Ta'ziyeh is one of the religious performances that is deeply linked to Shiite beliefs and love for the family of infidelity and purity. The Ta'ziyah was originally held to commemorate the uprising and martyrdom of Imam Hussein (AS), but gradually the life and testimony of other Shiite elders has become a subject of passionate ta'ziyeh. The origins of ta'ziyeh can be found in rituals such as "Sorrow of the Golden", "Siva of Siyav", "the Mitra Tragedy". Although the flourishing of the art of Ta'ziyeh occurred during the Safavid period, it seems that the oldest ta'ziyyah available was compiled in the era of Karim Khan Zand and gained qualitative growth during the Qajar period. The Life and Testimony of Prophet Ahmad bin Mossi, the King of Cheragh (AS), has been the source of the creation of several versions of the Ta'ziyeh because of its dramatic charge. In these soliloquies, Prophet Ahmad bin al-Musa (AS) and his brothers leave for Medina to visit his brother, Imam Reza (AS). In Shiraz, however, they are confronted with the prohibition of slaughter, by the monkey puppet ruler and martyred in a defensive manner. While they have a straightforward, straightforward narrative, they have a dramatic curve, and despite the linguistic impoverishment of these texts, their poetic weakness, and their slippery weight and rhyme. After all, they are heart-wrenching speeches that sit in the audience's heart.