Wednesday, 6 June 2018

The correct manner of Ittiba' and Taqlid.



AMJA Seminar
The Right way in the matter of Ittibba’ and Taqlid





By Dr. Suhaib Hasan
Secretary
Islamic Sharia Council U.K





2018


The Right way in the matter of Ittibba’ and Taqlid

This paper is dedicated to the issue of Ittiba’ (following, i.e. The Book and Sunnah) and Taqlid (following one’s Imam blindly). A person is judged according to the way he follows his Deen; whether he endeavours to follow the Book and the Sunnah, irrespective of the way it was delivered to him as he confines himself to follow a certain Imam even if his opinion is found not in line with the Quran or the Sunnah.
Let us begin our discussion with the saying of a great scholar of India, Shah Walliullah of Delhi (d.1776). He says in his famous book, Hujjatullah Al-Baligha:
“Let it be known that the people before the fourth century had no consensus to follow a particular Madhab absolutely. Abu Talib Makki said in his book, Qut-ul-Qulub:
“The Books and factions are all innovative. The people during the first two centuries were not confined to the sayings of the persons and to the fatwa of an individual and to consider his opinion in each and every matter and to learn Fiqh according to his Madhab only”. (1)
Guided by this statement, we are going to explore first the state of the people in the first three centuries as how they used to practise their religion and then to compare it with the way it was followed by the later generations till present. Let us see the state of affairs in each century since the times of the Prophet (SAW)
A) The period of the Prophet (SAW): 23 years till 11th A.H
1)      The Prophet (SAW) was the only source for guidance, learning, practise and following. Even if the companions differ in their understanding of his commandment or instruction he was the one to give his approval or denial.
For example, in the famous event of the encounter with the Jewish tribe of Bani Quraiza, he commanded the advancing groups of believers by saying: “No one among you is to pray Asr prayer except at Bani Quraiza” (2)
And here comes a difference of opinion among them when a faction of them preferred to pray Asr while they were still on their way to their destination, because Asr time was due. On the other hand, the other faction preferred to offer it at Bani Quraiza, even if it was delayed, because that was the commandment of the Prophet.
Here we can notice that the latter group implemented the order literally while the former group kept to the spirit of that order. They thought that the Prophet (SAW) wanted them to go as fast as they could, so that they could be there by Asr time. But when they were left behind schedule, they were not supposed to be relaxed in the matter of the prayers.
However, the Prophet (SAW) did not object to any of these two actions; a clear approval of both approaches.


2)      Amr bin Al-As, a companion, was leading a campaign known as the Battle of Chains (Ghazwa Al-Salasil). He narrated what happened to him during a very cold night:
“I had a wet dream that night. I was supposed to take a bath but I thought that I might be killed if I take a bath. So, I did my dry ablution (Tayammum) and led the members of my party in the Fajr prayer. When we returned to the Prophet (SAW), the matter was reported to him.
He said to me: “Oh Amr! Did you lead your party in Fajr prayers while you were in the state of a major impurity?”.
I replied: I just remembered the saying of Allah Al-Mighty:
 وَلَا تَقۡتُلُوۡۤا اَنۡـفُسَكُمۡ​ؕ اِنَّ اللّٰهَ كَانَ بِكُمۡ رَحِيۡمًا”
“And do not kill yourselves, Indeed Allah is very merciful to you”. (Al-Nisa: 29)

So, I did my dry ablution and prayed.
The Prophet (SAW) smiled and did not say even a word to him.
He also said to the Prophet (SAW): If I had kindled a fire to heat up the water, I might have alarmed the enemy”. (3)
So here we find a companion exercising Ijtihad in a certain condition and getting the approval from the Prophet (SAW).


3)      Another case of Ijtihad approved by the Prophet (SAW), Abu Sa’id Al-Khudsi reported:
Two companions were travelling together. The time for the prayer was due but they did not find enough water to perform their ablution. So both of them did the dry ablution and prayed. Later, they found enough water within the time. One of them did their ablution and prayed once again. The other one did not repeat his prayer. When they came back to the Prophet (SAW), they mentioned to the Prophet (SAW) what they had done. He addressed the one who did not repeat the prayer by saying:
“You acted according to the Sunnah and your prayer was sufficient for you”
To the one who did ablution and repeated the prayer, he said: “You earned the reward twice” (4)

4)      In about 28 times, the command to obey Allah and his Prophet (SAW) is given. The following verse adds an emphasis on referring back to Allah (i.e. the Quran) and to the Prophet (SAW) (i.e., the Sunnah) in all manners of dispute.

 يَا أَيُّهَا الَّذِينَ آمَنُوا أَطِيعُوا اللَّهَ وَأَطِيعُوا الرَّسُولَ وَأُولِي الْأَمْرِ مِنكُمْ ۖ فَإِن تَنَازَعْتُمْ فِي شَيْءٍ فَرُدُّوهُ إِلَى اللَّهِ وَالرَّسُولِ إِن كُنتُمْ تُؤْمِنُونَ بِاللَّهِ وَالْيَوْمِ الْآخِرِ ۚ ذَٰلِكَ خَيْرٌ وَأَحْسَنُ تَأْوِيلًا
                           “O you who believe! Obey Allah and obey the Messenger, and those charged with authority among you. If you differ in anything among yourselves, refer it to Allah and His Messenger, if you do not believe in Allah and the Last Day: That is best, and most suitable for final determination” (Al-Nisa: 59)
5)      In the following verse, a clear warning is given:
Once a ruling comes from Allah and his Prophet (SAW), there was no option left for the believers except to follow that ruling.

وَمَا كَانَ لِمُؤْمِنٍ وَلَا مُؤْمِنَةٍ إِذَا قَضَى اللَّهُ وَرَسُولُهُ أَمْرًا أَن يَكُونَ لَهُمُ الْخِيَرَةُ مِنْ أَمْرِهِمْ ۗ وَمَن يَعْصِ اللَّهَ وَرَسُولَهُ فَقَدْ ضَلَّ ضَلَالًا مُّبِينًا

“It is not fitting for a Believer, man or woman, when a matter has been decided by Allah and his Messenger to have any option about their decision: if anyone disobeys Allah and His Messenger, he is indeed on a clearly wrong Path”. (AL-Ahzab: 36)

6)      The following verse speaks about the authority of the Prophet (SAW) as a legislator:
 ۚ وَمَا آتَاكُمُ الرَّسُولُ فَخُذُوهُ وَمَا نَهَاكُمْ عَنْهُ فَانتَهُوا ۚ
“So take what the Messenger assigns to you, and deny yourselves that which he withholds from you”. (Al-Hashr: 7)
7.            The Prophet’s legacy is the Book and Sunnah. He said during his last pilgrimage: “I have left among you two things; you will never be lost if you stick to them: the Book of Allah and my Sunnah. (5)
B) The Period of the Companions: (Al-Sahaba). This period covers around one hundred years after the death of the Prophet (SAW). The last companion to die in 110 AH was Abu Al-Tufail Amin bin Wathila Al-Laithi. It covers a greater part of the period of the Successors (Al-Tibi’un): those who not only met one or many of the Companions but were known to accompany them for a while. The last one among them was to survive another seventy years.
Here we want to prove that the reference point for them was always the Sunnah of the Prophet (SAW), whether it had been a case of Fatwa or a decision in a disputed matter. Let us look at a number of examples in this regard:
1) Just after the death of the Prophet (SAW), three issues had been raised. Each one was resolved in the light of the Sunnah of the Prophet (SAW).
i)                    There had been a heated debate at a place called Saqifa Bani Sa’idah which was attended by a good number of Ansar (the early inhabitants of Madinah) and some from Muhajirin (immigrants from Makkah). The issue was: who was going to succeed the Prophet (SAW)? There were suggestions about having an Amir from Ansar and another from Muhajirin. Abu Bakr (RA) reminded them of the hadith of the Prophet (SAW): “Imams are to be from Quraish as long as they have the understanding (of Din)”. Most willingly they accepted this ruling and on the proposal of Umar bin Khattab (RA), Syyadina Abu Bakr was chosen to be the successor (Khalifa) to the Prophet (SAW). (6)
ii)                   The second issue was about the place where the Prophet (SAW) was to be buried. Once again Abu Bakr came to resolve this issue when he quoted the Hadith of the Prophet (SAW): “Whenever a Prophet dies, he is to be buried at the very same place where he dies”. So, he was buried in his own house where he used to live with his wife, Ayesha (RA). (7)
iii)                 The third issue was about the distribution of his inheritance. His daughter Fatimah (RA) did ask for her share in the inheritance. Abu Bakr (RA) reminded her of the saying of the Prophet (SAW): “We, the group of the Prophets, do not leave any inheritance after us. Whatever we leave, is a charity”. (8)

