
Understanding Four Madhhabs: the problem with anti-madhhabism
Understanding Four Madhhabs: the problem with anti-madhhabism
The ummah's greatest achievement over the past millennium has undoubtedly been
its internal intellectual cohesion. From the fifth century of the Hijra
almost to the present day, and despite the outward drama of the clash of
dynasties, the Sunni Muslims have maintained an almost unfailing attitude
of religious respect and brotherhood among themselves. It is a striking
fact that virtually no religious wars, riots or persecutions divided them
during this extended period, so difficult in other ways.
The history
of religious movements suggests that this is an unusual outcome. The normal sociological
view, as expounded by Max Weber and his disciples, is that religions enjoy an
initial period of unity, and then descend into an increasingly bitter factionalism
led by rival hierarchies. Christianity has furnished the most obvious example
of this; but one could add many others, including secular faiths such as Marxism.
On the face of it, Islam's ability to avoid this fate is astonishing, and demands
careful analysis.
There is, of course, a straightforwardly religious explanation. Islam is the
final religion, the last bus home, and as such has been divinely secured from
the more terminal forms of decay. It is true that what Abdul Wadod Shalabi
has termed spiritual entropy has been at work ever since Islam's inauguration,
a fact which is well-supported by a number of hadiths. Nonetheless, Providence
has not neglected the ummah. Earlier religions slide gently or painfully into
schism and irrelevance; but Islamic piety, while fading in quality, has been
given mechanisms which allow it to retain much of the sense of unity emphasised
in its glory days. Wherever the antics of the emirs and politicians might lead,
the brotherhood of believers, a reality in the initial career of Christianity
and some other faiths, continues, fourteen hundred years on, to be a compelling
principle for most members of the final and definitive community of revelation
in Islam. The reason is simple and unarguable: God has given us this religion
as His last word, and it must therefore endure, with its essentials of tawhid,
worship and ethics intact, until the Last Days.
Such an explanation has obvious merit. But we will still need to explain
some painful exceptions to the rule in the earliest phase of our history.
The Prophet himself (pbuh) had told his Companions, in a hadith narrated
by Imam Tirmidhi, that "Whoever among you outlives me shall see a vast dispute".
The initial schisms: the disastrous revolt against Uthman (r.a.), the
clash between Ali (r.a.) and Muawiyah, the bloody scissions of the Kharijites
- all these drove knives of discord into the Muslim body politic almost
from the outset. Only the inherent sanity and love of unity among scholars
of the ummah assisted, no doubt, by Providence overcame the early spasms
of factionalism, and created a strong and harmonious Sunnism which has,
at least on the purely religious plane, united ninety percent of the
ummah for ninety percent of its history.
It will help us greatly to understand our modern, increasingly divided situation
if we look closely at those forces which divided us in the distant past. There
were many of these, some of them very eccentric; but only two took the form
of mass popular movements, driven by religious ideology, and in active rebellion
against majoritarian faith and scholarship. For good reasons, these two acquired
the names of Kharijism and Shi'ism. Unlike Sunnism, both were highly productive
of splinter groups and sub-movements; but they nonetheless remained as recognisable
traditions of dissidence because of their ability to express the two great
divergences from mainstream opinion on the key question of the source of religious
authority in Islam.
Confronted with what they saw as moral slippage among early caliphs, posthumous
partisans of Ali (r.a.) developed a theory of religious authority which departed
from the older egalitarian assumptions by vesting it in a charismatic succession
of Imams. We need not stop here to investigate the question of whether this
idea was influenced by the Eastern Christian background of some early converts,
who had been nourished on the idea of the mystical apostolic succession to
Christ, a gift which supposedly gave the Church the unique ability to read
his mind for later generations. What needs to be appreciated is that Shi'ism,
in its myriad forms, developed as a response to a widely-sensed lack of definitive
religious authority in early Islamic society. As the age of the Righteous Caliphs
came to a close, and the Umayyad rulers departed ever more conspicuously from
the lifestyle expected of them as Commanders of the Faithful, the sharply-divergent
and still nascent schools of fiqh seemed inadequate as sources of strong and
unambiguous authority in religious matters. Hence the often irresistible seductiveness
of the idea of an infallible Imam.
