Further reading: Richard C. Foltz, Frederick M. Denny,
and Azizan Baharudding, eds., Islam and Ecology (Cam-
bridge, Mass.: Harvard University Press, 2003); Andrew
Watson, Agricultural Innovation in the Early Islamic
World (Cambridge: Cambridge University Press, 1983);
World Resources Institute, World Resources (Oxford,
U.K.: Elsevier Science, 2000–01).
ahl al-bayt
(Arabic: people of the house)
The ahl al-bayt in Islam is a holy family consisting
primarily of five members: the prophet m
Uhammad
(d. 632), a
li
ibn
a
bi
t
alib
(Muhammad’s cousin
and son-in-law, d. 661), F
atima
(Muhammad’s
daughter, d. 633), and the two sons of Ali and
Fatima, Hasan (d. 669) and h
Usayn
(d. 680). It
can also include all descendants of Muhammad’s
clan, the Banu Hashim, and even all Muslims.
Muhammad’s family is highly respected by
all Muslims, but it is the Shia, followers of the
minority branch of Islam, who hold them in high-
est esteem. They regard the family of Muhammad
as pure, sinless, and divinely inspired exem-
plars of the best worldly and spiritual qualities.
Miraculous powers are assigned to members of
this family, and it is believed that they will help
their devotees enter
paradise
on J
Udgement
d
ay
.
The Shia also believe that Muhammad’s family
produces, with God’s guidance, the most quali-
fied leaders of the Muslim community, called
imams. t
Welve
-i
mam
s
hiism
venerates 12 such
leaders, all but one of whom suffered martyrdom
at the hands of wayward members of the Mus-
lim community. Like Christians who believe in
J
esUs
as a redeemer, they believe that the suffer-
ing and death of these heroic figures, especially
of Husayn, the third imam, redeem the sins of
the faithful and that the 12th imam, known as
m
Uhammad
al
-m
ahdi
, will arise in the future to
combat the forces of evil and inaugurate a golden
age at the end of time.
The tombs of ahl al-bayt are popular Muslim
pilgrimage sites, including those of Ali (Najaf,
Iraq), Husayn (Karbala, Iraq, and Cairo, Egypt),
Ali al-Rida (the eighth imam; Mashhad, Iran),
and of women saints such as Zaynab bint Ali
(Damascus, Syria, and Cairo, Egypt). Sufi
tariqa
s
include members of the holy family, especially
Ali, in their lists of spiritual teachers. Rulers of a
number of Muslim empires and states have also
claimed descent from ahl al-bayt, including the
F
atmid
dynasty
in Egypt (909–1171), the a
laWid
dynasty
of Morocco (1631–present), the h
ash
-
emite
dynasty
of Iraq (1921–1958) and of Jordan
(1923–present), and many of the clerics holding
power in Iran since the revolution of 1978–79.
See also a
ga
k
han
; a
laWi
;
imam
; s
hiism
;
ziyara
.
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