|
"And say: Truth has
come and falsehood
has vanished away. Lo!
falsehood
is ever bound to
vanish."
(17:81)
Praise belongs to Allah Who has made truth clearly
distinct from error, who puts down innovation and innovators and raises high
the Sunna of the Prophet, Peace be upon him, and the people who follow it. Praise belongs to Allah Who in every century
inspires a group of scholarly people to defend the Way of the Prophet, Peace be
upon him, from the distortions of the ignorant -- those who call the majority
of Muslims mushrik (idolaters) and mubtadi` (innovators) and kafir
(disbelievers), falsely claiming that they alone are saved. Salutations and greetings upon the Prophet,
his Family, and his Companions who are the exemplars and guardians of the
Sunna.
The
reason for this book |
This brief but excellent book by the Iraqi scholar
al-Zahawi (1863-1936) is published in English for the first time, by Allah's
grace, to give our Muslim brother in the West the necessary historical
background on important questions of belief and methodology which are currently
under attack from certain quarters of our Community. It is a companion volume
to our two books entitled Islamic Doctrine and Beliefs According to Ahl
al-Sunna.[1]
Islam,
in our understanding and that of the majority of Muslims, both scholars and
non-scholars, is the Islam of Ahl al-Sunna wa al-Jama`a -- The People of the
Way of the Prophet and the Community of Muslims. Chief and foremost among them are the true Salaf of Islam: the
Companions, the Successors, and their Successors according to the Prophet's
sound hadith in Muslim: "The best century is my century, then the one
following it, then the one following that." All the scholars understood by that hadith that the true Salaf
were the models of human behavior and correct belief for us Muslims and for all
mankind, that to follow them was to follow the Prophet, and that to follow the
Prophet was to achieve salvation according to Allah's order: "Whoever
obeys the Prophet obeys Allah" (4:80).
In
our time, however, the name Salaf has been usurped by a movement which seeks to
impose its own narrow interpretation of Religion towards a re-fashioning of the
teachings of Islam. The adherents of
this movement call themselves "Salafi." Such an appellation is baseless since the true Salaf knew no such
school as the "Salafi" school nor even called themselves by that
name; the only general name they recognized for themselves was that of
Muslim. As an eminent scholar has
stated, the Salafiyya is not a recognized school of thought in Islam, rather,
it refers to a blessed historical period of our glorious past.
In
reality, today's so-called "Salafi" movement, now about thirty years
old, is the modern outgrowth of an two-century old heresy spawned by a scholar
of the Najd area in the Eastern part of the Arabian peninsula by the name of
Muhammad ibn `Abd al-Wahhab (1703-1792).
This scholar has been refuted by a long line of scholars both in his
time and ours. Their names and the
titles of some of their excellent refutations are found in the bibliography
given at the end of this introduction.
In
essence, Salafism and Wahhabism are the same, but the latter is identified by
its founder while the former takes the name of the Salaf and makes it its
own. Yet both Salafism and Wahhabism
depart from the belief and practice of the Salaf, as the present book
abundantly makes clear.
About
the book |
Al-Zahawi displays a profound mastery of the proofs
of Ahl al-Sunna which he presents in a clear and systematic style. The book is divided into concise sections
tracing the origins of the Wahhabi/Salafi movement and the teachings that this
movement promotes in isolation of the doctrine of the majority of Muslims. After a brief historical overview of the
bloody origins of Wahhabism and the "Salafi" creed, the author turns
to investigate the foundations of the shari`a which have been targeted by the
Wahhabi/Salafi movement for revision, namely:
the Wahhabi/Salafi tampering
of the doctrine of the pious Salaf concerning Allah's essence and attributes,
and his freedom from body, size, or direction;
their rejection of ijma` (scholarly consensus) and qiyas
(analogy);
their rejection of the
sources and methodological foundations of ijtihad (deriving qualified
judgment) and taqlid (following qualified judgment).
The
author then narrows down on the Wahhabi/Salafi practice of takfir, which is
their declaring Muslims unbelievers, according to criteria not followed by the
pious Salaf but devised by modern-day "Salafis." The author shows that the
"Salafis" went out of bounds in condemning the Umma (Muslim
Community) on the question of taqlid, declaring unbelievers all those who
practice taqlid, that is, the majority of Muslims. Finally, the author turns to the linchpin of "Salafi"
philosophy: leaving the ijma` of the true Salaf in declaring unbelievers all
Muslims who use the Prophet Muhammad's intercession, Peace be upon him, as a wasila
or means of blessing.
About the author |
Al-Shaykh Jamil Effendi al-Siqdi al-Zahawi was the
son of the Mufti of Iraq and a descendant of Khalid ibn al-Walid. He was educated in the Islamic sciences
chiefly by his father and, besides going on to become the greatest Arabic and
Persian poet of modern Iraq, was also a literary master in the other two
Islamic languages of the time: Turkish and Kurdish.
Al-Zahawi
gave early proofs of his scholarly talents.
By the age of forty he had served on the board of education in Baghdad,
as the director of the state printing office, as editor of the chief state
publication, al-Zawra', and as a member of the Baghdad court of
appeal. The second half of his life was
devoted to writing, journalism, and teaching.
He taught philosophy and Arabic literature in Istanbul and law in
Baghdad. A prolific writer, at one
point he declined the office of court poet and historian of Iraq offered him by
King Faysal. In addition to the above
he was scientifically inclined and wrote papers on various scientific topics
such as electricity and the power of repulsion, all this despite a chronic
disease of the spine which had crippled him from his twenty-fifth year.
At
the turn of the century Arabia had witnessed the return of the Wahhabis to
power and the open rebellion of their forces against the Caliph of the Islamic
community. What was worse, the Wahhabi
heresy was knocking at the gates of Baghdad, and the scholars of Ahl al-Sunna
spoke out in order to stem its rising tide.
In 1905 at the age of 42 and upon the request of his father al-Zahawi
published this eloquent indictment of the sect's innovations in doctrine and
jurisprudence, refuting its tenets one by one.
He named the book, of which the present work forms the major part, al-Fajr
al-sadiq fi al-radd `ala munkiri al-tawassul wa al-khawariq ("The True
Dawn: A Refutation of Those Who Deny The Validity of Using Means to Allah and
the Miracles of Saints"). The
title indicates Zahawi's opinion, reminiscent of that of other scholars who
wrote similar refutations, that the Wahhabi position on tawassul represents the
essence of their deviation from the beliefs of Ahl al-Sunna, although it is but
one of their many divergences with Sunni Muslims.
Zahawi's
brilliant style, his acute sense of balance and moderation, and his luminous
logic and concision gave this brief book an undisputed place of honor among
modern works of heresiology. May Allah
reward him with His generosity, as well as those who collaborated on this
timely and all-beneficial translation for the edification of English-speaking
Muslims. We warmly recommend this book
to all the sincere students and teachers who are interested in the growth and
dissemination of sound Islamic belief in the West. As Sayyidina `Umar said,
"This Religion is our flesh and our blood, so watch from whom you take
it": in our time it is a duty to inform ourselves as to the soundness of
the religious teaching which we are receiving and passing on to our
children. For our own sake and theirs,
we must discern the sources of such teaching with extreme caution, sifting the sound
from the unsound, correcting what is wrong with our hand, our tongue, and our
heart.
Muslims
of the twenty-first century should beware of the renewed onslaught on their
beliefs being conducted today from within our Communities East and West. In the name of Qur'an and Sunna, but
actually supported by certain regimes pursuing specific ideologies,
"Salafis" are taking over the mosques built by Ahl al-Sunna in Europe
and North America -- mostly Indian and Pakistani immigrants -- by means of
elections and fundings. It is the duty
of all Muslims to ascertain that the mosques of Allah continue as centers of
sound Islamic practice, not "Salafi" practice. This can only be done if one first appraises
oneself of the reality of "Salafi" beliefs which are different from
those of the main body of Muslims.
The Prophet said, Peace be
upon him: "My Community will split into seventy-three sects. All of them will be in the fire except one
group." They asked: "Who are they, O Messenger of Allah?" He said:
"Those that follow my way and that of
my companions."[2] This is a rallying-cry to the Firm Rope of 1,418 years of
mainstream Islam and an invitation to reject the absurd claim of the
"Salafi" movement that it is they, and not Ahl al-Sunna, who are the
Saved Group. As Zahawi asks -- may
Allah have mercy on him: If the saved group are those who came after Muhammad
ibn `Abd al-Wahhab, then what is the status of all those who came before him,
and that of the majority of those who came after him -- that is, Ahl al-Sunna
wa al-Jama`a?
This
warning is not meant as an attack on Islamic unity. On the contrary, our cry of alarm must be understood as a
reaffirmation that the Saved Group which the Prophet mentioned in his hadith
are the People of the Way of the Prophet and their scholars. Those scholars
have spoken in no uncertain terms in condemnation of the innovations of
Wahhabis and "Salafis" in our time, as the present book and the
bibliography below, al-hamdu lillah, prove beyond doubt.
May
Allah give victory to those who stand truly for the way of His Prophet, Blessings
and Peace be upon him. O Believers, read this book and take heed of its
message. We conclude this brief introduction with a selective list of authors
and works of Ahl al-Sunna scholars in whose pages the deviations of Wahhabis
and Salafis are exposed time after time and conclusively refuted. We look forward to their translations and
recommend every one of them. And all
praise belongs to Allah, the Lord of the Worlds.
Shaykh Hisham Muhammad Kabbani
Los Altos, California
1 Muharram 1418
19 May 1996
AHL AL-SUNNA CONDEMNATIONS
OF THE WAHHABI/SALAFI
HERESIES:
A SELECT BIBLIOGRAPHY
Al-Ahsa'i Al-Misri, Ahmad (1753-1826): Unpublished manuscript
of a refutation of the Wahhabi sect.
His son Shaykh Muhammad ibn Ahmad ibn `Abd al-Latif al-Ahsa'i also wrote
a book refuting them.
Al-Ahsa'i, Al-Sayyid `Abd al-Rahman: wrote a sixty-seven
verse poem which begins with the verse:
Badat fitnatun kal layli qad ghattatil aafaaqa
wa sha``at fa kadat tublighul gharba wash
sharaqa
[A confusion came about like nightfall covering the
skies
and became widespread almost reaching the
whole world]
Al-`Amrawi, `Abd al-Hayy, and `Abd al-Hakim Murad (Qarawiyyin
University, Morocco): Al-tahdhir min al-ightirar bi ma ja'a fi kitab
al-hiwar ["Warning Against Being Fooled By the Contents of the Book
(by Ibn Mani`) A Debate With al-Maliki (an attack on Ibn `Alawi
al-Maliki by a Wahhabi writer)"] (Fes: Qarawiyyin, 1984).
`Ata' Allah al-Makki: al-sarim al-hindi fil `unuq al-najdi
["The Indian Scimitar on the Najdi's Neck"].
Al-Azhari, `Abd Rabbih ibn Sulayman al-Shafi`i (The author of Sharh
Jami' al-Usul li ahadith al-Rasul, a basic book of Usul al-Fiqh: Fayd
al-Wahhab fi Bayan Ahl al-Haqq wa man dalla `an al-sawab, 4 vols.
["Allah's Outpouring in Differentiating the True Muslims From Those Who
Deviated From the Truth"].
Al-`Azzami, `Allama al-shaykh Salama (d. 1379H): Al-Barahin al-sati`at ["The Radiant
Proofs..."].
Al-Barakat al-Shafi`i al-Ahmadi al-Makki, `Abd al-Wahhab ibn
Ahmad: unpublished manuscript of a refutation of the Wahhabi sect.
al-Bulaqi, Mustafa al-Masri wrote a refutation to San`a'i's
poem in which the latter had praised Ibn `Abd al-Wahhab. It is in Samnudi's "Sa`adat
al-Darayn" and consists in 126 verses beginning thus:
Bi hamdi wali al-hamdi la al-dhammi astabdi
Wa bil haqqi la bil
khalqi lil haqqi astahdi
[By the glory of the Owner of glory, not baseness,
do I overcome;
And
by Allah, not by creatures, do I seek guidance to Allah]
Al-Buti, Dr. Muhammad Sa`id Ramadan (University of
Damascus): Al-salafiyyatu marhalatun zamaniyyatun mubarakatun la madhhabun
islami ["The Salafiyya is a blessed historical period not an Islamic
school of law"] (Damascus: Dar al-fikr, 1988); Al-lamadhhabiyya akhtaru
bid`atin tuhaddidu al-shari`a al-islamiyya ["Non-madhhabism is the
most dangerous innovation presently menacing Islamic law"] (Damascus:
Maktabat al-Farabi, n.d.).
Al-Dahesh ibn `Abd Allah, Dr. (Arab University of Morocco), ed. Munazara `ilmiyya bayna `Ali
ibn Muhammad al-Sharif wa al-Imam Ahmad ibn Idris fi al-radd `ala Wahhabiyyat
Najd, Tihama, wa `Asir ["Scholarly Debate Between the Sharif and Ahmad
ibn Idris Against the Wahhabis of Najd, Tihama, and `Asir"].
Dahlan, al-Sayyid Ahmad ibn Zayni (d. 1304/1886). Mufti of Mecca and Shaykh al-Islam (highest
religious authority in the Ottoman jurisdiction) for the Hijaz region: al-Durar
al-saniyyah fi al-radd ala al-Wahhabiyyah ["The Pure Pearls in
Answering the Wahhabis"] pub. Egypt 1319 & 1347 H; Fitnat
al-Wahhabiyyah ["The Wahhabi Fitna"]; Khulasat al-Kalam fi
bayan Umara' al-Balad al-Haram ["The Summation Concerning the Leaders
of the Sacrosanct Country"], a history of the Wahhabi fitna in Najd and
the Hijaz.
al-Dajwi, Hamd Allah: al-Basa'ir li Munkiri al-tawassul ka
amthal Muhd. Ibn `Abdul Wahhab ["The Evident Proofs Against Those Who
Deny the Seeking of Intercession Like Muhammad Ibn `Abdul Wahhab"].
Shaykh al-Islam Dawud ibn Sulayman
al-Baghdadi al-Hanafi (1815-1881 CE): al-Minha al-Wahbiyya fi radd
al-Wahhabiyya ["The Divine Dispensation Concerning the Wahhabi
Deviation"]; Ashadd al-Jihad fi Ibtal Da`wa al-Ijtihad ["The
Most Violent Jihad in Proving False Those Who Falsely Claim Ijtihad"].
Al-Falani al-Maghribi, al-Muhaddith Salih: authored a large
volume collating the answers of scholars of the Four Schools to Muhammad ibn
`Abd al-Wahhab.
al-Habibi, Muhammad `Ashiq al-Rahman: `Adhab Allah al-Mujdi
li Junun al-Munkir al-Najdi ["Allah's Terrible Punishment for the Mad
Rejector From Najd"].
Al-Haddad, al-Sayyid al-`Alawi ibn Ahmad ibn Hasan ibn
al-Qutb
Sayyidi `Abd Allah ibn `Alawi al-Haddad al-Shafi`i: al-Sayf
al-batir li `unq al-munkir `ala al-akabir ["The Sharp Sword for the
Neck of the Assailant of Great Scholars"]. Unpublished manuscript of about 100 folios; Misbah al-anam wa
jala' al-zalam fi radd shubah al-bid`i al-najdi al-lati adalla biha al-`awamm
["The Lamp of Mankind and the Illumination of Darkness Concerning the
Refutation of the Errors of the Innovator From Najd by Which He Had Misled the
Common People"]. Published 1325H.
Al-Hamami al-Misri, Shaykh Mustafa: Ghawth al-`ibad bi
bayan al-rashad ["The Helper of Allah's Servants According to the
Affirmation of Guidance"].
Al-Hilmi al-Qadiri al-Iskandari, Shaykh Ibrahim: Jalal
al-haqq fi kashf ahwal ashrar al-khalq ["The Splendor of Truth in
Exposing the Worst of People] (pub.
1355H).
Al-Husayni, `Amili, Muhsin
(1865-1952). Kashf al-irtiyab
fi atba` Muhammad ibn `Abd al-Wahhab ["The Dispelling of Doubt
Concerning the Followers of Muhammad ibn `Abd al-Wahhab"]. [Yemen?]:
Maktabat al-Yaman al-Kubra, 198?.
Ibn `Abd al-Latif al-Shafi`i, `Abd Allah: Tajrid sayf
al-jihad `ala mudda`i al-ijtihad ["The drawing of the sword of jihad
against the false claimants to ijtihad"].
The family of Ibn `Abd al-Razzaq al-Hanbali
in Zubara and Bahrayn possess both manuscript and printed refutations by
scholars of the Four Schools from Mecca, Madina, al-Ahsa', al-Basra, Baghdad,
Aleppo, Yemen and other Islamic regions.
Ibn `Abd al-Wahhab al-Najdi, `Allama
al-Shaykh Sulayman, elder brother of Muhammad ibn `Abd al-Wahhab: al-Sawa'iq
al-Ilahiyya fi al-radd 'ala al-Wahhabiyya ["Divine Lightnings in
Answering the Wahhabis"]. Ed. Ibrahim Muhammad al-Batawi. Cairo: Dar
al-insan, 1987. Offset reprint by Waqf Ikhlas, Istanbul: Hakikat Kitabevi,
1994. Prefaces by Shaykh Muhammad ibn Sulayman al-Kurdi al-Shafi`i and Shaykh
Muhammad Hayyan al-Sindi (Muhammad Ibn `Abd al-Wahhab's shaykh) to the effect
that Ibn `Abd al-Wahhab is "dall mudill" ("misguided and
misguiding").
Ibn `Abidin al-Hanafi, al-Sayyid Muhammad Amin: Radd
al-muhtar `ala al-durr al-mukhtar, Vol. 3, Kitab al-Iman, Bab al-bughat
["Answer to the Perplexed: A Commentary on "The Chosen
Pearl,"" Book of Belief, Chapter on Rebels]. Cairo: Dar al-Tiba`a
al-Misriyya, 1272 H.
Ibn `Afaliq al-Hanbali, Muhammad Ibn `Abdul Rahman: Tahakkum
al-muqallidin bi man idda`a tajdid al-din [Sarcasm of the muqallids against
the false claimants to the Renewal of Religion]. A very comprehensive book refuting the Wahhabi heresy and posting
questions which Ibn `Abdul Wahhab and his followers were unable to answer for
the most part.
Ibn Dawud al-Hanbali, `Afif al-Din `Abd Allah: as-sawa`iq
wa al-ru`ud ["Lightnings and thunder"], a very important book in
20 chapters. According to the Mufti of
Yemen Shaykh al-`Alawi ibn Ahmad
al-Haddad, the mufti of Yemen, "This book has received the approval of the
`ulama of Basra, Baghdad, Aleppo, and Ahsa' [Arabian peninsula]. It was summarized by Muhammad ibn Bashir the
qadi of Ra's al-Khayma in Oman."
Ibn Ghalbun al-Libi also wrote a refutation in forty verses of
al-San`ani's poem in which the latter had praised Ibn `Abd al-Wahhab. It is in Samnudi's Sa`adat al-darayn
and begins thus:
Salami `ala ahlil isabati wal-rushdi
Wa laysa `ala najdi
wa man halla fi najdi
[My salutation is upon the people of truth and
guidance
And not upon Najd nor the one who
settled in Najd]
Ibn Khalifa `Ulyawi al-Azhari: Hadhihi `aqidatu al-salaf wa
al-khalaf fi dhat Allahi ta`ala wa sifatihi wa af`alihi wa al-jawab al-sahih li
ma waqa`a fihi al-khilaf min al-furu` bayna al-da`in li al-salafiyya wa atba`
al-madhahib al-arba`a al-islamiyya ["This is the doctrine of the
Predecessors and the Descendants concerning the divergences in the branches
between those who call to al-salafiyya and the followers of the Four
Islamic Schools of Law"] (Damascus: Matba`at Zayd ibn Thabit, 1398/1977.
Kawthari al-Hanafi, Muhammad Zahid. Maqalat al-Kawthari. (Cairo: al-Maktabah al-Azhariyah li
al-Turath, 1994).
Al-Kawwash al-Tunisi, `Allama Al-Shaykh Salih: his refutation
of the Wahhabi sect is contained in Samnudi's volume: "Sa`adat al-darayn
fi al-radd `ala al-firqatayn."
Khazbek, Shaykh Hasan: Al-maqalat al-wafiyyat fi al-radd
`ala al-wahhabiyyah ["Complete Treatise in Refuting the
Wahhabis"].
Makhluf, Muhammad Hasanayn: Risalat fi hukm al-tawassul
bil-anbiya wal-awliya ["Treatise on the Ruling Concerning the Use of
Prophets and Saints as Intermediaries"].
Al-Maliki al-Husayni, Al-muhaddith Muhammad al-Hasan ibn
`Alawi: Mafahimu yajibu an tusahhah ["Notions that should be
corrected"] 4th ed. (Dubai: Hashr ibn Muhammad Dalmuk, 1986); Muhammad
al-insanu al-kamil ["Muhammad, the Perfect Human Being"] 3rd ed.
(Jeddah: Dar al-Shuruq, 1404/1984).
Al-Mashrifi al-Maliki al-Jaza'iri: Izhar al-`uquq mimman
mana`a al-tawassul bil nabi wa al-wali al-saduq ["The Exposure of the
Disobedience of Those Who Forbid Using the Intermediary of the Prophets and the
Truthful Saints].
Al-Mirghani al-Ta'ifi, `Allama `Abd Allah ibn Ibrahim (d.
1793): Tahrid al-aghbiya' `ala
al-Istighatha bil-anbiya' wal-awliya ["The Provocations of the
Ignorant Against Seeking the Help of Prophets and Saints"] (Cairo:
al-Halabi, 1939).
Mu'in al-Haqq al-Dehlawi (d. 1289): Sayf al-Jabbar al-maslul
`ala a`da' al-Abrar ["The Sword of the Almighty Drawn Against the
Enemies of the Pure Ones"].
Al-Muwaysi al-Yamani, `Abd Allah ibn `Isa: Unpublished
manuscript of a refutation of the Wahhabi sect.
Al-Nabahani al-Shafi`i, al-qadi al-muhaddith Yusuf ibn Isma`il
(1850-1932): Shawahid al-Haqq fi al-istighatha bi sayyid al-Khalq (s)
["The Proofs of Truth in the Seeking of the Intercession of the
Prophet"].
Al-Qabbani al-Basri al-Shafi`i, Allama Ahmad ibn `Ali: A
manuscript treatise in approximately 10 chapters.
Al-Qadumi al-Nabulusi al-Hanbali: `AbdAllah: Rihlat
["Journey"].
Al-Qazwini, Muhammad Hasan, (d. 1825). Al-Barahin
al-jaliyyah fi raf` tashkikat al-Wahhabiyah ["The Plain Demonstrations
That Dispel the Aspersions of the Wahhabis"]. Ed. Muhammad Munir
al-Husayni al-Milani. 1st ed. Beirut: Mu'assasat al-Wafa', 1987.
Al-Qudsi: al-Suyuf al-Siqal fi A`naq man ankara `ala
al-awliya ba`d al-intiqal ["The Burnished Swords on the Necks of Those
Who Deny the Role of Saints After Their Leaving This World"].
Al-Rifa`i, Yusuf al-Sayyid Hashim, President of the World
Union of Islamic Propagation and Information: Adillat Ahl al-Sunna wa
al-Jama`at aw al-radd al-muhkam al-mani` `ala munkarat wa shubuhat Ibn Mani` fi
tahajjumihi `ala al-sayyid Muhammad `Alawi al-Maliki al-Makki ["The
Proofs of the People of the Way of the Prophet and the Muslim Community: or,
the Strong and Decisive Refutation of Ibn Mani`'s Aberrations and Aspersions in
his Assault on Muhammad `Alawi al-Maliki al-Makki"] (Kuwait: Dar
al-siyasa, 1984).
Al-Samnudi al-Mansuri, al-`Allama al-Shaykh Ibrahim: Sa`adat
al-darayn fi al-radd `ala al-firqatayn al-wahhabiyya wa muqallidat
al-zahiriyyah ["Bliss in the Two Abodes: Refutation of the Two Sects,
Wahhabis and Zahiri Followers"].
Al-Saqqaf al-Shafi`i, Hasan ibn `Ali, Islamic Research
Intitute, Amman, Jordan: al-Ighatha bi adillat al-istighatha wa al-radd
al-mubin `ala munkiri al-tawassul ["The Mercy of Allah in the Proofs
of Seeking Intercession and the Clear Answer to Those who Reject it"]; Ilqam
al hajar li al-mutatawil `ala al-Asha`ira min al-Bashar ["The Stoning
of All Those Who Attack Ash'aris"]; Qamus shata'im al-Albani wa
al-alfaz al-munkara al-lati yatluquha fi haqq ulama al-ummah wa fudalai'ha wa
ghayrihim... ["Encyclopedia of al-Albani's Abhorrent Expressions Which
He Uses Against the Scholars of the Community, its Eminent Men, and
Others..."] Amman : Dar al-Imam al-Nawawi, 1993.
