The Sentinel-Record

Shiites in Mideast mark solemn holy day of Ashoura

- MEHDI FATTAHI Associated Press writers Samya Kullab in Baghdad, Rahim Faiez and Munir Ahmed in Islamabad, and Isabel DeBre in Dubai, United Arab Emirates, contribute­d to this report.

“Somehow, I feel like I must go to mourning, because Imam Hussein was brutally and unfairly treated. I love his pride, his bravery. He is a symbol, a role model.”

— Nasrin Bahami, a participan­t in the Tehran procession

TEHRAN, Iran — Millions of Shiite Muslims — from Iran to Afghanista­n and Pakistan — were marking the festival of Ashoura on Monday, one of the most emotional occasions in their religious calendar, commemorat­ing the 7th century martyrdom of the Prophet Muhammad’s grandson Hussein.

Security forces, particular­ly in Taliban-run Afghanista­n, were on high alert for any violence. In the past, bloody attacks have marred the festival across in the Middle East, as Sunni extremists who view the Shiites as heretics seize on the holy day to target large gatherings of mourners.

Shiite Muslims were to mark the holy day on Tuesday in Iraq and also in Lebanon, where a major procession typically shuts down Beirut’s biggest suburb. With power split in Lebanon among the country’s religious sects, Ashoura presents an opportunit­y for Lebanon’s Shiites to show force.

In the Iraqi city of Karbala, where Hussein is entombed in a gold-domed shrine, religious charities laid out vats of rice, bread and beans to feed the pilgrims. Thousands typically rush toward the shrine to symbolize their desire to answer Hussein’s last cries for help in battle.

Crowds of mourners were thin in Kabul, where the country’s Shiites have suffered a wave of brazen attacks by the local Islamic State affiliate, which has tried to undermine the new Taliban government. Repeated bombings have rattled Afghanista­n’s ethnic minority Hazara Shiites, who previously experience­d persecutio­n under the Taliban and fear their new rulers — who seized power a year ago as U.S. and NATO troops withdrew — will let violence continue against their community.

Shiites represent over 10% of the world’s 1.8 billion Muslims and view Hussein as the rightful successor to the Prophet Muhammad. Hussein’s death in battle at the hands of Sunnis at Karbala, south of Baghdad, ingrained a deep rift in Islam and continues to this day to play a key role in shaping Shiite identity.

Over 1,340 years after Hussein’s martyrdom, Baghdad, Tehran, Islamabad and other major capitals in the Middle East were adorned with symbols of Shiite piety and repentance: red flags for Hussein’s blood, symbolic black funeral tents and black dress for mourning, procession­s of men and boys expressing fervor in the ritual of chest beating and self-flagellati­on with chains.

In Afghanista­n and Pakistan, authoritie­s cut mobile phone services in key cities holding commemorat­ions for fear of militant bombings. Internet monitoring group NetBlocks confirmed Monday that Afghanista­n was experienci­ng significan­t service disruption­s.

Pakistani police were out in force along procession routes. The Taliban shut down roads leading to Shiite neighborho­ods and mosques in Afghanista­n.

The Taliban have encouraged Shiites to carry out their devotions. However, they did not designate Ashoura a national holiday this year, as Afghanista­n’s authoritie­s have in the past. They also banned major procession­s for fear of violence after a string of bombings targeting Shiite-dominated areas.

Despite the threat of attacks, hundreds of frenzied Shiites turned up on the streets of Kabul to beat their heads and chests in unison. They whipped themselves with knife-edged chains to the point of blood splatterin­g onto the streets.

The Afghan mourners struck a defiant tone.

“Those who want to stop us from commemorat­ion of this day will take their wish to grave with themselves,” said Habibullah Bashardost, adding that the community had braced itself for more violence.

“Even if these people who are commemorat­ing today are martyred, we have our coming generation to continue this path,” Bashardost said.

Another participan­t, Ahmadullah Hussaini, said his presence at the bloodletti­ng ritual under the shadow of targeted attacks delivered a succinct message: “We are not scared of anything, not even death.”

In Shiite powerhouse Iran, thousands of men and women shrouded in black thronged the streets of Tehran. Green plumage, the color of Islam, fluttered in the air. Camels covered with multicolor­ed cloth paraded through the city, evoking how Hussein set out from Mecca with a small band of companions. Iranians pounded their chests in mourning and chanted in unison, while some mourners clad in black wept.

“Somehow, I feel like I must go to mourning, because Imam Hussein was brutally and unfairly treated,” said Nasrin Bahami, a 65-year-old participan­t in the Tehran procession. “I love his pride, his bravery. He is a symbol, a role model.”

In Iraq, black flags of grief fluttered over the capital’s major thoroughfa­res. Portraits of the revered saint hung from the doors of nearly every house in the Shiite-dominated suburb of Sadr City.

 ?? (AP/Anmar Khalil) ?? Iraqi Shiites take part in Ashoura on Monday in Karbala, Iraq.
(AP/Anmar Khalil) Iraqi Shiites take part in Ashoura on Monday in Karbala, Iraq.
 ?? (AP/Hussein Malla) ?? Lebanese Shiite scouts of the Iranian-backed Hezbollah group carry their group and Lebanese flags Tuesday as they march during the holy day of Ashoura in the southern suburb of Beirut.
(AP/Hussein Malla) Lebanese Shiite scouts of the Iranian-backed Hezbollah group carry their group and Lebanese flags Tuesday as they march during the holy day of Ashoura in the southern suburb of Beirut.
 ?? (AP/Muhammad Sajjad)* ?? Shiite Muslims flagellate themselves with knives on chains Monday during procession in Peshawar, Pakistan.
(AP/Muhammad Sajjad)* Shiite Muslims flagellate themselves with knives on chains Monday during procession in Peshawar, Pakistan.
 ?? (AP/Anmar Khalil) ?? Iraqi Shiites take part in Ashoura on Monday in Karbala.
(AP/Anmar Khalil) Iraqi Shiites take part in Ashoura on Monday in Karbala.
 ?? (AP/Anjum Naveed) ?? Shiite Muslims flagellate themselves with knives on chains Monday during a Muharram procession in Islamabad, Pakistan. Muharram, the first month of the Islamic calendar, is a month of mourning for Shiites in remembranc­e of the death of Hussein, the grandson of the Prophet Muhammad, at the Battle of Karbala in present-day Iraq in the 7th century.
(AP/Anjum Naveed) Shiite Muslims flagellate themselves with knives on chains Monday during a Muharram procession in Islamabad, Pakistan. Muharram, the first month of the Islamic calendar, is a month of mourning for Shiites in remembranc­e of the death of Hussein, the grandson of the Prophet Muhammad, at the Battle of Karbala in present-day Iraq in the 7th century.
 ?? (AP/Ebrahim Noroozi) ?? Afghan Shiite Muslims attend a mourning ceremony Friday, three days ahead of Ashoura, in a mosque in Kabul, Afghanista­n.
(AP/Ebrahim Noroozi) Afghan Shiite Muslims attend a mourning ceremony Friday, three days ahead of Ashoura, in a mosque in Kabul, Afghanista­n.

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