PROTECT YOUR RELIGION
THROUGH AUTHENTIC TRADITIONS OR HADITH Part 5 of 6
PART 5
ON DA'IF (WEAK) HADITH AND PASSING RULINGS BASED ON THEM
Many of the early scholars held the firm opinion that to act
upon, or derive rulings from a hadith which has been declared to be weak
by the scholars of hadith is unacceptable. Their reasoning being that
Islam has no need of anything weak, and the authentic material of Islam will
suffice for all time, the da'if hadith amounting only to a conjecture
which has the possibility of being correct.
We quote from the introduction of The Prophet's Prayer
Described of Shaykh Al-Albani, " ... this is because we hold
that the authentic ahadith are sufficient, leaving no need for anything
weak, for the latter does not amount to anything except dhann (conjecture,
suspicion), and incorrect conjecture at that; as the Exalted says, ' ... and
conjecture is of no use against the truth.' "
And now the following quotes will show the position of the
early scholars of hadith on this issue. Imam Ash-Shafi'i (He is
the Mujtahid Imam and the Mujaddid of his time, Muhammad
ibn Idris ash-Shafi'i. He studied under a galaxy of prominent Imams, amongst
them Imam Malik.) said in his Risalah (394-403, #1090-1105):
[#1090] Surely, the greatest of
liars is he who ascribes to me that which I did not say, and who claims to have
dreamt what he did not dream, and who claims that he is the son of someone
other than his own father.
[#1091] Whoever ascribes to me that
which I did not say, will surely have to occupy his seat in the Fire.
[#1092] Surely, whoever tells
untruths about me, will have a house built for him in the Fire.
[#1093] Whoever tells untruths about
me is surely seeking for himself a resting place in the Fire. The Messenger of
Allah began to say that while he was wiping the ground with his hand.
[#1094] From Abu Hurayrah, "You
may report about the Children of Israel and there is no blame (haraj). Report
about (or from) me, but do not tell untruths about me."
[#1095] This is the most emphatic hadith ever transmitted from the Messenger
of Allah on this matter. We have relied on it as well as on others (ahadith or evidences) in not
accepting any report (hadithan)
except from a trustworthy transmitter, and that we know the truthfulness of
those who transmitted the hadith
since it was begun till its end is reached;
[#1096] If someone would say, 'What
evidence is there in this hadith
for what you have stated?'
[#1097] It would be said: Knowledge
surely has made it certain that the Prophet would never, in any circumstances,
order anyone to lie about the Children of Israel, nor about anyone else. So
when he has permitted reporting about (al-haditha'an)
the Children of Israel, it was not accepting untruthfulness about the Children
of Israel that he has permitted, but he only has permitted accepting that from
whom reported it, whose truthfulness or untruthfulness is not known.
Imam Muslim states in the introduction to
his Sahih, under the chapter heading, "The weak ahadith are
to be discarded and only authentic ahadith are to be narrated":
"To proceed, May Allah have mercy upon you. If
it were not from the evil practice that we have seen from many who take upon
themselves the position of Muhaddith, in their leaving the obligation to
discard the weak ahadith and munkar narrations and to suffice with
only the authentic ahadith - well known and transmitted from reliable
narrators, well known for their truthfulness and trustworthiness. After knowing
and admitting with their tongues that much of what they fling at the ignorant
is to be rejected and is transmitted by unsatisfactory narrators whose
narrations are censured by the scholars of hadith like Malik, Yahya ibn
Sa'id al-Qattan and others ... And know, may Allah have mercy upon you,
that what is obligatory upon everyone who is able to distinguish between
authentic and weak narrations and between the suspect and reliable narrators,
is that he should narrate therefrom except that known to be authentic and have
trustworthy narrators ... "
Imam Ibn Rajab al-Hanbali (Sharh
At-Tirmidhi (2/112). He is the exemplary Imam and great Mujtahid scholar,
Ibn Rajab al-Hanbali, a student of both Ibn Taymiyyah and Ibn Al-Qayyim amongst
others.) Said, " ... and it is clear from what Muslim mentions in the
introduction to his book, that it is necessary that the ahadith to do
with targhib wa't-tarhib (encouragement and discouragement) are not
narrated except from those that ahkam (rules and regulations) are
narrated [meaning the authentic ahadith]."
Al-Allamah Jamal ud-Din al-Qasimi narrates from
a group of the Imams of hadith that they did not accept acting by a weak
hadith at all, like Ibn Ma'in, Al-Bukhari, Muslim, Abu Bakr ibn Al-Arabi
al-Maliki, Ibn Hazm and others.(Qawa'id Al-Hadith(pg. 113) of Al-Qasimi).
Abu Bakr ibn Al-Arabi (Aridat Al-Ahwadhi Sharh Sunan
At-Tirmidhi (5/201)) said, while commenting on the hadith, "The
halal is clear and the haram is clear ... ", " ... What I have as the
reason regarding that, and Allah knows best, is that which we have
transmitted from Ahmad ibn Hanbal that he permits weak ahadith regarding
al-wara'(abstaining from doubtful matters). May Allah be pleased with
Al-Bukhari who did not see for the heart to hold to, nor for the religion to be
connected through nothing except the authentic ahadith, and that is our position?