This interpretation of the rise of Imamism also helps to explain the second
great phase in Shi'i expansion. After the success of the fifth-century
Sunni revival, when Sunnism seemed at last to have become a fully coherent
system, Shi'ism went into a slow eclipse. Its extreme wing, as manifested
in Ismailism, received a heavy blow at the hands of Imam al-Ghazali, whose
book "Scandals of the Batinites" exposed and refuted their secret doctrines
with devastating force. This decline in Shi'i fortunes was only arrested
after the mid-seventh century, once the Mongol hordes under Genghis Khan
had invaded and obliterated the central lands of Islam. The onslaught
was unimaginably harsh: we are told, for instance, that out of a hundred
thousand former inhabitants of the city of Herat, only forty survivors crept
out of the smoking ruins to survey the devastation. In the wake of this tidal
wave of mayhem, newly-converted Turcoman nomads moved in, who, with the
Sunni ulama of the cities dead, and a general atmosphere of fear, turbulence,
and Messianic expectation in the air, turned readily to extremist forms
of Shi'i belief. The triumph of Shi'ism in Iran, a country once loyal
to Sunnism, dates back to that painful period.
The other great dissident movement in early Islam was that of the Kharijites,
literally, the seceders, so-called because they seceded from the army of
the Caliph Ali when he agreed to settle his dispute with Muawiyah through
arbitration. Calling out the Quranic slogan, "Judgement is only Gods",
they fought bitterly against Ali and his army which included many of
the leading Companions, until Ali defeated them at the Battle of Nahrawan,
where some ten thousand of them perished.
Although the first Kharijites were destroyed, Kharijism itself lived on. As
it formulated itself, it turned into the precise opposite of Shi'ism, rejecting
any notion of inherited or charismatic leadership, and stressing that leadership
of the community of believers should be decided by piety alone. This was assessed
by very rudimentary criteria: the early Kharijites were known for extreme toughness
in their devotions, and for the harsh doctrine that any Muslim who commits
a major sin is an unbeliever. This notion of takfir (declaring Muslims to be
outside Islam), permitted the Kharijite groups, camping out in remote mountain
districts of Khuzestan, to raid Muslim settlements which had accepted Umayyad
authority. Non-Kharijis were routinely slaughtered in these operations, which
brought merciless reprisals from tough Umayyad generals such as al-Hajjaj ibn
Yusuf. But despite the apparent hopelessness of their cause, the Kharijite
attacks continued. The Caliph Ali (r.a.) was assassinated by Ibn Muljam, a
survivor of Nahrawan, while the hadith scholar Imam al-Nasai, author of one
of the most respected collections of sunan, was likewise murdered by Kharijite
fanatics in Damascus in 303/915.
Like Shi'ism, Kharijism caused much instability in Iraq and Central Asia, and
on occasion elsewhere, until the fourth and fifth centuries of Islam. At that
point, something of historic moment occurred. Sunnism managed to unite itself
into a detailed system that was now so well worked-out, and so obviously the
way of the great majority of ulama, that the attraction of the rival movements
diminished sharply.
What happened was this. Sunni Islam, occupying the middle ground between the
two extremes of egalitarian Kharijism and hierarchical Shi'ism, had long been
preoccupied with disputes over its own concept of authority. For the Sunnis,
authority was, by definition, vested in the Quran and Sunnah. But confronted
with the enormous body of hadiths, which had been scattered in various forms
and narrations throughout the length and breadth of the Islamic world following
the migrations of the Companions and Followers, the Sunnah sometimes proved
difficult to interpret. Even when the sound hadiths had been sifted out from
this great body of material, which totalled several hundred thousand hadith
reports, there were some hadiths which appeared to conflict with each other,
or even with verses of the Quran. It was obvious that simplistic approaches
such as that of the Kharijites, namely, establishing a small corpus of hadiths
and deriving doctrines and law from them directly, was not going to work. The
internal contradictions were too numerous, and the interpretations placed on
them too complex, for the qadis (judges) to be able to dish out judgements
simply by opening the Quran and hadith collections to an appropriate page.
