Misplaced Pages

Kitab al-Ghayba (al-Nu'mani)

Article snapshot taken from Wikipedia with creative commons attribution-sharealike license. Give it a read and then ask your questions in the chat. We can research this topic together.

For the book by al-Shaykh al-Tusi, see Kitab al-Ghayba (al-Tusi).
Part of a series on
Shia Islam
Beliefs and practices
Days of remembrance
History
Branches and sects
Ahl al-Kisa
Holy women
icon Shia Islam portal

The Kitāb al-Ghayba (Arabic: كتاب الغيبة, lit. 'Book of Occultation') is a book by the 10th-century Shia scholar Muhammad ibn Ibrahim al-Nu'mani on the subject of the occultation of the last Twelver Imam Muhammad al-Mahdi in 873–4 (260 AH). The aim of the book was to refute the existing doubts about the occultation and to support it by reason and narration.

Author

Muhammad ibn Ibrahim al-Nu'mani was reportedly a pupil of al-Kulayni (c. 864–941). He wrote this work around 953, and died in 970.

Motivation

Much doubt and skepticism existed in al-Nu'mani' time about the occultation (ghayba) of the last Twelver Imam Muhammad al-Mahdi in 873–4 (260 AH). In his book al-Nu'mani wrote that, having noticed how the Shia followers were perplexed by the event of the occultation, he wanted to try and save them from this perplexity. He also tried to show that the doubt and ignorance of people originated from the concerns of worldly and mortal aims. There are many references to the characters and symbols occulted to Imam.

See also

References

  1. "Kitab al-Ghayba: The Book of Occultation".
  2. Etan Kohlberg (1991). belief and law in imami shiism. Variorum. p. 523.
  3. "Traits caractéristiques du soulèvement du Yéménite (1)".
Categories: