Zaynab bint Ali (a.s)
Angelic Appellation
It was five years after the Muslims
had accompanied the Prophet (s.a.w.) and his family in the migration
(Hijrah) to Medina, when the Holy Prophet’s daughter, Fatimah A-Zahraa
(a.s.), gave birth to a little girl. When her father, Imam Ali (a.s.),
saw his daughter for the first time, Imam Husayn (a.s.), who was then
almost three years old, was with him. The boy exclaimed in delight, "O
father, Allah has given me a sister." At those words, Imam Ali (a.s.)
began to weep, and when Husayn (a.s.) asked why he was crying so, his
father answered that he would soon come to know.
Fatimah (a.s.) and Ali (a.s.) did
not name their child until a few days after her birth, for they awaited
the Prophet’s return from a journey so that he could propose the name.
When finally the baby girl was brought before him, he held her in his
lap and kissed her. The Angel Jibra’il came to him and conveyed the
name that was to be hers, and then he began to weep. The Prophet
(s.a.w.) asked why Jibra’il wept and he answered, "O
Prophet of Allah. From early on in the life, this girl will remain
entangled in tribulations and trials in this world. First she will weep
over you separation from this world; thereafter she will bemoan the loss
of her mother, then her father, and then her brother Hasan. After all
this she will be confronted with the trials of the land of Karbala and
the tribulations of that lonely desert, as a result of which her hair
will turn gray and her back will be bent."
When the members of the family heard
this prophecy they all broke down in tears. Imam Husayn (a.s.) now
understood why earlier his father had also wept. Then the Prophet
(s.a.w.) named her Zaynab (a.s.). When the news of Zaynab’s birth
reached Salman al Farsi, he went to Imam Ali (a.s.) to congratulate
him. But instead of seeing him happy and rejoicing, he saw Imam Ali
(a.s.) shed tears, and he too was apprised of the events of Karbala and
the hardships that were to befall Zaynab (a.s.).
One day, when Zaynab (a.s.) was
about five years old, she had a strange and terrible dream. A violent
wind arose in the city and darkened the earth and the sky. The little
girl was tossed hither and thither, and suddenly she found herself stuck
in the branches of a huge tree. But the wind was so strong that it
uprooted the tree. Zaynab (a.s.) caught hold of a branch but that
broke. In a panic, she grabbed two twigs but these two gave way and she
was left falling with no support. Then she woke up. When she told her
grandfather, the Prophet (s.a.w.), about the dream he wept bitterly and
said, "O may daughter. That
tree is me who is shortly going to leave this world. The branches are
your father Ali and your mother Fatimah A-Zahraa, and the twigs are your
brothers Hasan and Husayn. They will depart this world before you do,
and you will suffer their separation and loss."
Growing up in Medina
Zaynab (a.s.) shared with her
brothers and sister the extraordinary position of having such examples
to look up to, emulate and learn from, as her grandfather, the Prophet
of Allah (s.a.w.), her mother Fatimah (a.s.), daughter of the Prophet,
and her father Imam Ali (a.s.), cousin-brother of the Prophet. In the
pure environment that enveloped her, she absorbed the teachings of Islam
that her grandfather imparted, and after him, her father. Here too, she
learnt to master all household skills with great proficiency.
She had barely attained the tender age of seven when her beloved mother
passed away. Her mother’s death had closely followed her cherished
grandfather’s passing away. Some time later, Imam Ali (a.s.) married
Umm ul-Banin, whose devotion and piety encouraged Zaynab (a.s.) in her
learning.
While still a young girl she was
fully able to care for and be responsible for the running of her
father’s household. As much as she cared for the comforts and ease of
her brothers and sisters, in her own wants, she was frugal and
unstintingly generous to the poor, homeless and parent less. After her
marriage, her husband is reported as having said, "Zaynab (a.s.) is the
best housewife." From very early on she developed an unbreakable bond of
attachment to her brother Imam Husain (a.s.). At times when as a baby
in her mother’s arms, she could not be pacified and made to stop crying,
she would quiet down upon being held by her brother, and there she would
sit quiet gazing at his face. Before she would pray, she used to first
cast a glance at the face of her beloved brother.
One day, Fatimah (a.s.) mentioned
the intensity of her daughter’s love for Imam Husain (a.s.) to the
Prophet (s.a.w.). He breathed a deep sigh and said with moistened eyes,
"My dear child. This child of
mine, Zaynab, would be confronted with a thousand and one calamities and
face serious hardships in Karbala."
Womanhood
Zaynab (a.s.) grew into a fine
statuted young woman. Of her physical appearance, little is known.
When the tragedy of Karbala befell her in her mid - fifties, she was
forced to go out uncovered. It was then, that some people remarked that
she appeared as a ‘shining sun’ and a ‘piece of the moon.’
In her character, she reflected the best attributes of those who raised
her. In sobriety and serenity, she was likened to Umm ul-Mu’minin
Khadija, her grandmother (a.s.); in chastity and modesty to her mother
Fatimah A-Zahraa (a.s.); in eloquence to her father Imam Ali (a.s.) in
forbearance and patience to her brother Imam Hasan (a.s.); and in
bravery and tranquillity of the heart to Imam Husain (a.s.). Her face
reflected her father’s awe and her grandfather’s reverence.
When the time came for marriage, she
was married in a simple ceremony to her first cousin, Abdullah ibn
Ja’far Tayyar. Abdullah had been brought up under the direct care of
the Prophet (s.a.w.). After his death, Imam Ali (a.s.) became his
supporter and guardian until he came of age. He grew up to be a
handsome youth with pleasing manners and was known for his sincere
hospitality to guests and selfless generosity to the poor and needy.
Together, this young couple had five children, of whom four were sons,
Ali, Aun, Muhammad, and Abbas, and one daughter, Umm Kulthum.
