The National - 10 Oct 2018
From Moqtada Al Sadr's
uncle to Gertrude Bell, Najaf's old city has welcomed many famous guests
In the covered alleyways
of old Najaf in Iraq, poetry and philosophy books compete on laden shelves with
economic treatises, the Quran and other theological tomes for students'
attention.Since leaving his native Bangladesh for the Shiite holy city three years
ago, religious student Mohammed Ali Reda has regularly frequented secondhand
bookstores. There are many like him in Najaf. Some wear turbans - black for
descendants of the Prophet Mohammed, and white for religious scholars.
"I am still at the
start of my apprenticeship", said Reda, in one of the dozens of bookshops
in the city's Howeish market. Wearing a simple white robe and scarf, he speaks
in hesitant Arabic, like his Iranian, Pakistani and Turkish student peers.
"For the moment, we
have lessons in Arabic, law and Islamic morals", he added.
he 19-year-old avidly
seeks advice on books on Islamic law, religious principles and other lessons of
Shiite Islam. While Iraq is majority Shiite, only a minority follow this strand
of Islam in Reda's homeland, like most of the rest of the Muslim world.
Several decades Reda's
senior, Mohannad Mustapha Jamal el Din - a religious student turned teacher -
also feels at home among the bookstalls.
Najaf's 750-year-old
market helps make it a "city apart", he enthused.
Located 150 kilometres
south of Baghdad, the city welcomes millions of Shiite pilgrims every year. They
come to visit the tomb of Imam Ali, son-in-law of the Prophet Mohammed and a
founding figure of Shiite Islam. Najaf "is like no other city in Iraq -
(it's) steeped in religion and literature", said Jamal el Din, sporting
the black turban.
Among the crowds of
religious students, there are also poetry lovers.
Some,
like Jamal el Din, have a foot in both camps.
"One can be versed
in both fields - (knowledge of) one does not preclude the other".
Iraqi
poet Mohammed Mahdi Al Jawahiri could be found in Najaf's alleyways and
bookstores in the 1920s, as he progressed from strict religious instruction to
militant journalism in Baghdad.Twenty-one years after his death, his
collections sit on shelves that heave with a splendid array of titles,
stretching to the arcane such as "Islamic economy - Marxist or
Capitalist?". Other one-time students have found their calling in the maze
of Najaf's old city, and become famous in their own right.
Examples include the
Grand Ayatollah Ali Sistani, the spiritual leader of Iraq's Shiite majority,
and Mohammed Bakr Sadr, a great Shiite thinker.
Sadr
was killed by former dictator Saddam Hussein's regime, and was an uncle of
political heavyweight Moqtada Al Sadr, whose electoral list won the largest
number of seats in Iraq's legislative elections in May. Until the 1950s,
secondhand bookstores held weekly meetings for students in Najaf, according to
Hassan Al Hakim, an expert in history and Islamic civilisation. They
"gathered near Imam Ali's tomb and every Friday they sold works at
auction, including many original editions", said the professor of Kufa
University, who has set up a heritage association for Najaf.
Famed British
archaeologist Gertrude Bell "visited the Najaf book market" in the
early 20th century, Mr Hakim said.
The academic contends
that the city's special status should not be threatened by the shift of much
academic literature online. "We want our students to view books as their
primary source, ahead of the internet" for verified information, Mr Hakim
said.
And "by looking for
a book, we can find others that interest us", he noted.
Source: www.thenational.ae
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