Name: Ja'far
Title: al-Sadiq.
Agnomen: Abu Abdillah.
Father's name: Mohammad al-Baqir.
Mother's name: Umm Farwah.
Birth: In Medina, on Monday, 17th Rabi al-awwal 83 AH.
Death: Died at the age of 65, in Medina on Monday, 25th Shawwal 148 AH; poisoned
by al-Mansur ad-Dawaniqi, the Abbasid caliph.
The holy Imam Ja'far al-Sadiq was the sixth in the succession of the twelve
Apostolic Imams. His epithet was Abu Abdillah and his famous titles were
al-Sadiq, al-Fadil and al-Tahir. He was the son of Imam Mohammad al-Baqir, the
Fifth Imam, and his mother was the daughter of al-Qasim ibn Mohammad ibn Abi
Bakr.
Imam Ja'far al-Sadiq was brought up by his grand- father, Imam Zaynu 'I-Abidm in
Medina for twelve years and then remained under the sacred patronage of his
father Imam Mohammad al-Baqir for a period of nine- teen years.
Imamate: After the death of his holy father in 114 AH, he succeeded him as the
Sixth Imam, and thus the sacred trust of Islamic mission and spiritual guidance
was relayed down to his custody right from the Holy Prophet through the
succession of the preceding Imams.
Political Condition
The period of his Imamate coincided with the most revolutionary and eventful era
of Islamic history which saw the downfall of the Umayyad Empire and the rise of
the Abbasid caliphate. The internal wars and political upheavals were bringing
about speedy reshufflements in government. Thus, the Holy Imam witnessed the
reigns of various kings starting from Abdu 'l-Malik down to the Umayyad ruler
Marwan al-Himar. He further survived till the time of Abu 'l-Abbas al-Saffah and
al-Mansur among the Abbasids. It was due to the political strife between two
groups viz., the Umayyads and Abbasids for power that Imam was left alone
undisturbed to carry out his devotional duties and peacefully carry on his
mission to propagate Islam and spreading the teachings of the Holy Prophet. In
the last days of the Umayyad rule, their Empire was tottering and was on the
verge of collapse, and a most chaotic and demoralized state of affairs prevailed
throughout the Islamic State. The Abbasids exploited such an opportunity and
availing themselves of this political instability, assumed the title of
"Avengers of Banu Hashim". They pretended to have stood for the cause of taking
revenge on the Umayyads for shedding the innocent blood of the Holy Imam
Hussein. The common people who were groaning under the yoke of the Umayyads were
fed up with their atrocities and were secretly yearning for the progeny of the
Holy Prophet to take power. They realized that if the leadership went to the
Ahlul-Bayt, who were its legitimate heir, the prestige of Islam would be
enhanced and the Prophet's mission would be genuinely propagated. However, a
group of the Abbasids secretly dedicated their lives to a campaign for seizing
power from the hands of the Umayyads on the pretext that they were seizing it
only to surrender it to the Banu Hashim. Actually, they were plotting for their
own ends. The common people were thus deceived into supporting them and when
these Abbasids did succeed in snatching the power from the Umayyads, they tuned
against the Ahlu 'l-Bayt.
Religious Condition
The downfall of the Umayyads and the rise of the Abbasids constituted the two
principal plots in the drama of Islamic history. This was a most chaotic and
revolutionary period when the religious morals of Islam had gone down and the
teachings of the Holy Prophet were being neglected, and a state of anarchy was
rampant. It was amidst such deadly gloom that the virtuous personage of Imam
Ja'far al-Sadiq stood like a beacon of light shedding its luster to illuminate
the ocean of sinful darkness around. The world got inclined towards his virtuous
and admirable personality. Abu Salamah al-Khallal also offered him the throne of
the caliphate. But the Imam keeping up the characteristic tradition of his
ancestors flatly declined to accept it, and preferred to content himself with
his devotional pursuits and service to Islam. On account of his many debates
with the priests of rival orders like Atheists, Christians, Jews, etc.
Teachings
The versatile genius of Imam Ja'far al-Sadiq in all branches of knowledge was
acclaimed throughout the Islamic world, which attracted students from far-off
places towards him till the strength of his disciples had reached four thousand.
The scholars and experts in Divine Law have quoted many ahadith (traditions)
from Imam Ja'far al-Sadiq. His disciples compiled hundred of books on various
branches of science and arts. Other than fiqh (Islamic jurisprudence), hadith
(tradition), tafsir (exegesis of the Holy Quran), etc., the Holy Imam also
imparted mathematics and chemistry to some of his disciples. Jabir ibn Hayyan
at.-Tusi, a famous scholar of mathematics, was one of the Imam's disciples who
benefited from the Imam's knowledge and guidance and was able to write four
hundred books on different subjects.
