WAHHABISM
AND ITS REFUTATION BY THE AHL AS-SUNNAT
Although they say they
are Muslims, Wahhabis, also called Najdis, are one of the groups who
have departed from the Ahl as-Sunnat.
Ahmad Jawdat
Pasha, a statesman, and Ayyub Sabri Pasha [d. 1308 (1890 A.D.)],
Rear-Admiral during the time of the thirty-fourth Ottoman sultan 'Abd
al-Hamid Khan II [1258-1336 (1842-1918), buried in the shrine of Sultan
Mahmud in Istanbul] (rahmat-Allahi ta'ala 'alaihim), each wrote a
history book, in which they explained Wahhabism in full detail.[34] The
following is derived, for the most part, from the latter's book, who
translated this information from Ahmad Zaini Dahlan's book "Fitnat
al-Wahhabiyya." He passed away in 1308 (1890 A.D.).
Wahhabism was
established by Muhammad ibn 'Abd al-Wahhab. He was born in Huraimila in
Najd in 1111 (1699 A.D.) and died in 1206 (1791 A.D.). Formerly, he had
been to Basra, Baghdad, Iran, India and Damascus with a view to
traveling and trade. He was in Basra when, in 1125 [1713 A.D.], he
succumbed to a snare set by Hempher, who was only one of the numerous
British spies, and served as a tool in the British plans to (destroy
Islam). He published the absurdities prepared by the spy in the name of
Wahhabism. Our book Confessions of A British Spy gives detailed
information on the establishment of Wahhabism. There he found and read
books written by Ahmad Ibn Taymiyya of Harran [661-728 (1263-1328), d.
in Damascus], the contents of which were incompatible with the Ahl as-Sunnat.
Being a very cunning person, he became known as ash-Shaikh an-Najdi. His
book Kitab at-tawhid[35] ,which he prepared in cooperation with the
British spy, was annotated by his grandson, 'Abd ar-Rahman, and was
interpolated and published in Egypt with the title Fat'h al-majid by a
Wahhabi called Muhammad Hamid. Muhammad ibn 'Abd al-Wahhab's ideas
spread among villagers, the inhabitants of Dar'iyya and their chief,
Muhammad ibn Su'ud. Those who accepted his ideas, which he termed
Wahhabiyya, are called Wahhabis or Najdis. They increased in number, and
he imposed himself as the Qadi and Muhammad ibn Su'ud as the amir
(ruler). He declared it as a law that only their own descendants should
succeed them.
Muhammad's
father, 'Abd al-Wahhab, who was a pious Muslim and a scholar of Medina,
apprehended from Ibn 'Abd al-Wahhab's words that he would start a
perverted movement and advised everybody not to talk with him. But he
proclaimed Wahhabism in 1150 (1737 A.D.). He spoke ill of the ijtihads
of the 'ulama' of Islam. He went so far as to call the Ahl as-Sunnat
"disbelievers." He said that he who visited the shrine of a
prophet or of a wali and addressed him as "Ya Nabi-Allah!" (O
Allah's Prophet) or as, "Ya 'Abd al-Qadir!" would become a
polytheist (mushrik).
The Wahhabi point
of view is that he who says that anybody besides Allahu ta'ala did
something becomes a polytheist, a disbeliever. For example, he who says,
"Such and such medicine relieved the pain," or "Allahu
ta'ala accepted my prayers near the tomb of such and such a prophet or
wali," becomes a polytheist. To prove these ideas, he puts forth as
documents the ayat al-karima: "Iyyaka nastain" (Only Thy help
we ask) of the Surat al-Fatiha and the ayats expounding tawakkul.[36]
The book Al-Usul-ul-arba'a
fi-terdid-il-wahhabiyya, at the end of its second part, says in Persian:
The Wahhabis and
other la-madhhabi people cannot comprehend the meanings of majaz[37] and
isti'ara' (metaphor). Whenever somebody says that he did something, they
call him a polytheist or a disbeliever though his expression is a majaz.
However, Allahu ta'ala declares in many ayats of Qur'an al-karim that He
is the Real Maker of every act and that man is the majazi maker. In the
57 th ayat of Surat al-Anam and in Surat Yusuf, He says: "The
decision (hukm) is Allahu ta'ala's alone," that is, Allahu ta'ala
is the only Decider (hakim). In the 64 th ayat of the Surat an-Nisa', He
says: "They will not be believers unless they make thee (the
Prophet) judge (yuhakkimunaka) of what is in dispute between them."
The former ayat states that Allahu ta'ala is the only Real Hakim, and
the latter states that man can be metaphorically referred to as a hakim.
Every Muslim
knows that Allahu ta'ala alone is the One who gives life and takes life
away, for He declares: "He alone gives and takes life," in the
56 th ayat of the Surat Yunus, and, "Allahu ta'ala is the One who
makes man dead at the time of his death," in the 42 nd ayat of the
Surat az-Zumar. In the 11 th ayat of the Surat as-Sajda, He says as a
majaz: "The angel who is appointed as the deputy to take life takes
your life."
Allahu ta'ala alone is
the One who gives health to the sick, for the 80 th ayat of Surat ash-Shu'ara
states: "When I become sick, only He gives me recovery." He
quotes 'Isa ('alaihi 's-salam) in the 49 th ayat of the Al-i 'Imran sura
as saying: "I heal him who is blind and baras[38], and I bring the
dead back to life by Allahu ta'ala's permission." The One who gives
a child to man is actually He; the 18 th ayat of the Surat Mariam states
[the Archangel] Jabrail's ('alaihi 's-salam) majazi words, "I will
give you a pure son."
The real owner of
man is Allahu ta'ala. The 257 th ayat of the Surat al-Baqara states this
openly: "Allahu ta'ala is the Wali (Protector, Guardian) of those
who believe." And by saying, "Allahu ta'ala and His Prophet ('alaihi
's-salam) are your walis," and "The Prophet protects the
believers more than they protect themselves," in the 56 th and 6 th
ayats of Suras al-Ma'ida and al-Ahzab, respectively, He means that man,
too, though symbolically, is a wali. Similarly, the real helper is
Allahu ta'ala, and He also calls men 'muin' (helper) metaphorically. He
says in the third ayat of the Surat al-Ma'ida: "Help one another in
goodness and piety (taqwa)." Wahhabis use the word 'mushrik'
(polytheist) for those Muslims who call somebody an 'abd (servant,
slave) of someone other than Allahu ta'ala, for example, ''Abd an-Nabi'
or ''Abd ar-Rasul'; however, in the 32 nd ayat of Surat an-Nur, it is
declared: "Give in marriage your unmarried women and those pious
ones among your slaves and female slaves." The Real Rabb (Trainer)
of men is Allahu ta'ala, but someone else can also be called 'rabb'
metaphorically; in the 42 nd ayat of the Surat Yusuf is said,
"Mention me in the presence of your rabb."
'Istighatha' is what
the Wahhabis oppose most: 'to ask help or protection of someone other
than Allahu ta'ala,' which they call polytheism. In fact, as all Muslims
know, true istighatha is only for Allahu ta'ala. However, it is
permissible to say metaphorically that one can do istighatha for
someone, for, it is declared in the 15 th ayat of Surat al-Qassass:
"People of his tribe did istighatha for him against the
enemy." A hadith ash-Sharif says, "They will do istighatha for
Adam ('alaihi 's-salam) at the place of the Mahshar." A hadith ash-Sharif
written in Al-hisn al-hasin, says, "He who needs help should say,
'O Allahu ta'ala's slaves! Help me!' " This hadith ash-Sharif
commands one to call for help from someone not near him."[39]
Translation from the book Al-Usul-ul-arba'a ends here.
[Every word has a
distinguishable meaning, which is called the real meaning of that word.
The word will be called majaz when it is not used in its real meaning
but in any other meaning which can be related to it. When a word special
to Allahu ta'ala is used as majaz for human beings, Wahhabi people will
think that the word is being used with its real meaning. So, they will
call a person who uses the word mushriq, or kafir. But they should pay
attention to the fact that these words are used as majaz in ayats and
hadith ash-Sharifs for human beings.]
To ask for
shafa'a (intercession) and help from Rasulullah ('alaihi 's-salam) and
the awliya' does not mean to turn away from Allahu ta'ala or to forget
that He is the Creator. It is like expecting rain from Him through the
cause or means (wasita) of clouds; expecting cure from Him by taking
medicine; expecting victory from Him by using cannons, bombs, rockets
and aeroplanes. These are causes. Allahu ta'ala creates everything
through causes. It is not polytheism (shirk) to stick to these causes.
Prophets 'alaihim-us-salam always clung to causes. As we go to a
fountain to drink water, which Allahu ta'ala created, and to the bakery
to get bread, which again He created, and as we make armaments and drill
and train our troops so that Allahu ta'ala will give us victory, so we
set our hearts on the soul of a prophet or a wali in order that Allahu
ta'ala will accept our prayers. To use a radio in order to hear a sound
which Allahu ta'ala creates through the means of electro-magnetic waves
does not mean to forget about Him and have recourse to a box, for He is
the One who gives this peculiarity, this power, to the apparatus in the
radio box. Allahu ta'ala has concealed His Omnipotence in everything. A
polytheist worships idols but does not think of Allahu ta'ala. A Muslim,
when he uses causes and means, thinks of Allahu ta'ala, who gives
effectiveness and peculiarities to the causes and creatures. Whatever he
wishes, he expects it from Allahu ta'ala. He knows that whatever he gets
comes from Allahu ta'ala. The meaning of the above-mentioned ayat shows
that this is true. That is, when saying the Surat al-Fatiha in each
salat, the believer says, 'O my Rabb! I hold on to material and
scientific causes in order to get my worldly desires and needs, and beg
Thine beloved slaves to help me. As I do so, and always, I believe that
Thou alone is the Giver, the Creator of wishes. From Thee alone I
expect!' believers who say this every day can not be said to be
polytheists. To ask for help from the souls of prophets and awliya' is
to hold on to these causes, which were created by Allahu ta'ala. This
ayat of Surat al-Fatiha states clearly that they are not polytheists but
true believers. Wahhabis also stick to material and scientific means.
They satisfy their sensual desires by any means. But they call it
"polytheism" to have recourse to prophets and awliya' as
mediators.
