“It would be absurd to think that he would leave the “people of degrees’ without the
possiblity of recognizing him; for the purpose of their acquiring this knowledge the wrodl
was created. If he should leave them so–whic God forbid!–he would be ungenerous.
Therefore a moon must exist in this night of faith which would remain perpetually
manifest in its real nature.” (W. Ivanow, Ismailitica p. 26)
At the time of his manifestation at the “resurrection” God was himself revealed to the
faithful and seen by them in the Imam. On that day called the millenium of Saturdays,
God became His own Proof. But thereafter is a period of six thousand years called the
“Night of the Faith,” when he can only be recognized through another, except as he may
graciously become manifest, “sometimes in the form of a father, sometimes in the form
of a son, or a child, or a youth, or an old man.” (Kalami Pir p. 67) At such times,
however, His manifestations are not in His whole glory, so man needs the ‘moon’ to
reveal Him. The hijjat fulfills this need.
The Hujjat
“The path to him (the Imam) lies through the heart of hujjat;
The hujjat knows everything by the direct Divine help to his heart.” (W. Ivanow,
Ismailitica p. 31)
Under the Fatimids the tern hujjat had come to be used for the person next to the Imam,
who sustained a very close relation to him, such as Salman had toward Ali. Among the
Nizari Ismailis that position has been lifted immensely higher until the hujjat’s “real
essence is the same as that of the Imam from all eternity.” (W. Ivanow, Ismailitica p. 68)
By his miraculous nature the hujjat needs not to receive instruction, he knows; it becomes
his duty to teach.
“And if he do not appear and teach, the “people of degrees” will fail in attaining salvation
and perfection in the next life and therefore will be no use in the creation of the world.”
(W. Ivanow, Ismailitica p. 32)
The hujjat corresponds with the First Intelligence–and is considered to be ma’sum.:
“One cannot know the Lord except through Him, as one cannot know God except
through God. Only one man can really know God, and this is the great hujjat. All other
people know Our Lord only through him, as the manifestation and the brilliance of reason
appears in him only. he is the “Gate of knowledge” and the Gate of the glory and mercy
of Our Lord. He is the means of knowing the Laws of Reality and of solving doubts; he
is the governor and the commander of all the true faithful, and whoever disobeys him is
placed in Hell and suffers eternal punishment. The manifestations of the Divine attributes
and His exalted properties attain its perfection in the hujjat. All hujjats are the same in
substance. The Imam, who at the period of his full manifestation is the Qaim of the Great
Resurrection, is very near to him; he is greater that the hujjat, through his reavealing the
mysteries of the Reality.” (Kalami Pir pp. 88-89)
The hujjat may carry on the dawat in the absence of the Imam; he can never be hidden at
the same time as the Imam, but in any period of occultation of the Imam the hujjat is
active as a guide to the people. (Kalami Pir. pp-63-64)
Later sectartian accounts, as Kalami Pir, speak of Baba Sayyidna as the hujjat during the
second satr, following Nizar, but early historians never mention him as such. The same
author also names ‘Abd al lahi Qaddah as hujjat during the first satr. (Kalami Pir. p.63)
Neither name appears in the list of hujjats printed in Ismailitica. Working from this
period back, sectarian leaders have assigned a hujjat to every Imam. It is not necessary
for the hujjat to be a relative of the Imam, though this is not forbidden. The position
seems not to be inherited. Not all hujjats are humans.
“The paradise of Adam, the Ark of Noah, the vision of Abraham, Jesus and Mary, the
Mount Sinai of Moses, Gabriel of Mustafa,–all these are forms of the Hujjat.” (Ivanow,
Ismailitica, p 33)
Some hujjats have been prominent dais, as Sadr al din. Anyone may rise to the honor; it
was held by a woman in one case. The hujjat of the present Imam, the Aga Khan III, dies
while still a child only six months of age. His duties have been taken over by the Imam.
Unlike Ismaili doctrine under the Fatimids, all Imams are on the same basis of equality
and the higher position given Ali as Asas vanishes. But Ali’s place in the regard of
Ismailis has in no way decreased. Of Ali we read such extravagant statements as that:
“Ali was he who still in the womb of his mother,
told the Prophet in his ears the meaning of the Koran by heart.” (Kalami Pir p 62)
Prophet
Of greater importance is the question of the place left the Prophet in this branch of
Ismailism. The term natiq seems to have been discontiued and is never applied to Hasan
‘ala dhikrhi’s salam. But when the Prophet’s era was superceded by the new cycle
initiated under Hasan, the religion Muhammad had initiated was cancelled or was
henceforth to find its true interpretation in a newly “revealed batin which is the dini
qiyamat, i.e., religion of the last day.” This fact is more explicitl;y expressed in these
lines:
“There are seven law givers,–six periods of the religious law: Adam, Noah, Abraham,
Moses, Jesus and Muhammas the Apostle of God, and one is that of the Qaim,–
prostration and glorification be due at this mention.” (Kalami Pir p 98)
This is also referred to in Raudat al taslim where we are told that the doctrine of the
Shairah had reached perfection, and needed to be followed by the teaching about
Qiyamat. In the Diwan of Khaki Khorasani this change is indirectly implied in “the
doctrine about the cancellation of the outward forms of religion.” (Ivanow, p 10)
Other indications of a changed attitude toward the Prophet are found in expression like
these:
“AS God said that just as the month of Ramadan is better than a thousand months, so the
Imam of the time is greater than a thousand prophets and apostles.
