  The militia, Afwaj al-Muqawamah al-Lubnaniyah (the Lebanese Resistance Detachments), better known by the acronym AMAL (which also means “hope”), was initially trained by al-Fatah (the largest organization in the PLO) and it played a minor role in the fighting of 1975 and 1976.  Musa al-Sadr’s movement was affiliated with the LNM and its PLO allies during the first year of the civil war, but it broke with them when the Syrians intervened in June 1976 to prevent the defeat of the Maronite dominated Lebanese Front.

Impressive as Imam Musa’s influence was, it is important not to exaggerate his impact in terms of the political mobilization of the Shi‘as.  The multi-confessional parties and militias attracted the majority of Shi‘a recruits and many more Shi‘as carried arms under the colors of these organizations than under Amal’s.  Even in war the Shi‘as suffered disproportionately; by a large measure they incurred more casualties than any other sect in Lebanon.  Perhaps the single most important success achieved by al-Sadr was the reduction of the authority and the influence of the traditional Shi‘a elites, but it was the civil war, and the associated growth of extralegal organizations, that conclusively rendered these personalities increasingly irrelevant in the Lebanese political system.

Despite his occasionally vehement histrionics, Musa al-Sadr was hardly a man of war. (He seems to have played only an indirect role in directing the military actions of the Amal militia.)  In a poignant effort to curtail the violence, he declared a hunger strike, but the combination of visceral fury and frustration, government impotence, and the strength of the emerging warlords dwarfed the gesture.  His weapons were words, and as a result his political efforts were short-circuited by the war.  In the months preceding the outbreak of mayhem Musa al-Sadr’s star was still rising, but his political fortunes plummeted by 1976.

Ironically, it was the still mysterious disappearannce of Musa al-Sadr in 1978 that helped to retrieve the promise of his earlier efforts.  In August 1978, he visited Libya with two companions, Shaykh Muhammad Shihadah Ya‘qub and journalist ‘Abbas Badr al-Din.  The party has not been heard from since.  Although his fate is not known, it is widely suspected that he died at the hands of the Libyan leader, Colonel Mu‘ammar al-Qadhhafi for reasons that remain obscure.  The anniversary of his disappearance, August 31, is celebrated annually with a national strike in Lebanon.

Musa al-Sadr has become a hero to his followers, who revere his memory and take inspiration from his words and his suffering.  The symbol of a missing imam -- reminiscent as it is of the central dogma of Shi‘ism -- is hard to assail, and even his blood enemies are now heard to utter words of praise.  The movement he founded, now simply called Amal, has -- since his disappearance -- become the largest Shi‘a organization in Lebanon and one of the most powerful.  Simultaneously, the more militant Hizbullah (Party of God) claims the Imam al-Gha’ib (or the Hidden Imam) as its forebear.

The competition for supremacy in Lebanon among the Shi‘as is in large measure a matter of who is the rightful heir to the legacy of Musa al-Sadr.  On the one side is Hizbullah, under the strong influence of Muhammad Husayn Fadlallah, which emerged after the Israeli invasion of Lebanon and has been authoritatively associated with the kidnappings of foreigners.  On the other side is Amal, still a reform movement, but an angrier, more vengeful one than it was under al-Sadr’s leadership.  Musa al-Sadr would probably recognize neither organization, but his message that deprivation or second-class citizenship need not be passively accepted retains its power.



Musa al-Sadr see Sadr, Musa al-
Musa as-Sadr see Sadr, Musa al-
Musa-ye Sader see Sadr, Musa al-
Moussa Sadr see Sadr, Musa al-

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