Since the words
of Muhammad ibn 'Abd al-Wahhab were all in accordance with sensual
desires, those who did not have religious knowledge believed them
easily. They asserted that the 'ulama' of the Ahl as-Sunnat and Muslims
of the right way were disbelievers. Amirs (leaders) found Wahhabism
consistent with their desires to increase their power and to extend
their lands and territories. They forced the Arab tribes to become
Wahhabi. They killed those who did not believe them. Villagers, from
fear of death, obeyed the amir of Dar'iyya, Muhammad ibn Sa'ud. Becoming
soldiers of the amir suited their desires to attack the property, life
and chastity of non-Wahhabis.
Shaikh Sulaiman,
Muhammad ibn 'Abd al-Wahhab's brother, was an 'alim of the Ahl as-Sunnat.
This blessed person refuted Wahhabism in his book As-sawa'iq al-ilahiyya
fi 'r-raddi 'ala 'l-Wahhabiyya and deterred the dissemination of its
heretical tenets. This valuable book was printed in the year 1306. It
was also printed in offset process in Istanbul in 1395 [1975 A.D.].
Muhammad's teachers, who realized that he had opened a way leading to
evil, refuted his corrupt books. They announced that he had deviated
from the right way. They proved that Wahhabis gave wrong meanings to
ayats and hadiths. Yet all these increased the villagers' resentment and
hostility against the believers.
Wahhabism was
spread not through knowledge but through cruelty and bloodshed by
ignorant people. Of the cruel who soaked their hands with blood in this
way, the amir or Dar'iyya, Muhammad ibn Sa'ud, was the most
stone-hearted. This man was of the Bani Hanifa tribe and was one of the
descendants of those idiots who had believed Musailamat al-kadhdhab as a
prophet. He died in 1178 [1765 A.D.] and was succeeded by his son 'Abd-ul-'aziz,
who, in his turn, was slain by a Shiite in 1217. He was succeeded by his
son Sa'ud, who died in 1231. His son Abdullah took his place, only to be
executed in Istanbul in 1240. His place was taken by Tarki bin Abdullah,
a grandson of 'Abd-ul-'aziz's. The person to succeed him, in 1254, was
his son Faisal, who in his turn was succeeded by his son Abdullah in
1282. His brother 'Abd-ur-rahman and his son 'Abd-ul-'aziz settled in
Kuwait. In 1319 [1901 A.D.] 'Abd-ul-'aziz moved to Riyad and became the
Amir. In 1918 he attacked Mecca in cooperation with the British. In 1351
[1932 A.D.] he established the State of Sa'udi Arabia. We read in
newspapers issued in 1991 that Fahd, the Amir of Su'ud, had sent four
billion dollars as an aid to the Russian disbelievers who had been
fighting the Mujahidin in Afghanistan.
It is said that
Wahhabis are on the way of being sincere in believing in the Oneness of
Allahu ta'ala and in escaping disbelief, that all Muslims have been
polytheists for six hundred years, and that they have been trying to
save them from disbelief. To prove themselves right, they put forward
the fifth ayat karima of Surat al-Ahqaf and the 106 th ayat karima of
the Surat Yunus. However, all the commentaries of Qur'an al-karim
unanimously write that these two ayats and many others have all been
sent down for polytheists. The first of these ayats is: "No one is
more heretical than the one who turns away from Allahu ta'ala and prays
to things which will never hear till the end of the world.' And the
other is: "Tell the Meccan polytheists, 'I was commanded not to
pray to things, which are neither useful nor harmful, other than Allahu
ta'ala. If you pray to anyone but Allahu ta'ala, you will be torturing
and doing harm to yourselves!"
The book Kashf
ash-shubuhat deals with the third ayat karima of Surat az-Zumar, which
declares: "Those who accept things other than Allahu ta'ala as
guardians say, 'If we worship them, we worship them so that they might
help us approach Allahu ta'ala and intercede for us.' " This ayat
karima quotes the words of polytheists who worship idols. The book
likens Muslims who ask for shafa'a to such polytheists and intentionally
says that polytheists also believed that their idols were not creative
but that Allahu ta'ala alone was the Creator. In an interpretation of
this ayat karima, the book Ruh al-bayan says, "Human creatures are
created with the ability to acknowledge the Creator, who created them
and everything. Every human creature feels the desire to worship his
Creator and to be drawn towards Him. Yet this ability and desire are
worthless, for the nafs, Satan or bad companions might deceive man, [and
as a result, this innate desire will be destroyed,] and man will become
[either an unbeliever in the Creator and the Last Day like communists
and freemasons or] a polytheist. A polytheist cannot approach Allahu
ta'ala, nor can he know Him. The valuable thing is the marifa, the
knowledge, which ensues after eliminating polytheism and embracing
tawhid. Its sign is to believe in prophets ('alaihi 's-salam) and their
books and to follow them. This is the only way of being drawn towards
Allahu ta'ala. The merit of prostrating oneself was naturally given to
Satan, but he refused to prostrate in a manner unsuitable for his nafs.
Ancient Greek philosophers became disbelievers because they wanted to
approach Allahu ta'ala not by following prophets ('alaihi 's-salam) but
by their own reasons and nafses. Muslims, to approach Allahu ta'ala,
adapt themselves to Islam, thus their hearts get filled with spiritual
light. The attribute 'Jamal' (Beauty) of Allahu ta'ala manifests itself
to their spirits. Polytheists, to approach Allahu ta'ala, follow not the
Prophet or Islam but their nafses, their defective minds and bidats, and
thus their hearts get darkened and their spirits get obscured. Allahu
ta'ala, at the end of this ayat karima, states that they lie in their
statement, "We worship idols so that they shall intercede for
us." As it is seen, it is very unjust to take the 25 th ayat karima
of Surat al-Luqman, which says, "If you ask disbelievers, 'Who
created the earth and the skies?' they will say, 'certainly Allahu
ta'ala created them,' " and the 87 th ayat karima of Surat
az-Zukhruf, which says, "If you ask those who worship things other
than Allahu ta'ala, 'Who created these?' they will say, 'Certainly
Allahu ta'ala created them,' " as documents and to say,
"Polytheists, too, knew that the Creator was Allah alone. They
worshipped idols so that they would intercede for them on the Day of
Judgement. For this reason they became polytheists and
disbelievers."[40]
We, Muslims, do
not worship prophets ('alaihi 's-salam) or awliya' (rahimahum-Allahu
ta'ala) and say that they are not companions or partners of Allahu
ta'ala. We believe that they were creatures and human beings and that
they are not worth worshipping. We believe that they are the beloved
slaves of Allahu ta'ala, and He will pity His slaves for the sake of His
beloved ones. Allahu ta'ala alone creates loss and profit. He alone is
worth worshipping. We say that He pities His slaves for the sake of His
beloved ones. As for polytheists, though they, owing to the knowledge
inherent in their creation, say that their idols are not creative, and
because they have not developed this latent knowledge by following
prophets ('alaihimu 's-salam), believe that their idols are worth
worshipping, and so they worship them. Because they say idols are worth
worshipping, they become polytheists. Otherwise, they would not become
polytheists for saying that they wanted intercession.[41] As it is seen,
likening the Ahl as-Sunnat to idolatrous disbelievers is completely
wrong. All these ayats were sent for idolatrous disbelievers and
polytheists. The book Kashf ash-shubuhat gives wrong meanings to the
ayats, uses sophism and says that the Muslims of the Ahl as-Sunnat are
polytheists. It also recommends that non-Wahhabite Muslims should be
killed and that their property should be confiscated.
Two hadiths
reported by 'Abdullah ibn 'Umar (radi-Allahu 'anhuma) state: "They
have left the right course. They have imputed to Muslims the [meanings
of the] ayats that descended for disbelievers," and "Of all my
fears on behalf of the Umma, the most horrible thing is their
interpretation of Qur'an al-karim according to their own opinions and
their fallacious translations." These two hadiths foretold that the
la-madhhabi would appear and by misinterpreting the ayats that had
descended for disbelievers they would use them against the Muslims.
Another person
who realized that Muhammad ibn 'Abd al-Wahhab had wrong ideas and would
be harmful later on and who gave advice to him was Shaikh Muhammad ibn
Sulaiman al-Madani (d. in Medina in 1194/1780, rahimah-Allahu ta'ala),
one of the great 'ulama' of Medina. He was a Shafi'i scholar of fiqh and
wrote many books. His annotation on Ibn Hajar al-Makki's (rahimah-Allahu
ta'ala) At-tuhfat al-muhtaj, a commentary to the book Minhaj, has gained
great fame. In his two-volume book, which is entitled Al-fatawa, he
says, "O Muhammad ibn 'Abd al-Wahhab! Don't slander Muslims! I
advice you for Allahu ta'ala's sake. Yes, if someone says that someone
other than Allahu ta'ala creates actions, tell him the truth! But those
who cling to causes (wasila) and who believe that both causes and the
effective power in them are created by Allahu ta'ala cannot be called
disbelievers. You are a Muslim, too. It would be more correct to call
one Muslim a 'heretic' than calling all Muslims as such. He who leaves
the community is more likely to go astray. The 114 th ayat karima of
Surat an-Nisa' proves my word right: 'If a person who, after learning
the way to guidance, opposes the Prophet ('alaihi 's-salam) and deviates
from the believers' beliefs and 'ibadat, in the next world We shall
resurrect him in disbelief and apostasy, with which he has been so
intimate, and We shall hurl him into Hell."
Though Wahhabis have
innumerable wrong tenets, they are based on three principles:
1 - They say that a'mal
or 'ibadat are included in iman and that he who does not perform a fard
though he believes that it is fard, for example, salat because of
laziness or zakat because of stinginess, becomes a disbeliever and he
must be killed and his possessions must be distributed among Wahhabis.
Ash-Shihristani
states: "The 'ulama' of the Ahl as-Sunnat have unanimously said
that 'ibadat are not included in iman. One who, though he believes it to
be a fard, does not perform a fard because of laziness does not become a
disbeliever. There has not been unanimity concerning those who do not
perform salat; according to Hanbali Madhhab, one who does not perform
salat because of laziness becomes a disbeliever."[42] [Thena-ullah
Pani-Puti 'rahmatullahi alaih' states at the beginning of his book Ma-la
budda, "A Muslim does not become a disbeliever by committing a
grave sin. If he is put into Hell, he will be taken out of Hell sooner
or later and will be put into Paradise. He will stay eternally in
Paradise." This book is in Persian and was printed in Delhi in 1376
[1956 A.D.] and was reproduced by Hakikat Kitabevi in Istanbul in 1410
[1990 A.D.]. In Hanbali Madhhab, it was said that only he who did not
perform salat would become a disbeliever. The same was not said for
other kinds of 'ibadat. Therefore, it would be wrong to consider
Wahhabis as Hanbali in this respect. As explained above, those who do
not belong to the Ahl as-Sunnat cannot be Hanbali, either.[43] Those who
do not belong to any of the four Madhhabs do not belong to the Ahl as-Sunnat.