In Medina, it was Zaynab’s practice
to hold regular meetings for women in which she shared her knowledge and
taught them the precepts of the Deen of Islam as laid out in the Holy
Qur’an. Her gatherings were well and regularly attended. She was able
to impart the teachings with such clarity and eloquence that she became
known as Fasihah (skillfully fluent) and Balighah (intensely eloquent).
In the thirty-seventh year A.H. (after Hijrah), Imam Ali (a.s.) moved to
Kufa to finally take up his rightful position as khalifah. He was
accompanied by his daughter Zaynab (a.s.) and her husband. Her
reputation as an inspiring teacher among the women had preceded her.
There too, women would throng to her daily sittings where they all
benefited from her erudition, wisdom and scholarship in the exegesis of
the Qur’an. The depth and certainty of her knowledge earned her the name
given to her by her nephew, Imam Ali Zayn al Abideen (a.s.), of ‘Alimah
Ghayr Mu’allamah, ‘she who has knowledge without being taught.’ Zaynab
(a.s.) was also nicknamed Zahidah (abstemious) and ‘Abidah (devoted)
because of her abstinence and piety. She found worldly adornments,
always preferring the bliss and comfort of the Next World over that of
this world. She used to say that for her the life of this world was as
a resting place to relive fatigue along a journey. Humble and of high
morals, her main concern was to strive to please Allah and in doing so
she avoided anything which was the least doubtful.
Assassination
On the night before Friday the 19th
of Ramadan in the fortieth year after Hijrah, Imam Ali (a.s.) went to
the central mosque for prayers. Shortly after the adhan (call to
prayer), Zaynab (a.s.) heard a heart-rending cry. Soon the cries came
nearer to her house and she realized that they were bringing her the
news of her father’s assassination. Ibn Muljim had struck Imam Ali
(a.s.) a fatal blow while he was in the defenseless state of sajdah
(devotional prostration). Mortally wounded, he was carried back home on
the shoulders of his followers.
There was to be no recovery from this wound. On the twenty-first night
of the Month of Ramadan, Imam Ali (a.s.) died, leaving his two sons and
daughter to witness and face his enemies’ misguided lust for power and
revenge. After his father’s soul was released, Imam Hasan (a.s.) said,
"Tonight such a great man has died with whose good conduct no one in the
past or the future can compare. He fought holy wars side by side with
the Holy Prophet, and made his life a shield for him. The Prophet used
to make him a standard - bearer of the army while the angels Jibra’il
walked on his right and Mika’il on his left. He never came back from
any war without victory. At that time of his death he left nothing,
save seven hundred dirhams with which he had intended to provide the
people of his house with a servant."
Zaynab (a.s.) was submerged in grief at the brutal loss of her dear
father. Together with her husband she returned to Medina.
Some ten years later, Zaynab (a.s.)
was once again stricken with a grievous loss, that of her brother Imam
Hasan (a.s.). He too fell victim to the schemes of the power - hungry
Bani Umayya. Mu’awiya was intent on converting the caliphate into a
hereditary kingship so as to retain the seat of power within his clan.
To achieve this it was necessary that he secure allegiance of the people
for his son Yazid. This proved to be impossible as long as Imam Hasan
(a.s.) was alive. Therefore he successfully eliminated him through an
ingenious intrigue in which the hand that dealt Imam Hasan (a.s.) the
deadly poison was none other than the Imam’s wife..
The rights of leadership now passed
into the hands of Imam Husain (a.s.), but the Bani Umayya would not
leave him in peace. Within six years of Husain’s brother’s death,
Mu’awiya started to openly call upon people to swear allegiance to his
son Yazid, and people met his desire willingly or unwillingly. Imam
Husain (a.s.) numbered among the five men who alone refused to pledge
themselves to Yazid. During the four years left to his life after
securing allegiance for his son, Mu’awiya was unable to dissuade Imam
Husain (a.s.) from his firm opposition to such a system of rule. If the
caliphate was to be based on heredity, then none other than the
Prophet’s grandson and nearest surviving kin was more suitable. And if
the right to rule was to be given on the basis of piety and learning,
then to whom else other than Husain (a.s.) - proven to be possessed of
untainted wisdom, complete knowledge of Islamic Law, piety, and devotion
of the highest degree could this position be rightfully apportioned.
In the month of Rajab in the
sixtieth year after Hijrah, the Bani Hashim were confronted with the
caliphate of Yazid. Yazid did not have the forbearance of his father,
and was not content to let Imam Husain (a.s.) stay in Medina in peace.
The day after his father’s death he wrote to Walid ibn ‘Utba ibn Abu
Sufyan, the governor of Medina, asking him to pursue Imam Husain (a.s.),
Abdullah ibn Umar, and Abdallah ibn Zubayr, and compel them to swear
allegiance to him. Again Imam Husain (a.s.) refused. He decided to
leave Medina, and, at the behest of other oppressed people, to go to
Kufa where, he had been led to believe, there were many who wished to
combat the tyrannical rule of the transgressing Bani Umayya and see to
it that pure enlightened leadership of Muslims prevailed instead.
Rendezvous with Fate - Karbala
When Zaynab (a.s.) learnt of her
brother’s proposed journey to Kufa she begged her husband to give her
leave to accompany her brother. Abdullah pointed out that such a
journey was fraught with difficulties and hardship. Zaynab (a.s.)
insisted, saying, "My mother did not leave me to watch from afar as
recreation the day when my brother is all alone, surrounded by enemies
with no friend or supporter. You know that for fifty-five years my
brother and I have never been separated. Now is the time of our old age
and the closing period of our lives. If I leave him now, how shall I be
able to face my mother, who at the time of her death had willed,
‘Zaynab, after me you are both mother and sister for Husayn (a.s.)’? It
is obligatory for me to stay with you, but if I do not go with him at
this time, I shall not be able to bear the separation."