Al-Sawi al-Misri: Hashiyat `ala al-jalalayn ["Commentary
on the Tafsir of the Two Jalal al-Din"].
Sayf al-Din Ahmed ibn Muhammad: Al-Albani Unveiled: An
Exposition of His Errors and Other Important Issues, 2nd ed. (London: s.n.,
1994).
Al-Shatti al-Athari al-Hanbali, al-Sayyid Mustafa ibn Ahmad
ibn Hasan, Mufti of Syria: al-Nuqul al-shar'iyyah fi al-radd 'ala al-Wahhabiyya
["The Legal Proofs in Answering the Wahhabis"].
Al-Subki, al-hafiz Taqi al-Din (d. 756/1355): Al-durra
al-mudiyya fi al-radd `ala Ibn Taymiyya, ed. Muhammad Zahid al-Kawthari
["The Luminous Pearl: A Refutation of Ibn Taymiyya"]; Al-rasa'il
al-subkiyya fi al-radd `ala Ibn Taymiyya wa tilmidhihi Ibn Qayyim al-Jawziyya,
ed. Kamal al-Hut ["Subki's treatises in Answer to Ibn Taymiyya and his
pupil Ibn Qayyim al-Jawziyya"] (Beirut: `Alam al-Kutub, 1983); Al-sayf
al-saqil fi al-radd `ala Ibn Zafil ["The Burnished Sword in Refuting
Ibn Zafil (Ibn Qayyim al-Jawziyya)" Cairo: Matba`at al-Sa`ada, 1937; Shifa'
al-siqam fi ziyarat khayr al-anam ["The healing of the sick in
visiting the Best of Creation"].
Sunbul al-Hanafi al-Ta'ifi, Allama Tahir: Sima
al-Intisar lil awliya' al-abrar ["The Mark of Victory Belongs to
Allah's Pure Friends"].
Al-Tabataba'i al-Basri, al-Sayyid: also wrote a reply to
San`a'i's poem which was excerpted in Samnudi's Sa`adat al-Darayn. After
reading it, San`a'i reversed his position and said: "I have repented from
what I said concerning the Najdi."
Al-Tamimi al-Maliki, `Allama Isma`il (d. 1248), Shaykh
al-Islam in Tunis: wrote a refutation of a treatise of Ibn `Abd al-Wahhab.
Al-Wazzani, al-Shaykh al-Mahdi, Mufti of Fes, Morocco: Wrote a
refutation of Muhammad `Abduh's prohibition of tawassul.
al-Zahawi al-Baghdadi, Jamil Effendi Sidqi (d. 1355/1936): al-Fajr
al-Sadiq fi al-radd 'ala munkiri al-tawassul wa al-khawariq ["The True
Dawn in Refuting Those Who Deny the Seeking of Intercession and the Miracles of
Saints"] Pub. 1323/1905 in Egypt.
Al-Zamzami al-Shafi`i, Muhammad Salih, Imam of the Maqam
Ibrahim in Mecca, wrote a book in 20 chapters against them according to
al-Sayyid al-Haddad.
See also:
Ahmad, Qeyamuddin. The Wahhabi movement in India. 2nd
rev. ed. New Delhi : Manohar, 1994.
AHADITH ON THE KHAWARIJ
WHICH THE SCHOLARS CONSIDER
TO APPLY TO THE WAHHABIS
These ahadith are cited in the Six Books of
authentic traditions for the most part. They have been collated for the most
part from the following two books written in refutation of the Wahhabi heresy:
a) al-Sayyid al-`Alawi ibn Ahmad ibn Hasan ibn `Abd
Allah ibn `Alawi al-Haddad: Misbah al-anam wa jala' al-zalam fi radd shubah
al-bid`i al-Najdi al-lati adalla biha al- `awamm ["The Lamp of
Creatures and the Illumination of Darkness Concerning the Refutation of the
Errors of the Innovator From Najd by Which He Had Misled the Common
People"] published 1325H.
b) al-Sayyid Ahmad ibn Zayni al-Dahlan (d.
1304/1886). Mufti of Mecca and Shaykh al-Islam in the Hijaz region of the
Ottoman state: Khulasat al-kalam fi bayan umara' al-balad al-haram
["The Summation Concerning the Leaders of the Holy Sanctuary"] (A
History of the Wahhabi Fitna in Najd and the Hijaz) p. 234-236.
The
Prophet said, Peace be upon him:
1. "They [Khawarij = those outside] transferred
the Qur'anic verses meant to refer to unbelievers and made them refer to
believers."
2. "What I most fear in my community is a man
who interprets verses of the Qur'an out of context."
3. "The confusion [fitna] comes from there (and he pointed to the East = Najd in
present-day Eastern Saudi Arabia)."
4. "A people that recite Qur'an will come out of the East, but it will not go past
their throats. They will pass through
the religion (of Islam) like the arrow passes through its quarry. They will no
more come back to the religion than the arrow will come back to its
course. Their sign is that they shave
(their heads)."
5. "There will be in my Community a dissent and
a faction, a people with excellent words and vile deeds. They will read Qur'an, but their faith does
not go past their throats. They will
pass through religion the way an arrow passes through its quarry. They will no more come back to the religion
than the arrow will come back to its original course. They are the worst of human beings and the worst of all creation. The one who kills them or is killed by them
is blessed. They summon to the book of
Allah but they have nothing to do with it. Whoever kills them is closer to
Allah than they. Their sign is that
they shave (their heads)."
6. "A people will come out at the end of times,
immature, foolish and corrupt. They
will hold the discourse of the best of creation and recite Qur'an, but it will
not go past their throats. They will
passes through religion the way an arrow passes through its quarry. If you find them, kill them, for verily
whoever kills them will have his reward from Allah the Day of Judgment."
7. "There will be people in my Community whose
mark is that they shave (their heads).
They will recite Qur'an, but it will not go past their throats. They will pass through religion the way an
arrow passes through its target. They are the worst of human beings and the
worst of all creation."
8. "The apex of disbelief is towards the East
[Najd]. Pride and arrogance is found
among the people of the horse and the camel [Bedouin Arabs]."
9. "Harshness and dryness of heart are in the
East [Najd], and true belief is among the people of Hijaz."
10. "O Allah, bless our Syria and our
Yemen!" They said: "Ya Rasulallah, and our Najd!" He
didn't reply. He blessed Syria and Yemen twice more. They asked him to bless
Najd twice more but he didn't reply. The third time he said: "There [in
Najd] are the earthquakes and the dissensions, and through it will dawn the
epoch [or horn] of shaytan."
11. A version has, "The two epochs [or horns]
of shaytan." Some scholars have said that the dual referred to Musaylima the Arch-liar and to Muhammad ibn
`Abd al-Wahhab.
12. Some versions continue with the words: "And
in it [Najd] is the consuming disease," i.e. death.
13. Some books of history mention the following
version in the chapters devoted to the battles against the Banu Hanifa:
"At the end of times a man will come out of
Musaylima's country and he will change the religion of Islam." Note: Most
of the Khawarij were from the Najd area, from the tribes of Banu Hanifa, Banu
Tamim, and Wa'il. Musaylima was from the Banu Hanifa, and Ibn `Abd al-Wahhab is
from Tamim.
13a. Abu Bakr said concerning the Banu Hanifa (the
tribe of Musaylima the Liar): "Their valley [Najd] will not cease to be a
valley of dissensions until the end of time, and the religion will never
recover from their liars until Judgment Day," and in another version:
"Woe to al-Yamama without end."
13b. When `Ali killed the Khawarij, someone said:
"Praise be to Allah Who has brought them down and relieved us from
them." Ali replied: "Verily,
by the One in Whose hand is my soul, some of them are still in the loins of men
and they have not been born yet, and the last of them will fight on the side of
the Antichrist."
14. "A people that recite the Qur'an will come out of the East, but it will not go
past their throats. Every time a generation of them is cut down another one
will come until the last one finds itself on the side of the Antichrist."
15. "There will be a huge confusion within my
Community. There will not remain one house of the Arabs except that confusion
will enter it. Those who die because of it are in the fire. The harm of the
tongue in it will be greater than that of the sword."
16. "There will be a dissension (in which
people will be) deaf, dumb and blind (this means they will be blind and not see
the true issue nor listen to the voice of truth): whoever tries to control it,
the dissension will control him."
17. "A shaytan will appear in Najd by whose
dissension the Arabian island will quake."
18. On the authority of al-`Abbas: "A man will
come out of the Wadi Abu Hanifah [in Najd] (whose appearance is) like a bull
that lunges against its yoke. There
will be much slaughter and killing in his time. They will make the possessions
of Muslims lawful for themselves and for trade among themselves. They will make
the lives of Muslims lawful for themselves and for boasting among themselves.
In that confusion the despised and the lowly will attain positions of power.
Their idle desires will keep company with them the way a dog keeps company with
its master."
19. On the authority of Abu Sa`id al-Khudri:
"Verily in the wake of this time of mine comes a people who will recite
Qur'an but it will not go past their throats. They will pass through religion
the way an arrow passes through its quarry. They will kill the Muslims and
leave the idolaters alone. If I saw them, verily I would kill them the way the
tribe of `Aad was killed [i.e. all of them]."
20. "There will be towards the end of time a
people who will say to you what neither you nor your forebears ever heard
before. Beware of them lest they
misguide you and bring you confusion."
21. "They will pass through Islam like an arrow
passes through its quarry. Wherever you
meet them, kill them!"
22. "They are the dogs of the people of
Hell."
23. "They recite Qur'an and consider it in
their favor but it is against them."
24. "There will be thirty dajjals (antichrists)
after me, all claiming prophethood."
25. "Some people will be standing and calling
at the gates of hell; whoever responds to their call, their will throw him into
the Fire. They will be from our own people [i.e. Arabs] and will speak our
language [Arabic]. Should you live to see them, stick to the main body (jama`a)
of the Muslims and their leader. (If there is no main body and no leader,)
isolate yourself from all these sects, even if you have to eat from the roots
of trees until death overcomes you while you are in that state."
26. "Just before the Hour there will be many
liars." Jabir ibn Samurah said: "Be on your guard against them."
27. "The Hour will not come until thirty
dajjals appear, all of them lying about Allah and His Messenger."
28. "There will be Dajjals and liars among my
Community. They will tell you something new, which neither you nor your
forefathers have heard. Be on your guard against them and do not let them lead
you astray."
29. "The time of the Dajjal will be years of
confusion. People will believe a liar, and disbelieve one who tells the truth.
People will distrust one who is trustworthy, and trust one who is treacherous;
and the ruwaybidha will have a say." Someone asked: "Who are
they?" He said: "Those who rebel against Allah and will have a say in
general affairs."
30. "If the leadership is entrusted to those
unfit for it, expect the Hour."
31. "You will see the barefoot ones, the naked,
the destitute, the shepherds and camelherds take pride in building tall
structures in abundance."
32. "One of the signs of the change of religion
is the affectation of eloquence by the rabble and their betaking to palaces in
big cities."
Jamil Effendi al-Zahawi's al-Fajr al-sadiq fi al-radd `ala munkiri al-tawassul wa
al-khawariq "The True Dawn: A Refutation of Those Who
Deny The Validity of Using Means to Allah and the Miracles of Saints" |
1:
The Origin of the Wahhabi Sect |
The Wahhabiyya is a sect whose origin can be traced
back to Muhammad Ibn `Abd al-Wahhab.
Although he first came on the scene in 1143 (1730 CE), the subversive
current his false doctrine initiated took some fifty years to spread. It first showed up in Najd. This is
the same district that produced the false prophet, Musaylima in the
early days of Islam. Muhammad Ibn Sa`ud, governor of this
district, aided Ibn `Abd al-Wahhab's effort, forcing people to follow him. One
Arab tribe after another allowed itself to be deceived until sedition became
commonplace in the region, his notoriety grew and his power soon passed beyond
anyone's control. The nomadic Arabs of the surrounding desert feared him. He
used to say to the people: "I call upon you but to confess tawhid
(monotheism) and to avoid shirk (associating partners with Allah in worship)." The people of the
countryside followed him and where he walked, they walked until his dominance
increased.
Muhammad
Ibn `Abd al-Wahhab was born in 1111 and died in 1207 (1699-1792 CE). At the
outset of his career, he used to go back and forth to Mecca and Madina in quest
of knowledge. In Madina, he studied
with Shaykh Muhammad Ibn Sulayman al-Kurdi and Shaykh Muhammad Hayat al-Sindi
(d. 1750). These two shaykhs as well as
others with whom he studied early on detected the heresy of Ibn `Abd
al-Wahhab's creed. They used to say:
"Allah will allow him be led astray; but even unhappier will be the lot of
those misled by him." Circumstances
had reached this state when his father `Abd al-Wahhab, a pious scholars of the
religion, detected heresy in his belief and began to warn others about his
son. His own brother Sulayman soon
followed suit, going so far as to write a book entitled al-Sawa`iq (the
thunderbolts)[3] to refute the innovative
and subversive creed manufactured by Ibn `Abd al-Wahhab.
Famous
writers of the day made a point of noting
the similarity between Ibn `Abd al-Wahhab's beginnings and those of the
false prophets prominent in Islam's initial epoch like Musaylima the
Prevaricator, Sajah al-Aswad al-Anasi, Tulaiha al-Asadi and others of their
kind.[4] What was different in `Abd al-Wahhab's case was his concealment
in himself of any outright claim to prophecy.
Undoubtedly, he was unable to gain support enough to openly proclaim
it. Nevertheless, he would call those who came from abroad to
join his movement Muhajirun and those who came from his own region Ansar
in patent imitation of those who took flight from Mecca with the Prophet
Muhammad in contrast to the inhabitants
of Madina at the start of Islam. Ibn
`Abd al-Wahhab habitually ordered anyone who had already made the obligatory
Pilgrimage (Hajj) to Mecca prior joining him to remake it since Allah had not
accepted it the first time they performed because they had done so as unbelievers.
He was also given to telling people wishing to enter his religion:
"You must bear witness against yourself that you were a disbeliever and
you must bear witness against your parents that they were disbelievers and died
as such."
His practice was to declare a group of famous
scholars of the past unbelievers. If a
potential recruit to his movement agreed and testified to the truth of that
declaration, he was accepted; if not, an order was given and
he was summarily put to death. Ibn `Abd
al-Wahhab made no secret of his view that the Muslim community had existed for
the last six hundred years in a state of unbelief (kufr) and he said the
same of whoever did not follow him.
Even if a person was the most pious and Allah-fearing of Muslims, he
would denounce them as idolaters (mushrikun), thus making the shedding
of their blood and confiscation of their wealth licit (halal).
On
the other hand, he affirmed the faith of anyone who followed him even though
they be persons of most notoriously corrupt and profligate styles of life
. He played always on a single theme:
the dignity to which Allah had entitled him. This directly corresponded to the
decreased reverence he claimed was due the
Prophet whose status as Messenger he frequently depreciated using
language fit to describe an errand boy rather than a divinely commissioned
apostle of faith. He would say such things as
"I looked up the account of Hudaybiyya and found it to contain this
or that lie." He was in the habit of using contemptuous
speech of this kind to the point that one follower felt free to say in his
actual presence: "This stick in my
hand is better than Muhammad because it benefits me by enabling me to
walk. But Muhammad is dead and benefits
me not at all". This, of course,
expresses nothing less than disbelief and counts legally as such in the fours
schools of Islamic law.[5]
Returning always to the same theme, Ibn `Abd
al-Wahhab used to say that prayer for the Prophet was reprehensible and
disliked (makruh) in the Shari`a. He would prohibit blessings on the Prophet from being recited on the eve of
Friday prayer and their public utterance from the minbar, and punish harshly
anyone who pronounced such blessings. He even went so far as to kill a blind mu'adhdhin
(caller to prayer) who did not cease
and desist when he commanded him to abandon praying for the Prophet in
the conclusion to his call to prayer.
He deceived his followers by saying that all that was done to keep
monotheism pure.
At
the same time, he burned many books containing prayers for the Prophet, among
them Dala'il al-Khayrat and others, similar in content and theme. In this
fashion, he destroyed countless books on Islamic law, commentary on the Qur'an,
and the science of hadith whose common fault lay in their contradiction of his
own vacuous creed. While doing this, however, he never ceased encouraging any
follower to interpret Qur'an and hadith for himself and to execute this
informed only by the light of his own understanding, darkened though it be
through errant belief and heretical indoctrination.
Ibn
`Abd al-Wahhab clung fiercely to denouncing people as unbelievers. To do this he used Qur'anic verses originally revealed about idolaters and
extended their application to monotheists.
It has been narrated by `Abd
Allah Ibn `Umar and recorded by Imam Bukhari in his book of sound hadiths that
the Khawarij transferred the Qur'anic verses meant to refer to unbelievers and
made them refer to believers.[6] He also relates another narration transmitted on the authority of
Ibn `Umar whereby the Prophet, on him be peace, said: "What I most fear in
my community is a man who interprets verses of the Qur'an out of context."
The latter hadith and the one preceding it apply to the case of Ibn `Abd
al-Wahhab and his followers.
It
is obvious the intention to found a new religion lay behind his statements and
actions. In consequence, the only thing he accepted from the religion of our
Prophet, on him be peace was the Qur'an. Yet even this was a matter of surface
show. It allowed people to be ignorant
of what his aims really were. Indicating this is the way he and his followers
used to interpret the Qur'an according to their own whim and ignore the
commentary provided by the Prophet, on him be peace, his Companions, the pious
predecessors of our Faith (al-salaf al-salihun), and the Imams of
Qur'anic commentary. He did not argue
on the strength of the narrations of the Prophet and sayings of the Companions,
the Successors to the Companions and the Imams among those who derived rulings
in the Shari`a by means of ijtihad nor did he adjudicate legal cases on the
basis of the principle sources (usul) of the Shari`a; that is, he did
not adhere to Consensus (ijma`) nor to sound analogy (qiyas). Although he claimed to belong to the legal
school (madhhab) of Imam Ahmad Ibn Hanbal, this pretense was motivated
by falsehood and dissimulation. The
scholars and jurists of the Hanbali school rejected his multifarious
errors. They wrote numerous articles
refuting him including his brother whose book
touching on Ibn `Abd al-Wahhab's errors was mentioned earlier.
The
learned Sayyid al-Haddad al-Alawi[7] said: "In our opinion,
the one element in the statements and actions of Ibn `Abd al-Wahhab that makes
his departure from the foundations of Islam unquestionable is the fact that he,
without support of any generally accepted interpretation of Qur'an or Sunna (bi
la ta'wil), takes matters in our religion necessarily well-known to be
objects of prohibition (haram) agreed upon by consensus (ijma`)
and makes them permissible (halal).[8] Furthermore, along with
that he disparages the prophets, the messengers, saints and the pious. Willful disparagement of anyone failing
under these categories of person is unbelief (kufr) according to the
consensus reached by the four Imams of the schools of Islamic law.
Then
he wrote an essay called "The Clarification of Unclarity Concerning the
Creator of Heaven and Earth" (kashf al-shubuhat `an khaliq al-ardi wa
al-samawat)[9] for Ibn Sa`ud. In this work
he declared that all present-day Muslims are disbelievers and have been so for
the last six hundred years. He applied
the verses in the Qur'an, meant to refer to disbelievers among the tribe of the
Quraysh to most Allah-fearing and pious individuals of the Muslim
community. Ibn Sa`ud naturally took
this work as a pretext and device for extending his political sovereignty by
subjecting the Arabs to his dominance.
Ibn `Abd al-Wahhab began to call people to his religion and instilled in
their hearts the idea that every one under the sun was an idolater. What's
more, anyone who slew an idolater, when he died, would go immediately to
paradise.
As
a consequence, Ibn Sa`ud carried out whatever Ibn `Abd al-Wahhab ordered. If he commanded him to kill someone and
seize his property, he hastened to do just that. Indeed, Ibn `Abd al-Wahhab sat among his folk like a prophet in
the midst of his community. His people
did not forsake one jot or little of what he told them to do and acted only as
he commanded, magnifying him to the highest degree and honoring him in every
conceivable way. The clans and tribes
of the Arabs continued to magnify him in this manner until, by that means, the
dominion of Ibn Sa`ud increased far and wide as well as that of his sons after
him.
The
Sharif of Mecca, Ghalib, waged war against Ibn Sa`ud for fifteen years until he grew too old and weak to
fight. No one remained if his
supporters except they joined the side of his foe. It was then that Ibn Sa`ud entered Mecca in a negotiated peace
settlement in the year 1220 (1805 CE). There he abided for some seven years
until the Sublime Porte (i.e. the Ottoman government) raised a military
force addressing command to its
minister, the honorable Muhammad `Ali Pasha, ruler of Egypt. His intrepid army
advanced against Ibn Sa`ud and cleared the land of him and his followers. Then, he summoned his son Ibrahim Pasha who
arrived in the district in the year 1233 (1818 CE). He finished off what
remained of them.
Among
the hideous abominations of Ibn `Abd al-Wahhab was his prohibiting people from
visiting the tomb of the Prophet, on him be Allah's blessing and peace. After
his prohibition, a group went out from Ahsa to visit the Prophet. When they returned, they passed by Ibn `Abd
al-Wahhab in the district and he commanded that their beards be shaved and they
be saddled on their mounts backwards to return in this fashion to Ahsa. The Prophet, on him be peace, related
information about those Khawarij preserved in numerous hadiths. Indeed, these sayings constitute one of the
signs of his prophethood; for they convey knowledge of the unseen. Among them are his statements in Bukhari and
Muslim: "Discord there; discord there!" pointing to the East; and
"A people will come out of the East who will read Qur'an with it not
getting past their throats. They will
pass through the religion like an arrow when it passes clean through the flesh
of its quarry and comes back pristine and prepared to be shot once again from
the bow. They will bear a sign in the shaving of their heads." Another
narration of the hadith adds: "They are calamity for the whole of Allah's
creation; Blessed is he who kills them" or "Slay them! For though
they appeal to Allah's Book, they have no share therein." He said: O
Allah! bless us in our Syria and bless us in our Yemen!" They said: O
Messenger of Allah! And in our Najd? but he replied: In Najd will occur
earthquakes and discords; in it will dawn the epoch [or horn] of Shaytan."
Again he said: "A people will come out of the East, reading the Qur'an and
yet it will not get past their throats. Whenever one generation is cut off,
another arises until the last dawns with the coming of Antichrist. They will bear a sign in the shaving of
their heads."
Now
the Prophet's words explicitly specify in text his reference to those people
coming out of the East, following Ibn `Abd al-Wahhab in the innovations he made
in Islam. For they were in the habit of ordering those who followed them to
shave their heads and once they began to follow them, they did not abandon this
practice. In none of the sects of the past prior to that of Ibn `Abd al-Wahhab
did the likes of this practice occur.[10] He even ordered the women
who followed him to shave their heads. Once he ordered a woman who entered his
new religion to shave her head. She
replied: " If you ordered men to shave off their beards, then it would be
permissible for you to order a woman to shave her head. But the hair on a woman's head has the same
sacred status as a man's beard."
Ibn `Abd al-Wahhab was unable to answer her.
Found
among the narrations transmitted from the Prophet, on him be peace, is his
statement: "At the end of time, a man will rise up in the same region from
which once rose Musaylima. He would
change the religion of Islam."
Another saying has it: "From Najd a Shaytan will appear on the
scene causing the Arab peninsula to erupt in earthquake from discord and
strife."
One
of the abominations of Ibn `Abd al-Wahhab was his burning of books containing
works of Islamic science and his slaughter of the scholars of our faith and
people both of the top classes and common people. He made the shedding of their blood and confiscation of their
property and wealth licit well as digging up graves of awliya (saints). In Ahsa, for example, he ordered that some
of the graves of awliya be used by people to relieve the wants of nature. He forbade people to read Imam Jazuli's Dala'il
al-Khayrat, to perform supererogatory acts of devotion, to utter the names
of Allah in His remembrance, to read the mawlid celebrating the Prophet's birth,
or to evoke blessings and prayers on the Prophet from the Minaret after the
call to prayer. What's more, he killed
whoever dared to do any of those things.
He forbade any kind of act of worship after the canonical prayers. He would publicly declare a Muslim a
disbeliever for requesting a prophet, angel or individual of saintly life to
join his or her prayers to that person's own prayer expressing some intention
whose fulfillment might be asked of Allah as, for example, when one supplicates
the Creator for the sake of Muhammad, on him be peace, to accomplish
such-and-such a need. He also said anyone who addressed a person
as lord or master (sayyid) was a disbeliever.
Undoubtedly,
one of the worst abominations perpetrated by the Wahhabis under the leadership
of Ibn `Abd al-Wahhab was the massacre of the people of Ta'if. upon entering
that town. They killed everyone in
sight, slaughtering both child and adult, the ruler and the ruled, the lowly
and well-born. They began with a
suckling child nursing at his mother's breast and moved on to a group studying
Qur'an, slaying them, down to the last man.