2 - They say that
one who asks for shafa'a from the souls of prophets ('alaihimu 's-salam)
or awliya' (rahimahum-Allahu ta'ala) or who visits their tombs and prays
while considering them mediators becomes a disbeliever. They also
believe that the dead do not have any sense.
If a person who talked
to a dead person in a grave had been a disbeliever, our Prophet (sall-Allahu
'alaihi wa sallam), great 'ulama' and the awliya' would not have prayed
in this manner. It was our Prophet's (sall-Allahu 'alaihi wa sallam)
habit to visit the Bakee Cemetery in Medina and the martyrs of Uhud. In
fact, it is written on the 485 th page of the Wahhabite book Fath al-majid
that he greeted and talked to them.
Our Prophet (sall-Allahu
'alaihi wa sallam) always said in his prayers, "Allahumma inni as-aluka
bi-haqqi 's-sa'ilina 'alaika," (O my Allahu ta'ala! I ask Thee for
the sake of those people whom Thou hast given whatever they asked) and
recommended to pray so. When he interred Fatima, the mother of Hadrat
'Ali (radi-Allahu 'anhuma), with his own blessed hands, he said, "Ighfir
li-ummi Fatimata binti Asad wa wassi' 'alaiha madkhalaha bi-haqqi
nabiyyika wal-anbiya' illadhina min qabli innaka arhamu 'r-rahimin."
(O Allahu ta'ala! Forgive Mother Fatimat binti Asad, her sins! Widen the
place she is in! Accept this prayer of mine for the right [love] of Thy
Prophet and of the prophets who came before me! Thou art the Most
Merciful of the merciful!) In a hadith ash-Sharif reported by 'Uthman
ibn Hunaif (radi-Allahu 'anh) one of the greatest of the Ansar, it is
told how the Prophet ('alaihi 's-salam) ordered a blind man, who asked
him to pray for his healing, to perform an ablution and a salat of two
rak'as and then to say, "Allahumma inni asaluka wa atawajjahu
ilaika bi-nabiyyika Muhammadi 'n-nabiyyi 'r-Rahma, ya Muhammad inni
atawajjahu bika ila Rabbi fi hajati hadhihi li-takdiya li, Allahumma
shaffi'hu fiyya." In this prayer the blind man was commanded to
have recourse to Muhammad ('alaihi 's-salam) as a mediator so that his
prayer would be accepted. The Sahabat al-kiram often recited this
prayer, which is quoted in the second volume of Ashi'at al-lama'at and
also in Al-hisn al-hasin with its references and, in its explanation,
interpretation as, "I turn towards Thee through Thine
Prophet."
These prayers
show that it is permissible to put those whom Allahu ta'ala loves as
mediators and to pray to Him by saying "for their sake."
Shaikh 'Ali Mahfuz who
died in 1361 (1942 A.D.), one of the great 'ulama' of Jami' al-Azhar,
praises Ibn Taymiyya and 'Abduh very much in his book Al-ibda'.
Nevertheless, he says in the two hundred and thirteenth page of the same
book: "It is not right to say that the great awliya' (rahimahum-Allahu
ta'ala) dispose worldly affairs after death, such as curing the ill,
rescuing those who are about to be drowned, helping those who are
against the enemy and having lost things found. It is wrong to say that,
because the awliya are very great, Allahu ta'ala has left these tasks to
them or they do what they wish or that one who clings to them will not
go wrong. But whether they are alive or dead, Allahu ta'ala blesses,
among His awliya', the ones whom He wills, and, through their karamat,
He cures the ill, rescues those who are about to be drowned, helps those
who are fighting an enemy and recovers lost things. This is logical.
Also Qur'an al-karim reveals these facts."[44]
'Abd al-Ghani an-Nabulusi
(rahimah-Allahu ta'ala) writes: "A hadith qudsi, which al-Bukhari
reported from Abu Huraira (radi-Allahu ta'ala 'anh), says: Allahu ta'ala
declared: 'My slaves cannot approach Me through anything as close as
they approach me by means of the fard. If My slaves do the
supererogatory 'ibadat, I like them so much that they hear with Me, see
with Me, hold everything with Me, walk with Me, and I give them whatever
they ask of Me. If they trust in Me, I protect them.' " The
supererogatory 'ibadat mentioned here are [as clearly written in Maraq
al-falah and at-Tahtawi's annotation. Please see page 428.] the sunnat
and supererogatory 'ibadat done by those who do the 'ibadat which are
fard. This hadith ash-Sharif shows that one who, after doing the 'ibadat
which are fard, does the supererogatory worships will earn Allahu
ta'ala's love and his prayers will be accepted."[45] Whether alive
or dead, when such people pray for others, people for whom they pray get
what they wish. Such people hear even when they are dead. As they did
not when they were alive, they do not turn down those who ask
empty-handed, but they pray for them. For this reason, a hadith ash-Sharif
states: "When you are in trouble in your affairs, ask for help from
those who are in graves!" The meaning of this hadith ash-Sharif is
clear, and its tawil (interpretation in a different way) is not
permitted. Alusi's tawil is false.
In actual fact,
"Muslims are still Muslims when they are dead just as is the case
when they are asleep. Prophets are still prophets ('alaihi 's-salam)
after death just as is the case when they are asleep; for, it is the
soul who is a Muslim or a prophet. When a man dies, his soul does not
change. This fact is written in the book 'Umdat al-'aqa'id by Imam
'Abdullah an-Nasafi [printed in London in 1259 (1843 A.D.)]. Likewise,
awliya' are still awliya' (rahimahum-Allahu ta'ala) when they are dead
just as they are when asleep. He who does not believe this is ignorant
and stubborn. I have proven in another book that the awliya' possess
karamat after they die, too."[46] The Hanafi scholar Ahmad ibn
Sayyid Muhammad al-Makki al-Hamawi and the Shafi'i scholars Ahmad ibn
Ahmad as-Sujai and Muhammad ash-Shawbari al-Misri wrote booklets in
which they proved with evidence that awliya' possessed karamat, that
their karamat continued after their death, and that tawassul or
istighatha [see below] at their graves was permitted (jaiz).[47]
Muhammad Hadimi
Effendi (rahimah-Allahu ta'ala) of Konya (d. 1176/1762 in Konya) wrote:
"The Karamat of awliya' are true. A wali is a Muslim who is al-'arifu
bi'llah (one who knows Allahu ta'ala and His Attributes as much as is
possible). He performs many 'ibadat and taat. He very carefully avoids
sins and the sensual desires of his nafs. Things created by Allahu
ta'ala outside of His custom and scientific laws are called 'khariq-ul 'ada'
(extraordinary things), which are of eight kinds: mujiza, karama, i'ana,
ihana, sihr, ibtila, isabat al-ayn (effect caused by the evil eye) and
irhas. Karama is an extraordinary occurrence that happens through a
devoted believer who is al-'arifu bi'llah. He is a wali, not a prophet.
Abu Ishaq Ibrahim al-Isfaraini, a Shafi'i scholar, denied some of the
karama, and all Mutazila denied karama. They said that it can be
confused with mujiza and, therefore, belief in prophets might become
difficult. However, a wali to whom a karama happened does not claim
prophethood, nor does he want a karama to happen. It is permissible to
pray to Allahu ta'ala through prophets and awliya' even after their
death because their mujiza and karama do not cease after death. This
type of prayer is called 'tawassul' or 'istighatha.' Ar-Ramli, too, said
the same. Al-Imam al-Haramain said, 'Only the Shiites deny the
continuity of karama after death.' 'Ali Ajhuri, a prominent Maliki
scholar of Egypt, said, 'The wali, when he is alive, is like a sword in
its sheath. After his death, his influence becomes stronger like that of
a sword out of its sheath.' This statement is also quoted by Abu 'Ali
Sanji in his book Nur al-hidaya. It is certified in the light of the
Book (Qur'an al-karim), the Sunnat and ijma' al-Umma that karama is
true. Hundreds of thousands of the karamat of the awliya' have been
reported in many valuable books."[48] The translation from the book
Bariqa ends here.
And, a sahih hadith
conveyed by the hadith scholars Ibn Hudhaima, ad-Dara Qutni and at-Tabarani
on the authority of 'Abdullah ibn 'Umar (radi-Allahu ta'ala anhuma)
states: 'It has become wajib for me to intercede for those who will
visit my grave.' Imam al-Manawi, too, quoted this hadith in Kunuz ad-daqaiq.
In addition, he wrote the hadith ash-Sharif, 'After my death, visiting
my shrine is like visiting me when I am alive,' from Ibn Hibban; and the
hadith ash-Sharif, 'I will intercede for the one who visits my grave,'
from at-Tabarani. The following two hadiths, which are marfu', the first
one quoted by Imam al-Bazzar and the second one written in the Sahih of
Muslim and both on the authority of 'Abdullah ibn 'Umar (radi-Allahu
ta'ala anhuma), are known by almost every Muslim: 'It has become halal
for me to intercede for those who will visit by grave'; 'On the Day of
Judgement I shall intercede for those who come to al-Madinat al-munawwara
to visit my grave.'[49]
It is great news that
is quoted in the hadith ash-Sharif, "A person who performs hajj and
then visits my grave will have visited me when I was alive," which
was quoted by at-Tabarani, ad-dara Qutni and ['Abd ar-Rahman] Ibn al-Jawzi.
The hadith ash-Sharif, "A person who does not visit me after
carrying out the hajj will have hurt me," which ad-Dara Qutni
quotes, alludes to those who neglect to visit the Prophet's ('alaihi 's-salam)
grave after hajj though they do not have an excuse (not to do so).
'Abd al-'Aziz, Rector
of the Islamic University of al-Madinat al-munawwara, wrote in his
Tahqiq wa Idhah, "None of the [above] hadiths [recommending the
visit] has any support or document. Shaikh al-Islam Ibn Taymiyya said
that all of them were mawdu'. " However, their sanads (documents)
are written in detail in the eighth volume of az-Zarqani's commentary to
Al-mawahib and at the end of the fourth volume of as-Samudi's Wafa' al-wafa'.