Abdullah himself had wanted to
accompany the Imam, but since he had been weakened by illness, he gave
her permission to go on this destined journey. With her he sent two of
their sons. Zaynab (a.s.) Had been prepared all her life for what was
written for her and her brother. She preferred to face the trials of
Karbala than to ever be separated from him.
Having decided to leave, Imam Husayn (a.s.) ordered that litters be
prepared for the ladies of his family. Abu’l-Fadl Abbas, his
half-brother (for they shared the same father), helped Zaynab (a.s.) and
her sister Umm Kulthum into their litter. They were followed by two
young girls, Fatima Kubra and Sakina, daughters of Imam Husayn (a.s.).
After the first day of their journey, the party camped at Khuzaymiyyah
for the night. While Zaynab (a.s.) was seeing to her brother’s comfort,
he said to her, "What will come to pass has long since been decreed."
When later on their journey, they reached Ruhayma, they found their way
blocked by Hur ibn Yazid Riyahi. Sakina saw what had happened and when
she told Zaynab (a.s.), Zaynab wept and said to her, "Would that the
enemy killed all of us rather than slay my brother."
When Imam Husayn (a.s.) heard of his sister’s distress, he went to her
tent and she said to him, "O my
brother, talk to them. Tell them about your nearness to the Holy
Prophet and of your kinship with him."
Imam Husayn (a.s.) replied,
"O sister! I spoke to them at length.
I tried to convince them but they are so immersed in misguidance and
obsessed with greed that they cannot set aside their evil intentions.
They will not rest till they have killed me and seen me rolling around
in my blood. O sister, I advise you to patiently endure the forthcoming
troubles. My grandfather the Holy Prophet had told me of my martyrdom,
and his foretelling cannot be untrue."
Imam Husayn’s (a.s.) party reached
Karbala on the second of Muharram. But the supporters that had
originally invited him to Kufa were no longer his to command. Having
received wind of their intentions, Yazid appointed Ibn Ziyad, governor
of Kufa, to carry out orders to subvert their plans, and this they had
achieved successfully. With the Imam’s following cunningly eliminated,
forces were sent to meet him near Karbala.
The tents were pitched and at night Imam Husayn (a.s.) sat cleaning his
sword and reciting couplets forecasting his doom. His son Zayn
ul-Abidin (a.s.) listened quietly but in sorrow. When Zaynab (a.s.)
heard him she could not restrain her tears. She went to her brother and
prayed that death would overtake her. Imam Husayn (a.s.) urged her not
to let Shaytan deprive her of her power of fortitude. She asked whether
she might be killed in his place, and when she heard his negative reply
she fainted. When she came to her brother, he said, "Everything is
mortal. The final word lies with Allah and to Him is the return. My
father and grandfather were better men than I but where are they now?
Their example is the standard for me and for all Muslims."
So saying he bade her be patient and
not to weep over his death or shed tears or beat her cheeks. He then
took her to the tent of his son Ali Zayn ul-Abidin (a.s.) and left her
there. But Zaynab (a.s.) was not to be consoled, and from this time
came to be known as Bakiya (one who weeps). On the eve of the tenth day
of Muharran, Imam Husayn (a.s.) addressed his followers, the Ansar and
the Bani Hashem. It had become clear that this was to be a battle unto
death. He therefore released them from any obligation to remain by his
side, and let them know that no grudge would be held against them were
they to turn away from the coming decisive battle and return to safety.
There was now no doubt about the
slaughter that was to come. Despite the heavy burden of knowing this
insurmountable fact, Zaynab (a.s.) maintained her tranquillity through
constant prayer and remembrance of the ultimate cause for which their
lives were being sacrificed.
On the insistence of Shimr, Umar ibn Sa’d prepared to attack Imam
Husayn’s dwindled forces. When Zaynab (a.s.) heard the battle - cries
of their approaching troops she ran to her brother’s tent and found that
he had fallen asleep while cleaning his sword. She stood there quietly
for a moment. He woke up, and seeing her said that he had just had a
dream in which he saw his grandfather, the Holy Prophet (s.a.w.), his
father Ali (a.s.), his mother Fatima (a.s.), and his brother Hasan
(a.s.) telling him that he would soon join them. Seeing how distressed
Zaynab (a.s.) was on hearing these words, he said to her, "The blessings
of Allah are upon you. Do not worry about the troubles these wretched
people will cause."
Sacrifice - Karbala
The tenth day of Muharram, ‘Ashura,
dawned. Before going into battle Imam Husayn (a.s.) went into the tent
of his son Zayn ul-Abidin (a.s.) who was lying ill on a sheep’s skin too
weak to join his father in battle. He was being tended to by his aunt
Zaynab (a.s.). Husayn (a.s.) bade him farewell, saying, "My son, you
are the best and purest of my children. After me you will be my
successor and deputy. Take care of these women and children during
captivity and the rigors of travel. Console them. My son, convey to my
friends my Salam (greetings of peace) and tell them their Imam has been
killed away from his home and that they should mourn for me."
Sighing deeply, he turned to Zaynab
(a.s.) and the other women of the Bani Hashim and said, "Take
heed and remember that this my son is my successor and Imam and is to be
obeyed by everyone." Then to Zaynab
(a.s.) he said, "After killing
me, my enemies would take off the clothes from my body. Therefore
please bring me some old and tattered dress to wear so that they might
not undress me and leave me naked."
Zaynab (a.s.) did as he
requested.
That same day, Zaynab (a.s.) brought to him her two sons Aun and
Mohammad and said to him, "O my
brother, if women were permitted to fight, I would have courted death to
save you. But it is not allowed. Accept therefore the sacrifice of my
two sons."
