Muhammad Taha al-Huwayzi (Arabic: محمد طه الحويزي, romanized: Muḥammad Ṭāhā al-Ḥuwayzī; 1899 – 4 April 1968) was an Iranian-Iraqi Ja'fari jurist, religious teacher and poet. He was born in Najaf to a father from Al-Huwayza, and studied early education from him, then became a student of Muhammad Husayn Isfahani for a long time. After the death of his father, he moved to Al-Huwayza in 1927, worked in agriculture, then returned to Najaf in 1946, from there to Qom in Iran, where he studied under Hossein Borujerdi, he who entrusted him for his religious educational institute. In Qom, he held a madrasah seminar in which he taught Arabic language and poetry. In his last years, he moved to Ahvaz for Shariah service until his death at the age of 69. Even though he was a Twelver Shia religious teacher in profession, Al-Huwayzi considered one of the most prominent figures of Khuzestani Arabs in Arabic literature, and left behind a collection of poetry and prose letters.
[1][2][3][4][5][6]
Biography
His full nasab is Muhammad Taha bin Nasrallah bin al-Hussein bin Nasrallah bin Abbas bin Muhamamd bin Karamallah bin Muhammad Hasan bin Habib bin Farjallah bin Muhammad bin Darwish bin Muhammad bin Hussein bin Jamal al-Din bin Akbar, al-Karami al-Khaffaji al-Huwayzi.[6] He was born in 1899 Najaf, Karbala Sanjak, Baghdad vilayet, to an Arab family from Al-Huwayza, capital of Musha'sha'iyan Emirate. He studied early education of literature under his father, Nasrallah (1874 - 1927), then attended the classes of Abd al-Rasoul Al-Jawahiri and Muhammad Hossein Gharavi and followed him for a long time. Learned Arabic prosody from Qasim Muhyi ad-Din [ar].[1][5]
In his final year, Al-Huwayzi returned to his hometown and replaced his father in Sharia duties for fifteen years until he died on 4 April 1968 in Ahwaz. His body was transferred to Najaf and buried with his father in their family cemetery in Amarah neighborhood.[1]
Poetry
Al-Huwayzi considered one of the prominent Iranian Arab religious poets during the mid-20th century. Also known for his sense of humour, he was good at joking and improvisation, inventing his jokes as poetry. The dictionary Al-Babtain of Contemporary Arab Poets described his poetry as follows: [7]
He maintained traditional purposes; wrote poetry to congratulate his friends and elders on various occasions, and praise (madḥ) of Imam Ali, Musa al-Kadhim and Muhammad al-Jawad... His madḥ included advice and preaching. He also wrote long sentimental poetry characterized by the tenderness of expression, the presence of the image, and the softness of the expression... Among these are his two poems The Breath of the Spirit and The Radiance of the Soul which both contained mystical glimpses and philosophical meanings. He also wrote ghazal and muwashshah. His poems were distinguished by the accuracy of expression, the eloquence and the strength of the structure. And he was also interested in some of the poetic techniques (badīʿ).
Works
Al-Huwayzi left behind some handwritten works, a poetry collection, prose letters, a book in fiqh titled Tā'liqāt fī mustafīḍah al-fiqh wa-al-uṣūl (Arabic: تعليقات مستفيضة في الفقه والأصول) and Kitāb-al-muṭawwal fī ʻilm al-maʻānī wa-al-bayān (Arabic: كتاب المطول في علم المعاني والبيان) on Arabic rhetoric.[1]
References
Citations
^ abcdeAl-Jaburi, Kamel Salman (2003). Mu'jam Al-Shu'ara' min Al-'Asr Al-Jahili Hatta Sanat 2002 معجم الشعراء من العصر الجاهلي حتى سنة 2002 [Dictionary of poets from the pre-Islamic era until 2002] (in Arabic). Vol. 5 (first ed.). Beirut, Lebanon: Dar Al-Kotob Al-Ilmiyah. p. 78.
^Al-Khaqani, Abdullah (2000). Mawsūʻat al-Najaf al-Ashraf موسوعة النجف الأشرف [Encyclopedia of Najaf] (in Arabic). Vol. 20 (first ed.). Beirut, Lebanon: Dar Al-Adhwa. p. 143.
^Khalfi, Yaser (2020). Tarikh-e Adabiyat-e Arab dar Iran تاریخ ادبیات عرب در ایران [History of Arabic literature in Iran] (in Persian). Vol. 3 (first ed.). Tehran, Iran: Shadegan. p. 191. ISBN9789645917232.
^Al-Khaqani, Abdullah (1999). al-Muntakhab min aʻlām al-fikr wa-al-adab المنتخب من اعلام الفكر والأدب [Eminents of thought and literature] (in Arabic) (first ed.). Beirut, Lebanon: Dar al-Mawahib.
^ abcAl Mahbubah, Ja'far Baqir (2009). Māḍī al-Naǧaf wa-ḥāḍiruhā ماضى النجف وحاضرها [Najaf's past and present] (in Arabic). Vol. 2 (second ed.). Beirut, Lebanon: Dar Al-Adhwa. p. 188.
^ abAl-Khaqani, Ali (1987). Shuʻarāʼ al-Gharī, aw, al-Najafīyāt شعراء الغرى، أو، النجفيات [Poets of Al-Ghari or Al-Najafiyat] (in Arabic). Vol. 9 (first ed.). Qom, Iran: Mar'ashi Najafi Library. pp. 394–436.