Английская Википедия:Husayniyya

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Ḥosayniya
Файл:Muharram mourning, Hussainia TZ.jpg
Hussainia in Dar es Salaam, Tanzania
Arabic Шаблон:Lang (ḥusayniyya)
Шаблон:Lang (ma'tam)
Hindi Шаблон:Lang (imāmbāṛā)

Шаблон:Lang (āshurkhānā)

Bengali Шаблон:Lang (imambaṛa)
Persian Шаблон:Lang (ḥoseyniye)
Urdu Шаблон:Lang (imāmbāṛā)
Шаблон:Lang (imāmbārgāh)
Шаблон:Lang (āshurxānā)
Шаблон:Lang (huseyniya)

Шаблон:Husayn A Husayniyya (Шаблон:Lang-ar) is a congregation hall for Twelver Shia Muslim commemoration ceremonies, especially those associated with the Mourning of Muharram.[1] Hussainiya is a multitude hall for the mourning of Muharram and other commemoration rituals of Shia that its name gets from Husayn ibn Ali, the grandson of Muhammad.[2]

Terminology

A hussainiya is different from a mosque. The name comes from Husayn ibn Ali, the third of the Twelve Imams and the grandson of the Islamic prophet Muhammad. Husayn was martyred at the Battle of Karbala on 10 October 680 CE during the reign of Ubayd Allah ibn Ziyad. The Shia commemorate his martyrdom every year on Ashura, the 10th day of Muharram.[3] There are also other ceremonies which are held during the year in hussainiyas, including religious commemorations unrelated to Ashura.[4] and may not necessarily hold jumu'ah (Friday congregational prayer).

In South Asia, a hussainiya can also be referred to as an imambara, imambargah, or ashurkhana. In Afghanistan and Central Asia, it is also called a takyakhana. In Bahrain and the United Arab Emirates, as well as in other Gulf States it is called a ma'tam (Шаблон:Lang-ar).

History

From the time of the Safavid was ruling in Iran, when Shia tended to hold the religious and mourning ceremonies, not only the passageways or the roofed places were used for the religious communities, even to make the Hoseynias and also Takyeh(s) became commonplace.[5] Any Hosseynia had some booths (or rooms) and arcades, both in large and small sizes. Also in many alleys and streets, on the days near Ashoura, the religious people blackened the walls and the roofs and illuminated them, by the colorful lights... From the age of Zand, many bigger and vaster Takye(s) was made just to hold Tazia, where there was a stage by the height of one meter from the floor, to show the different senses of Tazieh.[6] Expense of the Hussainiya is provided by Charitable donations and endowments.[7][8]

Файл:Bara Imambara Lucknow.jpg
The Asifi Imambara in Lucknow, the capital city of the Indian state of Uttar Pradesh.

Usage

Hussainiya was used during Muharram, Safar, and Ramadan for mourning, Rawda Khwani, Sineh Zani (a Customary form of mourning ceremony which shows their grief with chest-beating).[9] Also, Hussainiya is a place for accommodations of passengers[10] and pilgrims and feeding the poor.[1] Since hussainiya serves as a focal point for Shi’i gathering, it also plays a very significant role in consolidation of religious identity specially for Shi’i population in diaspora.[11]

Notable hussainias

Файл:Zanjan azam hussainia-history.jpg
A historic image from Zanjan azam Hussainiya in Iran
Файл:Mourning of Muharram in cities and villages of Iran-342 16 (44).jpg
A Hussainia in Iran
Файл:Azakhana Wazeer Un Nisa Danishmandan Amroha.jpg
Imambara Wazeer Un Nisa in Amroha, India

See also

References

Шаблон:Reflist

Шаблон:Commons category Шаблон:Islamic architecture