Shaykh Murabtal Haaj
Shaykh Murabtal Haaj
Shaykh Murabtal Haaj
[Note: Hyperlinks within this document are links to footnotes at the bottom of the
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Amongst the most important replies that I have given, is my reply concerning the one
who has deviated to the point where he censures the importance of studying the branches
[furu'] of jurisprudence, and we seek refuge in Allah from the deviation of such a
wandering deviant. Would that he simply had claimed independent reasoning (ijtihad) for
himself only, and Allah is his reckoner, but abandoned the call of Muslims to leave that
which is incumbent upon them. In our reply to such a one, we make mention what the
scholars of the methodological bases of Islamic jurisprudence (usuli’un) and the Imams
of jurisprudence themselves have said about such a matter. As for my labelling him a
deviant, it is only because he has desired to impose upon common people the precious
rank of absolute independent reasoning [ijtihad], about which Muhammad an-Nabigha
said,
“[taqlid] is necessary for other than the one who has achieved the rank of absolute ijtihad.
Even if he is a limited [mujtahid] who is unable [to perform absolute ijtihad].”
“It means that taqlid is an obligation on anyone who is not an absolute mujtahid, even if
he has achieved the limited rank of ijtihad muqayyad . . . [until he says], ‘And ask the
people of the reminder, if you yourselves do not know.’”
By using the line of Muhammad an-Nabigha above, I am in no way claiming that all
ijtihad has been severed in every land; how [could I say such a thing] when [Sidi
Abdullah] says in Maraqi as-sa’ud:
“The earth will never be void of a mujtahid scholar until its very foundations shake.”
He also said,
“[Regarding] the necessity of binding to a specific madhhab, the [scholars] have
mentioned its obligation upon anyone falling short [of the conditions of ijtihad].”
“It means that it is incumbent for whoever falls short of achieving the rank of absolute
ijtihad to follow a particular madhhab.”
“The consensus today is on the four, and all have prohibited following [any] others.”
“This means that the consensus of the scholars today is on the four schools of thought,
and I mean by the schools of Malik, Abu Hanifa, Shafi’i and Ahmad. Indeed, all of the
scholars have prohibited following any other school of an independent and absolute
mujtahid since the eighth century when the school of Dawud adh-Dhahiri died out and
until the 12th Century and all subsequent ones.”
In the chapter concerning inferential reasoning, from Maraqi as-sa’ud, [Sidi Abdullah]
says,
“As for the one who is not a mujtahid, then basing his actions on primary textual
evidence [Qur’an and hadith] is not permissible.”
“It means that it is prohibited for other than a mujtahid to base his actions upon a direct
text from either the Book or the Sunna even if its transmission was sound because of the
sheer likelihood of there being other considerations such as abrogation, limitations,
specificity to certain situations, and other such matters that none but the mujtahid fully
comprehends with precision. Thus, nothing can save him from Allah the Exalted
excepted following a mujtahid. Imam al-Qarafi1 says,
‘And beware of doing what some students do when they reason directly from the hadith,
and yet they don’t know their soundness, let alone what has been mentioned [by the
Imams] concerning the subtleties involved in them; by doing this, they went astray and
led others astray. And whoever interprets a verse or hadith in a manner that deviates from
its intended meaning without proof [dalil] is a kafir.’”
As for the conditions of the absolute and independent ijtihad, they are mentioned in the
Maraqi as-sa’ud in the following line and what follows:
“And that [word ‘faqih’2] is synonymous with the [word] ‘mujtahid’ coupled with those
things which bear upon [him] the burden of responsibility,
Such as his being of extreme intelligence by nature, and there is some debate about one
who is known to reject juristic analogy [qiyas]
“This means that among the conditions of ijtihad is that [the mujtahid] knows that he
must adhere to the intellectual proof which is the foundational condition [al-bara’atu al-
asliyya3] until a transmitted proof from a sacred law indicates otherwise.”