The bloody battle raged all
day. One by one, Imam Husayn’s (a.s.) son, kinsmen and supporters were
butchered on the battlefield. When Zaynab’s sons were killed she bore
their death with fortitude. She did not come out of her tent, nor did
she loudly lament for she did not wish to cause grief or shame to her
brother. But when the corpse of Ali Akbar (a.s.) (the son of Imam
Husayn [a.s.]) was brought to the tents of the women, Zaynab (a.s.) was
distraught. Oblivious of her veil she came out of her tent and clasped
the body saying, "O my son,
would that I had become blind, or had been buried beneath the ground so
as not to have seen this day."
Their enemies did not even give them
access to any water that might soothe their parched throats. Their
water supplies had long since been finished. When the Imam was taking
his final leave of the ladies, Zaynab (a.s.) asked that he try to get a
little water for his dehydrated infant son Ali Asghar (a.s.). The Imam
took him in his arms and went to beseech Umar ibn Sa’d for water for the
innocent child. But his request fell on deaf ears and stone hearts.
Instead, an arrow pierced he child’s neck, killing him instantly. Imam
Husayn (a.s.) returned with the child still in his arms, himself
spattered with his son’s blood. Zaynab (a.s.) took the small corpse
from her brother and pressing it close to her chest lamented pitifully
the heavy toll on life that the injustices of the enemy extracted.
The fateful day wore on. Husayn
(a.s.) was wounded so many times until eventually he fell off his
horse. His enemies surrounded him and attacked him with swords and
spears. When Zaynab (a.s.) saw his agony from her tent door she went on
to the field of battle, and approaching the Imam, she said, "O
my brother, my master, would that the sky fell down on the earth and the
mountains toppled to the ground."
Then she turned to Umar ibn Sa’d and said, "O
Sa’d, Husayn is being butchered and you are only watching."
Hearing this, his eyes filled
with tears, but he made no reply.
Then Zaynab (a.s.) addressed the others of the army, "Is
there no Muslim among you who would help the grandson of the Prophet of
Allah?"
And then the fighting came to
an end. Seventy - three brave men had faced four thousand, and after
the bloody encounter was over, none of the Imam’s supporters were left
alive. The Imam’s body was trampled by his enemies’ horses, his head
was severed, and even the tattered cloth with which he had hoped to
preserve his modesty was snatched off him.
At the moment of the Imam’s death, Angel Jibra’il (a.s.) proclaimed, "Beware,
Husayn has been murdered in Karbala."
Upon hearing this Zaynab (a.s.)
rushed to Imam Zayn ul-Abidin (a.s.) and told him about the tragedy that
had just occurred. At his asking she raised the curtain of the tent
door for him and, looking towards the battlefield, he exclaimed,
"My Aunt, my father had been killed,
and with him the spring of generosity and honor to has come to an end.
Inform the women and ask them to conduct themselves with patience and
forbearance; let them be prepared to be plundered and taken captive."
Now the enemy came in full
force to the women’s tents. Umar ibn Sa’d gave the order to loot.
Barging in, they plundered what they could and set the tents on fire.
They beat the women with their spears and snatched away their veils.
Imam Zayn ul-Abidin’s bedding was ripped from beneath him and he was
left lying feeble, weak and unable to move. Both Sakina’s and Fatima’s
earrings were wrenched from their ears, making them bleed.
While the tents burned away, Zaynab (a.s.) gathered the young women and
went to find Imam Ali Zayn ul-Abidin (a.s.). Finding that he had not
been killed, Shimr had come to behead him. Zaynab (a.s.) threw herself
on her sick nephew to protect him and Shimr was stopped from carrying
out his evil intention.
Most of the women and the children
had fled into the open in terror. As night fell, Zaynab (a.s.)
collected them all together, but could not find Sakina, daughter of
Husayn (a.s.). She was greatly perturbed and called on her dead brother
to tell her where the girl was. A voice replied, "O
my sister, my daughter is with me."
Sakina had slipped away to
where the body of her dead father lay. Zaynab (a.s.) found her there
clinging to his body and brought the orphaned child back.
Eloquent Defiance - Kufa
The next day, the members of the
Prophet’s family were made to leave for Kufa to be presented to Ibn
Ziyad. Among the prisoners were Zaynab (a.s.), her sister Umm Kulthoom
(a.s.), other women of the Bani Hashim, Imam Zayn al Abideen (a.s.),
three young sons of Imam Hasan (a.s.), and other daughters of Imam
Husayn (a.s.). When, on their way, they reached the battlefield, a
heart-rending sight met their eyes. The bodies of the martyrs lay naked
on the burning sand, covered with dust and blood. The enemy had not
buried them, although they had burned their own dead.
Seeing this scene of carnage, Imam
Ali (a.s.) was so affected that he appeared to be on the verge of death
himself. Noticing his state, Zaynab (a.s.) said to him, "O you who are
reminded of my grandfather and father. What has happened to you for I
see that you are about to lose your life." He replied,
"Dear Aunt, how can I be otherwise when I
see that the bodies of my father, uncle, brothers and cousins are lying
on the ground neglected while their clothes have been removed and there
is no arrangement for shrouding and burying them."
Zaynab (a.s.) then also openly lamented
the murder of her beloved brother and their imprisonment.
Umar ibn Sa’d had entrusted the severed heads of Husayn (a.s.), his
sons, and other martyrs, to different tribal chiefs so that on the way
people would see that various tribes had taken part in the battle and
none would dare to interrupt their march. The captives were made to
ride on camels without saddles, their faces unveiled for all the world
to see, while ahead of them their captors gleefully carried the chopped
off heads of their loved ones impaled on spears.
Kufa was then regarded as the
principle city of Islam. Imam Ali (a.s.) had made it his capitol during
his caliphate and here Zaynab (a.s.) and Umm Kulthoom had once lived
respected and loved. Now they came to this city of their memories as
captives.