If we were to incline to the position of Ahmad; then holding to da'if ahadith
cannot be accepted except in lessons/admonishment which soften the heart,
but as for the basis (usul) there is no way to accept that."
(Quoted from Abu Ghuddas introduction to Al-Muhasibi's Risalah
Al-Mustarshidin (p. 58) where he states that he has abridged the quote from
Ibn Al-Arabi.)
Ibn Hazm (He is the great Imam who championed the Dhahiri
school of thought and wrote many invaluable treatise, amongst them his Muhalla
in usul al-fiqh, and Milal wa Nahl on different sects.) said in Al-Milal,
" ... and it is not permissible with us that we say as these ahadith
say (i.e. those weak and fabricated narrations), or to trust in them, or to
take anything from them."
Ibn Taymiyyah said, "... and it is not permissible to
rely in the Shari'ah upon da'if ahadith which are not sahihor
hasan. But Ahmad ibn Hanbal and other scholars considered it permissible
to report with regards to fada'il al-a'mal (rewards and excellences of
actions) that which they did not know to be affirmed, when it is known that it
is not a lie. And that is because when the action is known to be legislated
with a Shari'ah evidence, it is possible that the reward be a fact. And
not one of the Imams said that he considered it to be permissible to make
something obligatory or recommended based upon a da'if hadith." (Al-Qa'idah
Al-Jalilah (pg. 82) of Ibn Taymiyyah.)
Then Ibn Taymiyyah said, " ... and Ahmad ibn Hanbal or
others like him from the Imams did not rely upon this type of ahadith in
the Shari'ah. And the one who relates from Ahmad that he used to rely
upon the weak ahadith, which are not sahih or hasan, has
erred."
So the narrations from him that he would act upon a da'if
hadith when there was nothing else present in the texts on that subject,
or nothing that contradicted that da'if hadith, does not mean
that Imam Ahmad used them as proof in the Shari'ah. Allah
knows best.
Al-Allamah Ahmad Shakir said, " ... and as
for what Imam Ahmad ibn Hanbal and Abdur-Rahman ibn Mahdi, and Abdullah
ibn Al-Mubarak said, 'When it is narrated to us pertaining to halal and haram
we are strict. And when it is narrated to us pertaining to fada'il al-a'mal
(the rewards and excellence of actions) then we are lenient," they mean,
according to what I find to be most convincing - and Allah knows best -
that the leniency was in their taking the hasan hadith, that
which does not reach the level of sahih. Because the convention of
distinguishing between the sahih and hasan was not present at
their time ... rather many of the early scholars did not describe a hadith except
by it being sahih or da'if only." (Al-Ba'ith Al-Hadith
(pg. 101) of Ahmad Shakir.)
So what is clear is that the term hasan was not
present at that time, and a great deal of what these scholars used to narrate
in terms of fada'il al-amal was of the level of what the later scholars
called hasan. So the opinion from the above mentioned scholars is to
leave acting by the weak hadith in totality, except where there is a
consensus of the Islamic scholars on the issue at hand. And Allah knows best.
And as for the claims of some that Imam Ahmad amongst others of the
early scholars allowed weak ahadith to be used in Shari'ah rulings
then that has no firm basis as mentioned above (So what would the author of Al-Albani
Unveiled say about the position of all these scholars, would he label them
all as ignorant as well, as he has done in his amazing 'scholarly' work?!)
And especially in this day and age, when so many innovations
and misunderstandings about Religion are present, many of them having their
roots in these da'if ahadith, it becomes even more essential to
narrate only authentic ahadith as part of the process of purifying the
understanding of the Religion. The preceding was with regards to acting upon
the da'if hadith, as regards to using the da'if hadith
in certain Islamic sciences like in the hadith science in which the weak
ahadith are used to support or strengthen other ahadith, then
this has been done and is being done by all of the scholars of hadith.
For those that follow the opinion that acting upon a da'if ahadithis
permissible, it would be good to mention the three conditions for acting upon a
da'if ahadith as laid out by Ibn Hajar al-Asqalani:
- Upon that which they all agree, that it should not be very weak so that it excludes that only narrated by a liar, one accused of lying and one who makes serious mistakes;
- That it falls under a general proof already present - which excludes that which is invented having no basis; and
- That acting upon it the person does not think that it is something established - in order that he does not attribute to the Prophet what he did not say. (As mentioned by his student As-Sakhawi.)
We can see from these condition the following; the first
principle lays out the obligation to make known the weak ahadith from
the authentic, even in fada'il al-a'mal. Something which many people who
follow this opinion do not do, not only that but many of the scholars who
follow this opinion today are not even capable of discerning whether the hadith
they are quoting contains the types of weaknesses indicated above! The second
principle establishes that in reality the person is not acting by the weak hadith
but rather by the general proof already present. (The quotes are taken from the
introductions of Sahih Al-Jami As-Saghir, Tamam Al-Minna, Silsilah
Ad-Da'ifah (vol. 1) of Al-Albani, with the exception of the quotes of Imam
Ash-Shafi'i and Ibn Al-Arabi.)
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