And when they wiped out the people they found in the houses, they went
out into the streets, the shops and the mosques, killing whoever happened to be
there. They killed even men bowed in
prayer until they had annihilated every Muslim who dwelt in Ta'if and only a
remnant, some twenty or more, remained.
These
were holed up in Beit al-Fitni with ammunition, inaccessible to their
approach. There was another group at
Beit al-Far to the number of two-hundred and seventy who fought them that day,
then the second and third until the Wahhabis sent them a guarantee of clemency;
only they tendered this proposal as a trick.
For when they entered, they seized their weapons and slew them to a
man. Others, they also brought out with
a guarantee of clemency and a pact to the valley of Waj where they abandoned
them in the cold and snow, barefoot, naked exposed in shame with their women,
accustomed to the privacy afforded them by common decency and religious
morality. They, then, plundered their
possessions: wealth of any kind, household furnishings and cash.
They
cast books into the streets alleys and byways to be blown to and fro by the
wind among which could be found copies
of the Qur'an, volumes of Bukhari, Muslim, other canonical collections of
hadith and books of fiqh, all mounting
to the thousands. These books remained there for several days, trampled upon by
the Wahhabis. What's more, no one among them made the slightest attempt to
remove even one page of Qur'an from under foot to preserve it from the ignominy
of this display of disrespect. Then,
they raised the houses and made what was once a town a barren waste land. That was in the year 1217 (1802 CE).
2: The Wahhabis and their Recent Rebellion (1905) |
The leader of the Wahhabis at the time of the
present account is `Abd al-Rahman Ibn Faysal, one of the sons of Muhammad Ibn
Sa`ud, the Rebel who turned his face in disobedience to the greater Islamic
Caliphate in the year 1205 (1790 CE). The incidents he occasioned with the
Sharif of Mecca, Ghalib continued up to 1220 (1805 CE). Then, when the Sharif's
power to do battle with him waned, the Sublime Porte raised a military force
against him, charging its minister the late Muhammad `Ali Pasha, ruler of
Egypt, and his son, the late lbrahim Pasha, with its command as we pointed out
in the preceding chapter just as books of history have written it down.
Now
this `Abd al-Rahman was for almost thirty years governor of Riyadh. Then, Muhammad Ibn al-Rashid, took over Najd
as its governor and Ibn Sa`ud fled to the remote areas by the sea coast. He ultimately ended up in Kuwait where he
remained in humiliating poverty. Nor
did anyone feel sorry for him until the Sublime Porte looked on him with favor
and afforded him a remittance. Thereupon, he began to live a more comfortable
life, though in a state of exile, due to the largesse of the Ottoman
government.
When
Muhammad Ibn al Rashid died, May Allah have mercy on his soul, his nephew came
to power, `Abd al-Aziz Ibn Mut'ab Ibn al-Rashid, who is governor of Najd at the
time of writing this. It fell out that
an incident took place between the `Abd al-Aziz just mentioned and the Shaykh
of Kuwait, Mubarak Ibn Sabah. Behind it
was Mubarak Ibn Sabah's murder of his brother, Muhammad Ibn Sabah who was, at
that time, locum tenens or temporary substitute of the Sublime Porte in
Kuwait. The same individual also
murdered his other brother and robbed his children of an immense inheritance.
The latter heirs, thereupon, fled the fratricide's further pursuit. Faced with this state affairs, the uncle of
the murdered children, Yusuf Ibn Ibrahim, took refuge with `Abd al-Aziz Ibn al-Rashid,
the Governor of Najd, taking sides in his presence against his own brother
Mubarak Ibn Sabah, the aforementioned fratricide, in an attempt get back the
wealth the latter had robbed from his nephews.
Negotiations
of reconciliation broke down to the point that each of the two parties in the
dispute fitted out an army, one against the other. The two armies clashed at a place called Tarafiya. Mubarak Ibn Sabah suffered defeat and some
four thousands fighters from his army were killed, although he escaped
unharmed. He fled back to Kuwait
vanquished and humiliated. However, no
time elapsed before Ibn Sabah sought foreign protection and rebelled
again. The foreigners supplied both
money and arms. Then, the power of `Abd
al-Rahman ibn Faysal ibn Sa`ud began to wax strong against the Governor of
Najd, al-Rashid. It chanced that the
latter was at that moment preoccupied by military expeditions in the remote
districts of Riyadh.
Mubarak
Ibn Sabah seized his opportunity.
Helped by foreigners with money and weapons, he fitted out an army and
placed it under the command of that `Abd al-Rahman mentioned earlier. Ibn Sabah dispatched him to Riyadh to
capture it, occupy it by force, fortify its barriers and entrench himself
within. When the news of what had
happened reached the governor, Ibn al-Rashid, he returned and encircled it for
a time with the intent of taking it back.
His encampment around Riyadh lasted for a year. Then, something occurred in one of remote
areas of the district that distracted him from the encirclement and he
abandoned it. This afforded Ibn Sa`ud
an opportunity as well, for he came out with his army outfitted with foreign
aid and seized `Unayza, Burayda, and the remainder of the regions of Qusaym.
The Sublime Porte witnessed the hostile
action of `Abd al-Rahman, his rebellion and insolence against its friend the
faithful Governor of Najd, Ibn al-Rashid, as well as his defection to the foreigner, it dispatched a
squadron from its intrepid armies as a support for the Governor of Najd, Ibn
al-Rashid to cut off the rear end of those renegades and crush their hostile
activities. Ibn al-Rashid snuffed out the sparks of sedition. The Ottoman forces clashed with the rebels,
the party of Ibn Sa`ud near the town of Bahkrama in the region of Qusaym. A fierce battle between the two forces
ensued, issuing finally in the defeat of the rebellious party, the forces of
Ibn Sa`ud. The victorious army took
possession of eleven standards of their defeated foe. Ibn al-Rashid and his soldiers were extolled for their role in
crushing the enemy in this battle and their bravery; the memory of it will last
forever. This praise has an undeniable
base in fact, word and deed. [At the
time of writing this,] the vanquished are presently enclosed and surrounded
with the intrepid forces of Ibrahim Pasha looking on and encompassing them
round about, praised for their exemplary manner of containing the enemy and
curbing his defiance.
When Ibn `Abd al-Wahhab saw that the inhabitants of
the rural regions of Najd were different from the urbane world of its cities,
he would extol the simplicity and innocence of human beings as they are found
in the primordial state of the Arabs.
Ignorance, then, gained the upper hand among the city-dwellers so that
sciences of an intellectual character lost status in their eyes. Besides, there was no longer an appetite in
their hearts for things sound and wholesome, once he had sewn in their hearts
the seeds of corruption and vice. For it
was to vice and corruption that his own soul had become attuned since time
immemorial nourished by his grab at
political leadership masked under the name of religion. After all, he believed -- May Allah revile
him -- that prophethood was only a matter of political leadership which the
cleverest people attain when circumstances help them in the form of an ignorant
and uninformed crowd.
3: The Wahhabi Creed |
Moreover,
since Allah the Exalted had shut tight the door of prophecy after the Seal of
the Prophets, our master Muhammad, on him be Allah's blessing and peace, there
was no way to realize the goal of his desires except to claim that he was a
renewer of the faith (mujaddid) and an independent thinker in the
formulation of legal rulings (mujtahid). Such an attitude -- or rather the worst and most profound state
of moral misguidance and religious disbelief --brought him to the point of
declaring every group of Muslims disbelievers and idolaters. For he set out to
apply the verses of Qur'an specifically revealed to single out the idolaters of
the Arabs to generally include all Muslims who visit the grave of their
Prophet, and seek his intercession with their Lord.
In
doing this, he cast aside what ran counter to his own invalid claims and the
vain desires commanding his ego to work mischief regarding the explicit
statements of the Master of all messengers and Imams, the mujtahids of our
religion (that is, who have the capacity to exercise independent reasoning in
the process of legal discovery). Hence,
when he saw a consensus of legal opinion in matters of faith which clashed with
his own unwarranted innovations, he rejected it as a matter of principle,
asserting: "I do not entertain any
opinion of people coming after the Qur'an which contains all that pertains to
Islam, the fresh and the dry (cf. 6: 59)." Thus, he failed to heed what the Qur'an itself declared, when it
says: "He who follows the path of
those other than the Muslims" (4:115) inasmuch as he accepted from Qur'an
only what it reveals concerning the idolaters of the Arabs. These verses he interpreted in his own
obscure fashion, having the gall to stand before Allah and facilitate the
accomplishment of his own personal political ambitions by means of an
unwarranted and unjustified exegesis of His holy text. His method here mostly
consisted in applying these verses concerning the idolaters to Muslims and on
this basis declaring that they had been disbeliever for the last six hundred
years, that one may shed their blood with impunity and confiscate their
property and reduce their land, the Abode of Peace, (Dar al-Islam) to a
field of war against disbelief (Dar al-Harb).
Yet
the Prophet, on him be Allah's blessings and peace, from what we see in the two
canonical collections of sound hadith, Bukhari and Muslim, declared in the
narration where the angel Jibril assumes human form to question him about the
creed of Islam: "Islam is to
testify that there is no god but Allah and Muhammad is the Messenger of
Allah." Again, in the narration of
`Umar he says: "Islam is built upon five articles of faith (the first
being): "Testimony that there is no god but Allah, Muhammad is His servant
and Messenger." Then, there is his declaration to the delegation of `Abd
al-Qays also cited in Bukhari and Muslim:
"I am commanding you to believe in Allah alone. Do you know what belief in Allah alone
is? It is to testify: "There is no god but Allah and Muhammad
is the Messenger of Allah.""
Also cited is his exhortation: "I have been ordered to fight people
until they say: "There is no god
but Allah and that Muhammad is the Messenger of Allah." Finally, the
Prophet says: "It is sufficient that folk say: "There is no god but
Allah."
However,
Ibn `Abd al-Wahhab and his followers go counter to all these statements of the
Prophet, on him be peace. They make a
disbeliever the one who says: "There is no god but Allah and Muhammad is
the Messenger of Allah" because that person is not like them in respect to
their claim that the one who testifies in the aforementioned fashion and yet
asks Allah for something for the sake of a prophet or evokes the name of
someone absent or dead or makes a vow to that person it is as if his belief
diverges from his testimony. His only
aim here is to market goods unsaleable where sound hadiths and correct exegeses
of the Qur'an are exchanged. We will
explain -- Allah willing -- the groundlessness of this claim and show its
spuriousness to the reader.
It
is amazing how Ibn `Abd al-Wahhab misrepresents use of the prophet's name in
petitions to Allah or tawassul under the pretense of monotheism (tawhid)
and divine transcendence (tanzih) claiming that use of a prophet's name
in this manner constitutes association of a partner with Allah; yet at the same
time there is his outright assertion to the effect that Allah's mounting His
throne is like sitting on it and his affirmation that Allah has a hand, face
and possesses spatial dimension! He
says it is possible to point to Him in the sky and claims that He literally
descends to the lower heavens so that he gives a body to Allah who is too
exalted in the height of His sublimity beyond what obscurantists proclaim. What happens to Divine transcendence after
making Allah a body so that the lowliest of inanimate creatures share
properties in common with their Creator?
To what is He, the Exalted, transcendent when He is characterized in so
deprecating a fashion and His divinity couched in terms so redolent of ridicule
and contempt?
One
of Ibn `Abd al-Wahhab's more enormous stupidities is this: When he sees reason
going against his claims, he casts aside all modesty and suspends reason giving
it no role in his judgment. He
endeavors thereby to make people like dumb beasts when it comes to matters of
faith. He prohibits reason to enter into religious affairs despite the fact
that there is no contradiction between reason and faith. On the contrary,
whenever human minds reach their full measure of completeness and perfection,
religion's merits and prerogatives with regard to reason become totally
manifest. Is there in this age, an age of the mind's progress, anything more
abominable than denying reason its proper scope, especially when the cardinal
pivot of religion and the capacity to perform its duties is based on the
ability to reason? For the obligation to carry out the duties of Islam falls
away when mental capacity is absent. Allah has addressed his servants in many
places in the Qur'an: "O you who possess understanding" (cf. 65:10)
alerting them to the fact that knowledge of the realities of religion is only a
function of those possessed of minds.
Now
the time has come for me to give a summation of the vain and empty prattle of
the renegade Wahhabi sect which it aspires to issue as a doctrine. Next, I shall discuss it in terms of the
research that has been brought in its rebuttal and refute its argument. Their invalid creed consists of a number of
articles:
(1) Affirming the face, hand, and spatial
direction of the Creator and making Him a body that descends and ascends;
(2) Making principles derived from narration (naql)
prior to those derived from reason (`aql);
(3) Denial and rejection of consensus as a
principle (asl) of Shari`a legislation;
(4) Similar denial and rejection of analogy (qiyas);
(5) Not permitting copying and emulating the
judgments of the Imams who have in Islam the status of those capable of
exercising independent reasoning in matters of Shari`a;
(6) Declaring Muslims who contradict them
disbelievers;
(7) Prohibition of using the name of the
Messenger in petitions to Allah or the name of someone else among the friends
of Allah and the pious;
(8) Making the visiting of the tombs of prophets
and of pious people illicit;
(9) Declaring a Muslim a disbeliever who makes a
vow to someone other than Allah or sacrifices at the grave or final resting
place of awliya or the pious.
4: Their
Making Allah Into A Body (Tajsim) |
Although the Wahhabis declare any Muslim a
disbeliever who visits the Prophet's grave and asks Allah for help by means of
him, and they consider that associating with Him a partner in his Divinity,
declaring that His Divinity is too transcendent for that, they at the same time
annul this transcendence when they insist on making his "firm
establishment on His throne" at once:
- a
literal affirmation of the throne,
- a
taking up a spatial position with respect to it, and
-
being physically situated at a higher level above it.
They
further corrupt divine transcendence by making Him a holder of the heavens in
one finger, the earth in another, the trees in another, and the angels in yet
another. Then, they affirm of Him
spatial direction placing Him above the heavens fixed upon the throne so a
person can to point to Him in a sensible fashion. Also, they say that he literally descends to the lower heavens
and ascends from thence. Accordingly,
one of them recites:
"If affirming Allah's establishment on His
throne
means
He is body, then I make Him a body!
If
affirming His attributes is making Him like something,
then
I do not hesitate to make Him like something!
If
denying establishment on His throne, or His attributes,
or
His speech is to avoid anthropomorphism
Then
I deny that our Lord avoids anthropomorphism!
He
alone grants success,
and
He knows best and is more sublime."
Now
I shall relate to you the way at least one of the Wahhabiyya expresses his
doctrine in a book entitled "The Pure
and Undefiled Religion."[11] The author says that by body one means either what is made up of
matter and form according to the philosophers; or what is composed of the atom
according to the theologians. All this, he says, is categorically denied of Allah, the Exalted. But the correct view -- he says -- denies it
of contingent[12] beings as well; for neither
are the bodies of creatures composed of matter and form nor of atom. Note how far off the beaten track and
eccentric his mode of expression is here.
For, on the one hand, he claims that in its generally accepted meaning
"body" is either a hylomorphic[13] or an atomic compound. On the other hand, he rejects the existence
of "body" in this sense whether the body in question be necessary[14] or contingent. Evidently,
the purpose of this denial is to arrive at a denial of corporeality. This
follows from his own opinion concerning Allah: since he does not want it said
that he likens the Creator to the creature, he denies corporeality to the creature
but only in the sense of a hylomorphic or atomic compound, taking it for
granted that the reader will be cognizant of the fact no body is made up purely
of matter and form -- as the philosophers have it.
But,
then, he is left with it being composed of atoms. Yet his ignorance does not
lie in the strange claim that "body" possesses no limit at which it
ends.[15] It is no wonder that he arrives at this abominable confusion. I
wish he had explained, after his denial of body's being a hylomorphic compound,
what order of bodily composition he has in mind. I do not think even his muddle- headedness allows him to hold to
the claim that bodies are made up of infinitely divisible parts. The ulama of Kalam or dialectical
theologians reject this position without exception. Today's science denies it as well. Besides, any demonstrative proof one can produce will vouchsafe its
invalidity. To delve into an
explanation of why this is so would take us beyond our proper business.
So to return to the present discussion, we
note that the Wahhabi author, casting his first definition aside, goes on to
say that if one means by body what is characterized by attributes and means by
this that bodies see by means of vision, talk, speak, hear, are pleased, are
angry, then these are ideas affirmed of the Lord, the Exalted, as well insofar
as one ascribes such attributes to Him.
Hence, to characterize bodies as seeing, hearing, etc. cannot constitute
denial of the same attributes to Him.
I
reply: We know of no one who defines body as something which talks, speaks,
hears, sees, which is pleased and is angry.
These attributes exist only in a living being possessed of
intelligence. To be sure, the body sees
by means of vision just as he says. But
his affirmation of body to Allah in this sense is to bring Him down to the
level of His creatures because of what it simultaneously denies about His
Divinity. When predicated of Allah,
being a body in this sense is an imperfection and deficiency which is
obligatorily rejected.
As
from the standpoint of reason, according to the scientific explanation given in
optics, sight is only brought about by the radiation of light on the surface of
a visible object and the reflection of
light-rays on the organ of vision.
Given this, we must first suppose the existence of an object of vision
which possesses, as we said, a surface on which light-rays fall. And that, in
turn, requires an object made up of parts.
But here we take a fall, if our purpose is to characterize
Divinity. This is because the body in
this sense is identical to the definition of "body" which the Wahhabi
author of "The Pure and Undefiled Religion" denies is true of Allah
at the outset. Indeed, he denies that body in this sense applies to any
contingent (mumkin) being.
From
the standpoint of transmitted proof-texts Allah says: "Sight does not
perceive Him yet He perceives sight"
(6: 103). There is no conflict of this verse with the verse: "Faces
on that day will be bright looking at their Lord" (75: 22). For the mode
of this vision of Him on the day of resurrection is unknown just as true
doctrine teaches and proclaims. It is possible that vision on that day consists
of a kind of uncovering without a need of sight which is, strictly speaking,
without parallel. Indeed, the
text's use of "faces"
signifies precisely that inasmuch as He did not say eyes. And its saying "bright" expresses
clearly the occurrence of the perfected attitude experienced by the faces as a
result of that unveiling.
Then
he says "If you mean by body what can be pointed to in a sensible fashion
then the most knowing of Allah among His creatures pointed to Him by his finger
raising it up to the sky,"[16] etc. then I reply that
common sense judges that what is pointed to in a sensible way must be in a
direction and a place and must be an object of vision -- and all of that is
impossible concerning Allah. If Allah the
Most Exalted were in a direction or a place, then place and direction would
exist before He did whereas demonstrable proof exists that there is no priority
without beginning other than Allah. Furthermore, if He were in a place then He
would need that place and this would constitute a denial of His absolute
self-sufficiency.[17]
Still further, if He were in
a place then He would be in it sometimes or at all times. The first alternative
is false because moments in time are similar in themselves. Likewise Allah's
relation to moments of time is all the same so His singling out of one of them
would be a gratuitous preference of one time over another if there is no external
agent who is responsible for tipping the scales; and if there is, then He would
be depending on external factors to achieve spatial confinement. The second alternative is also false since from
it follows the insertion of spatially confined things into places already
occupied by bodies and that is absurd. Also, were it possible to point to him
in a sensible fashion then he could be pointed to from every point on the
surface of earth and since the earth is circular it follows that Allah is
surrounded by earth from all directions. Otherwise, pointing to him would be
impossible. And since He is firmly established on His throne and has taken a
position on it just as the Wahhabis claim, then, his throne is surrounded by
the seven heavens. Thus, it follows from His coming down to the lower level and
His going up from thence, as the Wahhabis say, that His body becomes small when
he goes down and gets big when he goes up.
Therefore Allah would be constantly changing from one state to another!
Now
the texts from the transmitted sources of Qur'an and Sunna establishing that He
can be pointed to and of which the Wahhabis lay hold -- these they understand
superficially and they in no wise contradict certainties. They are interpreted (tu'awwal)
either in a general sense -- and the detailed meanings are left to Allah
himself, just as the majority of the pious ancestors are in agreement on; or
they are interpreted in a detailed fashion as according to the opinion of many,
in that what is mentioned about pointing him to the heavens is predicated upon
the fact that Allah is the creator of the heavens or that the heavens are the
manifestation of His power because of what they contain in the way of the great
worlds in relation to which our humble world is only an atom. Likewise ascent to him is in the sense of
ascent to the place to which one draws near by acts of obedience and so forth
and so on with respect to Qur'anic exegesis.
5: How the
Wahhabis Cast Aside
Reason |
Since clear reason and sound theory clash in every way
with what the Wahhabis believe, they are forced to cast reason aside. Thus by
their taking the text of Qur'an and Sunna only in their apparent meaning (zahir)
absurdity results. Indeed, this is the well-spring of their error and
misguidance. For by attending only to the apparent meaning of the Qur'anic
text, they believe that Allah being fixed on His throne and being high above His
throne is literally true and that He literally has a face, two hands and that His
coming down and His going up is a literal going down and coming up and that He
may be pointed to in the sky with the fingers in a sensible manner and so
forth. According to this interpretation, Allah is made into nothing less than a
body. These very Wahhabis, who call visiting graves idol-worship, then, become
themselves idol-worshippers by fashioning the object they worship into a body,
like an animal who sits on its seat and literally comes down and goes up and
literally has a hand and a foot and fingers. But the true object of worship,
Allah the Exalted, transcends what they worship.
Still, if one refutes them by rational proofs and
establishes that their beliefs contradict the nature of divinity by criteria
recognized by reason, they answer that there is no arena for humble human minds
in matters like this whose level is beyond the level of mere reason. In this
respect they are exactly like Christians in their claim about the Trinity. For
ask a Christian: "How is three one and
one three?" they will answer:
"Knowledge of the Trinity is above reason; it is impermissible to apply
reasoning in this area."
There is no doubt that when reason and the
transmitted text contradict each other, the transmitted text is interpreted by
reason. For often it is impossible for a single judgment to affirm what each of
them requires because of what is entailed by the simultaneous holding together
of two contradictory propositions. Taking one side or the other, in other
words, does not relieve the conflict. On the contrary, one must choose either
priority of the transmitted text over reason or reason over the transmitted
text. Now the first of these two alternatives has to be invalid simply because
it represents the invalidation of the root by the branch.
Clearly, one can affirm the transmitted text only by
virtue of reason. That is because affirmation of the Creator, knowledge of
prophecy and the rest of the conditions of a transmitted text's soundness are
only fulfilled by aid of reason. Thus reason is the principle behind the
transmitted text on which its soundness depends. So, if the transmitted text is
given precedence over reason and its legal implication established by itself
aside from the exercise of reason, then the root would be invalidated by the
branch. And from that the invalidation of the branch would follow as well. For
the soundness of the transmitted text is derived from the judgment of reason,
whose corruption is made possible when reason is invalidated.
Reason, then, is not cut off by the soundness of the transmitted text.
Hence, it follows that declaring the transmitted text sound by making it prior
to reason constitutes nothing less than the voiding of its soundness. But, if
making something sound accomplishes its corruption, we face a contradiction:
the transmitted text, then, is invalid. Therefore, if the priority of the
transmitted text over reason does not exist on the basis of the preceding argument, then we have determined that reason
has priority over the transmitted text. And that is what we set out to prove.
Once one realizes this, one also realizes without
question the necessity of interpreting the Qur'anic verses where the apparent
sense contradicts reason when the said verses are obscure and do not refer to
things that are known with certainty (yaqinat). On the one hand, there
is general interpretation where the detailed clarification is left to Allah (tafwid
tafsilih). This is the school of the majority of the Pious Ancestors of our Faith (al-Salaf). On the other
hand, we have interpretation which sets out the text's meaning in a more
perspicuous fashion. The majority of later scholars (al-khalaf) follow
the latter. In their view:
The term "to firmly
establish" as in the verse of Qur'an: "The All-Merciful is firmly established
on His throne" (20:18) means "He took possession of it" (istawla). This
is supported by the words of the poet who said: "`Amr took possession (qad
istawla) of Iraq without bloodshed or sword."
Allah's saying: "And your
Lord comes with angels rank on rank" (89:22) means his power comes.[18]
His saying: "Unto Him good
words ascend" (35:10) means: good words please Him.[19] For the word is an accident
for which, by itself, locomotion is impossible.
His saying: "Wait they for
naught else than that Allah should come unto them in the shadows of the clouds
with the angels?" (2:210) means that His punishment should come unto them.[20]
His saying: "Then He drew
near and came down until he was two bows' length or nearer" (53:8-9) means that
the Prophet came near Him by virtue of his obedience. The length of two
bow-lengths is a pictorial representation in sensible fashion of what the mind
understands.
