Known for. Charitable work, advocacy. Relatives. Musa al-Sadr (brother) Sadr al-Din al-Sadr (father) Rabab al-Sadr Charafeddine ( Arabic: رباب صدر; born 4 April 1944 [1]) is a Lebanese activist and president of the Imam al-Sadr Foundation. She is the sister of disappeared Shia imam and political leader Musa al-Sadr. [2] [3] [4] [5]
Al-Sadr’s uncle, Ayatollah Mohammad Baqir al-Sadr, also a cleric and dissident, was killed in Baghdad in 1980. Al-Sadr’s cousin, the Iranian-Lebanese cleric Musa al-Sadr and founder of the Shiite Amal Movement, disappeared in Libya in 1978. The majority of the followers of the three – father, uncle and cousin – came from Iraq’s lower
Translator’s preface: This work was originally given as part of an oral series of lectures by Imam Sayyed Musa al-Sadr in 1959. At the time, al-Sadr was lecturing in Iran and the following lecture, from which this excerpt is derived from, was in Persian. It was later translated into Arabic by Sheikh Ali Hajjti Kermani.
When Musa Sadr established the Amal movement in 1974, he put the militia organizations under the command of Dr. Mostafa Chamran, who admired Sadr and saw him as “the successor of the Imam Hussein.” Chamran took his doctorate in the United States and was invited to direct Musa Sadr’s technical school in Burj al-Shemali near Tyre.
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musa al sadr quotes