Misconceptions about Nahj al Balaghah
No scholar of Sunni or
Shi'a profession has questioned the genuineness and authenticity of Nahj
al-balagha for more than two centuries. The first person to raise doubts about
its attribution to Amir al-Mu'minin was Ibn Khallikan (d. 681/1282), who, without
referring to any author or source,made the following remarks about the
authorship of Nahj al-balaghah:
People have different opinions about the compiler of Nahj al- balaghah, a
collection of the utterances of al-'Imam 'Ali ibn Abi Talib (as) There is difference
as to whether it was compiled by al-Sharif al-Murtada or his brother al-Radi.
It is also said that it is not at all the composition of 'Ali (as) and that the
one who compiled it and attributed it to him made it himself; but Allah knows
the truth.
These remarks were made in Wafayat al-aya'n in connection with the account of
the life and work of al-Sharif al-Murtada, al-Radi's elder brother. Ibn
al-'Athir al Jazari (555-630/1160-1232) in Mukhtasar al-Wafayat, Salah al-Din
al-Safadi (d. 764/1362) in al-Wafi bi al-wafayat, al-'Allamah al-Yafi'i(d.
768/1366) in Mir'at al Jinan, and Ibn al-'Imad in Shadharat al-dhahab were
content just to repeat Ibn Khallikan's conjecture without bothering to
substantiate it. Al-'Allamah al-Dhahabi (d. 748/1347) in Mizan ul-'i'tidal was
the first person to pick up the audacity to raise the unfounded doubt to a
degree of certainty a century after Ibn Khallikan.
He wrote in his account of al-Murtada:
Al Sharif al-Murtada, who is accused of fabricating Nahj al- balaghah, was a
scholar of considerable knowledge. Whosoever sees his book Nahj al-balaghah
would come to believe that it was falsely attributed to Amir al-Mu'minin (as),
because it contains open abuse rather than downgrading of the two caliphs Abu
Bakr and 'Umar. Contradictions and mean matters have also crept into it, which
do not conform with the spirit of the Companions of the Quraysh and our
knowledge of the later Companions. One is convinced that the major part of this
book is forged and unauthentic.
Ibn Hajar al-'Asqalani (d. 748/1347) repeated al-Dhahabi's objections without
bothering to probe deeper into the matter.
The most interesting and at the same time the weakest part of the objections
concerns ascription of the authorship of Nahj al-balaghah to al-Murtada.
The objectors belonged to the Umayyad West and had deep prejudices against
Shiii scholars, and perhaps under the impact of Umayyad propaganda their
prejudice was so deep-rooted that even their scholarship could not rise above
it.
Among the four contemporaries of al-Radi and al-Murtada, three, that is,
al-Tha'alibi, al-Najashi (d. 450/1058), and al-Khatib al-Baghdadi (d. 463/1071)
have given accounts of both the brothers.
Al Shaykh al-Tusi did not give any account of al-Radi in al-Fihrist or
al-Rijal, but he did not count Nahj al-balagha among the works of al-Murtada,
which dispel any conjecture attributing its authorship to him, because al-Tusi
was very close to him as his student. Al-Tha'alibi and al-Khatib al-Baghdadi
did not mention Nahj al-balaghah either in the account of al-Murtada or that of
al-Radi.Al-Najashi in unambiguous terms attributed Nahj al-balagha to al-Radi.
Al-Tusi's exclusion of Nahj al-balaghah from the works of al-Murtada,and
al-Najashi's mention of it among the works of al-Radi are sufficient to prove
that it was without any doubt a work of al-Radi.
The objectors, who could not even determine authorship of the book exactly,
depended on nothing but their whim to raise doubts about its authenticity.
A more convincing proof of al-Radi's authorship of Nahj al-balaghah can be
found in his own other works in which he has mentioned it. Those books are the
following:
1. Khasa'is al- 'A'immah: A manuscript of this work of al-Radi is in Rida
Library Rampur (India) which reveals that Fadl Allah ibn 'Ali al- Husayn
al-Rawandi (d. 555/1160) accepted Khasa'is as al-Radi's work. In this book, as
quoted above, al-Radi has mentioned his intention of compiling Nahj al-balaghah.
