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From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
Ayatollah Sayyid Jafar al-Tabatabaei al-Hakim (Arabic: جعفر الطباطبائي الحكيم; born 1965) is a high-ranking Shiite jurist in the city of Najaf.
He is a lecturer, speaking on issues of religion and contemporary thought. He has participated in many seminars and conferences, both on the local and international level, and has supervised weekly symposia for long periods outside of Iraq, and in Baghdad and Najaf.
He is currently a teacher of advanced religious studies in the seminaries of Najaf, and namely Dar al-Ilm.[1]
Al-Hakim was born in Najaf, the son of Ayatollah Abdul al-Sahib al-Hakim, the son of late grand Ayatollah Muhsin al-Hakim.[2] His mother is the daughter of Iraqi scholar and statesman, Muhammad Bahr al-Uloom. Besides his studies in secular schools, he joined the Islamic Seminary at an early age in 1977.
Sayyid Jafar al-Hakim is brother to Sayyid Ali al-Hakim.
He continued his studies while imprisoned by Saddam Ba'ath party for more than nine years. The studies, at that period of time, were under the supervision of a number of Shiite scholars and jurists who were in prison with him.[3]
On February 13, 1991, through a daring attempt, he managed to escape from the prison of Saddam, following the Gulf War air strikes on Iraq, and joined the Islamic seminary in another country.
After the fall of Saddam Hussein in 2003, he returned to Iraq to continue his religious academic career, teaching at the Advanced Intermediate Studies (sutooh olya) level, and he now supervises research sessions of Advanced Seminars (bahth kharij) level in jurisprudence and principles of jurisprudence. Besides teaching and supervising in other fields of sciences such as, theology, theosophy, philosophy, and epistemology.
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