Muhammad
al Mahdi
'abû l-qâsimi muhammadi
bni hassan
(868AD - ?) Muhammad al Mahdi (the guided)
is the Twelfth and last Imam of the Twelver Shi'i,
and is also known as Muhammad al Muntazar (the awaited).
Very little can be said of him with any certainty. In fact, the non Twelver
might very well question whether there was an historical person associated
with the name. Jafar, the brother of the Eleventh Imam denied the existence
of any child and claimed the Imamate for himself. In fact, accounts of
public appearances by Muhammad al Mahdi often involve his mysterious arrival
at key moments to challenge his uncle's claims.
In brief, the Twelver Shi'i believe that he was born to a Byzantine slave
named Narjis Khatun, and that his birth was kept quiet by his father, the
Eleventh Imam, Hassan al Askari, because of
the intense persecution of the Shi'i. Hidden since birth, he reappeared
at age six to assert his claim to the Imamate, only to then disappear down
a well to avoid the sad fate of his father and grandfather. For the next
seventy years he maintained contact with his followers through a succession
of four assistants known as Bab (Gate), Uthman al Amir, his son Abu Jafar
Muhammad ibn Uthman, Abu'l Qasim Husayn ibn Ruh an Nawbakhti, and Abu'l
Husayn Ali ibn Muhammad as Samarri. These years are known as the Lesser
Occultation.
On his deathbed in 941 AD, the fourth Bab, as Samarri produced a letter
from the Imam stating that there should be no successor to as Samarri and
that from that time forward the Mahdi would not be seen until he reappeared
as champion of the faithful in the events leading to the Judgement Day.
Therefore, after 941 AD there has been no earthly expression of the Imamate.
This period is known as the Greater Occultation. However, it is still possible
to seek the Twelfth Imam's advice or intercession by writing him a letter
and leaving it at one of the Shi'i shrines. To explain the doctrine of
the Occultation, Shi'i theologians draw an analogy to the idea of the sun
being occulted by clouds. While the sun is out of sight, it still exists
and warms the earth.
There is much that is miraculous associated with al Mahdi. The various
traditions are rich in stories and are often contradictory. Tales range
from speaking from the womb, growing at so astonishing a rate that he was
full grown by age six, being raised by birds and the ability to appear
and disappear at will.
While there was much controversy over the succession of the Twelfth Imam,
as the Lesser Occultation proceeded, dissent gradually diminished. This
can be attributed in part to the active support of the Caliphate for the
institution of the Bab. Several opponents of the doctrine of the Occultation
were executed and others were persecuted in various ways. Another factor
explaining the acceptance of the Lesser Occultation, and by extension the
Greater Occultation, was that due to the house arrest of the Tenth
and Eleventh Imams most Shi'i were already accustomed
to the idea of their Imam being hidden from their view. In the time of
the Tenth and Eleventh Imams a network of wikala (agents) had developed
to act as intermediaries between the Imam and his followers, handling money
and carrying messages back and forth. In fact, Uthman al Amri, the first
Bab of the Twelfth Imam had held the same position as head of the wikala
under the Eleventh Imam. Therefore, for most Shi'i, there was not a significant
change in their relation to their Imam after the death of the Eleventh
Imam.
Some titles of the Twelfth Imam include: Sahib az Zaman (Master of the
Age), Sahib al Amr (Master of Command), al Qa'im (the one to arise), Bagiyyat
Allah (remnant of Allah), and Imam al Muntazar (the awaited Imam).