Ali, first Imam of the Shiites. The Arabic text, starting up in the right corner, translates: "God's messenger [prophet Muhammad] said: 'He whose lord I am, also has Ali as his Lord.'" The text comes from a hadith, a Tradition / about the prophet Muhammad: Shortly before the prophet Muhammad died he made his last pilgrimage to Mecca. According to this hadith, transmited among others by the Sunni scholar Ahmad ibn Hanbal, Muhammad and his following rested on their journey back to Medina at a place called Ghadir Khumm. There, the Prophet took Ali's hand and held it up, and said to his followers: "He whose lord I am, also has Ali as his lord. O Lord, be a support for all who are the support of Ali, and be the enemy of all who oppose him." This narrative is one of the texts that Shia Muslims use in arguing that Ali is the rightful heir to leadership in the Muslim community, and the first Imam. Original: Small images, Ingvild Flaskerud, Qum 1999. Ali with his sword Dhu 'l-Faqar. The Farsi text on the image encourages the viewer to learn from Ali's way of way of being. Ali is one of the great models for all Muslims, but for Shia Muslims in particular. Original: Small images, Ingvild Flaskerud, Qum 1999.
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