The Draft
Constitution
or the Necessary
Evidences for it
General Rules
Article 1
The Islamic
belief (‘Aqidah) constitutes the foundation of the state. Hence, nothing is
permitted to exist within its entity, its structure or its accountability or
any other aspect connected to it, unless the Islamic ‘Aqidah is its basis. At the
same time, the Islamic ‘Aqidah acts as the basis of the constitution and
Shari’ah laws; thus, nothing related to the constitution or to the laws is
permitted to exist unless it emanates from the Islamic ‘Aqidah.
The explanation and the clarification of the evidences
The state comes into being by the
emergence of new ideas upon which it is established. The authority (the
governing of people’s affairs and the management of their issues) in the state
changes when the new ideas change, since if these ideas turned into concepts
(i.e. if their meaning was perceived and their credibility was established),
they would influence man’s behaviour. This behaviour would then proceed
according to these concepts. Thus, man’s viewpoint about life changes, and
according to its change, his viewpoint towards the interests also changes. The
authority is simply the guardianship of these interests and the supervision of
their management; thus the viewpoint about life is the basis upon which the
state is built and it is the basis upon which the authority is established.
However, the viewpoint about life is generated by a specific thought about
life. Hence, this thought about life becomes the basis of the state and the
basis of the authority.
Since the specific
thought about life is embodied in a host of concepts, criteria and convictions,
this host of concepts, criteria and convictions is considered a basis. The
authority looks after peoples’ affairs and supervises the management of their
interests according to this host of concepts, criteria and convictions.
Therefore, the basis is a host of thoughts and not just one single idea. It is
this host of thoughts in its entirety that generated the viewpoint about life,
and consequently the viewpoint towards the interests was established and the
authority set about managing them according to this viewpoint. Therefore, the
state was defined as being an executi entity for a host of concepts, criteria
and convictions that a group of people had adopted.
This is regarding the
state from the fact that it is a state i.e. from the fact that this state is
the authority that looks after the interests of people and supervises the
management of these interests.
However, this host of
thoughts upon which the state is founded i.e. the host of concepts, criteria
and convictions could either be built upon a fundamental thought or not built
upon a fundamental thought. If it were built upon a fundamental thought, it
would be solidly built with strong pillars and a firm entity; since it would
rest upon a fundamental foundation. This is so because the fundamental thought
is the thought that has no other thought behind it, and that is the
intellectual ‘Aqidah. In such a case, the state would be built upon an
intellectual ‘Aqidah. On the other hand, if the state were not built
upon a fundamental thought, this would ease its destruction and it would not be
difficult to demolish its entity and then usurp its authority. This is because
it has not been built upon one intellectual ‘Aqidah upon which the state
was established. Therefore, it is essential that in order for the state to be a
strong entity, it must be established upon an intellectual ‘Aqidah from
which ideas that the state was founded upon emanate i.e. an intellectual ‘Aqidah
from which the host of
concepts, criteria and convictions that represent the idea of the state
regarding life emanate and consequently the viewpoint of this state towards
life and this is what produces its viewpoint towards the interests.
The Islamic State is
built solely upon the Islamic ‘Aqidah because the host of concepts,
criteria and convictions which the Ummah (collective of Muslims) has
adopted emanate solely from an intellectual ‘Aqidah. The Ummah
has first of all adopted this ‘Aqidah and embraced it as a conclusive ‘Aqidah
based on decisive evidence. Hence, this ‘Aqidah was its comprehensive
idea about life and accordingly its viewpoint about life was shaped and based
upon it and its viewpoint towards the interests was derived from it. The Ummah
also took the host of concepts, criteria and convictions from it and therefore
the Islamic ‘Aqidah is the basis of the Islamic State.
Additionally, the
Messenger of Allah
established the Islamic State upon a specific
basis; therefore this very basis must be the basis of the Islamic State in
every era and in every location. When the Messenger of Allah
established the authority in Madinah and
assumed the rule over it, he established it on the basis of the Islamic ‘Aqidah
from the very first day and the verses of legislation had not been revealed
yet. Hence, the Messenger of Allah
made the Shahadah (testimony) of “There
is no god but Allah and Muhammad is the Messenger of Allah” as the
basis of the Muslims’ life and of the relationships between people as well as
the basis for removing grievances and settling disputes. In other words, it was
the basis of all aspects of life and the basis of authority and government. He
did not stop at that; rather, He (swt) also
legislated for Jihad and made it an
obligation upon the Muslims in order to carry this ‘Aqidah to all
people. Abu Dawud reported on the authority of Abu Hurayrah that the Messenger
of Allah
said: “I
have been ordered to fight people until they profess that there is no god but
Allah. If they said it, their lives and their wealth would be inviolable to me,
except that which is by right and their account is with Allah” (Agreed upon, text
used from Bukhari)
The Messenger of
Allah
also made the protection of the continued
presence of the ‘Aqidah as a basis for the state an obligation upon the
Muslims and he
ordered the Muslims to brandish the sword and
to fight if the flagrant Kufr (disbelief) were to become apparent; in
other words, if the ‘Aqidah ceased to be the basis of authority and
rule. The Messenger of Allah
was asked about the tyrant rulers “the most
evil of the leaders”: “Do we challenge them with the sword?”
He
replied “No, as long as they continue to establish
prayer amongst you.” (Muslim), and he
made the Bay’a (pledge of allegiance to
the ruler) based on the Muslims’ obedience to the people in authority unless
the Muslims witness a flagrant Kufr. In the narration of Auf Bin Malik
regarding the evil leaders “It was said O Messenger of Allah – do we not
challenge them with the sword? And he
replied: "No as
long as they establish the prayer” (Muslim).
And ‘Ubadah B. Samit said in the agreed upon narration regarding the Bay’a
“and
that we would not dispute the people in authority unless we witness a flagrant
Kufr (disbelief)” and in the narration of Al-Tabarani, the wording was:
“open Kufr”. And in a narration by Ibn Hibban in his Sahih collection, the
wording was: “unless the disobedience to Allah is flagrant”. All
of this indicates that the basis of the state is the Islamic ‘Aqidah,
since the Messenger of Allah
established the authority
upon it, ordered the brandishing of the sword in order to maintain it as a
basis for the authority and he also ordered Jihad
for its sake.
The first article of
the constitution was drafted based on the previously mentioned grounds. This
article prohibits the state from having any concept, conviction or criterion
that does not emanate from the Islamic ‘Aqidah. To have the Islamic ‘Aqidah
as a nominal basis for the state would not be sufficient; rather, this basis
should be reflected in every aspect related to the State’s existence and in
every minor or major issue. Hence, it is forbidden for the state to have any
concept about life or about ruling unless it emanates from the Islamic ‘Aqidah.
The state would not tolerate any concept not emanating from this ‘Aqidah.
Therefore, it would not tolerate the concept of democracy to be adopted within
the state because it does not emanate from the Islamic ‘Aqidah and
because the Islamic Aqidah contradicts with the concepts which emanate
from it. Additionally, the concept of nationalism would not be allowed to have
any consideration whatsoever because it does not emanate from the Islamic ‘Aqidah
and because the concepts which emanate from the Islamic ‘Aqidah abhor
it, prohibit it and outline its danger. Likewise, the concept of patriotism
should not have any existence, for it does not emanate from the Islamic ‘Aqidah
and because it contradicts with the concepts that emanate from the Islamic ‘Aqidah.
Furthermore, the apparatus of the State would not have any ministerial
departments according to the democratic understanding and nor should there be
in its government any imperial, monarchical or republican concepts for these do
not emanate from the ‘Aqidah of Islam and they contradict with the
concepts emanating from it. Furthermore, it is categorically forbidden for
individuals, movements or groups to account the Islamic State on other than the
basis of the Islamic ‘Aqidah. Hence, such type of accounting that is
based upon other than the Islamic ‘Aqidah would be prohibited and the
establishment of movements and groups on other than the basis of the Islamic ‘Aqidah
would be prohibited. The fact that the Islamic ‘Aqidah acts as the basis
for the State makes all of this binding upon the State itself and makes it
incumbent upon the citizens over which it rules. This is since its life, in its
capacity as a state, as well as the life of every matter originating from it in
its capacity as a state, and every action linked to it in its capacity as a
state, and every relationship established with it in its quality as a state,
must have as its basis the ‘Aqidah of the State, that is the Islamic ‘Aqidah.
As for the second
issue in the article, its evidence is reflected in the fact that the
constitution is the fundamental law (qanun al-asaasi) of the State;
thus, it is a law, and the law itself is the order of the authority. Allah (swt) ordered the ruler to rule by what
He (swt) revealed to the Messenger of Allah
and described the one who rules by other than
what Allah (swt) has revealed as a disbeliever if he believed in what he ruled
by and believed in the unsuitability of what Allah (swt) revealed to His
Messenger
. He (swt) described
the ruler who rules by other than what He (swt) revealed but did not believe in
it as ‘aassi (disobedient). This indicates that belief in Allah (swt)
and His Messenger
must be the basis of the orders of the ruler;
that is, the basis of the laws and the basis of the constitution. As for the
command of Allah (swt) to the ruler to rule by what He (swt) revealed, in other
words by the Shari’ah rules, this is established in the Book and the Sunnah.
Allah (swt) says, “ By your God, they shall not believe until they make you judge of what
is in dispute between them” (TMQ 4:65) and “So rule between them by what
Allah has revealed” (TMQ 5:49).