In the Prophet's saying in
Bukhari and Muslim: "Allah comes down to the nearest heaven and says: who is
repenting, I shall turn to him, and who seeks forgiveness, I shall forgive him"
the coming down signifies Allah's mercy.[21] He specifies night because
it is the time of seclusion and various kinds of acts of humility and worship
and so forth, as found in many verses of the Qur'an and narrations of the
Prophet.
5: Wahhabi Rejection Of Consensus (Ijma`) |
Since the very substance of the Wahhabi creed
contradicts what the noble Companions, the great Mujtahids and the totality of
the Ulama have reached a consensus on, they must reject Consensus as a
principle (asl) of Islamic legislation and deny its probative value as a
basis for practical application. In consequence, they have declared disbeliever
any Muslim who says "There is no god but Allah and Muhammad is the Messenger of
Allah" other than themselves because Muslims visit the graves of prophets and
awliya, and ask Allah for something for the sake of a prophet.
They
pronounce this declaration of unbelief despite the fact that the Muslim
Community has reached a consensus that whoever articulates the twofold
testimony of faith or shahada, the ordinances of the religion become
immediately binding. As we have seen from the hadith: "I have been ordered to
fight people until they say: There is no god but Allah" and the hadith: "It is
sufficient that folk say: There is no Allah but Allah is sufficient." Ibn Qayyim has said: "Muslims have reached a
consensus that when the disbeliever says : There is no god but Allah and
Muhammad is the Messenger of Allah, he enters Islam." For that reason, there is a general agreement that when the
apostate apostatizes by an act of idolatry, repentance is accomplished by utterance
of the shahada.
Furthermore,
Wahhabis consider seeking the intercession of the Prophet after his death an
act of disbelief (kufr) even though a consensus allowing it is in place.
At the same time, they say following and emulating the legal rulings of one of
the four mujtahids, Imam Abu Hanifa, Imam Shafi`i, Imam Malik and Imam Ahmad
Ibn Hanbal is prohibited. As a result, anyone, they say, may derive legal
rulings (istinbat al-ahkam) directly from the Qur'an according to their
capability; notwithstanding the existence of consensus to the effect that no
one is capable of being an Imam in the religion or school of law unless he
satisfies the criteria for a scholar capable of legal reasoning (mujtahid).
It is not up to anyone to take from Qur'an and Sunna until he has satisfied
those criteria by joining in himself the qualifications of the mujtahid
which are, simultaneously, the conditions of ijithad.
Ijtihad
is the agreement of the mujtahids of the Muslim community in a certain
generation on a matter of religion or dogma. A corollary to this is that
consensus on any matter is absent after the disappearance of a generation of
mujtahids. While this is the case, one knows that if no consensus has been
agreed upon, there exists a possibility in each generation of reaching a
settlement on questions about which a clear ruling in Qur'an and Sunna is
absent and which mujtahids of the past have not discussed.
Consider
these examples. A man hears it said that the earth is moving around the sun.
Without thinking, he says: "If the earth is moving around the sun, then my wife
is divorced," since there is no clear evidence in Qur'an and Sunna for
affirming the earth's movement around the sun. The ulama of the Muslim
community therefore need to make a clear pronouncement regarding this question.
Hence, their consensus regarding the earth's motion does not exist until a
question like this is settled.
Or,
suppose a man fasts, riding in a balloon in the air before the setting of the
sun and he is lifted into the air until he arrived at the height of ten
thousand miles. Then the sun sets on earth and the people on land break their
fast but the sun is not absent from his eyes when he is in the air by reason of
the earth's roundness. Is it permitted for him to break fast and it is
obligatory for him to pray salat al-Maghrib? This is an example where there is
no clear ruling upon in Qur'an and Sunna. It follows, then, that the ulama of a
generation must clarify a judgment of things like this and agree upon it. And
what we say agrees with Imam Ghazali's definition of ijma`. He defines it as
agreement of the community of Muhammad (s) upon a certain matter and what is
meant by agreement is the manifest and unhidden agreement of its ulama.
Those
that deny ijma` claim: the occurrence of such a consensus is impossible.
They deduce evidence for their denial by arguing that agreement of the ulama
presupposes their being equally placed with regard to the legal situation in
question. Their being scattered in remote countries over the face of the earth
precludes this. We refute this objection by rejecting the reasoning that the
ulama's being spread abroad is an impediment to their agreement in view of the
(unconditional) strictness of their scrutiny of Shari`a evidences.
Those
rejecting ijma` claim further that agreement is based either on an indication (dalil)
in the sources which is decisive (qat'i) or on a speculative one (zanni). Both, they say, are invalid. The decisive indication is invalid because,
they say, if it were existent there would be no need for recourse to agreement
in the first place; and the speculative indication is invalid because agreement
on a ruling is impossible since
temperaments differ and points of view differ out of natural habit. Our answer
is a rejection of both their objections. Regarding the decisive indication
there is no need of transmitting it since consensus is stronger than it, and
for the elimination of difference entailed through its transmission. With
regard to the speculative indication, their objection does not stand up because
of the possibility of consensus being too obvious for either differences of
temperament and/or point of view to prevent it. Only in what is minute and
obscure lie impediments to reaching consensus.
In
further objection, they claim: Even if we grant establishment of consensus in
itself, then knowledge of their agreement would still be impossible. They argue
that in the habitual course of things there is no chance of affirmation of a
legal ruling concerning this thing or the other declared by every individual
member of the ulama in the world.
Likewise, they argue that in the habitual course of things transmission
of a consensus is impossible because its transmission from single individuals
is not conveyed and the consensus does not issue in practical application. One simply cannot conceive of a thing being
so widely known that lying about it is impossible (tawatur) -- they
claim -- inasmuch as such a situation would involve the necessary equaling out
of points of view on a given state of
affairs with the result that pro and con positions and a middle position would
be unfeasible. Moreover, it is unlikely
that people informed of something so well-known that lying about it is impossible
to have seen and heard all the ulama in every country and in that fashion to
have transmitted it from them, generation to generation, until it reaches us.
To
both their arguments there is one answer.
Its procedure consists in causing one to doubt that there exists a
conflict with what is necessary. For it
is well known in a decisive manner that the Companions and the Successors
reached a consensus on the priority of a decisive indication over a speculative
one and that this is the case only by reason of its being established with them
and its transmission to us. Furthermore, ijma` constitutes a proof in the view
of all the ulama except the Mu'tazilite al-Nazzam and some of the Khawarij. The
proof of its evidentiary nature (hujjiyya) is that they agree upon the
decisive certainty of the error of contradicting ijma`. Ijma` therefore counts
as proof in Shari`a legislation because custom transforms the agreement of a
number of many recognized ulama from the status of non-decisive to the status
of decisive certainty in a matter pertaining to the Shari`a. By virtue of
custom the implication of a decisive text necessarily counts as decisive
indication that to contradict ijma` is error.
On
this point, no one says here that there is affirmation of ijma` by ijma` nor
affirmation of ijma` by a decisive text
whose establishment is itself dependent on ijma`: that would be to reason in a
circle. We are saying: what is being claimed is that the fact of ijma` itself
constitutes a proof for ijma`. What establishes this is the existence of a
decisive text indicated by the existence of a formal consensus, which custom
precludes were it not for that text. The establishment of this formal consensus
and its customary indications pointing to the existence of a text are not
dependent upon the fact that ijma` constitutes a proof. This is because the existence of such formal
consensus is derived from tawatur -- what is known as true beyond doubt
so that the possibility of people's
collusion on a lie is precluded -- and because the formal evidence indicating a
text is derived from the custom.
Among
the evidences for the probative value of ijma` is the Prophet's statement, on
him be peace:
"My community will
never agree on error (al-khata')."
The content of this hadith is so well-known that it
is impossible to lie about it (mutawatir)[22] simply because it is
produced in so many narrations, for example:
"My
community will not come together on a misguidance";[23]
"A group of my community will continue in truth
until the dawning of the Hour";[24]
"The hand of Allah is with the congregation (al-jama`a)";[25]
"Whoever leaves the community or separates
himself from it by the length of a span, dies the death of the Jahiliyya
(period of ignorance prior to Islam)";[26]
and so forth.
As for the solitary hadiths (ahad) involved, even if they are not
widely attested, they possess value equivalent to the widely attested hadith
and, indeed, positive knowledge results from them just like stories we hear
relating the courage of Imam `Ali and the generosity of Hatim.
The
deniers of the evidentiary nature of ijma` use as proof the verse from the
Qur'an: "And We reveal the Scripture unto thee as an exposition of all
things" (16:89). Then they say that there is no reference for the
exposition of legal rulings except the Qur'an. The answer to them is this does
not preclude that there can be something other than the Book also exposing
matters; nor does it preclude that the
Book can expose certain things by means of the ijma`. If it did, we would wind up
with external meanings which nevertheless do not oppose the decisive texts.[27]
They
also invoke against the probative nature of ijma` Allah's statement: "If
you differ in anything among yourselves, refer it to Allah and His
Messenger" (4:59). Therefore there
is no source of reference, they claim, other than Qur'an and Sunna. The answer
is: this text refers specifically to what people are "differing
about." But what is agreed upon is
not like that. Or it specifically
concerns the Companions. If we were to
accept that this is not the case, then, again, one ends up with external
meanings not clashing with what is decisive just as we claimed earlier.
In
addition, they adduced the hadith of Mu`adh as evidence that he left out ijma`
when he mentioned his evidences in answer to the Prophet's query about them,
and the Prophet approved what he said.[28] They say this indicates
that ijma` does not count as evidence. The answer is Mu`adh did not mention it
only because at that time ijma` did not yet constitute a formal proof in case
of failing to settle upon a source with respect to Qur'an and Sunna. It does not follow that ijma` did not become
a proof in its own good time and after taking its place as a source.
6: The
Wahhabis' Denial of
the Principle of Analogy
(Qiyas) |
Wahhabis reject analogy (qiyas) in legal
reasoning just as they reject consensus. By rejecting it, however, they only
intend to discredit the authority of
those truly capable of independent reasoning in deriving legal rulings
in the Muslim Community, that is, the
mujtahids of the four recognized schools of Islamic law. The Wahhabis allege that the mujtahids cast
aside the Qur'an and Sunna and operate only on the basis of their personal
opinions to the point of criticizing the Imams of the Umma for using qiyas as a
proof in Shari`a. They denounce by
saying that the Imams believe that the religion of Islam is deficient and that
they complete it by reasoning like of ijma` and qiyas. For this, they cite the Qur'anic verse:
"This day I have perfected for you your religion" (5:3). They say we
find whatever is necessary for life clearly stated in the Qur'an. So what need do we have for qiyas. The texts take in the whole of life's
eventualities, they claim, without need of derivation (istinbat) and
analogy.
It
is amazing that the Wahhabis, for the sake of calumny against mujtahids who
accept qiyas themselves, proceed to toy with the word of Allah and verses of
Qur'an and manipulate them, changing them from their correct meaning and
interpreting them according to their own passion and whim. And yet they have no interpretation of the
superficial sense of the verses of the Qur'an that does not disparage the
Creator -- in keeping with their literalism according to which Allah is
established firmly on His throne and has hands and a face. They say that the mujtahids operate
according to their own opinions, even though they go so far as to allow the
ignorant riffraff of those possessing their faith to comment upon the Word of
Allah according to their own limited understanding.
Qiyas
is the equating of the branch with the root with respect to the cause of the
legal ruling. Its essential elements are four:
(1) the original root which is the object of
comparison;
(2) the branch or subsidiary case being likened
to root;
(3) the ruling governing the root;
(4) the general attribute which is the aspect
under which the comparison is being made.
The legal ruling of the new case is not an essential
element of it since it is the fruit of the analogy and its consequence. An example of analogy is when we say a drink
made of fermented figs is an intoxicant, then it is forbidden by analogy to
wine by the evidence of the statement: "Wine is prohibited":[29]
(1) The original case is wine, that is, the
object of comparison.
(2) The new case which is like it is the drink
made from fermented figs which is what is being compared to the wine.
(3) The legal ruling in the original case is
prohibition.
(4) The general attribute is intoxication.
Analogy
counts as a proof because the Companions had acted by it repeatedly despite the
silence of the others. In a case like that the silence is the agreement of
custom because of Qur'anic command: fa`tabiru -- "Consider and
reflect!" (59:2). It is well known
that "consideration" consists of making an analogy of one thing to
another which is not an exception.
Even
if this did not constitute an argument, many matters would remain that we see
come into existence in the course of time whose legal status is overlooked, and
regarding whose status the criteria for judging are absent from the apparent
meaning of the texts in the Qur'an and Sunna. Yet this does not contradict
Allah's statement: "There is not a grain in the darkness or depths of the
earth, nor anything fresh or dry but is inscribed in a clear Record"
(6:59). What is meant by "clear Record" here is the Preserved Tablet
on which Allah has deposited what was
and what will be.
We
may say that since the root of the analogy is mentioned with its legal ruling
in the Book, the branch to which the root's ruling is applied is considered
mentioned as well, for it is built upon the root. Or again we say: It is obvious
that the manner in which the content of the Book of Allah embraces every
green and dry is not all explicit. Rather, many of the legal rulings of Qur'an
come into being by pure derivation (istinbatan). And among the modes of derivation there is
qiyas. So the Wahhabis' statement
whereby the texts of Qur'an and hadith pertain to all of life's phenomena
without derivation or analogy is not granted. Their containing all of life's
phenomena is only complete by their application.
7: Their
Denial of Taqlid and of the Ijtihad
of Past Sunni Scholars |
Since the statements of the Mujtahids of the past --
may Allah have mercy upon them -- and the established religious rulings to
which they have arrived clash with what the deviant sect of Wahhabis have
devised in the way of unwarranted innovation, that sect deemed it a necessity
to deny the validity of their ijtihad, reject the soundness of their opinions,
and declare whoever followed their opinions to be an unbeliever. The result of
this is that they have the freedom of action to establish themselves far and
wide and to scream and play with the religion just as their passions
dictate. Thus, they pave the way for
founding the basis of their clear misguidance.
For if they did not deny the ijtihad of the Mujtahids of the past, then
their application, in accordance with their whim, of the verses of the Qur'an
revealed concerning idolaters to Muslims and to those who make their petitions
to Allah for the sake of the honor of His Messenger and respect of the saints (awliya)
could not have been brought to pass.
That is because they focus on what no Mujtahid said in the first place
and what none of Imams of the Religion accepted.
All
of this misguidance is due to the unwarranted innovator Ibn `Abd al-Wahhab who
displayed marked resemblance to those who claimed prophethood like Musaylima
and Abu al-Aswad al-Anasi and other liars. For he was concealing in himself the
establishment of a religion which imitated the pattern of those liars. But he feared to show people his lies unlike
they who showed their lies. What he made appear to people he put in the guise
of support of the Islamic faith while he painted this picture in people's minds
that he simply wanted pure monotheism and that people had become
idolaters. Thus, the jihad with people
followed so that they might "return from their idolatry." Therefore, Ibn `Abd al-Wahhab claimed
absolute ijtihad for himself and charged with error whoever preceded him
belonging to the Mujtahids -- those great figures who dipped from the sea of
knowledge of the Prophet -- and declared disbeliever their followers. He did not permit imitating the opinions of
anyone other than himself, although he allowed anyone his of his ignorant
followers to interpret the Qur'an in whatever mode their limited understanding
gave them access, and to derive legal rulings from them on the basis of their
weak grasp of its meaning. It was as
though he permitted any one of his followers to be a mujtahid. Look at the way he played with religion and
toyed with the Shari`a of the Faithful Messenger of Allah!
As
for his claim of absolute ijtihad, it is pure silliness on his part and
shameless impudence with regard to the Arab language since he was not in his
time one of those recognized for being foremost in knowledge. On the contrary,
he was not even numbered among those who were considered by masters in the
Hanbali madhhab as having any weight whatsoever, not to mention being
considered an absolute mujtahid in the religion.
Ijtihad
has conditions which the ulama have agreed upon without exception and it is not
permissible for any individual to be an imam in the religion and in any of the
schools of Islamic Law, unless he has fulfilled them.
Conditions of Ijtihad |
(1) He must be a master of the language of the
Arabs, knowing its different dialects, the import of their poems, their proverbs, and their customs.[30]
(2)
He must have a complete grasp of the differing opinions of the scholars and
jurists of Islam.[31]
(3)
He must be a jurist himself, learned in the Qur'an, having memorized it and
knowing the difference of the seven readings of the Qur'an while understanding
its commentary, being aware of what is clear and what is obscure in it, what it
abrogates and what is abrogated by it, and the stories of the prophets.
(4)
He must be learned in the Sunna of the Messenger of Allah, capable of
distinguishing between its sound hadith and its weak hadith, its continuous
hadith and hadith whose chain of transmission is broken, its chains of
transmission, as well as those hadith which are well known.[32]
(5)
He must be scrupulously pious in the religion, restraining his lower desires
with respect to righteousness and trustworthiness, and his doctrine must be
built upon the Qur'an and the Sunna of the Prophet. One who is missing in any
of these characteristics falls short and is not permitted to be a Mujtahid whom
people imitate.[33]
Ibn
al-Qayyim in I`lam al-muwaqqi`in does not permit anyone to make
derivation from the Qur'an and Sunna as long as he has not fulfilled the
conditions of ijtihad with respect to the Islamic sciences. A man asked Ahmad
Ibn Hanbal: "If a person memorized a hundred thousand hadiths, is he a
jurist (faqih)?" Imam Ahmad
said: "No." He said: "Two hundred thousand hadiths?" Imam Ahmad said: "No." Three hundred thousand hadiths? Again, he
said: "No." "Four
hundred thousand hadiths?"
Finally, he said: "Yes."[34] It is said that Ahmad Ibn
Hanbal gave legal answers on the basis of six hundred thousand hadith.[35]
Know
that people have agreed generation after generation and century after century
that the Mujtahid Imams only derive legal rulings from the Qur'an and the Sunna
after they have completely studied the Sunna and its sciences and the Qur'an
with respect to its rulings and understanding, in a way unmatched by those who
followed them in later times. On the
contrary, the ulama, generation after generation, take hold of what they said ,
scholars of the caliber of al-Nawawi, al-Rafi`i, Taqi al-Din al-Subki, Ibn
Hazm, Ibn Taymiyya, Ibn al-Qayyim, Ibn al-Jawzi, scholars like Fakhr al-Din
al-Razi, al-Tahawi, al-Qasim, al-Qarafi: all were imitating the opinions of the
Mujtahids and their followers, despite the fact that each one of these leading
figures and those before them had delved deep into every category of the
Islamic sciences. Yet and still, they knew that they had not arrived at the
level of deriving law from Qur'an and Sunna independently. What's more, they
understood their own limits. May Allah
have mercy on the man who knows his measure and does not go beyond his proper
level.
So
how is it possible for any one of us from this later time to derive law from
Qur'an and Sunna and to cast aside the ulama who were capable of deriving law
and whom both the elite and the masses of the Muslims agree on following?
Ibn
`Abd al-Wahhab's labeling disbeliever those who imitate the opinion of the
Mujtahids of the past, as mentioned previously is only to initiate spread of
his unwarranted innovation (bid`a) in our faith so that he may only
considers Muslim those who follow him.
Would that I knew what would happen if we supposed that past Mujtahids
had gone astray, as Ibn `Abd al-Wahhab has claimed, and they had, indeed, gone
astray. Would it be incumbent upon the
common person to practice Islam while being unable to know how to derive legal
rulings from Qur'an and Sunna with Ibn `Abd al-Wahhab having not yet been born
to resolve the difficulty of their confusion and ignorance? I do not believe that he would have arrived
at the temerity to say those people were living in the primordial state of
natural religion (fitra) since they came in a time prior to a
"renewer of religion"![36]
The present writer knows
that following an authority in matter of Islamic practice (al-taqlid) is
necessary inasmuch as, ordinarily speaking, it is impossible that each
individual Muslim reach the level of knowledge enabling him to derive legal
rulings of the Shari`a directly from Qur'an when there is no plain meaning text
and he is completely ignorant of the Arabic language like non-Arab people such
as Persians, Kurd, Afghans, Turks, and others whose number increases beyond the
number of Arabs, a fact obvious to any one with a knowledge of geography. The
scholars of Islam have agreed that it is incumbent upon a person who has not
reached the stage of ijtihad to follow and imitate the legal rulings of a
mujtahid. For Allah has said: "Ask
those who have knowledge (Ahl al-dhikr) if you do not know." (16:
43) and the Prophet said, on him be peace: "Did they ask when they did not
know? For the only remedy of incapacity
in such instances is to ask a question."[37]
8: Their Naming Muslims Disbelievers (Takfir) |
Wahhabis have pretexts for their doctrine to in
order to construct a foundation for their unwarranted innovation in religion.
One of them is to declare Muslims unbelievers.
That is because Ibn `Abd al-Wahhab, as you know by now, has been seduced
by the evil promptings of his ego into attempting to create a new religion by
which he could obtain political leadership.
However, when he saw that this could not be brought to pass in the land
of Muslims -- for, in spite of their extreme ignorance, they held fast to the
faith of Islam -- he created the innovation in Islam itself. Furthermore, when he saw that the matter
could not be accomplished except after declaring Muslims disbelievers by using
some semblance of Qur'anic evidence, he found that the only way to declare them
unbelievers was through their calling on Allah by using their Prophet as a
means (tawassul) as well as for the sakes of other prophets, awliya and
pious persons. Likewise he levelled the
same charge at those who vow or perform sacrifices for their sakes and perform
other acts whose description I shall bring later. All these matters he
considers worship of the Prophets and the saints. And since the Qur'an is
jam-packed with clearly articulated verses to the effect that one who worships
something or someone other than Allah, he is an idolater, Ibn `Abd al-Wahhab
makes all monotheists idolaters because of the state of affairs just described.
Since
the Wahhabis have declared disbeliever all Muslims who differ with them, they
have made their country the land of warfare (bilad harb). Then they have
made licit the shedding their blood and seizing their property. Yet Allah, the
Exalted, has said: "Surely, religion with Allah is the Surrender (al-Islam)"
(3:19). And the Prophet has said: "Islam consists in testifying that there
is no god but Allah and that Muhammad is the Messenger of Allah." Also, in the hadith of Ibn `Umar we find:
" Islam is built upon five things: Testifying that there is no god but
Allah and that Muhammad is the His servant and Messenger," to the end of
the hadith. There is the hadith of the
delegation of `Abd al-Qays: "I order you to believe in Allah alone. Do you know what belief in Allah alone
is? It is to bear witness that there is
no god but Allah and that Muhammad is the Messenger of Allah."[38] Ibn Qayyim said: "All Muslims agree that if the disbeliever
says: There is no god but Allah and Muhammad is the Messenger of Allah, he
enters Islam."
Know
that to declare a Muslim a unbeliever is no small matter. The ulama, among them
Ibn Taymiyya and Ibn Qayyim,[39] have agreed that the
ignorant person and the one who makes a mistake in this community, even if what
is done makes its perpetrator an idolater or disbeliever, and that person
pleads the excuse of ignorance or that he made a mistake until a proof is
explained to him in a lucid and clear fashion, a situation like such a person's
is ambiguous.[40] The Muslim might have
joined in him disbelief, idolatry and faith. Yet he does not disbelieve in such
a way that carries him out of the religion.
Apostasies and Heresies |
The Khawarij were the first to separate from the
Congregation of Muslims. The Messenger of Allah had spoken about them and
ordered them to be killed and fought: "They will pass through Islam like
an arrow passes through its quarry.
Wherever you meet them, kill them!"[41] "They are the dogs of
the people in Hell."[42] "They recite Qur'an and consider it in their favor but it is
against them."[43] The Khawarij went out of Islam in the time of our master `Ali,
may Allah be pleased with him. They
declared him and Mu`awiya disbelievers and declared licit their blood and
property as well as the blood and property of those with him. They made the land of the former a land of
war and declared their own land an abode of faith. They only accepted from the Prophet's Sunna what agreed with
their own doctrine, deduced evidence for their doctrine from what was not
perspicuous in the Qur'an, and applied the verses revealed concerning the idolaters
to the people of Islam. Yet despite
their disbelief, neither the Companions nor the Successors declared them
disbelievers, just as Ibn Taymiyya has transmitted. `Ali said to them: "We
do not start out killing you nor are you kept out of the mosques of Allah in
which you mention His name. We do not rescind the rights of protection with respect
to your life and property afforded you by Islam as long as your hand is with
us." The great among the Companions debated the Khawarij, like Ibn `Abbas,
until four thousand returned to the truth.
As
for the fighting of the people of the Ridda -- apostates -- one category
among them apostatized Islam and returned to the disbelief which they were on
with respect to idol worship. Another
category apostatized and followed Musaylima and they were the Banu Hanifa and
some other tribes. Yet another group
apostatized, followed and agreed with Aswad al-`Anasi in Yemen. Others said claims of Tulayha al-Asadi were
true; they were the Ghatafan, Fazara and other tribes. Still others did the
same with respect to Sujah. All these denied the prophethood of Muhammad, may Allah bless him and grant him
peace. They refused to pay the tax on Muslims and to pray, abandoning the rest
of the Shari`a as well. One class of
apostates distinguished between prayer and the tax. They denied the obligatoriness of conveying the latter to the
Imam. In reality, those are the People
of Rebellion (baghi). The name
"Ridda" was attached to them only because of their entry into the
throng of the apostates.
