Jump to content

Hadi al-Modarresi: Difference between revisions

From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
Content deleted Content added
Ofcom1 (talk | contribs)
removing smearing campaign attempt for political agendas
m Reverted edits by Ofcom1 (talk): nonconstructive edits (HG) (3.4.4)
Line 14: Line 14:
Almodarresi eluded execution by moving from house to house, often living in cellars for months and traveling in disguise. His uncle Ayatollah Sayed Hassan Al Shirazi was gunned down by Iraqi government assassins in Beirut for his role as a key opposition figure to Saddam's regime.{{citation needed|date=November 2011}}
Almodarresi eluded execution by moving from house to house, often living in cellars for months and traveling in disguise. His uncle Ayatollah Sayed Hassan Al Shirazi was gunned down by Iraqi government assassins in Beirut for his role as a key opposition figure to Saddam's regime.{{citation needed|date=November 2011}}


==Bahraini coup d'état==
With the escalation of the Ba’athist repression, Hadi fled Iraq and found sanctuary in [[Bahrain]], where he gained citizenship in 1974,<ref name="EhteshamiQuilliam2016">{{cite book|author1=Anoushiravan Ehteshami|author2=Neil Quilliam|author3=Gawdat Bahgat|title=Security and Bilateral Issues between Iran and its Arab Neighbours|url=https://books.google.com/books?id=NpLJDQAAQBAJ&pg=PA67|date=21 December 2016|publisher=Springer|isbn=978-3-319-43289-2|pages=67–}}</ref> and rose to international prominence. In 1979, Hadi Almodarresi left Bahrain for Iran, either because his passport expired, or because he was deported.<ref name="RamazaniKechichian1988">{{cite book|author1=Rouhollah K. Ramazani|author2=Joseph A. Kechichian|title=The Gulf Cooperation Council: Record and Analysis|url=https://books.google.com/books?id=hyXcVOV4G6YC&pg=PA33|year=1988|publisher=University of Virginia Press|isbn=978-0-8139-1148-9|pages=33–}}</ref><ref>[https://www.reuters.com/article/us-bahrain-party-closed-idUSBRE86910B20120710 Bahrain closes Islamist party, cites "violent" cleric], Reuters, 10 July 2012</ref>

In 1981, Hadi's brother Taqi formed the [[Islamic Front for the Liberation of Bahrain]], and appointed Hadi as leader of the organization. The professed aim of the Front was the ‘uprising of all Muslims under Imam Khomeini’.<ref>Iran’s Persian Gulf Policy: From Khomeini to Khatami by Christin Marschall, Routledge, 2003, p32</ref> It came to international prominence as the front organization for the [[1981 Bahraini coup d'état attempt|1981 failed coup in Bahrain]], which attempted to install Hadi Almodarresi as the spiritual leader of a theocratic Shia state.<ref>Low Intensity Conflict in the Third World Stephen Blank, et al, Inc NetLibrary, Press, Air University (U.S.), 1988, p8</ref> Almodarresi in addition to heading the IFLB served as Khomeini’s “personal representative” in Bahrain.<ref>Iran’s Persian Gulf Policy: From Khomeini to Khatami by Christin Marschall, Routledge, 2003, p32</ref>


== Return to Iraq ==
== Return to Iraq ==

Revision as of 09:32, 8 July 2018

Ayatollah Sayed Hadi Almodarresi or al-Modarresi (Template:Lang-ar; Hādī al-Mudarrisī) (1957– ) is an Iraqi Shi'a scholar and leader. Much of his career was marked by opposition to the government of Saddam Hussein, and he spent many years in exile. Almodarresi returned to Iraq following the 2003 collapse of Saddam's regime, and administers humanitarian projects in Iraq.

Early life

Almodarresi was born in 1957 to a family with a long line of top-ranking scholars that dominated the hawza (Religious seminarie) for many years in Karbala, Iraq. His family includes supreme religious jurists (marja’a) such as Grand Ayatollah Mirza Mahdi Al Shirazi (grandfather), Grand Ayatollah Mohammad Shirazi (uncle) and Grand Ayatollah Sadiq Shirazi (uncle), Grand Ayatollah Ali Al-Sabzowari (cousin), Grand Ayatollah Sayed Abdul Hadi Al-Shirazi (great uncle), as well as Grand Ayatollah Mohammad Taqi Al Modarresi (brother).

