Azyumardi Azra
Azyumardi Azra
Azyumardi Azra
1\ 1\
HADHRAMI SCHOLARS IN THE MALAY-INDONESIAN DIASPQRA:
A Preliminary Study of Sayyid 'Uthman
Azyumardl Azra
EDITORIAl. BOARD:
Harun Nasution
Mastubu
M. Quraisb Shibab
A Aziz Dablan
M. Satria Effendi
Nabilah Lubis
M. Yunan Yusuf
Komaruddin Hidayat
M. Din Syamsuddin
Muslim Nasution
Wabib Mu'tbi
EDITOR IN CHieF:
Azyumardi Azra
EDITORS:
Saiful Muzani
Hendro Prasetyo
]oban H. Meuleman
NurulFajri
BadriYatim
ASSISTA.."'TS TO THE EDITOR:
ArifSubban
Mucblis Ainurrafik
fuiGUSIII..ANGL'AGE ADVISOR:
judith M. Dent
AR.o.BIC lANGUAGE AD\1SOR:
M. Fuad Facbruddin
COVER DESIGNER:
S. Prinka
STUDIA ISIAMIKA (ISSN 0215-0492) is a journal published quarterly by the Institut Agama Islam
Negeri (1\.IN, The State Institute for Islamic Studies) Syarif Hidayatullah,Jakarta, (SIT DEPPEN No.
129/SK/Dll]ENtPPG/SIT/1976) and sponsored by the Department of Religious Affairs of the Republic
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All articles published do not necessarily represent the \'ie'I\'S of the journal, or other institutions to
which it is affiliated. They are solely the \icws of the authors.
Azyumardi Azra
Hadhrami Scholars
in the Malay-Indonesian Diaspora:
A Preliminary Study of Sayyid 'Uthman
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sion of the role of the Arabs in the spread of Islam to this part of the
world, there is no clear reference to the involvement of Hadhram1
scholars either in the conversion of the local population to Islam nor
in the development of Islamic learning in the area.
Despite this, however, it is interesting to note that a Hadhrarru
scholar named Sayyid Zayn bin 'Abd Allah Alkaf, as cited by
Muhammad al-Baqir (1986: 45), maintained that Hadhrami 'ulama',
or more precisely preachers, played a crucial role in the spread of
Islam in the archipelago. Alkaf asserted that most of the prominent
early preachers oflslam in Java, collectively known as the "Wali Sanga"
("Nine Saints") were in fact Hadhrarnis. They included Mawlana Malik
Ibrahim, Sunan Ampel, Sunan Bonang, Sunan Drajat, Sunan Giri,
Sunan Kudus and Sunan Gunung Jati. Hamka, the late head of the
Council of Indonesian 'Ulama's, who had a special interest in Islamic
history, without mentioning the genealogical origins of some of the
W ali Sanga, also maintained that some descendants of Ahmad bin 'Is a
al-Muhajir and Muhammad bin 'Ali al-Faqih al-Muqaddam were
'ulama' who played an important role in the preaching of Islam in the
Malay-Indonesian world (Hamka, 1983: 406-7).
Considering the opposition of many Hadhram1 scholars to Sufism,
as we will elaborate upon further in due course, it is worth mention-
ing in passing that al-Faqlh al-Muqaddam was the first sayyid to turn
to Sufism in the early 7th/13th century. To him is ascribed an injunc-
tion to the sayyids to abandon arms for the pursuit of religious and
moral aims, and from him the 'Alaw1 tarlqah of which he is the qutb
(spiritual pole) has continued to the present day (Serjeant, 1956: 19):
Some of the Wali Sanga are known for their religious tendencies
to Sufism; they even mixed it with local beliefs and practices. And,
we are of course aware of the Arab origins of some of the Wali Sanga;
but there is no hint whatsoever from other sources that they origi-
nated from the Hadhramawt. Local historiographies such as Hikayat
Raja·raja Pasai and Sejarah Melayu for instance, tell us about the Ar-
abs who came to the archipelago to convert local rulers and their
population to Islam; but they are said to have come from either Jeddah,
Mecca or Baghdad, not from Hadhramawt (Azra, 1992: 35-8).
Thus, it is likely that Hadhram1 scholars were not yet on the scene
during this early history of Islam in the archipelago; or at least we do
not have reliable accounts of their presence. In the seventeenth cen-
tury, however, Hadhram1 scholars began to appear in the picture.
fasting, hajj pilgrimage, etc. This book appears to have had some popu-
larity in the archipelago; it was among the books used in the pesantrens
(Islamic traditional boarding schools) in Java and Madura in the nine-
teenth century (Van den Berg, 1886b).
