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   | Can a Woman Be a 
		Leader of Muslims?-Part 3 By Fatima Mernissi 
 Hazrath Aisha (RA), who often used to accompany the Prophet (Pbuh) on 
		military expeditions, knew the procedure for the negotiations that took 
		place before the military occupation of a city.
 
 
 For each Hadith of the Sahih, al-’Asqalani gives us the historical 
		clarification: the political events that served as background, a 
		description of the battles, the identity of the conflicting parties, the 
		identity of the transmitters and their opinions, and finally the debates 
		concerning their reliability - everything needed to satisfy the 
		curiosity of the researcher.
 
 
 On what occasion did Abu Bakra recall these words of the Prophet (Pbuh), 
		and why did he feel the need to recount them? Abu Bakra must have had a 
		fabulous memory, because he recalled them a quarter of a century after 
		the death of the Prophet (Pbuh), at the time that the caliph Ali retook 
		Basra after having defeated Aisha (RA) at the Battle of the Camel.
 
 
 Before occupying Basra, A’isha went on pilgrimage to Makkah where she 
		learnt the news of the assassination of Uthman (RA) at Madinah and the 
		naming of Ali as the fourth caliph. It was while she was in Makkah that 
		she decided to take command of the army that was challenging the choice 
		of ‘Ali. Days and days of indecision then followed. Should she go to 
		Kufa or Basra? She needed to have an important city with enough 
		provision to aid her cause and let her set up her headquarters. After 
		numerous contacts, negotiations, and discussions, she chose Basra. Abu 
		Bakra was one of the notables of that city and, like all of them, in a 
		difficult position. Should he take up arms against Ali, the cousin of 
		the Prophet and the caliph, challenged maybe, but legitimate, or should 
		he take up arms against A’isha, the, wife of the Beloved of God? If one 
		realises, moreover, that he had become a notable in that Iraqi city, 
		which was not his native city, one can better understand the extent of 
		his unease.
 
 
 So why was he led to dig into his memory and make the prodigious effort 
		of recalling the words that the Prophet was supposed to have uttered 25 
		years before? The first detail to be noted - and it is far from being 
		negligible, is that Abu Bakra recalled his Hadith after the Battle of 
		the Camel. At that time, Aisha’s situation was scarcely enviable. She 
		was politically wiped out: 13,000 of her supporters had fallen on the 
		field of the battle. Ali had retaken the city of Basra, and all those 
		who had not chosen to join Ali’s clan had to justify their action. This 
		can explain why a man like Abu Bakra needed to recall opportune 
		traditions, his record being far from satisfactory, as he had refused to 
		take part in the civil war. Not only did he refrain from taking part, 
		but like many of the Companions who had opted for non-participation, he 
		had made his position known officially.
 
 
 A’isha, who often used to accompany the Prophet on military expeditions, 
		knew the procedure for the negotiations that took place before the 
		military occupation of a city and had conducted matters correctly. 
		Before besieging the city, she had sent messengers with letters to all 
		the notables of the city, explaining to them the reasons that had 
		impelled her to rebel against Ali, her intentions, and the objectives 
		that she wanted to attain, and finally inviting them to support her. It 
		was a true campaign of information and persuasion, a preliminary 
		military tactic in which the Prophet excelled. And Aisha was going to 
		use the mosque as the meeting place for a public discussion to inform 
		the population before occupying the city. Abu Bakra was thus contacted 
		from the beginning in his capacity as a notable of the city.
 
 
 A’isha did not take this course of action only because of faithfulness 
		to Muhammad’s methods. There was a more important reason. This was the 
		first time since the death of the Prophet that the Muslims found 
		themselves on opposite sides in a conflict. This was the situation that 
		Muhammad had described as the worst possible for Islam: fitna, civil 
		war, which turned the weapons of the Muslims inward instead of directing 
		them, as Allah wished, outward, in order to conquer and dominate the 
		world. So Aisha had to explain her uprising against Ali. She reproached 
		him for not having brought the murderers of Uthman, the assassinated 
		third caliph, to justice. Some of those who had besieged Uthman and 
		whose identity was known were in Ali’s army as military leaders. Many 
		Muslims must have thought like ‘A’isha, because a large part of the city 
		of Basra welcomed her, giving her men and weapons. After driving out the 
		governor who represented Ali, Aisha set up her headquarters in Basra, 
		and with her two allies, Talha and al-Zubair, members of the Quraysh 
		tribe like herself, she continued her campaign of information, 
		negotiation, and persuasion through individual interviews and speeches 
		in the mosques, pressing the crowds to support her against the “unjust” 
		caliph. It was year 36 of the Hejira (AD 656), and public opinion was 
		divided: should one obey an “unjust” caliph (who did not punish the 
		killers of ‘Uthman), or should one rebel against him and support Aisha, 
		even if that rebellion led to civil disorder?
 
 
 Thus the decision not to .participate in this civil war was not an 
		exceptional one, limited to a few members of the elite. The mosques were 
		full of people who found it absurd to follow leaders who wanted to lead 
		the community into tearing each other to pieces. Abu Bakra was not in 
		any way an exception. When he was contacted by ‘A’isha, Abu Bakra made 
		known his response to her: he was against fitna. He is supposed to have 
		said to her (according to the way he told it after the battle):
 
 
 “It is true that you are our umm (mother, alluding to her title of 
		“Mother of Believers,” which the Prophet bestowed on his wives during 
		his last years), it is true that as such you have rights over us. But I 
		heard the Prophet say: “Those who entrust power (mulk) to a woman will 
		never know prosperity.”
 
 
 Although, as we have just seen, many of the Companions and inhabitants 
		of Basra chose neutrality in the conflict, only Abu Bakra justified it 
		by the fact that one of the parties was a woman. According to al-Tabari’s 
		account, Basra, after ‘A’isha’s defeat, lived through many days of 
		understandable anxiety. Was Ali going to take revenge on those who had 
		not supported him one of whom was Abu Bakra? “In the end Ali proclaimed 
		a general amnesty to all those who threw down their arms. He announced 
		on the day of the battle that those who returned to their homes would be 
		spared. Ali spent some days on the battlefield; he buried the dead of 
		both sides and said a common funeral prayer for them before returning to 
		the city.
 
 
 What is surprising to the modern reader who leafs through the chronicles 
		of that famous Battle of the Camel is the respect that the people, 
		whatever their position towards the war, showed to Aisha. Very rare were 
		the occasions on which she was insulted -and even then it was never by 
		one of the political leaders, but by some of the ordinary people.
 
 (To be continued)
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