Allah (swt) has
confined the State’s legislation to what He had revealed and He warned against
ruling by other than it. He (swt) says, “Whoever rules by other than what Allah has
revealed, they are the disbelievers.” (TMQ 5:44). Also, the Messenger of Allah
said in an agreed upon Hadith, “Whoever introduces
into our matter (Islam) something that is not in it, then it is rejected” (Agreed upon, text from Bukhari), and in the
narration in Muslim “something that is not from it”, and in the narration from Ibn Hazm in Al-Muhalla and Ibn ‘Abd Al-Barr in Al-Tamhid “Every action which is not based upon our order, it is
rejected”. This indicates that
the legislation of the State must be confined to what emanates from the Islamic
‘Aqidah; these are the Shari’ah rules which we certainly believe
that Allah (swt) has revealed to the Messenger of Allah
, whether their
revelation were explicit; by stating that it is the rule of Allah (swt) and it
is reflected in the Book, the Sunnah or the Sahabah (companions
of the Prophet) unanimously consented that it is the rule of Allah (swt), or
whether their revelation was implicit; by saying this is an indication of the
rule of Allah (swt) taken by way of analogy whose ‘Illah (reason) is a Shari’ah
‘Illah. This is why the second issue has been drafted in the article.
In addition, since
the actions of the worshippers must be confined to the address of the
Legislator (swt), their governing should therefore be from Allah (swt), and the
Islamic Shari’ah came to address all the actions of people and all of
their relationships, whether these relationships were with Allah (swt), with
themselves or with other people. Hence, there is no place in Islam for people
to enact laws from themselves in order to govern their relations for they are
restricted to the laws of Shari’ah. Allah (swt) says “Whatever
the Messenger brought you take it; and whatever he forbade you abstain from
it.” (TMQ 59:7). He (swt) also says: “It
is not fitting for a believer, man or woman, when a matter has been decided by
Allah and His Messenger, to have any option about their decision.” (TMQ
35:36). The Messenger of Allah
said: “Truly Allah has commanded the
obligations, so do not neglect them; He also prohibited certain things, so do
not violate them and He imposed certain limits, so do not transgress them.”
(extracted by Al-Daraqutni from Abi Tha’labah, and confirmed as Hasan by
Al-Nawawi in Al-Riyadh Al-Salihin). He
also said: “Whoever introduces into our
matter (Islam) something that is not in it, then it is rejected” (Agreed upon,
through Aaisha (ra) and the wording is from Muslim).
Therefore, it is
Allah (swt) who legislated the rules, not the ruler, and it is He (swt) who
obliged people and obliged the ruler to adhere to them in their relations and
in their actions, restricted them to these rules and prohibited them from
following anything else. Due to this, there is no scope for man to lay down
laws to govern peoples’ relations and there is no place for the ruler to force
people or to give them the choice to follow principles and rules laid down by
man to govern their relations.
Article 2
Dar Al-Islam (Islamic Abode) is the territory where the rules of Islam are
implemented and its security is upheld by Islam. Dar Al-Kufr (abode of disbelief) is
the territory where the rules of Kufr are implemented or its security is upheld
by other than the security of Islam.
Dar has several meanings:
Linguistically: “abode”, such as His (swt) words: “So We
caused the earth to swallow him and his abode place”
(TMQ 28:81) and “way-station”, and every
place that a people settle is their Dar. Such as His words: “So the
earthquake seized them and they lay (dead), prostrate in their homes” (TMQ 7:91), and it means: “city”. Sibawayh stated: “This Dar is a
beautiful city and “abode and place” such as His words: “And
excellent indeed will be the abode (i.e. Paradise) of the Muttaqun” (TMQ 16:30)”. In the same manner, it
metaphorically means “tribe”, such as the narration of Abu Hamid Al-Sa’adi in
Bukhari from the Messenger
who said: “Truly the best tribe (Dar) of the Ansar is
the tribe of Bani Najjar…”
And Dar can be adjoined
to the names of things such as His (swt) words “I shall show you the home (Dar) of
Al-Fasiqun” (TMQ 7:145), “And excellent indeed will be the abode (i.e.
Paradise) of the Muttaqûn” (TMQ 16:30), “But they killed her. So he said: “Enjoy yourselves in
your homes for three days. This is a promise (i.e. a threat) that will not be
belied.” (TMQ 11:65), and His (swt) words: “And He caused you to inherit their lands,
and their houses, and their riches”. (TMQ 33:27). And similarly in the narration of Buraydah in Muslim where the Messenger
of Allah
said, “…Then invite them to move from their household
to that of the Muhajirin (emigrants)” and the narration of Salima Bin
Nufail from Ahmad that he
said: “the centre of the believers’
abode is as-Sham”
And it could be adjoined to meanings
such as His (swt) words: “and caused their people to dwell in the house
of destruction? “ (TMQ 14:28). And His words: “Who, out
of His Grace, has lodged us in a home that will last forever” (TMQ 35:35).
And in the narration of Ali (ra) from Ibn Asakir with a Hasan Sahih
chain, and in Tirmidhi: The Messenger of Allah
said to me: “May Allah have mercy upon
Abu Bakr, he married his daughter to me and carried me to the abode of
migration (Dar-Al-Hijrah)”. And the narration of Ibn Abbas in Daraqutni
saying: The Messenger of Allah
said: “If the slave
leaves the abode of Shirk (Dar-Al-Shirk) before his master, then he is free,
and if he leaves after him, then he is returned to him, and if a woman leaves
the abode of Shirk before her husband, she can marry whom she pleases, and if
she leaves after him, then she is returned to him”
And the Shari’ah
adjoined the term Dar to two words from meanings – being: Islam and Shirk. Tabarani has a version of the
previously mentioned narration of Salima Bin Nufail in the Musnad al-Shamiyin
with the words “the centre of the abode of Islam (Dar Al-Islam) is ash-Sham”. So, the word Dar here is added
to Islam. And likewise, Al-Mawardi narrated in al-Ahkam al-Sultaniyya and in
al-Hawi al-Kabir that the Messenger of Allah
said “Whatever is in the abode of Islam
is prohibited, and whatever is in the abode of Shirk is permitted” in
respect to the sanctity of blood and wealth in the abode of Islam…except by its
right in agreement with the rules of the Shari’ah,
and with respect to the absence of sanctity of the abode of Shirk (the abode of war “Dar Al-Harb”)
in the sitution of actual war, as in the rules regarding fighting and booty….in
agreement with the rules of the Shari’ah.
This division encompasses the whole world, so there is not a part from it which
falls outside of either the abode of Islam (Dar Al-Islam) or the abode
of Shirk, or in other words the abode of Kufr or abode of war (Dar Al-Shirk,
Dar Al-Kufr, Dar Al-Harb).
The abode is considered an
abode of Islam if it fulfils two conditions:
Firstly:
that the security is upheld by the Muslims, according to the evidence that he
said to his companions in Makkah “Truly, Allah made
brothers for you and an abode for you to be safe in”. This abode is the
Dar al-hijrah mentioned in the narration of ‘Ali already mentioned from
Ibn ‘Asakir, and in the narration of Aaisha (ra) in al-Bukhari in which the
Messenger of Allah
said: “I have been shown the abode of
your emigration”. And the evidence that he
and his companions did not emigrate to Madinah
until he
was sure about the presence of protection
and security; Al-Hafiz said in Al-Fath, Bayhaqi narrated through a strong chain
from Al-Sha’bi and Al-Tabarani connected it from the narration of Abu Musa
Al-Ansari who said: “The Messenger of Allah
set off with his uncle al-‘Abbas to meet
70 of the Ansar at al-‘Aqabah, and Abu Umama said to him – Asad Bin Zurara – O
Muhammad ask for your Lord and yourself whatever you want, then he informed us
of what reward we will have. He said: I ask you for my Lord, to worship Him and
do not associate anything else with Him, and I ask you for myself and my
companinos to accommodate use, and support us, and protect us from what you
protect yourselves. They said: What is for us? He
said: Paradise. They said: What you
asked for is yours”.
And the evidence related by Ahmad from Ka’ab Bin M’alik
through a Sahih chain, that the Messenger of Allah
said: “I pledge to you that you protect
me from that which you protect your women and children from. So al-Baraa Bin
Ma’ror took him by his hand and said Yes, by the One who sent you with the Truth,
we will most certainly protect you from that which we protect our people, and
so give us the pledge oh Messenger of Allah
, we are people of wars and
strong disposition, and we inherit this from our forefathers”. And in a Sahih narration by
Ahmad from Jaber that he
said in the pledge of ‘Aqabah “…and to
give support to me and protect me from whatever you protect yourselves, your
wives and your children from when I come to you, and you will have Paradise”.
And in the Dala’il Al-Nabuwa by Al-Bayhaqi, with a strong, good chain
from ‘Ubadah Bin Samit who said “And to give support to the Messenger of
Allah
from that which we protect ourselves,
our wives and our children when he arrives to us at Yathrib, and we would have
Paradise”.
The Prophet
refused to emigrate to any place which did not
have security, power and protection. Al-Bayhaqi narrated through a Hasan
chain from ‘Ali that the Messenger of Allah
said to the Shayban b. Tha’labah tribe: “You
have not replied badly since you expressed the truth, and the Deen of Allah is
not given support except by those who can protect it from all sides”.
This was after they had offered to support him with respect to the Arabs while
excluding the Persians.
Secondly: That the rules of Islam are implemented therein.
