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CONSTITUTIONAL DEVELOPMENT
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his successor; others, again, advanced the duty of seeking the rightful Imam and
rendering allegiance to him till it covered the whole field of faith and moralsno more
was required of the believer. To one of these sects, al-Mukanna, "the Veiled Prophet
of Khorasan," adhered before he started on his own account.
We have seen already that so early as 32 the doctrine had been preached in Egypt that
Ali was the God-appointed successor of the Prophet. Here we have its legitimate
development, which was all the quicker as it had, or assumed, a theological basis, and did
not simply urge the claims to leadership of the family of the Prophet after the fashion in
which inheritance runs among earthly kings. That was the position at first of the other
and far more important Shi'ite wing. It regarded the leadership as being in the blood of
Muhammad and therefore limited to the children of Ali by his wife Fatima, the daughter of
Muhammad. Again, the attitude toward the person of the leader varied, as we have already
seen. One party held that the leadership was by the right of the appointment of God, but
that the leader himself was simply a man as other men. These would add to "the two
words" (al-kadimatani) of the creed, "There is no god but God, and
Muhammad is the Apostle of God," a third clause, "and Ali is the representative
of God." Others regarded him as an incarnation of divinity; a continuing divine
revelation in human form. His soul passed, when he died, to his next successor. He was,
therefore, infallible and sinless, and was to be treated with absolute, blind obedience.
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SHI'ITE CONSTITUTIONAL THEORIES
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Here there is a mingling of the most strangely varied ideas. In Persia the people had
been too long accustomed to looking upon their rulers as divine for them to be capable of
taking up any other position. A story is told of the governor of a Persian province who
wrote to the Khalifa of his time that he was not able to prevent his people from giving
him the style and treatment of a god; they did not understand any other kind of ruler; it
was as much as his authority was worth to attempt to make them desist. From this attitude,
combined with the idea of the transmigration of souls, the extreme Shi'ite doctrine was
derived.
But though the party of Ali might regard the descendants of Ali as semi-divine, yet
their conspiracies and revolts were uniformly unsuccessful, and it became a very dangerous
thing to head one. The party was willing to get up a rising at any time, but the leader
was apt to hang back. In fact, one of the most curious features of the whole movement was
the uselessness of the family of Ali and the extent to which they were utilized by others.
They have been, in a sense, the cat's-paws of history. Gradually they themselves drew back
into retirement and vanished from the stage, and, with their vanishing, a new doctrine
arose. It was that of the hidden Imam. We have already seen the case of Muhammad ibn al-Hauafiya,
whom Muslims reckon as the first of these concealed ones. Another descendant of Ali, on
another line of descent, vanished in the same way in the latter part of the second century
of the Hijra, and another about A.H. 260. Their respective followers
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