The reasons underlying cases of apparent conflict between various revealed
texts were scrutinised closely by the early ulama, often amid sustained debate
between brilliant minds backed up with the most perfect photographic memories.
Much of the science of Islamic jurisprudence (usul al-fiqh) was developed in
order to provide consistent mechanisms for resolving such conflicts in a way
which ensured fidelity to the basic ethos of Islam. The term taarud al-adilla
(mutual contradiction of proof-texts) is familiar to all students of Islamic
jurisprudence as one of the most sensitive and complex of all Muslim legal
concepts. Early scholars such as Ibn Qutayba felt obliged to devote whole books
to the subject.
The ulama of usul recognised as their starting assumption that conflicts between
the revealed texts were no more than conflicts of interpretation, and could
not reflect inconsistencies in the Lawgiver's message as conveyed by the Prophet
(pbuh). The message of Islam had been perfectly conveyed before his demise;
and the function of subsequent scholars was exclusively one of interpretation,
not of amendment.
Armed with this awareness, the Islamic scholar, when examining problematic
texts, begins by attempting a series of preliminary academic tests and methods
of resolution. The system developed by the early ulama was that if two Quranic
or hadith texts appeared to contradict each other, then the scholar must first
analyse the texts linguistically, to see if the contradiction arises from an
error in interpreting the Arabic. If the contradiction cannot be resolved by
this method, then he must attempt to determine, on the basis of a range of
textual, legal and historiographic techniques, whether one of them is subject
to takhsis, that is, concerns special circumstances only, and hence forms a
specific exception to the more general principle enunciated in the other text.
The jurist must also assess the textual status of the reports, recalling the
principle that a Quranic verse will overrule a hadith related by only one isnad
(the type of hadith known as ahad), as will a hadith supplied by many isnads
(mutawatir or mashhur). If, after applying all these mechanisms, the jurist
finds that the conflict remains, he must then investigate the possibility that
one of the texts was subject to formal abrogation (naskh) by the other.
This principle of naskh is an example of how, when dealing with the delicate
matter of taarud al-adilla, the Sunni ulama founded their approach on textual
policies which had already been recognised many times during the lifetime of
the Prophet (pbuh). The Companions knew by ijma that over the years of the
Prophets ministry, as he taught and nurtured them, and brought them from the
wildness of paganism to the sober and compassionate path of monotheism, his
teaching had been divinely shaped to keep pace with their development. The
best-known instance of this was the progressive prohibition of wine, which
had been discouraged by an early Quranic verse, then condemned, and finally
prohibited. Another example, touching an even more basic principle, was the
canonical prayer, which the early ummah had been obliged to say only twice
daily, but which, following the Miraj, was increased to five times a day. Mutah
(temporary marriage) had been permitted in the early days of Islam, but was
subsequently prohibited as social conditions developed, respect for women grew,
and morals became firmer. There are several other instances of this, most being
datable to the years immediately following the Hijra, when the circumstances
of the young ummah changed in radical ways.
There are two types of naskh: explicit (sarih) or implicit (dimni). The
former is easily identified, for it involves texts which themselves specify
that an earlier ruling is being changed. For instance, there is the verse
in the Quran (2:142) which commands the Muslims to turn in prayer to the
Kaba rather than to Jerusalem. In the hadith literature this is even more
frequently encountered; for example, in a hadith narrated by Imam Muslim
we read: "I used to forbid you to visit graves; but you should now visit them." Commenting
on this, the ulama of hadith explain that in early Islam, when idolatrous
practices were still fresh in peoples memories, visiting graves had been
forbidden because of the fear that some new Muslims might commit shirk.
As the Muslims grew stronger in their monotheism, however, this prohibition
was discarded as no longer necessary, so that today it is a recommended
practice for Muslims to go out to visit graves in order to pray for the
dead and to be reminded of the akhira.
The other type of naskh is more subtle, and often taxed the brilliance of the
early ulama to the limit. It involves texts which cancel earlier ones, or modify
them substantially, but without actually stating that this has taken place.
