Encyclopedia of Islam



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Shiism

  

625  J




persecution and also to facilitate their search for 

new converts, they practiced taqiyya, assuming 

Sunni, Twelve-Imam Shii, Sufi, and even Hindu 

guise, depending on the context. Mongol inva-

sions in the 13th century contributed to a wide 

dispersion of the Ismailis, with sizeable com-

munities in India and Pakistan. These are known 

as the Khojas, who belong to the Nizari sect

and the Bohras, who belong to the Mustali sect. 

Indian Ismailis migrated to East Africa in the 19th 

century, as well as to England and North America 

in the 20th century. Although precise figures are 

lacking, recent estimates have placed the size of 

the Ismaili population today at around 15 million, 

or about one-tenth the size of the Twelve-Imam 

Shii population.

The third major Shii sect is known as z

aydi


 s

hi

-



ism

. The Zaydis believe that Zayd ibn Ali, who was 

killed in a revolt against the U

mayyad


  c

aliphate


in 740, was the fifth Imam instead of Muhammad 

al-Baqir (d. 731), whom the Twelve-Imam Shia 

recognized as the fifth. After Zayd’s death, Zaydi 

missionaries established a following in the Cas-

pian region and later Yemen. The Zaydis favored 

outward opposition to corrupt rulers, and they did 

not practice taqiyya to the same degree as the other 

Shii sects. They also rejected the idea of a messianic 

Mahdi. Holding concepts of leadership similar to 

those of the Sunnis, they accepted the legitimacy 

of the first caliphs and adhered closely to the s

haFii


l

egal


 s

chool


, one of the four major Sunni schools. 

Their theology, on the other hand, was strongly 

influenced by the m

Utazili


  s

chool


, which was 

rejected by most Sunnis. Zaidi communities in the 

Caspian region converted to Twelve-Imam Shiism 

by the 16th century, but the Yemeni Zaidis still 

exist, to about 36 percent of that country’s popula-

tion, or about 8 million (2007 estimate).

Other forms of Shiism existed in the past and 

to the present day. The 



ghulat

 (extremists) were 

heterodox sectarian movements that emerged in 

Islam’s first centuries. The earliest of these was 

associated with a semi-historical Jewish convert, 

Abd Allah ibn Saba al-Himyari of seventh-cen-

tury Iraq, who asserted that Ali had never died 

and would return as a messiah. Other beliefs that 

were associated with the ghulat include 

anthropo


-

morphism


, transmigration, and belief in prophets 

after Muhammad. Some ghulat beliefs, however, 

were accepted as orthodox Shii doctrine, such 

as the belief in the concealment and messianic 

return of the last Imam. The Alawis (or Alevis) 

are members of a Shii sect that believes that Ali is 

divine. They are found in Syria, Lebanon, Turkey, 

and southeastern Europe. In addition, there are 

religious communities that have roots in Shiism, 

but evolved into separate religious traditions, 

such as the d

rUze


 religion, which developed from 

Ismaili missionary activities in the 11th century. 

Moreover, the b

ahai


 F

aith


, now regarded as a 

universal religion, appeared first as a Shii sect in 

19th-century Iran.

Although Shii communities have accepted 

political quietism, legitimated by the doctrine 

of  taqiyya, in the face of persecution by other 

Muslims through much of their history, there 

have been significant moments when they have 

engaged in overt political activity and militancy. 

In addition to early anti-Umayyad movements 

and involvement in the Abbasid revolution in 

the eighth century, Shii activism is also evident 

in the Ismaili Qarmatian and Fatimid movements 

of the 10th century, and the s

aFavid

 

dynasty



,

which made Twelve-Imam Shiism the state reli-

gion of Iran in the 16th century. A Shii dynasty 

known as the Bahmanids ruled the Deccan region 

of India between 1347 and 1526, and the Luc-

know region of northern India was ruled by Shii 

Nawabs between 1732 and 1856. Such govern-

ments encouraged the celebration of Shii devo-

tional activities and gave strong support to Shii 

Ulama


. Shii authorities began to support anticolo-

nial movements in late 19th-century Iran, which 

spawned more radical Shii activism in the 20th 

century, not only in Iran, but also in Lebanon, 

Iraq, and the wider Persian Gulf region. This is 

evident in the rise of the d

aaWa

 p

arty



 in Iraq, the 

establishment of the Islamic Republic of Iran in 

1979 under the leadership of Ayatollah r

Uhollah


k

homeini


 (d. 1989), and the formation of h

izbUl


-

lah


 in southern Lebanon in response to the Israeli 

invasion of 1982. Moreover, 

sUicide

 bombings 

K  626  

Shiism



against civilian and military targets began to be 

used by radical Shii groups at this time, which 

legitimated this tactic in terms of the Shii con-

cept of martyrdom. The removal of the Baathist 

regime of s

addam


 h

Usayn


 in Iraq in 2003 by the 

United States and Great Britain inadvertently gave 

political Shiism more power in Iraq and the wider 

Middle East, leading some observers to speak of 

a modern “Shia revival” that will significantly 

reshape the region for years to come.



See also  a

ga

  k



han

;  a


khbari

  s


chool

;  a


laWi

a



ssassins



batin

; b

ohra




daawa



fitna

; g

UlF


 W

ars


heresy


holidays


; U

sUli


 s

chool


.


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