Qom Seminary
The Qom Seminary, known as the Hawza Ilmiyya of Qom, is the preeminent center for Twelver Shia Islamic scholarship in Iran, dedicated to advanced studies in jurisprudence, principles of jurisprudence, philosophy, and theology.[1]Revived in its modern institutional form in 1922 by Grand Ayatollah Abdul-Karim Ha'eri Yazdi, who relocated from Arak to restore the historic Fayziyya Madrasa in Qom, the seminary rapidly expanded under his leadership and that of successors like Ayatollah Hossein Borujerdi, attracting students from across the Shia world.[2]
It hosts tens of thousands of students, primarily focused on Usuli rationalist jurisprudence, and has produced influential marja' taqlid (sources of emulation) whose fatwas guide Shia Muslims globally.[2]
The seminary's political significance surged with the 1979 Iranian Revolution, as figures like Ayatollah Ruhollah Khomeini, who lectured there, leveraged it to advocate wilayat al-faqih (guardianship of the jurist), embedding clerical authority in Iran's governance structure and positioning Qom as a rival to Najaf's more quietist tradition.[1]
While sustaining traditional hawza pedagogy through private tutorials and khums-funded stipends, it faces debates over state influence and modernization, including tensions between independence and alignment with the Islamic Republic's ideological apparatus.[2][1]