In these books, it is also written that these hadiths were hasan and
that Ibn Taymiyya's comment was groundless. The rector and instructors
of Medina university thus try to calumniate the writings of the 'ulama'
of the Ahl as-Sunnat and in their place spread the Wahhabi tenets all
over the world with their books. In order to convince Muslim and
non-Muslim nations that they are true Muslims, they follow a new policy;
they have founded an Islamic center called Rabitat al-Alam al-Islami in
Mecca and have gathered ignorant, and bribable men with religious
educations that they have chosen from every country, and to whom they
pay salaries hundreds of gold coins. These ignorant men with religious
posts, having no knowledge about the books of the scholars of the Ahl
as-Sunnat, are used like puppets. From this center they disseminate
their tenets, which they call "fatwas of world Muslim unity,"
to the whole world. In the fallacious fatwa issued during the Ramadan of
1395 (1975 A.D.), they said "It is fard for women to perform the
salat of Juma. The Khutba of Juma and 'Iyd can be delivered in the
native language of every country." A heretic named Sabri from among
the followers of Mawdudi, a member of this center of fitna and fasad in
Mecca, immediately took that fatwa to India, whereupon salaried,
wealthy, and ignorant men being there forced women into mosques, and
initiated the khutba to be read in various languages. To prevent this
movement, scholars of the Ahl as-Sunnat and true men of religion in
India (rahimahum-Allahu ta'ala) prepared fatwas from valuable sources
and spread them. Wahhabis could not refute these fatwas -the truth.
Hundreds of men with religious educations from Kerala, in southern
India, realizing that they had been deceived, repented and returned to
the line of the Ahl as-Sunnat. Four of those fatwas which are based on
reliable sources, were printed in offset process and posted to all
Islamic countries. Real men of religious authority in every country call
the attention of Muslims to, and try to extinguish, the agitation which
divides Islam from within. Thanks to Allahu ta'ala, the innocent and
vigilant youth in every corner of the world can distinguish the truth
from falsehood.
While explaining the
subjects concerning the khutba of Juma, takbir iftitah and prayers in
salat, Ibn 'Abidin (rahimah-Allahu ta'ala) wrote in his work Radd al-mukhtar:
"Delivering the khutba in a language other than Arabic would be
like saying the takbir iftitah ("Allahu akbar") in another
language when beginning salat. The takbir iftitah is like the dhikrs of
salat, and it is makruh tahrima to recite the dhikrs and prayers of
salat in a language other than Arabic, as was forbidden by Hadrat 'Umar
(radi-Allahu 'anh)." In the chapter on the wajibs of salat, he
wrote: "To commit a makruh tahrima is a minor sin. If one continues
to commit it, one loses one's 'adala[50]." It is written in at-Tahtawi
that a person who continually commits a minor sin becomes a fasiq and
that one should go to another mosque in order not to perform salat [in
congregation] behind an imam who is a fasiq or a committer of bidat.
Because it was a makruh and a bidat, which is a grave sin, to read the
whole or a part of the khutba in another language, the as-Sahabat al-kiram
and the Tabiin (rahimahum-Allahu ta'ala) always delivered the entire
khutba in Arabic in Asia and Africa, even though the listeners had no
knowledge of Arabic and could not understand the khutba. Though
religious knowledge had not spread and had to be taught to them, they
read the entire khutba in Arabic. And it was for this reason that for
six hundred years the Ottoman Shaikh al-Islams and world-wide famous
great Muslim scholars, though they seriously wanted the khutba to be
read in Turkish so that the congregation could understand its contents,
could not permit it for they knew it was not permissible for the khutba
to be delivered in Turkish.
A hadith ash-Sharif,
reported by Imam al-Baihaki on the authority of Abu Huraira (radi-Allahu
'anh) states: "When a person greets me, Allahu ta'ala gives my soul
to my body and I hear his greeting." Relying on this hadith ash-Sharif,
Imam al-Baihaki (rahimah-Allahu ta'ala) said that prophets ('alaihi 's-salam)
were alive in their graves in a life unknown to us.
And 'Abdal-'Aziz ibn
'Abdullah of Medina quotes this hadith on the 66 th page of his Al-hajj
wal-umra and comments that it expresses the death of the Prophet ('alaihi
's-salam). Yet, on the same page, he states that he is alive in his
grave in a life unknown to us. His statements contradict each other. In
actual fact, this hadith ash-Sharif indicates that his blessed soul is
given to his body and he responds to greetings. Furthermore, the two
hadiths quoted on the 73 rd page of the same book report the command
that one should say, "As-salamu 'alaikum ahl ad-diyari min al-Muminin,"
while visiting graves. The hadiths order us to greet the graves of all
Muslims. Someone who hears can be greeted or spoken to; although the la-madhhabi
quote these hadiths, they claim that the dead cannot hear and say
'polytheist' about those who believe that the dead can hear. They
misinterpret ayats and hadiths!
There are many hadiths
revealing that Rasulullah (sall-Allahu 'alaihi wa sallam) is alive in
his tomb in an unknown life. There being so many of them signifies that
they are sound. Of these hadiths, the following two are written in six
famous books of hadiths: "I will hear the salawat recited at my
grave, I will be informed of the salawat recited at a distance";
"If a person recites salawat at my grave, Allahu ta'ala sends an
angel and informs me of this salawat. I will intercede for him on the
Day of Judgement."
If a Muslim goes to the
grave of a dead Muslim whom he knew when he was alive and greets him the
dead Muslim will recognize him and reply to him. A hadith ash-Sharif
reported by Ibn Abi'd-dunya declares that a dead Muslim recognizes and
answers the one who greets him and becomes happy. If a person greets
dead people whom he did not know, they become pleased and acknowledge
the greeting (salam). While good Muslims and martyrs (rahimahum-Allahu
ta'ala) recognize and answer those who greet them, is it possible that
Rasulullah (sall-Allahu 'alaihi wa sallam) will not? As the sun in the
sky illuminates the whole world, so he answers all simultaneous
greetings simultaneously.
A hadith ash-Sharif
says, "After my death, I will hear as I do when I am alive."
Another hadith ash-Sharif reported by Abu Yala says, "Prophets ('alaihimu
's-salam) are alive in their graves. They perform salat." Ibrahim
ibn Bishar and Sayyid Ahmad ar-Rifai and many awliya (rahimahum-Allahu
ta'ala) said that they had heard a reply after they had greeted
Rasulullah (sall-Allahu 'alaihi wa sallam).
The great Muslim
scholar Hadrat Jalal ad-din as-Suyuti wrote the book Sharaf al-muhkam as
an answer to the question asked of him: "Is it true that Sayyid
Ahmad ar-Rifai kissed Rasulullah's blessed hand?" In this book, he
proved with reasonable and traditional evidence that Rasulullah (sall-Allahu
'alaihi wa sallam) was alive in his shrine in an incomprehensible life
and that he heard and answered greetings. He also explained in this book
that on the Miraj Night Rasulullah saw Musa ('alaihi 's-salam)
performing salat in his grave.
A hadith ash-Sharif,
which our mother 'Aisha as-Siddiqa (radi-Allahu 'anha) related, says,
"I suffer the pain of the poisonous meat I ate at Khaibar. Because
of that poison my aorta almost fails to function now." This hadith
ash-Sharif shows that, in addition to prophethood, Allahu ta'ala has
given the status of martyrdom to Muhammad, the Highest of Mankind ('alaihi
's-salam). Allahu ta'ala declares in the 169 th ayat of Surat al 'Imran:
"Never regard those who have been killed in the way of Allahu
ta'ala as dead! They are alive in His view. They are nourished." No
doubt this great Prophet ('alaihi 's-salam), who has been poisoned in
the way of Allahu ta'ala, is the highest of those honored with the
status defined in this ayat karima.
A hadith ash-Sharif
reported by Ibn Hibban says, "Prophets' ('alaihimu-'s-salam)
blessed bodies never rot. If a Muslim recites the salawat for me, an
angel conveys that salawat to me and says, 'So and so's son so and so
has recited a salawat and greeted you.' "
A hadith ash-Sharif
reported by Ibn Maja says, "On Fridays recite the salawat for me
repeatedly! The salawat will be communicated to me as soon as it is
recited." Abu 'd-darda' (radi-Allahu ta'ala 'anh), one of those who
were in the company of the Prophet ('alaihi 's-salam) at that moment,
asked, "Will it be communicated to you after you die, too?"
The Prophet ('alaihi 's-salam) said, "Yes, I will be informed of it
after my death, too, for, it is haram for the earth to decompose
prophets ('alaihi 's-salam). They are alive after death, and they are
nourished." [This hadith ash-Sharif is written also in the final
section of the book Mawta-wal-qubur, by Thena-ullahi Pani-Puti. This
book is in Persian and was printed in Delhi in 1310 [1892 A.D.] and
reproduced by Hakikat Kitabevi in Istanbul in 1990].
Hadrat 'Umar (radi-Allahu
'anh), after the conquest of Quds (Jerusalem), went into the Prophet's
('alaihi 's-salam) Blessed Grave (al-Qabr as-Saada) and visited his
grave and greeted him. Hadrat 'Umar ibn Abd al-'Aziz, who was a great
wali, usually sent officials from Damascus to Medina and had them recite
a salawat at the Blessed Grave and greet him. Hadrat 'Abdullah ibn 'Umar,
after returning from each journey, would go directly to the Hujrat as-Saada;
first he would visit Rasulullah ('alaihi 's-salam), then Abu Bakr as-Siddiq
(radi-Allahu 'anh) and then his father and greet them. Imam Nafi' said,
"More than a hundred times I saw Hadrat 'Abdullah ibn 'Umar go into
the Blessed Grave and say, 'As-salamu 'alaika ya Rasul-Allah!' One day
Hadrat 'Ali (radi-Allahu 'anh) went into Masjid ash-Sharif and he wept
when he saw the grave of Hadrat Fatima (radi-Allahu 'anh) and he wept
all the more when he went to the Hujrat as-Saada. Then, saying, 'As-salamu
'alaika ya Rasul-Allah' and 'As-salamu 'alaikuma, O Two Brothers of
Mine!' he greeted the Prophet ('alaihi 's-salam), Hadrat Abu Bakr and
Hadrat 'Umar (radi-Allahu ta'ala anhuma)."
