What do you want to know in particular?
Well.
I do not personally think all of the caliphates were rightly guided. Because for sure there were caliphates who were horrible to their subordinates.
Is there a consensus of which ones were guided and which ones were led astray? Also would it be bad to reject the leadership of caliphates if they displayed bad behaviour?
Did the prophet state that these were the rightly guided caliphs? Or did he mean that those that are rightly guided qualify as rightly guided? Uthman had a lot of problems in the way he ruled ....
What problems were those?
Well.
I do not personally think all of the caliphates were rightly guided. Because for sure there were caliphates who were horrible to their subordinates.
Is there a consensus of which ones were guided and which ones were led astray? Also would it be bad to reject the leadership of caliphates if they displayed bad behaviour?
Ok so I understand that the first four who ruled. Such as until 661. Just around 30 years after his death. But what troubles me is that Muawiya demanded the death of those who murdered Uthman, and Ali refused to accept this demand as something conditional to his rule. Since he didn't need to prove to Muawiya that he was fit to rule, since he had been one of the appointed caliphs in the first place.
Did this not lead to the division of the Sunni and the Shia
If people refuse to also follow Ali and understand his authority. Are these people also then refusing the command to follow the first four caliphs? Ali being the last.
Ali radiAllahu anh never *refused* to punish the murderers of Uthman. There was too much chaos in the Islamic state at that time, and he wanted to resolve other issues first.
Shias are a totally different story.
We love all the ashaab, and we believe what happened to ahlul bayt was wrong.
They were supposed to give pledge of allegiance to Ali. And as I said earlier, ashaab were humans.
it might have originated from there, maybe the roots but the sunni and shia dispute started when imam hussein was martyred.I was under the impression that this dispute between Ali and Muawiya is what caused the actual political dispute between the Shia and the Sunni.
Did the Sunni not side with Muawiya and thus neglected the rightly guided caliph of Ali?
I was under the impression that this dispute between Ali and Muawiya is what caused the actual political dispute between the Shia and the Sunni.
Did the Sunni not side with Muawiya and thus neglected the rightly guided caliph of Ali?
Salaam
No There was no sunni and shia clear position at the time of Muawiya (ra) and Ali (ra) - After the battle of Siffin Muawiya Controlled Damascus and the surrounding region - Ali Controlled Kufa and the Surrounding region. The Sunnis hold the position that after Uthamn (ra) Ali (ra) is the rightly guided Caliph. However Muawiya (ra) with all his differences with Ali (ra) is still a companion of the prophet and he also helped the Ummah against the Byzantines at the time - he is respected for that reason.
Ali (ra) and Muwaiya (ra) agreed to rule the two regions until the Khawirj Killed Ali (ra) after that Hasan met with Muwaiya and gave him the caliphate and united the Ummah.
Ok so who killed Ali's son in the battle at Karbala?
yazid( muawiya's son) and his army.
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