2. Haqa'iq al-tanzil: Only the fifth part of this book is accessible to us. Its
authorship is unanimously attributed to al-Radi. On page 167 of this book
al-Radi makes this remark:
Anybody who needs a proof of our claim should refer to our book Nahj
al-balaghah and think upon its contents. We have compiled all forms and genres
of the utteranees of Amir al-Mu'minin (as) in this book, which comprises
sermons, letters, aphorisms, and admonitions, and is divided into three
independent parts, each containing a specific genre.
3. Majazat al-'athar al-Nabawiyyah: Al-Najashi and others have included this
book among al-Radi's works. At two places in this book al-Radi has referred to
Nah; al-balagha as a work of his own compilation.
It is important to note that even Ibn Khallikan, al-Dhahabi and Ibn Hajar did
not question the authenticity of the attribution of Nahj al-balaghah in its
entirety to'Ali (as). They were mainly skeptical of those parts which were
critical of the Caliphs Abu Bakr and 'Umar.
But if we find such utterances and writings of Amir al-Mu'minin (as) in both
Shi'i and non-Shi'i sources earlier than Nahjal-balaghah,baseless-ness of
al-Dhahabi's and Ibn Hajar's objections can be conclusively proved.
Let us again refer to Istinad-e Nahj al-balagha by 'Arshi, a contemporary Sunni
scholar of India. With respect to the harshest of the sermons concerning the
issue of the caliphate, known as al-Khutbat aldhiqshiqiyyah, 'Arshi refers to
the following early sources in which the sermon had occurred:
1. Abu Ja'far Ahmad ibn Muhammad ibn Khalid al-Barqi (d.274/887) has quoted it
in full in al-Mahasin wa al-'adab.
2. Ibrahim ibn Muhammad al-Thaqafi al-Kufi (d. 283/896) quoted it in al-Gharat.
In his notes on al-Gharat, Sayyid Jalal al-Din Muhaddith,quoting Imtiyaz 'Ali
Khan 'Arshi, says that this khutbah is not found in it; even Ibn Abi al-Hadid
and al-'Allamah Muhammad Baqir al-Majlisi (1037-1110 or 1111/1627-1698 or 99)
did not refer to al-Gharat as an early source of this sermon.
3. Abu 'Ali Muhammad ibn 'Abd al-Wahhab al Jubba'i al-Basri al-Mu'tazili(d.
303/915 -16) narrated it.
4. Abu Ja'far Muhammad ibn 'Abd al-Rahman ibn Qubbah al-Razi (a teacherof al-
Mufid and a pupil of Abu al-Qasim al-Balkhi, a Mu'tazili in his youth) quoted
it in al-Insaf.
5. Abu al Qasim 'Abd Allah ibn Ahmad ibn Mahmud al-Ka'bi al-Balkhi al-Mu'tazili
(d. 319/931) in al-'Insaf.
6. Abu Ja'far Muhammad ibn 'Ali ibn al-Husayn ibn Musa ibn Babawayh al-Qummi,
known as alShaykh al-Saduq (d. 318/930), has quoted it in two of his books:
Ilal al Sharayi' and Ma'ani al-'akhbar.
7. Abu 'Abd Allah Muhammad ibn al-Nu'man, known as al-Shaykh al-Mufid(d. 413/
1022) inKitdb al-'irshad.
8. Shaykh al-Ta'ifah Abu Ja'far Muhammad ibn al-Hasan al-Tusi (d. 460/1068) in
al-'Amali.