According to Sayyid 'Uthman -about whom we will say more in
a more detailed fashion in due course- when Ibn Sumayr was in
Singapore he observed that many local Muslims were induced to en-
ter the Naqshbandiyyah tanqah by Shaykh Isma'!l, a Minangkabau
sufi master who came from Mecca. Ibn Sumayr asserted that Isma'll
al-Minangkabawi was wrong for having taught Islamic mystical teach-
ings to common Muslims who had allegedly not fulfilled certain re-
quirements to enter the tariqah. In order to counter al-Minangkabawi's
activities, in 1269 Ibn Sumayr wrote a special work which was later
expanded by Sayyid 'Uthman himself. We cannot find this Ibn Sumayr
work but according to Sayyid 'Uthman, in it Ibn Sumayr delineates
not only some proper ways to enter the tariqahs, but also some dis-
tinctions between true and false tariqahs (Sayyid 'Uthman, n.d. [a]: 2-
3; 1891: 9). As far as Ibn Sumayr's attitude to Sufism is concerned, he
was apparently not content with only writing that book. He even
carried out a kind of "heresy hunt'' against those who spread and
preached tariqahs to common Muslims (Van den Berg, 1886: 164;
Snouck Hurgronje, 1886: 82). This reminds one of similar "heresy
hunts" against the Wujudiyyah followers in Aceh during the time of
al-Raniri's sojourn in the seventeenth century.
travel to Mecca ~o meet his father and to "complete his Islam", that is,
to make the hajj pilgrimage, the fifth or the last pillar of Islam. After
the pilgrimage, however, he prolonged his stay in Mecca to study,
mostly with his father and Sayyid Ahmad Dahla.n, a well-known
Shafi'1teMujitand historian of Mecca ('Al~bi.n Sayyid 'Uthman, 1343/
1924: 3-4; Plano Sayyid 'Uthman; Steenbrink, 1984: 135; cf. Snouck
Hurgronje, 1887).
After having studied in Mecca for 7 years, Sayyid 'Uthman re-
turned to his land of origin, Hadhramawt, where he studied with
several leading 'ulama' such as Habib 'Abd Allah bin Husayn bin
Tahir, Habib 'AbdAllah bin 'Umar bin Yahya, Habib Hasan bin
Salih al-Bahr, Habib 'Ah1w1 bin Saqqaf al-Jufr1 and others. It is said
that he spent most of his time studying. At the request of one of his
teachers he married a sharifah. But when some of his teachers died, he
felt uneasy about staying longer in the Hadhramawt. Thus, he re-
turned to Mecca and later also went to Medina {' AH bin Sayyid
'Uthman, 1343/1924: 3-4; Plano Sayyid 'Uthman).
Like many 'ulama' in the history of Islamic learning, Sayyid
'Uthman travelled a great deal. From Medina he went to Dimyat, .
Egypt, the homeland of his mother, looking for his family there. He
stayed in Egypt for eight months, studying with unnamed teachers
and getting married. Then he travelled to Tunis, Morocco and Alge-
ria where he stayed for 5 and 7 months respectively. In this area he
visited such towns as Marrakesh and Fez, where he studied both excr
teric (zahir) and esoteric (batin) sciences. He also established contacts
and relationship with some leading 'ulama' of the region, including
the Muftt of Tunis. Then he sailed to Istanbul where he stayed for 3
months. In Istanbul he was said to have met the Muftt and Shaykh al·
Islam, and submitted a letter from the Pasha of Medina to the latter.
Later he travelled to Palestine, Syria and Hadhramawt. Finally he
returned to Batavia via Singapore in 1279/1862 and spent the rest his
career and life there. He died at an advanced age in 1331/1931 ('Ali
bin Sayyid 'Uthman 1343/1924: 6-9; Plano Sayyid 'Uthman).
The biographical accounts of Sayyid 'Uthman claim that the main
purpose of these travels and sojourns was to pursue Islamic knowl-
edge. However, there is no information about his teachers in Egypt,
Tunis, Algeria, Morocco, Istanbul and Syria. Therefore, most likely
what he did at that time was to exchange informacion on various
religious matters and make contacts with some high ranking 'ulama'
particular dealing with the shan'ah or fzqh. The fact that he owned a
lithographic printer made it possible for him to publish various works
whenever he wished to.
