
The Arba'een
pilgrimage to Karbala has been underway since 10 October. It will grow in number rising to perhaps more
than 25 million people a few days before America’s Thanksgiving. It is the largest annual
religious pilgrimage in the world, bigger than the Haaj to Mecca, and, dwarfing
the ‘Way-of-Saint-James’ pilgrimage to Santiago
de Compostela. The pilgrimage is in mourning
of Husayn ibn Ali (sometimes called Hussein), the grandson of the prophet Mohammed. The vast majority of the pilgrims will be
Shia, but a small percentage will include Sunni, Christian, Yazidi,
Sabaean and others. The Vatican has sent
delegations in the past, and perhaps Patriarch Kirill of Moscow will send a delegation also. Most pilgrims walk 85
kilometers (~52 miles) over several days from Najaf. Some walk in crutches. Some will walk all the way from Basra. Many will come from India, Africa, Europe,
southern Russia, Central Asia, and the Americas. There will also be smaller versions in London,
Toronto, Dearborn and Los Angeles. The
one in Karbala itself will be a major target for Daesh or other Salafists, and
maybe the overseas ones will also be targets of terror. I wonder if
the Iraqi Army and Iraqi state sponsored militias will hold off on using more units in retaking Mosul until after Arba’een is
over so they can provide security in Karbala and Najaf? Or conversely, will they perhaps try to speed up Mosul Ops to declare victory before Arba'een is ended? But I don't believe they have enough time to do that before the 20th.
It
all started with the Battle of Karbala. Not
the latest one in 2007, when the Mahdi Army clashed with gunmen of the Badr Brigades. That fight was essentially a power struggle between
Muqtada al-Sadr and Nouri al-Maliki as to who would provide security for the
pilgrims from the danger of Salafi jihadist bombers. They and their followers essentially went to
war with each other for the honor of who would be the ‘Defenders of the Faith’.
Not the one in 1991 when the Medina Division shelled Karbala with tanks and artillery for a week in order to suppress Shia uprisings. They destroyed entire neighborhoods, killing thousands. That was one of the incidents that led to Operation Southern Watch which imposed a useless No Fly Zone below the 32nd Parallel. That NFZ was ineffective because there were no friendly units on the ground below it to keep Sadaam's ground troops or attack helos from persecuting the Shia again. The NFZ over the Kurdish regions in the north worked much better as the Peshmerga could counteract Sadaam's ground actions.
Not the 1849 siege by the Ottoman army in order to reassert the Sultan's authority over the city. They killed approximately 15% of the city population.
And not the 1802 sack of the city by 12000 Wahhabis. They killed a few thousand residents, ransacked Husayn's tomb, and needed 4000 camels to carry home the loot.
The
original Battle of Karbala took place over 1300 years ago in the year 61
of the Islamic Calendar (680 CE). Husayn,
his family and a small group of followers were defeated by a several thousand
man Syrian Army of the Umayyads. Husayn
and at least 72(?) were beheaded. 14 of the 72 were liberated slaves including a Christian, John bin Huwai, who died fighting for Husayn. The name the “Prince of Martyrs” has long since been a title given
to Husayn. That battle has been made the subject of a
historical religious movie by award winning Iranian film director Ahmad Reza Darvish. It has English subtitles. Darvish also had help from major British film studios and Academy Award nominated Indian film
editor Tariq Anwar.
There are also scores of videos on YouTube showing more detail on the actual Arba'een pilgrimage walk. One worth seeing IMO (and less than four minutes long) is https://www.youtube.com/shared?ci=BIv4ofSz7_0
And not the 1802 sack of the city by 12000 Wahhabis. They killed a few thousand residents, ransacked Husayn's tomb, and needed 4000 camels to carry home the loot.
The
original Battle of Karbala took place over 1300 years ago in the year 61
of the Islamic Calendar (680 CE). Husayn,
his family and a small group of followers were defeated by a several thousand
man Syrian Army of the Umayyads. Husayn
and at least 72(?) were beheaded. 14 of the 72 were liberated slaves including a Christian, John bin Huwai, who died fighting for Husayn. The name the “Prince of Martyrs” has long since been a title given
to Husayn. That battle has been made the subject of a
historical religious movie by award winning Iranian film director Ahmad Reza Darvish. It has English subtitles. Darvish also had help from major British film studios and Academy Award nominated Indian film
editor Tariq Anwar.There are also scores of videos on YouTube showing more detail on the actual Arba'een pilgrimage walk. One worth seeing IMO (and less than four minutes long) is https://www.youtube.com/shared?ci=BIv4ofSz7_0
