Fatima: Difference between revisions

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==Biography==
==Biography==
[[File:Fatima's House.jpg|thumbnail|A rarely seen picture of Fatima's house in Medina,1982]]
[[File:Fatima's House.jpg|thumbnail|A rarely seen picture of Fatima's house in Medina,1982]]
Fatima was probably the youngest daughter of [[Muhammad]] and his first wife, [[Khadija]], the only daughter to live long enough to bear numerous offsprings. Her date of birth is variously given as between five years before and two years after the beginning of the Prophet’s mission. <ref>Lammens, pp. 8-14.</ref> She was particularly close to her father and is said to have followed him to Medina shortly after his emigration (hejra). Although there is disagreement over details, she became the wife of the Imam [[ʿAli ibn Abi Talib|Ali b. Abi Taleb]] probably in 2/623-24. Muhammad arranged this marriage in obedience to divine will, having already rejected requests for her hand by Abu Bakr, ʿOmar, and probably the very wealthy ʿAbd-al-Rahman b. ʿAwf. <ref>Ibn Saʿd, pp. 11-20; Ibn Rostam, p. 12.</ref>  
Fatima was probably the youngest daughter of [[Muhammad]] and his first wife, [[Khadija]], the only daughter to live long enough to bear numerous offspring. Her date of birth is variously given as between five years before and two years after the beginning of the Prophet’s mission. <ref>Lammens, pp. 8-14.</ref> She was particularly close to her father and is said to have followed him to Medina shortly after his emigration (hejra). Although there is disagreement over details, she became the wife of the Imam [[ʿAli ibn Abi Talib|Ali b. Abi Taleb]] probably in 2/623-24. Muhammad arranged this marriage in obedience to divine will, having already rejected requests for her hand by Abu Bakr, ʿOmar, and probably the very wealthy ʿAbd-al-Rahman b. ʿAwf. <ref>Ibn Saʿd, pp. 11-20; Ibn Rostam, p. 12.</ref>  


Before the occupation of the prosperous oasis of Khaybar ʿAli and Fatima were poor. As long as she lived Fatima was ʿAli’s only wife and bore him five children: [[Hasan]], [[Hussain ibn Ali|Hussain]], Muhassen (or Muhsen, dead at very young age), Omm Kulthum, and [[Zaynab]]. She was apparently much affected by her father’s death and died of illness in Medina a few months later, in 11/633. Reports on her death, her burial, and the exact place of her grave are contradictory. <ref>Yaʿqūbī, Taʾrīḵ II, pp. 128-30; Tabari, III, pp. 2436 ff.; Masʿūdī, Morūj VI, p. 165.</ref> Today three sites in Medina are visited as her burial place.
Before the occupation of the prosperous oasis of Khaybar ʿAli and Fatima were poor. As long as she lived Fatima was ʿAli’s only wife and bore him five children: [[Hasan]], [[Hussain ibn Ali|Hussain]], Muhassen (or Muhsen, dead at very young age), Omm Kulthum, and [[Zaynab]]. Reports on her death, her burial, and the exact place of her grave are contradictory. <ref>Yaʿqūbī, Taʾrīḵ II, pp. 128-30; Tabari, III, pp. 2436 ff.; Masʿūdī, Morūj VI, p. 165.</ref> Today three sites in Medina are visited as her burial place.


==Political Involvement==
==Political Involvement==
She seems to have performed only three acts of political significance, each recorded in almost all sources, both [[Sunni]] and [[Shiʿa|Shiʿite]], though in different versions. First, after the conquest of Mecca she refused her protection to [[Abu Sufyan]]; second, after the death of the Prophet she courageously defended ʿAli’s cause, fiercely opposed the election of Abu Bakr, and had violent disputes with him and particularly with ʿOmar; third, she laid claim to the property rights of her father and challenged Abu Bakr’s categorical refusal to cede them, particularly Fadak and a share in the produce of Khaybar.