'Arshi adds that al Shaykh al Saduq has narrated this Khutbah on the authority
of two different chains of narrators:
Narrated to us Muhammad ibn 'Ali Majalawayh from his uncle Muhammad Ibn
al-Qasim, he from Ahmad ibn 'Abd Allah al-Barqi he from his father, he from Ibn
Abi 'Umayr, he from Aban ibn 'Uthman he from 'Aban ibn Taghlib, he from
'Ikrimah, he from 'Abd Allah ibn al-'Abbas. ('Ilal al-sharayi' and Ma'anial-'
akhbar)
Narrated to us Muhammad ibn Ibrahim ibn Ishaq al-Taliqani, from 'Abd al-'Aziz
ibn Yahya al Jalludi, from Abu 'Abd Allah Ahmad ibn 'Ammar ibn Khalid, from
Yahya ibn 'Abd al-Hamid al- Hammani, from 'Isa ibn Rashid, from 'Ali ibn
Khuzaymah, from 'Ikrimah, from Ibn al-'Abbas. (Ma'ani al 'akhbar)
Al-Sayyid al-Radi has not quoted the entire chain of narrators, and was content
to remark that the sermon was popularly known as 'al-Shiqshiqiyyah ', while his
teacher al-Mufid narrates both the chain of narrators and the story behind its
narration. This is indicative of the fact that this sermon was so famous in those
days that al-Radi did not find it necessary to prove its veracity by quoting
the chain of its narrators. Surprisingly, the same famous sermon was used by
his and 'Ali's opponents to question his veracity and to malign him by accusing
him and/or his brother of forging it. The kind of criticism Ibn Khallikan and
his followers dabbled in not only discredits them as researchers but also makes
their other works suspicious in the eyes of impartial and objective students of
history.
Those who could not find any of the above-mentioned books to cross-check the
veracity of Nahj al-balaghah had failed miserably even in determining correctly
its authorship.
Al-Shaykh al-Mufid has collected a number of 'Ali's speeches in al-'Irshad
concerning the issue of the succession to the Prophet (saw) and 'Ali's
criticism of the ways and means adopted by his opponents to deprive him of the
caliphate. The famous Khutbah known as al-Shiq-shiqiyyah begins with the
following preface:
(A group of traditionists report by a variety of chains of authority (turuq) on
the authority of Ibn al-'Abbas, who said:)
I [i.e. Ibn al-'Abbas, was with the Commander of the Faithful at al-Rahabah I
mentioned the [matter of] Caliphate and those who had preeeded him. He breathed
heavily and said: "By God, Ibn Abi Quhatah took on...."
This khutbah ends with the following words:
Then you would have found that your world is more insignificant in my eyes than
a goat's snot.
At this point 'Ali's speech was interrupted by a man from Kufah. Ibn al-'Abbas,
after narrating the text of the speech, adds:
I have never regretted anything nor felt such distress like the distress l felt
at losing the rest of the speeeh of the Commander of the Faithful, peace be on
him. When he finished reading the letter, I said: "Commander of the
Faithful would you continue your speech from the point which you reached?"
He answered: "In no way, in no way. It was like foam on the camel's mouth
(shiqshiqah) as it opens its mouth to bellow and then falls silent."
Apart from al-'Irshad this khutbah, as claimed by 'Arshi, is found in other
sources also. In no way can it be dubbed as al-Radi's or al-Murtada's
fabrication. Sayyid Hibat al-Din al-Shahristani, in Mahuwa Nahj al-balaghah,
has quoted different versions of al-Khutbat al-Shiqshiqiyyah from:
Nathral-durar wa nuzhat al-'adab by the vizier Abu Sa'id al-'Abi; al-'Irshad by
al- Shaykh ai-Mufid; al-Mahasin wa al-'adab by al-Barqi; al-Saduq in Ila'l
al-sharayi';and a book of al-Jalludi. All the versions have minor differences,
which indicate that the source from which al-Radi quoted this sermon was other
than these four. After enumerating the earlier works containing this
khutbah,Hibat al-Din al- Shahristani points out that Ibn 'Abd Rabbih, one of
tbe compilers of al-Khutbat al-Shiqshiqiyyah, was a follower of the Banu
Umayyah and a staunch admirer of the third caliph 'Uthman ibn writes:
'Affan. Much earlier than Ibn Khallikan made his remark questioning the
authenticity of the attribution of Nahj al- balaghah, certain doubts had come
to circulate as indicated by Ibn Abi al-Hadid al-Mu'tazili (d. 555/1257), who
referred to a discussion concerning the attribution of al-Khutbat al-
Shiqshiqiyyah with his teacher Abu al-Khayr Musaddiq ibn Shabib [sic. Shayb]
al-Wasiti (d. 605/1208), who said:
I read this khutbah in the presenee of Abu Muhammad 'Abd Allah ibn Ahmad, known
as Ibn al-Khashshab (493 -567/1099-1172)... and asked him if he considered this
khutbah to be a forged one and not of 'Ali (as). Ibn al-Khashshab said:
By God, I am convinced that it is from 'Ali and I am as sure of it as I am
convineed of your truthfulness.