The
Qadariyya separated from the Congregation of Muslims in the final period of the
time of the Companions. They were
composed of two sects. The first
directly denied the divine Decree (qadar). They said that Allah did not foreordain His servants to commit
acts of disobedience nor does he guide the one in error and foreordain the
guidance. In their view, the Muslim is
one who makes himself Muslim by himself and the one who prays makes himself a
prayer by himself, and so forth and so on with respect to other acts of
obedience and disobedience. This sect
makes the servant the creator (khaliq) of his own deeds instead of
Allah.
The
second sect is just the opposite of the first.
They claim that Allah compels people to act in a certain way and that
disbelief and disobedience among human creatures are like the black and white
color of their skins. In their view,
the creature has no part to play in doing none of this. On the contrary, all acts of disobedience in
their view are ascribable to Allah. The
perpetrators of such acts are the followers of Iblis where he says:
"Because You have sent me astray, I shall ambush them" (7:16).
Similarly, the idolaters say: "Had Allah willed, we nor our forefathers
would not have been idolaters" (6:148).
Yet for all this disbelief and misguidance on the part of the Qadariyya,
not one of the Companions nor any of the Successors declared them to be
disbelievers. Rather, they stood right
before them and explained to them their misguidance from the Qur'an and Sunna. They did not make killing them an obligation
incumbent on Muslims nor exact against them the judgments made against the
people of apostasy.
Then,
the Mu`tazila separated from the Congregation of Muslims in the period of the
Successors. Among their doctrines of
disbelief is their claim that the Qur'an is created. They also deny that the Prophet, on him be Allah's blessing and
peace, can intercede in the behalf of perpetrators of acts of disobedience and
assert that perpetrators of disobedience will reside eternally in hell fire and
so on and so forth with respect to their teachings. Again, not one of the ulama of that time declared them
unbelievers but the scholars among the Successors and those who succeeded them
confronted them. They refuted them and
explained to them the falsity of their doctrine. They did not exact on them the laws against apostates. On the contrary, on them and those before
who made unwarranted innovations in the religion they carried out the Muslim
laws of inheritance and marriage and buried them in Muslim ground.
Then
there was the Murji'a who claimed that faith (iman) resided in the
verbal assertion of belief and not in the deed. Hence, in their view, one who articulates the twofold declaration
bearing witness to his faith is a believer even if he does not perform a single
act of prayer the whole of his life, nor fast one day of Ramadan. Yet despite their lingering in error and
their continual dogged resistance to change even after the people of truth
explained to them the error of their school of thought, no one declared them
unbelievers. Rather, they treated them and the people of unwarranted innovation
before them as brethren of fixed and stable faith.
The Jahmiyya separated from the
Congregation of Muslims. They said no Allah who is an object of worship is upon
the throne nor does Allah have any speech as on earth. They denied Allah the attributes that He
affirms of Himself in His clear Book and which His true and faithful Messenger
affirms of Him and all the Companions. Likewise, they denied the vision of
Allah in the hereafter and so forth and so on with respect to their doctrines
of disbelief. In spite of that, the
ulama refuted them and demonstrated to them their misguidance until they killed
some of their propagandists like Jahm Ibn Safwan and al-Ju`d Ibn Dirham. But after killing them they ritually
cleansed their bodies, prayed for them and buried them in Muslim ground. They did not carry out the rulings for
people guilty of apostasy.
Then
the Rafida or "Rejecters" separated from the Congregation of
Muslims. They agreed with the Mu`tazila
in their belief that they were the sole creators of their own actions. They denied the vision of the Creator on the
Day of Judgment. They declared most of
the Companions to be unbelievers and they vilified the Mother of the Believers
(`A'isha). Despite all this non of the
`ulama declared them to be unbelievers nor did they forbid the rulings of
inheritance and marriage apply to them; rather they applied to them the same
rulings that applied with all Muslims.
Those
following the school of thought of the Pious Ancestors -- which the Wahhabis
attempt to hide behind -- are distinguished by the signal absence of declaring
deviant groups unbelievers as we have mentioned. Shaykh Taqi al-Din Ibn Taymiyya said that Imam Ahmad did not
declare the Khawarij disbeliever, nor the Murji'a nor the Qadariyya nor the
individuals of the Jahmiyya. Indeed, he
prayed behind the Jahmiyya who called people to their doctrine while they
punished harshly those who did not agree with them. Ibn Taymiyya also said in essence that among the blameworthy
innovations is declaring a group among the Muslims to be unbelievers, making
their blood and wealth licit because of rejected innovations. For, he said, there may be in that group
less unwarranted innovation than in the party carrying out the declaration of
disbelief. Even if one supposes a group
to have made unwarranted innovation, it is unwarranted for the group which is
on the path of the Sunna to declare them unbelievers, since, perhaps, its
innovation is an outgrowth of an error, and Allah said: "Our Lord do not
blame us if we forget or make a mistake" (2:286) and: "The mistake
you make will not be held against you but what your hearts on purpose
intend" (33:5). The Prophet said: "Surely, has Allah forgiven my community
error and forgetfulness and what they were forced to do."[44]
The
Consensus has long since concluded that whoever confirms what the Messenger has
brought -- even if there be in it some trace of disbelief and idolatry --
should not be declared a unbeliever until the proof is furnished. The only proof that can be furnished is in
the strength of Consensus not speculative but decisive. Further, the one who
furnishes the proof is the Leader of the Muslims or his deputy. But disbelief
only exists when one denies things necessary to the religion of Islam such as
the existence of the Creator and his unity, the rejection of the message of
Muhammad or the rejection of the duties of Islam like the obligatoriness of
prayer.
The
school (madhhab) of the People of the Prophet's Way and the Congregation
of Muslims (Ahl al-Sunna wa al-Jama`a) shrinks from declaring anyone
belonging to the religion of Islam an unbeliever. This holds even to the point
of suspending pronouncements of disbelief against people who introduce
unwarranted innovations into Islam, despite the command to kill them out of
defense against the harms they may do -- not because of their disbelief. For there may be found joined in a single
individual disbelief (kufr), belief (iman), hypocrisy (nifaq),
and idolatry (shirk) and he is not a complete disbeliever. Whoever
confesses Islam it is accepted from him whether he be truthful or lying. Even
if signs of hypocrisy and ignorance are manifest on him, he is excused from
disbelief. The same is true of
hesitation and doubt even if this be weak.
By now the unwarranted innovation on the part of the Wahhabis should be
manifest in any case, when they introduce an unwarranted innovation by
declaring Muslims disbelievers and thereby contradict what Allah has brought to
us in the Qur'an and by the Sunna of His Messenger as well as the statements of
the Imams of the religion and the learned mujtahids.
9: The Wahhabis' Rejection of Tawassul
(Using a means) |
In the preceding sections we have spoken about the
way the Wahhabis declare any Muslim a disbeliever for contradicting their
unwarranted innovations in our religion, and the way they ascribe to that
person idolatry. The moment has now
come to speak of how they take, as a pretext for their declaration of
disbelief, the seeking of help from the prophets and awliya and their use of
the latter as a means to Allah and the visiting of their graves. For the Wahhabis have rejected these
practices and claimed they are forbidden (haram).
Their Hatred of Muslims Who Make Tawassul |
The Wahhabis have made their rejection of those
seeking aid (mustaghithin), those using persons as means of access to
Allah (mutawassilin), and those visiting graves (za'irin),
especially intense. They consider them actual idolaters and idol-worshippers.
Indeed, they deem their status worse than the idolaters of old. The latter,
they say, were idolaters only with respect to divinity. As for the Muslim
idolaters -- they mean those who contradict them -- they have associated a partner both to divinity and to lordship.
They also say that the unbelievers in the time of the Messenger of Allah did
not always practice idolatry but they sometimes practiced polytheism and
sometimes practiced monotheism, abandoning calling on prophets and men of
righteousness. That is because when times were good they prayed to them and
believed in them. But when disaster and difficulties struck, they abandoned
them, worshipped Allah faithfully and sincerely, and recognized that the
prophets and pious could do them neither good nor ill.
Their Assimilation of Muslims to Idol-Worshippers by quoting
the Qur'an |
The Wahhabis applied the Qur'anic verses revealed
concerning the idolaters to the monotheists of the Community of Muhammad,
Allah's blessings and peace be upon him, and grasped on to these verses as a
basis for declaring Muslims disbeliever.
They may be listed as follows:
"Do not call on anyone
along with Allah" (72:18);
"And who is more astray
than one who invokes besides Allah such as will not answer him to the day of
judgment and when mankind are gathered they will become enemies for them, and
deny having been worshipped" (46:5-6);
"Nor call on any other
than Allah such as can neither profit thee nor hurt thee: if thou dost, behold!
thou shalt certainly be of those who do wrong" (10:106);
"And those whom you
invoke besides Him own not a straw. If
ye invoke them, they will not listen to your call, and if they were to listen,
they cannot answer your prayer. On the day of Judgment they will reject
your partnership and none, O Man! can
inform you like Him who is All-aware" (35:13-14);
"So call not on any
other god with Allah, or thou will be among those who will be punished"
(26: 213);
"To Him is due true
prayer; any others that they call upon besides Him hear them no more than if
they were to stretch forth their hands for water to reach their mouths but it
reaches them not. For the prayer of those without faith is vain prayer"
(13:14);
"Say: Call on those
besides Him whom ye fancy; they have no power to remove your trouble from you
or to change them. Those unto whom they cry seek for themselves the means of
approach to their Lord, which of them shall be the nearest; they hope for His
mercy and fear His wrath: for the wrath of thy Lord is something to take heed
of" (17:57).
These
and other verses have been revealed with respect to the idolaters among the
Arabs. Ibn `Abd al-Wahhab, however,
claims that whoever seeks help by the Prophet, implores or calls upon Allah by
means of the Prophet of someone else among the prophets, awliya or pious, or
asks for the Prophet's intercession or visits his grave is considered in the
class of idolaters contained within the scope of the above verses. His specious
argument concerning these verses is based on the idea that though they were
revealed concerning the idolaters their admonition belongs to the general sense
of the expression and not the specificity of the cause.
Refutation of This Falsehood |
We do not deny that the admonition belongs to the
general sense of the expression and not with a specific cause. However, we say that these verses do not
refer to the people whom the Wahhabis claim they embrace since the Muslims who
make tawassul (using means) and istighatha (seeking aid) in no
way share the state of the unbelievers concerning whom the verses were
revealed. Invocation (du`a)
comes in a variety of senses which we will soon mention. However, in all these verses it has the
sense of worship, and Muslims only worship Allah the Exalted; none of them ever
adopted prophets and awliya as gods, making them partners with Allah so that
the general sense of these verses would apply to them. Muslims do not believe
that prophets and awliya are entitled to worship since they have not created
anything nor do they have control over harm and benefit. On the contrary, they believe that they are
Allah's servants created by Him. By
visiting their graves and imploring Allah in their name they only intend being
blessed by means of their blessing for they are alive, near to Allah and He has
selected and chosen them. Hence, he shows
mercy to His servants by means of their blessing and heavenly benediction (baraka).
Further False Comparison of Muslims to Idolaters |
The Wahhabis say: the defense of those who practice
tawassul is the same apology the idolaters of the Arabs offered as the Qur'an
says describing the way the idolaters defended their worship of idols: "We
only worship them in order that they may bring us nearer" (39:3). Hence, the idolaters do not believe that the
idols create anything. Rather, they
believe that the Creator is Allah, the Exalted, by evidence of the following
verse: "If thou ask them, Who created them, they will certainly say,
Allah" (43:87) and: "If indeed thou ask them who is that created the
heavens and the earth, they would be sure to say, Allah" (39:38). Allah has only judged against them for their
disbelief because they say "We only worship them in order that they may
bring us nearer." The Wahhabis say: Thus, do people who implore Allah by
prophets and the pious use the phrase of the idolaters: "In order to bring
us nearer" in the same sense.
Refutation of That False Comparison |
The answer contains several points:
(1) The idolaters of the Arabs make idols gods;
while the Muslims only believe in one
Allah. In their view, prophets are
prophets: awliya are awliya only. They
do not adopt them as gods like the idolaters.
(2) The idolaters believe these gods deserve
worship contrary to what Muslims
believe. Muslims do not believe that
anyone by whom they implore Allah deserve the least amount of worship. The only one entitled to worship in their
view is Allah alone, May He be Exalted.
(3) The idolaters actually worship these gods as
Allah relates: "We only worship them..." Muslims do not
worship prophets and pious persons by the act of imploring Allah by means of
them.
(4) The idolaters intend by their worship of their
idols to draw near Allah just as He relates concerning them. As for the Muslims, they do not intend by
imploring Allah by means of prophets and saints to draw close to Allah, which
is only by worship. For that reason,
Allah said in relating about the
idolaters: "... in order that they bring us nearer." However, Muslims
only intend blessings (tabarruk) and intercession (shafa`a) by
them. Being blessed by a thing is obviously different from drawing near to
Allah by it.
(5) Since the idolaters believe that Allah is a
body in the sky, they mean by "to bring us near" a literal bringing
near. What indicates this is its being
stressed by their use of the word zulfa -- nearness to power -- inasmuch
as emphasizing something by its own same meaning indicates for the most part
that what is intended by it is the literal meaning and not the
metaphorical. For when we say: "He
slew him murderously" (qatalahu qatlan) a literal killing rushes to
the understanding, not that of "a hard blow" in counterdistinction to
what we mean when we just say: "He slew him"; for that might mean
only a hard blow. The Muslims do not
believe that Allah is a body in the sky remote enough from them to see a
literal proximity to Him by imploring Allah through a prophet. The ruling of Shari`a contained in the verse
does not apply to them, whereas since the Wahhabis believe that Allah is a body
who sits on his throne, they do not discover a meaning of blessing which the
Muslims intend by their imploring Allah by prophets and awliya, but only that
of drawing near which belongs to bodies. For that reason, these verse are
applicable to them not to Ahl al-Sunna.
Kinds of shirk |
We ought here to explain the various forms of idolatry
or association of partners with Allah or shirk. First, we find the shirk of
making-independent, such as affirming two independent gods like the shirk of
the Zoroastrians. Secondly, there is the shirk of dividing into parts, that is,
making-compound but of a number of gods like the shirk of the Christians. Thirdly, there is the shirk of drawing-near,
that is, the worship of something other than Allah in order to draw near to
Allah in a closer fashion. This is exemplified in the shirk of the Period of Ignorance
prior to Islam.
The
kind of shirk that Wahhabis made applicable to the Muslim making istighatha
and tawassul and upon which Wahhabis built their doctrine of calling
Muslims disbelievers belongs to the third category, the shirk of drawing-near
which the Jahiliyya professed as its religion.
The
state of affairs that delivered the Jahiliyya into its form of idolatry is a
type of satanic seduction whereby its worship of Allah in its idolatrous manner
stemmed from extreme human weakness and powerlessness; and a belief that not to
draw near to Him by worshipping those nearest to Him, nobler in His sight, and
more powerful, like the angels, would constitute bad manners. But when they observed the disappearance of
the objects of their worship either constantly or some of the time they
fashioned idols to represent them; so that when the objects of worship
disappeared from them, they worshipped their images.
If
this is firmly understood, then it is clear to the reader that the state of the
idolaters of the Jahiliyya does not in any way apply to Muslims imploring Allah
by the means of prophets and the pious. The Arabs of the Jahiliyya adopted
idols as gods. "Allah" means
"One who deserves worship." They believed the idols deserved
worship. First of all, they believed
that they could deliver harm and benefit. Thus, they worshipped them. This
belief on their part plus their worship of them is what caused them to fall
into idolatry. So when the proof was
furnished them that these idols had no power to harm them or benefit them, they
said: "We only worship in order that they bring us nearer." How,
then, is it possible for the Wahhabis to assimilate the believers who declare
that Allah is One to those idolaters of the Jahiliyya?
There
is no doubt that Arab idolaters disbelieved simply because of their worship of
statues and representations of prophets, angels, and awliya of which they
formed images which they worshipped and to which they did sacrifice. This was
due to their belief that prophets, angels, and awliya are gods (aliha)
along with The Allah (allah) and could, on their own, do them benefit
and harm. The Allah therefore furnished proof of the falsity of what they were
saying and struck parables to refute their doctrine which He did in many
verses. These verses state that the one
Allah who alone is entitled to worship necessarily has power over removing harm
and delivering benefit to him who worships Him; and that what they in fact
worshipped were objects originating in time and antithetical to Lordship.
Persons who seek help and who call upon Allah by means of prophets are free and
innocent of this order of idolatrous worship and belief.
As
for the claim that seeking aid (istighatha) is worship of someone other
than Allah, it is high-handed and arbitrary.
For the verses which the Wahhabis adduce as proof-texts -- all of them
-- were revealed to apply to unbelievers who worship someone other than Allah.
They intended by their worship of that other individual to come closer to Him.
Furthermore, they believed that there is another god along with Allah and that
He has a son and a wife -- exalted exceedingly high is He beyond what they
say. This is a point of unanimous
agreement which no one disputes. There
is nothing in the verses revealed concerning the unbelievers that would count
as evidence that merely seeking the help of a prophet or saint when accompanied
by faith in Allah is worship of someone other than Allah Himself.
Refutation of their claim that tawassul is worship
of other than Allah |
The Wahhabis say that such seeking of help is a form
of invocation. They cite the hadith:
"inna al-du`a huwa al-`ibada":
"Invocation -- it is worship."[45] Hence, they claim, he who
asks help from a prophet or a saint (wali) is simply worshipping him by
that request for help; yet only worship of Allah alone is beneficial and
worship of other than Him is shirk.
Hence, they conclude, the one who seeks aid of someone other than Him is
an idolater.
The
answer for this is that the verbal pronoun huwa ("it is") in
the hadith conveys restriction of the grammatical predicate "worship"
to its subject "invocation" and it thus renders definite the
predicate, just as the author of al-Miftah[46] says and with whom the
majority of the scholars agree concerning this hadith. Thus, for example, when we say: "Allah
-- He is the Provider" (Allah huwa al-Razzaq) (51:58), it means
there is no provider other than He.
Accordingly, when the Prophet said: "Invocation: it is
worship" he signified that worship is restricted to invocation. What is meant by the hadith is:
"Worship
is nothing other than invocation."
And the Qur'an supports this meaning when it says:
"Say: My Lord would not concern Himself with you but for your call (du`a)
on Him" (25:77). That is, He would
not have shown favor to you were it not for your worship. For the honor of
mankind lies in its worship and its respect in its knowledge and obedience.
Otherwise, man would not be superior to the beasts. The Hajj, the Zakat, the
Fast and the testimony of faith are all invocation and likewise reading of the
Qur'an, dhikr or remembrance, and obedience. Hence, worship is confined to invocation. Once this is firmly
established, it becomes clear that there no is proof in the hadith for what
Wahhabis claim, because if asking for help is a kind of invocation, as the
Wahhabis claim, it does not necessarily follow that asking for help is worship,
since invocation is not always worship as is plain to see.[47]
If,
on the contrary, we restrict the subject "invocation" to the predicate
"worship" in the hadith according to the interpretation of the author
of al-Kashshaf[48] whereby the definition of
the predicate in a nominal clause might be either restricted to the subject or
restricted to the predicate, then the logical deduction of the Wahhabis whereby
all du`a is worship is still not supported by it. Otherwise, the definite article al in al-du`a
(invocation or literally a call on someone) makes invocation generic and
betokens universal inclusion into the genus. Yet this is not the case since not
every invocation is an act of worship (`ibada).
On
the contrary, the matter stands as we find it in the verse of Qur'an: "Nor
call on other than Allah such as can neither profit thee nor hurt thee"
(10:106) and similarly in the verse:
"Call your witnesses or helpers!" (2:23). Calling on Allah in the
sense of requesting is found where the Qur'an says: "Call on Me and I will
answer you" (40:60) and in the sense of a declarative statement:
"This will be their prayer (da`wahum) therein: Glory to Thee, O Allah!" (10:10). As for
"calling on someone" in the sense of summoning them (nida'),
we find: "It will be on the day when he will call you (yad`ukum)"
(17:52) and in the sense of naming someone we find: "Deem not the calling (du`a)
of the Messenger of Allah among yourselves like the calling of one of you to
another" (24:63).
As
the author of al-Itqan[49] makes plain: If the
definite article belongs to the genus and signifies universal inclusion
therein, then the man who says: "Zayd! Give me a dirham" perpetrates
an act of disbelief. Yet the Wahhabis, of course, will not claim this. Hence,
it is plain that the definite article signifies specification. So what is meant by invocation in the hadith
is invocation to Allah and not calling on someone in the general
sense. The meaning would be:
"Calling to Allah is one of the greatest acts of worship."
It is in the manner of the Prophet's saying: "al-hajju
`arafatun" or:
"The Pilgrimage is `Arafah"[50]
which is taken to mean that this represents the
Hajj's greatest essential element. For the one making the request comes toward
Allah and turns aside from what is other than He. Furthermore, the request is commanded by Allah and the action
fulfilling that command is worship. The
Prophet names it "worship" to show the subjugation of the subject
making the request, the indigence of his condition, and the humility and
lowliness of his worship.
Among
the proofs that what is meant by "invocation" in the hadith is the
"calling on Allah" and not the general sense of "calling"
is the fact which many grammarians confirm and Ibn Rushd clearly makes plain as
does al-Qarafi also in his Commentary on al-Tanqih:[51] namely, that asking (al-su'al)
is one of the categories of wanting (al-talab) put forth by one lower to
one higher in station. If it is
addressed to Allah, it is named "request" (su'al) and
"invocation" (du`a).
The latter is not applied to someone other than Allah. And if it is not
permissible (la yajuz) to name the request of other than Allah by the
unqualified name of du`a, then such a request a fortiori is not
named a du`a in the sense of worship.
10: Tawassul
(Using means): Evidence for
its Permissibility |
Before plunging into this chapter let us clarify one
thing pertaining to what one means by seeking help with the prophets and pious
persons and imploring Allah by means of them.
First, they are means and causes to obtain what is intended. Second, Allah is the true agent of the favor
or miracle which comes at their hand, not they themselves, just as true
doctrine asserts in the case of other actions: for the knife does not cut by
itself but the cutter is Allah the Exalted, although the agent is the knife in
the domain of the customary connection of events. Be that as it may, it is Allah who creates the cutting.
Al-Subki,
al-Qastallani in al-Mawahib al-laduniyya, al-Samhudi in Tarikh
al-Madina, and al-Haythami in al-Jawhar al-munazzam said that
seeking help with the Prophet and other prophets and pious persons, is only a
means of imploring Allah for the sake of their dignity and honor (bi
jahihim). The one doing the asking seeks from the One asked that He assign
him aid (ghawth) on behalf of the one higher than him. For the one being
asked in reality is Allah. The Prophet is but the intermediary means (wasita)
between the one asking for help and the One asked in reality. Hence, the help
is strictly from Him in its creation (khalqan) and being (ijadan),
while the help from the Prophet is strictly in respect to secondary causation (tasabbuban)
and acquisition from Allah (kasban).
The
most prominent among the scholars of Islam have acknowledged the permissibility
of istighatha and tawassul with the Prophet, peace be upon him.[52] Its permissibility is not
contravened by the report of Abu Bakr, may Allah be pleased with him, whereby
when he said "Rise! [plural], We will seek help with the Messenger of
Allah from this hypocrite," the Prophet said:
"Innahu
la yustaghathu bi innama yustaghathu billah"
"Help
is not sought with me, it is sought only with Allah."
Since Ibn Luhay`a is part of its chain of
transmission, the discussion of it is well-known.[53]
Were we to suppose that the hadith is sound, it
would be of the like of the Qur'anic verse, "You did not throw when you
threw, but Allah threw" (8:17)[54] and the Prophet said,
"I did not bear you but Allah bore you."[55] Thus the meaning of the hadith "Help is not sought with
me" is:
"(Even
if I am the one ostensibly being asked
for
help,) I am not the one being asked for help,
in
reality Allah Himself is being asked."
In
sum, the term istighatha or "asking for help" applies to
whomever the help comes from including in respect to causation and acquisition;[56] this is what the Arabic
means and the Shari`a permits. The hadith "Help is not sought with
me" must be interpreted in the light of this. This meaning is supported by
the hadith in Sahih al-Bukhari[57] touching on intercession on
the Day of Resurrection. Such was the help people sought from Adam, then
Ibrahim, then Musa, then `Isa, then Muhammad, on him and them be Allah's
blessings and peace.