According to al-Imam
al-azam Abu Hanifa (rahmat-Allahi 'alaih), one should perform hajj first
and then go to al-Madinat al-munawwara and visit Rasulullah ('alaihi 's-salam).
The same is written in the fatwa of Abu 'l-Laith as-Samarqandi.
Qadi 'Iyad, author of
the book Shifa'; Imam an-Nawawi, a Shafi'i alim; and Ibn Humam, a Hanafi
alim (rahimahum-Allahu ta'ala), said that there had been ijma' al-Umma
on it being necessary to visit the Blessed Grave. Some 'alims said that
it is wajib.' As a matter of fact, it is sunnat to visit graves, a fact
which is also written in the Wahhabite book Fat'h al-majid.
The 63 rd ayat al-karima
of Surat an-Nisa' purports: "If they, after tormenting their nafses,
come to you (My Messenger) and beg for Allahu ta'ala's (My) pardon, and
if My Messenger apologizes on behalf of them, they will certainly find
Allahu ta'ala as the Receiver of Repentance and Compassionate."
This ayat karima indicates that Rasulullah (sall-Allahu 'alaihi wa
sallam) will intercede and his intercession (shafa'a) will be accepted.
Also, it commands us to visit his blessed grave and to ask for his
intercession by coming from distant places.
A hadith ash-Sharif
states: "It is suitable to set off on a long journey only for
visiting three mosques." This hadith points out that it is thawab
to go on a long journey with the purpose of visiting Masjid al-Haram in
Mecca, Masjid an-Nabi in Medina and the Masjid al-Aqsa in Jerusalem. For
this reason, those who go for hajj but do not visit the Blessed Grave in
Masjid an-Nabi will be deprived of this reward.
Imam Malik (rahmat-Allahi
'alaih) said that it is makruh for those who visit the Blessed Shrine to
stay too long near the Hujrat as-Saada. Imam Zain al-'Abidin (rahmat-Allahi
'alaih), while visiting, stood near the pillar which stood in the
direction of the Rawdat al-Mutahhara and he approached no further. Until
Hadrat 'Aisha (radi-Allahu 'anha) died, the visit was done by standing,
facing the qibla, at the outer side of the door of the Hujrat as-Saada.
A hadith ash-Sharif
says, "Do not make my grave a [place of] festival." Hadrat 'Abd
al-'Azim al-Munziri, a hadith scholar, explained this hadith ash-Sharif
as: "Do not consider it enough to visit my grave only once a year,
like on 'Iyd days. Try to visit me frequently!" And the hadith ash-Sharif,
"Do not make a cemetery of your houses," means that we should
not make our houses look like a cemetery by not performing salat. Thus
it is seen that Hadrat al-Munziri's explanation is correct. As a matter
of fact, it is not permitted to perform salat in a cemetery. It was said
that this hadith ash-Sharif might come to mean, "Do not fix a
certain day like a feast for visiting my shrine?" Jews and
Christians, during their visit to their prophets, habitually assembled
together, played instruments, sang songs and held ceremonies. These
hadiths imply that we should not behave like them; that is, we should
not make merry with forbidden things on feast days, nor play reeds or
drums or gather to hold ceremonies during our visit. We should visit and
greet, pray and then leave silently without staying long.
Al-Imam al-azam
Abu Hanifa (rahimah-Allahu ta'ala) said that visiting the Blessed Grave
is a most valuable sunnat, and there are some scholars who said that it
is wajib. For this reason, visiting the Blessed Grave is allowed as a
vow in the Shafi'i Madhhab.
In fact, "Allahu
ta'ala, in His Word, 'If I had not created you, I would not have created
anything!'[51] points out that Muhammad ('alaihi 's-salam) is the Habib-Allah
(Allahu ta'ala's Most Beloved). Even an ordinary person will not refuse
something asked for the sake of his beloved. It is easy to have a lover
do something for the sake of his beloved. If a person says, 'O my Allahu
ta'ala! For the sake of Thine Muhammad ('alaihi 's-salam), I ask of
Thee,' this wish of his will not be refused. Trivial worldly affairs,
however, are not worth putting Rasulullah's (sall-Allahu 'alaihi wa
sallam) sake as a mediator."[52]
Al-Imam al-azam Abu
Hanifa (rahimah-Allahu ta'ala) said, "I was in Medina. Shaikh Ayyub
as-Sahtiani, one of the sulaha', went into Masjid ash-Sharif. I followed
him. Hadrat Shaikh faced the Blessed Grave and stood with his back to
the qibla. Then he went out." Hadrat Ibn Jamaat wrote in his book
Al-mansak al-kabir, "While visiting, after performing a salat of
two rak'as and praying near the minbar (pulpit), you should come to the
qibla side of the Hujrat as-Saada and, with the Prophet's ('alaihi 's-salam)
blessed head on your left, you should stay two meters away from the wall
of the al-Marqad ash-Sharif (the Prophet's shrine), then, leaving the
qibla wall behind and turning slowly till you face the Muwajahat as-Saada,
you should greet him. This is so in all the Madhhabs."
'Abd al-Ghani an-Nabulusi
(rahimah-Allahu ta'ala), while explaining the twenty-third of the
"Disasters incurred by the tongue," writes: "It is makruh
tahrima to say, while praying, 'for the right of the prophets' or 'for
the right of [such and such living or dead] wali' or to ask Allahu
ta'ala for something by saying so, for, it has been said that no
creature has any rights on Allahu ta'ala; that is, he does not have to
grant anyone's wish. This is true, yet He promised His beloved servants
and recognized a right for them on Himself; that is, He will accept
their wish. He declared in Qur'an al-karim that He placed a right of His
servants on Himself, for example, 'It has become a right on Us to help
believers.' "[53] It is declared in Al-fatawa al-Bazaziyya,
"It is permitted to ask for something for the sake of a prophet or
a dead or living wali by mentioning his name." The commentary on
Shir'a states: "One must pray [to Allahu ta'ala] by making
intermediaries of His prophets ('alaihi 's-salam) and salih believers.
This is also written in Al-hisn al-hasin." As it is seen, Muslim
scholars said that it is permissible to pray to Allahu ta'ala through
the right and love which He has given to His beloved ones. And no
scholar said that it would be polytheism to pray with the idea that men
have rights on Allahu ta'ala. Only Wahhabis say so.
Though they praise Al-fatawa
al-Bazaziyya in the book Fat'h al-majid and put forward his fatwas as
documents, they oppose him in this respect. Also Hadimi, while
explaining the "Disasters caused by the tongue," wrote: "
'For the right of Thy Prophet or wali' means 'his prophethood or wilaya
is right.' Our Prophet ('alaihi 's-salam), too, with this intention
said, 'For the right of Thy Prophet Muhammad,' and, during the wars he
asked for Allahu ta'ala's help for the right of the poor among the
Muhajirun. Also there were many Muslim 'ulama' who prayed, 'For the sake
of those people whom Thou hast given whatever they asked from Thee,'
and, 'For the right of Muhammad al-Ghazali,' and who wrote these prayers
in their books."[54] The book Al-hisn al-hasin is full of such
prayers. The tafsir Ruh al-bayan says in an explanation of the
eighteenth ayat of Surat al-Maida: A hadith reported by 'Umar al-Faruq (radi-Allahu
'anh) states: "When Adam ('alaihi 's-salam) made a mistake, he
said, 'O my Rabb! Forgive me for the sake of Muhammad ('alaihi 's-salam).'
And Allahu ta'ala said, 'I have not created Muhammad yet. How do you
know him?' He said, 'O my Rabb! When Thou created me and gave me of
Thine soul, I looked up and saw the phrase "La ilaha illa'llah
Muhammadun Rasulullah" written on the skirts of the 'Arsh. Thou
would only write the name of Thine most beloved by Thine Name.
Considering this, I knew that Thou loved him very much.' Upon this
Allahu ta'ala said, 'O Adam, you tell the truth. Of Mine creatures, he
is the one I love most; so I have forgiven you for his sake. If Muhammad
had not existed, I would not have created you.' " This hadith ash-Sharif
is quoted in Imam al-Baihaki's Dala'il and in Alusi's Ghaliyya.
The Wahhabi writes:
"Imam Zain al-'Abidin 'Ali (rahimah-Allahu ta'ala) saw a man
praying by the Prophet's ('alaihi 's-salam) grave and interrupted him by
telling him the hadith, 'Recite a salawat for me. Wherever you are, your
greeting will be communicated to me.' " It narrates the event
incorrectly and goes on, "Hence, it is forbidden to go near a grave
for praying and reciting salawat, which is similar to making graves
places of festival. It is forbidden for those who go to perform salat in
Masjid an-Nabi to approach the tomb for greeting. None of the Sahaba did
so, and they prevented those who wanted to do so. No other deed but the
prayers and greetings said by his Umma will be communicated to the
Prophet."[55] He also writes that the Sa'udi government placed
soldiers near the Prophet's ('alaihi 's-salam) shrine in Masjid an-Nabi
to prevent Muslims from doing so.[56]
Hadrat Yusuf an-Nabhani
refuted these lies at many places in his book: "Imam Zain al-'Abidin
(rahimah-Allahu ta'ala) did not forbid visitation to the Blessed Grave
of the Prophet ('alaihi 's-salam). But he forbade non-Islamic,
disrespectful behavior during a visit. His grandson, Imam Jafar as-Sadiq,
used to visit the Hujrat as-Saada, and, standing near the pillar which
stood in the direction of the Rawdat al-Mutahhara, greet and say, 'His
blessed head is on this side.' 'Do not make my grave [a place of]
festival', means 'Do not visit my grave on certain days like feast days.
Visit me all the time.' "[57] "Abu 'Abdullah al-Qurtubi writes
in his At-tazkira that the deeds of the Prophet's ('alaihi 's-salam)
Umma are communicated to him every morning and every evening." (pp.
