This book contains two articles by two great scholars
known for their learning, erudition and convincing
style. The first valuable article by Ayatullah Sayyid
Muhammad Baqir al-Sadr refutes all the doubts and
objections raised by the sceptics in connection with the
Mahdi's existence, his role, his early Imamate and his
occultation. The second article by Ayatullah Shaykh
Murtaza Mutahhary deals with the philosophical aspects
of the Mahdi's mission and removes a grave misconception
about the circumstances in which he will reappear.
It is hoped that the scholarly treatment of the subject
will augment the faith of the readers and at the same
time fully satisfy their intellectual curiosity.
Publishers
***
The savior's return
Chapter one
Who And What Of The Mahdi
The Mahdi is not only an embodiment of the Islamic
belief but he is also the symbol of an aspiration
cherished by mankind irrespective of its divergent
religious doctrines. He is also the crystallization of
an instructive inspiration through which all people,
regardless of their religious affiliations, have learned
to await a day when a heavenly mission, with all its
implications, will achieve their final goal and the
tiring march of humanity across history will culminate
satisfactorily in peace and tranquillity. This
consciousness of the expected future has not been
confined to those who believe in the supernatural
phenomena but has also been reflected in the ideologies
and cults which totally deny the existence of what is
imperceptible. For example, dialectical materialism
which interprets history on the basis of contradictions
believes that a day will come when all contradictions
will disappear and complete peace and tranquillity will
prevail. Thus we find that this consciousness
experienced throughout history is one of the widest and
the commonest psychological experience of humanity.
The religion, when it endorses this common consciousness
and stresses that in the long run this world will be
filled with justice and equity after having been filled
with injustice and oppression, gives it a factual value
and converts it into a definite belief in the future
course of humanity. This belief is not merely a source
of consolation, but it is also a source of virtue and
strength. It is a source of virtue because the belief in
the Mahdi means the total elimination of injustice and
oppression prevailing in the world. It is a source of
inexhaustible strength because it provides hope which
enables man to resist frustration, howsoever, hopeless
and dismal the circumstances may be. The belief in the
appointed day proves that it is possible for the forces
of justice to face the world filled with injustice and
oppression, to prevail upon the forces of injustice and
to reconstruct the world order. After all prevalence of
injustice, howsoever dominant and extensive it may
become, is an abnormal state and must in the long run be
eliminated. The prospect of its elimination after
reaching its climax, infuses a great hope in every
persecuted individual and every oppressed nation that it
is still possible to change the state of affairs.
Although the concept of the Mahdi is more wide spread
than the Muslim community, yet its detailed features, as
determined by Islam, meet more fully all the aspirations
attached to it since the dawn of history. They are in
greater conformity with the feelings and sentiments of
the oppressed and the persecuted of all times. It is
Islam which has given a concrete shape to an abstract
idea. It is no longer necessary to look forward to an
unknown saviour who may come into the world at a distant
future. The saviour is already here and we simply have
to look for the day when the circumstances are ripe for
him to appear and begin his great mission. The Mahdi is
no longer an idea. He is no longer a prophecy. We need
not wait for his birth. He already exists actually and
we only wait for the inauguration of his role. He is a
specific entity living among us in his real human form
and shares our hopes and disappointments and our joys
and griefs. He witnesses all the acts of oppression and
persecution which are perpetrated on the face of the
earth and, somehow or another, he himself is affected by
them. He is anxiously awaiting the moment when he will
be able to extend his helping hand to everyone whom any
wrong has been done and be able to eradicate injustice
and oppression completely.
Although this Awaited Saviour is living among us,
waiting for the appointed moment for his advent, yet he
is ordained not to proclaim himself nor to disclose his
identity.
It is evident that the concept of the Mahdi, with its
Islamic features, shortens the gap between the oppressed
and the expected saviour. It spans the bridge between
them, howsoever long the period of waiting may be.
When we are asked to believe that the Mahdi is a
particular person already living a normal life, we are
also expected to believe that the idea of absolute
eradication of every kind of injustice and oppression by
the Mahdi has already been embodied in the person of the
Awaited Saviour who will reappear while he will be, as
the tradition says, 'owing no allegiance to any tyrant'.