This means that the light of Prophethood is derived from the light of walayat (i.e.,
Imamship) (Kalami Pir p. 69)
In the time of every prophet who laid the foundation of the new religion, the Imam
manifested himself in his own holy substance…The Prophets had to point him out to the
people. (Kalami Pir p. 61)
Wherever in the common teachings of shariah the Koran, the Lord Gabriel, Mikael,
Israfil, and Azrail are spoken of, their real meaning and archtype, as can be explained, is
the hujjat, because in interpretation, tawil, the meaning of the angel is the people of unity,
i.e., the Hujjat, nobody else. And wherever dai is mentioned, it means the prophet, …and
as regards (his statement) that he (Muhammad) was receiving revelation from Gabriel,
i.e., that he was a dai, he recieved instruction from Salman….”(Ivanov, Ismailitica. pp
32/33)
If these quotations leave a doubt about the true regard in which the Prophet was held,
other evidence is found in the lists of hujjats from the Khojah Vrttant, by Sachedina
Naujiani, in which Muhammad is shown as the Hujjat of Imam Ali. This is true also in a
second list of hujjats of the Shughnani Ismailis published by Ivanov who suggests that
the hujjat of Ali’s time is believed to have been Salman Farsi but Muhammad’s name
was used for fear of persecution.
Cycles and Numbers
Nizari Ismailism, much more than the other branches, is concerned with cycles, great and
small. The great cycle is equivalent to 360,000 years. The Qiyamat proclaimed at Alamut
by Imam Hasan II marked the last millenium of the first half of the great cycle, or
180,000 years. Smaller cycles are of 7000 years, at the beginning of which a prophet of a
new religion appears. It was at the beginning of the last of these cycles that “the final
form of a revealed religion” was vouchsafed.(Ivanov, Ismailitica. pp xxxv/xxxvi)
Also characteristic of this branch is its emphasis on numbers, chiefly seven and twelve.
“on examining the universe and human nature, we see that everything therein consists of
units of seven.” So the author divides his treatise into seven chapters.
“There are seven heavens, which have seven planets; there are seven earths, seven seas,
seven climes, seven strong winds, seven days of the week,–these makes seven times
seven. Man has seven parts of the body: Two hands, two feet and legs, a face, nose, liver
stomach, lungs, spleen and kidneys. In another way: hair, skin, flesh, bones, veins, fat
and blood. Also seven senses of perception: hearing, sight, taste, smell, growth, reasoning
and imagination. Seven forms of instinct: attraction, touch, digestion, repulsion,
direction, growth and procreation. Man comes out of seven substances: plasm, clay,
sperm, clotted blood, foetus, flesh and bones….” (Kalami Pir p97)
On could quote much more numbers, all of which has mysterious significance–a part of
the meaning that members of the hierarchy need to be acquainted with.
The Nizari Hierarchy
Again and again the people of this branch of Ismailism are referred to as “the people of
degrees.” Nowhere in the sectarian writings of this period do we find a series of
initiations in which all members of the community are promoted degree by degree, but it
seems to be open to any Ismaili to advance through grades of dai. The reference to
“people of degrees” would seem to mean those whose teachers are graded in a hierarchy
similar to, and yet differing from, that which we found among the western Ismailis
(Fatimids). As given in the Book on the Recognition of the Imam, the degrees are as
follows:
Imam, the manifestation of the Divine Will
Hujjat, the manifestation of Universal Reason
Dai, the preacher
Madhun: akbar, the more informed
Madhun: asghar, the less informed
Mustajib, the neophyte, needs instruction, but is not allowed to teached
“people of opposition” (adversaries of the religion, who are a manifestation of Universal
Body
The author of Raudat al taslim also staes that these degrees are ‘seven in all,” but groups
them in threee, namely, teachers and hujjat.
