WHO WERE THE KHARIJIS?
Throughout
 Islamic history, groups have arisen from time to time advocating 
radically new and divergent ways of thinking about the religion. One of 
the most radical and violent of these groups emerged during the 
political mayhem of ‘Ali’s caliphate, which lasted from 656 to 661. 
Known as the Kharijis, they emerged from a radical political position 
and went on to develop particularly extreme beliefs that put them at 
odds with most Muslims. While they never became a major political or 
religious force in the Muslim world, they had major impact on their own 
times and their ideology has been replicated numerous times by other 
fringe groups throughout the past 1400 years.
Background
In
 June of 656 CE (35 After Hijra), the caliph of the Muslim Empire, 
‘Uthman bin ‘Affan (may Allah be pleased with him) was assassinated. The
 killers were a group of discontented Muslim Egyptian soldiers, who took
 issue with a ruling ‘Uthman made in a case between them and the 
governor of Egypt. Unlike the previous two caliphs, Abu Bakr and ‘Umar 
(may Allah be pleased with them),
 who left behind at least some guidance as to how to pick a new caliph 
(Abu Bakr simply appointed ‘Umar while ‘Umar appointed a council of six 
to choose one of their own), ‘Uthman had not left behind a framework to 
choose a new caliph.
The assassins, who now held effective control in the capital, Medina, wanted ‘Ali (may Allah be pleased with him) to be the new caliph. ‘Ali (may Allah be pleased with him) naturally
 resisted such an appointment by murderers. Accepting the nomination 
could be construed by others as his implicit approval of the rebels’ 
actions, which couldn’t be further from the truth considering that he 
sent his own sons to defend ‘Uthman when the rebels barricaded him in 
his house. But when some of the leading members of Medina’s community 
told ‘Ali (may Allah be pleased with him) that
 he was the Muslim nation’s best chance at peace and normalcy, 
especially considering his status as the Prophet’s ﷺcousin and 
son-in-law, he reluctantly took on the title of fourth caliph of the 
Muslim Empire.
He
 did, however, have some immediate opposition. Mu’awiya, the governor of
 Syria, was a cousin of ‘Uthman (may Allah be pleased with him).
 He was ready to pledge allegiance to the new caliph so long as ‘Ali 
tried and punished the rebellious Egyptian soldiers who killed ‘Uthman. 
‘Ali (may Allah be pleased with him),
 however, did not believe doing so was in the interests of the Muslim 
nation. He certainly did not approve of the soldier’s actions, but 
punishing them could bring about an even bigger revolt, leading to more 
bloodshed and trials for the young Muslim Empire, which ‘Ali was keen to
 avoid.
Without
 Mu’awiya’s support, however, ‘Ali was left without one of the largest 
and most prosperous provinces of the empire. Mu’awiya was intensely 
popular in Syria. He had been the governor there since the caliphate of 
‘Umar, and did a good job of prudently managing the relations between 
the region’s native Christian population and the newly introduced Arab 
Muslims. ‘Ali, in turn, had strong support in Iraq, particularly in the 
city of Kufa, where his supporters were incensed at Mu’awiya’s refusal 
to pledge allegiance.
In
 order to avoid an eventual civil war between Mu’awiya’s Syrian 
supporters and Ali’s Iraqi ones, the two men agreed to an arbitration. 
They figured allowing a third party to mediate the dispute and find a 
solution, and potentially a new caliph, would be a peaceful end to a 
perilous political divide.
But
 ‘Ali encountered an unforeseen problem with his arbitration. Some of 
his supporters were so convinced that he was right in his choice not to 
pursue justice for ‘Uthman’s murderers, that they were enraged at his 
choice to go to arbitration. To them, ‘Ali had committed a major sin by 
agreeing to deal with Mu’awiya. They seceded from ‘Ali’s camp and became
 known as the Kharijis (also known as the Khawarj or Kharijites), 
meaning “those who left”.
Khariji Ideas
The
 development of Khariji ideas is an interesting lesson in how political 
ideas can lead to new divergent ideas of Islam (a similar political to 
religious process would form Shi’ism in later years). The Khariji 
political position that ‘Ali made a mistake morphed into a belief that 
any and all people who commit sins are unfit to rule. This alone was a 
particularly extreme idea, but it didn’t end there.
Eventually,
 the Kharijis argued that sins themselves were a form of kufr (disbelief
 in God). They argued that if you commit a sin, you are in effect a 
disbeliever in God and thus could be fought and killed, even if you were
 a Companion of the Prophet ﷺor a caliph. Furthermore, if you disagreed 
with their belief that sins are disbelief, you are by default a 
disbeliever and could be fought and killed.
Khariji
 beliefs did not have much basis in actual Islamic theology. Takfir 
(declaring people disbelievers) is in fact a very specific and rare 
thing in mainstream Muslim belief, with the majority opinion, as stated 
in the ‘Aqida of Imam al-Tahawi, being that the only thing that 
invalidates someone’s status as a Muslim is openly declaring that they 
do not believe that there is no God but Allah and that Muhammad ﷺis His 
messenger. Thus most of the Kharijis were not educated people well 
versed in the Qur’an and the sayings of the Prophet. The majority were 
desert Bedouin raiders who made up for their lack of understanding of 
Islam with a strong zeal for Khariji beliefs, no matter how 
intellectually shallow they were.
Khariji
 ideas never took hold with the general population. Besides being a 
distortion of the Prophet’s teachings, Khariji beliefs were simply too 
extreme for most people to be on board with. But that didn’t stop the 
small group of Kharijis from having a major impact on the Muslim world.
In
 line with their beliefs, Kharijis attempted to assassinate all the 
political leaders who took part in the arbitration that led to their 
establishment. They failed in their attempts to kill Mu’awiya and ‘Amr 
ibn al-’As, who supported Mu’awiya and ruled Egypt in his name. But in 
661 they succeeded in killing the caliph, ‘Ali, in Kufa. The 
assassination of the Prophet’s cousin and son in law brought about the 
end of the Rashidun era of the caliphate and the beginning of the 
Umayyad Caliphate, led by Mu’awiya.
The
 Kharijis continued to be a nuisance for the Umayyad and Abbasid 
caliphates for centuries. They never came to hold major cities in their 
numerous rebellions, but would use their familiarity with the deserts to
 roam throughout the Muslim world, harassing and terrorizing populations
 that did not accept their beliefs. In North Africa, they managed to get
 some support for their cause from groups of indigenous Berbers by 
playing off of the tensions between them and the ruling Arabs.
Eventually,
 the Khariji movement would die out slowly, a victim of its own 
extremism that prevented it from ever being accepted by most Muslims. 
One strand of them managed to moderate to some extent and developed into
 the Ibadi sect, which today forms the majority of Oman’s population. 
But while the Khariji movement itself did not last, their concept of 
takfir of sinners has been resurrected from time to time by numerous 
extremist groups, even being echoed by some modern political movements.
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