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Virtues of Hazrat Imam Taqi Al-Jawad (AS)
By: Baqir Reza
In respect of his manners and qualities, Imam Muhammad Taqi (A.S.)
– the ninth infallible successor f Prophet Muhammad (SAW) - occupied
that lofty position of humaneness that is the distinguished
characteristic of the Prophet (SAW) and his progeny. The predominant
feature of his life style was to meet everybody with humility, to help
the needy, to maintain human equality and observe simplicity. To offer
help to the indigent secretly, to treat not only friends but even
adversaries kindly and politely, to be attentive in entertaining the
guests and to keep the springs of bounties overflowing for those
thirsty for religious and scholarly knowledge, were his chief
occupations. His life pattern was the same as that of the other
members of this chain of the infallible ones whose life history has
already been given in earlier chapters.
The worldly people who did not have a full idea of the greatness of
his soul must have certainly been under the impression that the very
fact of a small child becoming the son in-law of the emperor of a
great Muslim empire must alter his thoughts, nature, behavior and
habits and, thus, completely remold his life style. In fact, this must
have been an important objective before Mamun's shortsighted vision.
The animus of the Abbasids or the Umayyad kings was not so much
against the members of the Prophet' (SAW) progeny as for their
extraordinary God-given qualities. They were ever endeavouring to
break that centre of lofty manners and humaneness that was established
at Madinah and had become nucleus of exemplary spirituality against
the material power of the realm. Accordingly, in desperation, they
devised and tried various means with a view to achieving this
objective. The demand of oath of allegiance from Imam Husain (A.S.)
was one form of it and the appointment of Imam Reza (A.S.) as heir
apparent another. Only outwardly in one case the method of dealing
with the situation was hostile and in the other, seemingly devotional.
Just as Imam Husain (A.S.) was martyred when he refused to pledge
allegiance, Imam Reza (A.S.), being out of step with the materialistic
objectives of the regime, was silenced forever through poisoning.
Now from the point of Mamun it was a valuable opportunity. The
successor of Imam Reza (A.S.) was a mere child of about eight years
who had been separated from his father three years back. The political
sagacity of Mamun made him wrongly expect that it would be very easy
to bring over that child to his own way of life after which the still
and silent but extremely dangerous centre that was firmly established
against the government of the day would be destroyed forever.
He did not deem the failure of Mamun in his plan related to the
appointment of Imam Reza (A.S.) as the heir apparent as a ground for
any disappointment. He felt so because the life pattern of Imam Reza (A.S.)
was firmly based on a particular principle. If it did not alter, it
did not follow that Imam Muhammad Taqi (A.S.), after having been
brought in the palace environments right from the early formative
years, would stick to his ancestor's principled wav of life.
Except those who were conversant with the God-gifted perfections of
these chosen beings, everybody in those days must have been of Mamun's
mind. But the world was amazed to see that the eight year old child
who had been made the son in-law of the emperor of the Islamic domain,
was so steadfast in following his family traditions of sobriety and
uprightness and its principles that he refused to stay in the imperial
palace after marriage and, while in Baghdad insisted on residing in a
rented house. An idea of the strong will power of Imam Muhammad Taqi (A.S.)
can be had from another event. Usually when the bride's family
financially occupies a higher place it prefers that the son in-law
should reside with it in the same house; if not, at least in the same
town... However, Imam Muhammad Taqi (A.S.), only a year after the
marriage, forced Mamun to let him (and his wife) return to Madinah.
Certainly, this must have been extremely unpalatable for a loving
father and a powerful potentate like Mamun. Nevertheless, he
had to bear the pain of separation of his daughter and let the Imam (A.S.)
return to Madinah along with Ummul Fazl. After coming to Madinah the
style of functioning of the household was the same as before. There
was no gatekeeper, no check and restraint, no pomp and show, no
particular meeting time and no discrimination in dealings with the
visitors. Mostly the Imam (A.S.) used to sit in the Prophet's mosque
where Muslims in general came to benefit from his preaching and
counseling. Narrators of traditions used to put questions about
traditions and scholars would place their problems before him and seek
solutions. It was evident that it was surely the successor of Imam
Jafar Sadiq (A.S.) who, occupying the same seat of learning was
providing guidance to the people.
With regard to household affairs and matters relating to conjugal
life, he kept Ummul Fazl confined within the bound within which his
ancestors used to keep their wives. He did not at all care for the
fact that his wife was the daughter of the emperor of his time.
Therefore, in the presence of Ummul Fazl he married an esteemed woman
from amongst the progeny of Hazrat Ammar Yasir. The chain of Imamate
should continue the divine will through this woman who became the
mother of Imam Ali Naqi (A.S.). Ummul Fazl dispatched a written
complaint to her father in his regard. For Mamun also this event must
not have been any less painful. However, he had now no option but to
bear with what he had himself done. He wrote to Ummul Fazl in reply
that his objective in marrying her with Abu Jafar (A.S.) was not to
make unlawful for him that God has made lawful. He forbade her writing
such letters to him in future.
By writing this reply, he had only tried to wipe off his own
humiliation. There are instances before us where in the presence of a
venerable lady, from religious point of view, the husband did not take
a second wife during her lifetime. Hazrat Ali (A.S.) and Hazrat Fatima
Zahra (A.S...) are examples in this respect. In their lifetime,
neither the esteemed Prophet (SAW) nor Hazrat Ali Murtaza (A.S.) even
thought of having a second wife. However, to confer this distinction
on the daughter of an emperor simply because she was the daughter of
such a person, violated the Islamic spirit of which the progeny of
Muhammad (SAW) was guardian. Therefore, Imam Muhammad Taqi (A.S.)
considered it his duty to follow a path different from theirs (that
is, having a second wife in the lifetime of the first one).
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"Knowledge is
better than wealth because it protects you while you have to
guard wealth. it decreases if you keep on spending it but the
more you make use of knowledge ,the more it increases . what you
get through wealth disappears as soon as wealth disappears but
what you achieve through knowledge will remain even after you."MORE
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