Further reading: Laleh Bakhtiar, Encyclopedia of Islamic
Law: A Compendium of the Major Schools (Chicago: ABC
International Group, 1996); Yusuf al-Qaradawi, The
Lawful and the Prohibited in Islam (Al-halal wal-haram fi
al-Islam). Translated by Kamal El-Helbawi, M. Moinud-
din Siddiqui, and Syed Shukry (Indianapolis: American
Trust Publications, 1960).
al-Hallaj, al-Husayn ibn Mansur
(857–
922) controversial early Sufi remembered for his
proclamation “I am the Truth” and for the martyr’s
death he suffered at the hands of Muslim authorities
in Baghdad
Born in the Fars region of southern Iran, al-
Husayn ibn Mansur al-Hallaj moved with his
family to Wasit, a town in central Iraq. His father
probably worked in the textile industry (hallaj is
Arabic for a person in the cotton or wool carder
profession). In his youth, al-Hallaj memorized the
q
Uran
and studied s
UFism
with Sahl al-Tustari (d.
896), but he was not initiated as a Sufi until he
was 20 years old. Marriage did not sway him from
his spiritual quest, and, traveling between i
ran
,
i
raq
, and m
ecca
, he reportedly gained a following
of 400 disciples. He was also said to have visited
i
ndia
, Central Asia, and the tomb of J
esUs
in Jeru-
salem. After performing the
haJJ
to Mecca for the
third time, he returned to his family in b
aghdad
and created a model of the k
aaba
in his house.
Al-Hallaj’s affiliations with rebels, Shiis, and non-
Muslims eventually aroused the suspicions of
conservative Sunnis and political authorities.
Some of his former Sufi associates even accused
him of magic and witchcraft. Moreover, while
engaged in his spiritual quest for God, he made
public sermons and statements that angered his
opponents. In one of these, he said that Muslims
could fulfill the hajj duty by performing circum-
ambulations in their hearts and giving charity to
the poor at home. His most famous utterance was,
“I am the Truth,” which his enemies interpreted to
be an assertion of his own divinity. In the Islamic
worldview, Truth (haqq) was regarded as an attri-
bute of God. Sufis made such statements (sha-
thiyyat) while in a state of ecstasy, implying that
they were speaking in God’s voice, not their own.
Al-Hallaj soon became implicated in the religious
and political intrigues of 10th-century Baghdad
and was imprisoned for nine years. Finally put on
trial by his enemies in 922, he was charged with
blasphemy
, beaten, and crucified. His remains
were burned and thrown into the Tigris River,
preventing his family and friends from giving him
a proper Muslim burial or from venerating him as
a saint. Al-Hallaj consequently has a mixed legacy,
remembered by some as a heretic and by others as
a martyred
saint
. His sayings were written down
and collected by his followers. He is also credited
for having written Kitab al-Tawasin, an assemblage
of meditations on m
Uhammad
, the prophet’s n
ight
J
oUrney
and
a
scent
, and s
atan
’s dialogues with
God and m
oses
.
See also
apostasy
;
FUnerary
ritUals
;
haqiqa
;
J
Unayd
, a
bU
al
-q
asim
ibn
m
Uhammad
;
martyrdom
.
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