2) Abdullah ibn Mas’ud heard a man saying after a sneeze: “Al-hamdu Lillah was Salatu Ala Rasulullah.” Ibn Mas’ud said to him: “Whatever you have said is true. But that is not the way the Prophet has told us. He instructed us to simply say ‘Al-hamdu Lillah’ after sneezing. Say ‘Al-hamdu Lillah’ whenever you sneeze. If you hear someone saying this after sneezing, say to him: ‘Yarhamukumu Allah’ (May Allah have mercy upon you). The sneezer should pray for you as well by saying: “Yahdi Kumullah wa Yuslihu Halakum” (May Allah guide you and set your affairs right). (9)
There are plenty of occasions when you should say: “As Salatu was Salamu ‘ala Rasulullah”. You should say it, for example, whenever you hear the name of our beloved Prophet (SAW) or whenever you enter a Masjid or step out of it, adding these words respectively: “Allahumma Iftah li abwaba Rahmatik” and “Allahumma Inni As’aluka min fadlika”.
3) Once Abdullah bin Abbas was sitting beside the Ka’ba when Amir Mu’awiya entered the Grand Mosque and began circumambulating (Tawaf) around the Ka’ba. He kissed the black stone in the beginning, but he rubbed his hand on the other three corners of the Ka’ba (i.e. Syrian, Iraqi and Yemeni corners) as well. Ibn Abbas knew that the Prophet (SAW) – apart from kissing the black stone and rubbing the Yemeni corner – had never touched the other two corners during Tawaf, so he objected to Mu’awiya, to which he replied: “to me none of the four corners of Ka’ba is deserted”. “But that was not the practise of the Prophet (SAW)”, Ibn Abbas emphasised. Mu’awiya could only say: ‘You have said the truth’. (10)
4) Abdullah bin Umar was well known for his adherence to the Sunnah. He once saw his son Bilal stopping his wife from going to the Mosque. Abdullah bib Umar said “don’t do that because the Messenger of Allah has said: ‘don’t stop the slave-girls of Allah from entering the Houses of Allah’”. Bilal was adamant that he would not allow her even after listening to this saying. Ibn Umar was so upset that he swore never to speak to him again until his dying day. (11)
5) Abdullah bin Amr bin As had a very large garden with a great number of palm trees. Water in this was so abundant that his assistant planned to sell the excess after irrigating the whole garden to a neighbour at an exorbitant price of thirty thousand dirhams. That offer could have attracted anyone except a companion like Abdullah bin Amr who refused to approve his sale because the Prophet (SAW) forbade the selling of any extra water. (12)
6) Abu Huraira used to address a gathering of Muslims on Thursday evening (Friday night). Once, before beginning his sermon he said to the people: ‘whoever has cut off from any of his relations should leave this place.’ No one stood up. On repeating these words thrice, a young man left the place and went to his aunt whom he had deserted a long time before and reconciled with her. (13)
Abu Huraira said this because he knew that all actions are presented to Allah each Friday night. He didn’t like his assembly of the devout to be smeared by a person who had committed the sin of deserting his relatives. By doing so, he saved a person from a major sin. Anas ibn Malik was known to be a faithful servant of the Prophet (SAW). Once he was invited to a party where a Magian offered him Faluda (a well-known drink) in a silver glass. Anas refused to accept it. He preferred to drink in an earthen pot than to use the silver one because the Prophet (SAW) forbade the Muslims from eating or drinking in golden or silver utensils. (14)
This is how the companions behaved throughout their lives setting sublime examples of adherence to the Sunnah.
7) Once Syyedina Umar saw Khalid bin Walid wearing a silk shirt. He asked him to take it off. Khalid replied that Abdul Rahman bin Auf used to have one as well. Umar said; ‘The Prophet allowed him because he suffered badly from itching’. Khalid then, had no alternative but to take it off. Following the news of the Muslims’ victory in the conquest of Syria, Umar advanced to Damascus with a number of Companions. On reaching the outskirts of ‘Amwas, a town in Syria, news of a wide-spread plague in the town reached him. Umar consulted his people on whether he should venture into the town. The heated discussion that followed came to an end when Abdul Rahman bin Auf cited this saying of the Prophet: ‘If you are inside a place where an epidemic breaks out, don’t come out of it. And don’t go in if you happen to be away from such a place’. Umar eventually commanded his people to retreat. Someone still remarked: ‘Umar! Do you run away from a destiny decreed by Allah?’. To this, Umar replied: “Yes we run away from one destiny to the other decreed by Allah as well”. (15)

C) The Period of Successors (Al-Tabi'un) and those who followed them (Atba Al-Tabi'un).
We have said earlier that the period of the Successors lasted till the death of the last successor, Khalaf bin Khalifa in 180 A.H. We have chosen to speak about these three generations (Companions, Successors and those who succeeded them) because of the saying of the Prophet (SAW) : "The best people are those of my times, then those after them, then those after them”. (16)
Among the successors, these seven emerged as Faqih (Jurists):                                                                            Sa'id bin Al-Musayyab, Urwah bin Zubair, Al Qasim bin Muhammad bin Abu Bakr, Kharja bin Thabit Al-Ansari, Sulaiman bin Yasar Al-Hilali, Ubaidullah bin Abdullah bin 'Utba bin Mas'ud, Abu Bakr bin Abdul Rahman bin Al Harith.                                                                                                                                              Add to them: Abu Salama bin Abdul Rahman bin A'uf, and Salim bin Abdullah bin 'Umar.
The successors followed the same way as that of the Companions; the Book and the Sunnah. Let us look at some of their sayings and examples:
1) Mutarrif bin Abdullah said: By Allah we do not want anything other than the Qur'an but we still need someone who is more knowledgable of the Qur'an than us.  i.e. the Prophet (SAW). (17)
2) The Caliph 'Umar bin Abdul Aziz said: The top of the judgement is to follow what is in the Book of Allah, then by what is in the Sunnah of the Messenger of Allah. (18)
3) Among the most knowledgeable with the matters of divorce was Sa'id bin Al-Musayyab, with the issues of Hajj 'Ata bin Abi Rabah, with the matters of Halal and Haram Ta'us, with Tafsir Mujahid, and with all of them Sa'id bin Jubair about whom Ibn Abbas said, when the people of Kufah used to ask him any question: "Do you not have that great scholar Sa'id bin Jubair?". (19)
4) Al-Sha'bi (Amir bin Sharahil) said: "Pious among the first generation did not like to narrate a lot of Hadith but if I had to start afresh after the time that has passed, I would not have said anything except the one which attracted the consensus of the people of Hadith”. (20)
5) All four Imams clearly declared their adherence to the Qur'an and Sunnah. This is what they said:
i) Imam Abu Hanifa was asked: ‘What do we do if we find a saying of yours opposing the Book of Allah?”. He replied, “Leave my saying and stick to the Book of Allah”. The questioner asked, “What if it contradicts a saying of the Prophet (SAW)?”. He said, “Leave my saying in the face of the Prophet’s (SAW) saying”. Again he was asked, “What if it goes against the saying of a Companion?”. Again he said, “Leave my saying in the face of the Companion’s saying”. (Al-Qawl al-Mufeed by Shawkani)
Imam Abu Hanifa also declared, “My Way (madhab) is whatever is proved by an authentic (Sahih) hadith. (21)
ii) The saying of Imam Malik bin Anas is well known, “Each of everyone’s sayings can be accepted or rejected, except for the Prophet of Allah (SAW)”. (Ibn Abdul Barr, Ibn Hazm, also in al-Yawaqeet wal Jawahir 2:96) He also said, “I am just a mortal: sometimes I am wrong, sometimes I am right. So check my opinions; whatever agrees with the Book and the Sunnah, accept it; whatever disagrees with them, reject it”. (22)
Once Imam Shafi’I narrated a Hadith. Someone from the audience said, “Do you say so as well?”. On hearing this, the Imam was enraged. His face turned pale and he said, “Woe to you! Which earth would carry me? Which sky would shelter me if I narrate a saying of the Prophet (SAW) and do not hold the same view! Do you see a zunnar (belt worn by non-Muslims) on me? Or have you noticed me coming out of a church? How can I report something from the Prophet (SAW) and not agree with it?!”.
iii) Imam Ahmad bin Hanbal said, “Do not follow me or Malik or Shafi’i or Auza’i or Thauri, but take from where they took (i.e. from the Quran and authentic Sunnah)”. He also said, “He who rejects a saying of the Messenger of Allah (SAW) is on the verge of destruction”. (23)