Now
we have come to the point of setting forth the permissibility of tawassul and
adducing evidence for it. We find in
the Qur'an:
"O
ye who believe! Be wary of Allah and
seek al-wasila
--
the means to approach Him" (5:35).
Ibn `Abbas said that al-wasila signifies
whatever means one employs to draw close to Allah. The Wahhabis claim that "means" refers exclusively to
actions and this is pure arbitrariness.
The manifest and apparent sense (zahir) of the text refers to
persons (dhawat) not actions.
For Allah says: ittaqu Allah (Fear Allah) which conveys the sense
of wariness in doing whatever Allah has
ordered and relinquishing whatever He has forbidden. If we interpret "seek
the means" in terms of actions, then the order of "seeking the
means" would consist in an emphasis (ta'kid) of the command:
"Be wary of Allah." This is
different than if "seeking the means" is interpreted to refer to
persons. For then the command of taqwa
is to actually lay a basis (ta'sis) for one's action and this is better
than emphasis.[58]
Again,
Allah says:
"Those
unto whom they cry seek for themselves
the
means of approach to their Lord, which of
them
shall be the nearest" (17:57).
Ibn `Abbas said they are Jesus and his mother,
Azrael and the angels. And the
commentary on this verse is that the unbelievers worship prophets and angels
because they regard them as their lords.
Thus Allah says to them,
"Those whom you worship are imploring Allah by who is nearer. How, then, do you make them lords when they
are servants in need of their Lord and imploring Him by One who is higher in
rank than they are?"
Allah
also said:
"If
they had only, when they were unjust to
themselves,
come unto thee and asked Allah's
forgiveness,
and then the Messenger had asked
forgiveness
for them, they would have found
Allah
indeed Oft-returning, Most Merciful" (4:64).
Allah has linked their seeking of forgiveness from
Him with seeking forgiveness from the Prophet.
So in this verse from the Qur'an we have clear evidence of imploring
Allah by means of the Prophet and acceptance of the one that implores Him in
this fashion. We understand this also
from the statement: "They would have found Allah Oft-returning, Most
Merciful."
Asking
forgiveness for his community, you should know, is not tied to his being alive
and the hadiths cited shortly indicate this. One cannot say that the verses
cited among a definite group of people have no general applicability; for even
if they are cited among a definite group while the Prophet was alive, they
maintain a general relevance by the generality of the cause occasioning their
utterance. So the verses take in whomever satisfies such a description whether
he be alive or dead.[59]
Another
evidence is the Qur'anic verse: "Now the man of his own people appealed to
him [Musa] against his foe" (28:15).
Here Allah attributes a request for help to a creature who is asking
someone other than Himself. This is sufficient evidence for the permissibility
for asking someone other than Allah for help.
If someone objects and says that the help being
sought in these texts is from someone alive and who has power over his actions,
the reply is that attributing the power to him if it is held to issue from him
in a fashion independent of Divine assistance is the same as kufr, that
is disbelief. And if it is only Allah's power to be a cause and means, then
there is no difference between living and dead. Thus the recipient, alive or
dead, possesses the miracle as a token of respect and honor. If the seeking of
aid is not related to Allah literally and to someone else figuratively, the
seeking of help is forbidden in either case. From this you know the secret of
the Prophet's formal rejection of seeking help from himself when Abu Bakr
al-Siddiq said: "Rise! We will ask the Messenger of Allah for help from
this hypocrite" and the Messenger of Allah said to him: "Help is not
sought from me. Help is sought from Allah" despite the fact that the
Prophet was then alive and had power over his actions. He only intended to deny
the seeking of help from him literally and in reality. For he wanted to teach
his Community that help only can be sought, in reality, from Allah.
We
find another evidence for tawassul in the Qur'anic verse:
"They
do not possess intercession save those
who
have made a covenant with their Lord" (19:87).
Some of the commentators on Qur'an say that the
"covenant" (al-`ahd) is the phrase: "There is no god but
Allah and Muhammad is the Messenger of Allah." The meaning of the verse
would be: "Intercessors will not intercede except for those who say: There
is no god but Allah," that is, the believers, like what we find where the
Qur'an says: "They only intercede for one who is accepted" (21:28). However, the resulting meaning: they do not
possess intercession for anyone except those who made a covenant etc. is
far-fetched and somewhat constrained.
The
best commentary of Allah's statement "They do not possess" is
"They do not obtain." Then, the expression of the exception
"save those who..." is admissible without implying something in
addition, and the meaning is asserted:
"He does not possess intercession except the one who says: There is
no god but Allah." That is, only the believers intercede. This is like the
verse "And those unto whom they call instead of Him possess no power of
intercession except him who bears witness to the Truth" (43:86). The bearing witness to the Truth is the
phrase: "There is no god but Allah."
Since
what is meant by imploring Allah with the prophets, the saints, and the pious
and by asking them for help is a request for their intercession, and since
Allah has related that they possess intercession, then who can prevent anyone
from seeking by permission of Allah what they possess by permission of
Allah? Thus, it is permissible to ask
from them that they give you what Allah has given to them. The only thing forbidden is asking
intercession from idols which do not possess anything at all.
Another
evidence is narrated by Ibn Majah with a sound chain of transmission on the
authority of Abu Sa`id al-Khudri, may Allah be pleased with him. He relates that the Messenger of Allah said:
"The one who leaves his house for prayer and then says: "O Allah, I
ask thee by the right of those who ask you and I beseech thee by the right of
those who walk this path unto thee, as my going forth bespeak not of levity,
pride nor vainglory, nor is done for the sake of repute. I have gone forth
solely in the warding off your anger and for the seeking of your pleasure. I
ask you, therefore, to grant me refuge from hell fire and to forgive me my
sins. For no one forgive sins but yourself." Allah will look kindly upon him and seventy thousand angels will
seek his forgiveness."[60]
In
this manner did the Prophet make tawassul when he said "I ask thee by the
right of those who ask you," that is, by every believing servant.
Moreover, he commanded his Companions to use this prayer when they made du`a
and to make tawassul just as he made tawassul. The Pious Ancestors (al-Salaf)
of our faith among the Companions' Successors and their Successors continued to
use this prayer upon their going out to prayer and no one disavowed them for
it.
Among
further evidences for the permissibility of tawassul is the occasion when the
Prophet said on the authority of Anas ibn Malik: "O Allah, grant
forgiveness to my mother, Fatima Bint Asad, and make vast for her the place of
her going in[61] by right of thy Prophet and
that of those prophets who came before me" and so on until the end of the
hadith. Al-Tabarani relates it in al-Kabir.
Ibn Hibban and al-Hakim declare it sound. The "Fatima" referred to
here is the mother of Sayyidina `Ali who raised the Prophet. Ibn Abi Shayba on
the authority of Jabir relates a similar narrative. Similar also is what Ibn `Abd Al-Barr on the authority of Ibn
`Abbas and Abu Nu`aym in his Hilya on the authority of Anas Ibn Malik
relate, as al-Hafiz al-Suyuti mentioned in the Jami` al-Kabir.[62]
Also
found as evidence: al-Tirmidhi, al-Nasa'i, al-Bayhaqi, and al-Tabarani relate
with a sound chain that a blind man came to the Prophet and said: "Pray to
Allah that He relieve me." The
Prophet said: "If you wish I will pray, and if you wish you may be
patient, and that is better." Then he prayed for him and commanded him to
make ablution and do his ablution well and utter this prayer: "O Allah, I
ask you and I address You by Your Prophet Muhammad, the Prophet of Mercy. O
Muhammad, I address by you my Lord in my need. O Allah, accept his intercession
on my behalf." Then he returned
and gained his sight. Al-Bukhari produces this hadith in his Ta'rikh
(Biographical History), Ibn Majah, and al-Hakim in al-Mustadrak with a
sound chain of transmission. Suyuti in al-Jami'
al-Kabir and al-Saghir mentioned it also. It is therefore
established that the Prophet commanded the blind man to invoke him and implore
Allah by means of him to accomplish his need.
The
Wahhabis may claim that this is only in the life of the Prophet and that it
does not provide evidence for the permissibility of imploring Allah by means of
him after death. We answer that this
prayer has been used by the Companions and the Successors also after the repose
of the Prophet to accomplish their needs.
The evidence for this is what al-Tabarani and al-Bayhaqi have related,
namely, that a man visited `Uthman ibn `Affan, may Allah be pleased with him,
during the time when he was Caliph, concerning a certain need he had but the
noble Commander of the Faithful did not look immediately into it. The man
complained to `Uthman Ibn Hunayf who
said to him: "Go and make ablution, then go to the mosque and pray in the
following manner: "O Allah, I ask you and address you by your Prophet
Muhammad, the Prophet of Mercy. O
Muhammad, I address my Lord by you to accomplish my need." Then
mention your need." So the
man went away and did precisely as he was told and came back to the door of
`Uthman ibn `Affan. Then the doorkeeper
came to him, took his hand, brought him into the presence of `Uthman and made
him to sit down with him. `Uthman said: "Tell me what you need" and
he mentioned his need and it was fulfilled. Then the Caliph said to him:
"Whatever need you have, mention it to me." When the man went out of
his presence he met Ibn Hunayf and said: "May Allah reward you with good
for he would have not looked into my need until you spoke to him for me."
But Ibn Hunayf said: "By Allah I
did not speak to him, but I witnessed Allah's Messenger when the blind man came
to him and complained about losing his sight."[63]
Such
an act constitutes tawassul and he called upon him after the death of the
Prophet on the grounds that the Prophet is living in his grave and his rank is
above the rank of the Martyrs whom Allah has expressly said that they are
living, being provided for, with their Lord.
Another
evidence for tawassul is what al-Bayhaqi and Ibn Abi Shayba relate with a sound
chain of transmission that a drought afflicted the people during the caliphate
of `Umar, may Allah be pleased with him, and Bilal Ibn al-Harth came to the
grave of the Prophet and said: "O Messenger of Allah, ask for rain for
your community, for they are being destroyed." Then the Messenger of Allah came to him in a dream and said to
him that they would have water. This evidence of ours is not in the vision of
the Prophet. Even if his vision is
true, the legal rulings of the Shari`a are not established by dreams, where
there is room to cast doubt on the words or perspicuity of the dreamer. The evidence we are citing lies in the
action of one of the Companions while that Companion was awake. That is Bilal
Ibn al-Harth who came to the grave of the Prophet and called on him and made a
request of him to provide his community with rain.[64]
Again,
we find evidence in the Sahih of Bukhari from a narration of Anas Ibn
Malik from `Umar Ibn al-Khattab in the time when he was Caliph asking for rain
by means of al-`Abbas, the uncle of the
Prophet, when there was a drought in the Year of "Ramada" (the Year
of Destruction in 17 A.H.), then they received rain. And in al-Mawahib
al-laduniyya of the savant al-Qastallani we find that when `Umar asked
`Abbas for rain, he said: "O people, the Messenger of Allah used to see in
al-`Abbas what as son sees in a father," whereupon they followed the
Prophet's model in his behavior with al-`Abbas and took the latter as a means
to Allah.
There
is no difference in the tawassul or imploring by naming prophets and other
pious persons and them being alive or dead because in neither state do they
differ in anything whatsoever. In
either state, producing an effect on states of affairs is not up to them.
Creation, bringing into existence, producing an effect on states of affairs:
all of this belongs to Allah alone, who has no partner in this or anything
else. As for the one who believes that producing effects belongs only to the
living, it is up to them to differentiate between imploring Allah for the sake
of the living or imploring Allah for the sake of the dead. For our part we say that Allah is the Creator
of all things regardless, and "Allah has created you and all you do"
(37:96). The Wahhabis who make a great show of their defense of monotheism and
permit using only living persons as a means have made themselves fall into the
sin of associating a partner with Allah (shirk) insofar as they believe,
in their ignorance, that living beings have an effect upon things when in
reality no one produces an effect except Allah.
Using
as means (tawassul), or using as intermediary (tashaffu`), or
asking for help (istighatha) a single person: the upshot of all this is
the same, the aim of it being only to get blessings (tabarruk) by
mentioning the names of beloved servants of Allah for whose sake Allah may
grant mercy to creation, be they living or dead. The actual author of existence
is Allah alone, they are only customary causes (asbab `adiyya), they
produce no effect on their own.
Their
Condemnation of Nida' (Calling Out) |
As for the invocations of common Muslim people in
Arabic like: "O `Abd al-Qadir Gilani look at me (Ya `Abd al-Qadir
adrikni)!" and "O Ahmad al-Badawi give us support (Ya Badawi
madad)!" they belong to the figurative language of the mind just as
the application of someone who says to his food: "Satisfy me!" or to
his water: "Quench my thirst!" or to his medicine: "Heal
me!" The food does not satisfy,
nor does the water quench the thirst, nor the medicine heal. But the One who is the real Satisfier of our
hunger, the Quencher of our thirst and the Healer of our ills is Allah
alone. The food, the water, the
medicine are only the proximate or secondary causes which custom has
established on the surface of things by our mind's regular association of them
with certain concomitant events.
The
majority of the Muslim community agree on the permissibility of imploring Allah
for the sake of the Prophet, the Companions, and the pious. From many of the
Companions, the ulama of the Pious Ancestors, and those in succeeding
generations, the meeting together of a majority on what is forbidden and
idolatrous is not allowable because of the Prophet's sound hadith which some
consider mutawatir:[65] "My community will not
come together on an error"[66] and because Allah said:
"You are the best community of mankind which has been produced"
(3:110). Then how could all of them or
the majority of them come together on what is erroneous?
One
of the evidences permitting the seeking of help is what Bukhari has related in
a sound hadith from Ibn `Abbas that the Prophet mentioned in the story of
Hajar, the mother of Isma`il: when thirst overtook her and her son, she began
to run in search for water, then she heard a voice yet saw no one and she said:
"If there be help (ghawth) with you, then help us (aghith)."[67] If seeking aid of other than Allah was shirk then why did
she seek aid? Why did the Prophet mention it to his Companions and not reject
it? And why did the Companions after him transmit it and the narrators of
hadith mention it?
Bukhari
also relates in the Hadith of Intercession[68] that people, while they are
in the horrors in the Day of Resurrection, ask help of Adam, then of Noah, then
of Abraham, then of Moses, then of Jesus, and all of them will give an excuse,
and Jesus will say: "Go to Muhammad." Then they will go to Muhammad and then he will say: "I will
do it." If seeking aid of a
creature was forbidden then the Prophet would have not mentioned to the
Companions. The ones who object to this
give the answer that this is the Day of Resurrection when the Prophet has
power. One responds with the refutation that in their worldly life they have no
power except as a secondary cause: likewise after death, the living in their
graves and beyond are allowed to be secondary causes only.
Al-Tabarani
has related from `Utba Ibn Ghazwan from the Prophet that he said: "If one
of you loses his way with respect to anything whatsoever or wishes help when he
is in a land in which he has no friend let him say: O servants of Allah help me
(ya `ibad Allah a`inuni)! for Allah has servants whom he does not
see."[69]
It
is not said that all that is meant by the "servants of Allah" in the
hadith cited above are only angels, or Muslims among the jinn, or men of the realm of the invisible: for
all of these are living.[70] Hence, the hadith would not
give evidence for asking aid from the dead, but this is not the case. We mention this because there is nothing
explicit in the hadith whereby what is meant by "servants of Allah" are the categories we mentioned
above and nothing else. Yet even if we were to concede this, the hadith would
still be a proof against the Wahhabis from another standpoint, and that is the
calling on someone invisible. The Wahhabis no more allow it than the calling on
the dead.[71]
Furthermore,
their contestation for some of the narrators of this hadith is pointless. It was narrated through a variety of paths
of transmission, one of which supports the other. Thus, al-Hakim related it in his book of sound hadith as well as
Abu `Uwana and al-Bazzar with a sound chain of transmission from the Prophet in
this form: "If the mount of one of you runs loose in a desert land, let
him call: O servants of Allah, restrain my beast! (ya `ibad Allah ahbisu)."
Shaykh al-Islam Ibn Taymiyya has mentioned this hadith in his book al-Kalim
al-Tayyib, also Ibn Qayyim in his own al-Kalim al-Tayyib, Nawawi in
his Adhkar, al-Jazari in Al-Hisn al-Hasin, and other transmitters
of hadith whose number is too large to count.
The latter wording is from the narrative of Ibn Mas`ud whose chain of transmission is continuous
back to the Prophet. The narration of
Ibn Mas`ud whose chain is interrupted is: "Let him call: O servants of
Allah, help me (a`inuni ya `ibad Allah)."[72]
There
is also transmitted on the authority of `Abd Allah Ibn al-Imam Ahmad Ibn Hanbal
that he said: "I heard my father say: "I had made Hajj five times and
once I got lost on the way. I was
walking and I began to say: O servants of Allah, show us the way! I continued to say this until I got on the
right way."[73]
One
of the Wahhabis' pretexts in declaring disbeliever anyone who asks for help or
calls on an absent prophet or saint who has died is that the call of people who
beseech help from an absent prophet or saint might be in numerous places at one
and the same time, and the number of the callers exceedingly large, mounting to
hundreds of thousands. Yet and still,
they claim, the ones asking for help believe that the one who is called upon is
present at that very moment -- not to mention their view that it is disbelief
and shirk because of attributing to the person called upon for help the
characteristics of Allah, since they are impossible for the ordinary mind to
conceive when attributed to a human being. For it is obvious that one body
cannot be existent in numerous places at one time.
The
answer is that Muslims do not believe that
the person called upon is present
in person at the time he is called in a number of places. That
counts as disbelief.
Besides, omnipresence of this
order is impossible. What the callers
believe is that the baraka, that
is, the blessing or grace of the one called, is present in those places in a
subtle fashion by Allah's act of creation and
motivated by His mercy for the person asking for help out of respect for
the one whom he calls on. That is not impossible, for the mercy of Allah is
wide and without limit.
Then,
when the Wahhabis attribute to Muslims this belief (omnipresence in person) of
which they are completely innocent, they apply to it the criterion of
invalidity which the jurists apply in the conditions of marriage if, as they
note, a man marries a woman "by witness of Allah and his
Messenger": the marriage contract is invalid. The Wahhabis then claim: if
the Prophet knows of the call of someone who is asking for help when he calls
out to him from afar, then he would be the Knower of the invisible and the
contract of marriage which the jurists say is invalid would be sound.
The
answer is that Muslims just as they do not believe the Prophet or a saint asked
for help is present when he is called; likewise they do not attribute knowledge
of the invisible to anyone except Allah, the Exalted. As for the absence of the validity of a marriage contract by
witness of Allah and His Messenger, it is because Islamic Law makes the
eye-witness testimony a condition of marriage and acts like it to preserve the
marriage rights; since disputes may arise between the partners to the marriage
which may eventually come before judges. Then it will be impossible for one or
the other of the disputing parties to establish his claim by the witness of
Allah and His Messenger. For suppose
that Allah -- who transcends what the obscurantists say -- is indeed a body who
comes down to the lower heaven as the Wahhabis claim: then we would say it
would be a common phenomenon for him to descend to the courtroom so that His
testimony before it might be produced to decisively settle the dispute of the
two contending parties!
You
know that the Wahhabis declare one who calls on other than Allah a disbeliever;
for example, one who says "O Messenger of Allah" (ya rasulallah)
and so forth. Yet if we go to look we
see that this purported disbelief of one who says "O Messenger of
Allah!" for example, implies two suppositions: either he believes that the
individual whom he calls is himself present at the time of his call, hears his
call, accomplishes his need because of it and saves him from the difficulty for
which he called him in the first place; or he believes that the one whom he
calls hears by Allah's hearing, purely through Allah's own power, and that
Allah and no one else accomplished his need in virtue of the baraka of the one
on whom he calls; and, moreover, that it is Allah who delivers him from the
difficulty which he is in, for the honor of that Prophet.
Either
supposition shows some fault of thinking on the part of the Wahhabi who claims
that the caller is a disbeliever. As
for the first, anyone who believes that someone else other than Allah
accomplishes his need and saves him from difficulty is a disbeliever whether
he calls out or never calls out anyone and it is incorrect to make his
disbelief depend on the circumstance of calling out. You know that no Muslim
believes this doctrine. As for the
second supposition, one whose heart is the seat of faith[74] and who believes that the
one who accomplishes needs and saves from perils is Allah alone, not someone
else: it is not allowed that such a person be called an unbeliever solely on
the basis of calling out to someone absent while believing that Allah creates
the hearing in him.
The
Wahhabis have shown ignorance in saying, at this juncture of the argument, that
Islamic Law judges on the basis of externals (al-hukm bi al-zahir), and
that the external sense of calling upon someone other than Allah is that the
caller believes in that other as having all-encompassing knowledge of the
unseen and possessing an effective power to accomplish needs and complete
disposal over the universe! Yet, they
say, complete knowledge of the unseen and effective power to accomplish the
needs of creatures are characteristics peculiar to the Creator: therefore, they
conclude, belief that someone other
than Allah is characterized in this way automatically constitutes ascribing a
partner to Allah and disbelief.
The
answer is that the external interpretation of the frame of mind of a person who
supplicates someone other than Allah signifies only that the caller has called
other than Allah. It does not signify
that he believes that the one he calls has power to carry out one's needs nor
any of the other attributes the Wahhabis mention.
Belief
is an inward matter of which certain external phenomena might give
indications. The act of calling is not
one of them. Say to the Wahhabis who
deem the external meaning of calling to be an indication of idolatry and
disbelief: Why is it most of you don't consider what belongs to the Muslim whom
you call a disbeliever from the side of his external behavior manifest in acts
of prayer, fasting, zakat, and the other pillars of the Faith? Why do you not look at these as indicators
of his faith and sound belief? What is
more amazing, that same Muslim who engages in supplication, clearly articulates
(by keeping the pillars) his disbelief in the own power of the one he calls to
and in anything that goes with it. Yet
despite this, you use this single external act of his as an indicator of that
very belief which he has denied of himself.
Would that I knew by what legal rule you can prove from the external
significance of a man's call (nida') that his belief is deviant in the face of all the clear
indications he gives you that his belief is sound.[75]
11: Wahhabis
Claim: Anyone Visiting a
Grave is a Disbeliever |
Should one inquire as to the nature of Wahhabi
doctrine and be curious as to what its objective is, the answer to both
questions is easily summed up. It is their declaring all Muslims
unbelievers. This answer is a sufficient
definition of their entire school of thought.
For the one who looks closely into the ideas they introduce will find
that in each question that school strives to declare all Muslims unbelievers,
even though Allah Himself is pleased with Islam as their religion:
they have declared Muslims
unbelievers for their assertion that Allah the Exalted transcends corporeality;
they have declared Muslims
unbelievers for their acceptance of Consensus is unbelief;
they have declared Muslims
unbelievers for their unquestioning emulation (taqlid) of the legal
rulings concerning the faith made by the Imams, the mujtahids of the four
schools of Islamic law;
they have declared Muslims
unbelievers for their seeking the Prophet's intercession (istishfa`)
after his death and using him as a means to Allah (tawassul);
they have declared Muslims
unbelievers for their visitation of graves.
To
anyone who has eyes to see, it is obvious that a visitor to a grave either aims
at seeking intercession, using as means to Allah those buried there and seeking
to be blessed by visiting them, as in the case of visitation of places where
prophets and saints are buried; or, on the other hand, the purpose may be
consideration of the departed folk in order to strengthen feelings of humility
in the heart and attain reward by reading the opening chapter of the Qur'an and
asking Allah to forgive them, as when one visits the graves of all
Muslims. Or, yet again, the aim of
visitation may be remembrance of relatives and the departed beloved and
visiting those whom fate has snatched away, of early making their graves their
abodes. He remembers that they left him never to return again, feeling grief at
their leave, his mind's tongue moving to express itself in lines like the
following:
O
thou departing hence in pomp and power,
Tarry
a while, for thy ransom is pomp and power.
Do
not make haste, but walk humbly,
For
thou art leaving never to return again.
His sensibilities impel him to visit their graves,
pausing at the traces of their tombs to shed sad tears over their remains and
express their sorrow in lines like the following:
Gone
are those dear to me! and I remain, like a lone sword.
How
many a brother dearly beloved
I
laid in his grave by my own hand!
There
is not in any of these practices one thing which calls for labeling as an
unbeliever a Muslim bearing witness that there is no god but Allah and Muhammad
is the Messenger of Allah. I do not
think that even the uneducated and gullible among people, not to mention the
learned person versed in Islamic Law, is ever so impelled by his ignorance as
to intend, by his visitation of a
grave, to worship it; nor that he would ever believe that the grave itself
accomplishes his need and creates what he wants.