It was night when they arrived at the city, and the palace of Ibn Ziyad
was shut, so they were made to camp outside. When he was informed of
their arrival the next day, he ordered that a great function should take
place to which all would be invited without distinction. The head of
Imam Husayn (a.s.) was to be placed on a gold tray near the court chair,
and the heads of the other martyrs were also to be displayed. The
people of Kufa were told that some tribe had committed aggression
against the Muslims, but the Muslims had secured victory and because of
this, there was to be a celebration.
Festively dressed and in
anticipation of joyful celebration, the people poured into the streets
and market place and the music of victory was heard as the captives
arrived. But there were a few who guessed the truth, and they looked on
with downcast eyes. One woman, on recognizing Zaynab (a.s.) and her
retinue of unveiled women, ran into her house and brought them all head
covers and sheets with which to cover their bodies. But they were not
allowed to preserve their modesty and the enemy guards snatched them
away.
When Zaynab (a.s.) saw some of the
men and women who had realized what had really happened; weeping and
wailing, she bade them to be quiet and spoke to them with piercing
eloquence and insight.
"Praise be to Allah and
blessings be on my Muhammad and his purified and chosen progeny. So now,
O people who deceive, forsake and contrive, it is you who weep. May
Allah not stop your tears and may your chests burn incessantly with the
fire of grief and sorrow. Your example is that of a woman who
assiduously prepares a strong rope and then entwines it herself, wasting
her own hard labor.
You swear such false oath which
bear no truthfulness at all. Beware that you have nothing except vain
talk, false pride, mischief, malice, evil, rancor, falsehood, and
sycophancy. Beware that your position is that of slave maids and
purchased girls who are but the meanest beings. Your hearts are full of
enmity and rancor. You are like the vegetation that grows on filthy
soil and is yet green, or like the mortar applied onto graves.
You should know that you have
perpetrated a very morbid deed and have prepared evil provision for your
next life, because of which Allah’s anger is against you and His wrath
would fall upon you.
Now you are crying aloud and
wailing over my brother! Yes, cry, because it behooves you to cry.
Yes, weep profusely and laugh less, because you have earned the shame of
killing the Imam of the age. The stain of his blood is now on your
clothes and you cannot remove it, nor can you secure acquittal from the
charge of killing the son of the last Prophet of Allah, the Chief of the
youths in Paradise. You have killed a person who was your support, the
knower of the Sunnah and the ultimate arbitrator at the time of your
mutual disputations. He was the basis of your talks and actions. He
was your place of refuge in the event of hardship.
Know that you have been guilty of
the most heinous crime in the world and have prepared the worst
provision for the Day of Judgment. Curses be upon you and may
destruction overtake you. Your efforts have gone wasted and you have
been ruined. You have transacted a losing trade. You have become the
victim of Allah’s wrath and have fallen into ignominy and degradation.
People of Kufa, woe upon you. Do
you realize which piece of Mohammed’s heart you have severed, which
pledge you have broken, whose blood you have shed and whose honor you
have desecrated? You have certainly committed such a crime because of
which the sky may fall down on the earth, the earth may crack and
mountains crumble to pieces. By killing your Imam, you have committed a
evil act of rebellious behavior and heedlessness towards dignity. In
view of all these acts would you wonder if blood should rain down from
the sky? In any case you should mind that the chastisement of the Next
World will be severe. At that junction there will be no one to help
you. Do not regard the time and opportunity given to you by Allah as
small and unimportant, and do not be satisfied with it because Allah is
not quick in acting it does not imply that He is unable. For him there
is no fear that the time of vengeance is passing away. Allah is
certainly keeping watch over you."
People wept, putting their fingers
in their mouths and biting them. Without appealing to sentiments of
pity, she exposed to them the reality of their selves and their evil
deeds. The eyes that had previously been raised in expectation of
celebration were now downcast with shame by the truthful force of her
speech. Zaynab (a.s.) entered the government palace with which she was
so familiar. In the great audience hall her father had dispensed
justice during his caliphate. Her sons had played there and her
brothers had been accorded great respect by the people there. Although
she was shabbily dressed, and her head was uncovered, she entered with
awe-inspiring dignity and took her place in silence. Ibn Ziyad was
amazed at her boldness and inquired who she was. Zaynab (a.s.) did not
reply, an it was left to one of her slaves to inform him of her
identity. Enraged because of her apparently haughty behavior, Ibn Ziyad
addressed her, "Allah be
praised. Your brother and your kinsmen are dead and their false claims
have come to naught."
Zaynab (a.s.) replied,
"It was Allah’s wish that they should
be martyred, and they met their deaths bravely. If this was your
heart’s desire then you must indeed be content today. But you have
killed those whom the Holy Prophet (s.a.w.) help upon his knee when
they were children, and whose play filled him with joy. Soon you will
stand with them before Allah and they will demand justice. Beware of
the Day of Reckoning."
And it seemed to all that heard
that she spoke with the voice of Imam Ali (a.s.), her father.
Angrily, Ibn Ziyad turned to a young man and inquired who he was. The
youth replied, "I am Ali, son of
Husayn."
Ibn Ziyad was amazed that he was
still alive, and ordered that he should be killed. But Zaynab (a.s.)
intervened and said that if the boy was to be killed then she should be
killed with him. Ibn Ziyad was moved by her love and allowed the young
Imam to live. Chains were then put around him, and a ring around his
neck; then he was permitted to remain with the women. The family of the
Holy Prophet (s.a.w.) were kept prisoners in a house near the central
mosque. There they were kept locked in and under guard, and none save
slave-maids were able to visit them.
