Musa al-Musawi
Imam Dr[citation needed] Musa al-Musawi | |
---|---|
Title | Imam Dr[citation needed] |
Personal | |
Born | 1930 |
Died | 1997 |
Religion | Islam |
Nationality | Iranian, Iraqi |
Main interest(s) | Islamic philosophy |
Notable idea(s) | Shia reformism |
Notable work(s) | The Miserable Revolution, Shiah:a critical revision |
Occupation | Professor |
Muslim leader | |
Disciple of | Abu l-Hasan al-Isfahani, Abu al-Qasim al-Khoei |
Influenced by | |
Post | Professor of Islamic Economics at the University of Tehran 1960-1963,
Lecturer of Islamic Philosophy at the Baghdad University 1968-78 as a professor, Visiting fellow at the Halle University (GDR) and Tripoli University in Libya 1973-1974, Research associate at the Harvard University 1975-1978 and lecturer at the University of California, Los Angeles 1978 |
Musa al-Musawi (1930-1997) was a Muslim scholar and professor of philosophy, he wrote books on philosophy[1] and revisionist texts on Shia Islam.[2] His grandfather was Grand Ayatullah Abu al-Hasan al-Esfahani whom he lived with for 17 years after the assassination of his father.[1] He was educated at Najaf traditional religious school and was awarded the highest certificate in Islamic Law (Ijtihad) from its university.[1][better source needed] He was also the 20th Majles deputy for Lanjan (1961).
Timeline of his life
[edit]- Pursued his studies at the University of Tehran and obtained a doctorate's in Islamic Law in 1955.
- Studied at Sorbonne University where he earned his second doctorates in 1959.
- Professor of Islamic Economics at the University of Tehran 1960–1963.
- Elected deputy for Isfahan in the Iranian Parliament 1960–1963.
- Narrowly escaped death when some Basra based Savak agents of Mohammad Reza Pahlavi, the shah of Iran made an attempt on his life in 1968.
- Lecturer of Islamic Philosophy at the Baghdad University 1968-78 as a professor.
- Was for some time visiting fellow at the Halle University (GDR) and Tripoli University in Libya 1973–1974.
- Became a research associate at the Harvard University 1975-1978 and lecturer at the University of California, Los Angeles 1978.
- Dr Musa al-Musawi ran for the presidential election after the Islamic revolution of Iran, 1980.
- President of the High Islamic Council of the Americas since 1981 and founder of Human rights for Islamic countries from 1992 to 1997.
Books
[edit]al-Musawi wrote many books over a variety of topics.[2][3]
Books on Shiite doctrine
[edit]- al-Shi’a wa-l-tashih: al-Sira’ bayn al-shi’a wa-l-tashayyu’ (the struggle between Shia and Shiism), 160 pages (Los Angeles 1987, Cairo 1989, Paris 1997), is a "refutation" of all parts of Shia Islam in its present existing form, with the author's aim of "purging Shiism of all aberrations and deviations that were inflicted upon it over the course of time."
- al-Sarkha al-kubra. ‘Aqidat al-shi’a fi usul al-din wa-furu’ihi fi ‘asr al-a’imma wa-ba’dahum (Los Angeles 1991)
- Ya shi’at al-‘alam istayqiza (s.l., ca. 1995),
- al-Thawra al-ba’isa (The Miserable Revolution):[4] a critique of Ruhollah Khomeini and the Islamic Republic of Iran.
- al-Mudtahidan
Books on Islamic philosophy
[edit]- Min al-Suhrawardi ila l-Kindi (Beirut 1979)
- Min al-Kindi ila ibn Rushd (Beirut, Paris 1977)
- al-Jadid fi falsafat Sadr al-Din al-Shirazi (Baghdad 1978)
Books on contemporary politics within Iran in the 1970s and ‘80s
[edit]- Iran fi rub qarn (Baghdad 1972)
- al-Thawra al-ba’isa (s.l., ca. 1985)
Iranian Oral History Project
[edit]Dr Musa al-Musawi was interviewed for 5 hours by Shahla Haeri for Harvards the Iranian Oral History Project, the project is a collection of personal accounts of 134 individuals who played major roles in or were eyewitnesses to important political events in Iran from the 1920s to the 1980s. Amongst the people interviewed are Massoud Rajavi, Shapour Bakhtiar, Abolhassan Banisadr and Mehdi Haeri Yazdi.
See also
[edit]Notes
[edit]- ^ a b c al-Musawi, Musa. The miserable revolution.
- ^ a b "A Shiite cleric's criticism of Shiism: Musa al-Musawi". freidok.uni-freiburg.de.
- ^ Brunner, Rainer; Ende, Werner (January 1, 2001). The Twelver Shia in Modern Times: Religious Culture and Political History. BRILL. ISBN 9004118039 – via Google Books.
- ^ al-Duktūr, Mūsawī, Mūsá (January 23, 1987). The miserable revolution. Dar Al-Maʼmun. OL 2104944M.
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: CS1 maint: multiple names: authors list (link)
External links
[edit]Media related to Musa al-Musawi at Wikimedia Commons
- Iranian Oral History Project, Interview with Al-Musawi-Esfahani, Musa: Tape 01
- Iranian Oral History Project, Interview with Al-Musawi-Esfahani, Musa: Tape 02
- Iranian Oral History Project, Interview with Al-Musawi-Esfahani, Musa: Tape 03
- Iranian Oral History Project, Interview with Al-Musawi-Esfahani, Musa: Tape 04
- Iranian Oral History Project, Interview with Al-Musawi-Esfahani, Musa: Tape 05
- Shiah:a critical revision
- 1930 births
- 1997 deaths
- People from Najaf
- Academic staff of the University of Tehran
- Iranian scholars
- 20th-century Iranian writers
- Iranian Sunni Muslims
- Academic staff of the University of Baghdad
- Iraqi former Shia Muslims
- Iraqi people of Iranian descent
- Musawis
- Critics of Shia Islam
- Converts to Sunni Islam from Shia Islam
- 20th-century Iranian philosophers