The Prophet's Order to
Visit Graves |
The Prophet said: "I forbade you in the past to
visit graves, but visit them. (For visiting graves promotes renunciation of
this World and remembrance of the Hereafter)."[76] As for travels to visit graves, the ulama have had different
opinions about it. Some of them make it illicit (haram) giving as
evidence the words of the Prophet: "Do not travel except to three mosques:
the Masjid al-Haram, this Masjid here in Madina, and Masjid al-Aqsa (in
Jerusalem)." This is related by Bukhari, Muslim and al-Tirmidhi. Al-Qadi
Husayn al-Marwazi (d. 462H) and al-Qadi `Iyad (d. 544H) have opted to forbid
travel for visitation to graves[77] while others have permitted
it, among them Imam al-Haramayn al-Juwayni and others. The proof they adduce for its permissibility
is the Prophet's statement: "I have forbidden you in the past to visit
graves, but visit them." They said
the Prophet has commanded us in this hadith to visit graves, and that he did
not differentiate between graves that are near and graves that are far and to
visit which travel becomes necessary.
As
for the hadith: "Do not travel except to three mosques..." he only
forbade frequency of travel to mosques not to places of religious visitation,
just as is clear from his words. He
only forbade frequency of travel to mosques because one mosque is like the
other and no city is devoid of a mosque; so there is no need for a journey.
This is not the case with graves that are places of visitation. They are not equal in blessing just as the
hierarchical standing of their inhabitants differs in the view of Allah.
Without
doubt, the exception expressed: "...except for three mosques" has
several ramifications. Its meaning may be either the remote genus as when one
says: "Do not travel anywhere except to three mosques." According to
this meaning it is prohibited to travel anywhere other than what is expressed
in the exception: this means that travel is illicit even for jihad, trading and
commerce, gaining livelihood, acquiring knowledge and for pleasure and so
forth. This cannot be the case. As for
the proximate genus the meaning is: do not undertake travel to any mosque
except to three. This is the correct
interpretation. The hadith is specific in forbidding travel to all
mosques except three. Thus, it is evidence for the permissibility for travel to
visit graves.
`Umar,
may Allah be pleased with him, after the conquest of Damascus said to Ka`b
al-Ahbar: "O Ka`b, do you wish to come with us to Madina to visit the
Messenger of Allah?" Ka`b
answered: "Yes, O Commander of the
Faithful." Similarly, we have
evidence of Bilal's coming from Damascus to Madina to visit the grave of the
Prophet. This took place during the
caliphate of `Umar.[78]
Among
those who say that traveling to visit graves is permissible we find Imam
al-Nawawi, al-Qastallani, and Imam al-Ghazali. The latter said in his Ihya'
`Ulum al-Din after mentioning the hadith: "Do not
travel...": "The gist of the
matter is that some ulama use it as evidence for prohibiting travel to places
of religious visitation and pilgrimage.
It is clear to me that this is not the case. On the contrary, visitation to graves is commanded by the hadith:
"I have forbidden you in the past to visit graves, but visit them."
The hadith only mentions the prohibition of visitation to other mosques than
the three Mosques because of the likeness of one mosque to another.
Furthermore, there is no city in which there is no mosque. Hence, there is no need to travel to another
mosque. As for places of religious
visitation, the baraka of visiting them varies to the measure of their
rank with Allah."
Touching on the issue of whether dead people
hear or not, our view is as follows. It is well known that hearing in living
people is actually a property of spirit (al-Ruh). The ear is only an organ or rather
instrument of hearing, nothing more.
Since the spirit of the dead person does not become extinct with the
extinction of his body, the belief that the spirit hears is not
farfetched. One cannot claim that it
does not hear due to loss of the organ of hearing by reason of the body's
perishing. For we say that it sometimes
hears even without that organ just as in visions. Thus, the spirit talks and
hears in its sleep just as it sees in dreams without mediation of an instrument,
that is, an organ of sensation. Then,
is it too much for the rational person, after experiencing sound and sight in
one's sleep by the sole means of the spirit and without the slightest
participation of the organs of sound and sight, to believe that after the
spirit separates from the body it hears and sees even without the organs of
sound and sight?
Yet
and still, the Wahhabis do not extend their denial that the dead can hear to
martyrs because Allah says: "Do not consider those who are slain for
Allah's sake dead, but they are alive receiving sustenance with their
Lord" (3:169). There is no doubt that the rank of prophets is not beneath
the rank of martyrs: they, like them, are alive with their Lord, receiving
sustenance. It has been narrated that the Prophet said: "I passed by Musa
on the night of my Journey while he was praying in his grave."[79] And on the authority of Anas the Prophet said: "Prophets are
alive in their graves [praying]."[80] Abu Ya`la al-Mawsili and al-Bazzar relate this. On the authority of Ibn `Umar the Prophet
said: "I saw Jesus, Moses, and Abraham, on them be peace." This is
related by Bukhari, Muslim and Imam Malik in his Muwatta'. Abu Bakr Ahmad Ibn Husayn al-Bayhaqi
recorded in Shu`ab al-Iman on the authority of Abu Hurayra that the
Prophet said: "Whoever sends blessings on me at my grave, I will hear him,
and whoever sends blessings on me from afar, I am informed about it."[81] Therefore, if the premise prophets are alive is affirmed,
then, one must also affirm the premise prophets can hear; for hearing is
a concomitant property of life.
It
is incorrect to invoke the fact that since the life of prophets and martyrs in
the barzakh or "isthmus life" is different from the life
of this world they cannot hear. Even if
we grant that the two lives are each of a different kind, nevertheless
affirming "They are alive" with any kind of life is sufficient
to establish that they hear and that their tawassul and supplication for help
follows as a matter of course.
Finally,
the organ of hearing itself, in
prophets, is not voided by death: for their bodies do not suffer the corruption
of the grave as we know from the noble hadith: "Allah has forbidden the
earth to consume the bodies of Prophets."[82] If we were to slacken the reins and say it is true that the
bodies of prophets undergo corruption in their graves as the Wahhabis claim,
having already affirmed that they are alive and receiving sustenance
(3:169), then, this would simply count as affirmation that they hear even
though they lack an organ for this purpose according to the view we expounded
above.
We
have abundant evidence in hadith which provide evidence that other than
prophets and martyrs among the dead can hear. Cited by Bukhari and Muslim and
the narrators of the Sunan is the hadith transmitted on the authority of
Ibn `Umar who said: "The Messenger of Allah spoke to the People (buried)
in the Well saying: "Have you found out that what your Lord had promised
you is true?" then someone exclaimed: "Are you calling out to the
dead!" The Prophet replied: "You do not hear better than they do,
except they do not respond."" And in Bukhari and Muslim we find the
hadith of Anas on the authority of Abu Talha that the Prophet called to them:
"O Abu Jahl Ibn Hisham! O Umayya Ibn Khalaf! O `Utba ibn Rabi`a! Have you
not found out that what your Lord promised you is true? for I have found that
what he has promised me is true."
`Umar said to him: "O Messenger of Allah, how do you address bodies
devoid of spirit?" The Prophet
replied: "By Him Who holds my life
in His Hands! You do not hear what I am saying to them better than they
do." Similarly, it has been
affirmed in Bukhari and Muslim on the authority of Anas that the Prophet said:
"Surely, when the servant of Allah is placed in his grave and his
companions in this life turn away from it, he hears the thumps of their
sandaled feet."[83]
Abu
Nu`aym Al-Isbahani has mentioned with his chain of transmission from `Ubayd Ibn
Marzuq who said: "A woman of Madina, named Umm Mihjan, used to sweep the
mosque, then she died. The Prophet was not told of this event. Thereafter, he passed over her grave and
queried: "What is this?"
Those present replied: "Umm Mihjan." He said: "The one
who swept the mosque?" They answered: "Yes." Thereupon the
people lined up and prayed for her. Then he addressed her: "Which work of
yours did you find more favored?" They exclaimed: "O Messenger of
Allah, can she hear you?" He replied: "You cannot hear better than
she does." Then it is mentioned that she answered him: "Sweeping the
mosque." The chain of transmission
in this hadith is interrupted. There
are others more like it.[84]
It
is narrated concerning `A'isha, may Allah be pleased with her, when she heard
the hadith about the dead hearing, she denied it and said: "How does the
Prophet say something like that when Allah has said: "You cannot make
those to hear who are in the graves"
(35:22). While her opinion does not affirm the hearing of the dead as
Ibn Taymiyya notes in his Legal Opinions (Fatawa) and in other places,
we have no excuse for following it. For the question necessarily concerns a
well-known matter of faith which no one has permission to deny. In fact `A'isha
has also narrated that the Prophet said, as Ibn Rajab has noted in Ahwal
al-Qubur: "Surely they know now that what I said to them is
true." This narration of hers
supports those which say that the dead
hear, for if it is possible for a dead man to know, surely it is possible for him also to hear.
Therefore, to affirm that they do know is necessarily also to affirm that they
hear.
As
for the Qur'anic verses: "You cannot make those who are in the graves
hear" (35:22) and: "You cannot make the dead hear..." (27:80)
there is no evidence in them for the denial of hearing in the case of the dead
in the absolute sense, it is only evidence for denying hearing for those who
benefit thereof.[85] That is because what is meant by the phrase: "Those in the
graves" in the first verse and by "the dead" in the second verse
are the unbelievers, who are compared to the dead lying in their graves. Just as the dead do not hear with a
beneficial kind of hearing -- that is, with a hearing made complete by the
mutual exchange of address between the hearer and the speaker -- in the same
way the unbelievers do not hear the warning signs that the Prophet addresses to
them in a way that benefits them by guiding them to faith in Allah.
What
otherwise confirms the above is that unqualified hearing is also an established
attribute of the unbelievers: they hear what the Prophet said to them; but they
derived no benefit from it. This is
confirmed by Allah's saying: "If Allah had recognized in them any good, He
would, indeed, have made them hear: if He made them hear (as it stands), they
would turn away" (8:23). Hence, what is meant by "hear" when He
says "He would indeed have made them hear" is a hearing which brings
benefit to the hearer and when He says: "If He made them hear (as it
stands)" He means hearing which carries no benefit. If this were otherwise, the sense of the
passage would be corrupt inasmuch as the verse would, then, be a syllogism
where the middle term (He makes them hear) is reiterated; the end result would
be: "If Allah had recognized any good in them, they would have turned
away." This conclusion is absurd
and contradictory, as you can see, since it would entail that the turning back
take place -- which is evil -- despite the fact that Allah recognized good in
them. Allah's recognition would be, in that case, a misrecognition with respect
to the true state of the unbelievers -- Exalted is Allah high above such a
possibility.
The
above cited two verses point to a further meaning: that what is meant by the
hearing negated in both cases is the hearing connected with the faculty of
guidance just as the context of the two verses indicate. The meaning then is
that you do not guide the unbelievers by yourself, O Muhammad! because they are
like dead men and that you cannot cause the dead to hear by yourself. The only agent causing them to hear is Allah
as the Qur'an says: "You do not guide whom you like but Allah guides whom
he wishes" (28:56).
One
does not say: "Just as the one making the dead to hear in reality is
Allah, likewise, the one making the living to hear is in reality none other
than He." For Allah is the Creator
of all actions whatsoever, just as the true doctrine on the matter
teaches. What, then, is the motivation
for illustrating Allah's agency with the hearing of the dead? What we say is this:
1- The fact that Allah alone is the one making
the dead to hear is a matter admitting of no ambiguity even for a blind
man. As for His being the one causing
the living to hear in reality, it is not said like that.[86] This is because one might falsely suppose that the Agent causing
hearing in the one spoken to is the actual speaker, on the grounds that the
hearing of the one spoken to directly follows the external voice issuing from
the mouth of the person who addresses him. Hence to exemplify Allah's agency
with the hearing of the living is improper.
To give an example requires that its content be unambiguously clear;
this is not the case in the category of living persons as we have explained.[87]
2- Since the unbelievers were alive, to
illustrate the fact that the Prophet cannot make them hear by comparing them to
the living whom the Prophet cannot cause to hear comes close to fashioning a
comparison between a thing and itself, as we find in that given by the poet who
said:
Surrounded
as we are with water,
We
sit like people encircled by water.
The
Wahhabis respond, with regard to the hadith of the People of the Well, that the
hearing experienced by the dead on the occasion when the Prophet questioned
them was a miracle proper only to him. It does not count as evidence, they
claim, that these dead were also capable of hearing the speech of someone else. The answer to this is that the miracle is
not a miracle unless its manifestation is a phenomenon experienced by other
persons like the speaking of pebbles.
The Companions were hearing the voice of the pebbles glorifying Allah
while they were being held in the palm of the Prophet's hand.[88] But it is impossible that the dead's hearing of the Prophet
speaking to them be a miracle since it was not manifest to anyone but
himself. Furthermore, the hadith
reporting that the dead hear the thumping of sandaled feet (Bukhari and Muslim)
contravenes such a phenomenon being a miracle in the case of the People of the
Well. For it indicates that dead people
also hear the talk of other people besides the Prophet.
The
Wahhabis further respond that the object intended when the Prophet spoke to the
dead was admonition of the living and not to cause an act of understanding on the part of the dead. The
answer to this is that if the intended object of his speech was admonition of
the living, why did `Umar ask:
"How do you speak to bodies devoid of spirit?" out of astonishment at
his speaking to them? I do not believe that fatuousness has pushed the Wahhabis
to the point of thinking that after almost three-quarters of a millennium they
understand what the Prophet meant better than his Companion, `Umar. Besides, the answer the Prophet gave by
itself constitutes denial that what he aimed at was admonition because he
replied: "You do not hear better than they." This answer is obviously not suitable as an
admonition. On the contrary, it is a
clear rejection of `Umar's sense of farfetchedness in the Prophet's behavior
and astonishment because of it.
The
Wahhabis, finally, answer that the Prophet only spoke to the dead out of
personal conviction that they hear.
Thereafter, they claim, the two verses of the Qur'an were revealed to
correct his belief. The response to this is that it is unallowable that the
Prophet believed anything like that of his own accord. On the contrary, it came about necessarily
in virtue of revelation and inspiration from his Lord. Allah said of him:
"He does not speak of his own desire" (53:3). This is especially the
case since he did not arrive at his knowledge of the matter by merely
exercising his faculty of reason.
Rather, it came about by way of revelation and inspiration as we have
said.
One
piece of evidence that indicates that Allah quickens the dead in their graves
so that they hear is His statement retelling the avowal of those who said:
"Our Lord, twice hast Thou put us to death and twice hast Thou quickened
us" (40:11). For what is meant by
the first putting to death is the putting to death before resting in the grave. What is meant in the case of the
other is the putting to death after resting in the grave. If Allah did not give life in the graves a
second time, it would be impossible to put to death a second time. The Wahhabis answer this by saying that the
first putting to death is the state of nonexistence prior to creation and the
second putting to death is after creation.
In truth, this is amusing even for children because putting to death can
take place only after the occurrence of life and there is no life prior to
Allah's creation of life. As for their
response that the first putting to death is the putting to death of people
after their life in the world of atoms, it is weaker than the first
answer. People in the world of atoms
were no different than spirits which Allah created and asked: "Am I not
your Lord? and they answered, saying: Yes!" (7:172). Moreover, the reader knows that death is
defined as a separation of the soul from the body. Hence, there is no death prior to embodiment, although it is
possible for Allah to annihilate spirits after creating them. But that has
nothing to do with death as we have just defined it.
Finally,
the Wahhabiyya usher forth evidence for the incapacity of dead people to hear
on the basis of a legal ruling of the Shari`a that ulama apply in the case
where a man performs certain acts using
such words as: "If I address X, my wife is divorced" -- or: "my
slave-girl is free." Now, if that man speaks to X after his death, then
the divorce is invalid and the act of manumission null. They conclude that the basis of nullity and
voidness is the fact that dead person lacks the faculty of hearing.
We
refuse to grant that the basis of the ruling for the ulama is the absence of
hearing on the part of the dead. On the
contrary, they base themselves on what they know of custom, namely that it
routinely makes the stipulating of oaths like the above, conditional on life.
The whole benefit of speaking is the mutual exchange of communication, which
does not place when one party of the communication is dead. Conversing with a
dead person, therefore, does not qualify as speech only inasmuch as his death
renders him powerless to respond -- not because he is powerless to hear.
12: The
Wahhabis' takfir of the one who swears, makes a vow, or sacrifices by
other than Allah |
May Allah the Exalted fight the Wahhabis because
they are intent on establishing reasons to declare Muslims unbelievers. They
have shown that takfir is their highest ambition. You see them declaring
as disbelievers persons who implore Allah for the sake of the Prophet and seek
his help by intercession to Allah to accomplish their needs, while not feeling
the slightest shame in seeking help from unbelievers of the foreign states of
Europe[89] in order to carry out their
plans which are to subject the Muslims to their control, make war against them,
and, in rebellion from the authority of the Commander of the Faithful, renounce
allegiance to him and the obedience to him which Allah has ordered in the
Qur'an as we have explained earlier.
They have taken the enemies of Islam as intimate friends, asking them to
aid them with military support in their corrupt purpose and using that support
to perpetrate their stubborn harassment and error. Yet Allah has said: "O
ye who believe! take not the Jews and the Christians for your friends and
protectors" (5:54). May our Lord remove the Wahhabis from the face of the
earth. Do they not know that those same "friends" they make in order
to subjugate Muslims to their tyranny, will, once they have gotten a foothold,
in turn, subjugate and oppress them as well along with whomever else they
consider adverse and opposed to their plans?
We
have shown that the practice of the Wahhabis is to declare all Muslims
disbelievers. As we already said, they claim they are unbelievers because they
implore Allah for the sake of prophets and saints and, in addition, call on
them for help. Wahhabis also claim that Muslims are unbelievers if they swear
by the name of someone else than Allah and make vows to other than Him and
sacrifice animals for their sake.
For
the sake of argument, let us grant that certain doctrines which the Wahhabis
attribute to Muslims are held by them and do in fact constitute disbelief, and
that it is correct to say that the person asserting them has acted contrary to
Islam. Even then, it would still not be
correct to pronounce the entire community of Muslims guilty of unbelief or even
a specific Muslim individual. For the
latter might have made such a statement lacking knowledge of whatever texts
would obligate acknowledgment of the truth.
Or it might be the case that such knowledge has not been suitably
established in his view. Or perhaps he has not understood it and had what
confuses him laid out in a fashion that allows him to beg forgiveness before
Allah and seek proper excuses for his error.
For the one who believes in Allah and His Messenger, Allah is a Forgiver
of sins whether committed in thought, word, or deed. As for the more severe aspect of what He has revealed in the
Qur'an concerning those who perpetrates those sins, it comes in the form of threats
and, as it says, is meant for: "Whoever kills a believer intentionally,
his recompense is Hell to abide therein" (4:93); and "Those who
unjustly eat up the property of orphans, eat a fire into their own bodies: they
will soon be enduring a blazing fire" (4:10); and: "Those who disobey
Allah and His Messenger and transgress His limits will be admitted to a Fire,
to abide therein: and they shall have a humiliating punishment" (4:14).
In
his book Madarij al-salikin, Ibn al-Qayyim has made the statement, the
gist of which is as follows: The adherents of the Sunna of the Prophet are in
complete agreement that Allah's friendship and enmity might be found in the
single individual in two different respects: there might exist in him faith and
hypocrisy, as well as faith and unbelief together. In addition, he will be
close to Allah in one respect more than the other. Hence, of the people in one respect the Qur'an says: "They
were that day nearer to unbelief than to faith" (3:167). Associating a partner with Allah -- shirk
-- falls into two classes: hidden and manifest. Hidden shirk might be
forgiven. As for manifest shirk, there is no forgiveness for it without express
repentance.
Now
swearing by someone other than Allah -- Ibn Qayyim continues -- does not remove
the one who does it from Islam, even though there is mentioned in a hadith
narrated on the authority of Ibn `Umar that:
"Whoever swears by someone other than Allah has associated a
partner with Him."[90] And in another narration of
the same hadith: "Whoever swears by someone other than Allah has committed
an act of kufr." The leading
scholars of hadith in the schools of Shafi`i, Hanafi, Maliki and Hanbali law
all construe kufr here to mean kufr al-ni`ma or the failure to
acknowledge Allah's favor or blessing.
As for the shirk mentioned in the first narration, they find it to be al-shirk
al-khafi or the kind that is hidden rather than manifest such as occurs
when one performs an act of piety in order to show off. That does not remove a person from
Islam. Yet it defeats the religious
purpose of that act. On this much the
ulama have reached a consensus so that those who follow the school of Imam
Shafi`i, for example, say that it falls into the category of what is makruh
tanzihan or reprehensible for purposes of scrupulous observance, rather
than makruh tahriman or reprehensible to the point of prohibition and
reprobation. Therefore, the mode of swearing about which the ulama disagree
over whether it is reprehensible or prohibited cannot be said to make its
perpetrator an unbeliever and thus remove him from Islam.[91]
As
for the vow to someone other than Allah, both Shaykh Taqi al-Din Ibn Taymiyya
and Ibn al-Qayyim -- who are among the most critical concerning this question
-- said that it is not permissible and that it constitutes an act of
disobedience. Neither said that it constitutes an act of unbelief or of shirk
such as would remove one from Islam. Their position is that fulfilling such a
vow is not allowable, but that if the vow is to give alms to some deserving
person among the poor, then, it is good for him in the sight of Allah. Now, if
the one making the vow to someone other than Allah were an unbeliever then they
would not have ordered him to perform an act of charity since charity is
unacceptable from an unbeliever. Rather, they would have ordered him to renew
his Islam.
As
for the sacrifice for the sake of someone other than Allah, Ibn Qayyim
categorizes it under things prohibited, not under act of unbelief, except when
one sacrifices to something worshipped besides the Creator. Similarly,
those versed in knowledge record that it is prohibited because it is for
the sake of someone other than
Allah. Nevertheless, they do not
declare the one who performs such a sacrifice an unbeliever.
Conclusion |
What I intended to elaborate in this hastily thrown
together work has now been accomplished.
My purpose has been to prevent the spread of the Wahhabi school into
Iraq and neighboring areas, to clarify for the individual reader the truth, and
unveil for him what is correct. He
should no longer be deceived by whatever this subversive sect publishes to
infect with its views the ignorant and the simple-minded.
My
efforts in this work have been aided by my brother and friend in Islam, the
learned Ma`ruf Effendi al-Risafi, may the Creator long sustain him. And praise
belongs to Allah first and last.
The indigent one relying on Allah the Exalted
Jamil Effendi Zahawi Zadah
Beginning of Ramadan 1322 A.H. (1904 C.E.)
[3]Sulayman ibn `abd al-Wahhab al-Najdi, al-Sawa'iq al-Ilahiyya fi al-radd 'ala al-Wahhabiyya ["Divine Lightnings in Refuting the Wahhabis"], ed. Ibrahim Muhammad al-Batawi (Cairo: dar al-insan, 1987). Offset reprint by Waqf Ikhlas, Istanbul: Hakikat Kitabevi, 1994.
[5]It is an offense passible of death to disparage the Prophet in all Four Schools according to the ijma`. See the chapters on disparaging the Prophet in Qadi `Iyad's Shifa', Ibn Taymiyya's Al-sarim al-maslul, Ibn Qunfudh's Wasilat al-islam bi al-nabi, etc.
[7]This is the father of al-Habib Ahmad Mashhur al-Haddad who died in Mecca in 1995 -- may Allah have mercy on both of them.
[9]Edited by `Abd Allah ibn `Abd al-Rahman Al Bassam, 1st ed. (Cairo: Dar ihya al-kutub al-`arabiyah, 1377 [1957 or 1958]).
[10]The mufti of Zabid (Yemen) al-Sayyid Abd al-Rahman al-Ahdal said: "It is enough testimony against Muhammad ibn Abd al-Wahhab that the Prophet (s) said: "Their mark is that they shave," for this was never done by any of the sects of innovators before him." Related by al- Sayyid Ahmad Dahlan in his book Khulasat al-kalam fi bayan umara' al-balad al-haram p. 235.
When Ibn `Abd al-Wahhab had a group of Muslims killed because they did not shave their heads as he required his followers to do, al-Mun`ami wrote a lampoon whose first verse is:
Afi halqi al-ra'si bis sakakina wal haddi
hadithun sahihun bil asanida `an jaddi
[Is there, concerning shaving the head at swordpoint,
an authentic hadith related from my ancestor the Prophet?]
[11]Muhammad Siddiq Hasan, Nawab of Bhopal (1832-1890), author of al-Din al-khalis in 4 volumes (Cairo: Maktabat dar al-`urubah, 1956-1960).
[16]An aberrant, anthropomorphizing interpretation of the hadith in Sahih Muslim (English ed. 2:616) whereby at the end of the Farewell Pilgrimage the Prophet pointed his finger in turn at the sky then at the people, saying: "O Allah, be witness, O Allah, be witness, O Allah, be witness."
[17]In kalam or theology Allah's "necessity" (wujub) is a reference to necessary existence and self-sufficiency, which applies to Allah alone, whereas all other existence possesses only "contingency" (imkan).
[18]Or His reward, as Imam Ahmad interpreted it. See Bayhaqi's sound report in Ibn Kathir's al-Bidaya wa al-nihaya 10:327 and Ibn al-Jawzi's Daf` shubah al-tashbih (Saqqaf ed.) p. 13.