As a writer, according to a list of his works written by himself, he
composed around 100 works, mostly in Malay and only a few in Ara-
bic. Most of Sayyid 'Uthman's works are short treatises dealing with
matters regardingfiqh -both 'ibddah (rituals) and mu amalah (religio-
social matters like marriage and inheritance), kalam (theology), tawh£d
(knowledge on the Unity of God), akhlaq (ethics), Sufism, "histories"
of some the prophets, tafstr (commentaries) on certain chapters of the
Qur'an, hadiths, du'J' (supplication) and Arabic (Sayyid 'Uthman,
n.d. [b]: 1-16; Van den Berg, 1886: 165-7; Brill Catalogue, 1980: 1-6).
Van den Berg (1886: 164) claims that Sayyid 'Uthman was regarded
as a respected authority on the sharz'ah and kalam ("theology") not
only by the Hadhram1s but also by some Indonesian Muslims. It is
difficult, however, to gauge the influence of Sayyid 'Uthman among
Indonesian Muslims, or even among Hadhram1s. Al-Baqir, in his long
essay on the 'Alawiyy1n and their role in the history of Islam in Indo-
nesia, has nothing to say about Sayyid 'Uthman. One might wonder
why he makes no mention at all of Sayyid 'Uthman as it is unlikely
that he was unaware of Sayyid 'Uthman's scholarship and learning.
Therefore, he was perhaps inflicted by some kind of bad feeling which,
as Snouck Hurgronje says, was prevalent even among the Hadhram1s,
towards Sayyid 'Uthman because of his collaboration with the Dutch
East Indies government (Snouck Hurgronje, 1994: 1631-2).
Sayyid 'Uthman was officially appointed by the Dutch as an
adviseur honorair voor A rabische zaken" on 20 June, 188 9. His appoint-
ment to this post was undoubtedly recommended by Snouck
Hurgronje who appeared to have known him well before this Dutch
scholar came to Indonesia. Snouck Hurgronje, who came initially as
a researcher, reponed to the Dutch authorities in Batavia after only
40 days in Indonesia that Sayyid 'Uthman was willing to help him in
his research. It is interesting to note that as an honorary adviser, Sayyid
'Uthman was not on the official payroll. Instead he was paid fl. 100 a
month through Snouck Hurgronje for his services in providing infor-
mation to the Dutch scholar on Islamic developments in the area. In
addition to that monthly allowance, Sayyid 'Uthman reportedly re-
ceived much larger amounts of money as contributions to cover some
of his expenses in producing publications considered favorable to the
was how to perform correctly all the obligatory rituals of Islam, and
to conduct marriage and the division of inheritance according to the
sharfah. If Muslims fully follow the teachings and examples of these
great 'ulama'then they would live happy lives (Sayyid 'Uthman, 1890:
25).
Sayyid 'Uthman was wrong on these points. He does seem to have
read many works of earlier Malay-Indonesian 'ulama', for he refers to
some of them in his own works. It is odd, therefore, that he should
assert that none of them wrote about jihad. 'Abd al-Samad al-
Palimban1, for instance, is widely known to have appealed to the
Mataram sultan in Java to lead a jihad against the Dutch who increas-
ingly threatened Muslims in this region. He even wrote a special work
on the virtue of jihad (Fada'i/ al-jihad). Daud bin 'AbdAllah al-Patanl,
another leading Malay scholar in the early nineteenth century is also
known to have paid special attention to the issue of jihad in his many
fiqh books (Azra, 1992: 551-9).
So why was Sayyid 'Uthmk so bitter towards Muslims whoop-
posed the rule of the unbelievers -in this case, the Dutch- by launch-
ing jihad? Snouck Hurgronje suggests that the reason is that like many
other Hadhrarn1 sayyids, Sayyid 'Uthman committed himself only to
the strict rules of the shart'ah (Snouck Hurgronje, 1886: 78). But it is
also clear that Sayyid 'Uthman understood and propagated the shari'ah
in a very narrow sense. In his view, sharfah was concerned only with
rituals; like his close friend, Snouck Hurgronje, he denied any politi-
cal impulse to the shar£'ah.
But does this mean that Sayyid 'Uthman was a non-political per-
son? His personal stand on the issue of unbeliever rulers and of jihad
makes it clear that he was not a non-political person at all. In other
words, he was not indifferent as far as political issues are concerned.
This is also obvious in his response to the phenomenal rise of the
Sarekat Islam (SI -Islamic Association), the first Islamic proto-
nasionalist movement in Indonesia, which was founded in 1911. For
some, Sayyid 'Uthman's response to the SI might be surprising. Sayyid
'Uthman was or could be a close ally of the Dutch, but he made no
secret that he was also an ardent defender of the SI, which was, from
its establishment, a challenge or even a real menace to the colonial
political economic status quo. But one may still wonder, whydidSayyid
'Uthman defend the SI so passionately? Does it have something to do
with the fact that among the original supporters of the SI there were
century who, in his book Tuhfat al-Raghibm, states that the people of
bid'ah (ahl al-bidah) are the most wicked creation on earth (ibid: 12).