The belief in him means the belief in eradication of all
evils in a concrete form.
The tradition urges the believers in the Mahdi to keep
on waiting for him and to continue looking forward for
solace. The idea is to establish a close spiritual and
intuitive link between the believers, on the one hand,
and the Mahdi and all that he stands for, on the other.
It is not possible to establish such a link without
believing that the Mahdi has already been born and is a
living and a contemporary personality.
Thus we find that the concept of the living Mahdi has
given a new impetus to the idea of an expected saviour.
It has made it a source of effective strength and
consolation to every person suffering from deprivation
and injustice, a person who rejects all forms of tyranny
because he feels that his Leader, being a contemporary
and a living personality and not a future idea, shares
his sufferings and feels his misery.
Yet this concept, being beyond the imagination and
comprehension of a number of people, has led them to
adopt a negative attitude towards the very idea of
the Mahdi.
Chapter two
Some Objections About The Mahdi
Some of the objections raised by them are mentioned
below: -
(a) Longevity
They object to the Mahdi being a contemporary of so many
successive generations during the past ten centuries and
continuing to live until he reappears on the scene. How
is it possible for him, they ask, to live such a long
life without being affected by the natural laws,
according to which everyone has to pass through the
stages of old age and senility and eventually has to die
at a time far earlier than the supposed present age of
the Mahdi. Such a long life is impossible from a factual
point of view.
(b) Suspension of laws
They also inquire as to why Allah is so keen to suspend
natural laws for the sake of this particular person and
to prolong his life so extraordinarily. Is humanity
unable to produce any other competent leader? Why is it
not possible that the role of filling the world with
justice and equity be left to a leader who may be born
on the eve of the appointed day and grow like other
people?
(c) Lack of training
They also say that if it is true that the Mahdi is the
name of a particular person who is the son of the
eleventh Imam of the Prophet's House, who was born in
255 A.H. and whose father died in 260 A.H. and who at
the time of his father's death was a child of not more
than five years of age, then obviously this age was not
sufficient for his having been trained religiously and
intellectually by his father. They ask as to how then
has he been prepared for his great role.
(d) His continued existence
They also say that even if it is presumed that the
existence of the Mahdi is theoretically possible, how
can they believe in his actual existence in the absence
of any scientific or religious proof? According to them,
a few traditions of unknown authenticity attributed to
the holy Prophet cannot be considered to be enough for
such a belief.
(e) Delay in appearance
They also say that, if the leader is already prepared
for the performance of his great role, then what is the
necessity of waiting for hundreds of years. Could not
the upheavals and the tragedies so far witnessed by the
world justify his appearance on the scene?
(f) His superhuman role
With reference to the Mahdi's role they ask as to how it
is possible for an individual, howsoever great he may
be, to play such a decisive role in the world, when it
is known that no individual by himself can make history
nor can he give it an entirely new turn. It is the
prevailing circumstances which produce and direct
historical changes. The greatness of an individual lies
only in his coming to the fore-front, in the given
circumstances, and in effecting a practical change by
selecting one of the multiple solutions.
(g) His modus operandi
They also ask what practical methods will be employed by
that individual to bring about the colossal change and
to ensure the final victory of the forces of justice
over the mighty and dominating forces of oppression and
injustice, which now have the most destructive weapons,
scientific potentialities and political, social and
military power at their disposal.
These are the questions which are frequently asked in
this connection and repeated in one form or another.
They are not always motivated merely by intellectual
curiosity. There are psychological reasons also which
stimulate them. There is a strong general feeling that
there is little chance of overthrowing the present world
system, which is too powerful and invincible. This
feeling produces skepticism and gives rise to queries.
It leads to defeatism and an inferiority complex. One
begins to shudder at the very idea of a world-wide
change which may eliminate injustice and historical
contradictions and usher in a new system based on
justice and equity. This mental frustration impels one
to doubt and reject every possibility of such a change
by giving one reason or another.