[19]Or His acceptance, as interpreted by Abu Hayyan in Tafsir al-bahr al-muhit (7:303) and Bayhaqi in Ibn Hajar's Fath al-Bari (13:416).
[20]Or: His power and His order, as Imam Ahmad interpreted it. See Bayhaqi's sound report in Ibn Kathir's al-Bidaya wa al-nihaya 10:327 and Ibn al-Jawzi's Daf` shubah al-tashbih (Saqqaf ed.) p. 110 and 141.
[21]As reported also from some of the Salaf, such as Imam Malik: see Ibn `Abd al-Barr, al-Tamhid (7:143) and Dhahabi, Siyar a`lam al-nubala' (8:105).
[22]"Ghazali has pointed out that this hadith is not mutawatir... Having said this, however, al-Ghazali adds [Mustasfa 1:111] that a number of prominent Companions have reported ahadith from the Prophet, which although different on their wording, are all in consonance on the theme of the infallibility of the community and its immunity from error... [Both he and al-Amidi in al-Ihkam 1:220-221] observe that the main purport of these ahadith... convey positive [qat`i] knowledge, and that the infallibility of the ummah is sustained by their collective weight." Mohammad Hashim Kamali, Principles of Islamic Jurisprudence (Cambridge: Islamic Texts Society, 1991) p. 178. See Ibn al-`Arabi al-Maliki's list of the ahadith pertaining to ijma` in his commentary on Tirmidhi's relevant section in Kitab al-fitan: `Aridat al-ahwadhi (Beirut: Dar al-kutub al-`ilmmiyya, n.d.) 9:8-11.
[26]Muslim (Imara #55) through Ibn `Abbas. Muslim relates it with slight variations through three more chains. Ibn Abi Shayba also relates it in his Musannaf.
[27]Al-zahir la yuqawimu al-qati`: "The external sense does not stand in opposition to what is decisively known.
[28]It is reported that the Prophet asked Mu`adh ibn Jabal upon the latter's departure as judge to the Yemen: "How will you apply judgment when the occasion arises?" He said: "I shall judge according to Allah's Book." The Prophet asked: "And if you do not find [an answer]?" He said: "Then by the Sunna of His Messenger." The Prophet said: "And if you do not find [an answer]?" He said: "Then I shall do my best to form an opinion and spare no pain." The prophet slapped his chest and said: "Praise belongs to Allah Who has blessed the messenger of Allah's Messenger's with something pleasing to Allah's Messenger." Related by Abu Dawud (Eng. 3:1019 #3585).
[30]It is not necessary, according to consensus, that he possess profound erudition in the Arabic language (tabahhur), but it is enough that he have a moderate erudition (tawassut) as described by Zahawi.
[31]By this are meant the science of differences of opinions (`ilm al-khilaf), the science of consensus in opinions (`ilm al-ijma`), and the science of analogy and its kinds (`ilm al-qiyas).
[32]It is not necessary that he reach the rank of hadith master (hafiz), as Suyuti in al-radd `ala man akhlad points out by listing non-hafiz absolute mujtahids (mujtahid mutlaq) such as Abu Ishaq al-Shirazi, Ibn al-Sabbagh, al-Juwayni, and al-Ghazali.
[33]Suyuti has listed among the mujtahids whose mastership is recognized at one and the same time in the three fields of jurisprudence, hadith, and the Arabic language: himself, Ibn al-Salah, Abu Shama, al-Nawawi, Ibn Daqiq al-`Id, and Taqi al-Din al-Subki among others.
[34]Al-Sakhawi relates in the introduction to his biography of Ibn Hajar al-`Asqalani entitled al-Jawahir wa al-durar that Ahmad said neither yes nor no to the figure of 300,000, but he gestured with his hand that it was acceptable (Cairo 1986 ed. p. 26). Ibn al-Jawzi relates in al-Hathth `ala hafz al-`ilm (Alexandria ed. 1983 p. 43) that Abu Zur`a said that Imam Ahmad knew no less than 1,000,000 hadiths.
[35]According to Imam Ahmad's statement reported by Al-Hakim in his Madkhal li `ulum al-hadith (Robson ed. p. 13) there were 7,000,000 sound hadiths known in his time, of which the hafiz Abu Zur`a had memorized 6; and he sat at Bukhari's feet like a young boy learning. All these numbers refer to chains of transmission, not texts.
[36]These are the renewers of religion according to Ahl al-Sunna:
1st Century: `Umar ibn `Abd al-Aziz (62-101)
2nd: Abu Hanifa (80-150), Malik (93-179), al-Shafi`i (150-204)
3rd: Ahmad ibn Hanbal (164-241), Abu al-Hasan al-Ash'ari (260-324)
4th: al-Hakim al-Naysaburi (321-405)
5th: al-Bayhaqi (384-458), al-Ghazali (450-505)
6th: Fakhr al-din al-Razi (544-606)
7th: al-Nawawi (631-676), Ibn Daqiq al-`Eid (?-702)
8th: Taqi al-Din al-Subki (683-756), al-Bulqini (724-805)
9th: al-`Asqalani (773-852), al-Suyuti (849-911)
10th: al-Sha`rani (898-973)
11th: al-Faruqi al-Sirhindi (971-1034)
12th: Ibn `Alawi al-Haddad (1046-1132)
13th: Khalid al-Baghdadi (1193-1242)
14th: al-Kawthari (d. 1371)
Ibn Qayyim said: "There is an obligatory (wajib) taqlid, a forbidden taqlid, and a permitted taqlid... The obligatory taqlid is the taqlid of those who know better than us, as when a person has not obtained knowledge of an evidence from the Qur'an or the Sunna concerning something. Such a taqlid has been reported from Imam al-Shafi`i in many places, where he would say: "I said this in taqlid of `Umar" or "I said that in taqlid of `Uthman" or "I said that in taqlid of `Ata'." As Al-Shafi`i said concerning the Companions -- may Allah be well pleased with all of them: "Their opinion for us is better than our opinion to ourselves."" Ibn Qayyim, A`lam al-muwaqqi`in `an rabb al-`alamin 2:186-187.
[39]Zahawi mentions them often because Salafis consider them their highest scholarly authorities. Yet, as he shows, they contradict them on many foundational issues, such as this one.
[42]Sound (sahih) hadith related through various chains by Ibn Majah, Muqaddima 12, and Ahmad 4:355, 382, 5:250, 253, 256, 269.
[43]These and many other ahadith have been understood by some scholars to apply to the Wahhabis as well. See above, section following the bibliography.
[44]Ibn Majah, Talaq 16. Tabarani also relates it through two good chains. See Haythami, Majma` al-zawa'id.
[45]Ahmad 4:267, 271, 276; Tirmidhi, Tafsir of surat 2:16 (#2969) and 40 (#3247, #3372) (hasan sahih); Abu Dawud Witr # 1479 (sahih); Ibn Hibban; Bukhari in al-Adab al-mufrad (sahih); Ibn Majah, Du`a Ch. 1 (#3828), and Bayhaqi in Shu`ab al-iman 2:37 (#1105bis); without "inna": Muslim, Tabarani, al-Hakim, al-Nisa'i, and Ibn Abi Shayba.
[48]al-Zamakhshari's Qur'anic commentary entitled al-Kashshaf `an haqaiq al-tanzil wa-`uyun al-aqawil fi wujuh al-ta'wil.
[52]Imam Ahmad, for example. `Ala' al-Din al-Mardawi said in his book al-insaf fi ma`rifat al-rajih min al-khilaf `ala madhhab al-Imam al-mubajjal Ahmad ibn Hanbal (3:456): "The correct position of the [Hanbali] madhhab is that it is permissible in one's supplication (du`a) to use as means a pious person, and it is said that it is desirable (mustahabb). Imam Ahmad said to al-Marwadhi: yatawassalu bi al-nabi fi du`a'ih -- "Let him use the Prophet as a means in his supplication to Allah.""
Al-hafiz Taqi al-Din al-Subki said: "Verily Allah knows that every goodness in my life which He has bestowed upon me is on account of the Prophet (s), that my recourse is to him, and that my reliance is upon him in seeking a means to Allah in every matter of mine. Verily he is my means to Allah in this world and the next." In Fatawa al-Subki, beginning of the article entitled "The Descent of Tranquility and Peace on the Nightlights of Madina" (tanazzul al-sakina `ala qanadil al-madina) 1:274.
Imam Shawkani said in his commentary on al-Jazari's (d. 833) `Iddat al-hisn al-hasin entitled Tuhfat al-dhakirin bi `iddat al-hisn al-hasin: "He [al-Jazari] said: Let him make tawassul to Allah with His Prophets and the salihin or saints (in his du`a). I say: And exemplifying tawassul with the Prophets is the hadith extracted by Tirmidhi et al. (of the blind man saying: O Allah, I ask You and turn to You by means of Muhammad the Prophet of Mercy)... as for tawassul with the saints, among its examples is the hadith, established as sound, of the Companions' tawassul asking Allah for rain by means of al-`Abbas the Prophet's uncle, and `Umar said: "O Allah, we use as means to You the uncle of our Prophet etc." (Beirut ed. 1970) p. 37.
[53]Suyuti, Jami` al-ahadith 496 #2694. Haythami in Majma` al-zawa'id: "Tabarani related it and its men are those of sound hadith except Ibn Luhay`a who is fair (hasan).
[58]To be wary of Allah is itself a means to Him, therefore the order that follows it ("Seek a means to Him"), if it refers to actions, is a reiteration of the action already named ("Fear Allah") for emphasis. This Zahawi calls ta'kid. If it refers to persons, however, it is a definition of a distinct action rather than a reiteration of the action already named. This Zahawi calls ta'sis. In the latter case the strength of the two orders is greater.
[59]Al-`Utbi said: As I was sitting by the grave of the Prophet (s), a Beduin Arab came and said: "Peace be upon you, O Messenger of Allah! I have heard Allah saying: "If they had only, when they were unjust to themselves, come unto thee and asked Allah's forgiveness, and the Messenger had asked forgiveness for them, they would have found Allah indeed Oft-returning, Most Merciful" (4:64), so I have come to you asking forgiveness (of Allah) for my sin, seeking your intercession with my Lord." Then he began to recite poetry:
O best of those whose bones are buried in the deep earth,
And from whose fragrance the depth and height have become sweet,
May I be the ransom for a grave which thou inhabit,
And in which are found purity and bounty and munificence!
Then he left, and I dozed and saw the Prophet (s) in my sleep. He said to me: "O `Utbi, run after the Beduin and give him glad tidings that Allah has forgiven him."
Related in: Nawawi, Adhkar, Mecca ed. p. 253-254, and al-Idah fi manasik al-hajj, chapter on visiting the Prophet; Ibn Hajar al-Haythami, al-Jawhar al-munazzam [commentary on Nawawi's Idah]; al-Qurtubi, commentary on 4:64 in Ahkam al-Qur'an 5:265; Samhudi, Khulasat al-Wafa p. 121 (from Nawawi); Dahlan, Khulasat al-Kalam 2:247; Ibn Kathir, Tafsir 4:64 and al-Bidayat wa al-nihayat 1:180; Abu Muhammad ibn Qudama, al-Mughni 3:556; Abu al-Faraj ibn Qudama, al-Sharh al-kabir 3:495; al-Bahooti al-Hanbali, Kashshaf al-qina` 5:30; Taqi al-Din al-Subki, Shifa' al-siqam p. 52; and Ibn al-Jawzi, Muthir al-gharam al-sakin ila ashraf al-amakin.
[60]Related in Musnad Ahmad (3:21), Ibn Majah (Masajid), al-Mundhiri in al-Targhib (1:179), Ibn Khuzayma in his Sahih, Ibn al-Sani, and Abu Nu`aym. Ghazali mentions it in the Ihya and `Iraqi said: it is hasan. Nawawi mentions Ibn al-Sani's two chains in the Adhkar and says they are weak. However, Ibn Hajar al-`Asqalani says it is hasan in al-Amali al-masriyya (#54) and the Takhrij of Nawawi's book, explaining that the latter neglected Abu Sa`id al-Khudri's narration and omitted to mention Ibn Majah's.
[62]Haythami says in Majma` al-zawa'id: "Tabarani's chain contains Rawh ibn Salah who has some weakness but Ibn Hibban and al-Hakim declared him trustworthy. The rest of its sub-narrators are the men of sound hadith."
[63]Sound (sahih) hadith related by Bayhaqi, Abu Nu`aym in the Ma`rifa, Mundhiri (Targhib 1:473-474), Haythami, and Tabarani in the Kabir (9:17-18) and the Saghir (1:184/201-202) on the authority of `Uthman ibn Hunayf's nephew Abu Imama ibn Sahl ibn Hunayf.
[64]Ibn Kathir cites it from Bayhaqi in al-bidaya wa al-nihaya (7:92) and says: isnaduhu sahih; Ibn Abi Shayba cites it in his "Musannaf" with a sound (sahih) chain as confirmed by Ibn Hajar who says: rawa Ibn Abi Shayba bi isnadin sahih and cites the hadith in Fath al-bari Istisqa' ch. 3 (Beirut: Dar al-kutub al-`ilmiyya, 1410/1989 2:629-630). Ibn Hajar says that the man who visited and saw the Prophet (s) in his dream is identified as the Companion Bilal ibn al-Harth. He counts this hadith as one of the reason for Bukhari's naming of the chapter "The people's request to their leader for rain if they suffer drought."
In his edition of Ibn Hajar, the Wahhabi scholar Ibn Baz rejects the hadith as a valid source for seeking rain through the Prophet (s) -- although it is established that the hadith is sound -- and condemns the act of the Companion who came to the grave, calling it "munkar" and "wasilat ila al-shirk." Fath al-Bari 2:630n.
[69]Hadith hasan (fair) related by Tabarani in al-Kabir, Abu Ya`la, Ibn al-Sani, and Haythami in Majma` al-zawa'id 10:132. Bayhaqi relates something close to it on the authority of Ibn `Abbas in Kitab al-adaab" (p. 436): "Allah has angels on earth who keep a record even of the leaves that falls on the ground. Therefore, if one of you has a lameness in his leg or finds himself in need in a deserted place of the earth, let him say: a`inu `ibad Allah rahimakum Allah, "Help, O servants of Allah, may Allah have mercy on you!" Verily he shall be helped, if Allah wills." Ibn Hajar said its chain is fair (isnaduhu hasan) in al-Amali. Bayhaqi relates it with two more chains from Ibn `Abbas in Shu`ab al-iman (1:183 #167; 6:128 #7697) and another from Ibn Mas`ud in Hayat al-anbiya' ba`da wafatihim (p. 44) also related in al-Kabir by Tabarani who has ya `ibad Allah a`inu repeated three times, Ibn al-Sani, Abu Ya`la, and Nawawi in al-Adhkar. Ibn Abi Shayba relates in his Musannaf (7:103) through Aban ibn Salih that the Prophet (s) said: "If one of you loses his animal or his camel in a deserted land where there is no-one in sight, let him say: "O servants of Allah, help me! (a`inu `ibad Allah), for verily he will be helped." The latter is the same as Bayhaqi's narration #167 from Ibn `Abbas.
[71]Shawkani allows the calling on someone invisible: "In the hadith (of a`inu) there is evidence that it is permissible to ask help from those one does not see among the servants of Allah, whether angels or good jinn, and there is nothing wrong in doing it, just as it is permissible for someone to seek the help of human beings if his mount becomes unmanageable or runs loose." Tuhfat al-dhakirin p. 155-156.
[72]Ibn Mas`ud's narration of ahbisu is the weaker of the chains and `Utba's narration of a`inu the stronger. Ibn Hajar said of the former, as reported by Ibn `Allan in his Futuhat (5:145): "A rare (gharib) hadith related by Ibn al-Sani (#508) and Tabarani (cf. Munawi in Fayd al-Qadir 1:307) and its chain is interrupted." Both Ibn Hajar and al-Haythami (Majma` 10:132) said: "Its chain contains Ma`ruf ibn Hassan who is weak." (Shawkani mentions that Abu Ya`la cites it also.) However, as the third previous note shows, the hadith a`inu is established as authentic.
Nawawi relates in Al-adhkar after mentioning the hadith ahbisu: "One of our very knowledgeable teachers related to me that one day his animal ran loose -- I think it was a mule -- and he knew that hadith, so he said it, and Allah restrained it for them on the spot. I myself was with a group one time when one of their animals broke free and they were unable to restrain it, so I said it: it stopped on the spot with no reason other than those words." Shawkani cites Nawawi's two accounts in his Tuhfat al-dhakirin.
[75]From Abu Hurayra: I heard the Prophet (s) say: "By the one in Whose hand is Abu al-Qasim's soul, `Isa ibn Maryam shall descend as a just and wise ruler. He shall destroy the cross, slay the swine, eradicate discord and grudges, and money shall be offered to him but he will not accept it. Then he shall stand at my graveside and say: Ya Muhammad! and I will answer him."
Abu Ya`la relates it with a sound chain in his Musnad (Dar al-Ma'mun ed. 1407/1987) 11:462; Ibn Hajar cites it in al-matalib al-`aliya (Kuwait, 1393/1973) 4:23, chapter entitled: "The Prophet's life in his grave" and #4574; Haythami says in Majma` al-zawa'id (8:5), chapter entitled: "`Isa ibn Maryam's Descent": "Its sub-narrators are the men of sound (sahih) hadith."
Bukhari in his Adab al-mufrad, Nawawi in his Adhkar, and Shawkani in Tuhfat al-dhakirin all relate the narrations of Ibn `Umar and Ibn `Abbas whereby they would call out Ya Muhammad whenever they had a cramp in their leg (Chapters entitled: "What one says if he feels a cramp in his leg"). Regardless of the grade of these narrations, it is significant that Bukhari, Nawawi, and Shawkani never raised such a disturbing notion as to say that calling out "O Muhammad" amounted to shirk. See the following editions:
Nawawi's Adhkar:
1970 Riyadh edition: p. 271
1988 Ta'if edition: p. 383
1992 Mecca edition: p. 370
Bukhari's Adab al-mufrad:
1990 `Abd al-Baqi Beirut edition: p. 286
1994 Albani edition entitled Da`if al-adab al-mufrad: p. 87
The latter gives as a reference: Takhrij al-kalim al-tayyib (235)"
date? Beirut: `Alam al-kitab: p. 324
date? Beirut: Dar al-kutub al-`ilmiyya: p.142.
Shawkani's Tuhfat al-dhakirin:
1970 Beirut: Dar al-kutub al-`ilmiyya: p. 206-207.
[76]Muslim (Jana'iz, penultimate chapter; Adahi 37); Abu Dawud (Jana'iz 77; Ashriba 7); Tirmidhi (Jana'iz 7, 60); Nisa'i (Jana'iz 100; Dahaya 39; Ashriba 40); Ibn Majah (Jana'iz 47); Ahmad (1:145, 452; 3:38, 63, 66, 237, 250; 5:350, 355-357, 359, 361).
[77]This prohibition does not include the grave of the Prophet, concerning which visit `Iyad and Marwazi hold the same position as the ijma`, namely that it is a Sunna mustahabba.
[78]Shawkani in Nayl al-awtar confirms that Bilal undertook travel for the express purpose of visiting the Prophet (s) according to a report with a good chain in hafiz Ibn `Asakir's Tarikh Dimashq.
[79]A sound (sahih) tradition related on the authority of Anas and others by Muslim, Nasa'i, Bayhaqi in the Dala'il al-nubuwwa and the Hayat al-anbiya, and Suyuti in Anba' al-adhkya' and Sharh al-sudur. Nawawi said in his commentary on this hadith: "The work of the next world is all dhikr and du`a" (Sharh Sahih Muslim 1/73/267).
[80]A sound (sahih) tradition related on the authority of Anas ibn Malik (r) by al-Bazzar in his Musnad, Abu Ya`la in his Musnad, Ibn `Adi in al-Kamil fi al-du`afa', Tammam al-Razi in al-Fawa'id, al-Bayhaqi in Hayat al-anbiya' fi quburihim, Abu Nu`aym in Akhbar Asbahan, Ibn `Asakir in Tarikh Dimashq, al-Haythami in Majma` al-zawa'id (8:211), al-Suyuti in Anba' al-adhkiya' bi-hayat al-anbiya' (#5), and al-Albani, in Silsilat al-ahadith al-sahihah (#621). Suyuti adds: "The life of the Prophet, may Allah bless him and give him peace, in his grave, and [also] that of the rest of the prophets is known to us as definitive knowledge (`ilman qat`iyyan)." Sakhawi, Ibn Hajar al-`Asqalani's student, said: "As for us (Muslims) we believe and we confirm that he (s) is alive and provided for in his grave" (al-Qawl al-badi` p. 161). Ibn al-Qayyim said in Kitab al-Ruh p. 58: "It is obligatory knowledge to know that his body (s) is in the earth tender and humid (i.e. as in life), and when the Companions asked him: 'How is our greeting presented to you after you have turned to dust' he replied: 'Allah has defended the earth from consuming the flesh of Prophets,' and if his body were not in his grave he would not have given this answer."
[81]Abu al-Shaykh cites it in Kitab al-Salat `ala al-nabi ("Jala' al-afham" p. 22), and Ibn Hajar says in Fath al-Bari (6:379): "Abu al-Shaykh cites it with a good chain (sanad jayyid)." Bayhaqi mentions it in Hayat al-anbiya and Shu`ab al-iman (2:218 #1583).
[82]A sound (sahih) tradition related on the authority of Aws ibn Aws al-Thaqafi by: Ahmad in his Musnad, Ibn Abi Shaybah in the Musannaf, Abu Dawud in the Sunan, Nisa'i in his Sunan, Ibn Majah in his Sunan, Darimi in his Musnad, Ibn Khuzaymah in his Sahih, Ibn Hibban in his Sahih, Hakim in the Mustadrak, Tabarani in his Kabir, Bayhaqi in Hayat al-anbiya', Suyuti in Anba' al-adkhiya, Dhahabi who confirmed al-Hakim's grading, and Nawawi in the Adhkar. Another version in Ibn Majah has this addition: "And the Prophet of Allah is alive and provided for (fa nabiyyullahi hayyun yurzaq)." Bayhaqi mentions it also in the Sunan al-kubra.
[83]See also the "Chapter on the Proofs Used to Establish the Knowledge that the Dead Hear in the Graves" in Ibn al-Qayyim's al-Ruh and similar chapters in Suyuti's Sharh al-sudur, Ibn al-Kharrat's al-`Aqiba, Ibn Rajab's Ahwal al-qubur, Subki's Shifa' al-siqam and others.
[84]Ibn Hajar says in al-Isaba (8:187): "Mihjana, also named Umm Mihjan: a black woman who used to sweep the mosque [in Madina]. She is mentioned in the books of sound (sahih) hadith but without being named."
[85]See Ibn Qayyim's section "That the Hearing of the Dead is Real" in Al-Ruh (Madani ed. 1984) p. 59: "The actual meaning of these verses (35:22 and 27:80) is: You cannot make those hear whom Allah does not wish to hear, for you are only a Warner. That is: Allah has only given you the ability to warn, for which he has made you responsible; not that of making those to hear whom Allah does not wish to hear."
[87]Zahawi's point is that Allah highlighted the power to make the dead hear in the Qur'an as an example of His agency, because in the case of the dead, His agency is more evident to the mind than in the case of the living, although He equally effects the hearing of both the living and the dead.
[88]Hadith of Abu Dharr related by Haythami in "Majma` al-zawa'id" with a sound (sahih) chain, chapter entitled `Alamat al-nubuwwa (Signs of Prophethood): "The Prophet took pebbles and they glorified Allah in his hand; he put them down and they became silent..."
[90]A sound (sahih) hadith related by Abu Dawud, Iman 3:570 (3251), and Tirmidhi, Iman 5:253 (1535).
[91]This is Ibn Qayyim's text in Kitab al-Salat of the Madarij: "About Greater Shirk Allah says: "Surely whoever ascribes partners to Allah, for him Allah has forbidden the Garden. His abode is the Fire. For wrong-doers there will be no helpers" (5:72); and also: "Whoever ascribes partners to Allah, it is as if he had fallen from the sky and the birds had snatched him or the wind blown him to a far-off place" (22:31). About showing off He says: "And whoever hopes for the meeting with his Lord, let him do righteous works, and associate no partner in the worship due only to his Lord" (18:110).
"On this same subject of Lesser Shirk, the Prophet, may Allah bless him and grant him peace, said: "Whoever swears an oath by other than Allah has associated something with Him." This was related by Abu Dawud and others. However, it is well known that swearing an oath by something other than Allah does not take one out of the community of the Muslims, and it does not make someone a disbeliever. In the same vein the Prophet said: "Shirk in this Umma is stealthier than creeping ants." [Ahmad 4:403; Albani considers it sound in Sahih al-Jami` al-saghir, 3:333 (3624).]