...life is a journey and the people we meet along the way enrich it in ways unimaginable.
Tuesday, 18 February 2014
Madhabs are characterised by differences of opinions?
Monday, 17 February 2014
Dangers of Qiyas without proper knowledge
This weekend, I had a discussion with a couple of friends regarding a Hadith about forbidding the filing of teeth, plucking of eyebrow and so forth.
There were some speculations as to whether it means whitening of the teeth and so on are also forbidden. I stopped the speculations because of a few concerns I have with such a discussion:
1. Do we have enough knowledge to know whether the Hadith is muttawatur or ahad; and also sahih or hasan or daif?
2. Do we know the background of the Hadith - in what context it was said and the cause of it? What is the underlying meaning?
3. Were there other hadiths or verses of the Qur'an supporting or contradicting this one? If contradicting, how do we reconcile them?
3. When those are clarified, we then need to understand what is the 'basis' for making the qiyas (extrapolation) to other things such as whitening of the teeth etc? What is the operative cause/reason for the qiyas?
4. Could there be extenuating circumstances that may lead to different conclusion?
5. What is the impact of making the qiyas? How wide ranging is it in terms of individual and community level?
As I learn more about Islamic jurisprudence, the more cautious I become in these kinds of discussions. Personally, I think we were not equipped to address the above points.
For example, take the third point...what is the underlying reason for forbidding the filing of the teeth? Is it because it is not healthy or because it is tempering with what God gave you or it is to beautify oneself or it is misrepresenting oneself to others? And then we ask how do we know that the underlying reason can be applied to the other activities?
The danger is then that we apply the wrong reasoning and therefore the wrong qiyas. In that case, we are misrepresenting what the Prophet s.a.w. intended. And given that we didn't apply due diligence, we couldn't even say that we exercised our ijtihad. Thus we fall into the danger of assuming a role of authority without being duly qualified for it. And in so doing, interpose our will over the Divine Will.
This little incident is just one example of how I realise, in my arrogant youth, I would have jumped to conclusions that could have had me assuming an authoritarian role in interpreting the Hadith and applying it willy nilly to what I saw fit. Inshallah, I have learnt my lesson that my knowledge is too limited for such a task but that I should learn more towards equipping myself with the knowledge.
Wallahu 'alam.
Tuesday, 17 December 2013
Seerah of the Prophet s.a.w. - What a da'i can learn from him.
The last few days I have been battling an essay for my Seerah course. While not the best work I have done, I thought I'd share it here as it falls nicely with the series on Seerah that I have been doing on and off. I hope it will benefit someone.
Wassalam,
Sid
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Sunday, 3 November 2013
When the Devil Speaks by Khaled Abou El Fadl
This entry is a copy of part of a chapter in the book 'The Search for Beauty in Islam' by Professor Khaled Abou El Fadl. The chapter, Chapter 56 (pp190-192), is entitled 'When the Devil Speaks'.
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When the Devil Speaks
(Khaled Abou El Fadl, The Search for Beauty in Islam, 2006)
God praises the nation that speaks without fear. The only chosen people are those who command the good and condemn the evil (3:110). Such is the true covenant of God, that the chosen are a people of principle, not the by-product of lineage or the inheritors of some past glory. The covenant is a covenant of words - discharged through words. To paraphrase the Prophet, whoever is silent before an injustice becomes as if a demon. The beauty of God is pure goodness, and the abyss of ugliness is fear, for what other than fear can silence the soul and give the word to Satan? God commands that we speak the truth even against those we hold most dear. Lineage, blood, or love is not supreme - supremacy is to the word that must be spoken truthfully.
Our Exalted and Merciful God has set the unwavering word for all those who believe. The Lord has commanded that we stand firmly for justice as witnesses for God. If others will testify on behalf of blood or tribe, the chosen will testify only on behalf of God. "Bear witness for God, even as against yourselves, or your parents or your kin, and whether it be against rich or poor for [whomever it may be] God has a greater entitlement over you. Follow not the whims of your hearts, lest you swerve. If you distort justice or fail to testify, beware that God knows all that you do." (4:135)
How can we testify if the walls of dungeons are all we can see? How can we testify if we are not free? How can the believers testify if they live in fear? Are they supposed to sacrifice themselves on the alters of freedom when the altars are now in the control of demons? What truly breaks the heart and chokes the throat is that today, the demons are humans who call themselves Muslim believers. Yet, it does not matter what they call themselves, a name never discharged a covenant or commended anyone to the Lord. What matters is the truth of the word, and that when the pious fall silent only the devil speaks.