The ulama have given many examples of this, including the two verses in Surat
al-Baqarah which give differing instructions as to the period for which widows
should be maintained out of an estate (2:240 and 234). And in the hadith literature,
there is the example of the incident in which the Prophet (pbuh) once told
the Companions that when he prayed sitting because he was burdened by some
illness, they should sit behind him. This hadith is given by Imam Muslim. And
yet we find another hadith, also narrated by Muslim, which records an incident
in which the Companions prayed standing while the Prophet (pbuh) was sitting.
The apparent contradiction has been resolved by careful chronological analysis,
which shows that the latter incident took place after the former, and therefore
takes precedence over it. This has duly been recorded in the fiqh of the great
scholars.
The techniques of naskh identification have enabled the ulama to resolve most
of the recognised cases of taarud al-adilla. They demand a rigorous and detailed
knowledge not just of the hadith disciplines, but of history, sirah, and of
the views held by the Companions and other scholars on the circumstances surrounding
the genesis and exegesis of the hadith in question. In some cases, hadith scholars
would travel throughout the Islamic world to locate the required information
pertinent to a single hadith.
In cases where in spite of all efforts, abrogation cannot be proven, then the
ulama of the salaf recognised the need to apply further tests. Important among
these is the analysis of the matn (the transmitted text rather than the isnad
of the hadith). Clear (sarih) statements are deemed to take precedence over
allusive ones (kinayah), and definite (muhkam) words take precedence over words
falling into more ambiguous categories, such as the interpreted (mufassar),
the obscure (khafi) and the problematic (mushkil). It may also be necessary
to look at the position of the narrators of the conflicting hadiths, giving
precedence to the report issuing from the individual who was more directly
involved. A famous example of this is the hadith narrated by Maymunah which
states that the Prophet (pbuh) married her when not in a state of consecration
(ihram) for the pilgrimage. Because her report was that of an eyewitness, her
hadith is given precedence over the conflicting report from Ibn Abbas, related
by a similarly sound isnad, which states that the Prophet was in fact in a
state of ihram at the time.
There are many other rules, such as that which states that prohibition takes
precedence over permissibility. Similarly, conflicting hadiths may be resolved
by utilising the fatwa of a Companion, after taking care that all the relevant
fatwa are compared and assessed. Finally, recourse may be had to qiyas (analogy).
An example of this is the various reports about the solar eclipse prayer (salat
al-kusuf), which specify different numbers of bowings and prostrations. The
ulama, having investigated the reports meticulously, and having been unable
to resolve the contradiction by any of the mechanisms outlined above, have
applied analogical reasoning by concluding that since the prayer in question
is still called salaat, then the usual form of salaat should be followed, namely,
one bowing and two prostrations. The other hadiths are to be abandoned.
This careful articulation of the methods of resolving conflicting source-texts,
so vital to the accurate derivation of the Shariah from the revealed sources,
was primarily the work of Imam al-Shafi'i. Confronted by the confusion and
disagreement among the jurists of his day, and determined to lay down a consistent
methodology which would enable a fiqh to be established in which the possibility
of error was excluded as far as was humanly possible, Shafi'i wrote his brilliant
Risala (Treatise on Islamic jurisprudence). His ideas were soon taken up, in
varying ways, by jurists of the other major traditions of law; and today they
are fundamental to the formal application of the Shariah.
Shafi'i's system of minimising mistakes in the derivation of Islamic rulings
from the mass of evidence came to be known as usul al-fiqh (the roots of fiqh).
Like most of the other formal academic disciplines of Islam, this was not an
innovation in the negative sense, but a working-out of principles already discernible
in the time of the earliest Muslims. In time, each of the great interpretative
traditions of Sunni Islam codified its own variation on these roots, thereby
yielding in some cases divergent branches (i.e. specific rulings on practice).
Although the debates generated by these divergences could sometimes be energetic,
nonetheless, they were insignificant when compared to the great sectarian and
legal disagreements which had arisen during the first two centuries of Islam
before the science of usul al-fiqh had put a stop to such chaotic discord.