She seems to have performed only three acts of political significance, each recorded in almost all sources, both [[Sunni]] and [[Shiʿa|Shiʿite]], though in different versions. First, after the conquest of Mecca she refused her protection to [[Abu Sufyan]]; second, after the death of the Prophet she courageously defended ʿAli’s cause, fiercely opposed the election of Abu Bakr, and had disputes with him and particularly with ʿOmar; third, she laid claim to the property rights of her father and challenged Abu Bakr’s categorical refusal to cede them, particularly Fadak and a share in the produce of Khaybar.
==Hagiography==
==Hagiography==
Hagiographical material on Fatima is much more ample. Whereas Sunni authors emphasized her perfectly “orthodox” virtues, in particular her rank as the daughter of the Prophet, her ascetic life, and her exemplary piety, <ref>Abu’l-Nasr, pp. 72 ff.</ref> [[Twelver Shiʿite]] hagiographers depicted her as a figure of cosmic significance, though early reports, as well as traditions attributed to her, are much scantier than those related to the other thirteen immaculate ones (maʿsum). Fatima was counted among the Prophet’s house ([[ahl al-bayt]]), the five people of the mantle ([[ahl al-kisa]]), and the people of the ordeal ([[mubahala]]) and thus occupies a central place in the pleroma of the immaculate ones, enjoying ontological, initiatory, and eschatological privileges of the same order as those attributed to the Prophet and the imams.  
Hagiographical material on Fatima is much more ample. Whereas Sunni authors emphasized her perfectly “orthodox” virtues, in particular her rank as the daughter of the Prophet, her ascetic life, and her exemplary piety, <ref>Abu’l-Nasr, pp. 72 ff.</ref> [[Twelver Shiʿite]] hagiographers depicted her as a figure of cosmic significance, though early reports, as well as traditions attributed to her, are much scantier than those related to the other thirteen immaculate ones (maʿsum). Fatima was counted among the Prophet’s house ([[ahl al-bayt]]), the five people of the mantle ([[ahl al-kisa]]), and the people of the ordeal ([[mubahala]]) and thus occupies a central place in the pleroma of the immaculate ones, enjoying ontological, initiatory, and eschatological privileges of the same order as those attributed to the Prophet and the imams.  


Her luminous pre-existential entity, issuing from the divine light thousands of years before the creation of the world, devoted itself to the praise of God while circumambulating the divine throne. <ref>Ibn Babuya, 1385/1966 pp. 135 ff.; Khazzaz, pp. 110-11, 169-70.</ref> Her name, like those of all the people of the mantle, was derived from a divine name. <ref>al-Fater “the Creator”; Ibn Babuya, 1405/1985, p. 252; No’mani, p. 137; Ibn ʿAyyash, p. 23.</ref> She was present in the light of the fourteen impeccable ones when it was placed in Adam’s loins (solb). It was because of this light that angels were ordered to prostrate themselves before him. <ref>Hasan al-ʿAskari, pp. 219 ff.; Ibn Babuya, 1385/1966, pp. 6, 209; idem, 1405/1985, p. 255.</ref> Among the names God taught to Adam <ref>Koran 2:31-33.</ref> were those of the people of the mantle, including that of Fatima. <ref>Hasan al-ʿAskari, p. 217; Forat, p. 56.</ref>
Her name, like those of all the people of the mantle, was derived from a divine name. <ref>al-Fater “the Creator”; Ibn Babuya, 1405/1985, p. 252; No’mani, p. 137; Ibn ʿAyyash, p. 23.</ref> She was present in the light of the fourteen impeccable ones when it was placed in Adam’s loins (solb). It was because of this light that angels were ordered to prostrate themselves before him. <ref>Hasan al-ʿAskari, pp. 219 ff.; Ibn Babuya, 1385/1966, pp. 6, 209; idem, 1405/1985, p. 255.</ref> Among the names God taught to Adam <ref>Koran 2:31-33.</ref> were those of the people of the mantle, including that of Fatima. <ref>Hasan al-ʿAskari, p. 217; Forat, p. 56.</ref>
==Birth==
==Birth==
[[File:Creations reason.jpg|thumbnail|The Reason of Creation by Iranian artist, Hassan Rouholamin. It points out to Prophet Muhammad's hadith about Fatima’s birth. ]]
[[File:Creations reason.jpg|thumbnail|The Reason of Creation by Iranian artist, Hassan Rouholamin. It points out to Prophet Muhammad's hadith about Fatima’s birth. ]]
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In addition to light, the life of Fatima was characterized by piety; sadness over the destinies of her relatives and children; courage; obedience to God, her father, and her husband; and initiatory knowledge. <ref>ʿelm; for this translation, see Amir-Moezzi, pp. 174-99; on Fatima’s knowledge, cf. Hasan al-ʿAskari, pp. 221-22; Ibn Babuya, 1404/1984, p, 596; Ibn Shahrashub, pp. 102-4.</ref> She is the guardian of two of the secret and sacred books of the immaculate ones, Ketab Fatima and Moshaf Fatima, which may in fact be only a single book, and two secret tablets, of white pearl and emerald respectively. <ref>Amir-Moezzi, pp. 188-89; Kohlberg, pp. 302-05.</ref> Miracles resulting from her superior nature, piety, and esoteric knowledge are frequently attributed to her. <ref>Ibn Shahrashub, pp. 16 ff.; Borsi, pp. 85-86; Majlesi, pp. 19-81.</ref>
In addition to light, the life of Fatima was characterized by piety; sadness over the destinies of her relatives and children; courage; obedience to God, her father, and her husband; and initiatory knowledge. <ref>ʿelm; for this translation, see Amir-Moezzi, pp. 174-99; on Fatima’s knowledge, cf. Hasan al-ʿAskari, pp. 221-22; Ibn Babuya, 1404/1984, p, 596; Ibn Shahrashub, pp. 102-4.</ref> She is the guardian of two of the secret and sacred books of the immaculate ones, Ketab Fatima and Moshaf Fatima, which may in fact be only a single book, and two secret tablets, of white pearl and emerald respectively. <ref>Amir-Moezzi, pp. 188-89; Kohlberg, pp. 302-05.</ref> Miracles resulting from her superior nature, piety, and esoteric knowledge are frequently attributed to her. <ref>Ibn Shahrashub, pp. 16 ff.; Borsi, pp. 85-86; Majlesi, pp. 19-81.</ref>


Other salient points in the hagiography of Fatima have been brought together by Veccia Vaglieri: her betrothal and marriage to ʿAli, raised to the level of cosmic events; her glorious resurrection on the Day of Judgment; her complaint to God about the injustices wreaked by the community on her kinsmen and followers; her intervention in favor of the Shiʿites; and her hagiography as it developed in other branches of Shiʿism, specifically the Bateniya.
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==Fatima in Quran==
==Fatima in Quran==
According to early [[Imami]] writings, the name Fatima is explicitly mentioned in the “integral” Quran, <ref>in 20:115; see Kolayni, p. 283; on the “integral” Koran, see Amir-Moezzi, pp. 200-27.</ref> and early Imami exegetes, finding allusions to Fatima in a number of suras, sometimes resorted to rather daring interpretations, for example, identification of the “night of the decree” (laylat al-qadr) or the “holy spirit” (al-ruh al-qods) with the daughter of the Prophet. <ref>Forat, pp. 581-82.</ref> These interpretations differ little in nature from those of “extremist” ([http://www.iranicaonline.org/articles/golat Gholat]), some of whom identify her with the cavern of the Seven Sleepers or with the rock of Moses from which water gushes forth.<ref>characterized by Veccia Vaglieri, p. 849, as “deviant”</ref> The distinction between early esoteric Imamism and the Shiʿism considered “extremist” must be made with great care. <ref>Amir-Moezzi, pp. 313-16.</ref>
According to early [[Imami]] writings, the name Fatima is explicitly mentioned in the “integral” Quran, <ref>in 20:115; see Kolayni, p. 283; on the “integral” Koran, see Amir-Moezzi, pp. 200-27.</ref> and early Imami exegetes, finding allusions to Fatima in a number of surahs (chapters), sometimes resorted to rather daring interpretations, for example, identification of the “night of the decree” (laylat al-qadr) or the “holy spirit” (al-ruh al-qods) with the daughter of the Prophet. <ref>Forat, pp. 581-82.</ref> These interpretations differ little in nature from those of “extremist” ([http://www.iranicaonline.org/articles/golat Gholat]), some of whom identify her with the cavern of the Seven Sleepers or with the rock of Moses from which water gushes forth.<ref>characterized by Veccia Vaglieri, p. 849, as “deviant”</ref> .
