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CONSTITUTIONAL DEVELOPMENT
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Path of God (sabil Allah), and put in their places his own relations, late
embracers of the faith. He broke through the Constitution of Umar and gifted away great
tracts of state lands. The feeling spread abroad that in the eyes of the Khalifa an
Umayyad could do no wrong, and the Umayyads themselves were not backward in affording
examples. To the Muhajirs and Ansar they were godless heathen, and probably the Muhajirs
and Ansar were right. Finally, the indignation could no longer be restrained.
Insurrections broke out in the camp-cities of al-Kufa and al-Basra, and in those of Egypt
and at last in al-Madina itself. There, in A.H. 35 (A.D. 655), Uthman fell under the
daggers of conspirators led by a Muhammad, a son of Abu Bakr, but a religious fanatic
strangely different from his father, and the train was laid for a long civil war. In the
confusion that followed the deed the chance of the legitimist party had come, and Ali, the
cousin and son-in-law of the Prophet, was chosen.
Fortunately this is not a history of Islam, but of Muslim political institutions, and
it is, therefore, unnecessary to go into the manifold and contradictory stories told of
the events of this time. These have evidently been carefully redacted in the interests of
later orthodoxy, and to protect the character of men whose descendants later came to
power. The Alids built up in favor of Ali a highly ingenious but flatly fictitious
narrative, embracing the whole early history and exhibiting him as the true Khalifa kept
from his rights by one after the other of the first three, and suffering it all with
angelic patience. This
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varies from the extreme Shi'ite position, which damns all the three at a sweep as
usurpers, through a more moderate one which contents itself with cursing Umar and Uthman,
to a rejection of Uthman only, and even, at the other extreme, satisfies itself with
anathematizing the later Umayyads. At this point the Shi'ites join hands with the body of
orthodox believers, who are all sectaries of Ali to a certain degree. Yet this tendency
has been counteracted to some extent by a strongly catholic and irenic spirit which
manifests itself in Islam. After a controversy is over and the figures in it have faded
into the past, Islam casts a still deeper veil over the controversy itself and glorifies
the actors on both sides into fathers and doctors of the Church. An attempt is made to
forget that they had fought one another so bitterly, and to hold to the fact only that
they were brother Muslims. The Shi'ites well so-called, for Shi'a means sect, have never
accepted this; but it is the usage of orthodox, commonly called Sunnite, Islam. A concrete
expression of any result reached by the body of the believers then often takes the form of
a tradition assigned to Muhammad. In this case, it is a saying of his that ten men,
specified by name and prominent leaders in these early squabbles, were certain of
Paradise. It has further become an article in Muslim creeds, that the Companions of the
Prophet are not to be mentioned save with praise; and one school of theologians, in their
zeal for the historic Khalifate, even forbade the cursing of Yazid, the slayer of al-Husayn
(p. 28 below), and reckoned as the worst of all the Umayyads, because he had been
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