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SERMON 123Amir al-mu'minin's address to his followers on the battlefield of SiffinAbout supporting the weak and the low-spirited during the fightingWhoever among you feels spiritedness of heart during the action and finds any of his comrades feeling disheartened should ward off (the enemies) from him just as he would do from himself because of the superiority he enjoys over the other for if Allah had willed He would have made the former also like him. Certainly death is a quick seeker. Neither does the steadfast escape it nor can the runner-away defy it. The best death is to be killed. By Allah in Whose hand (power) lies the life of the son of Abu Talib certainly a thousand strikings of the sword on me are easier to me than a death in bed which is not in obedience to Allah. A part of the same sermonIt is as if I see you uttering voices like the rustling sound of lizards! You do not seek your own claims nor do you defend against oppression. You have been let free on the path. He who rushes (into the battle) achieves salvation while he who lags behind hesitating gets destruction. * * * * *SERMON 124To exhort his followers to fight (1)Put the armoured man forward and keep the unarmoured one behind. Grit your
teeth because this will make the swords skip off the skull and dodge on the
sides of the spears for it
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which are followed by reserves for support till their cities are continuously assailed by force after force and till the horses trample even the extreme ends of the lands the tracks of their beast and their meadows. as-Sayyid ar-Radi says: "ad-da'q" means trampling e.g. "taduqqu'l-khuyulu bihawafiriha ardahum" (the horses trample the ground with their hoofs). "nawahini ardihim" means lands opposite each other it is said "manazilu bani fulanin tatanaharu" meaning the 'houses of so-and-so are opposite each other.'
(1). Amir al-mu'minin delivered this Sermon on the
occasion of the battle of Siffin. This battle was fought in the year 37 A.H.
between Amir al-mu'minin and the Governor of Syria (ash-Sham) Mu'awiyah for the
so-called avenging for the killing of Caliph 'Uthman. But in reality it was
nothing more than Mu'awiyah who had been the Autonomous Governor of Syria from
Caliph 'Umar's days not wanting to lose that position by swearing allegiance to
Amir al-mu'minin but wanting to keep his authority intact by exploiting the
killing of Caliph 'Uthman for later events proved that after securing the
government he did not take any practical step to avenge 'Uthman's blood and
never spoke not even through omission about the killers of 'Uthman.
Although from the first day Amir al-mu'minin realised that war was inevitable it
was still necessary to exhaust all pleas. Therefore when on Monday the 12th
Rajeb 36 A.H. he returned to Kufah after the battle of Jamal he sent Jarir ibn
'Abdallah al-Bajali with a letter to Mu'awiyah at Damascus wherein he wrote that
the muhajirun and the ansar had sworn allegiance to him and that he too should
first swear him allegiance and thereafter place the case of 'Uthman's killing
before him so that he could pass verdict thereon according to the Qur'an and
Sunnah. But Mu'awiyah detained Jarir on several pretexts and after consulting
'Amr ibn al-'As staged a revolt on the excuse of 'Uthman's killing and with the
help of important persons of Syria convinced the ignorant people that the
liability for 'Uthman's life lay on 'Ali (p.b.u.h) and that he with his conduct
had encouraged the besiegers and had given them protection. Meanwhile he hung
the blood-stained shirt of 'Uthman and the amputated fingers of his wife Na'ilah
bint al-Farafisah on the pulpit in the Central Mosque of Damascus around which
seventy thousand Syrians cried and swore the pledge to avenge 'Uthman's blood.
When
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