88, 106) "Khalifa Mansur, during his visit to [the shrine of] the
Prophet ('alaihi 's-salam), asked Imam Malik, 'Shall I face the tomb or
the qibla?' Imam Malik (rahimah-Allahu ta'ala) said, 'How could you turn
your face away from Rasulullah (sall-Allahu 'alaihi wa sallam)? He is
the cause of your and your father Adam's ('alaihi 's-salam)
forgiveness!" (pp. 89, 116) "The hadith ash-Sharif, 'Visit
graves!' is a command. If a haram is committed during the visit, not the
visit itself, but the haram should be forbidden." (p. 92)
"Imam an-nawawi says in his Adhkar, 'It is a sunnat to visit
frequently the shrines of the Prophet ('alaihi 's-salam) and of pious
Muslims and to stay for some time near such places of visitation.'
" (p.98) "Ibn Humam, in his Fat'h al-Qadir, quotes the hadith
ash-Sharif transmitted by ad-Dara Qutni and al-Bazzar which says, 'If
someone visits me [at my shrine] only with a view to visiting me and not
to do anything else, he will have the right to be interceded for by me
on the Day of Judgement.' " (p. 100) "Allahu ta'ala favored
the awliya' with karamat. Their karamat are witnessed frequently even
after their death. They are able to be helpful after death, too. It is
permitted to have them intercede with Allahu ta'ala. But one should ask
help from them in a manner compatible with Islam. It is not permitted to
say, 'I will give that much... for you if you give me what I request,'
or 'If you cure my sick relative,' which is often uttered by the
ignorant. However, this cannot be regarded as an act causing disbelief
or polytheism, for, even the utterly ignorant person will not think that
the wali will create. He wants the wali to be the cause in Allahu
ta'ala's creating. He thinks that the wali is a human creature whom
Allahu ta'ala loves, and says, 'Please ask Allahu ta'ala to favor me
with what I wish; He will not reject your prayer.' As a matter of fact,
Rasulullah (sall-Allahu 'alaihi wa sallam) said, 'There are many people
who are considered low and worthless but who are Allahu ta'ala's beloved
slaves. When they want to do something, Allahu ta'ala certainly creates
it.'[58] Obeying such hadiths, Muslims ask the awliya' to intercede.
Imam Ahmad, al-Imam ash-Shafi'i, Imam Malik and al-Imam al-azam Abu
Hanifa (rahimahum-Allahu ta'ala) said that it is jaiz (possible,
permissible) to attain baraka (blessing) through the graves of the
pious. Those who say that they are of the Ahl as-Sunnat or that they
belong to one of the Madhhabs of the Ahl as-Sunnat must say as these
imams said. Otherwise, they may be judged not to be of the Ahl as-Sunnat,
but liars." (p. 118)
It is written in the
subject concerning carrying out hajj on behalf of someone else in the
book Al-fatwa al-Hindiyya, "It is permissible to devote the thawab
of an 'ibada to someone else. Therefore, the thawab of salat; fast;
alms; pilgrimage; recitation of Qur'an al-karim; dhikr; visitation of
the tombs of prophets, martyrs, awliya' and salih Muslims; giving a
shroud for a corpse; and the thawab of all gifts and good deeds can be
devoted." It is understood from this passage, too, that visiting
the graves of the awliya' does bring thawab.
Documents of what
has been written so far are written at length in our Arabic and English
books. Allahu ta'ala orders Muslims to unite. Therefore, all Muslims
should learn the itiqad of the Ahl as-Sunnat wal-Jamaat and come
together on the right way of Truth by believing as reported in the books
of these great scholars of the Ahl as-Sunnat. The Prophet (sall-Allahu 'alaihi
wa sallam) said that the only right way will be the way of the Ahl as-Sunnat.
We must be very careful not to dissent from the unity of the Ahl as-Sunnat
and not to be taken in by the deceitful writings of ignorant men with
religious post who trade in religious books and the writings of heretics
who want to deceive Muslims. Allahu ta'ala declares clearly in the 114
th ayat of Surat an-Nisa that those who dissent from the Muslims' unity
will go to Hell. It is clear by documents and references that a person
who does not belong in one of the four Madhhabs has separated himself
from the unity of the Ahl as-Sunnat and that such a la-madhhabi person
will become a heretic or a non-Muslim.[59]
The book At-tawassulu
bi'n-Nabi wa jahalat al-Wahhabiyyin proves with examples and documents
that Ibn Taymiyya had departed from the way of the Ahl as-Sunnat
wal-Jamaat.
3 - Wahhabis say,
"It causes kufr (disbelief) and shirk (polytheism) to build a dome
over a grave, to light oil-lamps for those who worship and serve in
shrines, and to vow alms for the souls of the dead! The inhabitants of
al-Haramain (Mecca and Medina) have worshipped domes and walls up to
now."
Building a dome over a
grave is haram if it is for ostentation or ornamentation. If it is for
protecting the grave from destruction, it is makruh. If it is intended
lest a thief or an animal should break in, it is permissible. But it
should not be made a place for visiting; that is, one should not say
that it should be visited at certain times.
It is not makruh to
bury corpses in a building that has been built before. The As-Sahabat
al-kiram buried Rasulullah (sall-Allahu 'alaihi wa sallam) and his two
Khalifas in a building. None of them stood against it. The Hadith ash-Sharif
states that their unanimity could not be heresy. The great Islamic
scholar Ibn 'Abidin wrote: "Some scholars said that it was makruh
to put a covering cloth, a skullcap or a turban over the graves of pious
Muslims or awliya'. The book Al-fatawa al-hujja says that it is makruh
to cover a grave with cloth. But, to us, it is not makruh if it is
intended to show everybody the greatness of the one in the grave or to
prevent him from being insulted or to remind those who visit him to be
respectful and behave well. Acts that are not prohibited in the al-adillat
ash-Shariyya should be judged in view of the intention involved. Yes, it
is true that during the time of the Sahabat al-kiram neither domes were
built over graves nor sarcophagi or clothes were put on graves. But none
of them was against the interment of Rasulullah (sall-Allahu 'alaihi wa
sallam) and the Shaikhain (his two immediate Khalifas) in a room. For
this reason and for carrying out the commands, 'Do not step on graves!'
and 'Do not be disrespectful to your dead!' and because they were not
prohibited, they cannot be bidats only because of being done afterwards.
All fiqh books state that right after the farewell tawaf it is necessary
to leave Masjid al-Haram as an act of respect towards the Kaba al-Muazzama.
However, the as-Sahabat al-kiram, because they respected the Kaba in
every regard, did not use to do so. But since succeeding generations
were unable to show due reverence, our 'ulama' declared that it was
necessary to show respect by leaving the Masjid by walking backwards.
Thus, they made it possible for us to be respectful like the as-Sahabat
al-kiram. Likewise, it became permissible to cover the graves of the
sulaha' and awliya with cloth or to build domes over them in order to be
respectful as Sahabat al-kiram were. The great scholar Hadrat 'Abd al-Ghani
an-Nabulusi explains this in detail in his book Kashf an-nur."[60]
In Arabia, shrines are called "mashhad." In al-Madinat al-munawwara,
there were many mashhads in the Baki' Cemetery. The la-madhhabi
destroyed all of them. No Islamic scholar has ever said that it would be
polytheism or disbelief to build domed tombs or to visit tombs. No one
has ever been seen demolishing tombs.
Ibrahim al-Halabi (rahimah-Allahu
ta'ala) wrote at the end of the book Al-Halabi al-kabir, "If a
person decides that his land will be a cemetery and if there is an empty
space in it, it is permissible for one to build a domed tomb in it with
an intention of burying a corpse. When there is no empty space left,
this tomb shall be demolished and graves shall be dug [in its place].
This is so because it is a place belonging to a waqf, devoted to be a
cemetery." If building domed tombs had been known to be
polytheistic, or if domed tombs had been considered idols, it would
always have been necessary to demolish them.
The first of the
Islamic tombs to exist on the earth was the Hujrat al-mu'attara, where
Rasulullah (sall-Allahu 'alaihi wa sallam) is buried. Our master
Rasulullah (sall-Allahu 'alaihi wa sallam) passed away in the room
belonging to his beloved wife, our mother 'Aisha (radi-Allahu 'anha),
before noon on Monday, the twelfth of Rabi al-awwal, 11 A.H. On
Wednesday night he was buried in that room. Hadrat Abu Bakr and Hadrat 'Umar
(radi-Allahu ta'ala 'anhuma) were buried in the same room. No Sahabi was
opposed to this. Now, this unanimity of the Sahabat al-kiram is being
opposed to. Even though denial of ijma' al-Umma by explaining away (tawil)
of a dubious document (dalil) does not result in disbelief, it causes
bidat.
Hadrat 'Aisha's ('radi-Allahu
'anha) room was three meters high, somewhat more than three meters long
and wide, and was made of sun-dried bricks. It had two doors, one facing
the west and the other facing the north. Hadrat 'Umar (radi-Allahu
ta'ala 'anh), when he was Khalifa, enclosed the Hujrat as-Saada with a
low stone wall. 'Abdullah ibn Zubair (radi-Allahu ta'ala 'anhuma), when
he became Khalifa, demolished this wall and rebuilt it with black stones
and had it plastered beautifully. This wall was not roofed at the top
and there was a door on the north. When Hadrat Hasan (radi-Allahu ta'ala
'anh) passed away in 49 A.H., his brother Hadrat Husain (radi-Allahu
ta'ala 'anh), as required by his last will, had his corpse brought to
the door of the Hujrat as-Saada and wanted to take his corpse into the
shrine to pray and ask for intercession; there were some people who
opposed it, thinking that the corpse would be buried in the shrine.
Therefore, to prevent the clamor, the corpse was not taken into the
shrine and was buried at the Bakee' Cemetery. Lest such unsuitable
events should happen again, the doors of the room and the one outside
were walled up.
