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"Taqiyah" redirects here. For the cap, see Taqiyah (cap).
See also: Persecution of Shia Muslims and Abdullah ibn Saba Within the Shia theological framework,[1] the concept of Taqiyya (تقية - 'fear, guard against', also taghiyeh)[2] refers to a dispensation allowing believers to conceal their faith when under threat, persecution or compulsion.[3] The word "al-Taqiyya" literally means: "Concealing or disguising one's beliefs, convictions, ideas, feelings, opinions, and/or strategies at a time of imminent danger, whether now or later in time, to save oneself from physical and/or mental injury." A one-word translation would be "dissimulation." [4]
[edit] Shi'i ViewAn eminent Shia authority, Ayatollah Sistani describes the concept of Taqiyya as follows: "1)Taqiyah is done for safety reasons. For example, a person fears that he might be killed or harmed, if he does not observe Taqiyah. In this case, it is obligatory to observe Taqiyah. The Taqiyah doctrine is based on the following verse from Qur'an 3:28: "Let not the believers take for friends or helpers unbelievers rather than believers. If any do that, in nothing will there be help from Allah; except by way of precaution, that ye may guard yourselves from them". Sunni commentator Ibn Kathir explained that "believers that fear for their safety from the unbelievers... are allowed to show friendship to the unbelievers outwardly, but never inwardly". According to the Shia scholar Muhammad Husain Jafari Sahiwal, Shi'ism would not have spread if it wasn't for taqqiyah. (Referring to instances where Shiites have been ruthlessly persecuted by the Sunni political elite, during the Umayyad and Abbasid empires.[6].prefix:Wikipedia talk:Citing sources/
[edit] Use in politicsMuslims and Islamists are sometimes accused of practicing Taqiyya in contemporary political debates. For instance, this accusation has been levelled by Fouad Ajami at the theologian Tariq Ramadan,[7] by James Woolsey at Islamist terrorists,[8] and by Michael Rubin and others at the government of Iran.[9][10] Others have responded that the accusers misunderstand the meaning of the term and that politicians of all religions lie, including (presumably) Muslim politicians.[7][11][12] [edit] See also
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