This is from the evidence of al-Bukhari from Ubada Bin Samit who said: “The
Messenger of Allah
called us and we took
the oath of allegiance to him. Among the injunctions he made binding upon us
was: Listening and obedience (to the Amir) in our pleasure and displeasure, in
our adversity and prosperity, even when somebody is given preference over us,
and without disputing the delegation of powers to a man duly invested with them
except when you see clear Kufr (disbelief) which you have proof from
Allah”. And listening to and
obeying the Messenger of Allah
is with regards to his orders and
prohibitions, in other words in respect to the implementation of laws. Another
evidence is what Ahmad narrated, Ibn Hibban in his Sahih collection and
Abu ‘Ubayd in al-Amwal by ‘Abd Allah b. ‘Amru from the Prophet
who said: “The emigration is two –
emigration of the one who is settled and the nomad, as for the nomad he obeys
if ordered and responds if called, as for the one who is settled they have the
greater test and reward”. The angle of inference is clear from his
words
“he obeys if ordered and responds if
called”, since the desert was part of the abode of Islam (Dar
Al-Islam) even if it was not the abode of emigration (Dar al-hijrah).
And accordingly with the evidence of the narration of Wathilah b. al-Asqa’ in al-Tabarani, al-Haythami said through a chain whose
people are all trustworthy that the Messenger of Allah
said to him “And the emigration of the
nomad is to return to your nomadity, and to listen and obey in your displeasure
and pleasure, and your adversity and prosperity, even if someone is given
preference over you…” and the evidence that Ahmad narrated with a Sahih
chain from Anas: “I followed some youths saying that Muhammad has come,
so I followed and did not see anything. Then they say – Muhammad has come, so I
followed and did not see anything. He said: Until Muhammad
and his companion Abu Bakr came, and we
were part of the fervency of Madinah. Then they sent a man from the people of
Madinah to make the Ansar aware of them, and so they were met by about five
hundred from the Ansar reaching them. The Ansar said: Proceed in safety and with
authority. And so the Messenger of
Allah
and his companion came from between
them. And so the people of Madinah came out, including the women overlooking
from their households saying which of them is he, which of them is he?”.
This narration has the evidence for both of the two conditions of security and
the implementation of the laws. With respect to the security – this is proven
from the presence of five hundred from the Ansar saying proceed in safety and
the Messenger
confirmed their words. In the same manner he
confirmed their words that the two of them would be obeyed. Accordingly the
security and obedience were fulfilled in the abode of emigration (Dar
al-Hijrah) and if they had not been fulfilled the Prophet
would not have emigrated.
These two conditions, the fulfillment of security and
obedience in the implementation of the laws, were pledged upon by the Ansar in
al-’Aqabah. Al-Bayhaqi narrated with a strong chian from ‘Ubadah b. Samit who
said “…We pledged allegiance to the Messenger of Allah
to listen and obey when we were busy and
inactive, and to spend in times of difficulty and ease, and upon enjoining the
good and forbidding the evil, and upon saying the truth regarding Allah and not
fearing the blame of the blamers, and upon us supporting the Messenger of Allah
whenever he came to Yathrib against
whatever we protected ourselves, our wives and our sons from, and we would have
Paradise. This was the pledge that we gave to the Messenger of Allah
”. And the security is that of the
Muslims, as made clear by his words “and upon us supporting the Messenger
of Allah
whenever he came to Yathrib against
whatever we protected ourselves, our wives and our sons from, and we would have
Paradise.”
This meaning was clear from the letter
which he wrote between the Emigrants and the Ansar, and made peace with the Jews therein and made a convenant
with them. This occurred in the first year of the emigration. This is from the
account of Ibn Ishaq and it has been called the sahifa. It says: “In
the name of Allah the Compassionate, the Merciful. This is a document from
Muhammad the Prophet
between the believers and Muslims of
Quraysh and Yathrib, and those who followed them and joined them and struggled
alongside them that they are one community (Ummah) to the exclusion of all
men…Believers are protectors one to the other to the exclusion of outsiders…The
Jews must bear their expenses and the Muslims their expenses. Each must help
the other against anyone who attacks the people of this document…If any dispute
or controversy likely to cause trouble should arise it must be referred to
Allah and to Muhammad the Messenger of Allah
”.
Based upon this, the abode cannot be an abode of Islam unless
it fulfilled the conditions that the security was in the hands of the Muslims
and that the laws of Islam were implemented, and if one of these two conditions
ceased, or was not fulfilled, such as the security falling into the hands of
the disbelievers or that the rule of Al-Taghut was implemented amongst
the people, the abode would become an abode of polytheism (Dar Al-Shirk)
or disbelief (Dar Al-Kufr). It is not a condition that both of these
conditions are absent for the abode to transform to an abode of polytheism,
rather it is sufficient that one of them is absent for that to occur. The abode
being one of disbelief does not mean that all of its inhabitants are disbelievers and if
the abode was one of Islam it does not follow that all of its inhabitants are
Muslims. Rather the meaning of the term abode (Dar) here is the Shari’ah
terminology (Shar’i real meaning)
in other words that the Shari’ah is what gives it this meaning, like the
terms prayer (Salah) and fasting (Sawm) and similar from the Shar’i
realities .
Based upon this, the term could be
applied upon a land where most of the inhabitants are Christians for example,
but if it was part of the Islamic State it would be referred to as an abode of
Islam (Dar Al-Islam). This is because the rules applied therein are the
Islamic laws and the security of the land would be by the security of Islam as
long as it remained part of the Islamic State.
And in the same manner, any land where
the majority of its inhabitants are Muslims but it was part of a State which
did not rule by Islam, nor was it secured by a Muslim army but rather by that
of the disbelievers, then the term abode of disbelief (Dar Al-Kufr)
would be applied to it despite most of its inhabitants being Muslims.
So, the meaning of abode (Dar) here is the Shar’i reality
(legislative meaning) without regard to where the Muslims were a majority or
minority where the term is applied; rather, it is with regard to the implemented
laws and the established security for its inhabitants. In other words, the
meaning of abode is taken from the legislative (Shar’i) texts which
explained this meaning, in the same way that the meaning of the word Salah
is taken from the legislative texts which explained its meaning. And in the
same manner all the Shar’i real meanings have their meaning derived from the
legislative texts and not from the linguistic meaning of the words.
Article 3
The Khalifah
adopts specific Shari’ah rules which he will enact as a constitution and
laws. If he adopts a Shari’ah rule, this rule alone becomes the Shari’ah
rule that must be acted upon and it becomes a binding law that every citizen
must obey openly and privately.
The evidence of this article is
derived from the Ijma’ (General Consensus) of the Companions that the Khalifah
reserves the right to adopt specific Shari’ah rules. It has also been
established in the same manner that it is obligatory to act upon the rules
adopted by the Khalifah. The Muslim is not permitted to act upon any
rule other than what the Khalifah has adopted in terms of rules even if
these rules were Shari’ah rules adopted by one of the Mujtahideen (scholars
of Islam). This is so because the rule of Allah that becomes duly binding upon
all the Muslims is what the Khalifah adopts. The rightly guided Khulafaa’
proceeded in this manner; they adopted a host of specific rules and ordered
their implementation. Thus the Muslims, with all of the Companions amongst
them, used to act upon these rules and to abandon their own Ijtihad (Islamic
opinion derived from the Islamic evidences). For instance, Abu Bakr (ra)
adopted in the matter of divorce a rule stipulating that the triple divorce
would be considered as one divorce if it were pronounced in one sitting. He
also adopted in the matter of distributing the wealth upon the Muslims a rule
stipulating that wealth should be distributed equally amongst the Muslims,
regardless of seniority in Islam or anything else. The Muslims followed him in
this as well as the judges and the Walis (governors) implemented the
rules that he had adopted. When Umar (ra) took office, he adopted other
opinions different to those of Abu Bakr (ra) in the same two matters; he
imposed the rule stipulating that the triple divorce is considered as three and
he also distributed the wealth among the Muslims according to their seniority
in Islam and according to their needs rather than distributing equally. The
Muslims duly followed him in this and the judges and the governors implemented
the rules he had adopted. Then, Umar (ra) adopted a rule stipulating that the
land conquered in war is a spoil for Bayt al-Mal (the State’s treasury),
not for the fighters, and that the land should remain with its owners and
should not be divided among the fighters or among the Muslims. The governors
and the judges duly complied and implemented the rule that he had adopted.
It was in this manner that all of
the rightly guided Khulafaa’ proceeded with respect to adoption of
opinions, ordering people to abandon their Ijtihad and the rules which
they had acted upon, and instead adhere to that which the Khalifah had
adopted. So the Ijma’ of the Companions was established on two matters;
the first is the right of adoption and the second is the obligation of acting
upon what the Khalifah adopts. Famous Shari’ah principles were
derived based on this Ijmaa’ of the Companions. These are: “The Sultan reserves the right to effect as many judgements as the
problems which arise”, “The order of the Imam resolves the disagreement” and “The order of the Imam is binding”.
The evidence for
adopting one Islamic opinion is the fact that there are different Islamic
opinions regarding one single matter; hence, in order to act upon the Shari’ah
rule in any matter it is imperative to adopt a specific Islamic opinion for it.
This is so because the Shari’ah rules, which represent the address of
the Legislator related to the actions of the worshippers, have come in the
Quran and in the narrations, and many of these can have a number of possible
meanings according to the Arabic language and according to Shari’ah. For
that reason, it is natural and inevitable that people differ in their
understanding of the address of the Legislator and that this difference in
understanding reaches the level of disparity and contradiction in the intended
meaning. Thus, it is inevitable to have different and contradictory
understandings of the same matter. Because of this, there could be a host of
different and contradictory opinions in a single matter. So when the Messenger
of Allah
said at the battle of Ahzab: “None
of you should pray ‘Asr except in Bani Quraythah” (recorded by
Al-Bukhari through Ibn Umar), some understood that he was urging haste and so
they prayed on their way to Bani Quraythah, while others understood that he
had literally ordered them to pray ‘Asr
in Bani Quraythah; therefore, they delayed praying ‘Asr until they
reached their destination. When the Messenger of Allah
heard of this, he approved both
understandings, and there are many verses and narrations similar to this.