Walid, the sixth
Umayyad Khalifa, when he was the governor of Medina, raised the wall
round the room and had it covered over with a small dome. When he became
Khalifa, he ordered 'Umar ibn 'Abd al-'Aziz, his successor as the
governor of Medina, to enlarge the Masjid ash-Sharif in 88 (707 A.D.);
hence, the room was surrounded with a second wall. This was pentagonal
in shape and roofed with no door.[61]
The book Fat'h al-majid
says: "A person who intends to get blessed (tabarruk) with a tree,
stone, grave or the like becomes a polytheist. Graves have been idolized
by building domes over them. The people of the Jahiliyya Ages, too,
worshipped pious persons and status. Today, all such and even more
excessive acts are committed at shrines and graves. To attempt to get
blessed with the graves of pious persons is similar to worshipping the
idol al-Lat. These polytheists suppose that awliya' hear and answer
their prayers. They say that they approach the dead by making vows and
giving alms for the graves. All these acts are major forms of
polytheism. A polytheist is still a polytheist even if he calls himself
something else. Praying to the dead respectfully and affectionately,
slaughtering animals, making vows and other similar acts are all
polytheistic whatever they call them. Today's polytheists, using the
words 'ta'zim' (respect, honor) and 'tabarruk,' say that what they do is
permissible. This supposition of theirs is fallacious."[62]
We have already
translated the answers given by Muslim scholars to such offensive
lampoons against the Muslims of the Ahl as-Sunnat, and have written them
down in our various books. In the following, a passage from the first
chapter of the book Al-usul al-arba'a fi tardid al-Wahhabiyya is
translated to show the vigilant reader that the Wahhabis have deceived
themselves and will lead Muslims to ruination:
Qur'an al-karim, Hadith
ash-Sharif, sayings and acts of the Salaf as-salihin, and most of the 'ulama'
document that it is permissible to show ta'zim to somebody other than
Allahu ta'ala. The 32 nd ayat of Surat al-Hajj states: 'When one shows
honor (yu'azzim) to Allahu ta'ala's sha'a'ir, this behavior is out of
the hearts' taqwa.' So it became wajib to show honor to Allahu ta'ala's
sha'a'ir. 'Sha'a'ir' means 'signs and indications.' Abdulhaqq ad-Dahlawi
(rahimah-Allahu ta'ala) said, 'Sha'a'ir is the plural of shaira, which
means indication ('alama). Anything that reminds one of Allahu ta'ala is
a shaira of Allahu ta'ala.' The 158 th ayat of Surat al-Baqara says:
'As-Safa and al-Marwa are among the sha'a'ir of Allahu ta'ala.' As
understood from this ayat karima, not only the hills as-Safa and al-Marwa
are the sha'a'ir of Allahu ta'ala, but there are other sha'a'ir as well.
And not only the places called 'Arafat, Muzdalifa and Mina can be cited
as sha'a'ir. Shah Wali-Allah ad-Dahlawi (rahimah-Allahu ta'ala) says on
the 69 th page of his work Hujjat Allahi 'l-baligha, 'The greatest
sha'air of Allahu ta'ala are Qur'an al-karim, Kabat al-Muazzama, the
Prophet ('alaihi 's-salatu wa 's-salam) and ritual salat.' And on the 30
th page of his book Altaf al-Quds, Shah Wali-Allah ad-Dahlawi (rahimah-Allahu
ta'ala) says, 'To love the sha'a'ir of Allahu ta'ala means to love
Qur'an al-karim, the Prophet ('alaihi 's-salatu wa sallam) and the Kaba,
or, to love anything that reminds one of Allahu ta'ala. To love the
awliya' of Allahu ta'ala is the same.'[63] While the two hills near
Masjid al-Haram in Mecca, namely as-Safa and al-Marwa, between which the
Prophet Ismail's ('alaihi 's-salam) mother Hadrat Hajar walked, are
among the sha'a'ir of Allahu ta'ala and can cause one to remember that
blessed mother, why should not the places where the Prophet Muhammad ('alaihi
's-salam), who is the most superior of all creatures and the Beloved One
of Allahu ta'ala, was born and brought up and the places where he
worshipped, migrated, performed salat and passed away and his blessed
shrine and the places of his Al (his blessed wives and Ahl al-Bait) and
companions be counted among the sha'air? Why do they destroy these
places?
When Qur'an al-karim is
read attentively and objectively, it will be easily seen that many ayats
express 'ta'zim' for Rasulullah ('alaihi 's-salam). The Surat al-Hujurat
declares: 'O those who believe! Do not go ahead of Allahu ta'ala and His
Prophet (sall-Allahu 'alaihi wa sallam)! Fear Allahu ta'ala! O those who
believe! Do not speak louder than the Prophet's voice! Do not call him
as you call one another! The reward for the deeds of those who do so
will vanish! Allahu ta'ala fills with taqwa the hearts of those who
lower their voices in the presence of Allahu ta'ala's Prophet; He
forgives their sins and gives many rewards. Those who shout at him from
the outside are thoughtless; it is better for them to wait till he comes
out.' It is apparent to a person who reads and thinks over these five
ayats impartially how much Allahu ta'ala praises the ta'zim that will be
shown to His beloved Prophet ('alaihi 's-salam) and how seriously He
commands the Umma to be respectful and modest towards him. The degree of
its importance can be judged by the fact that all the deeds of those who
speak louder than him will come to naught. These ayats came as a penalty
for the seventy people of the Bani Tamim tribe who had called the
Prophet by shouting disrespectfully in Medina. Today some people say
that they are the descendants of the Bani Tamim tribe. It must have been
for them that Rasulullah said, 'A violent and torturous people are in
the East,' and 'Satan will arouse disunion from there,' pointing to a
direction towards the Najd territory [on the Arabian Peninsula] with his
blessed hand. Some of the la-madhhabi are 'Najdis,' who have spread out
from the Najd. The disunion predicted in the above hadith appeared
twelve hundred years later: they came from the Najd to the Hijaz,
plundering Muslims' possessions, killing the men and enslaving the women
and children. They committed baser evils than disbelievers.
WHAT IS MORE: In the
above ayats, the repetitive phrase 'O those who believe,' shows that all
Muslims of all centuries till the Last Day are commanded to be
respectful towards Rasulullah (sall-Allahu 'alaihi wa sallam). If the
command had been only for the as-Sahabat al-kiram, 'radi-allahu ta'ala
anhum ajmain', 'O as-Sahaba,' would have been said. As a matter of fact,
the phrases, 'O wives of the Prophet!' and 'O people of Medina!' are
Qur'anic. The same phrase, 'O those who believe!' is used in the ayats
stating that salat, fast, pilgrimage, zakat and other 'ibadas are fard
for all Muslims of all times till the Last Day. So the Wahhabis' idea
that 'the Prophet (sall-Allahu 'alaihi wa sallam) was to be respected
when he was alive; neither respect is to be shown to nor help is to be
asked from him after his death,' is groundless in view of these ayats.
The above ayats
indicate that ta'zim towards others besides Allahu ta'ala is also
necessary. The 104 th ayat of Surat al-Baqara states: 'O those who
believe! Do not say "Ra'ina" [to the Prophet], but say,
"look upon us." You, be listeners to Allahu ta'ala's
commands.' believers used to say 'Ra'ina' (watch over, protect us) to
the Prophet (sall-Allahu 'alaihi wa sallam). 'Ra'ina' also meant 'to
swear, to blemish' in the Jewish language, and the Jews used this word
for the Prophet (sall-Allahu 'alaihi wa sallam) in this sense. Because
it also had this bad meaning, Allahu ta'ala forbade the believers to use
this word.
The 33 rd ayat of Surat
al-Anfal purports, "Allahu ta'ala will not punish them while you
are with them," and promises not to punish them until the end of
the world. This ayat refutes the Wahhabis' claim that the Prophet went
away and became soil.
The 34 th ayat of Surat
al-Baqara purports: "When We said to the angels, 'Prostrate
yourselves before Adam,' they all fell prostrate, except the Satan (Iblis)."
This ayat karima commands that Adam ('alaihi 's-salam) should be shown
ta'zim. Satan refused to respect somebody other than Allahu ta'ala and
slandered prophets, and thus disobeyed this command. Wahhabis are in the
footsteps of Satan. Yusuf's ('alaihi 's-salam) parents and brothers,
too, showed honor to him by prostrating themselves before him. If it
caused polytheism or disbelief to show honor or respect to somebody
other than Allahu ta'ala, He would not have praised His beloved slaves
with the word 'sajda' (prostration) when describing them. According to
the Ahl as-Sunnat, prostration before somebody other than Allahu ta'ala
is haram because it resembles the prostration in 'ibada, not because it
is a sign of respect!
Satan always appeared
in the figure of an old man of the Najd to Rasulullah (sall-Allahu 'alaihi
wa sallam). When the disbelievers assembled at a place called Dar an-Nadwa
in Mecca and decided to kill the Prophet, Satan appeared in the figure
of an old man of the Najd and taught them how to carry out the murder,
and they agreed to do as the Najdi old man said. Since that day, Satan
has been called Shaikh an-Najdi. Hadrat Muhyiddin Ibn al-'Arabi writes
in his work Al-musamarat: "When the Quraish disbelievers were
repairing the Kaba, each of the heads of the tribes said that he was
going to replace the valuable stone called al-Hajar al-aswad. Later they
agreed that the person who came [to the Kaba] first the following
morning would be the referee to choose one from among them to place the
stone. Rasulullah (sall-Allahu 'alaihi wa sallam) was the first who
came, he was twenty-five then, and they said they were going to obey
what he said because he was trustworthy (amin). He said, "Bring a
carpet and put the stone on it. You all hold the carpet at its sides and
raise it to the level where the stone will be placed." After it was
raised, he took the stone from the carpet with his blessed hands and set
it at its place in the wall. At that moment. Satan appeared in the
figure of the Shaikh an-Najdi and, pointing to a stone, said, "Put
this beside it to support it." His real purpose was for the foul
stone he pointed to fall in the future, so that the Hajar al-aswad would
lose its steadiness and, consequently, people would consider Rasulullah
(sall-Allahu 'alaihi wa sallam) inauspicious. Seeing this, Rasulullah (sall-Allahu
'alaihi wa sallam) said, "A'udhu bi'llahi min ash-shaitani 'r-rajim,"
and Satan immediately ran away, disappeared.' Because Muhyiddin ibn al-'Arabi
(rahmat-Allahi ta'ala 'alaih), with this writing, made known to the
world that the Shaikh an-Najdi was Satan, the la-madhhabi hate this
great wali. They even call him a disbeliever. It is understood also from
this passage that their leader was a Satan. For this reason, they
destroy the blessed places inherited from Rasulullah (sall-Allahu 'alaihi
wa sallam). They say that these places make people polytheists. If it
were polytheism to pray to Allahu ta'ala in sacred places, Allahu ta'ala
would not have ordered us to go for hajj; "Rasulullah (sall-Allahu
'alaihi wa sallam) would not have kissed the Hajar al-aswad while he was
performing tawaf; nobody would pray at 'Arafat and Muzdalifa; stones
would not be thrown at Mina, and Muslims would not walk between as-Safa
and al-Marwa. These sacred places would not have been respected that
much.