[The sciences of] grammar, prosody, philology, combined with those of usul and rhetoric
he must master.
According to the people of precision, [he must know] where the judgements can be found
without the condition of having memorized the actual texts.
[All of the above must be known] according to a middle ranked mastery at least. He must
also know those matters upon which there is consensus.
[Moreover, he must know] things such as the condition of single hadiths and what carries
the authority of great numbers of transmissions; also [knowledge of] what is sound and
what is weak is necessary.
Furthermore, what has been abrogated and what abrogates, as well as the conditions
under which a verse was revealed or a hadith was transmitted is a condition that must be
met.
The states of the narrators and the companions [must also be known]. Therefore, you may
follow anyone who fulfils these conditions mentioned above according to the soundest
opinion.
So, consider all of the above-mentioned, and may Allah have mercy upon you, and [may
you] see for yourself whether your companion is characterized by such qualities and
fulfils these conditions—and I highly doubt it. More likely, he is just pointing people to
himself in his demands that the people of this age take their judgements directly from the
Book and Sunna. If, on the other hand, he does not possess the necessary conditions, then
further discussion is useless.
In Muhammad ‘Illish’s, Fath al-‘Ali al-Malik, there are many strong rebukes for those
who wish to force people to abandon the study of the judicial branches and take directly
from the Book and the Sunna. The actual text of the question put to him is as follows:
“What do you say about someone who was following one of the four Imams, may Allah
the Exalted be pleased with them, and then left claiming that he could derive his
judgements directly form the Qur’an and the soundly transmitted hadiths, thus leaving the
books of jurisprudence and inclining towards the view of Ahmad bin Idris? Moreover, he
says to the one who clings to the speech of the Imams and their followers, “I say to you
‘Allah and His Messenger say’, and you reply ‘Malik said’ and ‘Ibn al-Qasim said’ or
‘Khalil said.’”
“My answer to this all this is as follows: Praise be to Allah, and Prayer and Safety be
upon our Master Muhammad, the Messenger of Allah. It is not permissible for a common
person to abandon following the four Imams and take directly from the textual sources of
the Qur’an and the hadiths for the simple reason that this entails a great many conditions
that have been clarified in the books of usul. Moreover, these conditions are rarely met by
the great scholars, especially in these last days in which Islam has become a stranger just
as it began a stranger.”
What he means is that people, other than the scholars, might interpret a tradition based on
an apparent meaning, and yet [the hadith may] have another interpretation based on some
other hadith that clarifies the meaning or some proof that remains hidden [to the common
people]. After a long discussion, he remarks,
“That as for their saying, ‘How can you leave clear Qur’anic verses and sound hadiths
and follow the Imams in their ijtihads, which have a clear probability of error,’”
“Surely the following of our [rightly guided] Imams is not abandoning the Qur’anic
verses or the sound hadiths; it is the very essence of adhering to them and taking our
judgements from them. This is because the Qur’an has not come down to us except by
means of these very Imams [who are more worthy of following] by virtue of being more
knowledgeable than us in [the sciences of] the abrogating and abrogated, the absolute and
the conditional, the equivocal and the clarifying, the probabilistic and the plain, the
circumstances surrounding revelation and their various meanings, as well as their
possible interpretations and various linguistic and philological considerations, [not to
mention] the various other ancillary sciences [involved in understanding the Qur’an]
needed.
“Also, they took all of that from the students of the companions (tabi’in) who received
their instruction from the companions themselves, who received their instructions from
the Lawgiver himself, may Allah bless him and grant him peace, divinely protected from
every mistake, who bore witness that the first three generations of Muslims would be
ones of virtue and righteousness. Furthermore, the prophetic traditions have also reached
us through their means given that they were also more knowledgeable than us through
their means given that they were also more knowledgeable than those who came after
them concerning the rigorously authenticated (sahih), the well authenticated (hasan), and
the weak (da’if) channels of transmission, as well as the marfu’u4, mursal5, mutawatir6,
ahad7, mu’dal8 and gharib9 transmissions.
