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Jarudiyya (Arabic: الجارودية, Persian: جارودیه, romanized: Jārūdīyya), also known as Jarudism,[1] is among the first branches of Zaydi Islam, attributed to Abu'l-Jarud Ziyad ibn al-Mundhir. Among the theorists of the Jarudiyya are Fadl ibn Zubayr al-Rasani, Mansur ibn Abi al-Aswad, and Harun ibn Saad al-Ajli. Abu Khalid al-Wasiti is another prominent figure in this school. Jarudiyya beliefs include: Zayd ibn Ali as imam, Ali's preference over other Sahabah and the necessity of rising up against a Tyrant.[2]
This article provides insufficient context for those unfamiliar with the subject. (June 2015) |
The Jarudiyya are counted as one of the first branches of Zaidiyyah. Jozef Van Ess called this sect Sorhoubiyyah.[citation needed] Two people had important roles in theoretical basics of this sect. One of them is Abu Al Jaroud as the one who established this school and the other is Abu Khalid, the one who was heir of Jaroudiyyah's teaching.[citation needed]
What we know about this sect is only restricted to religious teaching, particularly leadership or imamate. This sect in opposition to other sects of Zaydiyyah but in accordance with shia, affirms the right of succession after the prophet as the exclusive right of Ali. Therefore, they do not believe in the succession of Abu Bakr, Umar ibn al-Khattab and Uthman ibn Affan. They believe that there is a hidden text (nass khafi) approving of Ali as the right successor to the Prophet. According to Jarudiyah, some traditions evidently designate the succession of Ali. Al-Shaykh Al-Mufid believed that only the Imami Shi'a and Jarudiyya deserve to be called Shi'a. They have two beliefs on the determination of successor by the Prophet:
As for the knowledge of Imams, Jarudiyya believes that the Imam has innate knowledge regardless of acquiring knowledge by education. In other words, Imams have inborn knowledge from the very beginning. These beliefs are found among Yemeni Zaydis today.[3]
"Batrī" and "Jārūdī" refer to theological orientations rather than distinct, identifiable groups.[4]
Batrism reflects the perspectives held by most Zaydīs in the early eighth century, while Jārūdism represents the predominant beliefs among Zaydīs by the end of the ninth century.[5]
Historians consider the supporters of Zayd and his son Yaḥyā to be Batrī as they were Kūfan traditionists (proto-Sunnī) and supported ʿAlid military uprisings and political claims.[6]
Batrī and Jārūdī Zaydism[7] | |||
---|---|---|---|
Batrī Zaydism: | Jārūdī Zaydism: | ||
ʿAlī’s designation was implicit. | ʿAlī’s designation was explicit. | ||
Opponents of ʿAlī made a mistake in reasoning. Those who took up arms repented. | Opponents of ʿAlī are apostates. Those who took up arms are also apostates. | ||
Judgment: No cursing them or declaring them apostates. | Judgment: Cursing them and declaring them apostates is allowed. | ||
Allows for the Imāmate of the less worthy candidate. | Restricts the Imāmate to the most worthy candidate. | ||
Legal authority diffused in the larger Muslim community. | Legal authority restricted to the descendants of ʿAlī and Fāṭima. | ||
Rejects the theological doctrines of rajʿa, taqiyya, and badāʾ. | Accepts the theological doctrines of rajʿa, taqiyya, and badāʾ. |
Above are the main traits linked to Batrī and Jārūdī Zaydis.
The Batrīyya accepted the legitimacy of the first two caliphs, Abū Bakr and ʿUmar ibn al-Khaṭṭāb, arguing that ʿAlī ibn Abī Ṭālib's lack of objection constituted tacit approval of their rule: "We consent to whom he consented to, for it is unlawful for us to do otherwise."[8] In comparison to the Jārūdīyya who claimed that "anyone, who pushed ʿAlī away from that position, was blasphemous; and that the community was blasphemous and misguided when it abstained from giving the allegiance to him".[9]
Zayd ibn ʿAlī explained the concept of a man of lesser excellence, or al-mafḍūl, serving as imām by noting that, although ʿAlī ibn Abī Ṭālib was the most distinguished of the Companions, the caliphate was entrusted to Abū Bakr. This decision was based on considerations of expediency, religious factors, and the fact that the people’s hearts were not yet ready to fully accept ʿAlī’s leadership at that time.[10]
After ʿAlī and his sons al-Ḥasan and al-Ḥusayn, the imāmate was not determined by designation but by the emergence of a descendant, from either ʿAlī's sons, who was knowledgeable, just, and virtuous. The most qualified among them was considered the imām, with no room for an imām of lesser excellence. The Jārūdīyya also believed that there would always be an imām and that God's proof to humanity would never be absent. They rejected the possibility of having two imāms simultaneously, though they accepted that the current imām's identity and location could be concealed during times of dissimulation (taqiyya).[11]
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