Mohammed Bakr Al-Sadr

The Grand Ayatollah Sayyid Mohammed Bakr Al-Sadr (March 1st, 1935 - April 9th, 1980) was a monk Chiite Iraqi born with Al-Kazimiya (Iraq). Father-in-law of Moqtada al-Sadr (with the head of the Armed with Mehdi), it had in particular as cousins the Shiite leaders Mohammad Sadeq Al-Sadr and Musa Al-Sadr. His/her father Haydar Al-Sadr was also a Shiite monk of high ranking. Its line goes back to Mahomet through the seventh Imam of the Shiism, Musa Al-Kazim.

In the years 1960, it founds with Nadjaf, Holy City of the Shiism in Iraq, movement AD-Daawa.

In 1979, Mohammed Baker Al-Sadr emits a Fatwa proscribing adhesion with the Iraqi Baath and judges sells by auction the recourse to violence vis-a-vis the oppressor. In April 1980, the shortly after an assassination attempt perpetrated by Shiites against the Iraqi Deputy Prime Minister Tarek Aziz, Mohammed Baker Al-Sadr is carried out by hanging by the mode of Saddam Hussein, in company of several members of her family, before a tractor trails its corpse and that of his/her sister in the streets of Nadjaf.

In the pirate video of the execution of Saddam Hussein diffused by Al-Jazira, one intends one of the witnesses to pay homage to the Ayatollah Mohammed Bakr Al-Sadr.

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