Hatim ibn Ibrahim al-Hamidi () (died 16
Muharram 596
AH, 6 November 1199 AD), Al-Hutaib,
Yemen) was the third
Tayyibi Isma'ili ''
Dāʿī al-Muṭlaq'' (Absolute Missionary). He was of the
Banu Hamdan tribe of Yemen and succeeded his father, the second Dai Syedna Ibrahim, to the religious post.
Followers used to come to Syedna Hatim from all over
Haraz and just below
Hutaib was a cave known as Al-Kahf ul-N`eem where he used to preach to them.
In San’aa, the Dawat was ably managed by the Dai's Mazoon, Syedna Mohammad b. Taher al-Haaresi.
: Dai period: 557–596 AH/ 1162–1199 AD
Life
Syedna Hatim became the third Dai al-Mutlaq in Yemen after his father the second Dai Syedna
Ibrahim al-Hamidi in 557 AH/1162. His ascension to the throne of the Dawat was challenged by a grandson of the first Dai Syedna
Dhu'ayb ibn Musa, Ahsan bin Mohammad bin Syedna Dhu'ayb.
Syedna Hatim was the first Dai to venture into the Yemeni political field after the era under the rule of the Sulayhid Queen
Arwa al-Sulayhi and her political patronage. The
Zaydi Shia Imams of Yemen began to wage war against the
Tayyibi Ismaili
Isma'ilism ( ar, الإسماعيلية, al-ʾIsmāʿīlīyah) is a branch or sub-sect of Shia Islam. The Isma'ili () get their name from their acceptance of Imam Isma'il ibn Jafar as the appointed spiritual successor (imām) to Ja'far al-Sa ...
Shia (see
Al-Mutawakkil Ahmad bin Sulayman). It is in this context that Syedna Hatim became interested in territorial acquisition and becoming a military power as a security requisition for the
Taiyabi Ismailis.
Banu Zuwahi, offered mountain-peak fortress of Kawkaban near San’aa to Syedna Hatim in 561/1166. San’aa was under the rule of Sultan Ali b. Hatim al-Yami of the Hamdan tribe. See
Hamdanids (Yemen) for further information. Perceiving a threat to his own sovereignty, Sultan Ali proceeded to lay siege to Kawkaban. A trusted associate of the Dai, Ahmad al-Hibri betrayed him. Ahmad al-Hibri accepted a bribe from Sultan Ali, gave him vital information about the Dai's arrangements, and persuaded others in Kawkaban to turn against him, and forced Hatim to leave Kawkaban. He went to Lu’lu’a and Ray’an, two smaller fortresses some distance away. But Sultan Ali pursued him there with his troops and the Dai's reluctance to cause further strife among the Hamdan qabila prompted him to relinquish his hopes for acquiring territories in the San’aa region. He decided to move to the mountainous
Haraz region, where there had been Ismailis from the time of the first Sulayhid ruler. In the next few years a series of successful military expeditions gradually brought most of Haraz under the Dai's control. The core of his army was the Ya’aabir qabila, and their chief Amir Sabaa b. Yusuf.
Works
Amongst his many works of literature are: Al-Majalis al Hatimiyyah, Risalat Tohfatil Qulub, , Zahru Bazr al-Haqa’iq, Tanbeehul Ghafileen and Al-Shumus ul- Zaherah. In his work he clarified position of succession regarding Ismaili Imams after Imam Jafar. Syedna Hatim wrote: "The eldest of these(sons of Imam Jafer) shall die in life time appointing as successor seventh imam."
[Mullahs on the Mainframe: Islam and Modernity Among the Daudi Bohras; By Jonah Blank; p.21]
Death
Syedna Hatim died on Saturday 16
Muharram 596/7 November 1199 in
Hutayb. His tomb was built by Syedna
Mohammed Burhanuddin in the year 1971. It was further renovated and rebuilt in 2007.
Gallery
File:SyednaHatimMosque.jpg, This is where Syedna Hatim used to go and pray. It is located on a mountain near his Mausoleum
File:Hatimi Masjid .JPG, Hatimi Mosque under focus
File:Place of preaching Syedna Hatim.jpg, Place of preaching and writing, platform under curved roof of mountains,Al-Kahf ul-N`eem
File:Minaret Masjid Syedna Hatim.jpg, Minaret of the Syedna Hatim Mosque
File:Shubbaq 1.jpg, Shubbaq, Syedn Hatim Roaza
File:Minaret 2.jpg, A replica of Mukarnas at Syedna Hatim Rauza, taken from Juyushi Mosque
References
Sources
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{{DEFAULTSORT:Hatim ibn Ibrahim
1199 deaths
Year of birth unknown
Yemeni Ismailis
Tayyibi da'is
12th century in Yemen
12th-century Arabs
12th-century Ismailis
12th-century Islamic religious leaders