Almodarresi started his religious education in the Religious seminary of Karbala at the age of three and actively sought his religious studies under the auspices of many high ranking scholars. He completed the secondary part of the curriculum by the age of nine. Due to his distinguished abilities Almodarresi received the recognition of several maraje’ who appointed him as their special representative. Being A faith leader Bahrain, Grand Ayatollah Sabzewari and Grand Ayatollah Mar’ashi Najafi also awarded Almodarresi power of representation in which they praised him and labeled him as “scholar worthy of taking a leadership position” and urging Shias to follow his lead.[citation needed]

Opposition to Saddam Hussein

Almodarresi's advocacy of political freedom and strong stance against terrorism started from an early age when Saddam Hussein came to power in Iraq. Seventeen members of his wife’s family were executed by Saddam's regime or simply disappeared in the notorious Baathist penitentiaries. Almodarresi wrote the first book openly attacking the Iraqi regime ever to be published by a religious scholar. Published under a pseudonym in Beirut, the book was titled No To Rulers of Iraq and sparked a massive political crisis in Baghdad and caused the Baathist regime to issue an ultimatum for the removal of all Lebanese nationals from Iraq within 72 hours.[citation needed]

Almodarresi eluded execution by moving from house to house, often living in cellars for months and traveling in disguise. His uncle Ayatollah Sayed Hassan Al Shirazi was gunned down by Iraqi government assassins in Beirut for his role as a key opposition figure to Saddam's regime.[citation needed]

Bahraini coup d'état

With the escalation of the Ba’athist repression, Hadi fled Iraq and found sanctuary in Bahrain, where he gained citizenship in 1974,[1] and rose to international prominence. In 1979, Hadi Almodarresi left Bahrain for Iran, either because his passport expired, or because he was deported.[2][3]

In 1981, Hadi's brother Taqi formed the Islamic Front for the Liberation of Bahrain, and appointed Hadi as leader of the organization. The professed aim of the Front was the ‘uprising of all Muslims under Imam Khomeini’.[4] It came to international prominence as the front organization for the 1981 failed coup in Bahrain, which attempted to install Hadi Almodarresi as the spiritual leader of a theocratic Shia state.[5] Almodarresi in addition to heading the IFLB served as Khomeini’s “personal representative” in Bahrain.[6]

Return to Iraq

Upon returning to Iraq after the fall of Saddam’s regime, he was greeted by over 30,000 people in Baghdad and 50,000 in Sadr City and a similar crowd in his native city of Karbala.[citation needed]

Almodarresi established a television station upon his return to his hometown. He is also involved in several large-scale humanitarian projects in Iraq and has been involved in the building of mosques, schools, medical clinics, orphanages, and has been a stanch advocate of women's rights and consistently speaks out against the oppression of women in his lectures and books. He also facilitates marriage by providing financial help to people who wish to get married and has organized several large mass marriage ceremonies. Almodarresi also founded and currently heads the League of Religious Scholars which brings together many high ranking Shi’ite scholars or their representatives in Iraq.[citation needed]

References

  1. ^ Anoushiravan Ehteshami; Neil Quilliam; Gawdat Bahgat (21 December 2016). Security and Bilateral Issues between Iran and its Arab Neighbours. Springer. pp. 67–. ISBN 978-3-319-43289-2.
  2. ^ Rouhollah K. Ramazani; Joseph A. Kechichian (1988). The Gulf Cooperation Council: Record and Analysis. University of Virginia Press. pp. 33–. ISBN 978-0-8139-1148-9.
  3. ^ Bahrain closes Islamist party, cites "violent" cleric, Reuters, 10 July 2012
  4. ^ Iran’s Persian Gulf Policy: From Khomeini to Khatami by Christin Marschall, Routledge, 2003, p32
  5. ^ Low Intensity Conflict in the Third World Stephen Blank, et al, Inc NetLibrary, Press, Air University (U.S.), 1988, p8
  6. ^ Iran’s Persian Gulf Policy: From Khomeini to Khatami by Christin Marschall, Routledge, 2003, p32
  • Official website
  • Arabic biography, excerpts from a biography of Ayatollah Almodarresi, by Mansour Al Sheikh, "Allamah Sayed Hadi Almodarresi; His Positions, His Thoughts", Beirut, Lebanon 1991. Reprinted in Baghdad, Iraq 2004.]