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Ancestral musings on an Arabian sunset

This year, Ashura falls on October 23. It is the culmination of ten days of mourning held every year during the Islamic month of Muhurram to commemorate the Battle of Karbala.

Published on: Oct 18, 2015 03:18 PM IST
Hindustan Times | By , New Delhi
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This year, Ashura falls on October 23. It is the culmination of ten days of mourning held every year during the Islamic month of Muhurram to commemorate the Battle of Karbala. The Battle of Karbala took place on the tenth day of Muharram in 680 AD at Karbala, in present day Iraq. On one side were the supporters and clan of the Prophet of Islam’s grandson Hussain ibn Ali while on the other were the troops of the Umayyid Caliph, Yazid the First.

Lone dead tree in red sunset (Photo: ISTOCK)
Lone dead tree in red sunset (Photo: ISTOCK)

Imam Hussain, the son of Hazrat Ali and the Prophet’s daughter Fatima, came to fight the forces of the oppressive Caliphate at the request of the people of Kufa, although his brother Hassan had already been killed by these rival forces in Islam. The chivalrous Hussain and his followers were surrounded like Abhimanyu was, surrounded in the chakravyuh during the Battle of Kurukshetra. Their water supply from the Euphrates was cut off by 6,000 soldiers. 30,000 of Yazid’s soldiers fell on Hussain’s small group of two hundred, which included women and 72 of Hussain’s relatives. They were butchered mercilessly in their weak, parched state for the lineage and values that they represented. By sunset on Ashura, they were all dead, including a four-year-old girl, Sakina, and a six-month-old baby, Ali Asghar. This battle led to the split in Islam between the followers of Hazrat Ali, the Shias, and the opposing party, the Sunnis.

Ten centuries later, Bhai Mati Das and Bhai Sati Das, Chibber brothers devoted to the Sikh Gurus, were executed along with Guru Tegh Bahadur by Aurangzeb in November 1675. The military tradition of this brave community continues with a number of Mohyals in the Indian armed forces. Such are our entwined histories and many Hindus today would feel entitled to say ‘Ya Ali’ as scattered descendants of those ancient clans.

 
ABOUT THE AUTHOR
Renuka Narayanan

Renuka Narayanan is a commentator and columnist on religion and culture.

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