The difference of
opinion in single matters makes it incumbent upon the Muslims to adopt one
opinion from these various opinions since all of them are Shari’ah rules
and the rule of Allah (swt) in one single matter regarding one person is not
multiple. Therefore, it is imperative to choose one single rule from the Shari’ah
in order to act upon. Hence, the Muslim’s adoption of a specific Shari’ah
rule is necessary and inevitable when he or she undertakes the action since
undertaking the action obliges the
Muslim to accomplish it according to the Shari’ah rule. The obligation
of acting according to the Shari’ah rule, whether this was a Fard
(obligatory), Mandub (recommended), Haram (forbidden), Makruh (despised) or
Mubah
(permitted) makes it incumbent upon the Muslim to adopt a specific Shari’ah
rule. Therefore, it is obligatory upon every Muslim to adopt a specific Shari’ah
rule when taking rules for actions, irrespective of whether he or she was a Mujtahid
or a Muqallid (someone who follows the opinion of a scholar in an issue
rather than deriving it themselves) or whether they were the Khalifah or
other than the Khalifah.
With respect to the Khalifah,
it is imperative for him to adopt a host of specific rules according to which
he assumes the management of peoples’ affairs. Hence, it is necessary for him
to adopt certain rules pertaining to what is of a general nature to all the
Muslims in terms of matters of government and authority such as Zakat,
levies, Kharaj (land tax), foreign relations and everything that is
related to the unity of the State and ruling.
However, his adoption of the
rules is subject to scrutiny. If the Khalifah’s managing of the people’s
affairs were subject to adopting specific Islamic rules, then in this case the
adoption would be obligatory upon the Khalifah. This would be in
concordance with the Shari’ah principle stipulating that: “Whatever
is necessary to accomplish a duty is in itself a duty”, such as the signing of treaties.
However, if the Khalifah could manage peoples’ affairs in a specific
matter according to the Islamic Shari’ah rules without having to resort
to the adoption of a specific rule in this matter, then in this case the
adoption would be permitted for him rather than an obligation, such as Nisab
Al-Shahadah (the minimum number of witnesses in a testimony). In
this case, it is permitted for him to adopt or not to adopt, for in essence the
adoption is permitted and not obligatory; this is so because the Ijma’
of the Companions is that the Imam
can adopt and there is no Ijma’ that the Imam must adopt. Therefore, the adoption itself is permissible and
it does not become obligatory unless the obligatory management of peoples’
affairs cannot be accomplished except through adoption. In such a case it then
becomes obligatory so that the duty could be accomplished.
Article 4
The Khalifah
does not adopt any specific Shari’ah rule in matters related to
rituals(‘ibadaat) except in Zakat and Jihad, and whatever is
necessary to protect the unity of the Muslims, and nor does he adopt any
thought from among the thoughts related to the Islamic ‘Aqidah.
There is a consensus of the
companions that the Khalifah alone has the right to adopt and from this
consensus the famous rules “the decision of the Imam resolves the disagreement” and “the decision of the Iman is
binding” have been derived. However, it emerged from the events of Al-Ma’mun
(pertaining the Fitna (strife) of the creation of the Quran), that
adoption in the thoughts related to Aqa’id (beliefs, plural of ‘Aqidah)
caused Fitna for the Khalifah and Fitnah amongst the
Muslims. Therefore, the Khalifah deems it fit to abstain from adopting
in matters related to ‘Aqidah and in rules related to rituals in order
to avoid problems and to gain the consent and tranquillity of the Muslims.
However, abstaining from adopting in matters of 'Aqa’id and in rituals
does not mean that it is forbidden for the Khalifah to adopt in them, it
rather means that the Khalifah chooses not to adopt in them for he can
either adopt or abstain from adopting. Thus, he may choose not to adopt. That
is why the article stated that the Khalifah “does not adopt” rather than
stating that the Khalifah is “forbidden from adopting”, which indicates
that he may choose not to adopt.
As for why he chooses
to abstain from adopting in Aqa’id and in rituals, this is based upon
two issues: Firstly, the hardship caused by coercing people to follow a
specific opinion related to ‘Aqidah matters. Secondly, the fact that
what prompts the Khalifah to adopt is in reality the management of the
Muslims’ affairs by one single opinion and preserving the unity of the State
and the unity of the ruling. Hence, he adopts in matters related to the
relationships between individuals and related to public matters, and he does
not adopt in matters related to relationship of man with his God.
With respect to the
first issue, Allah prohibited the compulsion of the disbelievers to leave their
beliefs and to embrace the Islamic ‘Aqidah, forbade forcing them to leave
their rituals and ordered compelling them to be restricted by other Shari’ah
rules so, by greater reasoning, the Muslims should not be forced to leave the
rules related to the beliefs as long as they remained Islamic beliefs and
should not be forced to leave the rules related to rituals as long as they were
Shari’ah rules. Also, the compulsion to leave ideas connected to beliefs
is a definite cause of hardship and will inflame loyalty (to those ideas)
without doubt as proven by what happened with Imams such as Imam Ahmed Ibn
Hanbal in the Fitna of creation of the Quran. When they were subjected
to beating and humiliation, they did not submit neither did they leave what
they believed in. Allah (swt) has said “(Allah) has not laid upon you in
Deen any hardship” (TMQ 22:78).
The rituals are like
the beliefs since compulsion upon specific rules while the person holds another
opinion as the Shari’ah rule is a cause of distress upon the soul for it
is the relationship of people with Allah and because it is bound to the ‘Aqidah;
so the Khalifah should not adopt in whatever causes distress upon the
Muslims. However, it is not forbidden for him to do so.
As for the second
issue, the beliefs and the rituals are the relationship between man and the
Creator and they do not bring about relationships upon which problems spring
from, as opposed to the transactions and punishments since they are the
relationship between the individuals within the society and cause the
occurrence of relationships from which problems result. The origin in
transactions is the resolution of disputes and the essence of the Khalifah’s
adoption is to manage the peoples’ affairs. Their affairs are openly managed on
the part of the Khalifah with respect to what is between them in terms
of relationships and there is no scope for this in regards to their
relationship with Allah, in other words in their beliefs and rituals.
For that reason the
tangible reality of adoption by the Khalifah is that it can only be in
respect to the relationships between people in order to manage their affairs
and not in the relationships between them and Allah. Consequently, the reality of adoption is that it is only in the
relationships between the people and the public relationships. So, adoption in
the relationship between man and the Creator, in other words, in the beliefs
and rituals, contradicts the reality of adoption. Based upon this, the Khalifah
will not adopt in what contradicts the reality of adoption. However, it is not
forbidden for him to do so.
Built upon these two matters –
the distress or the hardship and the contradiction of the tangible reality of
adoption, the Khalifah does not adopt in the thoughts of the beliefs or
in the rules of the rituals. However, if a clear prohibition is mentioned in
the Quran and in the Sunnah regarding a certain belief (‘Aqidah),
then, at that time it is adopted (prohibiting that belief) even if there is
hardship and even if it contradicts the reality of adoption so as to give
preference to the definite text. For example, beliefs cannot be adopted except
by conviction. In a similar fashion, it can be done if managing the affairs of
the Muslims necessitates collecting them upon one rule. This is based upon the
texts that enjoin the protection of the congregation of Muslims and the protection
of the unity of the state. As example for this are the specification for the
times of Hajj and fasting Ramadan, the Eid celebrations, Zakat and Jihad.
In these issues the Khalifah
adopts a specific Shari’ah rule since, with respect to the ‘Aqidah,
there cannot be compulsion to leave conviction, rather adhering to what is
held as conviction is enforced. This is from text which is conclusive in its
narration and indication (qati’ thabut qati’ dalalah). With regards to
the ritualistic issues, there is no hardship in them since they are not from
that which pertains to the relationship solely between man and His Lord such as
prayer, rather they are those that are connected to the relationships between
people, such as the celebrations. Due to this adoption is permitted in these
two circumstance regarding beliefs and rituals.
What determines whether an idea
is from the ‘Aqidah or from the Shari’ah rules is its Shari’ah
evidence. So, if the evidence is an address related to the action of the
servants of Allah, then, it is a Shari’ah rule since the Shari’ah
law is the address of the Legislator related to the actions of the servant, and
if it is not related to the actions of the servant, then, it is from the ‘Aqidah.
Additionally, the difference between the ‘Aqidah and the Shari’ah
rule is that what is requested to have Iman in and has no action
requested in it, is from the ‘Aqidah, such as the stories and the
information regarding the unseen. Those
issues that request action are the Shari’ah rules. So, the following
words of Allah are all from ‘Aqidah: “Believe in Allah and His
Messenger and the Book which He revealed to His Messenger” (TMQ 4:136), “Allah is the Creator of all things” (TMQ 39:62), “And mention in the book Maryam…” (TMQ 19:16),
and the words “It is a Day whereon mankind will be like moths scattered
about; and the mountains will be like carded wool” (TMQ 101:4-5).
All of these are from ‘Aqidah because they are not related to the
actions of the servants; they are from what Iman is requested in, and
there is no request for action in them. Also, the words of Allah: “And
Allah has permitted trade” (TMQ 2:275), “If they suckle the
children for you, give them their due payment” (TMQ 65:6), and His words “and
when you judge between men, judge with justice” (TMQ 4:58) are all from the Shari’ah
rules since they are related to the actions of the servants and they are from
the issues that actions are requested in.
