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				25-05-2014
			
			
			
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				Battle of Camel 
 
 
 Aisha had long hated Ali, and wished that, when the aged Uthman died, her own  kinsman, Zubayr, should become caliph. When Uthman was assassinated, she was not  in Medina, having gone to Mecca a few weeks previously to perform the  pilgrimage. The news of Uthman's murder reached her when she was on the way  back. She returned immediately to Mecca and incited the citizens against Ali.
 
 
 The fiery address set a match to the smouldering fire of discontent. The first  to respond to Aisha's call was Abdullah bin Amur, the Uthmanid governor of  Mecca. Those Umayyads who had fled from Medina after the ghastly murder of  Uthman now also joined Aisha, and when Talha and Zubayr came over to Aisha, many  more of the Qoraish clamoured to join in the rebellion. Aisha advocated march on  Basra. Throwing off the veil ordained, Aisha now took command of the army. The  money to equip it came from Yamen treasury, brought to Mecca by the governor  whom Ali had deposed. It is however clear from the sources that in the battle  between Ali and Aisha, the triumvirate was fighting for personal reason rather  than for the blood of Uthman, which was a timely and convenient pretext for  them.
 
 
 
 Ali had been obliged to abandon the Syrian campaign against Muawiya, deciding  instead, to use his small force against Aisha, who had hatched a rebellion.  Realizing, however, that his army was by no means adequate for the task in hand,  he pitched his camp at Rabaza. In the interim, Aisha occupied Basra in 35/656.  Ali was a seasoned commander, born and bred in wars and famous for his skill as  tactician. His ascetic life had not chilled his martial fervour and at the  advanced age of sixty, he still retained the vigour of a much younger man. He  took to war after a recession of 25 years only taught that the demands of duty  only should be determined action and inaction, and that in matters concerning  principles and duties, the importunities of emotions and claims of age should  alike find no place. He was however anxious to avoid the shedding of Muslim  blood by Muslims. Of his desire and pacific intention, William Muir writes in  "The Caliphate, its Rise, and Fall"(London, 1924, p. 247) that, "But Ali's  thoughts were for peace if possible. He was a man of compromise and here he was  ready, in the interest of Islam, magnanimously to forget the insult offered  him."
 The two armies eventually encamped in the Wadi-us-Saba (Valley of the Lion)  near the village of Khuraiba outside Basra, facing each other. Aisha, on the  advice of some of her followers, went so far as to mount her camel, al-Askar and  that this battle is called the Battle of Camel, which took place on 10th Jamada  II, 35/December 4, 656. The battle began and reached a critical stage. Ali  ordered his men not to take offensive unless the enemy began to onset. He gave  further stringent orders that no wounded should be slain, no fugitive pursued,  no plunder seized nor the privacy of any house violated. The showers of arrows  were pouring in from the Aisha's side, Ali forbade his soldiers to return the  shot and bade them wait. Wherever the camel of Aisha stood, there the battle was  waged most fiercely.
 
 
 As long as that animal was standing, Ali realized, would  the battle continue. He therefore deputed one of his men to cut off its legs.  The warrior slipped behind the camel, did as he was bidden, and the camel  thudded to the ground. Within a very short time the bugle sounded the end of the  battle.
 After the battle, Ali repaired to Aisha's camp, where he treated her with  greatest deference, "For," said he, "respect must be shown to her because she is  the spouse of the holy Prophet." In the care of her brother, and under the  command of his own two sons, Ali then sent Aisha to Medina. She was shown every  deference and given forty hand-maids. Ali himself accompanied her retinue on  foot for a short distance, before bidding her farewell. "It befits your  dignity", Ali said to her, "to remain in your house and not to meddle in  politics or to share the rough life of the battlefield, nor to join any party in  future which may tarnish the glory of your name, or become the authoress of a  second rebellion." To this Aisha replied, "By God! there existed no enmity  between Ali and me, save a few petty domestic squabbles." On her return to  Medina, Aisha led a life of seclusion. She is said to have died in 59/678 at the  age of 66 years.
 
 
 
 The loss in the battle was very great. Some historians say that 16,796 men of  Aisha's forces, and 1,070 of Ali's army were killed. During the encounter, the  people of Aisha were known as asahab al-jamal (the companions of the camel), but  Ali called them an-nakisun (those who broke oath), which is the derivation of  Koran (48:10), wherein the word naksa means "bayt" or an oath of allegiance. The  supporters of Ali, however, became known after the battle of Camel as Shiat'i  Ali(the followers of Ali).
 
 
				 
 
  
 
  
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