TAQIYAH

TAQIYAH

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TAQIYAH is the precautionary dissimulation of religious belief and practice in the face of persecution. All Muslims recognize the personal duty of affirming right and forbidding wrong, but they also admit that, when confronted by an overwhelming injustice that threatens the well-being of an individual, this obligation can be fulfilled secretly in the heart rather than overtly. Among Shi’i Muslims, who from the death of the Prophet onward considered themselves subject to persistent religious persecution by the Sunni majority and the holders of political power, a further extension of this principle allowed not merely passive or silent resistance, but an active dissimulation of true beliefs when required to protect life, property, and religion itself.

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The classic case defining the practice of tagiyah is that of `Ali ibn Abi Talib, prophet Muhammad’s cousin, whom the Shi`ah hold to have been his sole, chosen successor. Instead of insisting immediately on his Godgiven right to lead the Muslim community, `Ali temporarily acquiesced to the rule of his numerous opponents in the interest of preserving himself and his cause for eventual restoration. `Ali swore loyalty to false leaders whom the Shi` ah have otherwise condemned as heretics. Qur’anic support for such tagiyah is given by surah 3.28: “Believers should not accept as protecting friends unbelievers rather than believers . . . unless [it is done] as a precaution in order to guard yourselves from them [or, out of fear of them].” The phrase “as a precaution,” as used in this verse, yields the term taqiyah. A further Qur’anic example is surah 16.1o6: “Whoever expresses disbelief in God after once believing [will suffer greatly], unless that person is under compulsion while yet remaining at peace in belief in the heart.” This second verse refers to the case of a Muslim whose parents, rather than renouncing their faith as did the son, accepted martyrdom. The son’s temporary act of coerced apostasy was, nonetheless, subsequently forgiven. The Shi` ah see this as further justification for the practice of taqiyah.

By the time of the sixth imam, Ja’far al-Sadiq (d. 765), widespread, clandestine pro-Shi`i movements had adopted taqiyah to hide revolutionary activities. Imam Ja’far, in contrast, urged his followers to accept their minority status peacefully and, in place of revolt, to practice a form of permanent taqiyah that became, instead, a doctrine of religious quietism. The Shi` ah began to interpret surah 49.13, “the most noble among you in the eyes of God is the most God-fearing,” as a recommendation for taqiyah. The verb “to fear God,” which has the same root as the term tagiyah, conveys the latter meaning only secondarily. The Shi`ah under Imam Ja’far, however, began to interpret this verse as signifying that “the most noble . . . is the one who practices tagiyah most.”

Subsequent to Imam Ja’far’s time, the conditions of persecution, apparent and otherwise, promoted an increasing reliance on this concept, leading eventually to the disappearance of the final imam of the Twelvers-an act that some Shi`ah regard as the ultimate imposition of tagiyah, the idea being that, until the imam’s own reappearance, all later periods belong to an age of taqiyah. One of the most prominent authorities of the tenth century, Ibn Babawayh (d. 991) insisted that “until the Imam appears tagiyah is obligatory and it is not permissible to dispense with it.”

Many scholars, such as the great Shaykh al-Mufid (d. 1022), however, saw in this absolute declaration a dangerous tendency, which they sought to modify. Having once declared that all future statements will be under the rule of tagiyah, no later statement, even those concerning tagiyah itself, can be accepted at face value. Opponents of the Shfah, then and now, fully understand this paradox; the practice of taqiyah allows the Shi’ah to say anything and make any claim; no utterance of theirs is to be trusted. To counter this, those like al-Mufid attempted to set more precise rules for the use of taqiyah, readily admitting that the duty of taqiyah is not the same for all people or all situations. It is not, therefore, an absolute obligation.

Nevertheless, taqiyah was and is practiced broadly by the Shi’ah and other minorities, and it continues to be recognized as a characteristic doctrine of the Shi’ah in general. In more modern times, especially after the Safavids (1501-1722) made Twelver Shiism the state religion of Iran, the necessity of a doctrine of universal tagiyah has diminished. The Shi’ah, moveover, have been sensitive to the charge of always dissimulating their true beliefs and have accordingly, like al-Mufid, rejected unrestricted tagiyah in favor of a more limited application. Modern discussions of tagiyah thus revolve around the issue of what conditions require it as a religious obligation or merely permit its use without incurring blame. A tendency to claim that the nobler course is to abstain from practicing it, if at all possible, is nearly always present. The modern consensus, which is based on a continuous tradition in juridical literature, is as follows: tagiyah may never be employed if it will result directly in the death of another Muslim; it is obligatory only when there is a definite danger that cannot be avoided and against which there is no hope; and it is permitted (discretionary) in the face of a danger to one’s own life, that of a family member, the loss of virtue of a female family member, or the serious deprivation of livelihood. Some allow certain conditions of expediency, but the general attitude is that these are areas where, although tagiyah may be practiced without blame, it would be preferable (and more noble) not to.

Even so, in those areas where Shi’is, and as another example, the Druze, continue to confront dangerous opposition, taqiyah persists as an important factor in religious belief and practice. The Shi’is for example, still insist that their numbers are systematically undercounted in the censuses of several countries, because adherents there observe tagiyah. The Druze, in line with their distant Shi` origins and continued minority status, preserve the doctrine of taqiyah even where current governments in their regions have tried to promote free expression.

[See also Shi`i Islam.]

BIBLIOGRAPHY

Ibn Babuyah. A Shiite Creed. Translated by Asaf A. A. Fyzee. London, 1942. Taqiyah is covered in chapter 39 (pp. 110-112). Kohlberg, Etan. “Some Imami-Shi` ! Views on Taqiyya.” journal of the American Oriental Society 95 (1975) 395-4o2. Highly useful article on taqiyah in Twelver Shi`i thought.

Layish, Aharon. “Taqiyya among the Druzes.” Asian and African Studies i9 (1985): 245-281.

McDermott, Martin J. The Theology of al-Shaikh al-Mufid. Beirut, 1978. Good study of al-Mufid’s thought; note entries in the index under “dissimulation.”

Strothmann, Rudolf. “Takiya.” In E. J. Brill’s First Encyclopaedia of Islam, 1913-1936, vol. 8, pp. 628-629. Leiden, 1987. Remains an excellent general outline of the subject.

Tabataba’i, Muhammad Husayn. Shiite Islam. Translated by Seyyed Hossein Nasr. Albany, N.Y., 1975. See Appendix I (pp. 223-225) for a discussion of taqiyah.

PAUL E. WALKER

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