It hardly needs remarking that although the Four Imams, Abu Hanifa, Malik ibn
Anas, al-Shafi'i and Ibn Hanbal, are regarded as the founders of these four
great traditions, which, if we were asked to define them, we might sum up as
sophisticated techniques for avoiding innovation, their traditions were fully
systematised only by later generations of scholars. The Sunni ulama rapidly
recognised the brilliance of the Four Imams, and after the late third century
of Islam we find that hardly any scholars adhered to any other approach. The
great hadith specialists, including al-Bukhari and Muslim, were all loyal adherents
of one or another of the madhhabs, particularly that of Imam al-Shafi'i. But
within each madhhab, leading scholars continued to improve and refine the roots
and branches of their school. In some cases, historical conditions made this
not only possible, but necessary. For instance, scholars of the school of Imam
Abu Hanifah, which was built on the foundations of the early legal schools
of Kufa and Basra, were wary of some hadiths in circulation in Iraq because
of the prevalence of forgery engendered by the strong sectarian influences
there. Later, however, once the canonical collections of Bukhari, Muslim and
others became available, subsequent generations of Hanafi scholars took the
entire corpus of hadiths into account in formulating and revising their madhhab.
This type of process continued for two centuries, until the Schools reached
a condition of maturity in the fourth and fifth centuries of the Hijra.
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It was at that time, too, that the attitude of toleration and good opinion between the Schools became universally accepted. This was formulated by Imam al-Ghazali, himself the author of four textbooks of Shafi'i fiqh, and also of Al-Mustasfa, widely acclaimed as the most advanced and careful of all works on usul usul al-fiqh fil madhhab (Ihya Ulum al-Din, III, 65) While it was necessary for the Muslim to follow a recognised madhhab in order to avert the lethal danger of misinterpreting the sources, he must never fall into the trap of considering his own school categorically superior to the others. With a few insignificant exceptions, the great scholars of Sunni Islam have followed the ethos outlined by Imam al-Ghazali, and have been conspicuously respectful of each others madhhab. Anyone who has studied under traditional ulama will be well-aware of this fact.
The evolution of the Four Schools did not stifle, as some Orientalists have suggested, the capacity for the refinement or extension of positive law. On the contrary, sophisticated mechanisms were available which not only permitted qualified individuals to derive the Shariah from the Quran and Sunnah on their own authority, but actually obliged them to do this. According to most scholars, an expert who has fully mastered the sources and fulfilled a variety of necessary scholarly conditions is not permitted to follow the prevalent rulings of his School, but must derive the rulings himself from the revealed sources. Such an individual is known as a mujtahid, a term derived from the famous hadith of Muadh ibn Jabal.
Few would seriously deny that for a Muslim to venture beyond established expert opinion and have recourse directly to the Quran and Sunnah, he must be a scholar of great eminence. The danger of less-qualified individuals misunderstanding the sources and hence damaging the Shariah is a very real one, as was shown by the discord and strife which afflicted some early Muslims, and even some of the Companions themselves, in the period which preceded the establishment of the Orthodox Schools. Prior to Islam, entire religions had been subverted by inadequate scriptural scholarship, and it was vital that Islam should be secured from a comparable fate.
In order to protect the Shariah from the danger of innovation and distortion, the great scholars of usul laid down rigorous conditions which must be fulfilled by anyone wishing to claim the right of ijtihad for himself. These conditions include:
- mastery of the Arabic language, to minimise the possibility of misinterpreting Revelation on purely linguistic grounds;
- a profound knowledge of the Quran and Sunnah and the circumstances surrounding the revelation of each verse and hadith, together with a full knowledge of the Quranic and hadith commentaries, and a control of all the interpretative techniques discussed above;
- knowledge of the specialised disciplines of hadith, such as the assessment of narrators and of the matn [text];
- knowledge of the views of the Companions, Followers and the great imams, and of the positions and reasoning expounded in the textbooks of fiqh, combined with the knowledge of cases where a consensus (ijma) has been reached;
- knowledge of the science of juridical analogy (qiyas), its types and conditions;
- knowledge of ones own society and of public interest (maslahah);
- knowing the general objectives (maqasid) of the Shariah;
- a high degree of intelligence and personal piety, combined with the Islamic virtues of compassion, courtesy, and modesty.