When Sad ibn Muaz (radi-Allahu
ta'ala 'anh), the head of the Ansar, came to where they assembled,
Rasulullah (sall-Allahu 'alaihi wa sallam) said, "Stand up for your
leader!" This command was intended for all of them to honor Sad. It
is wrong to say, "Sad was ill. It was intended that he should be
helped off his riding-animal," because the order was for all of
them. If it were intended for helping him, the order would have been for
one or two persons only, and "for Sad" would have been said,
and there would have been no need to say "for your leader."
Every time he went from
Medina to Mecca for hajj, 'Abdullah ibn 'Umar (radi-Allahu 'anhuma)
stopped and performed salat and prayed at the sacred places where
Rasulullah (sall-Allahu 'alaihi wa sallam) had sat. He would become
blessed by these places. He would put his hands on Rasulullah's (sall-Allahu
'alaihi wa sallam) minbar (pulpit) and then rub them on his face. Imam
Ahmad ibn Hanbal (rahmat-Allahi ta'ala 'alaih) would kiss the Hujrat as-Saada
and the pulpit to become blessed by them. The la-madhhabi, on the one
hand say that they belong to the Hanbali Madhhab, and, on the other,
regard as 'polytheism' what the imam of this Madhhab did. Then, it is
understood that their claim to be Hanbali is false. Imam Ahmad ibn
Hanbal put al-Imam ash-Shafi'i's (rahmat-Allahi ta'ala 'alaih) shirt
into water and drank the water to get blessings. Khalid ibn Zaid Abu
Ayyub al-Ansari (radi-Allahu 'anh) rubbed his face against Rasulullah's
(sall-Allahu 'alaihi wa sallam) blessed grave and, when someone wanted
to lift him up, he said: 'Leave me! I came not for the stones or soil
but for the audience of Rasulullah (sall-Allahu 'alaihi wa sallam).'
The as-Sahabat al-kiram
('alaihimu 'r-ridwan) used to get blessed with the things that belonged
to Rasulullah (sall-Allahu 'alaihi wa sallam). They received blessings
from the water he used in ablution and from his blessed sweat, shirt,
scepter, sword, shoes, glass, ring, in short, from anything he used.
Umm-i-Salama (radi-Allahu 'anha) the mother of the Faithful, kept a hair
from his blessed beard. When ill people came, she would dip the hair
into water and have them drink the water. With his blessed glass, they
used to drink the water for health. Imam al-Bukhari's (rahmat-Allahi
ta'ala 'alaih) grave emanated the smell of musk, and people took soil
from the grave to get blessed with it. No alim or Mufti disapproved of
it. The 'ulama' of hadith and fiqh permitted such actions."[64]
Translation from the book Usul-ul-arba'a ends here.
[During the times of
the Sahabat al-kiram and the Tabiin, and even until the end of the first
millennium, there were many awliya' and sulaha'. People used to visit
and receive blessings from them as well as obtain their prayers. There
was no need to make the dead intermediaries (tawassul) or to get blessed
(tabarruk) with lifeless things. The fact that these actions were rare
in those days does not mean that they were forbidden. If they had been
forbidden, there would have been those who would prevent them. No alim
prevented them.
As the Last Age has set
in, however, bidats and symptoms of disbelief have increased. The youth
have been deceived by the enemies of Islam in the disguise of religious
authorities and scientists,[65] and, because irreligiousness or apostasy
has suited their purposes, dictators and the cruel, the slaves of their
nafses, have given great support to this movement. The number of 'alims
and walis has decreased, there even has not appeared any in the last
decades, and, therefore, it has become a must to be blessed by the
graves of and the things inherited from the awliya'. But, something,
which are haram to do, have been inserted into these too, as if it was
done in every affair and worship.
With unanimity of the 'ulama'[66]
of Islam, not this lawful practice itself should be prevented, even
though prohibited behaviors (harams) have been introduced into it, but
instead the bidats introduced into it should be removed].
FOOTNOTES
[34] The seventh
volume of the former's 12-volume Tarih-i Osmani and the third volume of
the latter's 5-volume Mirat al-Haramain (p. 99. Turkish, the Library of
Sulaimaniyya).
[35] Meccan scholars
wrote very beautiful answers to Kitab at-tawhid and refuted it with
sound documents in 1221. The collection of their refutations, titled
Saif al-Jabbar, which was later printed in Pakistan, was reproduced in
Istanbul in 1395 [1975 A.D.].
[36] The correct
meanings of these ayats by the 'ulama' of the Ahl as-Sunnat and the
matters of tawhid and tawakkul are written in detail in Endless Bliss,
Third Fascicle, Chapter 35. Those who know the correct meaning of 'tawhid'
will understand that the Wahhabis, who consider themselves muwahhids,
are not muwahhids (believers in tawhid).
[37] Majaz is the use
of a word not in its usual or obvious literal meaning but in a sense
connected to its meaning. When a word special to Allahu ta'ala is used
for men in a majazi (figurative, symbolic) sense, the Wahhabis take it
in its literal meaning and call the one who uses it symbolically a
polytheist and disbeliever; they are unaware that such words are used
for men in symbolical senses in Qur'an al-karim and Hadith ash-Sharif.
[38] A skin-diseased
person, albion or vitiligo, with complete or partial whiteness,
respectively, of the skin.
[39] Al-usul al-arba'a
fi tardid al-Wahhabiyya (in Persian), end of the second part, India,
1346 (1928 A.D.); photographic reproduction, Istanbul, 1395 (1975 A.D.).
This book was written by Muhammad Hasan Jan Sahib, one of the grandsons
of hadrat Imam Rabbani 'rahmatullahi ta'ala alaihima'. The author, Jan
Sahib, refutes the Wahhabis and other la-madhhabi people also in his
Arabic work Tariq an-najat, India, 1350 (with Urdu translation);
photographic reproduction, Istanbul, 1396 (1976 A.D.).
[40] Jamil Sidqi
az-Zahawi (rahmat-Allahi ta'ala 'alaih) an alim of Iraq, in his work Al-fajr
as-Sadiq fi 'r-raddi 'ala 'l-munkiri 't-tawassuli wal-karamati
wal-hawariq (published in Egypt in 1323 (1905 A.D.), photographic second
reproduction, Istanbul, 1396 (1976 A.D.), explained this ayat-i karima
and proved that it had been misinterpreted. Jamil Sidqi taught 'ilm al-kalam
at the University of Istanbul. He died in 1355 (1936 A.D.). The 1956
edition of Al-munjid gives a picture of him.
[41] To ask the shafa'a
(intercession) of idols is a superstitious, false belief. It is unlawful
in Islam to believe in it, yet it is not polytheism. Worshipping idols
is polytheism.
[42] Al-milal wa 'n-nihal
(Turkish), p. 63, Cairo, 1070 A.H.
[43] See pp. 18 and 31
above. See also our Advice for the Muslim for details on the same
subject.
[44] Shaikh 'Ali Mahfuz,
Al-ibda', p. 213, Cairo, 1375 (1956 A.D.); 'Abdullah ad-Dasuqi and Yusuf
ad-Dajwi, professors at Jami' al-Azhar, wrote eulogies praising the book
at the end of Al-ibda'.
[45] 'Abd al-Ghani an-Nabulusi,
Al-Hadiqat an-nadiyya, p. 182, Istanbul, 1290.
[46] Al-Hadiqa an-nadiyya,
p. 290.
[47] These three
booklets were published together with Ahmad Zaini Dahlan's (rahimah-Allahu
ta'ala 'alaih) Ad-durar as-saniyya fi 'r-raddi 'ala 'l-Wahhabiyya in
Cairo in 1319 (1901 A.D.); photographic reproduction, Istanbul, 1396
(1976 A.D.).
[48] Bariqa, p. 269.
[49] Mirat al-Madina (Mirat
al-Haramain) p. 106.
[50] 'Justness'; he
will become unreliable on religious matters; he will not be accepted as
a witness.
[51] This hadith qudsi
is quoted also in al-Imam ar-Rabbani's (rahimah-Allahu ta'ala) Maktubat,
vol III, 122 nd letter.
[52] Mirat al-Madina,
p. 1282.
[53] Al-Hadiqa.
[54] Hadimi, Bariqa,
Istanbul, 1284.
[55] Fat'h al-Majid, p.
259; see above p. 53 for this book.
[56] ibid, p. 234.
[57] Shawahid al-haqq,
p. 80. 3rd. ed., Cairo, 1385 /(1965 A.D.). The next six quotations with
page numbers refer to this book, too.
[58] This hadith is
also quoted on the 381 st page of the book Fat'h al-majid.
[59] Hashiyatu Durr al-mukhtar
by the great scholar Ahmad at-Tahtawi and Al-basa'ir 'ala 'l-munkiri 't-tawassuli
bi 'l-maqabir, which was written in Pakistan as a refutation to fat'h
al-majid and reprinted in Istanbul.
[60] Ibn 'Abidin,
Hashiyatu Durr al-mukhtar (Radd al-mukhtar) p. 232, vol. V, Bulaq, 1272;
Kashf an-nur and Jalal ad-din as-Suyuti's (rahimah-Allahu ta'ala) Tanwir
al-khalak fi imkani ruyati 'n-Nabi jiharan wal-malak were published
together with the title Al-minhat al-wahbiyya, Istanbul, 1393 (1973
A.D.).
[61] See article 15 in
Advice for the Muslim for more detail.
[62] Fat'h al-majid, p.
133.
[63] Because the
Prophet said, 'When awliya' are seen Allahu ta'ala is remembered,' which
is quoted in Ibn Abi Shaiba's Musnad, in Irshad at-Talibin, and in Kunuz
ad-daqaiq, this hadith ash-Sharif shows that, awliya', too, are among
the sha'air. It is written in Jami' ul-fatawa that it is permissible to
build domes over the graves of Awliya and 'Ulama in order to show them
honor.
[64] Al-usul al-arba'a,
part one.
[65] Those who are in
the disguise of scientists are called "science impostors",
while those in the disguise of religious men are called 'zindiqs'.
[66] The writings of
the 'ulama' on this subject are quoted in Ahmad bin Zaini Dahlan's Ad-durar
as-saniyya fi 'r-raddi 'ala 'l-Wahhabiyya, Egypt, 1319 and 1347;
photographic reproduction, Istanbul, 1395 (1975 A.D.). Those who read
them will have no doubts left.
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