It is an undeniable historical truth that all the great scholars of Islam were
indebted for their learning to the very presence of the Ahlu 'I-Bayt who were
the fountain of knowledge and learning for all. Allamah ash-shibli writes in his
book Siratu'n- Nu'man: "Abu Hanifah remained for a considerable period in the
attendance of Imam Ja'far al-Sadiq, acquiring from him a great deal of precious
research on fiqh and hadith. Both the sects - Shi'ah and Sunni - believe that
the source of Abu Hanifah's knowledge was mostly derived from his association
with Imam Ja'far al-Sadiq." The Imam devoted his whole life to the cause of
religious preaching and propagation of the teachings of the Holy Prophet and
never strove for power. Because of his great knowledge and fine teaching, the
people gathered around him, giving devotion and respect that was his due. This
excited the envy of the Abbasid ruler al-Mansur ad-Dawaniqi who fearing the
popularity of the Imam, decided to do away with him.
Allamah Tabatabai writes:
Imam Ja'far ibn Mohammad, the son of the Fifth Imam, was born in 83/702. He died
in 148/765 according to Shi'ite tradition, poisoned and martyred through the
intrigue of the Abbasid caliph al-Mansur. After the death of his father he
became Imam by Divine Command and decree of those who came before him. During
the Imamate of the Sixth Imam greater possibilities and a more favourable
climate existed for him to propagate religious teachings. This came about as a
result of revolts in Islamic lands, especially the uprising of the Muswaddah to
overthrow the Umayyad caliphate, and the bloody wars which finally led to the
fall and extinction of the Umayyads. The greater opportunities for Shi'ite
teachings were also a result of the favourable ground the Fifth Imam had
prepared during the twenty years of his Imamate through the propagation of the
true teachings of Islam and the sciences of the Household of the Prophet.
The Imam took advantage of the occasion to propagate the religious sciences
until the very end of his Imamate, which was contemporary with the end of the
Umayyad and beginning of the Abbasid caliphates. He instructed many scholars in
different fields of the intellectual and transmitted sciences, such as Zurarah
ibn A'yan, Mohammad ibn Muslim, Mu'minu 't-Taq, Hisham ibn al-Hakam, Aban ibn
Taghlib, Hisham ibn Salim, Hurayz, Hisham al- Kalbi an-Nassabah and Jabir ibn
Hayyan (the alchemist). Even some important Sunni scholars such as Sufyan
ath-Thawri, Abu Hanifah, the founder of the Hanafi school of law, al-Qadi as-Sukuni,
al-Qadi Abu 'I-Bakhtari, and others, had the honour of being his students. It is
said that his classes and sessions of instructions produced four thousand
scholars of hadith and other sciences.
The number of traditions preserved from the Fifth and Sixth Imams is more than
all the hadith that have been recorded from the Prophet and the other ten Imams
combined. But toward the end of his life the Imam was subjected to severe
restrictions placed upon him by the Abbasid caliph al-Mansur, who ordered such
torture and merciless killing of many of the descendants of the Prophet who were
Shi'ite that his actions even surpassed the cruelty and heedlessness of the
Umayyads. At his order they were arrested in groups, some thrown into deep and
dark prisons and tortured until they died, while others were be- headed or
buried alive or placed at the base of or between walls of buildings, and walls
were constructed over them. Hisham, the Umayyad caliph, had ordered the Sixth
Imam to be arrested and brought to Damascus.
Later, the Imam was arrested by as-Saffah, the Abbasid caliph, and brought to
Iraq. Finally, al-Mansur had him arrested again and brought to Samarrah where he
had the Imam kept under supervision, was in every way harsh and discourteous to
him, and several times thought of killing him. Eventually the Imam was allowed
to return to Medina where he spent the rest of his life in hiding, until he was
poisoned and martyred through the intrigue of al-Mansur. Upon hearing the news
of the Imam's martyrdom, al-Mansur wrote to the governor of Medina instructing
him to go to the house of the Imam on the pretext of expressing his condolences
to the family, to ask for the Imam's will and testament and read it. Whoever was
chosen by the Imam as his inheritor and successor should be beheaded on the
spot. Of course, the aim of al-Mansur was to put an end to the whole question of
the Imamate and to Shi'ite aspirations. When the governor of Medina, following
orders, read the last will and testament, he saw that the Imam had chosen four
people rather than one to administer his last will and testament: the caliph
him- self, the governor of Medina, Abdullah Aftah, the Imam's older son, and
Musa, his younger son. In this way the plot of al-Mansur failed. (Shi'ite Islam)
Death
On 25th Shawwal 148 AH, the governor of Medina by the order of al-Mansur, got
the Imam martyred through poison. The funeral prayer was conducted by his son
Imam Musa al-Kazim, the Seventh Imam, and his body was laid to rest in the
cemetery of Jannatu'l-Baqi'.
al-Imam al-Sadiq, peace be Upon him, said:
One who has these five characteristics is the choicest of men: one who feels
joyous when he does something good; one who repents when he does something bad;
one who is grateful when he receives something from Allah; one who patiently
endures Allah's trials; one who forgives when he is done some injustice or
wrong.
Closer to Allah: forgiving one who has wronged him; being generous to one who
had deprived him; being kind to a kinsman who has not observed his rights of
kinship.
The true believer does not transgress the limits of fairness in a fit of anger;
he does not do anything unjustifiable for the sake of favour to some; neither
does he take more than his due share, though he may have the power.
* A Brief History of The Fourteen Infallibles,p. 123-130)