==Folklore and Popular Devotion==
[[File:Fatima 5.jpg|thumbnail| The House of Grief by Hassan Rouholamin. He depicts Ali ibn Abi Talib and his children farewell to Fatima.]]
[[File:Fatima 5.jpg|thumbnail| The House of Grief by Hassan Rouholamin. He depicts Ali ibn Abi Talib and his children farewell to Fatima.]]
Although little historical information on Fatima is available, her importance in myth and devotion is considerable throughout the Islamic world. Anecdotes, wonders, and miracles related to her birth, betrothal, wedding, virginity, pregnancy, motherhood, and powers have been elaborated. Interpretation of the Quranic phrase “people of the (Prophet’s) house” ([[ahl al-bayt]]) as “family of the cloak” (al-e ʿaba) and cosmological notions of primordial light have greatly influenced her image in popular religion. Her blood relationship with the Prophet; the charisma associated with her husband, ʿAli, and their sons Hasan and Hussain, the only male perpetuators of Muhammad’s line; and her role as transmitter of traditions added to her importance for all Muslims. It was, however, mainly through Shiʿite devotion, whether moderate (partly shared by Sunnites) or extreme, that she became the foremost female figure in Islamic thought and piety. Popular veneration of Fatima thus remains closely linked to hagiographic, esoteric, and philosophical interpretations.
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==Fatima in Oriental Studies==
==Fatima in Oriental Studies==
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==Fatima in Popular Culture==
==Fatima in Popular Culture==
Esoteric or popular beliefs about Fatima, often connected with episodes in her hagiography, constitute the basis of several feasts and pilgrimages ([[ziara]]). The most important of the former are commemorations of the ordeal ([[mubahala]]) witnessed by the ahl al-ʿabaʾ, who are thus recognized as legitimate leaders of the community, celebrated on 21 Dhu’l-hejja; <ref>Schmucker; Massignon, 1969, I, pp. 550-91.</ref> of Fatima’s birth (mawludiya) on 21 Ramadan, with a secondary celebration on 15 Shaʿban (which also commemorates the birth of the Mahdi Fatemi; the laylat al-baraʿa; the death of Salman); of her death on 3 Jomada II, with a secondary celebration on 2 Ramadan; of her figure as al-Masjed al-Aqsa, on 27 Rajab, commemorating Muhammad’s meʿraj. <ref>Massignon, 1969, I, pp. 576-77.</ref> Specific ziarat are made for Fatima at Medina. <ref>Massignon, 1969, III, pp. 295 ff.</ref> In private [[Rawza-Khani|rawza-khani]] (recitation of the [[martyrdom]] of Hussain) assemblies held by Persian women at any time of year, the most popular story is of Fatima’s invitation to a wedding, where she converts those present. <ref>ʿarusi-e Qoraysh; Massignon, 1969, I, p. 580.</ref> Special offerings are dedicated to Fatima: small pots (digcha-ye hazrat-e Zahra) on the last Wednesday of Safar and samanu, a kind of pudding reputed to have been her favorite dish. <ref>Shakurzada, pp. 26-27, 46 ff., 83; Massé, Croyances et coutumes, p. 47 n. 2.</ref> On the last Wednesday of the solar year [http://www.iranicaonline.org/articles/caharsanba-suri chaharshanba suri] some families used to break and replace their earthenware pots in her honor. <ref>Massé, Croyances et coutumes, p. 146 n. 2.</ref> Offerings and thanks are dedicated to Fatima as an intercessor on various occasions and in various sanctuaries throughout the Islamic world. She is especially invoked by Shiʿite women during childbirth. <ref>Massignon, 1969, III, p. 296.</ref>
