Fitna (word)
Fitna is an Arabic word with extensive connotations of trial, affliction, or distress. A word with important historical implications, it is also widely used in modern Arabic.
One might distinguish between the meanings of fitna as used in Classical Arabic and the meanings of fitna as used in Modern Standard Arabic and various colloquial dialects. Due to the conceptual importance of fitna in the Qur'an, its use in that work may need to be considered separately from, though in addition to, the word's general lexical meaning in Classical Arabic.
Aside from its use in the Qur'an, fitna is used as term for the four heavy civil wars within the Islamic Caliphate from the 7th to the 9th century AD.
Root and forms
Arabic, in common with other Semitic languages like Hebrew, employs a system of root letters combined with vowel patterns to constitute its whole range of vocabulary. As such, identification of the root letters of any word might bring a better understanding the word's full semantic range.Fitna has the triliteral root fā'-tā'-nūn. In addition to the feminine noun fitna, fitan, this root forms, in particular, a Form I active verb fatana, yaftinu, a Form I passive verb futina, yuftanu, a Form I maṣdar futūn, a Form I active participle fātin, a Form I passive participle maftūn, and so on.
Lexical meanings
Classical Arabic
, in his monumental Arabic-English Lexicon compiled from various traditional Arabic lexicographical sources available in Cairo in the mid-19th-century, reported that "to burn" is the "primary signification" of the verb. The verb then came to be applied to the smelting of gold and silver. It was extended to mean causing one to enter into fire and into a state of punishment or affliction. Thus, one says that something caused one to enter al-fitna, i.e. trial, affliction, etc., or more generally, an affliction whereby some good or evil quality is put to the test. Lane glosses the noun fitna as meaning a trial, a probation, affliction, distress or hardship, and says that "the sum total of its meaning in the language of the Arabs" is an affliction whereby one is tried, proved or tested.The definitions offered by Lane match those suggested by Badawi and Haleem in their dictionary of Qur'anic usage. They gloss the triliteral root as having the following meanings: "to purify gold and silver by smelting them; to burn; to put to the test, to afflict ; to disrupt the peace of a community; to tempt, to seduce, to allure, to infatuate."
Modern Standard Arabic
The meanings of fitna as found in Classical Arabic largely carry over into Modern Standard Arabic, as evidenced by the recitation of the same set of meanings in Hans Wehr's Dictionary of Modern Written Arabic. In addition, Wehr glosses the noun fitna as also meaning "charm, charmingness, attractiveness; enchantment, captivation, fascination, enticement, temptation; infatuation, intrigue; sedition, riot, discord, dissension, civil strife."Buckwalter & Parkinson, in their frequency dictionary of Arabic, list the noun fitna as the 1,560th most frequent word in their corpus of over 30 million words from Modern Standard Arabic and colloquial Arabic dialects. They gloss fitna as meaning "charm, allure, enchantment; unrest; riot, rebellion."
Nakhla Raid (first mention of Fitna in Quran)
The first Quran verse about Fitna was supposedly revealed during the Nakhla Raid. After his return from the first Badr encounter, Muhammad sent Abdullah ibn Jahsh in Rajab with 12 men on a fact-finding operation. Abdullah ibn Jahsh was a maternal cousin of Muhammad. He took along with him Abu Haudhayfa, Abdullah ibn Jahsh, Ukkash ibn Mihsan, Utba b. Ghazwan, Sa'd ibn Abi Waqqas, Amir ibn Rabia, Waqid ibn Abdullah and Khalid ibn al-Bukayr.Muhammad gave Abdullah ibn Jahsh a letter, but not to be read until he had traveled for two days and then to do what he was instructed to do in the letter without putting pressure on his companions. Abdullah proceeded for two days, then he opened the letter; it told him to proceed until he reached Nakhla, between Mecca and Taif, to lie in wait for the Quraysh, and to observe what they were doing.
While the Quraysh were busy preparing food, the Muslims attacked. In the short battle that took place, Waqid ibn Abdullah killed Amr ibn Hadrami, the leader of the Quraysh caravan, with an arrow. The Muslims captured two Quraysh tribe members. Nawfal ibn Abdullah managed to escape. The Muslims took Uthman ibn Abdullah and al-Hakam ibn Kaysan as captives. Abdullah ibn Jahsh returned to Medina with the booty and with the two captured Quraysh tribe members. The followers planned to give one-fifth of the booty to Muhammad.
