The Victors of Imam Hussain: Difference between revisions

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(Created page with "{{Infobox book | name = The Victors of Imam Hussain | image = The Victors of Imam Hussain.jpg | caption = | alt = | author = Shaykh Muhammad Mahdi Shams al-Din | title_orig = | orig_lang_code = | title_working = | illustrator = | cover_artist = | language = English | series = | subject = | genre = | published = 2016 | publisher = The Mainstay Foundation | media_type = | pages = 282 | awards = | preceded_by = | followed_by = | wikisource = | fulltext = | En_title...")
 
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== About the author ==
== About the author ==
[[Ayatollah Sheikh Muhammad Mahdi Chamseddine]] (born in 1936) was a prominent Shia-Lebanese religious scholar, intellectual, and public figure. He was one of the founders of the Supreme Shia Islamic Council in Lebanon, along with Sayyid Musa Al-Sadr and others. Chamseddine and Sadr were heavily involved in preaching a moderate understanding of Islam that espoused plurality and coexistence at a time when Lebanon was going through an extreme period of violent civil war. After the disappearance of Sadr in 1978, Chamseddine rose to the forefront as his successor. Chamseddine was not only a religious figure, but a public intellectual and political thinker. He led Lebanon in its national and political introspection, always calling for inter-faith and intra-faith dialogue. He made the unity and advancement of Lebanon his priority through his calls for civic engagement, national sovereignty, and resistance to occupation. At the same time, his theory of political legitimacy was based on notions of social contract and popular sovereignty, as opposed to other prevalent Islamist ideologies at the time. I one of his most influential books Nidham Al-Hukm Wa Al-Idara fi Al-Islam (The System of Government and Public Administration in Islam), Chamseddine set out his theory of national sovereignty based on Islamic teachings that gave religious legitimacy to representative government. He passed away due to illness at age 65 in 2001.
[[Shaykh Muhammad Mahdi Shams al-Din|Ayatollah Sheikh Muhammad Mahdi Chamseddine]] (born in 1936) was a prominent Shia-Lebanese religious scholar, intellectual, and public figure. He was one of the founders of the Supreme Shia Islamic Council in Lebanon, along with Sayyid Musa Al-Sadr and others. Chamseddine and Sadr were heavily involved in preaching a moderate understanding of Islam that espoused plurality and coexistence at a time when Lebanon was going through an extreme period of violent civil war. After the disappearance of Sadr in 1978, Chamseddine rose to the forefront as his successor. Chamseddine was not only a religious figure, but a public intellectual and political thinker. He led Lebanon in its national and political introspection, always calling for inter-faith and intra-faith dialogue. He made the unity and advancement of Lebanon his priority through his calls for civic engagement, national sovereignty, and resistance to occupation. At the same time, his theory of political legitimacy was based on notions of social contract and popular sovereignty, as opposed to other prevalent Islamist ideologies at the time. I one of his most influential books Nidham Al-Hukm Wa Al-Idara fi Al-Islam (The System of Government and Public Administration in Islam), Chamseddine set out his theory of national sovereignty based on Islamic teachings that gave religious legitimacy to representative government. He passed away due to illness at age 65 in 2001.


== About the book ==
== About the book ==