Based upon this, the
fact that the Messenger of Allah
is the seal of the Prophets is considered from
the ‘Aqidah since it comes under what is requested to have Iman in.
Conversely, the Imamate, in other words the Khilafah is not from the ‘Aqidah
since it is amongst the issues which action is requested in. The fact that the
Prophet
is free from sin is considered from the ‘Aqidah.
However, the issue of the Khalifah being from Quraysh,
Ahl Al-Bayt (family of the Prophet) or any Muslim from
amongst the Muslims is from the rules of the Shari’ah and it isn’t from
the ‘Aqidah since it is related to the actions of the servants and is
related to the the conditions of the Khalifah. In this manner,
everything that is not connected to the actions or is requested to have Iman
in is from the ‘Aqidah, but what is from the actions of the servants or
what is requested to be acted upon is considered to be from the Shari’ah
rules.
The reality of ‘Aqidah is
that it is a fundamental thought; the meaning of it being an ‘Aqidah is
that it is taken as the fundamental criteria to measure anything else;
therefore if the idea was not a fundamental one, then it would not be
considered ‘Aqidah. Also, ‘Aqidah is the comprehensive thought
regarding the universe, man and life, what came before the life of this world
and what will come after it and the relationship between life and what came
before it and what will be after it. This definition is for every ‘Aqidah
and is applied upon the Islamic ‘Aqidah. The definition also includes
the unseen within it. Accordingly, every thought from the ideas of this
comprehensive thought is from the ‘Aqidah. So, everything which is
related to Allah, the Day of Judgement, the creation of the universe and the
like is part of the ‘Aqidah, but everything which has no relation with
that is not considered from the ‘Aqidah.
Article 5
All citizens of the
Islamic State enjoy the Shari’ah rights and duties.
Article 6
The State is
forbidden to discriminate at all between the individuals in terms of ruling,
judiciary and management of affairs or their like. Rather, every individual
should be treated equally regardless of race, Deen, colour or anything
else.
These two articles have been
drafted in order to explain the rules pertaining to those who carry the Islamic
citizenship irrespective of whether they were Muslims or the people of Dhimmah
(non-Muslim citizen of the Islamic State). As for the Muslims, this is due to
the fact that the Messenger
has denied the Muslims who live outside the
Islamic State and who do not hold the Islamic citizenship from the rights
enjoyed by the State’s subjects. On the authority of Sulayman Ibn Buraydah on
that of his father who said: “Whenever the Messenger of Allah (saw)
appointed anyone as Amir of an army or an expedition, he would especially
exhort him to fear Allah and to be good to the Muslims who were with him. He (saw)
would say: “Conquer in the Name of Allah and in the Way of Allah. Fight against
those who disbelieve in Allah. Conquer and do not embezzle the spoils; do not
break your pledge and do not mutilate the dead bodies. Do not kill the children
and if you encountered your enemies who are polytheists, invite them to three
courses of action. If they respond to any of these, then accept it from them
and withhold yourself from doing them any harm. Invite them to Islam; if they
respond to you accept it from them and desist from fighting them. Then invite
them to migrate from their abode to the abode of the Muhajirin and inform them
that if they do so, they shall have all the privileges and obligations of the
Muhajirin. If they refuse to migrate, tell them that they will have the status
of Bedouin Muslims, but they will not get any share from the spoils of war or
Fai’ except when they actually perform Jihad with the Muslims” (Recorded by
Muslim). This narration indicates clearly that the one who does not
migrate to Dar Al-Islam will not enjoy any of the rights of citizenship
even if he were a Muslim. The Messenger of Allah
invited them to come under the authority of
Islam so that they may enjoy what the Muslims enjoyed and undertake the
obligations which the Muslims undertook; he
said: “Then invite them to migrate from their
household to the household of the Muhajirin and inform them that if they do so,
they shall have all the privileges and obligations of the Muhajirin”. This text
stipulates that migration is required for them to have what we have and for our
obligations to be upon them, in other words for them to fall under the laws.
The understanding of the narration is that if they did not move they would not
have what the emigrants had, in other words what they had in the abode of Islam
(Dar Al-Islam), so this narrations explain the difference in the
laws between the one who moves to the abode of the emigrants and the one who
doesn’t, and the abode of the emigrants was the abode of Islam with anything
else being the abode of disbelief (Dar Al-Kufr). The individual’s residence in Dar
Al-Islam or in Dar Al-Kufr is referred to as citizenship. Hence, a
person’s citizenship means the abode which he chooses as his residence; is it Dar
Al-Islam or Dar Al-Kufr? If it were Dar Al-Islam, then the
rules of Dar Al-Islam would apply to it, and in this case a person would
be a holder of an Islamic citizenship. If it were Dar Al-Kufr, the rules
of Dar Al-Kufr would apply to it, and the person living there would not
be considered as a holder of an Islamic citizenship.
The
laws encompass the Dhimmi who lives in Dar Al-Islam, so they are given the rights of residency and carry the citizenship. The Dhimmi is the one who embraces any Deen
other than Islam and becomes a citizen of the Islamic State while remaining
upon his faith which is other than Islam. The word Dhimmi is derived from the word Dhimmah, meaning the oath.
Hence, the Dhimmi are those to whom
we give an oath to treat according to the terms of peace we made with them and to
proceed in interaction with them and in managing their affairs according to the
rules of Islam.
Islam has come with several rules
pertaining to the people of Dhimmah, in which it guaranteed the rights
of citizenship for them and imposed upon them its duties. Islam also outlined
that the Dhimmi enjoy the same
justice we enjoy and that they should abide by the same rules that we abide by.
As for that which they enjoy in terms of justice and fairness, this is derived
from the general command reflected in Allah (swt) saying: “And if you judge between people
that you judge with justice.” (TMQ 4:58) and in His (swt) saying: “And
let not the hatred of others to you to make you swerve to wrong and depart from
justice. Be just, that is nearer to piety” (TMQ 5:8) and it is
also reflected in Allah (swt) saying regarding the judgement between the people
of the book “If you judge, judge with equity between them; for Allah loves those
who judge in equity” (TMQ 5:42).
As for abiding by that which we
abide by in terms of justice, this is derived from the actions and sayings of
the Messenger of Allah
. He
used to exact the same punishment upon the
disbelievers and the Muslims. The Messenger of Allah
punished a Jew by killing him for killing a
woman, as has been recorded in al-Bukhari from Anas Bin Malik who said: “A
woman who went out in Madinah wearing ornaments was attacked by a Jew who threw a stone at
her, so she was brought to the Prophet
barely alive, so the Messenger of Allah
said to her so and so killed you, upon which she raised her head, and so he
returned and said so and so killed you, upon which she raised her head, so he
returned and said so and so killed you upon which she lowered her head. The
Messenger of Allah called for that person and he was killed between two stones”. He
was brought a Jewish man and woman who had
committed adultery and so he stoned the pair of them as related by al-Bukhari
from Ibn Umar who said “A Jewish man and woman who had committed adultery
were brought to the Messenger of Allah
, and so he asked the Jews
what do you find in your book? They said our rabbis appeared red faced. ‘Abd
Allah Bin Salam said Call them to the Torah O Messenger of Allah, and so they
brought it and one of them placed his hand upon the verse of stoning and began
to recite what came before and after it, and so Ibn Salam said to him Raise you
hand, and the verse of stoning was there beneath his hand and so the Prophet
ordered for the two accused to be stoned”
It is a duty upon us to give the
people of the Dhimmah the protection given to the Muslims, due to words
of the Messenger of Allah
, “He who kills a covenanted
person unjustly shall not find the scent of heaven; its scent is found the
distance of a hundred year march”, transmitted by
Al-Tirmidhi who said it is Hasan Sahih. And
al-Bukhari transmitted it with the words “whoever killed
a covenanted person will not smell the scent of heaven; and its scent covers
the distance of 40 years”.
The people of Dhimmah enjoy the same rights as those
enjoyed by Muslims in terms of managing their affairs and securing their
living. It is narrated on the authority of Abu Musa Al-Ash’ari that the
Messenger of Allah
said: “Feed the hungry, visit the poorly and free
the prisoner” transmitted by al-Bukhari through Abu Musa. Abu
‘Ubaydah said: “Therefore, the people of Dhimmah
are excluded from Jihad, their prisoners are freed and if they are salvaged,
they return to their Dhimmah
and their oath as free, and there are narrations regarding that”. And on the
authority of Ibn Abbas who said: “The Messenger of Allah
made peace with the people of Najran” and from the narration as transmitted by Abu
Dawud in his Sunan “their churches would not be destroyed, and no priest
of theirs would be banished and they would not be coerced away from their faith
provided they did not innovate any matter and they did not deal in usury”.
The Prophet
used to visit their sick, as recorded by
al-Bukhari from Anas who said “There was a young Jewish boy who used to
help the Prophet
who became ill and so the Prophet
used to visit him. He sat by his head
and said to him – Embrace Islam, and so he looked at his father who said to him
Obey Abul Qasim, and so he embraced Islam. The Prophet
left him and he said All Praises to
Allah who saved him from the fire” which indicates that it is permitted to
visit them, be courteous and sociable with them. Al-Bukhari transmitted from
Amru Bin Maymun from Umar Bin al-Khattab (ra) who counselled at the time of his
death “And I direct the Khalifah after me with this and this, and direct him
that by the oath of Allah and the oath of His Messenger
, he should fulfil
their oath towards them, to fight on their behalf and not to burden them with
more than they could bear”.