“Thus, as far as this little band of men is concerned, there is only one of two possibilities:
either they are attributing ignorance to Imams whose knowledge is considered by
consensus to have reached human perfection as witnessed in several traditions of the
truthful Lawgiver, upon him be prayers and peace, or they are actually attributing
misguidance and lack of din to Imams who are all from the best of generations by the
testimony of the magnificent Messenger himself, may Allah bless him and grant him
peace. Surely, it is not the eyes that are blind, but blind are the hearts in our breasts.
As for their saying to the one who imitates Malik, for example, “We say to you ‘Allah
says’ or ‘the Messenger of Allah, may Allah bless him and grant him peace, says’ and
you reply, ‘Malik says’, or ‘Ibn al-Qasim says’, or ‘Khalil says’, for example,” our
response is that the follower who says, “Malik says . . . etc.,” means that, “Malik says
based on his deep understanding of the Word of Allah, or of the words of the Messenger,
or of those firmly adhering to the actions of the companions, or of the tabi’in who
understood clearly the Word of Allah and the word of the Messenger of Allah or took
their example from the actions of His Messenger.” And the meaning of [a follower]
saying “Ibn al-Qasim said . . .” is that he has [faithfully] transmitted what Malik said
based on his understanding of the Word of Allah or of what Ibn al-Qasim himself
understood from the word of Allah the Most Exalted. And the meaning of him saying,
“Khalil said . . . .”, for example, is that he is transmitting only from those [Imams]
aforementioned. As for Malik and Ibn al-Qasim, they are both Imams whose spiritual and
judicial authority is agreed upon by unanimous consensus of this Umma; and they are
both from the best of generations.
As for the one who leaves their leadership and says, “Allah said and His Messenger said .
. . ,” he has relied solely on his own understanding despite the fact that he is incapable of
having any precision in the verses and hadiths that he quotes since he is unable even to
provide chains of transmission [with any authority], let alone that he lacks knowledge
concerning the abrogated, the absolute and the conditional, the ambiguous and the
clarifying, the apparent and the textual, the general and the specific, the dimensions of the
Arabic and the cause for revelation, the various linguistic considerations, and other
various ancillary sciences needed. So, consider for yourself which is preferable: the word
of a follower who simply quotes the understanding of Malik, an Imam by consensus—or
the word of this ignoramus who said “Allah said and His Messenger said . . . .” But it is
not the sight that goes blind, but rather the hearts in our breasts.
Furthermore, know that the origin of this deviation is from the Dhahiriyya10 who
appeared in Andalucia [Muslim Spain] and whose power waxed from a period until Allah
obliterated all traces of them until this little band of men set about to revive their beliefs.
Imam al-Barzuli said, “The first one ever to attack the Mudawwana11 was Sa’id bin al-
Haddad .”
If you consider carefully the above-mentioned texts, you will realize that the one who
censures you from following [the Imams] is truly a deviant. And I am using the word
“deviant” to describe them only because the scholars [before me] have labelled this little
band and their view (madhhab) as deviant. Moreover, you should know that those who
condemn your adherence to the Imams have been fully refuted by Muhammad al-Khadir
bin Mayyaba with the most piercing of refutations, and he himself called them, in his
book, “the people of deviation and heterodoxy.” He called his book, Refuting the people
of deviation of heterodoxy who attack the following [taqlid] of the Imams of independent
reasoning, and I used to have a copy but no longer do. So, my brother, I seriously warn
you from following the madhhab of these people and even from sitting in their company,
unless there is an absolute necessity, and certainly from listening to anything they have to
say, because the scholars have declared their ideas deviant. Ibn al-Hajj says in his book,
al-Madkhal,
“Umar ibn al-‘Aziz said, ‘Never give one whose heart is deviant access to your two ears,
for surely you never know what may find fixity in you.’”
I ask Allah to make you and me from those who listen to matters and follow the best of
them.
Footnotes