Before we go much further on Sayyid 'Uthman's condemnation
of Muslims who practised bid'ahs, it is important to delineate his
detailed exposition of various kinds of bid'ahs. Unlike the widely held
distinction among Muslims that bid'ahs are of two kinds, that is, bid'ah
hasanah (good or lawful innovation), and bid'ah daldlah (wicked or
unlawful innovation), Sayyid 'Uthman divides bid'ahs into five kinds.
The first are the forbidden bid'ahs (bid'ahyang haram) which will
lead those Muslims who practise them to unbelief (kufr) and heresy
(murtad). The bid'ah haram include every innovation or addition to
Islamic rituals that contradicts the Qur•an, Hadhh, ljma' (consensus)
and athar (practices) of the companions and successors of the Prophet
Muhammad (Ibid: 14).
The second are the reprehensible bid'ahs (bidah yang makrU.h),
that is, all practices that are makrnh according to the shartah. Citing
the Path al·Mubin of Ibn Hajar, Sayyid 'Uthman notes that among
bid'ahs of this kind are decorating mosques or the Qur'an with artis-
tic flowery motifs and the like. He goes on to quote the Nur al·
Zutlam of Shaykh Nur1 al-Bantani (?) which states that among the
bidah makruh is to regard a particular day as religiously better than
other days of the week (Ibid: 15).
The third are the permissible bid'ahs (bid'ah yang mubah). The
bid'ah of this type include having delicious meals or drinks, or widen-
ing the sleeves of one's shirt. All these practices, according to Sayyid
'Uthman, did not exist during the Prophet's lifetime; and it is permis-
sible for Muslims to enjoy delicious meals or drinks, or to widen the
sleeves of their shirts (Ibid: 15-6).
The fourth are the recommended bid'ahs (bid'ah yang sunnah)
which, in Sayyid 'Uthman's view, are the same as the bidah hasanah.
Among bid'ahs of this kind are establishing waqfhouses for sufis and
seekers of knowledge; and other good deeds that were not practised
during the time of the Prophet (Ibid: 16).
The last type, which are very interesting, are the obligatory bid'ah
(bid'ah yang wajib). Sayyid 'Uthman argues that bid'ah of this type are
among the ford al·kifayah (collective obligations) of Islamic devotion
and rituals. The bid'ah wajib includes deeds like studying the 'ilm al·
'a/at, such as Arabic grammar, for the purpose of understanding the
Qur'an; and opposing Ahl al-Bid'ahs such as the Qadarites, Jabarites,
Bahraq. Again, one might be curious why Sayyid 'Uthman does not
include Ibn 'Arab1's works, whereas he considers the Shaykh al-Akbar
as originator of one of the most valid tar£qahs.
Snouck Hurgronje tells us that al- Wathfqat al- Wafiyyah was writ-
ten by Sayyid 'Uthman as a response to contra-arguments put for-
wards by the proponents of the tar£qahs in the archipelago. Accord-
ing to Snouck Hurgronje, they argued that by criticizing tariqahs and
their shaykhs, Sayyid 'Uthman had been disrespectful to many hon-
orable and respected sufl shaykhs. They also accused him of being jeal-
ous of Malay-Indonesian sufl shaykhs who exerted enormous influ-
ence among the Muslim masses. Moreover, he was said to have at-
tacked sufi shaykhs and their tariqahs in order to gain a "good name"
with the Dutch authorities. In short, they asserted that what Sayyid
'Uthman did was simply carry out a smear campaign against the sufi
shaykhs, their tartqahs and their followers (Snouck Hurgonje, 1886:
82-2).
Thu:., in al- Wath£qat al- Wafryyah, Sayyid 'Uthman offers a long
apology to what he regards as the true and correct sufi shaykhs, their
tar£qahs and works, as mentioned above. He defends himself by say-
ing that when he criticizes some sufi shaykhs and their tarfqahs he is
not motivated by "poor opinion" (su' al-zann), but by sharf'ah injunc-
tions to prevent evil. Furthermore, one should not have a "good opin-
ion" (husn al-zann) when one clearly sees that other Muslims have
transgressed shar£'ah (Sayyid 'Uthman, 1303: 11).
He argues that someone who prevents Muslims from following
the lawful tartqahs will be regarded as having deserted Islam and, there--
fore, will be doomed to hell. But the shar1'ah has ruled that it is obliga-
tory for the <u[ama' to prevent Muslims from following pseudo-sufi
shaykhs and their unlawful tarfqahs. They cannot remain silent when
Muslims are being led astray (Ibid: 7, 15). Sayyid 'Uthman is resentful
that many pseudo-sufis and those who entered tarfqahs without meet-
ing the necessary requirements refuse to listen to good advice. On the
contrary, they attack and curse one who reveals their falseness (Ibid:
11).
