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Mahdi

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The Mahdi (Arabic: مهدي‎ ​ transliterated: Mihdī, also Mehdi; "Guided One"), in Islamic eschatology, is the prophesied redeemer of Islam, who will change the world into a perfect Islamic society before Yaum al-Qiyamah (literally "Day of the Resurrection").

The exact nature of the Mahdi differs according to Sunni and Shi'a Muslims. For a more in-depth Shi'a account of the Mahdi, see Muhammad al-Mahdi.

Introduction

The idea of the Mahdi does not appear in the Qur'an, but is mentioned in the earliest and, according to many, most reliable collections of Muhammad's sayings-the 'hadith' collection of Muslim. Later recorded references to the Mahdi occurred in al-Mukhtar's rebellion against the Umayyid Caliphate in 686 CE. Al-Mukhtar claimed that Ibn al-Hanifiya, a son of the fourth Caliph Ali, was the Mahdi who would save the Muslim people from the unjust rule of the Umayyids. Ibn al-Hanifiya was not actively involved in the rebellion, and when the Umayyids successfully quashed it, they left him undisturbed.

The idea of a man who would arise to right the injustices in the world of Islam was now widely held, however, and later collections of hadiths included ample references to the Mahdi.

For example, in a hadith now widely regarded as authentic, the Islamic prophet Muhammad stated:

"Even if the entire duration of the world's existence has already been exhausted and only one day is left before the Day of Judgment, Allah will expand that day to such a length of time, as to accommodate the kingdom of a person out of my Ahl al-Bayt who will be called by my name. He will then fill the Earth with peace and justice as it will have been filled with injustice and tyranny before then."
:Sahih Tirmidhi, V2, P86, V9, P74-75.
The Mahdi, according to majority Sunni and Shi'ite tradition, will arise at some point before the day of judgement, institute a kingdom of justice, and will in the last days fight alongside the returned Jesus against the Dajjal (Antichrist or false Messiah).

However, since the most reliable sources do not refer to him, various Muslim traditions have ascribed different characteristics to the Mahdi, and many leaders of politico-religious revival movements in Islam have claimed to be the Mahdi.

The following sections list a few of the characteristics of the Mahdi, according to various traditions of Islam:

Birth of the Mahdi

Sunni, Shi'a, and Mahdavi sources

Sunni sources

Ithna Ashari Shia sources

Mahdavi sources

Characteristics of the Mahdi

Sunni and Shi'a sources

Sunni sources

Signs indicating the emergence of the Mahdi

Shi'a sources

"Before the appearance of the one who will rise, peace be upon him, the people will be reprimanded for their acts of disobedience by a fire that will appear in the sky and a redness that will cover the sky. It will swallow up Baghdad, and will swallow up Kufa. Their blood will be shed and houses destroyed. Death will occur amid their people and a fear will come over the people of Iraq from which they shall have no rest."
  • There will be an insurgence by the Sufyani, a descendant of Abu Sufyan. Abu Sufyan is considered by Shias to have been one of Muhammad's greatest enemies, along with his son, Muawiya I and Muawiya's son, Yazid. According to Shia narrations, the Sufyani's revolution will start from Palestine/Jordan, and his reign of tyranny will span the Middle East from Iraq to Egypt.
  • A loud call from the sky signals the Mahdi's appearance.
  • Emergence of the Mahdi

    Sunni and Shi'a sources

    Shi'a sources

    Claims of being the Mahdi

    A large mass of Muslims depending on the thoughts and decisions of their revered leaders & scholars, always kept waiting & didn't accept any claimants in the past. There have been several personalities over time who have considered themselves the Mahdi prophesied in Islam. Similar to the notion of a Messiah in the Judeo-Christian religions, the notion of a Mahdi as a redeemer to establish a society has lent itself to various interpretations leading to different claims within minorities or by individuals within Islam.

    Various sects of Muslims have believed and taken decesively someone to be their 'Promised Mahdi' while many keep waiting for one to appear.

    The Mahdi in fiction

    Several authors have used the concept of the Mahdi in fictional stories. Perhaps the best known is Frank Herbert, whose Dune science fiction novels centered on the character of Paul Atreides, who was proclaimed by his followers, the Fremen, to be the Mahdi. Paul's Fremen name, "Muad'Dib", means "teacher of adāb (manners and respect)" in Arabic, although within the novel it is a word in the Fremen language of Chakobsa, and is the name of a kind of desert mouse.

    In The Wheel of Time fictional world, the Tinker people are divided into travelling bands each led by a mahdi, which is translated as "seeker". The Tinkers are of the same ethnicity as the Aiel, a Fremen-like desert-dwelling people.

    The Mahdi plays a central role in Wilbur Smith's The Triumph of the Sun. It's about an English family during the Mahdi's siege of Khartoum in 1884.

    See also

    External links

    Sunni view

    Shia view

    Mouood (Arabic: موعود)'' The largest portal about Imam Mahdi and related articles and news, in Persian language.

    Mehdavi view

    Bibliography (English)

     


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