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Shia versus Sunni, 
the World’s Longest Running FeudBy Professor 
Nazeer Ahmed
 
 
 A hundred 
years from today, when a chronicler writes about the presence of Islam in North 
America, he may well record that one of the principal achievements of this 
presence was the healing of the Shia-Sunni split. It will be recorded that 
America brought together Shias and Sunnis in its embrace and made them 
rediscover the commonality of their faith transcending the distractions of 
history and tradition. The world’s 
longest running feud is not over Kashmir or Palestine or Chechnya, nor is it the 
Catholic-Protestant schism. It is the Shia-Sunni conflict. Measured in terms of 
historical longevity, it beats the Catholic-Protestant schism by a factor of 
three and the Palestinian conflict by a factor of more than twenty.
 If a traveler 
from outer space were to visit planet earth, he/she would be astonished at the 
sheer tenacity of the passions and prejudices that govern human life. And the 
Shia-Sunni conflict would easily top the list of issues that arouse ugly 
passions.
 Muslims 
vehemently deny it, but they have made Islam a parochial religion mired in the 
past. Islam was revealed as a universal deen from the heavens. Muslims have made 
it a religion based on history. What is preached is different from what is 
practiced. The transcendence of the Qur’an and the universality of the message 
of the Prophet have been replaced by the parochialism of those who claim to 
practice them. The contrast between Islamic precepts and Muslim practices is the 
most convincing illustration of how divine ideas get compromised when they are 
introduced into the matrix of human affairs.
 The mutual 
misconceptions between Shias and Sunnis are mind-boggling. Talk to a taxi driver 
in Johannesburg or a porter in Kuala Lumpur, and you will hear an earful of 
misinformation about Shia and Sunni beliefs. Some Sunnis believe that the Shias 
have their own version of the Qur’an. The word Rafzi (a derogatory term meaning 
deviant) is repeatedly invoked in conversations. On the other hand many Shias 
believe that the Sunnis are turncoats and apostates who revel in the tragedy of 
Karbala.
 The animosities 
and scornful labels have been there since the assassination of Ali (r) in the 
year 661 CE. For a long time thereafter some (Sunni) Umayyads used to take the 
name of Ali (r) with derision. Caliph Omar bin Abdel Azeez (d 719) put an end to 
this abhorrent practice. On the other hand, some Shias continue to send tabarra 
on the names of Abu Bakr (r) and Omar (r) to this day and to show disrespect to 
the name of Aisha (r ).
 The endless 
dispute is even more astonishing when you consider that it has its basis in 
history, not in doctrine. The origins of the dispute were forgotten, bitterness 
was entrenched and became a tool for politics and power. History was later 
elevated to dogma.
 Much of the often 
bloody history of Shia-Sunni conflicts is well known. The Sunnis believe in the 
Ijmah of the companions. The Shias believe in the primacy of succession through 
Ahl e Bait. The former resulted in the institution of Khilafat, the latter in 
the evolution of Imamat and Wilayat. And the feud has continued long after 
either institution has ceased to have relevance to the contemporary world.
 These differences 
were contained during the Khilafat of Abu Bakr (r) and Omar (r) but burst into 
the open with the assassination of Uthman (r). The ensuing civil wars were 
inconclusive and ended only after the assassination of Ali (r) and the 
abdication of Hassan (r) in favor of Amir Muawiya. The conversion of the 
Khilafat into a dynasty brought on the tragedy of Karbala, which is a benchmark 
in Islamic historiography.
 Thereafter, the 
Shia movement went underground, focusing primarily on the social and the 
spiritual. The Abbasid revolution (750-51 CE) gave some hope for Shia-Sunni 
reconciliation. This was not to be. The Abbasids deftly used the Shias in the 
uprising but abandoned them once they were in power. The persecution of the 
Shias continued.
 The subsequent 
centuries have been a continuous saga of political rivalries between these two 
groups. The Sunnis have been the dominant political group but on occasions the 
Shias have challenged the political primacy of the Sunnis. In 945 CE, the Ithna 
Ashari Buyids briefly occupied Baghdad only to be expelled by the Seljuk Turks. 
In the tenth and eleventh centuries, the Fatimids, another branch of Shia Islam, 
successfully challenged the military primary of the Sunni Abbasids in Baghdad 
and ruled an empire extending from Morocco to Syria from their capital of Cairo. 
For over a hundred years, it was Sunni Islam that was on the defensive. There 
were Shia kingdoms as far away as Multan (Pakistan) and Samarqand (Uzbekistan). 
The Fatimid power shriveled from within due to its narrow social base (they were 
not successful in proselytizing the Sunnis) and received its coup de grace at 
the hands of Salahuddin Ayyubi (1171 CE).
 With their 
political power fading, the Fatimids launched the deadly assassin movement. Many 
a stalwart historical figure fell to the dagger of the assassin. Included among 
these were the brilliant grand vizier Nizamul Mulk of Baghdad (1091 CE), 
Mohammed Ghori , conqueror of Delhi (1206 CE), the Atabeks Maudud (1127 CE) and 
Zengi (1146 CE) of Mosul. Salahuddin himself narrowly escaped the assassin’s 
dagger on several occasions.