A scholar who has fulfilled these conditions can be considered a mujtahid fil-shar, and is not obliged, or even permitted, to follow an existing authoritative madhhab. This is what some of the Imams were saying when they forbade their great disciples from imitating them uncritically. But for the much greater number of scholars whose expertise has not reached such dizzying heights, it may be possible to become a mujtahid fil-madhhab, that is, a scholar who remains broadly convinced of the doctrines of his school, but is qualified to differ from received opinion within it. There have been a number of examples of such men, for instance Imam al-Nawawi among the Shafi'is, Qadi Ibn Abd al-Barr among the Malikis, Ibn Abidin among the Hanafis, and Ibn Qudama among the Hanbalis. All of these scholars considered themselves followers of the fundamental interpretative principles of their own madhhabs, but are on record as having exercised their own gifts of scholarship and judgement in reaching many new verdicts within them. It is to these experts that the Mujtahid Imams directed their advice concerning ijtihad, such as Imam al-Shafi'i's instruction that if you find a hadith that contradicts my verdict, then follow the hadith. It is obvious that whatever some writers nowadays like to believe, such counsels were never intended for use by the Islamically-uneducated masses.
Other categories of mujtahids are listed by the usul scholars; but the distinctions between them are subtle and not relevant to our theme. The remaining categories can in practice be reduced to two: the muttabi (follower), who follows his madhhab while being aware of the Quranic and hadith texts and the reasoning, underlying its positions, and secondly the muqallid (emulator), who simply conforms to the madhhab because of his confidence in its scholars, and without necessarily knowing the detailed reasoning behind all its thousands of rulings.
Clearly it is recommended for the muqallid to learn as much as he or she is able
of the formal proofs of the madhhab. But it is equally clear that not every Muslim
can be a scholar. Scholarship takes a lot of time, and for the ummah to function
properly most people must have other employment: as accountants, soldiers, butchers,
and so forth. As such, they cannot reasonably be expected to become great ulama
as well, even if we suppose that all of them have the requisite intelligence.
The Holy Quran itself states that less well-informed believers should have recourse
to qualified experts: So ask the people of remembrance, if you do not know (16:43).
(According to the tafsir experts, the people of remembrance are the ulama.) And
in another verse, the Muslims are enjoined to create and maintain a group of
specialists who provide authoritative guidance for non-specialists: A band from
each community should stay behind to gain instruction in religion and to warn
the people when they return to them, so that they may take heed (9:122). Given
the depth of scholarship needed to understand the revealed texts accurately,
and the extreme warnings we have been given against distorting the Revelation,
it is obvious that ordinary Muslims are duty bound to follow expert opinion,
rather than rely on their own reasoning and limited knowledge. This obvious duty
was well-known to the early Muslims: the Caliph Umar (r.a.) followed certain
rulings of Abu Bakr (r.a.), saying I would be ashamed before God to differ from
the view of Abu Bakr. And Ibn Masud (r.a.), in turn, despite being a mujtahid
in the fullest sense, used in certain issues to follow Umar (r.a.). According
to al-Shabi: Six of the Companions of the Prophet (pbuh) used to give fatwas
to the people: Ibn Masud, Umar ibn al-Khattab, Ali, Zayd ibn Thabit, Ubayy ibn
Kab, and Abu Musa (al-Ashari). And out of these, three would abandon their own
judgements in favour of the judgements of three others: Abdallah (ibn Masud)
would abandon his own judgement for the judgement of Umar, Abu Musa would abandon
his own judgement for the judgement of Ali, and Zayd would abandon his own judgement
for the judgement of Ubayy ibn Kab.
This verdict, namely that one is well-advised to follow a great Imam as ones guide to the Sunnah, rather than relying on oneself, is particularly binding upon Muslims in countries such as Britain, among whom only a small percentage is even entitled to have a choice in this matter. This is for the simple reason that unless one knows Arabic, then even if one wishes to read all the hadith determining a particular issue, one cannot. For various reasons, including their great length, no more than ten of the basic hadith collections have been translated into English. There remain well over three hundred others, including such seminal works as the Musnad of Imam Ahmad ibn Hanbal, the Musannaf of Ibn Abi Shayba, the Sahih of Ibn Khuzayma, the Mustadrak of al-Hakim, and many other multi-volume collections, which contain large numbers of sound hadiths which cannot be found in Bukhari, Muslim, and the other works that have so far been translated. Even if we assume that the existing translations are entirely accurate, it is obvious that a policy of trying to derive the Shariah directly from the Book and the Sunnah cannot be attempted by those who have no access to the Arabic. To attempt to discern the Shariah merely on the basis of the hadiths which have been translated will be to ignore and amputate much of the Sunnah, hence leading to serious distortions.