The day after their arrival, Ibn
Ziyad wrote to Yazid informing him about the killing of Husayn (a.s.)
and the capture of his womenfolk. Yazid replied that the captives be
sent to him in Damascus along with the heads of the martyrs. After
about a month and seven days in Kufa, they were made to set off for
Damascus with a large escort of horsemen and footmen of the army so that
none should intercept their journey. With their steely hearted escort,
the caravan left Kufa on the eighteenth day of Safar. The women
suffered untold hardships on their journey to Damascus, which was no
less than six hundred miles away. Their journey took them through many
villages and towns, among them Karbala, Ba’albeck, Musal and Hums. They
were made to travel unveiled, on unsaddled camels like slaves, and the
heads of the men folk were carried on spears before them. In some of
the towns crowds flocked to jeer at them, but if it happened that they
were to pass through some place where the people were friendly towards
the family of the Holy Prophet (s.a.w.), they came out to fight the
Yazidites. They therefore were very often forced to take other routes
involving long diversions, and the camels were made to run faster so as
to cover the extra distance. The captives were harshly treated by their
escort, and many of the children perished form the rigors of the
journey. After about the twenty-eight days, on the sixteenth of Rabi’
ul-Awwal, the caravan reached Damascus.
The Victory of Truth -
Damascus
When they reached the outskirts of
Damascus they were made to halt. Yazid was informed of their arrival
and he fixed a date for their entry into the city. On the morning of
the appointed day, the members of the family of the Holy Prophet
(s.a.w.) were led to Damascus. They were tied with ropes and herded
together like goats. If anyone stumbled they were whipped. The city
streets had been decorated and the sound of music filled the air.
People came out in throngs wearing festive clothes and rejoiced when
they saw the procession, preceded as always by the heads of the
martyrs. Bearing themselves with dignity and self-respect, the
prisoners were paraded through Damascus. Zaynab (a.s.) even cast aside
the offering of food that some of them out of compassion offered them.
The son of an enemy of the Prophet (s.a.w.) who had waged war with Imam
Ali (a.s.) was among the crowds. When he saw Imam Zayn ul-Abideen
(a.s.), he jarringly asked him who was now victorious. In reply, the
Imam said, "If you wish to find
out who has been victorious, do so when it is time for prayer and the
Adhan and Iqamat are recited."
In this manner, the captives were
paraded until the afternoon when they reached the palace of Yazid.
There he was seated on his throne and was much pleased when he saw the
forty-four bound captives arrive. The head of Husayn (a.s.) was then
brought to him on a golden tray. He struck the Imam’s teeth with his
stick and said, "O Husayn! You
have paid the price of your revolt."
When Zaynab (a.s.) and her companions saw this show of arrogance they
burst into tears and there were many present who were ashamed. But
Yazid carried on gloating over his victory. He said to his subjects,
"My ancestors who were killed at
Badr have been avenged today. Now, it is clear that the Bani Hashim had
just staged a play to gain power and there was never any divine
revelation."
Zaynab (a.s.) however was not
afraid. She drew herself up and boldly said for all to hear,
"Praise be to Allah, the Lord of
the worlds and blessings on my grandfather, the Chief of divine
prophets.O Yazid, Allah says, and his word is true, that: ‘Then evil was
the end of those who did evil because they rejected the communications
of Allah and used to mock them.’ (30;10)
O Yazid, do you believe that you
have succeeded in closing the sky and the earth for us and that we have
become your captives just because we have been brought before you in a
row and that you have secured control over us? Do you believe that we
have been afflicted with insult and dishonor by Allah and that you have
been given honor and respect by Him? You have become boastful of this
apparent victory that you have secured and you have started feeling
jubilant and proud over this prestige an honor. You think that you have
achieved worldly good, that your affairs have become stabilized and our
rule has fallen into your hands. Wait for a while. Do not be so
joyful. Have you forgotten Allah’s saying: ‘The unbelievers should not
carry the impression that the time allowed to them by us is good for
them. Surely we give them time so that they may increase their evil
deeds, and eventually they will be given insulting chastisement.’
(3:178)
O son of freed slaves, is this
your justice that you keep your own daughters and slave maids veiled
while the daughters of the Prophet of Allah are being paraded from place
to place exposed. You have dishonored us by unveiling our faces. Your
men take us from town to town where all sorts of people, whether they be
residents of the hills or of riversides have been looking at us. The
near as well as the remote one, the poor as well as the rich, the low as
well as the high - all casting their glances at us while our position is
such that there is no male relative of ours to render us help or
support.
O Yazid, whatever you have done
proves your revolt against Allah and your denial of His Prophet (s.a.w)
and of the Book and Sunnah that the Holy Prophet (s.a.w.) brought from
Allah. Your deeds should not cause amazement because one whose
ancestors chewed the livers of the martyrs, whose flesh grew up on
virtuous people, who fought against the Chief of divine prophets, who
mobilized parities for fighting against him and drew swords against him,
should conspicuously excel all Arabs in unbelief, sinfulness, excesses,
and enmity against Allah and His Prophet (s.a.w.).
Remember that the evil deeds and
sinful actions that you have committed are the results of unbelief and
old rancor you bear because of your ancestors who were killed in Badr.
One who casts his glance of enmity, malice and rancor upon us does not
lag behind in practicing enmity against us. He
proves his unbelief, declares it with his tongue and jubilantly
proclaims: ‘I have killed the sons of the Prophet (s.a.w.) of Allah and
made his progeny captive,’ and wishes that his ancestors had lived to
see his achievement and to have exclaimed, ‘O Yazid, may your hands not
lose their strength; you have wreaked good vengeance on our behalf.’
O Yazid, you are striking the lips of Imam Husayn with your stick in
front of this crowd while these very lips used to be kissed by the
Prophet (s.a.w.) of Allah, and yet your face reflects pleasure and
happiness.
By my life, by killing the chief of youths of Paradise, the son of the
chief of Arabs (Ali [a.s.]) and the shining sun of the progeny of Abd
ul-Muttalib, you have deepened our wound and uprooted us completely.
By killing Husayn ibn Ali (a.s.),
you have gained nearness to the state of your unbelieving ancestors.