The Dhimmi should not be interfered with in terms of their faith and
their rituals, for the Messenger of Allah (saw) said according to what Abu
Ubaid reported in al-amwal through ‘Urwa who said: The Messenger of
Allah
wrote to the people of Yemen: “He who is upon his Judaism and
his Christianity, should not be coerced away from their faith”. Custom duties are
not extracted from the Dhimmi in the same way they are not taken from
the Muslims. Abu ‘Ubayd reported in al-Amwal on the authority of Abdul Rahman b. Ma’qal “I
asked Ziyad Bin Hadir – who did you used to tax? He said – we did not use to
tax Muslims nor the one who had a covenant. So I said – so who did you tax? He
said traders of war (people from states with no agreement) in the same
way they would tax us if we went to them”. The tax collector is the one
who extracts the custom duties.
Therefore, the Dhimmi are
subjects of the State, like any other subjects, enjoying the rights of
citizenship, protection, guaranteed living and fair treatment. They also enjoy
the right of being treated with kindness, leniency and clemency. They can join
the Islamic armed forces and fight alongside the Muslims if they choose to do
so, but they are not obliged to fight and no wealth is obliged from them except
the Jizya, so the taxes that
are obliged upon the Muslims do not apply to them. They are viewed by the ruler
and the judge in the same light as the Muslims are viewed without any
discrimination in terms of the management of their affairs and the
implementation of the rules of transactions and the penal code upon them.
Therefore, the Dhimmi enjoys all the rights, equally and exactly as
those enjoyed by the Muslim; he is also expected to perform all the duties
incumbent upon him, such as the fulfilment of the oath and the obedience of the
State’s orders.
In this way it can be seen that
the issue with respect to being taken care of is the citizenship of the State,
irrespective of whether they were Muslim or not. It is forbidden to
discriminate in any way between those who hold the Islamic citizenship, due to
the generality of the evidences pertaining the ruling and judicial matters and
management of affairs. Allah (swt) says: “And if you judge between people that you
judge with justice” (TMQ 4:48). This is a general address that applies to
all people, Muslims and non-Muslims alike. Furthermore, the Messenger of Allah
said: “The evidence must be submitted by the
plaintiff and the oath must be delivered by the defendant who denies the
charge” as transmitted by al-Bayhaqi with a Sahih chain. This
is also general and it applies to Muslims and non-Muslims alike. It is narrated
from ‘Abd Allah Bin Zubayr who said: “The Messenger of Allah
has decreed that the two disputing parties
should both sit before the judge” reported by Ahmad and Abu Dawud and authenticated
by al-Hakim. This is also general
and it includes any two disputing parties, Muslims and non-Muslims alike. The
Messenger of Allah
said “The Imam is a guardian and he is
responsible for his subjects.” (Agreed upon by Muslim and al-Bukhari). The
term
“subjects” is general and it
includes all the subjects, Muslims and non-Muslims alike. Likewise, all the
general evidences related to citizenship indicate that it is forbidden to
discriminate between the Muslim and the non-Muslim, between the Arab and the
non-Arab or between the white and the black. Rather, all the people who hold
the Islamic citizenship should rather be treated equally, without any
discrimination between them either by the ruler, in terms of looking after
their affairs and in terms of protecting their lives, their honour and their
wealth, or by the judge in terms of equality and justice.
Article 7
The State implements
the Islamic Shari’ah upon all those who hold the Islamic citizenship,
with no difference between Muslims and non-Muslims as follows:
(a)All the rules of Islam will be implemented upon the
Muslims without any exception.
(b)The non-Muslims will be allowed to follow their
beliefs and worships within the scope of the general system.
(c)The rule of apostasy will be implemented upon the
apostates from Islam if they themselves were the apostates. As for their
children, they will be treated as non-Muslims if they are born as such. Thus,,
they will be treated in accordance with their current status as being either
polytheists or people of the book.
(d)The non-Muslims will be treated in matters related to
foodstuffs and clothing according to their faith and within the scope of what
the Shari’ah rules permit.
(e)Matters of marriage and divorce will be settled among
the non-Muslims according to their faith, and will be settled between them and
the Muslims according to the rules of Islam.
(f)
The State will
implement the rest of the Shari’ah rules and all the Islamic Shari’ah
matters, such as transactions, penal codes, testimonies, ruling systems and
economics among others equally upon the Muslims and non-Muslims. The State will
also implement the same upon those with a covenant, the asylum seekers and all
those under the authority of Islam in the same way. It implements them upon all
members of society except for the ambassadors, consuls, and similar for they
have diplomatic immunity.
Truly Islam has come for all
people. Allah (swt) says “And We have sent you as a conveyor of glad
tidings and as a Warner unto all mankind” (TMQ 34:28). Just like
the disbeliever is obligated to abide by the “Usul” (foundations), in other words by the Islamic ‘Aqidah,
he is also obligated to abide by the branches i.e. the Shari’ah rules.
As for the fact that he is obligated to abide by the rules, this is clearly
mentioned in the verses of the Holy Quran, and as for the fact that he is
obligated to abide by the branches, this is because Allah (swt) has clearly
obligated him with some of the branches, among which are those verses
commanding the disbeliever to worship Allah (swt). He (swt) says, “O
people, worship your God” (TMQ 2:21), Allah (swt) also says “Hajj
thereto is a duty people owe to Allah” (TMQ 3:97), and similar.
Moreover, were the disbelievers not obligated to abide by the branches, Allah
(swt) would not warn them against their violation, and the verses warning them
against the forsaking of these branches are numerous, some of which are:
Allah (swt) says, “And
woe to the polytheists; those who do not pay Zakat” (TMQ 41:6-7).
Allah (swt) also says, "Those
who invoke not with Allah any other god, nor slay such life as Allah made
sacred, except for a just cause, nor do they commit fornication; and any that
does this meets punishment" (TMQ 25:68).
Allah (swt) also says, "What
led you into Hell-Fire? They will say we were not of those who prayed” (TMQ
74:42-3).
The fact that the disbelievers
have been obligated to abide by some of the commands and prohibitions indicates
that they have been obligated to abide by all the commands and prohibitions.
Furthermore, the verses which stipulate the obligation to abide by the branches
are mentioned in a general term and the general term remains upon its
generality unless the evidence of specification is mentioned; in this context,
no evidence has been mentioned which restricts these verses to the Muslims, and
so they remain general. For instance, Allah (swt) says, “Allah has permitted trade and
forbidden usury” (TMQ 2:275), and He (swt) says “And if they suckle your children
then given them their due payment” (TMQ 65:6), Allah (swt) also says "Then
pledge with possession..." (TMQ 2:283), and the words of
the Messenger of Allah
“He who revives a barren
land, it becomes his” reported by Ahmad and Al-Tirmidhi with a Sahih chain through Jabir. The
Messenger of Allah
also said “The hand is liable for what
it has taken until it is given back” transmitted by Ahmad with a Sahih chain through Samurah Bin Jandub. There are many other
rules to this effect. This serves as clear evidence that they are obligated to
abide by the branches.
Furthermore, the commandment to
abide by the foundation is in itself a commandment to abide by the branch, and
the commandment to abide by the whole is a commandment to abide by the part;
so, the obligation to pray entails the obligation of the prostration, the
recitation, the standing and so on. The disbeliever is commissioned to abide by
the foundation; thus, he is obligated to abide by the branch. As for the
non-acceptance of some branches from the disbelievers, such as prayer and
fasting, this is because the embracing of Islam is one of the conditions of
acceptance; thus, they would not be accepted until the condition is fulfilled.
However, this does not mean that it is not obligatory upon them. As for the
fact that they are not commanded to perform certain branches that embracing
Islam is not a condition for such as Jihad
this is because Jihad is fighting the
disbeliever for their disbelief, and the Dhimmi is a disbeliever. Thus,
it is inconceivable for him to fight the disbelievers due to their disbelief;
otherwise, it would be permitted for him to fight himself. Therefore, he is not
obligated to perform Jihad. However,
if he accepts to fight a disbeliever, it will be accepted of him. However, he
will not be forced to perform Jihad
and this does not mean that he is not commanded by Allah (swt) to perform it.
This is from the fact that they
are obligated to abide by the rules of Islam. As for the fact that the ruler
should implement all the rules of Islam upon them, this is reflected in Allah's
(swt) saying with respect to the People of the Book “So judge between them by what
Allah has revealed and do not follow their desires” (TMQ 5:48).
Allah (swt) also says with
respect to them “And judge between them by what Allah has revealed and do not follow
their desires” (TMQ 5:49).
Allah (swt) also says “We
have revealed the Book to you with the Truth, so that you judge between people
by what Allah has shown you” (TMQ 4:105).
This is a general address that
includes Muslims and non-Muslims alike, because the word “people” in “so
that you may judge between people…” is general. As for His (swt) saying “They
are fond of listening to falsehood and devouring anything forbidden. If they do
come to you, either judge between them or decline to interfere” (TMQ
5:42), this
means that if one were to come to the Islamic State from abroad seeking the
arbitration of the Muslims in a dispute with another disbeliever or other
disbelievers, the Muslims in this case are given the choice of either judging
between the disputing parties or declining to do so. This is since the verse
was revealed concerning those whom the Messenger of Allah
had made peace with and signed treaties with
from among the Jews of Madinah who were living as tribes and they were
considered as other states. They were not under the authority of Islam; rather,
they were other states. Thus, he
had signed treaties with them. However, if
they were under the authority of Islam, such as the Dhimmi, or if they
came as asylum seekers, it would be forbidden to judge between them by other than
Islam. The one who refused to refer to the rule of Islam, would be forced to by
the ruler and the ruler would punish him for it.
