Mohammad Bagher Shafti

Mohammad Bagher Shafti (Persian: محمدباقر شفتی; 1767 in Shaft – 22 March 1844 in Isfahan), was an Iranian shia clergyman. The Seyyed mosque in Isfahan was built by him. According to Hossein Nasr and Hamid Dabashi, he is probably the first clergyman to be given the title Hojatoleslam (from Arabic: حجة الإسلام, romanizedḥujjat al-islām). This title was bestowed upon him in recognition of his double role as both judge and Mufti, as well as his book about the execution of Sharia.[1][2]

Mohammad Bagher Shafti
Image of Shafti, created in Qajar Iran, dated 1843
Personal
Born1767
Died1844(1844-00-00) (aged 76–77)
ReligionShi'ism
DenominationShia
CreedTwelver

Biography edit

Shafti belonged to a impoverished family from Shaft, which is fifteen miles south of Rasht. He had spent a significant amount of time in Iran getting a madrasa education and had attended the most relevant Najaf teaching circles.[3]

Despite not being a resident of the city, Shafti steadily advanced in the religious hierarchy in Isfahan, which was recovering its position as the most significant religious center in Iran. He established himself by, among other things, handing out harsh legal judgments, lashing moral offenders, destroying wine cellars and musical instruments, expelling prostitutes from the city, fining drunkards. He also allegedly in took up the task of executing around 70 people he had sentenced to death. In one instance, Shafti beheaded a pederasty suspect and then offered prayers during the body's burial. He was the leader of a well-liked teaching group, seized the management of disputed or unclaimed religious endowments (vaqf), and accumulated substantial private holdings like villages, farms, and retail malls.[3]

At the time, Isfahan had only recently started to recover after decades of decline and depopulation. Together with a merchant from Gilan, Shafti conducted business, bought property, and amassed wealth through prudent investments and even money lending, which was against the prohibition against usury in Islam.[3]

References edit

  1. ^ Seyyed Vali Reza Nasr, Hamid Dabashi: Expectation of the Millennium. State University of New York Press, S. 205–206
  2. ^ Ahmad Kazemi Moussavi: "The Institutionalization of Marja'-i Taqlīd in the Nineteenth Century Shī'ite Community." Journal of The Muslim World. Band 84, Nr. 3–4, S. 279–299, 2007, S. 296
  3. ^ a b c Amanat 2017, p. 206.

Sources edit

  • Amanat, Abbas (2017). Iran: A Modern History. Yale University Press. ISBN 978-0300112542.