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Ali al Asghar ibn Husayn

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Name
  
Ali ibn


Ali al-Asghar ibn Husayn wwweslamdebegriffeaimagesabdullahibnalijpg

Died
  
October 10, 61 AD, Karbala, Iraq

Siblings
  
Ali al-Akbar ibn Husayn, Ali ibn Husayn Zayn al-Abidin, Sakinah bint Husayn, Fatimah bint Husayn

Parents
  
Husayn ibn Ali, Rubab bint Imra al-Qais

Cousins
  
Qasim ibn Hasan, Abdullah ibn Hasan

Grandparents
  
Ali, Fatimah, Imra al-Qays bin ‘Adi


Similar
  
Sakinah (Fatima al Kubra) bint Husayn, Ali al Akbar ibn Husayn, Husayn ibn Ali

‘Abdullah ‘Ali al-Asghar ibn Al-Husayn (09 Rajab 60 AH – 10 Muharram 61 AH (10 October 680 CE)), or simply ‘Ali Asghar ("Younger ‘Ali"), was the youngest child of Al-Husayn (son of ‘Ali, grandson of the Islamic Prophet Muhammad and the third Shia Imam) and Rubab bint Imra’ al-Qays. He was killed during the Battle of Karbala’, and is commemorated in Shi‘ism as the "personified quintessence of the innocent victim."

Contents

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Biography

Ali al Asghar ibn Husayn Ali al Asghar ibn Husayn

He was born in Medina on the 10th of Rajab, 60 AH. His father's other sons were Imam ‘Ali Zaynul-‘Abidin and ‘Ali al-Akbar. ‘Abdullah's three sisters were Ruqayyah (Sukainah), Fatimah al-Kubra (Sakinah) and Fatimah al-Sughra.

Ali al Asghar ibn Husayn Ali al Asghar ibn Husayn

Rubab and her two Children, Sakina and Ali Asghar, accompanied Husayn to Karbala’. In hagiography about the Battle, Husayn's camp at one time was cut off from water supplies and so Husayn went to Yazid's besieging forces to plead water for the Women and children in his camp. Husayn had brought along Ali Asghar for mercy, but Yazid's soldiers then killed Ali by an arrow to his throat. Shia tradition relates that Ali Asghar was killed by Hurmala with a three-headed arrow, when he moved his neck to stop the three-headed object from hitting his father. It has also been stated that it took Hurmala three attempts to shoot the arrow. He said he kept seeing the mother of Ali Asghar in front of his eyes. At Karbala, Ali Asghar was only six months old before he died. He is honored by Shia as the youngest person killed at the Battle of Karbala.

Aftermath

Ali-asghar.png

The massacre at Karbala’ made Mukhtar al-Thaqafi seek revenge. He led an uprising in which Hurmala and a number of his comrades were killed.

Commemoration

Ali al-Asghar is buried along with his brother Ali al-Akbar and his father Husayn in Karbala, Iraq, which is now one of the most visited shrine in the world. Ali al-Asghar and his death are commemorated in various ways, including iconographic depictions, hagiography recitations (rowzeh), Poetry (nowheh), replicas of Ali Asghar's cradle and grave, and dolls representing him. During nowheh, women perform self-flagellating rituals (sineh-sarpay or aza-sarpay) in which they move around (sineh-dowr) a cradle replica and hit their chests with their hands. In Muharram ceremonies and commemorations, Ali al-Asghar is represented as an innocent child suffering unbearable thirst. His death is mourned at length in rawza-khani (recital of the Rawdat ash-Shuhada "The Paradise of the Martyrs") literature and in early ta'ziya (passion play) traditions, a complete majles was dedicated to Ali al-Asghar, with the infant's cradle a conspicuous element on the stage. Ali al-Asghar is also represented in Muharram processions and mourned in folklore.

References

Ali al-Asghar ibn Husayn Wikipedia