It is forbidden to conclude an
indefinite Dhimmah oath with the
disbeliever unless two conditions are fulfilled. Firstly, that Dhimmis adhere to paying the Jizya
each year, and secondly that they abide by the rules of Islam i.e. the
acceptance of what is enforced upon them in terms of executing orders and
abstaining from prohibitions. This is due to the words of Allah (swt): “Until
they pay the Jizya with willing submission and feel themselves subdued.” (TMQ
9:29), meaning until they submit to the rules of Islam. In addition, the
Messenger of Allah
used to implement the rules of Islam upon
them. Al-Bukhari transmitted through Ibn Umar: “The Jews came to the
Prophet
with a man and woman from amongst
them who had committed adultery and so he stoned them”, and Al-Bukhari
reported through Anas: “The Prophet killed a Jew for the sake of a woman
who was killed for her ornaments”. Those Jews were subjects of the
Islamic State. Also, the Messenger of Allah
wrote to the people of Najran who were
Christians saying: “He who deals in usury from amongst you, shall be denied the Dhimmah” reported by Ibn
Abu Shaybah through al-Shu’bah (Mursal narration). All
this serves as evidence about the obligation to implement all the rules of
Islam upon all of the subjects without any difference between Muslims and
non-Muslims. It is on this basis that clause A of this article has been
drafted.
As for clause B, the general
order regarding the implementation of all the rules of Islam is mentioned in
Allah’s (swt) saying “And Judge between them by what Allah has
revealed” (TMQ 5:48). This general rule has been specified by Shari’ah;
excluding the ‘Aqidah they embrace, the rules which are to them a matter
of faith and the rules pertaining the actions which the Messenger of Allah
has allowed them to perform. The‘Aqidah
and all of these rules have been made an exception by Islam through a host of
clear texts. Allah (swt) says: “There is no compulsion in the Deen” (TMQ
2:256), and the Messenger of Allah
said: “He who has embraced Judaism and he who has
embraced Christianity should not be coerced away from their faith, and he must
pay Jizya” transmitted by Abu Ubaid in Al-Amwal through ‘Urwah. Hence, any action which
is considered as a matter of faith to them should not be interfered with by us
and we should allow them to practise what they believe, even if this were not
part of ‘Aqidah matters in our Deen. Additionally, we should also
not interfere with them in regard to any actions that the Messenger of Allah
allowed them to perform, such as drinking
alcohol and getting married, within the scope of the general system. In other
words, it is permitted for them to drink alcohol in their private lives but not
in the general affairs where they mix with the Muslims such as the general
markets and the like.
As for Clause 'C' of this
article, Islam has decreed a host of rules regarding the apostate, amongst them
that the apostate should be killed he or she does not repent since the
Messenger of Allah
said: “Kill the one who changes his Deen” (transmitted by Al-Bukahri through Ibn Abbas). Anas
reported: “I came to Umar who said: O Anas, what happened to the six from Bakr
Ibnu Wa’il? So I said: O Amir of the believers, they were killed in the battle.
Upon this Umar recited Allah’s (swt) saying: “To Allah we belong and to Him we
will return”. So I said: “Could they have been dealt with by other than death?
He said: “Yes, I would have invited them to Islam and had they refused, I would
have thrown them in jail” as reported by
Al-Bayhaqi. In other words, until they repent and if they did not, they
would be killed. This is because the apostate would be invited to Islam and all
the means of repentance would be exhausted, and if he still refused he would
then be killed. An apostate should not be killed just for apostatising due to
what is narrated from Jaber: “A woman, Umm Marwan, apostatized so Allah
ordered that she should be presented Islam, and if she repented (it is
accepted) and otherwise she is to be killed” reported by Al-Bayhaqi and
Al-Daraqutni. This narration is used by masses of Fuqaha’; - Ibn Qudamah uses
it as evidence in Al-Mugni, Al-Mawardi in Al-Hawi Al-Kabir and Al-Ahkam
Al-Sultaniyyah, Abu Ishaq Al-Shirazi uses it in Al-Muhadhdhab,
Al-Rafi’i in al-Sharh al-Kabir, al-Baghawi in al-Tadhhib and Ibn
al-Jawzi in al-Tahqiq; so it is considered from the Hasan (acceptable
authority) narrations and is acted upon – in other words he is asked to report
before execution.
Rulings of Clause 'C'
are all about the apostate himself; they are not about his children. However,
if a Muslim apostatised from Islam and remained upon the faith to which he
apostatised, for example he continued to be a Christian, a Jew or a polytheist,
and he were then to have children who had the same faith, would his children be
considered as apostates? And would they be treated as apostates? Or would they
be considered as being of the faith they had at birth?
The answer is that the children
of the apostate who are born before their father’s apostasy are considered as
Muslims without any doubt. However, if they were to follow their father and
apostatise as well, they would be treated as apostates. If they were born after
he had apostatised from a disbelieving or an apostate wife, these children
would be considered as disbelievers and not as apostates; thus, they would be
treated just like the people of the faith they inherited at birth. Hence, every
child born after his father’s apostasy from a disbelieving wife or an apostate
wife, would be judged as a disbeliever since he or she would have been born
from two disbelieving parents. Therefore, if the two parents became Jews or
Christians i.e. from the People of the Book, he or she would be treated as the
People of the Book would be treated, and if the two parents became polytheists,
he or she would be treated as a polytheist. This is so because Ibn Mas’ud
reported: “when the Messenger of Allah
wanted to execute your father (Uqbah Ibn Abi
Mu’it), the latter said: “What about the children?” He
said: “Hell fire” (reported by Abu Dawud, Al-Hakim
authenticated it, and Al-Dhahabi agreed with him).
In
the narration of Al-Daruqutni: “Hell fire for them and for their father”. It
is also the case since in Sahih of Al-Bukhari in the section of the
people of the abode, in the book of Jihad,
“The Messenger of Allah
passed al-abwa – or biwaddan –
and was asked about the people of the household, the women and family of the
polytheists who were killed with their fathers; he said: They are of them”. Therefore,
every child born to two disbelieving parents is considered a disbeliever and
the rule pertaining to the disbelievers applies to him.
Hence, those who
apostatised from Islam and became non-Islamic sects, such as the Druze, the
Bahai’, the Qadiani and the like, are not treated as apostates since they
didn’t apostatise but their ancestors were the apostates and they were
therefore born with two disbelieving parents. Thus, they are judged as
disbelievers and they will be treated as such. Moreover, since they have not
apostatised to a faith from among the People of the Book i.e. they have not
apostatised to Christianity or to Judaism, they will be therefore treated as
polytheists. Hence, their slaughtered meat will not be eaten and their women
will not be wedded since the non-Muslims are either considered to be People of
the Book or polytheists and there is no third category. This is why the
Messenger of Allah
said about the Magi of Hajar as narrated by
Al-Hasan Bin Muhammad Bin Al-Hanafiyya: “Whoever embraces Islam then
accept them, and whoever does not then impose Jizya upon them, but do not wed
their women or eat their slaughtered food” (Al-Hafiz said in Al-Dirayah:
“narrated by ‘Abd Al-Razzaq and Ibn Abi Shaybah, it is a Mursal
narration with a good chain”). As for
those who apostatised from Islam and became Christians - as in the case in
Lebanon with the family of Shihab; this family’s forefathers were Muslims and
they apostatised to Christianity and their children were born as Christians -
these people and their like will be treated as People of the Book.
As for Clauses 'D'
and 'E', their evidence is derived from the fact that the Messenger of Allah
allowed the Jews and the Christians to drink
alcohol and accepted their marriage and divorce proceedings; thus, his
acceptance serves as a specification of the general rule. However, the approval
of the Messenger of Allah
with regard to the disbelievers’ marriage is
given only when the two spouses are disbelievers, but if the husband were
Muslim and if the wife were either Christian or Jew, the rules of the Shari’ah
would then be applied upon both of them. It is not feasible for the wife to be
Muslim and the husband to be disbeliever for this is unlawful. Allah (swt)
says: “Then do not send them back to the disbelievers, they are not lawful
wives for them nor are the disbelievers lawful husbands for them.” (TMQ
60:10). Therefore,
it is forbidden for a Muslim woman to marry a non-Muslim, and if she did her
marriage would be unlawful.
As for Clause 'F', the evidence
with respect to the implementation of all the rules of Islam is derived from
all what has just been mentioned that the disbeliever is obligated to abide by
the foundations and the branches, thus, he is commanded to submit to all the
rules of Islam. This is general, and it includes the Dhimmi and the non-Dhimmi
from among those who live under the authority of Islam. Hence, all the
disbelievers who enter Dar Al-Islam must be subjected to
the rules of Islam except the ‘Aqidah matters, the rules related to ‘Aqidah
matters and any action which the Messenger of Allah
allowed them to do whether these disbelievers
were Dhimmi, under covenant or asylum seekers. However, the ambassadors
and their likes are excluded from this and the rules of Islam would not be
implemented upon them for they would be given what is known as diplomatic
immunity. This is so because Ahmed reported on the authority of Abu Wa’il who
said:
“Ibn Nawwaha and Ibn Uthal came to the Messenger of Allah
as envoys of Musaylima - the liar - and the
Messenger of Allah
said to them “Do you bear witness that I am
the Messenger of Allah?” They said “We bear witness that Musaylima is the
Messenger of Allah.” Upon this the Messenger of Allah
“I give you security by Allah and His
Messenger. If I were to kill an envoy I would have killed the two of you” (reported by Ahmad and declared Hasan by Al-Haythami). So, this narration indicates
that it is not permitted to kill the envoys of the disbelievers and nor to
apply the punishments (uqubat) upon them. However, this is
exclusively applicable upon those who have the capacity of an envoy such as the
ambassador and the “Chargé d'affaires” and the like.
