| advertise add site services publishers database health videos | ![]() | about toolbar stats live show health store more stuff JOIN/LOGIN |
Sayyed Abdul Aziz al-Hakim (Arabic: سید عبد العزيز الحكيم) (1950 - August 26, 2009 in Tehran, Iran) was an Iraqi theologian and politician and the leader of Islamic Supreme Council of Iraq, the largest political party in the Iraqi Council of Representatives. He was a member of the United States-appointed Iraqi Governing Council and served as its president in December 2003. Brother of the Shia leader Mohammed Baqir al-Hakim, he replaced him as leader of the Supreme Council for the Islamic Revolution in Iraq when Mohammed Baqir was assassinated in August 2003 in Najaf.
[edit] Early lifeHe was born in 1953,[1] the son of Grand Ayatollah Muhsin Al-Hakim. Raised in Najaf and then received his theological education through the religious school there, known as the Hawza. He was married to the daughter of Mohammed Hadi al-Sadr and he was the father of two girls and two boys. His son Muhsin Abdul Aziz al-Hakim was a political adviser for him while his other son Ammar al-Hakim is the Secretary General of Al-Mihrab Martyr Foundation. Seven of Abdul Aziz al-Hakim brothers have been killed, six of them on the orders of Saddam Hussein. He played a leading role in the Safar Intifada in 1977 and was imprisoned in 1972, 1977 and 1979. He went into exile in Iran in 1980, where he was a founding member in 1982 of SIIC and headed their military wing, the Badr Organization. He was the top candidate listed for the United Iraqi Coalition during the first Iraqi legislative election of January 2005 but did not seek a government post because the Alliance had decided not to include theologians in the government.[2] [edit] U.S. visitsOn December 4, 2006, al-Hakim met with George W. Bush whereat he made a commitment to help end violence,
Al-Hakim also gave his assessment of the situation in Iraq:
Abdul Aziz al-Hakim with Donald Rumsfeld On December 5, 2006, on behalf of The Catholic University of America and American University's Center for Global Peace, he spoke at the Pope John Paul II Cultural Center. The title of his speech was "Freedom and Tolerance in Shi'a Islam and the Future of Iraq". Notable guests at this event included Archbishop Donald Wuerl of Washington, D.C. and Rabbi Professor Ephraim Isaac from the Institute of Semitic Studies in Princeton, New Jersey. [edit] Illness and deathOn May 16, 2007 he flew to Houston for medical treatment. Reportedly he had lung cancer.[4] On May 20, 2007, Mr. Hakim left the U.S. for Iran, in order to receive chemotherapy treatment.[5] On August 26, 2009 Abdel Aziz al-Hakim died in a Tehran hospital after a long battle with lung cancer.[6] He was buried in Najaf on August 29, in the same crypt of his brother, who was killed exactly six years earlier.[7] [edit] References and notes
[edit] External links
| |||||||||||||||||||||||||||
| ↑ top of page ↑ | about thumbshots |