نوع المستند : المقالة الأصلية
المؤلف
باحث في معهد ثقافة ومعارف القرآن الکریم، المعهد العالي للعلوم والثقافة الإسلامية، قم المقدسة، إيران.
المستخلص
الكلمات الرئيسية
عنوان المقالة [English]
المؤلف [English]
This research aims to reread and analyze the political identity of Imam Husayn (AS) as a socio-political actor within the framework of the Prophetic discourse and in opposition to the dominant Umayyad discourse. Focusing on the event of Ashura as a turning point in Islamic history, the study seeks to answer the central question: How can the political identity of Imam Husayn (AS) be understood as a continuation of and reliance upon the Sira (tradition) and discourse of the Prophet of Islam (PBUH)? Furthermore, what are the discursive elements that provide legitimacy and foster resistance within this identity? The hypothesis is based on the idea that the political identity of Imam Husayn (AS) is not an isolated phenomenon or merely a reaction to contemporary circumstances, but rather the objective manifestation and purposeful continuation of the Prophetic discourse in the realms of legitimation and resistance against deviation. This discourse stood in serious opposition to the Umayyads' hegemonic, worldly, and force-based discourse.
The research methodology of this study is discourse analysis with a socio-historical approach. The theoretical framework integrates the concepts of discourse, political identity, and legitimacy within the Islamic-Shiite intellectual tradition, as well as modern discourse studies. The research data primarily rely on authoritative historical and narrative texts (including both Sunni and Shiite sources) that report the sayings, letters, and stances of Imam Husayn (AS) from the period following Muawiyah’s death until the Day of Ashura, as well as the established Sunnah and Sira of the Prophet (PBUH). These data have been subjected to discourse analysis within the historical-political context of the era of Imamate.
The research findings indicate that Imam Husayn’s (AS) political discourse was based on three main pillars, all rooted in the Prophetic Sira:
Legitimacy based on Divine Text (Nass) and Appointment: By citing the Hadith al-Thaqalayn, Hadith al-Manzila, and narrations concerning the Ahl al-Bayt (AS), the Imam asserted the legitimacy of himself and the Prophet’s family as the rightful successors of the Messenger of Allah (PBUH) and the religious and political authority of the Ummah. This stood in contrast to the tribal, usurpatory, and fraudulent legitimacy of the Umayyads.2. The Responsibility for Reforming the Ummah and "Enjoining the Good and Forbidding the Evil" (Amr bi al-Ma'ruf wa Nahy 'an al-Munkar): Imam Husayn (AS) defined his uprising not as a rebellion for power, but as a reformist movement within his grandfather's Ummah. Referring to the Prophet's (PBUH) tradition of establishing justice and confronting oppression, he viewed himself as the embodiment of enjoining the good and forbidding the evil in a situation where the corruption of Yazid's government threatened the very foundations of Islam. 3. Resistance and Martyrdom as an Identity-Building and Revitalizing Strategy: In a situation where successful armed resistance was not feasible due to a lack of sufficient public support, the Imam—aware of the tradition of struggle and patience of the prophets and saints—chose the strategy of conscious martyrdom. In his discourse, this choice was not a defeat, but the pinnacle of resistance against falsehood and a tool for exposing the true face of the Umayyad government and awakening the public conscience.
Consequently, this article demonstrates that the political identity of Imam Husayn (AS) must be understood in discursive continuity with the Prophetic Sira. His discourse was resistance-oriented and identity-conferring, redefining key concepts such as legitimacy, the responsibility of leadership, the duty of reform, and the meaning of resistance under difficult circumstances by utilizing the symbolic capital of the Prophet (PBUH). This discourse stood in total opposition to the prevailing discourse of hegemony, fear, and passivity. By transforming a military defeat into a discursive and moral victory, it created a paradigmatic model for resistance in Islamic history and beyond. Therefore, Ashura is not merely a tragic historical incident, but an arena for the emergence and confrontation of two entirely conflicting discourses in Islamic history, in which the authentic Prophetic discourse, led by Imam Husayn (AS), established and immortalized itself as the legitimate and identity-forming discourse by choosing martyrdom.
الكلمات الرئيسية [English]