Religious duties
The seven pillars, or religious duties of the Nizari Ismailis are usually listed as follows:
Shahadat or witness; taharat or purification; namaz or prayers; roza or fasting; zakat or
religious tax; hajj or pilgrimage; and jihad or religious war. Two other duties are
incumbent on every Ismaili, namely love for Ali and his family, and the recognition of
the Imam. Sectarian works dwell at greater lenght on these than they do on the pillars.
The new era initiated by Hasan II was marked by the lifting of the restrictions and
prohibitions of the shariah as introduced by the Prophet.
“It means that to those who did not acquire the knowledge (of the Imam) even the things
are prohibited which are allowed by the shariah, but to the knower even that which is
prohibited by the orthodox doctrines is permitted, as (drinking) wine, etc. (Ivanow,
Ismailitica. p 39)
“Our Lord, the King of the day of Resurrection is the Lord of the time, …His rules and
laws of Resurrection are the inner meaning of the prescription of the shariah. The angels
conveying the reward are functionaries of his religion. The inhabitants of Paradise are
those who became emancipated from the letter of the Law (zahir) and who attained the
understanding of its inner meaning (batin). In this world their reward is their being
relieved from undergoing the obligatory rules imposed by the shariah.” (Kalami Pir. p.
91)
This inner meaning, which is the only real meaning, since the people of degrees have
escaped from the zahir, is expressed for several pillars as follows:
Zadat
Dr Syed Mujtaba Ali says that after the recognition of the Imam, zadat, or almsgiving:
“is the second most important pillar….although interpreted allegorically as meaning the
sanctifying of life by means of the understanding of mankind, in practice it means the
giving of one fifth of on’e earnings to the Imam or to one of his deputies.” (p.33)
The author of the Book on the Recognition of the Imam devotes a section to this subject
in which he says:
“It is understood also that the religion of this sect is the true teaching of the Lord and his
Hujjat, and therefore the (material) value of the Truth which they both know (must be)
everything (one possesses), not only the one tenth prescribed by shairah. This one tenth is
the price of the shariah and is not worth more….The Truth can be obtained only by
those…who will sacrifice everything they possess for the sake of Truth. But whoever will
keep for himself a trifle shall not acquire the Truth….If he will hand to him all he
possesses, keeping nothing for himself, he will become a king and lord of both worlds
(Ivanow, Ismailitica. 43/44)
“The meaning of the zadat, or religious tax, is teaching the religion and making it reach
the faithful in accordance with their capacity to understand it.” (Kalami Pir. 92)
Shahadat
The word, shahadat, means “the refutation of the false and the affirmation of the Truth,”
or “to know God as God” in accordance with Ismaili doctrine.
Taharat
Ceremonial purification, or taharat:
“is to pass beyond custom and sunnat. (Ivanow. An Ismailitic Work. p 560)
“Its meaning is making oneself clean from the acts which are committed by those who
stick only to the outward side, zahir, of the teaching. Ablution means the returning to the
knowledge of the Imam. (Kalami Pir. p. 90)
“Ghusl or bathing is a renewal of the covenant. Zina (adultery) is equivalent to divulging
the mysteries of religion. (The Origins of the Khojahs. p. 33)
“which means becoming free from association with the adversaries.” (Kalami Pir p 91)
Namaz
In Kalami Pir, namaz or prayer, has the meaning of “reaching the knowledge of the Imam
and of the true religion.” (p 91)
“The meaning of the chief mosque is the hajjat, as all come around him; other mosques
are the teachers. The meaning of the qibla is the turning of everybody towrds the hajjat,
which is necessary; but the hujjat turns his face towards the Imam only.” (Kalami Pir. p.
91/92)
Roza
“Fasting means keeping silent as to what the Imam does, not trying to find his faults, and
recognizing all his actions as just even if they are blameable and impious. (The Origins of
the Khojahs. p. 32)
“(Roza) is to observe taqiya and not divulge the religious secrets.” (Kalami Pir. 92)
Hajj
“Pilgrimage denotes going and seeing the Imam and the seven ciruits around the Kaba
are to be devoted to him. (The Origins of the Khojahs. p. 46)
“The meaning of hajj, or pilgrimage to Kaba, is gradually abandoning beliefs which one
orginally had, and advancing by stages, from mustajib to hujjat. The uttering of the
formula of labbay-ka means accepting the preaching of the dai. And putting on the
special pilgrim’s dress, ihram, means getting away from the practice and the society of
people who stick only to the letter of the religion, zahir. (Kalami Pir. p 92)
Jihad
“Jihad is to make oneself non-existent in the Substance of God. (Ivanow. An Ismailitic
Work. p. 560)
“….is the scrutinizing of the arguement of those who are repugnant and bring to naught
their sayings by intellectual proofs and decisive arguements. (The Origins of the Khojahs.
p. 32/33)