The Attitude of the Religious Men In Karbala Towards The British Occupation of Iraq Al- Sayed Abul- Qasim Al- Kashany : As A Sample ( 1914- 1920) | ||
KARBALĀʾ HERITAGE Quarterly Authorized Journal Specialized in Karbalāʾ Heritage | ||
Article 1, Volume 3, Issue 1, March 2016, Pages 172-210 | ||
Authors | ||
Lecturer Dr. Hasan Dhary Sabia; Abbas Niama Al- Safy; Lecturer Dr. Ala | ||
Abstract | ||
Abstract Abu al-Qasim Al- Kashani was born in 1885 in Tehran the capital of Iran; he traveled to Najaf accompanied by his father, Sayed. Mustafa AL-Kashani and studied there at the hands of a number of most religious scholars (Mujtahid) . He participated with his father in the jihad (religious war) operations against the British invasion of Iraq (1914-1918) in the first and second jihad stage, and then moved on to the stage of peaceful strive and political resistance and established (The Arab Islamic Society), which worked on the distribution of booklets that were inciting people against the British occupation . Al- Kashani joined the delegation, set up in May 1920 to meet with the British political commissioner (Arnold Wilson) on June 2, 1920 and after the delegation failed in its mission and the British did not fulfill their pledges and disclaimed their promises and words they had given previously, the revolution broke out in Iraq in the summer of 1920 and involving Kashani active participation both in Karbala and Kufa until he was captured by the British after the failure of the revolution and then was released to travel to Iran with a group of religious scholars (mujtahid) in 1923. | ||
Keywords | ||
Historical Heritage Section | ||
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