Let me give just two examples of this. The Sunni Madhhabs, in their rules for
the conduct of legal cases, lay down the principle that the canonical punishments
(hudud) should not be applied in cases where there is the least ambiguity, and
that the qadi should actively strive to prove that such ambiguities exist. An
amateur reading in the Sound Six collections will find no confirmation of this.
But the madhhab ruling is based on a hadith narrated by a sound chain, and recorded
in theMusannaf of Ibn Abi Shayba, the Musnad of al-Harithi, and the Musnad of
Musaddad ibn Musarhad. The text is: "Ward off the hudud by means of ambiguities." Imam al-Sanani, in his book Al-Ansab, narrates the circumstances of this hadith: "A
man was found drunk, and was brought to Umar, who ordered the hadd of eighty
lashes to be applied. When this had been done, the man said: Umar, you have wronged
me! I am a slave! (Slaves receive only half the punishment.) Umar was grief-stricken
at this, and recited the Prophetic hadith, Ward off the hudud by means of ambiguities."
Another example pertains to the important practice, recognised by the madhhabs, of performing sunnah prayers as soon as possible after the end of the Maghrib obligatory prayer. The hadith runs: Make haste to perform the two rakas after the Maghrib, for they are raised up (to Heaven) alongside the obligatory prayer. The hadith is narrated by Imam Razin in his Jami.
Because of the traditional pious fear of distorting the Law of Islam, the overwhelming majority of the great scholars of the past - certainly well over ninety-nine percent of them - have adhered loyally to a madhhab. It is true that in the troubled fourteenth century a handful of dissenters appeared, such as Ibn Taymiyyah and Ibn al-Qayyim; but even these individuals never recommended that semi-educated Muslims should attempt ijtihad without expert help. And in any case, although these authors have recently been resurrected and made prominent, their influence on the orthodox scholarship of classical Islam was negligible, as is suggested by the small number of manuscripts of their works preserved in the great libraries of the Islamic world.
Nonetheless, social turbulences have in the past century thrown up a number of
writers who have advocated the abandonment of authoritative scholarship. The
most prominent figures in this campaign were Muhammad Abduh and his pupil Muhammad
Rashid Rida. Dazzled by the triumph of the West, and informed in subtle ways
by their own well-documented commitment to Freemasonry, these men urged Muslims
to throw off the shackles of taqlid, and to reject the authority of the Four
Schools. Today in some Arab capitals, especially where the indigenous tradition
of orthodox scholarship has been weakened, it is common to see young Arabs filling
their homes with every hadith collection they can lay their hands upon, and poring
over them in the apparent belief that they are less likely to misinterpret this
vast and complex literature than Imam al-Shafi'i, Imam Ahmad, and the other great
Imams. This irresponsible approach, although still not widespread, is predictably
opening the door to sharply divergent opinions, which have seriously damaged
the unity, credibility and effectiveness of the Islamic movement, and provoked
sharp arguments over issues settled by the great Imams over a thousand years
ago. It is common now to see young activists prowling the mosques, criticising
other worshippers for what they believe to be defects in their worship, even
when their victims are following the verdicts of some of the great Imams of Islam.
The unpleasant, Pharisaic atmosphere generated by this activity has the effect
of discouraging many less committed Muslims from attending the mosque at all.
No-one now recalls the view of the early ulama, which was that Muslims should
tolerate divergent interpretations of the Sunnah as long as these interpretations
have been held by reputable scholars. As Sufyan al-Thawri said: If you see a
man doing something over which there is a debate among the scholars, and which
you yourself believe to be forbidden, you should not forbid him from doing it.
The alternative to this policy is, of course, a disunity and rancour which will
poison and cripple the Muslim community from within.
