The (Arabic: دعاء كميل,) is a supplication attributed to Ali ibn Abi Talib, the fourth Rashidun caliph, the first Shia Imam, and the cousin and son-in-law of the Islamic prophet Muhammad. It has been transmitted on the authority of Kumayl ibn Ziyad, a close associate of Ali. This contains esoteric teachings about divine mercy and repentance, and remains popular especially among Shia Muslims.
Kumayl ibn Ziyad was a prominent nobleman in Kufa, Iraq. He was outspoken against the Rashidun caliph Uthman and was consequently exiled to Hims in Syria. Soon after the assassination of Uthman in 656 CE, he joined the new caliph Ali in Medina as one of his close associates. Later he was appointed by Ali as the governor of Hit, north of Kufa, where he prevented an early incursion by Mu'awiya, the rebellious governor of Syria. Kumayl also fought alongside Ali in the Battle of Siffin in 657 against Mu'awiya. Some years after the assassination of Ali in 661, Kumayl participated in the abortive revolt of Ibn al-Ash'ath in 700 against the Umayyad viceroy al-Hajjaj ibn Yusuf and was executed by him circa 708 for his role in the rebellion and for his continued devotion to Ali.
The is quoted on the authority of Kumayl, who is said to have learned this from Ali. In turn, Ali may have attributed the to Khidr, a figure, likely a prophet, who is described but not named in the Quran. Indeed, Ali often referred to Khidr as 'his brother', claiming Khidr appeared to him assuming the form of different people. Among Shia scholars, the is quoted by al-Tusi in his, by Ibn Tawus in his, and by Sharif al-Murtada . The is also featured in, a widely circulated collection of s compiled by the Shia scholar Abbas Qomi . There are several commentaries concerning this, some of which are listed by the Shia jurist Agha Bozorg Tehrani in his . The was translated to English by the philosopher and academic William Chittick. Especially among Shia Muslims, the remains popular, recited every Thursday night, and on mid-Shaban. The invocation of this is said to be "useful for protecting against the evil of enemies, for opening the gates of one's daily bread and for the forgiveness of sins."
Perpetual and constant remembrance of God is highlighted in this, a passage of which reads, "[O God!] Make all my time, in the night and the day, inhabited by Your remembrance." The benefits of this remembrance are explained in another passage of the, "O He whose name is a remedy and whose invocation is the cure."
The is also rich with esoteric teachings, chief among them the concept of, which might be translated from Arabic as 'loving mercy and compassion'. The begins, "O God! I ask You by your mercy 'which embraces all things'," which alludes to verse 7:156 of the Quran, or verses 6:12 and 6:54 of the Quran, according to which, God has 'inscribed' on His self the principle of mercy. A few verses later, the continues, "by Your names, which have filled the foundations of all things." Together, these two verses of the supplication imply that the defining quality of all divine names is mercy, suggests the Islamic author Reza Shah-Kazemi. As this mercy fills the foundations of all things, he continues, anything that lacks mercy is only temporary and transient. For Shah-Kazemi then, a central message of the is that there is hidden mercy even in the outwardly most absurd happenings, a mercy which would be revealed to most people only when the "veil" is lifted at death. Another verse of the supplication reads, "My far-fetched hopes have held me back from my true gain," echoing other statements attributed to Ali, including, "Most shattered minds have been felled by lightning bolts of covetous desires."
Having invoked the mercy of God, the then appeals to this mercy, "O God! I find no forgiver of my sins, no concealer of my ugly acts, no transformer of my ugly acts into beautiful ones, but You." The last part is an allusion to verse 25:70 of the Quran, "God will transform their ugly acts into beautiful ones," a divine promise to those who repent and act virtuously afterward. The continues, This refusal to despair from the mercy of God is also evident in another saying attributed to Ali, "The one who truly understands among all those who understand is the one who never makes people despair of the mercy of God." A few other passages from the follow below after minor edits.