D) The Characteristics of the Period of the Companions:
1) The point of reference had always been the Book and Sunnah
2) They had exercised their opinion rarely but only when they were unaware of any evidence from the text. This attitude is very obvious among the well known Companions like Abu Bakr and Umar.
3) They used to submit to the evidence whenever it was brought to their knowledge. In such cases, they never resisted to stick to their own opinion.
4) They were not hesitant to refer the matter to someone who was more knowledgeable if they themselves lacked the knowledge of the proper evidence.
5) A number of them emerged as most capable to issue Fatwa like Ayesha, Umar, Abu Bakr, Abdullah bin Abbas, Abdullah bin Mas'ud, Abdullah bin Umar, Zaid bin Thabit, Umm Salamah, 'Uthman, 'Ali, Abu Musa Al-'Ashari.  Through them, the knowledge had been passed to the successors who later developed two school of thoughts; that of the people of Hadith (in Hijaz) and that of the people of opinion (in Iraq).
6) The difference of the opinion among the Companions was due to one of these reasons:
i)    Absence of knowledge about a specific Sunnah.                                                                                          ii)  Interpretation of a verse in a way other than the understanding of someone else.
7) Collective Ijtihad had been the norm in their times. Abu Bakr and 'Umar used to consult the prominent companions whenever a new issue confronted them.
E) Characteristics of the period of the Successors and those that followed them.
1) Though the point of reference had remained the Book and the Sunnah, they also showed affiliation to the source of the Knowledge. I.e. the companions from whom they took the knowledge.
2) A number of prominent jurists emerged among them who excelled others in their knowledge and adherence to the evidence.
3) Because Madinah had been the original source of knowledge, there emerged the school of thought, known as "Madrasa Ashab al-Hadith”. Among them are the seven prominent jurists of Madinah.  
4) Abdullah bin Mas'ud had settled in Kufa. Among his pupils were 'Alqama bin Qais and Ibrahim Al-Nakhi who passed on his knowledge to Hammad bin Sulaiman, the teacher of Iman Abu Hanifa (Nu'man bin Thabit). Al-Sha'bi (Amir bin Sharahil) was the other most knowledgeable person in Kufa to establish the school of thought known as Ashab al-Ra'i (people of opinion).
5) The difference between the two schools lies in their adherence to the Sunnah. Whereas the first group depended mostly on the evidence from the Sunnah and refrained from employing their opinions in case the evidence was not available; the other group would freely exercise their opinions in a similar situation. Opinions here means Ijtihad based upon analogy (Qiyas) or general benefit (Maslaha Mursalah).                                                                                                            The following saying of Salim bin Abdullah bin 'Umar reveals the way adopted by the first group: "It is reported that a man came to Salim and asked him about an issue. He said: “I did not hear anything on this issue”. The man said: 'May Allah keep you well, then tell me about your opinion”. He replied: “No I cannot”. He repeated this question and showed his willingness to accept his opinion, to which Salim replied, “It may be that if I tell you about my opinion then you leave and later I opine something different and then I do not find you”. (24)                                                              On the other hand, the following two statements highlight the way of the second group.                 Abdullah bin Mas'ud used to say whenever he used to issue a Fatwa: "This ruling is based upon my opinion. If it is correct, then it is from Allah, and if it is wrong, then it is from Satan”. (25)   
Imam Abu Hanifa said: "If I do not find the issue in the Book of Allah nor in the Sunnah of the               Messenger of Allah, then I pick whatever saying I like among from the Companions and reject               whomever I like. However, I do not come out of the circle of the sayings of the Companions. But           if the matter reaches the level of Ibrahim Al-Nakhi, Al-Sha'bi, Hasan Al-Basri Ibn Sinan and Sa'id           bin Al Musayyab, then I exercise Ijtihad as they used to do as well”. (26)
  6) But it does not mean that the first group was totally devoid of the 'opinion' as the second group neglected the Sunnah. Among the school of Hadith, we can find Rabi'a, known as Rabi'a Al-Raye (of the opinion) and among the Kufic school, we can come across people like Al-Sha'bi who was known for his adherence to the Sunnah. Even among the students of Iman Abu Hanifa, both Imam Yusuf and Muhammad bin Al-Hasan were known to be in line with the people of Hadith.
7) The period of the Successors to the Successors had witnessed a number of scholars who were later known to be the originators of a specific Madhab in Fiqh such as:
·                Iman Abu Hanifa (d. 150)
·                Imam Malik bin Anas (d. 179)
·                Imam Abdul Rahman bin Amr Al-Auza'I (d. 159)
·                Imam Ja'far al-Sadiq
·                Imam Zaid bin Ali bin Al-Husain
·                Imam Laith bin Sa'd
·                Imam Sufyan Al-Thawri
And immediately after them emerged some more like:
·                Imam Muhammad bin Idris al-Shaf'I
·                Imam Ahmad bin Hanbal (d. 240)
·                Imam Abu Thaws
·                Imam Abu Jarir Al-Tabari
·                Imam Da'wud Al-Zahiri

Apart from the four well-known Madahib (Hanafi, Maliki, Shafi'I, Hanbali), the madhab of Imam                  Auzai flourished in Syria for about 230 years (till 347 AH) and in Andalusia for about forty years                 (till 230 AH).  The Fiqh of Zaid bin Ali still survives in Yemen while the faction of Twelves among                    Shi'a follows the Fiqh of Ja'far al-Sadiq.  Ibn Hazm (d.456) revived the Fiqhi school of Dawud Al-Zahiri                      through his prolific writings as projected in his book Al-Muhalla.
The remaining Imams were not followed by such a group of enthusiastic pupils who could carry on with the teachings of their mentors.
8) During this period, affiliation to a certain scholarly person by name was not known. An affiliation like 'Alawi (like that of Abdul Rahman Abu Laila) or 'Uthmani (like that of Abdullah bin Hakam) revealed one's preference for Ali over Uthman or vice versa without any feeling of hatred or malice towards the other. (27)
 9) This period witnesses the great scholars benefitting from each other: Shafii and Muhammad bin Al-Hasan from Imam Malik; Shafii from Mohammad bin Al-Hasan; Imam Ahmad from Shafii etc.
There had been debates among them as well sometime by writing, and on other times when they had been meeting one another but with mutual respect and honours. Imam Laith wrote to Imam Malik arguing about certain issues like:
-          Combining the two prayers.
-          The claimant is allowed to take an oath if he has only one witness with him.
-          The practise of allowing a deferred dower.
-          How to end the marriage by way of Lilaa (Oath).
-          To delegate the right of woman to the wife.
-          To deliver the sermon before the prayer of Istisqa (asking for rain).
-          Refuting the opinion of Malik about Zakat that it is not due if the two persons are found to be partners in a business and each one falls short of the Nisab. (28)
ii) Shafii criticises Imam Malik, especially his followers who started sanctifying his sayings and his legacies. (29)
iii) Al-Auzai debates with both Imam Al-Thauri and Imam Abu Hanifa on the issue of Raf’ul Yadain (raising one’s hands before and after Ruku) (30)
iv) Imam Abu Hanifa strongly debates with his contemporary Imam Jafar Al-Sadiq in a number of issues.
10) Apart from questions on Fiqh, a number of issues pertaining to belief and the attributes of Allah became objects of heated debate which led to factions known as Khawarij, Shia, Mu’tazila, Qadariyya, Jabariyya and Murji’a. The dissension among the factions attracted heated remarks such as Bid’a and Kafur against each other.
11) Though these Imams themselves did not embark upon a madhab of their own but their following led to turn the legacy of each Imam into a specific Madhab. Some of them established themselves and some others could not last but for a little while. Abu Hazam says:
“Two Madhab were able to spread right from the beginning, because of the authority and the Madhab rule of Abu Hanifa. It was due to Abu Yusuf who, after being appointed as Qazi, used to appoint only such people as Qadi, from the far East to the far West of Africa, those who were used to adhering to his Madhab”.
Secondly, Madhab of Malik with us at Andalusia because Yahya bin Main was very close to the Caliph and was most acceptable in the matters of legal rulings. He used to appoint the judges in all the provinces of Andalusia, but only after consulting him. He would always appoint those chosen by him, especially those who professed the Madhab of Imam Malik. This led the people to excel in learning Madhab of Malik just to get a position at the court of Sultan and gain a worldly benefit. Therefore, the people followed his Madhab and left the Madhab of Al-Auzai. (31)

12) We have quoted in the beginning, that strict following of a certain Imam got its root in the fourth century onwards. Let us project this phenomenon in this diagram:
(Timescale- AH)
10                 20                                     110          120          180                              220                          310










Prophet
Text Box: Companions
Text Box: Successors
Text Box: Successors to the Successors

