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hawzah

Hawzah, sometimes rendered as hawza or al-Hawza ilmiyya, is a term used in Twelver Shia Islam to denote a religious seminary or center of learning where clerics study and train for religious authority. The word itself conveys a gathering or seat of knowledge. Hawzahs are focused on the interpretation of Islamic law, theology, and related disciplines, and historically have been the main path for producing qualified Shia scholars.

A hawzah provides a long, teacher-led curriculum in areas such as fiqh (jurisprudence), usul al-fiqh (principles

The most prominent hawzah centers are in Najaf, Iraq, and Qom, Iran, though additional centers exist in

of
jurisprudence),
kalam
(theology),
logic,
philosophy,
Arabic
grammar,
and
sometimes
mysticism
or
ethics.
Students,
known
as
tullab,
study
under
senior
scholars
and
progress
through
levels,
often
spending
many
years
in
study
with
the
aim
of
attaining
the
status
to
perform
ijtihad
(independent
legal
reasoning).
The
highest
ranks
may
lead
to
becoming
a
marja’
taqlid,
a
recognized
source
of
emulation
for
Shia
communities.
other
cities
worldwide.
Najaf’s
hawzah
is
one
of
the
oldest
and
most
influential,
while
Qom’s
hawzah
gained
modern
prominence
in
the
20th
century.
Hawzah
education
is
typically
distinct
from
Sunni
madrasa
systems
in
its
emphasis
on
jurisprudential
reasoning
and
the
potential
for
scholarly
authority
that
extends
beyond
local
communities.