 Following the 
destruction wrought by the invasions of Timur (1375-1402 CE) and his conquest of 
India, Persia, Egypt and the Ottoman Empire, there were social and spiritual 
convulsions in the region of eastern Anatolia and Azerbaijan. Several 
political-religious movements were born in this caldron. Towards the end of the 
fifteenth century, Safiuddin, a Persian-speaking Turk, established a 
military-religious cult around himself and founded the Safavid dynasty of Persia 
(1499). The Safavids waged a relentless war against the neighboring Sunnis in 
Samarqand to the North and the Ottomans to the West. Safiuddin adopted the Ithna 
Ashari version of Islam, persecuted the Sunnis and reduced them to a small 
minority in the Persian heartland. The Safavids were contained only after the 
Ottoman Turks defeated them at the battle of Chaldiron (1524). However, warfare 
continued with the Great Moguls of India over control of Afghanistan (1605-1655) 
and the Ottoman Turks over control of Azerbaijan (1595-1639). The Safavid-Mogul 
rivalry, which was an echo of the Shia-Sunni rivalry, extended even to the 
Sultanates of the Deccan and was a primary reason for the advance of Mogul 
armies into southern India under Shah Jehan and Aurangzeb (1640-1707).
 The Shia-Sunni 
split takes its deadly toll even today. In Iraq, not a day goes by when rival 
Shia-Sunni groups take the lives of hundreds of innocent people. Even assuming 
there are hidden hands behind this anarchy, the carnage is historic in its 
magnitude and can only result in the death of a nation. In Pakistan, 
intermittent attacks on Shia and Sunni mosques and places of congregation 
continue, hardening the ill will between the two communities.
 Islam in America 
has a unique opportunity to heal these wounds. There are over three million 
Muslims in America. And there are over a million Iranians, a large majority of 
whom is Muslim. America has produced Muslim scholars of the first rank who have 
transcended Shia or Sunni labels and have made lasting contributions to Islamic 
sciences. The name of the eminent scholar Seyyed Hussein Nasr immediately 
springs to mind. America is the melting pot of nations. Muslims here are 
cosmopolitan. Shia-Sunni marriages and familial relations are commonplace in 
this land.
 There are also 
pressures from modern geopolitics. Shias and Sunnis realize that they face 
common challenges. With this realization there have been attempts on the 
international scene to reconcile the opposing points of view. In 1959, the 
eminent scholar Shaikh Mahmoud Shaltoot of Al Azhar issued a fatwa that “the 
Ja'fari school of thought, which is also known as ‘al-Shia al- Imamiyyah 
al-Ithna Ashariyyah’ (i.e., The Twelver Imami Shi'ites) is a school of thought 
that is religiously correct to follow in worship as are other Sunni schools of 
thought”. It is also recognized that the Zaidiyah school of fiqh is also 
historically valid. In numerous writings Imam Khomeini encouraged the Ithna 
Ashari Shias to pray with the Sunnis. Unfortunately, such voices of reason were 
drowned out in the oil politics of the Gulf and the drum beats of the Iran-Iraq 
war.
 This is not to 
minimize the obstacles to a Shia-Sunni reconciliation. There are religious 
leaders on both sides who are so mired in their own rote learning that they 
cannot separate what is history from what is doctrine. Many a mufti, when asked 
why it is not possible to have a common Shia-Sunni school of fiqh will throw up 
his hands in the air and declare: “Their sources are different. How can we even 
begin?” The process of fiqh is so institutionalized that a solution is unlikely 
to emerge from the traditional scholars.
 Instead, 
reconciliation will emerge from the educated masses, the men and women of the 
soil who have their faith in the Qur’an and who love the Prophet. They will find 
the Shia and Sunni labels to be irrelevant. They will bypass the processes of 
the different schools of fiqh, but will find commonality in the conclusions, the 
ethics and the injunctions for akhlaq (good character) derived therefrom. Does 
it matter what sources were used and what process of deduction was followed to 
establish the pre-eminence of Adl (justice) and Ehsan (the most beautiful deeds) 
in social relations? Aren’t Adl and Ehsan dictated by the Divine Word? In the 
emergence of a common Muslim ethic, transcending the Shia and Sunni brands, the 
Internet can play a vital role. I urge the educated and qualified Muslim youth 
in North America to undertake this noble but challenging task using guidance 
from broad-minded ulema, Shaikhs and Imams wherever they may live and whatever 
their title may be.
 Such a consensus 
emerged at least once before in Islamic history. Faced with the prospect of near 
annihilation from the Mongol invasions (1219-1302), the Islamic world turned its 
vision inwards. Nasiruddin al Tusi (d 1274), a distinguished scientist and man 
of letters, compiled his famous treatise Akhlaq e Nasiri (1273) as an ethical 
guide for Muslims. This book, written by a Shia scholar became required reading 
in the Sunni Mogul courts of India (1526-1707) and to a large extent governed 
their administration.
 This then is our 
vision: Men and women arriving in America from distant shores wherein they faced 
prejudice and persecution will fuse together a new personality in this new land 
on the basis of Adl and Ehsan. They will enjoin that which is good and beautiful 
and forbid that which is extreme and offensive to others. They will be neither 
Sunni nor Shia but universal in character and uniquely Islamic believing in and 
practicing Adl and Ehsan. In Ehsan there is healing. In Ehsan there is 
forgiveness. In Ehsan there is love. In it there is divine presence.
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