Muhammad Muhammad Sadiq al-Sadr: differenze tra le versioni
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Muḥammad Muḥammad Ṣādiq al-Ṣadr era figlio di Muḥammad Ṣādiq al-Ṣadr (1906–1986), e nipote di [[Isma'il al-Sadr|Ismāʿīl al-Ṣadr]], il patriarca della famiglia al-Ṣadr, ed era cugino primo di [[Muhammad Baqir al-Sadr]] e di [[Bint al-Huda]].
In seguito alla [[Guerra del Golfo]], gli sciiti dell'Iraq meridionale entrarono in aperta ribellione contro il governo centrale. Un certo numero di province rovesciò le strutture [[
Come esito della privazione dei diritti civili e della repressione degli sciiti in Iraq e della lealtà nei confronti di al-Ṣadr delle popolazioni locali, [[Saddam Hussein]] e il suo governo ba'thista, non furono in grado di controllare quella parte di Baghdad e la carenza di controllo limitò la loro capacità di colpire la base di consenso e di potere di al-Ṣadr. Quella parte di Baghdad fu ironicamente chiamata Madīnat Ṣaddām.<ref>Saddam City, nella stampa internazionale.</ref>
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As his power grew, al-Sadr became more and more involved in politics following the Gulf War and throughout the 1990s he openly defied Saddam. He organized the poor Shi'ites of [[Sadr City]], yet another nickname for the impoverished Shi'ite ghetto in Baghdad, against Saddam and the Baath Party. Sadr gained the support of the Shi'ites by reaching out to tribal villages and offering services to them that they would otherwise not have been afforded by Hussein's regime. Saddam began to crack down on the Shi'ite leaders in the late 1990s in an attempt to regain control of Iraq.
Sometime before his death, al-Sadr was informed of Saddam's limited patience with him. In defiance, al-Sadr wore his death shroud to his final Friday sermon to show that the Shi'ites would not be intimidated by Saddam's oppression and that Sadr would preach the truth even if it meant his own death. He was later killed leaving the mosque in the Iraqi city of [[Najaf]] along with two of his sons as they drove through the town.<ref>{{cite book |last=Berman |first=Eli |year=2011 |url=http://books.google.co.uk/books?id=R7jvDS3OiAUC&pg=PA56 |title=Radical, Religious and Violent |publisher=MIT Press |page=56 |isbn=9780262258005}}</ref><ref>{{cite news |last=Jehl |first=Douglas |url=http://www.nytimes.com/1999/02/22/world/assassination-of-shiite-cleric-threatens-further-iraqi-unrest.html |title=Assassination of Shiite Cleric Threatens Further Iraqi Unrest |work=The New York Times |date=February 22, 1999}}</ref> Their car was ambushed by men, and both his sons were killed by gunfire while he was severely injured. He died an hour later in the hospital. Shi'as in Iraq, as well as most international observers, suspect the Iraqi Baathist government of being involved in, if not directly responsible, for their murders. Anger at, among other things, the government's involvement in Sadr's death helped spark the [[1999 Shia uprising in Iraq]]. Saddam later vows to hunt the perpetrators who assassinated Sadr and calls for Shia-Sunni unity in Iraq.
Following the [[2003 invasion of Baghdad|fall of Baghdad]], the majority-Shi'a suburb of Revolution City (Saddam City) was unofficially but popularly renamed to [[Sadr City]] in his honor. Sadr City was the first part of Baghdad to overthrow the Baath Party in 2003.
Mohammad al-Sadr's son, [[Muqtada al-Sadr]], is currently the leader of the Sadr-ist movement and bases his legitimacy upon his relationship to his father. He led a guerilla uprising against Coalition forces and the new Iraqi government as part of the [[Iraqi insurgency (2003–11)|Iraqi Insurgency]] between 2004 and 2008.
Riga 54:
*[[Kamal al-Haydari]]
*[[Muhammad Ya'qubi]]
*[[Musa al-Sadr
*[[Elenco dei Marja']]
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