In a Western-influenced global culture in which people are urged from early childhood to think for themselves and to challenge established authority, it can sometimes be difficult to muster enough humility to recognise ones own limitations. We are all a little like Pharaoh: our egos are by nature resistant to the idea that anyone else might be much more intelligent or learned than ourselves. The belief that ordinary Muslims, even if they know Arabic, are qualified to derive rulings of the Shariah for themselves, is an example of this egotism running wild. To young people proud of their own judgement, and unfamiliar with the complexity of the sources and the brilliance of authentic scholarship, this can be an effective trap, which ends by luring them away from the orthodox path of Islam and into an unintentional agenda of provoking deep divisions among the Muslims. The fact that all the great scholars of the religion, including the hadith experts, themselves belonged to madhhabs, and required their students to belong to madhhabs, seems to have been forgotten. Self-esteem has won a major victory here over common sense and Islamic responsibility.
The Holy Quran commands Muslims to use their minds and reflective capacities;
and the issue of following qualified scholarship is an area in which this faculty
must be very carefully deployed. The basic point should be appreciated that no
categoric difference exists between usul al-fiqh and any other specialised science
requiring lengthy training. Shaykh Said Ramadan al-Buti, who has articulated
the orthodox response to the anti-Madhhab trend in his book: Non-Madhhabism:
The Greatest Bida Threatening the Islamic Sharia, likes to compare the science
of deriving rulings to that of medicine. "If ones child is seriously ill", he asks, "does one look for oneself in the medical textbooks for the proper diagnosis and cure, or should one go to a trained medical practitioner?" Clearly,
sanity dictates the latter option. And so it is in matters of religion, which
are in reality even more important and potentially hazardous: we would be both
foolish and irresponsible to try to look through the sources ourselves, and become
our own muftis. Instead, we should recognise that those who have spent their
entire lives studying the Sunnah and the principles of law are far less likely
to be mistaken than we are.
Another metaphor might be added to this, this time borrowed from astronomy. We might compare the Quranic verses and the hadiths to the stars. With the naked eye, we are unable to see many of them clearly; so we need a telescope. If we are foolish, or proud, we may try to build one ourselves. If we are sensible and modest, however, we will be happy to use one built for us by Imam al-Shafi'i or Ibn Hanbal, and refined, polished and improved by generations of great astronomers. A madhhab is, after all, nothing more than a piece of precision equipment enabling us to see Islam with the maximum clarity possible. If we use our own devices, our amateurish attempts will inevitably distort our vision.
A third image might also be deployed. An ancient building, for instance the Blue Mosque in Istanbul, might seem imperfect to some who worship in it. Young enthusiasts, burning with a desire to make the building still more exquisite and well-made (and no doubt more in conformity with their own time-bound preferences), might gain access to the crypts and basements which lie under the structure, and, on the basis of their own understanding of the principles of architecture, try to adjust the foundations and pillars which support the great edifice above them. They will not, of course, bother to consult professional architects, except perhaps one or two whose rhetoric pleases them nor will they be guided by the books and memoirs of those who have maintained the structure over the centuries. Their zeal and pride leaves them with no time for that. Groping through the basements, they bring out their picks and drills, and set to work with their usual enthusiasm.
There is a real danger that Sunni Islam is being treated in a similar fashion. The edifice has stood for centuries, withstanding the most bitter blows of its enemies. Only from within can it be weakened. No doubt, Islam has its intelligent foes among whom this fact is well-known. The spectacle of the disunity and fitnas which divided the early Muslims despite their superior piety, and the solidity and cohesiveness of Sunnism after the final codification of the Shariah in the four Schools of the great Imams, must have put ideas into many a malevolent head. This is not to suggest in any way that those who attack the great madhhabs are the conscious tools of Islams enemies. But it may go some way to explaining why they will continue to be well-publicised and well-funded, while the orthodox alternative is starved of resources. With every Muslim now a proud mujtahid, and with taqlid dismissed as a sin rather than a humble and necessary virtue, the divergent views which caused such pain in our early history will surely break surface again. Instead of four madhhabs in harmony, we will have a billion madhhabs in bitter and self-righteous conflict. No more brilliant scheme for the destruction of Islam could ever have been devised.
© Abdal-Hakim Murad
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