Text Box: Traditionists


F) The Period from the 4th Century till present:
The previous discussion covered the first three centuries of Islam. Though the period of “The Successes of the Successors” ends by 220 AH, the third century could be labelled as the century of traditionalists (Muhaddithin), which witnessed the Shuyukh (teachers) of the six collectors of Hadith like Ishaq bin Raahway (d.238). Ali bin Al-Madini (d.234), Yahya bin Ma’in (d.233), Al-Shafi (d.204) and many others. Along with Imam Ahmed bin Hanbali (d.241), the Compiler of Musnad Ahmad, came the six collectors of Hadith, namely Bukhari (d.256), Muslim (d.261), Ibn Maja (d.273), Abu Dawud (d.275), Tirmidhi (d.279) Al-Nasai (d.303) and the great traditionalist of Andalusia, Baqqi bin Makhla (d.276)
However, during this period many schoosl of thought had already emerged. It is natural to find the pupils of a great teacher propounding the teachings of their teachers after their death. In present times, two prominent schools of thought within the Hanafi Madhab have established themselves; Deobandi (after the name of Dar-ul-Uloom in Deoband, India) and Barelvi (after the name of Ahmad Rada Khan of Baraili, India). After the death of Imam Abu Hanifa (d.150), Auzai (d.157), Malik (d.179), Shafii (d.204), Ahmad (d.241), there had been a division on the basis a Madhab which strongly reflected in the appointments of judges (Qadi).
Let us take the narrative of Ibn Kathir about the third century where he records, under obituaries a number of judges as follows:
Year 239 AH: Abdul Malik bin Habib, the Maliki jurist.
Year 270 AH: Dawud bin Ali Al-Zahiri, he was well-prejudiced towards Al-Shafii. This is the first mention of the word Ta’asub (Prejudice) in favour of a Madhab. But surprisingly, Dawud himself became the founder of the Zahira, School of thought.
Year 292 AH: Abdul Hamid bin Abdul Aziz Abu Hatim, the Hanafi judge.
Year 302 AH: Bishr bin Nasr bi Mansur Abdul Qasim, the Shafii jurist. Qazi Abu Zusa Muhammad bin Uthman the Shafii jurist. Till this year the people of Al-Sham (Syria) used to practise the Madhab of Imam Auzai. So, he was the first one to judge according to Shafii Madhab in the land of Al-Sham.
Year 310 AH: Abu Jafar Muhammad bin Jarir Al-Talbari. He was buried in his house because the laymen among Hanabila did not allow him to be buried at day time. They went against him as he was accused of supporting the teachings of Rafida (Shia). Some ignorant people accused him of Ilhad (having beliefs leading to disbelief). However, that was untrue. He was one of the great Imams among the Muslims who adhered to the Book of Allah and the Sunnah of His Messenger both in knowledge and practise.
Year 311 AH: Muhammad bin Ishaq bin Khuzaima: Abu Ishaq al-Shirazi says in Tabaqat al-Shafiiya, that he said: “I did not follow anyone (i.e. Madhab) since I reached the age of sixteen”. (32)
G) By the 4th Century, adherence to one of those four Madhab became the norm of the Muslim societies to such an extent that it had led, sometimes, from disputes and riots to change from one Madhab to the other with bitterness. Here we are going to quote some of such events from the early 4th Century to the end of the fifth century AH.
Year 317 AH: A riot takes place between the followers of Abu Bakr Al-Marwazi Al-Hanbali and the common folk in Baghdad concerning the Tafsir of the verse 79 of Surah Al-Isra:
وَمِنَ اللَّيْلِ فَتَهَجَّدْ بِهِ نَافِلَةً لَّكَ عَسَىٰ أَن يَبْعَثَكَ رَبُّكَ مَقَامًا مَّحْمُودًا - 17:79
“And pray in the small watches of the morning: (it would be) an additional prayer (or spiritual profit) for you: soon will your Lord raise you to a Station of Praise and Glory!”- 17:79
Hanabila said: It means that Allah Al-mighty would let him sit with him on the throne. The other said: It means ‘the greatest intercession’ (Al-Shafa’a Al-Uzma). So they fought with one another and many of them were killed.
Year 319 AH: Ali bin Al-Husain bin Harb, a scholar on the Madhab of Abu Thaur, worked as Qazi for a long time in Egypt until he resigned in 311 AH. He returned to Baghdad where he died in 319 AH.
Year 321 AH: Ahmad bin Muhammad Abu Jafar Al-Tahawi. He used to be a Shafii jurist but once his maternal uncle Al-Muzani said to him: “By Allah! Nothing (good) comes from you”. He was infuriated a lot by this phrase and moved to Hanafi Madhab and became one of the leading scholars there.
Year 323 AH: Abul Hasan Al-Ashari. Being a Hanbali, he was impressed by Mutazila, who gave preference to the reasoning (intellect) upon the text (from Quran and Sunnah) in the beginning, but later he abandoned them and started refuting them.
Year 393 AH: Because of the efforts of Abu Hamid Al-Isfaraini (a Shafi scholar), the Caliph Al-Qadir billah appointed Ahmad bin Muhammad Al-Mazira (a Shafii jurist) as a chief Qazi, replacing Abu Muhammad bin Al-Akfani, a Hanafi jurist. It was a move which alarmed the people of Baghdad and all the eastern provinces. There was an uproar and protest, so Qazi Abul Ula Said bin Muhammad had to come from Naisabur, meet the Caliph and convince him to replace the Shafii Qazi with his predecessor, the Hanafi Qazi. (33)
Such was the importance to adhere to a specific Madhab, that if a Hanafi embraced the Madhab of Shafii, he would be punished. (34)
Year 332 AH: Abu Mansur Al-Maturidi, founder of his school of thought which was adopted by Hanafiyya in the matters of belief. It was a parallel movement to the Asharii school of thought which was supported by Shafiyya.
Year 422 AH: It is reported that Mahmud Ghaznawi, who was originally a Hanafi turned into a Shafii  after Qaffal Al-Marwazi demonstrated to him how the prayer is offered according to Hanafi madhab and secondly, how it is offered according to Shafi’i Madhab. (35)
Year 485 AH: By the end of this year, and because of the rise of Batiniyya, a great opponent of Abbasides, two separate Musallah (place for Imam to lead the prayers) were introduced in the Great Haram of Makkah; one for Shia and the other for Shafiyya. By the sixth century, they were increased to seven; four for the Sunni Madhahib, two for Shia and one in the name of the Sultan. (36)
By the beginning of the eighth century, they were reduced to four only. This is how they remained throughout the Ottoman empire. It was only during the time of Sultan Abdul Aziz bin Saud, in the 20th century that he brought all Muslims to pray behind the Imam.
H) A perusal of the history of the Muslim communities throughout the subsequent centuries until our present times, shows that Prejudice to one Madhab with the discard of the others had led to hatred, disunity, wrongdoing to the extent of fighting among them.
Affiliation to great scholars and Sufi saints led to attribution like Hanafi, Maliki, Shafi’i, Hanbali, Jafari in the matter of Fiqh, Ashari, Maturidi in the matter of belief; Gilani, Chishti, Suhurwardi, Tijani in the matters of Tasawwuf.
A natural question arises: Who is right among them? Who is worthier to be followed?
The answer is:
The closer you are to the model of the first three generations, the nearer you are to the Islamic teachings left by the Prophet (SAW). Was that model extinct throughout these ages?
The answer lies in this prophecy of the Prophet (SAW):
“A group from among my Ummah would remain abiding by the Haqq (the Right) who would be seen (not hidden). If someone forsakes them or opposes them, no harm would reach them until the (final) commands of Allah come while they wanted to still be there”. (37)
We believe that all such people, even though they had attributed themselves to one of the Fiqhi Madhahib, they fall in this category as long as they were not Prejudiced to their Madhab to the extent of discarding a Sahih Hadith or a clear Sunnah only because the Madhab dictates otherwise.
Among such people, after the period of the first three generations of Islam (known as Salaf, to which Salafi is attributed), we find scholars like Imam Ibn Tayyimiyya (d.728), a Hanbali by attribution. Abu Jafar Al-Tahawi (d.321) a Hanafi, Imam Shaukani (d.1250) a Shafii, Ibn Rushd (d.595) a Maliki, who were all of the opinion of benefitting from other Madhahib, as long as the evidence from the Quran and Sunnah were found in their favour.
In modern times, such examples of benefitting from all Madhahib, are seen in the work and lives of scholars like Abu Zahra (Hanafi background), Sheikh Abdul Aziz bin Baz (Hanbali), Sheikh Muhammad Amin Al-Shinqiti (Maliki), Muhibb ul-Din Al-Khateeb (Shafi’i)
On the issue of Triple Divorce said at one time by a husband to his wife, both Shanqiti and Ibn Baz stand apart. The former allows it and the latter considers it as one revocable divorce. This view was also held by Sheikh Muhammad Nasir ud-Din Al-Albani, a Salafi scholar. I benefitted from all three of them during my studies at Islamic university, Madinah, Saudi Arabia (from 1962 to 1966). This difference of opinion did not lead them to wage an abusive verbal war against one another. I have witnessed a mutual respect by which they behaved among themselves.
In present times, with the explosion of knowledge, especially in the spread of Hadith Books, there is a common trend among most of the Fiqh academies, councils for Fatwa and research to base their rulings on the evidence derived from the primary sources of Sharia without relying specifically on a certain Madhab. This is a door that has been opened towards benefitting from all Sunni Madhahib.
In our opinion, that is the right approach which should be followed by all scholars of Islam. The laymen is advised, according to the Quran (Al-Nahl:43) to ask the people of knowledge if he himself lacks the knowledge about a certain issue. Subsequently, it is incumbent on the scholar, to whom the question is raised, to answer in the light of the evidence available to him, not through blind following of a certain Imam.
This approach, whether it is called as Salafi or that of Ahl-e-Hadith doesn’t matter. What matters here is that this was the approach adopted by the companions, their successors and those followed suit till the times of the traditionalists.
That was the same approach adopted by the four established Imams. Among the pupils of Imam Abu Hanifa, his two students, Abu Yusuf and Muhammad Al-Hasan differed from him in two-third issues of fiqh. Was that difference of opinion based on desire or evidence?
Of course, it was due to the evidence and this is why the opinion held by both these pupils of Imam Abu Hanifa was normally accepted by the later followers. If that approach was good and commendable in the second and the third centuries, why should it not be the norm of the Muslim societies at present?
Finally, let me conclude by saying that the wave of blind following of a certain Imam, which started establishing itself from the fourth century onward was confined to Fatwa and Qada (courts of judgement). But apart from this impediment, the Islamic era as a whole had shown glowing examples of speeches of truth and ruling  based upon justice by the judges and muftis, bold decisions taken by many caliphs and sultans in defence of Islam and above-all, heroic expeditions leading to victory by a number of rulers who had left unprecedented marks on the channels of history. Such examples include Sultan Salahuddin Ayyubi, Sultan Muhammad Al-Fatih and many others during the Islamic rule in Spain and some great encounters by the Muslim warriors in India, in the face of the Marhata onslaught during the Mughal period and like that of Sultan Tipu (d.1799) who fell as a martyr, fighting the colonial forces at the gates of Surangaputam, Mysur.
Indeed, a Muslim would certainly be answering to Allah Al-Mighty, on the Day of Judgement about his adherence to the call of Allah and his Prophet (SAW), and not to his following of a certain Imam or a leader.
…………………………………………………………………………………………………………………………………………………………….


