Submitted by ChickFleih t3_107pbc6 in history
Hey everyone,
I’ve been learning about the history of the Safavids, and their strong anti-Sunni stance is quite intriguing. I know they boasted a strong Shia identity and led massive their efforts to spread Shia Islam throughout their territory. However, they also had a reputation for being extremely anti-Sunni and for brutally oppressing Sunni Muslims within their borders, which included Iran, Iraq, Azerbaijan, and other areas.
A good example is how Safavid rulers, one after another, treated Sunni religious leaders and scholars. Many of these individuals were either killed or exiled, and their mosques and graves were destroyed as a means of minimizing Sunni influence. The Safavids also enforced the cursing of the first three caliphs of Islam, an act Sunnis considered highly inflammatory.
Additionally, Safavid rulers utilized intimidation and physical violence as a means of forcing Sunnis to convert to Shia Islam. This could include acts like torture, imprisonment, and even execution for those who refused to conform.
I must mention that the Safavid dynasty was not the only one in history to engage in such acts of religious persecution. However, their strong anti-Sunni stance and the extreme measures they took to suppress Sunni beliefs and practices do stand out as particularly noteworthy.
I’m mostly curious about:
- Why such Shia Muslim empire thought it was okay to kill Sunni Muslims; what or who gave them the license to kill innocent people?
- Why didn’t the Ottoman empire, which was Sunni Muslim, assist those helpless Sunni Muslims in Iran and elsewhere?
- Why were major Shia Muslim religious scholars, such as Mohammad-Baqer Majlesi, quiet while the Safavids massacred Sunni Muslims? Did Majlesi agree with these bloody acts? I'm reading Moojan Momen's fantastic An Introduction to Shi'i Islam, and on page 115 the book says, "[Majlesi] asked for the expulsion of all Sufis from Isfahan." So perhaps Majlesi was okay with all of these events.
zamakhtar t1_j3y7epp wrote
Sunnis in Iran were seen as a fifth column who might ally with the Ottomans should they invade Iran. The Ottomans were also putting down Shia rebellions in their own territory, and increasingly emphasizing their position as a specifically Sunni Muslim state. But because Iran was majority Sunni, brutal methods were used to quickly convert the population to Shia Islam to secure it against the Ottoman threat.