This article may present fringe theories, without giving appropriate weight to the mainstream view and explaining the responses to the fringe theories. (October 2018) |
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Shia Islam originated as a response[citation needed] to questions of Islamic religious leadership which became manifest as early as the death of Muhammad in 632 CE. The issues involved not only whom to appoint as the successor to Muhammad, but also what attributes a true successor should have. Sunnis regarded Caliphs as a temporal leaders, (originally elected by general agreement, though later the hereditary principle became the norm). To the Shiite, however, the question of succession is a matter of designation of an individual (Ali) through divine command. In the same way, Shias believed that each Imam designated the next Imam by the leave of God. So within Shia Islam it makes no difference to the Imam's position whether he is chosen as a Caliph or not.[1]
Historians dispute the origin of Shia Islam[citation needed], with many[who?] Western scholars positing that Shiism began[when?] as a political faction rather than as a religious movement.[dubious – discuss][a][2][better source needed][need quotation to verify][3] However, Jafri disagrees, considering this concept or religious-political separation as an anachronistic application of a Western concept.[4] Sunnis[who?], on the other hand, often claim that Shiite beliefs only first formed under the scheming of Abdullah ibn Saba'[citation needed]; Sunnis reject the idea that Ali followed any beliefs that were contrary to the rest of the Sahaba.[5][6][better source needed][7]
In one Shi'i view, the source of true belief in each generation was ultimately [...] loyalty to the Caliph 'Ali and his descendants. [...] Defeat channeled many Shi'is from political activity into religious reflection.
Such an interpretation grossly oversimplifies a very complex situation. Those who thus emphasize the political nature of Shi'ism are perhaps too eager to project the modern Western notion of the separation of church and state back into seventh century Arabian society, where such a notion would be not only foreign, but completely unintelligible.
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