Heritage of Karbala Karbala in the memory The History of the Husayn and Abbas shrines'
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SayyidSalman Hadi Tumah (Arabic: سلمان هادي آل طعمه; born 16 February 1935), is an Iraqi poet, writer, and historian.[1][2]
He is considered Karbala's leading historian, writing a plethora of records on the city's history and heritage, as well its inhabitants and notables.[3]
Early life and education
Tumah was born on 16 February 1935, to Hadi Tumah and to the daughter of Ahmed Tumah. He hails from the noble Al Faiz family, and claims agnatic descent from Muhammad's daughter Fatimah and her husband, Ali, the first Shia Imam. His grandfather, Salih Tumah (d. 1901) was a member of the governing council of Karbala in the late Ottoman era.[4]
He had both an academic and religious primary education. His religious education was held at the Imam Husayn shrine, and he was taught Quran by Sheikh Hasan Kusa; Arabic by Sheikh Abd al-Husayn al-Baydhani, and Islamic History by Sayyid Abd al-Husayn al-Killidar. He graduated from Karbala High School in 1951. He then graduated from the Teachers' Institute in 1959, and was assigned as a teacher in a number of Karbala's schools. He then completed his education in the Psychology department of the University of Baghdad, graduating with a BA in 1971.[5]
A while after his retirement, he went to Lebanon and graduated with a MA. In 2009, he received his PhD from The Islamic Civilization Open University, and a year later, graduated with a second MA from the Islamic University of Lebanon, with his dissertation being about Sufi exegesis of the Quran (Ibn Arabi).
Career
He set up a literary society along with a group of laureates named The Middle Euphrates Association in 1956, and it remained until 1959.
He worked as a teacher in the 1960s, and retired in 1985, to then become a full-time researcher. His research consisted of history, genealogy, and religious theology.[6]
Tumah has published over seventy books, spanning between literature, poetry, and history. He also has more than 30 books in manuscript format. Some of his most notable works include:[8]
If you forget Husayn and his companions,
Then ask Karbala and its sorrows.
Those homes and its rises,
Weep and mourn its joy.
A poem about the valiant stand of Karbala in the 1920 revolt, that starts with:[1]
يا (كربلاء) وأنـتِ فـخـرُ قداسةٍ
يـسـتـوجبُ التعظيمَ والتبجيلا
يا موطنَ الأحرارِ مـنه تـألّـفـتْ
سورُ الجهادِ وفُصِّلتْ تفصيلا
O' Karbala, you are the pride of all that is sacred,
You deserve the pride and honour.
O' nation of the free, that erected,
The wall of holy war.
Personal life
Tumah is married to his cousin, the daughter of Muhammad Ahmed Tumah, and has two children. His son, Ahmed is a professor in electrical engineering, having achieved his doctorate from Brunel University, and teaches at the University of Karbala.[9] His cousin and brother-in-law, Adnan Tumah (d. 2021) is a professor of Andalusian history and literature.[10]