Al-Wasiti said to Ibn al-Khashshab: "A group is of the view that this
khutbah was fabricated by al-Radi, may God be pleased with him." Ibn
al-Khashshab said:
Is it not beyond the eloquence of al-Radi or any other? How could he speak from
such a high level of spirituality in such a (forceful) style? We are well
acquainted with al-Radi's writings, his style and his technique. I have
assessed both his poetry and prose, these words as compared to those of al-
Radi are so different that there is no question of confusing them with his
writings."
He further said:
By God, I have read this sermon in books written two hundred years before the
birth of al-Radi. Yes, of course, I have seen it written in many books. I can
identify this khutbah very well and know that which of the 'ulama' and men of
letters quoted it (in his work) mueh before al-Radi's father was born."
(Sharh Nahj al-balaghah, vol. I)
On another occasion, in his Sharh Nahj al-balaghah, Ibn Abi
al-Hadid
A group of blind followers of their own whims and wishes is of the opinion that
the best part of Nahj al-balagha is fabricated and forged by a group of Shi'i
writers and is something new. Most of them consider a part of it to be the
product of al-Radi's pen or of others. But this group consists of prejudiced
people, whose heart's vision is blocked by partiality and who have deviated
from the right and straight path of truth; they have strayed from truth due to
perversion, lack of knowledge, and unfamiliarity with literature and poetry.
(vol. 1, p. 543)
At another place he writes about the words of Amir al-Mu'minin (as):
His eloquence is such that he is the leader of the eloquent and the guide and
master of orators. It is said about his ulterances that his words are below the
Word of the Creator only, but over and above the words of all creatures; and
from him the world has learnt the art of speech and rhetoric.
There were people in the age of al-Radi himself whose hearts and eyes were
sealed in such a manner that they attributed some of 'Ali's utterances to
Mu'fiwiyah. Al-Radi's commentary on the following khutbah,is important:
His comment, are as follows:
People with no ability to understand literature aseribe it to Mu'awiyah whereas
these are undoubtedly the words of Amir al- Mu'minin. How can dirt compare with
pure gold?... 'Amr ibn Bahr al Jahiz, a critic gifted with insight and a
distinct sensibility, has probed the matter minutely. He has included this khutbah
in al-Bayan wa al-tabyin, and has mentioned those who attributed it to
Mu'awiyah. Subsequently he says: "This speech is very much like the
speeches of 'Ali (as) and is in conformity with the great man's classification
of people, and it also corresponds with his manner of depicting the people's
modes of behaving in anger, under oppression and waywardness, and in the state
of dissimulation and fear.
Similarly, al-Radi refers to his sources on a number of occasions,and also
gives an account of the circumstances that were responsible for the mood and
theme of a certain sermon. He has referred to: al Jahiz; al-Waqidi; Abu Ja'far
al-'Iskafi; Hisham ibn al-Kalbi; Sa'id ibn Yahya ai-'Umawi, the author of
al-Maghazi; Abu 'Ubayd al- Qasim ibn Salam; al-Tabari; Tha'lab; Ibn al-'A'rabi;
al-Mubarrad, and many others. How could an author who allegedly forged the
utterances and writings of Amir al- Mu'minin (as) be so honest in acknowledging
his indebtedness to his predecessors?
Those who raised doubts about the contents of Nahj al-balagha were unaware of
the high status and prestige of its compiler, both in the society and in the
academic circles. A man of his eminence could not even think of fabricating
sermons and letters in the name of al-'Imam 'Ali (as).
Had any such attempt been made by anybody, Shi'i scholars themselves would have
been the first to reject it, as an anthology of poetry attributed to al-'Imam
'Ali (as) (Diwan-e 'Ali) was never accepted by the majority of Shi'i scholars
as authentic. Some other such works, for example, the commentary on the Quran
attributed to al- Imam al-Hasan al-'Askari (as) or Fiqh al-Rida attributed to
al Imam al-Rida (as),are at issue among Shi'i scholars. But no one among
al-Radi's contemporaries or from the successive generations of Sunni or Shi'i
'ulama' ever questioned Nahj al-balaghah's authenticity for more than two
centuries.
Regarding the contents of Nahj al-balaghah the Muslim scholars of all shades of
opinion never doubted al-Radi's veracity.