Esoteric or popular beliefs about Fatima, often connected with episodes in her hagiography, constitute the basis of several feasts and pilgrimages ([[ziara]]). The most important of the former are commemorations of the ordeal ([[mubahala]]) witnessed by the ahl al-ʿabaʾ, who are thus recognized as legitimate leaders of the community, celebrated on 21 Dhu’l-hejja; <ref>Schmucker; Massignon, 1969, I, pp. 550-91.</ref> Then there is Fatima’s birth (mawludiya) on 21 Ramadan, with a secondary celebration on 15 Shaʿban (which also commemorates the birth of the Mahdi Fatemi; the laylat al-baraʿa; the death of Salman); then her death on 3 Jomada II, with a secondary celebration on 2 Ramadan; of her figure as al-Masjed al-Aqsa, on 27 Rajab, commemorating Muhammad’s meʿraj. <ref>Massignon, 1969, I, pp. 576-77.</ref> Specific ziarat are made for Fatima at Medina. <ref>Massignon, 1969, III, pp. 295 ff.</ref> In private [[Rawza-Khani|rawza-khani]] (recitation of the [[martyrdom]] of Hussain) assemblies held by Persian women at any time of year, the most popular story is of Fatima’s invitation to a wedding, where she converts those present. <ref>ʿarusi-e Qoraysh; Massignon, 1969, I, p. 580.</ref> Special offerings are dedicated to Fatima: small pots (digcha-ye hazrat-e Zahra) on the last Wednesday of Safar and samanu, a kind of pudding reputed to have been her favorite dish. <ref>Shakurzada, pp. 26-27, 46 ff., 83; Massé, Croyances et coutumes, p. 47 n. 2.</ref> On the last Wednesday of the solar year [http://www.iranicaonline.org/articles/caharsanba-suri chaharshanba suri] some families used to break and replace their earthenware pots in her honor. <ref>Massé, Croyances et coutumes, p. 146 n. 2.</ref> Offerings and thanks are dedicated to Fatima as an intercessor on various occasions and in various sanctuaries throughout the Islamic world. She is especially invoked by Shiʿite women during childbirth. <ref>Massignon, 1969, III, p. 296.</ref>


Popular devotion finds its utmost expression in representations of redemptive suffering focused on the [[Karbala]] paradigm. As mistress of the bayt al-ahzan (house of sorrows) and the Day of Judgment, <ref>Ayoub, 1978, pp. 48 ff., 212 ff.</ref> Fatima is present in most rituals as an “icon”: She wears a crown for Muhammad, a necklace or sword for ʿAli, and earrings of diamonds and rubies for Hasan and Hussain. <ref>Massignon, 1969, I, pp. 517, 568, 583, 612; Kashefi, p. 67; Calmard, p. 416; Ayoub, pp. 213-14.</ref> Hussain’s daughters Fatima Kobra, who allegedly married her cousin [[Qasim b. al-Hasan|Qasim b. Hasan]] at Karbala, and the sickly [[Fatima Soghra]], who remained in Medina, were both named after her. <ref>Kashefi, pp. 24, 391 ff.; Calmard, pp. 390, 393, 401.</ref> Banners ([[Alam|ʿAlam]]) related to Fatima are carried in [[Muharram]] processions. The 17th-century traveler Adam Olearius mentioned having seen at Ardabil a miraculous ʿalam allegedly made by her daughter. <ref>Massé, Croyances et coutumes, p. 131.</ref> The large Bibi ka ʿalam, made of gold (with pendant diamonds on each side symbolizing earrings), is carried on an elephant in Ashura processions at Hyderabad, Deccan, and is venerated by both Sunnites and Shiʿites. <ref>Hollister, p. 169; Pinault, pp. 158-59.</ref> The symbol of the open hand of Fatima (cf. the hand of God among Jews, of Mary among Christians) is widespread in Sunnite areas, <ref>Kriss and Kriss-Heinrich, I, p. 23, II, pp. 2 ff., with illustrations and references to Venus and Babylonian cults.</ref> but among Shiʿites the open hand (panja) represents that of Hazrat-e [[ʿAbbas b. ʿAli]] (q.v.), severed at Karbala. <ref>Massé, Croyances et coutumes, p. 27 n. 1; Eilers, p. 111 n. 7.</ref> Rawza-khanis and other liturgies and rituals connected with Fatima also found their way into passion plays ([[taʿzia]]; see bibliography).