References:
(1) Shah Waliullah Dehawi: Hujjat-ul-lah al-Baligha.
(2) Sahih Bukhari: No. 946., Sahih Muslim: No. 177.
(3) Abu Dawud: No. 334., Musnad Ahmad 4: 203., Mustadrak Al-Hakim 1:177.
(4) Abu Dawud: 338., Al-Nasa’i: 1: 213.
(5) Al-Mustadrak: 1:93.
(6) Ibn Hisham: 4: 656.
(7) Ibn Sa’ad 2:2:71., Mu’atta: 231
(8) Bukhari: 5:25
(9) Bukhari: 8:61., Abu Dawud: 5033., Tirmidhi: 2741.
(10) Musnad Imam Ahmad.
(11) Bukhari: 2:7., Muslim 3:136., Abu Dawud: 565.
(12) Musnad Ahmad: 2: 183.
(13) Bukhari: Al-Tarikh-al-Kabir 6:207., Al-Adab al-Mufrad
(14) Sunan al-Baihaqi.
(15) Bukhari: 7:169., Muslim al-Salam 98,100.
(16) Bukhari: 8:113., Tirmidhi, 3859, 5221.
(17) Ibn Abdul Barr: Jami’ Bayan ul-Ilm: 2:30.
(18) Al-Suyuti: Miftah al-jannah, p21.
(19) Muhammad Al-Khidr Al-Shanqiti: Kausar., Al-Ma’ani Al-Darari, 1:83.
(20) Al-Dahabi: Tazkinat-ul-Huffaz, 1:83.
(21) Al-Fulani: Iqaz, 62 with reference to Shami, 1:50.
(22) Ibid, p72.
(23) Ibid.
(24) Abdul Karim Zaidan: Al-Madkhal, 115.
(25) Muhammad Abu Zuhra: Imam Shafi’i, p139
(26) Ibid, p139
(27) Ibn Said: Al-Tabaqat, 6:133 (Urdu edition).
(28) M.A.Zuhru, p110
(29) Ibid, p70
(30) Abdullah M. Al-Jabawi: Fiqh al-Imam Al-Auza’i, 1:26
(31) Ibid, 1:68
(32) Ibn Kathir: Al-Bidaya Wal Nihaya, see volume 11, from the beginning till p125.
(33) Ibid, till p230.
(34) Muhammad Baha-ut-Din: Tarikh Ahl-e-Hadith, 2:131.
(35) Ibid, With a reference of Shami 3:190.
(36) Ibid, 2:210
(37) Bukhari, 9:125., Tirmidhi: No. 2229.






A Tribute to Hafiz Nisaruddin Ahmad.


A Tribute to Hafiz Nasiruddin Ahmad
By Dr Suhaib Hasan

The Islamic University in Madinah, which I joined in July 1962 as a young student, was a blessed place where I made many acquaintances. Among them was a young man, of my age, from the then East Pakistan, Hafiz Nasiruddin Ahmad by name. He joined the university a couple of years after me, but I got married then and moved out of the bachelor lodgings at the Campus. I moved to the small town of Madinah which had a population less than one hundred thousand people. Thus all the married couples had an opportunity to meet and visit each other. I was fortunate enough to live with my father, in his newly hired flat, who came to teach Hadith at the University just days after my marriage took place in Karachi. My other married colleagues, including Hafiz, had to rent lodgings in Madinah within the limited stipend of three hundred Riyals which every student used to receive monthly. Imagine how cheap living expenses were at that time. 50 to 75 Riyals was the average rent for a small house. Studying at Madina gave us all the opportunity to meet a number of respected scholars and dignitaries from East Pakistan as well as all over the world, who used to visit the holy land during Hajj every year.
I left Madina after my graduation in 1966, and was sent on my very first mission of teaching Arabic and Islam in Nairobi, Kenya where my stay was extended to a period of nine years, a long gap in that friendship which had its root in Madinah.
But Allah wanted this friendship to revive once again. In 1976, when I moved to London, apart from a family that has immigrated to UK from East Africa, Hafiz Nasiruddin Ahmad was one of two friends who received us at Heathrow. He had already rented for me a terraced house in Shepherds Bush. After a delicious meal at his apartment in Battersea, we moved to this temporary residence for two weeks. Although I later settled down in Wood Green, I continued to visit the Centre which he established in Battersea. I found him to be very industrious, courteous to whom he met, helpful to the seekers of assistance, an able educationist and a person with concern for the welfare of this Ummah.
I wish I knew the circumstances which led him to leave London and settle permanently in Bangladesh. During his visits to London he told me about his new centre in or around Dhaka, known as Shah Waliullah Centre, which catered both for orphans and the seekers of knowledge. A few years before his last illness, he visited me at my office at the Islamic Sharia Council at Leyton. I was shocked to see him as a frail old Sheikh accompanied with a younger relative. He must have been advised by his well-wishers to rest until he was stronger but I found him very concerned about the running and expansion of his Centre in Bangladesh. He carried with him a bundle of plans, all for just one cause! His concern was how to expand the Centre which he had established with dedication and the sweat of his brow. He was one of those fortunate people who live for a noble cause and die for a noble cause.
I remember him as a successful man who, as mentioned by the Prophet (saw), left behind him the three legacies which do not terminate by the death of a person. Instead they continue to increase the reward of the one who initiated them. They are/:
        I.            The pious children who always supplicates for him.
     II.            The knowledge from which the people benefit.
  III.            The act of charity which continues giving its fruits to the people.
I end these short lines by the saying of Allah:
Among the Believers are men who have been true to their covenant with Allah: of them some have completed their vow (to the extreme), and some (still) wait: but they have never changed (their determination) in the least
That Allah may reward the men of Truth for their Truth, and punish the Hypocrites if that be His Will, or turn to them in Mercy: for Allah is Oft-Forgiving, Most Merciful.
[Surah Ahzab verse 23-24]

Thursday, 31 May 2018

My Memoirs Part 8.


My Memoirs No.8

Final year in Madinah (1966)

I have not many recollections of my last year in the university except that I achieved the highest grade (Mumtāz) in the final exam by which I acquired my certificate in Islamic Sharia. It equates with a B.A in the British educational system.

There had been neither any award-giving ceremony nor any graduates gathering. We had to pick up our certificates from the office and say farewell to the Registrar and slip away quietly.

Would it not be adorable if I gave here some short and sketchy notes about some of my colleagues who shared with me the room, the class, the university as a whole?
With some I had good memories of a long-lasting company; with some others a remembrance of a kind gesture, exchange of some thoughts or opinions, a sitting of mutual reading and discussion. By remembering them, I find myself paying off a debt which I owe to them.

When I speak about them, I have to cover the post-graduate period during which I might have had contact with some of them as well.

So to make my task easier, I could briefly say about the phases of life through which I have passed after leaving Madinah and about which I have to speak in details in a later part of my memoirs.

From April 1967, I started my career as a teacher and Da’ī in Nairobi, the capital of Kenya.
In July 1976, I moved to London where I first established Al-Quran society and later, with the help and co-operation of some other activists I was able to lay the foundation of the Islamic Sharia Council (1982), and then Masjid Al-Tawhid (1984). I was one of the founding members of the international charity Muslim Aid in 1985.

I had the honour to be a member of the European Council for Fatwa & Research since its inception in 1997 and also a member of the Assembly of Muslim Jurists in America (AMJA) since its appearance in 2003.

I had been awarded as well, the membership of the World Organisation of the Muslim Scholars which was established under the auspices’ of Rabita ‘Alam Islami (Muslim World League) of Makkah.

With this background in mind, I am going to speak first about those colleagues who, by the time I write these lines (May 2018) had already passed away. May Allah Almighty have mercy upon them and declare them among the citizens of the Paradise. Secondly, as for those who are still alive, I will keep on remembering them in my writing on the Blog in future. I wish for me and them a blissful end in line with the saying of Allah:

مِّنَ ٱلۡمُؤۡمِنِينَ رِجَالٌ۬ صَدَقُواْ مَا عَـٰهَدُواْ ٱللَّهَ عَلَيۡهِ‌ۖ فَمِنۡهُم مَّن قَضَىٰ نَحۡبَهُ ۥ وَمِنۡہُم مَّن يَنتَظِرُ‌ۖ وَمَا بَدَّلُواْ تَبۡدِيلاً۬
“Among the believers are men who have been true to their covenant with Allah, of them some have fulfilled their obligations and some of them are still waiting, but they have never changed in the least.”
[Surah al-Ahzāb 33:23]

Thirdly, I have to crown this discussion with my thoughts about one of the greatest scholars of this century, a most influential person not only in Saudi Arabia but in the entire Muslim world, his eminence Sheikh ‘Abdul Aziz bin Abdullah bin Baz, May Allah have mercy upon him.