According to Sayyid 'Uthman several mistakes are made by sufi
shaykhs and their followers. The first is the claim of certain sufishaykhs
that they are able to transfer the secrets of dhikr (remembrance of
God) to their followers (Ibid: 8). A second mistake is the assertion
that they have met the Prophet Muhammad either in their dreams
while sleeping or in their jaga -when awake (Ibid: 9). A third mis-
take is the assertion that they have become acquainted with God and
therefore know His secrets, because they have reached the status of
awliya' (friends of God) (Ibid: 10). A fourth mistake is the presence of
ajnabiyyah women in the night in order to practice tarfqah. A fifth
mistake is the claim that one can become invulnerable (saktt) and
keramat (having the ability to perform miracles) by entering a tarfqah
or following certain sufi shaykhs (Ibid: 13; cf. 1891: 13-5).
Finally, on the last page of the Malay edition of al· Wathfqat al·
Wafiyyah he draws a ten-point distinction between true and correct
tarfqahs, and false and unlawful ones. Quite untypically he refrains
from criticizing any one particular tarfqah. But he cannot leave the
Naqshbandiyyah tariqah without comment.
His strongest attack on theN aqshbandiyyah, and on other tarfqahs
or sufi shaykhs he regards as having gone astray, is put forward in the
Buku Kecil. He alleges that many sufi shaykhs are nowadays more con-
cerned with wealth and social status than with genuine piety. They
do not really commit themselves to Islam but to worldly status and
enjoyment. They are "false" sufi shaykhs who exploit their followers
for their own interests, claiming to be or regarded by certain people
as able to do «Jeeramat" things. Because of their ignorance many Mus-
lims believe and pay respect to such false teachers (Sayyid 'Uthman,
1891: 6-8).
Sayyid 'Uthman recognizes that some sufi shaykhs in the past did
possess «keramat", for they were indeed awl£ya' Allah (friends of God).
Therefore, it is anathema to say something bad about them. But now,
he maintains, such awliya' Allah cease to exist. For that reason, those
who claim to have or are regarded as having the status of keramat,
and even of being able to do something against sunnat Allah (God's
natural law), must be false awliya! and they will be condemned to
hell. Sayyid 'Uthman urges his fellow Muslims not to readily believe
that those who claim to be able to perform extraordinary and miracu-
lous acts are awl£ya' Allah. These ahl al-bidahs, who are actually jasiq
(sinful), may indeed have a similar ability called istidraj, resulting from
then following shaytan and practising sihir (magic, witchcraft) (Sayyid
'Uthman, 1890: 21; n.d. (c): 5-11).
Again, connected to this, he cites the case of Shaykh 'Isma'll al-
Minangkabaw1, mentioned earlier, and that of Sulayman al-Affand1, a
Naqshband1 shaykh in Mecca, who had many disciples among both
This book al·Nasihat al· 'Anlqah holds a high position, [and] is correct in
all of its meaning; why not? Because it gathers the opinions of many great
scholars. As for those who join the tariqahs, if their sayings and deeds are in
accordance (muwafaqat) with the sbart'ab o£ the Prophet as [shown by] the
true tarfqah shaykhs, then they are acceptable. And if not, then they will be
like many disciples of shaykh Isma'il al-Minangkabawl.
... they criticize those who do not join the tarfqahs. They even prevent
[other] people from joining in their [collective) prayers...they hate them.
Shaykh Isma'll takes that tarfqab [Naqshband.iyyah] simply to collect wealth
to pay back all his debts. So in this respect he sells religion for worldly [pur-
poses] (Quoted in Steenbrink, 1; 184-5).
Conclusion
Sayyid 'Uthman is one of the most controversial figures in the
history oflslam in the archipelago. Apart from his accommodationist
political position vis-a-vis the Dutch, his contribution to Islamic dis-
course in the region cannot be ignored. In this respect it is reasonable
enough that Steenbrink should argue that Sayyid 'Uthman was among
the leading exponents of Islamic reformism (tokoh gerakan
pembaharuan) in Indonesia in the late nineteenth century. His "re-
formism" lies of course in his ceaseless attack on what he regards as
bidah and un-sharfah tarfqahs.
This preliminary paper has dealt with only some aspects of Sayyid
'Uthman's thought. There is still much to be done in order for us to
gain a better picture of Sayyid 'Uthman.
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