Najaf has been the cradle of Shī῾ī learning for many centuries.
According to Najaf tradition, it has been so ever since the prominent
scholar Muḥammad b. al-Ḥasan al-Ṭūsī, called shaykh al-tā'ifa or “senior
scholar of the the sect”, migrated there shortly after the Saljuq conquest
of Baghdad in 447/1055.
We have very little information about the teaching system and curriculum in
Najaf before the nineteenth century. In this essay, I will try to present
the basic elements of a Najaf ḥawza education as they exist in contemporary
Iraq and compare it with a Najaf curriculum of 1913. Quite remarkably, the
curriculum, teaching methods and patronage networks have been remarkably
stable over the last century. Politics and reform movements have, however,
had their effects on the curriculum too, as I shall explain in the course of
this essay.