So let me begin with the first group.

1.      Ibrahim Khalil

He comes of a very remote northern area in Pakistan, from Skardu, Gilgit, Baltistan, an area where Sunni  Muslims, mostly Ahl-e-Hadith to which he belonged and Noor Bakshia, a sect of Ismailia, the followers of Agha Khan live side by side. Difference of faith and practices may lead them to debate and discuss, and sometimes to denounce and have enmities. To come out of that far-flung area and travel to Karachi for the pursuit of knowledge was a great achievement on his part.

As I mentioned earlier we were together for the four years of our stay in Madinah and were also together in our appointment in Kenya. He remained associated to Madrasa al-Falah of Mombasa, from the day he joined till the day he had to leave it. He had been a successful teacher throughout his life and left behind him his legacy: a great number of students.

Visiting him in 2016, at his place in Mombasa, just one year before his death, was a great God-given opportunity for me.

The news of his death came to me through his eldest son Anas, who was with him while he was confined to his bed in Shifa hospital, Islamabad, Pakistan. The family took his body to Skardu for a burial in his native town.

May Allah shower His mercy upon him!

2.      Abdul Rahman Nasir

My second colleague in the boarding for the first two years of Jam’ia life.
He had to join the secondary stage lasting for three years before entering into the degree college.

With a healthy body and strong physique, he was always interested in militant ways and military life. He started his career as a translator to help Pakistan officials on their visits to Saudi Arabia. But his ambitions came true when he got the translator role with Pak forces headquarters in Islamabad.

He seems to have enjoyed his duties, away from the hectic field of Da’wa or preaching.

As a regular visitor to Islamabad annually, I have met him twice or thrice at his residence.

May Allah shower His mercy upon him.

3.      Muhammad Yusuf Kazim

After graduation, he was appointed as a teacher in Kempala, Uganda. In the summer of 1976, when I had to leave Nairobi for good, he replaced me at Mungana Madrasa where I had been a teacher for nine years.

Later he moved to the Islamic University at Islamabad. There I happened to meet him several times during my visits to Pakistan. He has developed a great liking for western philosophy and was found to be very appreciative of philosophical theories.

May Allah shower His mercy upon him.

4.      Abdullah Kaka Khail

Remembering him means to remember his two colleagues as well; Hasan Jan and Abdul Razzaq Iskandar. All three belonged to the famous seat of knowledge in Karachi; known as Jam’ia Binnuari, named after Sheikh Muhammad Yusuf Binnuari. They come from the northern border area of Pakistan. Pathan by tribe and Khaiber by province.

They were all well-versed in Hanafi Fiqh and their stay in Madinah gave them an exposure to Hanbali Fiqh in particular and to all the schools of thought in general. Our text back in Fiqh, Bidayat-ul-Mujtahid of Ibn Rushd allowed them an insight in comparative fiqh.

Though they were impressed by the scholastic approach of Sheikh Muhammad Al-Amin Al-Shanqiti, they seemed to be at odds with Salafi teachers, like Sheikh Muhammad Nasiruddin Al-Albani and Sheikh Abdul Mohsin Hamd Al-‘Abbad.

Abdullah Kaka Khail turned out to be a popular teacher at the Islamic University in Islamabad. Now his son Adnan is advancing his legacy in knowledge and defence of the religious values.

May Allah shower His mercy upon him.

5.      Hasan Jan

Long after graduation, I met him once in Makkah during a pilgrimage. He had shown me a treatise of his writing on the Hadith of “Umm Zar,” a famous Hadith in Bukhari where a very interesting discussion is recorded among eight women who had been describing their husbands. It is one of those Ahadith which consists of very difficult Arabic words and idioms.

He became famous by winning a seat in the National Assembly of Pakistan.

The last news which struck my ears were about his murder on the hands of some extremists who were not happy on his stance about some political issues in the northern areas of Pakistan.

May Allah shower His mercy upon him.

6.      Abu Bakr of Mozambique

See Memoirs No.5 for a detailed discussion about him.

7.      Siraj-ul-Rahman Nadawi

Not in Madinah but in Africa, a stronger bond of friendship developed among the two of us, mainly because of the womenfolk in both houses. During my few visits of Kampala, while I had been stationed in Nairobi, we were hosted by him. Later during the times of President Edi Amin, he moved to Mombasa, Kenya where he was able to establish a centre for education and training.

Twenty years after my departure from Nairobi I happened to visit this centre twice. Once during his lifetime and secondly in 2016 after his death. With his friendly contacts with some Arab Shuyukh and wealthy tradesmen, he acquired enough funds to establish this centre.

I remember a friendly gathering of our two families when I took him to Ngong Hill at the outskirts of Nairobi when I was still there.

A year before he passed away, he came to visit his son in London. I found him frail and exhausted, due to a heart attack he suffered while he was in Kenya.

During my last visit to Kenya in 2016, his son-in-law, a medical doctor by profession, took me to the Islamic college, a part of the main educational centre and two other schools and a mosque, which he also established at a distance from Mombasa on the road to Kalifi, a coastal town before approaching Lamu on the east African coast.

May Allah shower His mercy upon him.

8.      Habibullah Abdul Qadir Sindhi

I met him in Madinah where he used to assist the pilgrims in their boarding, lodging and travelling to Makkah especially as a spiritual guide during their sacred journey.

Long after leaving Madinah, I heard about him as a distinguished Sheikh with exhaustive writing on the fallacy of Sufism. I happened to visit him once in his house by the road leading to the airport. Here I got some glimpses of his books on the subject.

Being older than me, he turned out to be an old Sheikh, with fully Arab attire which attracted respect and admiration from the people around him.

May Allah shower His mercy upon him.

9.      Abdul Hamid Rahmani

See Memoirs No.6 where I have spoken about him.

10.  Hafiz Nisaruddin Ahmad

See my article (obituary) on his death in this blog.

11.  Abdul Wahhab Khilji

He must be a contemporary to my younger brother, Dr Suhail Hasan who stayed in Madinah with the family (my parents) after my departure to Nairobi in 1967.

He comes from Malair Kotla, one of the princely states in East Punjab, which is my birthplace as well.

I used to see him in Madinah, during my annual visits to see my parents until my father had to leave Madinah in 1980 after retirement.

As a Secretary General of Markazi Jamiat Ahl-e-Hadith, India, he was very influential in promoting the Salafi way of Islamic Da’wa in his homeland. On the other hand, this august post provided him a great opportunity to travel widely especially in the middle east to represent Jamiat at international forums. During such meetings and in Makkah, Istanbul and London, I happened to meet him and have exchange of thoughts with him.

After a long illness, he breathed his last on Friday 27th Rajab 1439 AH (13.4.2018) in Delhi.

May Allah shower His mercy upon him.

12.  Ihsan Ilahi Zaheer.

He joined the University one year later than me i.e. in 1963.

He was known to be an active, flamboyant and outspoken young man.

Myself, being away from Pakistan, soon after graduation, in a foreign land, I lost contact with him after leaving Madinah.

Once, during my annual Hajj activities, in late seventies, when I was officially used to be invited to participate in the guidance of pilgrims, I found him occupying a bed in a big room with a few beds, all for the delegates like us during the Hajj season. He told me that he had been invited that year to join hands with the working group during the Hajj season. But for him, to abide by a strenuous working schedule with regularity and punctuality was a task too far. I do not remember for how many days he made himself available but whatever amount of time he spent, he was a valuable asset for the whole group known as ‘’Taw’iya Islamia fi Al-Hajj (Islamic Awareness during Hajj).”

Twice, I think, he came to U.K to participate in the annual conference of Markazi Jamiat Ahl-e-Hadith held at Birmingham. At one occasion he was seen standing hand in hand on the stage with Mian Fazl-e-Haqq, the Secretary General of Pakistan Jamiat, with whom he used to have differences on party politics. The Birmingham meeting brought them closer and a chapter of rivalry and bitterness came to an end.

His books refuting Shi’ism brought him a fortune but also declared him an authority on this subject.

The murderous attempt on his life in 1988 while he was addressing a public meeting, crowned the last phase of his energetic life full in the defence of Islamic values, the propagation of the true Islamic faith and consolidation of a just system in Pakistan.

May Allah shower His mercy upon him.

13.  Abdul Salam Kilani

They were three: Abdul Salam Kilani, Hāfiz Sanaullah and Hāfiz Abdul Rahman, all from the same school of thought inspired by Sheikh Abdullah Ropari, who came to join the university in 1963. All three of them excelled in knowledge and adherence to Sunnah.

It is said about Kilani that he followed my footsteps in travelling to Madinah, on his first retreat after passing the summer vacation in his hometown in Punjab, by taking the voyage through Muscat, Dubai and Bahrain. Like me he spent a night in a small hotel in Bahrain where his eyes caught for the first time in his life, the glimpse of a black and white TV set. He simply turned his back to that object which was displaying pictures!

He was very simple in his life, very fond of the books and always with a smile on his face.