I sit in the Conference, testifying to the truth of the word. In my hand is Risalat Iblis ila Ikhwanihi al-Manahis (Satan's Epistle to His Miserable Brothers) by al-Hakim al-Jishumiyya al-Bayhaqi (d. 494/1100-1)/ The author was a Hanafi Mu'tazili jurist most of his life, and then the burdens of testimony called upon him to become a Zaydi. He was killed and silenced in Mecca because of his book, and now he joined the Conference, and now he speaks freely. His book, Satan's Epistle, was buried among the millions of manuscripts suppressed by the persecutors of the word until my mentor and teacher Hossein Modarresi published and liberated the work. Al-Bayhaqi asked in his book, if Satan on the Final Day would speak, what and whom would he praise? Satan ends up praising and thanking every Muslim who adopted a creed that attributed to God things that are irrational, unjust, or ugly. All those who make Islam the religion of the ugly and stupid lead themselves and others astray, and Satan feels nothing but gratitude and elation for this miserable company.
I start to wonder if Satan would speak about us today, what would he say? Which of our numerous vanities would he choose to praise? I think Satan would have to express his profuse gratitude for our emotions, whims and fears that induce us to submit to ourselves rather than to our Lord. Satan would be jubilant that our Lord told us to "read," and instead, we excelled in the hysteria of activism and irrationality. In the eyes of the devil, is there a better nation than that which celebrates stupidity, and declares the use of reason to be sophistry and heresy? Is there a better gift to depravity than a nation that treats knowledge as if it is an ornament or decoration, and not the gateway to the truth of our being? Isn't Satan ecstatic when he finds a nation that refuses to learn from its past and constantly tries to reinvent wisdom's wheel? Is there a greater evil than a people who testify against a knowledge they don't know, and excel at testifying on the basis of hearsay? Isn't speaking and testifying without knowledge an act of lying and an act of deceit and perjury? What would the devil say about a people who stuff their pulpits with despots and nominate the most ignorant to lead? How would the devil praise a people who treat their religion as an extra-curricular activity and a "feel-good" hobby? Isn't the devil simply elated with our esteemed sages, puerile kids who think Islam is a fashion show, and whose egos are their reference points? They have no need for books or knowledge - they simply act the role of the wise and pious as soon as they grow the sprucely beard and find the dapper wardrobe?
Tuesday, 29 October 2013
My Hajj Diary - Day 11 (end of entry)
Waiting for Fajr. Alhamdulillah, Alhamdulillah, Alhamdulillah! We have finally completed our hajj with a very smooth and beatuiful tawaf wada'. Woken up at quarter past 12 am in the darkness by Maha. Rini wanted to go to the Haram as soon as possible. There were already others waiting there when we came down.
Alhamdulillah, we got a taxi almost immediately. Got there and did the tawaf on the first floor. Even though it was larger but we did it peacefully and tranquilly and for the first time this hajj, I actually enjoyed the tawaf. The view of the Kaabah was still impeded but without pushing and shoving, we could really concentrate. We then waited at Marwa for Rini while she finished her Sa'i. Again, that went smoothly and we didn't lose each other. We easily got a taxi back, alhamdulillah, thanks to Maha's Arabic. So all in all, we had a smooth farewell tawaf without adventure. A good note to end on, alhamdulillah.
Having finished all the rights of Hajj, I am just waiting till tonight to start on the leg back to London. There is a sense of sadness and joy that my hajj journey is finally over.
The anticipation of the hajj experience building in the months before were nothing like the rush of the actual experience itself. I will need to analyse deeper its impact on me but have I learnt anything about myself in this journey that I didn't know before?
Also I realise I have never been more grateful for my ability to read a map and visualise it in reality in order to navigate. Alhamdulillah, now I realise what a gift it is. Alhamdulillah, this gift has been useful in navigating my way back to Mina twice and in and around the Haram as well as in Madinah. Ya Allah, let me always be grateful for this gift and let me use it wisely.
A weakness that was an asset for hajj is my inability to do small talks. This allows me to block most of the chatters and concentrate on what matters. The few discussions were on interesting matters or important matters. What it didn't help for me is the making of friends. But since I am not here on this journey to make friends, that is fine. Still, alhamdulillah, to get to know a few of the sisters is a blessing. Insha Allah, will try to stay in touch with them.