They were aware of the presence of earlier sources of al-'Imam 'Ali's
utterances. There is abundant reliable evidence in support of the existence of
such collections in the first and second centuries of Hijrah, from which 'Abd
al-Hamid ibn Yahyfi, Ibn al- Muqaffa', and Zayd ibn 'Ali ibn al-Husayn ibn 'Ali
ibn Abi Talib had quoted al-'Imam 'Ali's sermons and letters.
In the third and fourth centuries, too, several collections of 'Ali's khutab
and rasa'il were compiled, some of which have been already referred to above.
Ibn Abi al-Hadid (d. 655 or 656/1257 or 58); Taqi al-Din Ahmad, known as Ibn
Taymiyyah (661-728/1263-1328); and his pupil Salah al-Din al-Safadi (d.764/1362
-63) accepted Nahj al-balaghah as a genuine collection of al Imam 'Ali's words.
The former not only wrote one of the most famous commentaries on it, but also
repudiated all doubts about its authenticity.
Ibn Taymiyyah and al-Safadi were among staunch opponents and critics of the
Shi'ah, but both of them verified the authenticity of Nahj al-balagha and the
veracity of al-Sharif al-Radi. Al-Safadi, in the account of al-Radi, writes:
People are of the view that Nahj al-balaghah is his own writing. But I heard my
teacher, al-'Imam al-'Allamah Taqi al-Din Ahmad ibn Taymiyyah say: "Nahj
al-balaghah is not al-Sayyid al-Radi's product. What in this book is the
utterance of 'Ali ibn Abi Talib (as) is known, and whatever is from al-Radi
that is also known. (al-Wafi bi al-wafayat, vol. 2, p. 375)
Instead of going into further details of the controversy about the authenticity
of Nahj al- balaghah's ascription and forwarding more evidence against those
who created doubts about it, I would recommend the keen reader to consult
al-Mu'jam al-mufahras li alfaz Nahj al-balaghah, edited by al-Sayyid Kazim
al-Muhammadi and al-Shaykh Muhammad al-Dashti, who have done a commendable job
in preparing a very comprehensive bibliography of the sources of the book along
with a detailed item- by-item list of the sources of each and every sermon,
letter, and saying contained in Nahj al-balaghah. Moreover, since the death of
al-Radi scholars of eminence have been always interested in writing
commentaries on Nahj al-balagha, which is another very strong proof of its
authenticity. So many Sunni, Mu'tazili, and Shi'i scholars would not have taken
pains to comment upon al Radi's own fabrications.
'Ali Naqi Munzawi, in the catalogue of the library of Mishkat, donated to
Tehran University, has enumerated 33 narrators of al-'Imam 'Ali's utterances
before al-Radi and fourteen after him till the tenth Hijrah century. Danish
Pizhoh, in his preface to Farman-e Malik Ashtar, edited by Husayn 'Alawi Awi,
has given a list of its early commentators. Sayyid 'Abd al-Zahra' al-Khatib, in
Masadir Nahj al balagha wa asaniduh, has counted thirty-three books written
concerning the sources of Nahj al- balaghah. Hundreds of manuscripts of Nahj
al-balaghah in various libraries of the world and even a greater number of the
manuscripts of other earlier works containing al-'Imam 'Ali's utterances invite
all seekers of truth to trace the sources and ascertain the authenticity of
Nahj al-balaghah. There are also numerous documents available which contain
certificates and testimonials issued by eminent scholars to their pupils
authorizing them to narrate the contents of Nahj al-balaghah along with the
permission to narrate ahadith of the Prophet (saw) and the Imams (as). This is
enough to show that Nahj al-balaghah has been considered to be of equal value
in reliability with the most authentic compendiums of hadith. The narration of
Nahj al-balagha's traditions had started during the lifetime of al-Radi. Qutb
al-Din al-Rawandi (d. 573/1177) in the preface of his commentary on Nahj al-
balaghoh, refers to a daughter of al-Sharif al Murtada, who had studied the
book under al-Radi himself and was authorized to narrate its traditions to
others, and she used to narrate Nahj al-balaghah on her uncle's authority.
Shaykh 'Abd al-Rahim al-Baghdadi has narrated from this learned lady of the
family of the Imams (as).