Popular devotion finds its utmost expression in representations of redemptive suffering focused on the [[Karbala]] paradigm. As mistress of the bayt al-ahzan (house of sorrows) and the Day of Judgment, <ref>Ayoub, 1978, pp. 48 ff., 212 ff.</ref> Fatima is present in most rituals as an “icon”: She wears a crown for Muhammad, a necklace or sword for ʿAli, and earrings of diamonds and rubies for Hasan and Hussain. <ref>Massignon, 1969, I, pp. 517, 568, 583, 612; Kashefi, p. 67; Calmard, p. 416; Ayoub, pp. 213-14.</ref> Hussain’s daughter Fatima Kobra, who allegedly married her cousin [[Qasim b. al-Hasan|Qasim b. Hasan]] at Karbala, and the sickly [[Fatima Soghra]], who remained in Medina, were both named after her. <ref>Kashefi, pp. 24, 391 ff.; Calmard, pp. 390, 393, 401.</ref> Banners ([[Alam|ʿAlam]]) related to Fatima are carried in [[Muharram]] processions. The 17th-century traveler Adam Olearius mentioned having seen at Ardabil a miraculous ʿalam allegedly made by her daughter. <ref>Massé, Croyances et coutumes, p. 131.</ref> The large Bibi ka ʿalam, made of gold (with pendant diamonds on each side symbolizing earrings), is carried on an elephant in Ashura processions at Hyderabad, Deccan, and is venerated by both Sunnites and Shiʿites. <ref>Hollister, p. 169; Pinault, pp. 158-59.</ref> The symbol of the open hand of Fatima (cf. the hand of God among Jews, of Mary among Christians) is widespread in Sunnite areas, <ref>Kriss and Kriss-Heinrich, I, p. 23, II, pp. 2 ff., with illustrations and references to Venus and Babylonian cults.</ref> but among Shiʿites the open hand (panja) represents that of Hazrat-e [[ʿAbbas b. ʿAli]] (q.v.), severed at Karbala. <ref>Massé, Croyances et coutumes, p. 27 n. 1; Eilers, p. 111 n. 7.</ref> Rawza-khanis and other liturgies and rituals connected with Fatima also found their way into passion plays ([[taʿzia]]; see bibliography).


Beside Fatima’s name and variants, popular for Muslim girls, her epithets Zahra, Tahera, Zakiya, Raziya, Razia, Batul (virgin), Kaniz (maiden), and the like are also given as names, as are various diminutives: Fatayma/Fotaytom/Fattush, Foti/Foto in India. <ref>Schimmel, pp. 44, 69 ff.; on other names, see Veccia Vaglieri in EI2 II, pp. 847-48.</ref> Her name is sometimes given to girls born on Friday night. <ref>Schimmel, p. 23 n. 41.</ref> Fatima as “sovereign of feminine humanity” <ref>Corbin, 1960, pp. 115 ff.; idem, 1971-72, IV, p. 314.</ref> has been variously appreciated in recent history. Fatima has been idealized as a symbol of feminine excellence, a model of submission both to the will of God and her husband <ref>Meer Hassan Ali, p. 97.</ref> and authenticity and liberation for all women ([[Shariʿati]]).
Beside Fatima’s name and variants, popular for Muslim girls, her epithets Zahra, Tahera, Zakiya, Raziya, Razia, Batul (virgin), Kaniz (maiden), and the like are also given as names, as are various diminutives: Fatayma/Fotaytom/Fattush, Foti/Foto in India. <ref>Schimmel, pp. 44, 69 ff.; on other names, see Veccia Vaglieri in EI2 II, pp. 847-48.</ref> Her name is sometimes given to girls born on Friday night. <ref>Schimmel, p. 23 n. 41.</ref> Fatima as “sovereign of feminine humanity” <ref>Corbin, 1960, pp. 115 ff.; idem, 1971-72, IV, p. 314.</ref> has been variously appreciated in recent history. Fatima has been idealized as a symbol of feminine excellence, a model of submission both to the will of God and her husband <ref>Meer Hassan Ali, p. 97.</ref> and authenticity and liberation for all women ([[Shariʿati]]).
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