Later after graduation, he joined that group of Da’wa delegates who were appointed in Uganda.

Another interesting story is related about him. Once he was riding a tractor beside its African driver. He kept on talking to him about the beautiful teachings of Islam throughout his short journey to the fields. By the time he dismounted, the man had already pronounced the Kalima of Shahadah i.e. the one to embrace Islam.

It has been a normal chat among teachers like us to amuse ourselves to speak about marrying a second wife. Though none of us took it seriously except for Kilani. He, in the absence of his wife who was still in Pakistan, married a lady of Somali origin. It became a nightmare for him when his first wife arrived at Kampala. However, he managed to calm down the situation and even take his second wife to Pakistan for a short stay.

Later his Somali wife, with three of his daughters moved to London where I happened to meet them once according to the wishes of Kilani. These were very sad moments for him and his family as one of his daughters met her death in a road accident.

Kilani, eventually moved back to Pakistan where I had seen him once at the premises of Darus Salam Book shop.

He had grown in weight and seemed to be exhausted by travelling but he was still there with his smiles.

May Allah shower His mercy upon him.



Saturday, 23 December 2017

Memoirs Part 7


Memoirs part seven

Our stay in Madinah

My father had to look for an apartment to accommodate all three of us. Sheikh Muhammad Nasir Al-Aboodi, the Registrar of the university was kind enough to find us a two-room flat in a newly built three-story building next to Manakha, Madinah’s famous market with a huge taxi stand for journeys to Jeddah, Makkah and various other destinations in the kingdom. My father was introduced to the landlord as a teacher recruited from Pakistan to teach at the university. On hearing this, the man was aghast with surprise. He asked with curiosity and bewilderment; “How come a non-Arab is teaching our sons in Arabic?”.

Sheikh Al-Aboodi replied to this with a Quranic expression;

هَٰذِهِ بِضَاعَتُنَا رُدَّتْ إِلَيْنَا

“This is our own commodity which has been restored back to us”. (Surah Yusuf:65), a wonderful token of admiration from him!

A few months later, we moved to another apartment, again in a second floor flat in an old building, a bit nearer to Bab-e-Majeedi (one of the northern gates of the Prophet’s mosque and owned by a well-known dignitary in Madinah, Syyed Daftardar). One of my late colleagues, Yusuf Kazim stayed with us at the upper storey of the same house.

Now let me talk about various events in the academic years 1964-65:

1. King Faisal’s visit to the Jami’a

King Sa’ud bin Abdul Aziz was forced to abdicate in March 1964 and was succeeded by his brother, Prince Faisal in November 1964. After his enthronement as King, he paid a visit to Madinah, the city of the Prophet (SAW). During his short stay in Madinah he visited the university as well. It was a simple but graceful ceremony in the only hall existing in the campus at that time. There were no extravagant celebrations for the event, only a selection of finely decorated and simple chairs, and sofas for a selected number of students and staff were brought out.

 On behalf of the students, one Indian colleague, Muzzamil Siddiqi, had to deliver a welcome speech. Sheikh ibn Baz, the vice-chair at the time also gave a speech and welcomed the King and suggested to him the title of ‘Amir al-Muminin’. King Faisal was a very intelligent man who acknowledged how great the responsibilities would be if he accepted this title. Therefore, he commented in his speech that he would love to remain a servant to the two sacred places, i.e. ‘Khadim Al-Haramain Al-Sharifain’, and that was the title which lasted throughout his life and continues to be attributed to him today. I remember the famous Arabic Nasheed (anthem) which was reverberating throughout the streets of Madinah:

“Ya Faisalna, ya Faisalna, Allah yuhayee Faisalna, ya Faisalna ya Faisalna”.

King Faisal’s visit was a simple one in contrast to a visit by the dethroned King Saud some previous years ago, when golden coins were showered on the spectators, wherever his convoy passed. It was said that unnecessarily lavish displays of wealth, was one of the causes which led Prince Faisal to dethrone his elder brother.





2. New Friendships

As I had moved to the town, a phase of celibacy had come to an end, and I had to develop more friendly ties with the married couples in Madinah. One of our colleagues, Ghulam Qadir Balochi happened to marry in a family in Madinah which had mixed roots. Among the more close-friends were Nisaruddin Ahmad from East Pakistan, Sirajul Rahman from India and Abdul Khaliq from Pakistan.

In my later life, first in Kenya and later in London, I would be drawn closer to them, as the field of Da’wa got us together once again. Our studies during the day and regular attendance of evening prayers did not allow us to enjoy any recreational activities.

I remember some of the few gatherings we students had together; once at the site of the Well of Ruma and secondly, at a pool of flood waters on our way to the airport, following a heavy shower of rain; a very rare phenomenon in the mostly dry weather of Madinah. The Well of Ruma had a memorable history going back to the times of the Prophet (SAW).

 People in Madinah were short of drinking water, the Prophet (SAW) appealed to the congregation: “Who is going to buy this well which belonged to a Jewish person and declare it a charity for the Muslims? And I announce for him a place in paradise”. That great excellence and blessing was won by Uthman bin Affan, the Prophet’s son-in-law and the third Caliph after the death of the Prophet (SAW). He declared it a Waqf (endowment) for the benefit of the Muslims. His sincerity led this well to survive for fourteen centuries and it is still there in present times.

The fall of rain had always been a jubilant occasion for the inhabitants of Madinah. When a heavy shower poured upon the area, the valleys around Madinah turned into rivulets, and the people flocked to see and enjoy this rare occasion. I remember going to the southern outskirts of Madinah, on the road towards Makkah, where the flood waters were dashing heavily through the valley.

3. Hajj of Summer 1965

During the middle of 1965, I was blessed with performing Hajj for the third time, which came out as a family gathering as well. My elder sister, the only one beside her seven male siblings, had come with her husband and children to stay with us in Ramadan. The stay lasted until Hajj; so the first time we had the opportunity to occupy our own tent in Mina, was during Hajj.

My father’s colleague, Hafiz Mohammad Gundalwi, the esteemed Sheikh of Hadith, joined us with his wife and son Masud. When we were in Mina, after retreating from Arafat through Muzdalifa, I remember how Sheikh Gundalwi lost the trail of his temporary accommodation while coming back after throwing pebbles at Jamrah. He must have passed by the tent more than once, but could not recognise it. His wife was earnestly waiting for him at the mouth of the tent. She must have seen him approaching the tent and then missing it altogether. Again, when she sighted him, he was about to cross over. However, she shouted to him in her native Punjabi; “Now, where are you planning to go?”. The Sheikh halted abruptly, but was much pleased to find his place!

After Hajj, we were standing at the bus station, an open courtyard at the outskirts of Makkah, where my sister and her family boarded a bus packed with pilgrims and destined for Zahran, a town 1500 kilometres away at the eastern coast of Saudi Arabia. From there, they had to take their flight to Karachi. In those days, PIA, for which my brother-in-law worked as an accountant throughout his life, would have been operating to Zahran more frequently than Jeddah. With my previous memories of such long journeys, I was feeling uneasy to see my sister on the verge of such a hazardous journey ahead.

4. The dolls incident

In those days, Saudi Arabia followed a strict and heavy-handed approach towards creating a puritan society. A very glossy, illustrated magazine “Al-Arabi” from Kuwait had started its publication. It used to have a very informative article on one of the Arab towns in each issue. Attractive pictures crowned its title. However, it had to go through a very strenuous censorship process, before it could find its place in the bookstalls. Very often we used to see some of its pictures covered by black ink or the whole page was torn apart.

In such a puritanical environment, the street vendors once came out with imported dolls which were very beautifully designed. They were on sale just a few yards away from the gates of the Mosque of the Prophet (SAW) in the open courtyard in front of Bab-us-Salam (The Gate of Peace). For some students, especially in the last year of the Sharia College, this sight was completely intolerable. Subsequently, a group of them targeted these moving carts carrying the dolls and similar gifts and started breaking them and throwing the merchandise on the ground. The courtyard became a scene like that of a battlefield. The local police had to intervene and put the culprits behind bars. Sheikh ibn Baz tried his best to secure a release of the captives, but his attempts were in vain. At the most, they could sit their final exams. The expatriates among them were deported to their countries of origin and the local ones had to linger on for a while in prison.

I however, had not witnessed the incident, but the news spread like wildfire. Among them were several exemplar students who later excelled in the field of Da’wa in Kuwait and some other Arab capitals.

5. Summer vacation of 1965

Accompanying the father, we were back to Karachi after Hajj. By that time, the family had moved to a double storey house in Aziz Abad, a newly-developed area beyond the crowded allies of Liaquat Abad, otherwise known as Lalu Khait.

It was the beginning of September. When the war between India and Pakistan broke out. Indian troops had invaded Lahore, the Punjab capital, where a fierce resistance was triggered, culminating in a repulsion of the Indian army, making headlines across the world. Karachi was far away from the main fighting, but the military airbase at Maripur near Karachi, provided us with an air show where the Pakistani air force had to combat the advancing Indian fighter jets. It was clamour and rattling at daytime and complete blackout at night. The thundering noise of the bombs dropped kept the people sleepless and awake. Thanks to Allah, Karachi had a safe passage during those days of hammering and clamour. Both the Pakistani air force and navy had the opportunity to test its vigour and skills.