You proclaim your deed with pride and if they were to see you they would
approve of your action and pray that Allah may not paralyze your arms.
O Yazid! If you had heart enough
to take account of your nefarious deeds, you yourself would surely wish
your arms to be paralyzed and severed from your elbow and you would wish
that your parents had not given birth to you because you would know that
Allah has become displeased with you.
Allah, Grant us our rights.
Avenge those who have oppressed us.
O Yazid! You did what you wished, but remember that you have cut your
own skin and your own flesh to pieces. Soon, you will be brought before
the Holy Prophet. You will be overburdened with the weight of your sins
committed by shedding the blood of his progeny and by dishonoring his
family. The place to which you will be taken will be before all the
member of his family. The oppressed will be avenged and the enemies
will be punished.
Yazid! It is not seeming for you
to swell with joy after slaying the Prophet’s progeny. ‘Reckon not
those who are killed in Allah’s way as dead; nay, they are alive and are
provided sustenance from their Lord; rejoicing in what Allah has given
out of His grace’ (3:169-170)
Allah is sufficient to deal with
you. The Messenger of Allah is your antagonist and Hadrat Jibra’il is
our support and help against you.
Those who have made you the head
of state and burdened the Muslims with your leadership will soon find
out what awaits them. The end of all tyrants is agony.
O Yazid! I speak not to you thus
to warn you of the severe chastisement in store for you so that you
should be regretful for you are one of those whose hearts are hardened,
souls are rebellious and whose bodies are busy in Allah’s disobedience
while they are under the curse of the Prophet of Allah. You are from
among those in whose heart Shaytan has made his abode and has been
breeding young ones.
How amazing it is that the
virtuous people, sons of the divine prophets and vicegerents are killed
at the hands of liberated slaves, evil-doers and sinners. Our blood is
shed by their hands and our flesh serves as food for them. We feel
grieved for those whose bodies are lying enshrouded and unburied in the
battlefield, wounded with arrows.
O Yazid, if you consider our
defeat as your achievement then you will have to pay its price. Allah
commits not injustice to His servants. Our reliance is on Allah. He
alone is our Relief and place of Protection, and in Him alone do we
repose our hope.
You may contrive and try however
much you can. By Him who honored us with revelation, the Book and
Prophet hood, you cannot achieve our status, nor reach our position,
nor can you effect our mention, nor remove from yourself that shame and
dishonor that is now your lot because of perpetrating excess and
oppression on us. Your word is weak and your days are counted. Beware
of the day when the Announcer would announce the curse of Allah on the
oppressors and the unjust.
Praise be to Allah who gave good
end to His friends and granted them success in their aims, and
thereafter called them back to His Mercy, Pleasure and Bliss, while you
hurled yourself into evil and mischief by committing injustice against
them.
We pray to Allah to favor us with full recompense through them and grant
us the good of Khilafat and Imamat. Surely Allah is Kind and the Most
Merciful over His creatures."
Among the gathering was a red
haired Syrian who saw Fatima Kubra, daughter of Imam Husayn (a.s.) and
asked Yazid to give her to him. When the girl heard this she clung to
Zaynab (a.s.) and started to weep. She feared that now after the loss
of her father she was to be made a slave girl. Zaynab (a.s.) was not
afraid. She turned to Yazid and told him that he had neither right nor
authority to give the young girl away like that, at which he bristled,
retorting that he could do so. Zaynab (a.s.) riposted, "You
are abusing me because of your authority and power."
At this, Yazid was shamed to
silence.
To the Syrian, she said, "May
the curse of Allah be upon you. May hell be your eternal abode. May
your eyes be blinded and your limbs paralyzed."
Immediately, paralysis gripped
the man and he fell to the ground dead.
Yazid was so enraged with Zaynab (a.s.) bold defiance of his authority
that he might have ordered her killed had not Abdullah ibn Umar ibn As
intervened and begged that no notice be taken of her harsh words since
she had suffered much grief and hardship and was broken hearted. Imam
Zayn ul-Abideen (a.s.) would also have suffered death at the hands of
Yazid on account of his fearless speech, had not Zaynab (a.s.) saved his
life by begging Yazid to slay her also along with the boy. Yazid was
moved by her love for the boy and spared his life.
But death nevertheless took its toll. Sakina (a.s.), daughter of Imam
Husayn (a.s.), died in captivity in Damascus at the age of four and was
buried there.
Through Zaynab’s (a.s.) bold and
fearless speeches and from the word that spread as a result of their
journey, people came to know of the events of Karbala and their hearts
were stirred. The continued captivity and humiliation of the family of
the Prophet of Allah (s.a.w.) was bringing their cause to the attention
of an ever increasing number of people. Word came to Yazid that there
was turmoil and unrest in the realm and he decided to release the
captives.
When it seemed to him that the Ahl-lul-Bayt (a.s.) had been adequately
humiliated, and upon the urgings of certain people who were alert of the
public’s growing dissension upon learning the truth, Yazid sent for Imam
Zayn ul-Abideen (a.s.). He informed him of his impending release and
asked if he wished for anything. The youth said he would have to
consult his aunt Zaynab (a.s.). Arrangements were made and she arrived,
properly veiled. She asked, "O
Yazid, since the day our leader and our chief Husayn was butchered we
have not had any opportunity to mourn for him."
A large house was therefore provided
for them in the residential sector of Damascus and here Zaynab (a.s.)
held her first gathering for the mourning and remembrance of Imam Husayn
(a.s.). The women of the Quraysh and Bani Hashim arrived clad in black,
with their heads uncovered, weeping wretchedly.
Imam Zayn ul-Abideen (a.s.) sat on
the carpet of Imam Husayn (a.s.) and then Zaynab (a.s.) told the women
of Syria what had befallen them. They shed tears and mourned. They had
not known about the events of Karbala and Kufa, but when they went home,
they told their men folk. Gradually, illusions of Yazid’s good
intentions were dispelled. It was fear of revolt that caused Yazid to
release the members of the family of the Holy Prophet (s.a.w.).