We now propose to take up the above-mentioned
queries, one by one, and deal with them briefly.
Chapter three
Replies To The Objections
(a) Longevity
Is it possible for any human being to continue to live
for many centuries, as is presumed in the case of this
Awaited Saviour who has already lived for more than 1145
years? This long life is about 14 times the life of an
ordinary man who passes through all stages of life from
infancy to old age.
The impossibility of such a long life is the objection.
Let us have a close look at the objection. The word
impossibility here (like any other truth) is relative.
It has meaning only in relation to some person, place
and time. What is impossible for one person need not be
so for the others. Then what is impossible in one place
may be quite possible in another place. Again what is
not possible at one time may be quite possible at
another. There is no dearth of illustrations to prove
how impossibility is a relative term.
In other words, the possibility of a thing may be of
three categories viz. factual possibility, scientific
possibility and logical possibility. To journey across
the ocean, to reach the bottom of the sea and to travel
to the moon are practical possibilities. There are
people who have accomplished these tasks in one way or
another.
By a scientific possibility we mean that there may be
certain things which may not be practicable in the
present circumstances but there exists no scientific
reason to justify the denial of their practicability in
favourable circumstances and the scientific trends
indicate that they will be feasible sooner or later. For
example, there exists no scientific reason to deny the
possibility of man's travelling to Venus. Although, it
has not been possible for anyone to go to that planet so
far, yet we know that there is only a difference of
degree between man's landing on the moon and his landing
on Venus. It is only a question of surmounting
additional difficulties because of the greater distance.
Hence, it is scientifically possible to go to Venus,
though practically it is still impossible. In contrast,
it is scientifically impossible to go to the sun in the
sense that science does not hope that it will ever be
possible to manufacture a protective shield against the
heat of the sun which is virtually a huge furnace
blazing at the highest imaginable degree of temperature.
By a logical possibility we mean that, on the basis of
self-evident laws, reason does not regard a thing
impossible. For example, it is logically impossible to
divide three oranges into two equal parts without
cutting anyone of them. It is self-evident that, three
being an odd number, it is not divisible into two whole
numbers. Only an even number can be so divided and the
same number cannot be both odd and even simultaneously,
because that will mean self-contradiction which is
impossible. But a man's entering into fire without being
hurt or going to the sun without being affected by its
heat is not logically impossible, for it is not
self-contradictory to suppose that heat does not pass.
from a body having a higher temperature to a body having
a lower temperature. Only experience has proved that if
two bodies are mixed or put together, heat passes from a
body having higher temperature to a body having lower
temperature, till the temperature of both the bodies is
at par.
Thus, we know that the scope of the logical possibility
is wider than that of the scientific possibility and the
scope of the scientific possibility is wider than that
of the practical possibility.
There is no doubt that a person's remaining alive for
thousands of years is not logically impossible, for
there is nothing irrational or self-contradictory about
it. Life itself does not imply the sense of quick death.
Admittedly, such a long life is not as practical as
descending to the bottom of the sea or ascending to the
moon. Notwithstanding the present scientific facilities
it has not so far been possible to prolong human life to
hundreds of years. Even those who have all the modern
facilities at their disposal and are the keenest to
continue to live cannot have more than the normal span
of life.
As for the scientific possibility there exists nothing
to justify its denial from a theoretical point of view.
In fact this question is related to the physiological
explanation of senility. The question is, whether there
exists a natural law according to which human tissues
and cells, after attaining the stage of full
development, automatically begin to stiffen and
degenerate, till they cease functioning at a particular
moment or the senile degeneration is caused by some
external factors, such as microbes and poisons
infiltrating into the body through polluted food,
unhealthy jobs or some other causes. It is a question
with which science is grappling at present and is
earnestly trying to find an answer to it. For the
present there is more than one scientific explanation of
senility. Anyhow, if we accept the view that senile
degeneration is caused by external influences, it means
that if the tissues of the human body are secluded from
these particular influences it is theoretically possible
to prolong life, to delay senility and even to control
it eventually.
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