As soon as the war was over, my father and I rushed to travel back to Madinah, while my expectant wife remained in her family home at PECH society to witness the greatest maiden experience of her life as a mother.

A few days later, I received the news. She gave birth to twins, named as Abdullah and Abdulrahman. They were both weak and frail and could not survive. Abdullah passed away within hours of his birth. His twin brother joined him after six days. Unfortunately, I was not there to share the moments of grief and sorrow with my wife. As I have not seen them, I seldom remember them coming into this world and then hiding abruptly into eternity. I presented my wife with the saying of the Prophet (SAW), as reported by Imam Bukhari in his collections: Abu Saeed Al-Khudri reported that the women said to the Prophet (SAW): “The men have taken most of your time. So, appoint for us a day from you”. The Prophet (SAW) promised to do so. That day he came and admonished them and gave them some commandments. Among his discourse, he said to them: “Whoever among you send in advance three of her children, they will shield her from hell-fire”. A woman asked; “What if they are just two?”. He replied: “Yes, even if there are just two of them”.

One day during Ramadan, I was at Jeddah airport to receive my wife. To my surprise, there was another lady with her as well. She was the newly-wed bride of Ehsan Elahi Zaheer, who was not aware of her arrival at all. We took her to our rented room in Makkah where I was staying for the last ten days of Ramadan with my father and my mother who had arrived with four of my younger siblings one month ago. Ihsan was alerted by phone and then he was there by the end of the day, coming straight from Madinah!


Friday, 18 August 2017

Memoirs No. 7 (1966-69)

Memoirs No. 7 (1966-69)

Now in the beginning of 1964 academic year we were blessed to have seven new teachers. My father Abdul-Ghaffar Hassan (d. March 07), as a teacher of Isnad and Usul-al-Hadith, Hafiz Muhammad Gundalwi for Hadith in particular, Sulaiman Al-Ashqar, for Fiqh, Muhammad Al-Lubadi for Arabic grammar, Muhammad Ibrahim Shaqra for Fiqh as well, and Mahmud Al-Tahhan for Usul-al-Hadith as well. As for my father, an exhaustive biography is available on my blog.

Hafiz Muhammad Gundalwi

I am sorry to say that I could not benefit from him a lot because he had to leave our class – after a few lessons – to teach the batch one year ahead of us. His short biography is as follows. He was born in Ghondlawala, an outskirt of the famous Punjab town, Gujranwala (the then British India) in 1897. He studied locally then proceeded to Amritsar first and later to Delhi. Among his teachers were farmers Muhaddithin like Sheikh Abdul Jabbar Ghaznawi and Sheikh Ahmadullah in the mosque of Sheikh Nazir Hussain of Delhi. After completing his studies at the age of 22, he came back to his home town where he started his teaching career at Madrasa Muhammadiya. Later he was honoured to be invited to teach at the prestigious educational site, Darul-Hadith Rahmaniya at Delhi (where my father received his higher studies in Hadith), then at Jami’a Darussalam, Omar Abad in Hyderabad, Deccan. After returning back to his home town once again, especially after the one year when he was invited to teach at Madinah. Though his story in the city of the Prophet (SAW) was very short, he left a great impact on both, the teachers and students in the university. Throughout his life, he taught the famous Hadith collection of Imam Bukhari fifty times from the beginning to the end.
He was gifted with a very sharp memory. According to Isham Ilahi Zaheer, his son-in-law, he never committed himself to read daily papers or other magazines lest he committed to his memory some useless material or unnecessary information of knowledge. It was also reported that throughout his life he never missed Takbira-tul-Ihram of the daily five prayers in circles. This is why his written inheritance of knowledge does not exceed ten books and seven unpublished works. At the age of ninety years (according to the lunar calendar) he passed away on 14th Ramadan 1405 A.H. (04/06/1985).

Sheikh Muhammad Sulaiman al-Ashgar

I have received some lessons of Fiqh, mainly from Bidayat-tul-Mujtahid of Ibn Rushd from him in the third year. He had also given tafsir lessons from Fath-ul-Qadir of Imam Al-Shaukami. In my fourth year, both of these lessons are awarded to Sheikh Muhammad Amin Al-Shanqiti. His short biography is as follows. Born in the middle of 1930, Nablus in Palestine. After receiving his early education locally he moved to Saudi Arabia College of Riyadh in 1956 and was among the first batch to graduate. He started his teaching career as a lecturer in the same seat of knowledge. In 1964, he was invited by Sheikh Ibn baz to teach at the Islamic University. His tenure did not last long. He had to leave the university two years later to Kuwait where he worked at different teaching posts including his research work for the ambitious Kuwaiti project of preparing the Fiqh Encyclopaedia.
In 1990, following the Iraqi invasion of Kuwait, he had to move back to Jordan, a natural shelter for the Palestinians. He leaves behind him a wealth of contribution both in the field of Tafsir and Fiqh. He died on 16th November 2009.

Sheikh Noor-ud-Din Muhammad Itr

He was among the youngest teachers at Madinah. Now, at the time of writing these lines, I realise that he was older than me by just five years. Being a graduate of Hadith, he was awarded the subject of Usul-Al-Hadith which was later taken by my father. He belonged to a prestigious family of scholars in Halab, Syria. After he received his doctorate from Al-Azhar in 1964, he straight away came to Madinah to join the teaching staff at the university. His stay in Madinag was confined to two years as well. Being brought up and trained in hanafi Fiqh, the students could notice his warm support for Hanafi opinions both in Usul Hadith and Fiqh.
Apart from them I benefitted from some more people of knowledge either through their lectures from time to time by attending their circles in the mosque of the Prophet (SAW). Among them comes on top, Sheikh Hammad Al-Ansari, a great scholar of Hadith, followed by Muhammad Mukhtar Al-Shanqiti, who used to have his Fiqh circle in the mosque, Sheikh Abu Bakr Al-Jaza’iri, the author of ‘Aqeeda-tul-M’umin and a regular speaker at the mosque. Qari Abdul Fattah, the famous Qari from Bukahara who like many other Turkistani migrants have settled in hijaz after the repressive Bolshevik revolution in Russia in the beginning of the 20th century, Yousuf Nada of Egypt who used to be our neighbour and had developed a good friendship with my father.

King Faisal’s Visit tp the Jami’a

King Sa’ud bin Abdul Aziz had to abdicate in March 1964 and was succeeded by his brother Faisal. After enthroning as a King, he paid a visit to Madinah, the city of the Prophet (SAW). During his short stay in Madinah he paid a visit to the university as well. It was a simple but adorable ceremony in the only hall existing in the campus at that time: a hall with its ceiling not higher than any adjacent class room. The presences of some sofa sets were the only luxuries at that time. There were welcome speeches, one by a representative from among the students and one by Sheikh Abdul Aziz bin Baz, the vice president. I remember the Sheikh suggesting to him to accept the title of Amir-al-Mo’minin as used to be the traditions among the early Muslim Caliphate. King Faisal was wise enough to say that he would rather remain to be a servant of the believers, not their master.

I remember the famous Arabic Nashid (anthem) by which the streets of Madinah had been resounding:

“Ya Faisalna, ya Faisalna, Allah yuhayee Faisalna, ya Faisalna ya Faisalna.”


Thursday, 20 July 2017

A Random Thought

A Random Thought

By Abdul Wahhab Azzam
(From Egypt. From his book in Arabic about his random thoughts written in Karachi during his stay in Pakistan as an Ambassador in year 1952-1953).

Translated by Dr. Suhaib Hasan

I used to have a friend during my youth. Once we prayed together and I saw him praying the obligatory prayer only without offering his Sunnah. So I recited to him a line of ‘Al-Mutanabi’, the poet:

“I have not seen among the defects of the people a thing like those capable people who fail to complete.”

He used to say to me later, “Whenever I intended to leave Sunnah prayer, I remember the line of your man. So I always prayed it.”

This is a very wise saying of Abu al-Tayyib (i.e. Al-Mutanabbi) and deserves to be comprehended by the people. They fail to complete either because they are satisfied with imperfect actions and they stop before reaching the goal or because of laziness, fear or any other impediment.
If every person looks at that stage where perfectness lies and then strives hard to reach that goal, he would definitely get what he wanted without anything missing.

Similarly, if the nations act upon the wisdom of Abu Al-Tayyib, they would have advanced a lot more than what they have achieved.
No wonder that one of the biggest defect - among the defects of the people entirely – is that a man agrees to have imperfectness in his sayings, actions or thoughts while he is able to reach the level of perfectness. This is indeed a great defect. Because it is a collective defect which makes a man pleased with a lower level of his action, a lot lower than the goal and which makes the community always pleased with such a lower status in all its affairs.

And what is the community? Nothing but individuals. Every man is invited in this life to engage himself in action to achieve an increase for himself and for his group until he reaches at the summit or very near to it. You cannot achieve perfectness except by exercising to reach it by a lot of effort and a lot of patience. It is true that a man faces unexpected obstacles during his journey but if he keeps on advancing with effort and patience, he would certainly overcome them either today or tomorrow. But if he stands still, by his own will, then there is no way for him to reach his goal, his actions will not gain perfectness which make a man perfect in his life.