Mentioning in Quran
Muhammad initially disapproved of that act and suspended any action as regards the camels and the two captives on account of the prohibited months. The Arab pagans exploited this opportunity to accuse the Muslims of violating what is divinely inviolable. This idle talk brought about a painful headache for Muhammad's Companions, until at last they were relieved when Muhammad revealed a verse regarding fighting in the sacred monthsAccording to Ibn Qayyim, he said "most of the scholars have explained the word Fitnah here as meaning Shirk"
The Muslim Mufassir Ibn Kathir's commentary on this verse in his book Tafsir ibn Kathir is as follows:
means, trying to force the Muslims to revert from their religion and re-embrace Kufr after they had believed, is worse with Allah than killing.' Allah said:
In Qur'an
Statistics
Badawi & Haleem note that the triliteral root fā'-tā'-nūn occurs in 6 different forms a total of 60 times in the Qur'an. In particular, it appears 34 times as a noun and 26 times in various verbal forms. Bakhtiar's concordance of the Qur'an confirms Badawi & Haleem's numbers, although Bakhtiar further breaks down the appearance of each verbal form by distinguishing active and passive verbs by tense as well. The following table sets out the details; note that since the root only appears as a verb in Form I forms, that is assumed.Form | Number of Appearances |
Noun | 34 |
Verb, perfect active | 9 |
Verb, imperfect active | 8 |
Verb, perfect passive | 2 |
Verb, imperfect passive | 4 |
Participle, active | 1 |
Participle, passive | 1 |
Maṣdar | 1 |
Semantics
The triliteral root fā'-tā'-nūn, as noted above, bears a range of significations, even in the Qur'an itself. The Qur'anic appearances of the root are explored below.Persecution
Fitna as persecution appears in several of the verses commanding Muslims to fight the unbelievers. For example, in Qur'an , the command to fight is justified on the grounds that "persecution is worse than slaying." Similarly, in Qur'an, Muslims are forbidden from fighting unbelievers around the Holy Mosque in Mecca unless the unbelievers attack first, in which case Muslims are to fight "until there is no persecution and the religion is God's." The hijra is mentioned in Qur'an as having occurred because of the persecution believers had suffered in Mecca. Other examples are Qur'an, which promises the chastisement of Hell for those who have persecuted Muslims, and Qur'an, which provides that one's daily required prayer may be shortened if, when on a journey, one fears that the unbelievers may attack if one remains in a place long enough to complete the full prayer.Dissension/sedition
In Qur'an, the Qur'an itself is described as having "clear revelations – they are the substance of the Book – and others allegorical," and then the Qur'an characterizes those who are unsteady and who do not have firm faith as desiring dissension in the community through their pursuit of interpretations of the "allegorical" verses of the Qur'an. A set of occurrences of the root related to dissension or sedition occurs in Quran, where those who say they are believers, but show themselves reluctant to follow certain of God's commands, are described as seeking "sedition" among the community.Trial
Many instances of the root as "trial" appear throughout the Qur'an. This sense of the root bears the further sense of a "tribulation" or "difficulty" in such verses as, for example: Qur'an , where Moses, after killing a man in Egypt, was "tried with a heavy trial" by being forced to flee and to live among the Midians for many years; and Qur'an, where some believers are characterized as worshipping God "upon a narrow marge," since they are happy so long as their life is relatively secure and easy, but as soon as they experience a trial, they turn away from God.However, the root in other verses carries a sense of "trial" as simply a kind of test of a person's commitment to their faith. For example, Qur'an says, in part, "And even so do We try some of them by others." Things widely recognized as good things in life may serve as trials, as Qur'an and make clear by describing one's own wealth and children as trials. Qur'an also carries this sense of trial by something good; there, God's own "boon" is described as a trial for certain people. Again, in Qur'an, God will give those idolaters who decide to "tread the right path" an abundance of good "that We may test them thereby," to see whether they will turn away from God once they have obtained his favor or whether they will be steadfast in faith.
Trials may also result from things revealed by God that some may find difficult to accept. For example, Qur'an describes the revelation of the "Cursed Tree" as "an ordeal for mankind." Another example of this sense is Qur'an, where the number of the angels who guard the Fire has been "made a stumbling-block for those who disbelieve... and that those in whose hearts there is disease, and disbelievers, may say: What meaneth Allah by this similitude?"