Return to Medina
Yazid gave them the choice of
remaining in Damascus or returning to Medina. When Zaynab (a.s.)
decided to return to Medina, he called Nu’man ibn Bashir, who had been a
companion of the Holy Prophet (s.a.w.), and ordered him to make suitable
arrangements for their journey. A contingent of horsemen, foot soldiers
and adequate provisions were made available. Gaily decorated litters
with velvet seats were provided, but Zaynab (a.s.) ordered that these
should be covered in black so that people would know the travelers were
in mourning. When the citizens of Damascus came to know that the member
of the Holy Prophet’s (s.a.w.) family were leaving, the women came to
the house they were staying in for a last farewell. Many people
accompanied the caravan for part of the journey and then returned to
their homes with heavy hearts.
During the journey, Nu’man ibn
Bashir showed the travelers every consideration and respect. Whenever
they stopped, the tents of the men were pitched a mile away from those
of the women so that the women could move unhindered and unobserved by
strangers. Gatherings of mourners were held wherever they stopped and
many people came, listened and learned the truth. The travelers
returned to Medina via Karbala. When they reached Karbala, they found
Jabir ibn Abdullah Ansari and some of the chiefs of Bani Hashim were
already there for they had come to pay homage at the grave of Imam
Husayn (a.s.). It is related that they had brought the severed head of
the chief of martyrs with them from Damascus and that in Karbala, it was
rejoined with his body by his son Imam Zayn ul-Abideen (a.s.). A great
majlis was held before they resumed their journey. When the time came
to leave Karbala, Zaynab (a.s.) wanted to remain near her brother’s
grave till the day of her death. But Imam Zayn ul-Abideen (a.s.)
pleaded with her not to leave them and reluctantly, she agreed to return
to Medina.
Wherever the caravan stopped on its
way to Medina, a majlis-e-aza’ was held. When the city was in sight,
Zaynab (a.s.) bade the women alight from their camels and pitch their
tents. Black flags were raised. On learning of their arrival the
people of Medina came out in droves, and once again Zaynab (a.s.)
recounted to them the events at Karbala and the hardships of their
subsequent captivity. After some time, Imam Zayn ul-Abideen (a.s.)
asked the women to ready themselves for entering Medina. Then they
entered the city on foot, with black flags raised aloft. Zaynab (a.s.)
went straight to the grave of the Holy Prophet (s.a.w.) where she prayed
and told him of the massacre of his beloved grandson. Zaynab (a.s.) had
returned altered, her hair white, and her back bent. Although upon her
return, she had been reunited with her husband. She did not live long
after the tortuous trials she had to bear. The exact date and place of
her death is not clear but it is probable that she died in the year 62
A.H., some six months after her return.
Epilogue
It was her destiny to proclaim to
the world the sacrifices made by Imam Husain (a.s.) and the other
members of the family of the Holy Prophet (s.a.w.) for the cause of
Islam. She exposed evil deeds of Ibn Ziyad and Yazid with courage and
fearlessness. Had it not been for her the sacrifice of Karbala might
have faded into oblivion. She endured physical pain and mental torture
with fortitude and was a source of strength to all around her. The
sorrow and grief she expressed was an outpouring of her intense
humanity. Never did she rebel against the destiny decreed by Allah.
The strength of her submission was divine, yet her lamentation
poignantly human. The spirit of Zaynab (a.s.) will live forever. Her
courage, forbearance, and submission will continue to inspire those who
hear her story for all time to come.
Ziyarat to Zaynab (a.s.)
The following ziyarat
(verbal salutation) for Zaynab (a.s.) is traditionally recited to obtain
divine blessing while visiting her shrine. It can also be recited at
any other time in remembrance of the example of courage and submission
that she presented to the world, particularly on the acknowledged days
of her birth, death, and during the month of Muharam.
Peace be upon you, Oh daughter
of the Chief of Prophets.
Peace be upon you, Oh daughter of the Master of the sanctuary and
the banner.
Peace be upon you, Oh daughter of him who was made to ascend to
(highest) heaven and reached the station of two bow’s length (to Allah)
or even closer.
Peace be upon you, Oh daughter of the Leader of the pious.
Peace be upon you, Oh daughter of the support of the sincere friends
(of Allah).
Peace be upon you, Oh daughter of the Leader of the Deen.
Peace be upon you, Oh daughter of the Commander of the faithful.
Peace be upon you, Oh daughter of him who struck with the sword of two
blades.
Peace be upon you, Oh daughter of him who prayed towards the two
qiblahs (Jerusalem then Mecca).
Peace be upon you, Oh daughter of Muhammad, the chosen.
Peace be upon you, Oh daughter of Ali, the content (with decree of
Allah).
Peace be upon you, Oh daughter of Fatima, the radiant.
Peace be upon you, Oh daughter of Khadija, the elder.
Peace be upon you, Oh righteous one, pleasing (to Allah).
Peace be upon you, Oh learned, rightly guided one.
Peace be upon you, Oh generous, noble one.
Peace be upon you, Oh pious, pure one.
Peace be upon you, Oh you who were thoroughly tested by sufferance like
Husayn, the oppressed.
Peace be upon you, Oh you who were kept far from your home.
Peace be upon you, Oh you who were held captive in cities.
Peace be upon you, Oh daughter of the greatest endeared friend of
Allah.
Peace be upon you, Oh sister of the glorified friend of Allah.
Peace be upon you, Oh aunt of the revered friend of Allah.
Peace be upon you, Oh sister of misfortunes, Sayyida Zaynab, and may
the mercy and blessings of Allah be upon you.
This source of information was taken
from:
1. Bilgrami H. M. The Victory of Truth. Published by Zahra
Publications. Pakistan, 1986. |