All the Muslims agree that Allah is One,
Muhammad (S.A.W) is His
last Prophet, the Quran is His last Book for mankind, and that one
day
Allah (S.W.T) will resurrect all human beings, and they will be
questioned
about their beliefs and actions. There are, however, disagreements
between the two schools in the following two areas:
1. The Caliphate (successor-ship/leadership) which the Shia believe
is
the right of the Imams of Ahlul-Bayt.
2. The Islamic rule when there is no clear Qur'anic statement, nor
is there a Hadith upon which Muslim schools have agreed.
The second issue has root into the first one. The Shia bound
themselves to refer to Ahlul-Bayt (A.S.W.S) for deriving the Sunnah
of Prophet (S.A.W). They do this in conformity with the order of
Prophet reported in the authentic Sunni and Shi'a collections of
traditions beside what the Quran attests to their perfect purity.
The disagreement about the caliphate should not be a source of
division between the two schools. Muslims agree that the caliphate
of Abu Bakr (L.A) came through election by a limited number of
people and was a surprise for all other companions. By limited
number, I mean, the majority of the prominent companions of prophet
had no knowledge of this election.
Ali, Ibn Abbas, Usman , Talha, Zubair, Sa'd Ibn Abi Waqqas, Salman
al-Farsi, Abu Zar, Ammar Ibn Yasir, Miqdad, Abdurrahman Ibn Owf were
among those who were not consulted nor even informed of. Even Umar
confessed to the fact that the election of Abu Bakr (L.A) was
without consultation of Muslims. (See Sahih al-Bukhari,
Arabic-English, Tradition 8.817)
On the other hand, election implies choice and freedom, and that
every Muslim has the right to elect the nominee. Whoever
refuses to elect him does not oppose God or His Messenger because
neither God nor His Messenger appointed the nominated person by
people.
Election, by its nature, does not compel any Muslim to elect a
specific nominee. Otherwise, the election would be coercion.
This means that the election would lose its own nature and it would
be a dictatorial operation. It is well known that the Prophet said:
"There is no validity for any allegiance given by force."
Imam Ali (A.S) refused to give his allegiance to Abu Bakr (L.A) for
six months. He gave his allegiance to Abu Bakr (L.A) only
after the martyrdom of his wife
Fatimah al-Zahra (S.A), Daughter of the Holy Prophet (S.A.W), six
months after the departure of Prophet. (see Sahih al-Bukhari,
Arabic-English version, Tradition 5.546).
If refusal to give allegiance to an elected nominee was prohibited
in Islam, Imam Ali (A.S) would not have allowed himself to delay in
giving his allegiance. In the same tradition in Sahih al-Bukhari,
Imam Ali (A.S) said that he had some rights in Caliphate which was
not honoured, and
he complained why Abu Bakr (L.A) should have not consulted him in
deciding upon the ruler. He later gave his allegiance when he found
that the only way to save Islam is to leave the isolation which
occurred due to his refusal of giving the oath of allegiance.
What's more? The well known companions, Abdullah Ibn Umar and Sa'd
Ibn Abi Waqqas, refused to give their allegiance to Imam Ali for the
entire duration of his caliphate. (Ibn Al-Asir, his history
Al-Kamil, v3, p98).
But the Imam did not punish these companions. If it was permissible
for a Muslim, who was a contemporary of the caliph, to refuse to
give his allegiance, it would be more permissible for a person who
came in a later century to believe or not to believe in the
qualifications of that elected caliph. In doing so, he would
not be sinning, provided that the Caliph is not assigned by Allah.
The Shia say that Imam must be appointed by God; that appointment
may be known through the declaration of the Prophet or the preceding
Imam. The Sunni scholars say that Imam (or Caliph, as they
prefer to say) can be either elected, or nominated by the preceding
Caliph, or selected by a committee, or may attempt to gain the power
through a military coup (as was in the case of Mu'awiyah (L.A)).
The Shi'a scholars say that a divinely appointed Imam is sinless and
Allah does not grant such position to the sinful. The Sunni scholars
(including Mu'tazilites) say that Imam can be sinful as he is
appointed by other than Allah. Even if he is tyrant and sunk in sins
(like in the case of Muawiyah and Yazid), the majority of the
scholars from the schools of Hanbali, Shafi'i, and Maliki discourage
people to rise against that Caliph. They think that they should be
preserved although they disagree with the evil actions.
The Shia say that Imam must possess above all such qualities as
knowledge, bravery, justice, wisdom, piety, love of God etc. The
Sunni scholars say it is not necessary. A person inferior in these
qualities may be elected in preference to a person having all these
qualities of superior degree.