As for those upon whom the capacity of an envoy does not apply such as the
Consul and the Commercial Attaché and the like, they would not have any
immunity for they do not have the capacity of an envoy. This matter should be
referred to the international convention because it is a terminological
expression whose reality should be understood by way of looking into the
convention and it is part of establishing the Manat (reality); in other
words establishing whether they are considered envoys or not.
Article 8
The Arabic language
is exclusively the language of Islam and it is the only language used by the
State.
The evidence of this article is
derived from the fact that although all people are addressed by the Quran as
Allah (swt) says “And We have explained to man in this Quran every kind of similitude” (TMQ
17:89), “And We have propounded for people in this Quran every kind of parable”
(TMQ 30:58), Allah (swt) has however revealed it in Arabic and made it an
Arabic Quran. Allah (swt) says: "an Arabic Quran" (TMQ
12:2) and Allah
(swt) also says: "in the Arabic language" (TMQ 26:195).
Therefore, the Arabic language is
the sole language of Islam because it is the sole language of the Quran and
because the Quran is the miracle (Al-Mu’jizah) of the Messenger
of Allah
. The miracle of the
Quran lies in the Quran’s expression with this Arabic wording; in other words
with the Arabic wording and style. Although the miracle is found in both the
wording and the meaning inseparably, what is meant by its miracle in meaning is
not the miracle of what the Quran has brought in terms of meanings and topics
for the Sunnah has expressed these meanings and topics and yet it is not
considered a miracle. The miracle in meaning is established through the fact
that the meaning is itself expressed by this wording and this style. Hence,
expressing such a meaning in such a wording and in such a style is miraculous.
Therefore, the miracle lies in the Arabic wording that expresses the meaning
with the Arabic style. In other words, Allah’s (swt) saying: “If
you fear treachery from any group, throw back their covenant to them so as to
be on equal terms” (TMQ 8:58) is in itself incapacitating to all people
to produce something similar. Its miracle comes from the splendour in
expressing these meanings with this formulation and with such a style. Thus,
the miracle was the Arabic wording and the Arabic style that expressed this
meaning. Therefore, the miracle in the Quran is confined in its Arabic for it
is the origin of the miracle and the subject of the challenge to produce
something equal to it. Hence, the Arabic language is an integral part of the
Quran that cannot be separated from it. The Quran itself could not be
considered Quran without it. It is therefore forbidden to translate the Quran
for if it were altered it would lose its order and it would no longer be the
Quran or be like the Quran; it would rather be a commentary of it, and if its
commentary were anything like it then people would not have failed to produce
something equal to it when they were challenged to do so. Besides, Allah’s
(swt) saying “An Arabic Quran” means that if it were not Arabic it could not
be called Quran. Furthermore, we worship Allah (swt) with its wording;
therefore, the prayer would not be correct without it since Allah (swt) says: “So
read of the Quran as much as may be easy for you.” (TMQ 73:20) and the
Messenger of Allah
said: “A prayer is not accepted from he who does
not recite the Fatiha of the Book in every Raka’ah” (agreed upon
through ‘Ubadah). Therefore, the Arabic language is an integral part of
Islam.
As for Allah’s (swt) saying: “This
Quran has been revealed to me that I may warn you and all whom it reaches.” (TMQ
6:19), this means: so that I warn you with what is in the Quran, and this
applies to warning people with its wording and with its commentary for all of
this is considered as warning. By contrast, Allah’s (swt) saying: “Read”
does not refer to the reading of its commentary and nor does it refer to the
reading of its translation, because reading a book means reading its text, and
not its translation or commentary. This is therefore not akin to warning with
the Book, which means warning with its text and its contents. Besides, Allah
(swt) had decreed that the warning of the Messenger of Allah
is made in Arabic as Allah (swt) says: “With
it came down the Faithful Spirit; to your heart so that you admonish; in a
clear Arabic language.” (TMQ 26:193-5). This serves as a conclusive evidence
that it is forbidden to read the Fatiha in prayer in other than the
Arabic language, and this nullifies and refutes the argument of those who
claimed that the verse in which Allah (swt) says: "And this Quran has been
revealed to me" (TMQ 6:19) refers to the permissibility of reading
the Fatiha in other than the Arabic language for those who do not master
Arabic.
This is from the fact that the
Arabic language being a fundamental part of Islam. As for the evidence
pertaining to the fact that the Arabic language should be exclusively the
official language of the State, the evidence for it is that when the Messenger
of Allah
sent letters to Caesar, Kisra and Muqawqas in
which he invited them to Islam, those letters were written in Arabic though
they could have been translated into their own languages. Although Caesar, Kisra and Muqawqas were not
Arabs and although the Messenger of Allah
wrote the letters to convey Islam to them, the
Messenger of Allah
didn’t write his letters in
their languages. Hence, this serves as evidence that the Arabic language is
exclusively the official language of the State because the Messenger of Allah
did this. Besides, the fact
that the need to translate in order to convey Islam was pressing but the
Messenger of Allah
did not translate serves as an indication for
the obligation of restricting the State’s address of people to the Arabic
language whether the addressees were Arabs or non-Arabs. Therefore all non-Arab
people should learn the Arabic language and it is forbidden for the State’s
official language to be other than the Arabic language.
Imam Al-Shafi’i outlined in his
celebrated book of Usul (foundations of jurisprudence) entitled Al-Risalah
the following: “Allah (swt) has made
it an obligation upon all nations to learn the Arabic tongue following their
address with the Quran and their worshipping by it”.
Therefore, all this
makes it obligatory for the State to adopt the Arabic language as the exclusive
official language.
However, it must be
made clear that adopting the Arabic language exclusively as the State’s
language does not necessarily mean that the State could not use other than the
Arabic language since it is permitted for the State to use other than the
Arabic language in an official correspondence either for fear of distortion, to
acquire vital information, to convey the call to Islam abroad or for any
similar reason. This is the case because the Messenger of Allah
used Hebrew and Syriac. Hence, the ruling
stipulates the sole use of the Arabic language when adopting the State’s
official language rather than preventing the State from using other than the
Arabic language.
The question that comes to mind
now is: Would it be permitted to have a written and spoken language other than
Arabic in the lands ruled by the Islamic State?
The answer to this is that the
speaking and the writing of other languages could either be related to the
State itself, to the subjects’ relationship with the State, to the subjects
themselves or to individuals with one another.
If it were related to the State
itself or to the State’s relations, then in this case it would not be permitted
for the language to be other than the language of the state (the Arabic
language). This is because the Messenger of Allah
did not translate his letters to the non-Arabs
despite the pressing need to translate in order to convey Islam and this serves
as evidence stipulating the obligation of the sole use of the Arabic language
in the State’s administration and relations or in anything related to it. Based upon this, the State would not have any
place in its educational curricula to teach any other language apart from
Arabic whether these were the languages of the non-Arab peoples living under
the authority of the Islamic State or the peoples living outside the authority
of the Islamic State. In the same manner, public schools are prevented from
adopting anything other than the Arabic language as an academic language and
from introducing other than the Arabic language as a subject because they are
obliged to adhere to the State’s curricula. Accordingly, every matter related
to the State, to its relations, the relations of its subjects with it or any
other matter related to it must be conducted solely in the Arabic language,
spoken and written.
However, if speaking and writing
in other than the Arabic language were related exclusively to the subjects or
related to people’s relationships amongst themselves, this would be permitted
because the Messenger of Allah
permitted the translation of other languages
into Arabic and permitted the learning of other languages. This indicates that
it is permitted to speak and to write in other than Arabic. In a narration from
Zayd Ibn Thabit: “The Messenger of Allah
ordered me to learn the Book of the Jews,
until I became able to write the letters of the Messenger of Allah
and to read to him their letters if they wrote
to him” transmitted by
Al-Bukhari. So, this is an
evidence for the permissibility of speaking and writing in other than the
Arabic language. In the times of the Companions, there were people who used to
speak and to write in other than Arabic and they were not forced to learn it,
and someone used to interpret for the ruler.
Al-Bukhari reported in the
section “History of the Rulers”: “Kharija Bin Zaid Bin Thabit from Zaid Ibn
Thabit said: “The Messenger of Allah
ordered me to learn the Book
of the Jews, until I became able to write the letters of the Messenger of Allah
and to read to him their letters if they wrote
to him”. Umar (ra) said in the presence of ‘Ali, ‘Abd al-Rahman and Uthman: “What
is this woman saying?” Abdul-Rahman Ibnu Hatib said: “She is informing you
about the man who did so and so to her.” Abu Hamzah also said: “I used to translate between Ibn Abbas and
other people”.
Two evidences that
indicate the permission of translation are: the narration in which the
Messenger
ordered Zaid Bin Thabit to learn the Book of
the Jews and when Umar (ra) asked what that woman was saying - he meant the
woman who was found pregnant - ‘Abd al-Rahman was translating for him. The fact
that Abu Hamza used to translate what people would say for Ibn ‘Abbas means
that there were people who spoke other than Arabic. Therefore, speaking and
writing in other than Arabic is permitted according to the Sunnah and to
the actions of the Companions. Accordingly, the State would allow the
publication of books, newspapers and magazines in other than Arabic, and their
publication would not require a permit because it is part of the Mubah
(permitted) actions. It is also allowed to televise programmes in other than
Arabic if these stations belonged to an individual or to a group of people.
However, this will be prohibited in the State’s own radio and television
stations because everything related to the State must be exclusively in Arabic.
As for what is related to people among themselves, it will be permitted for
them to use other than Arabic in everything except for any specific issue which
was in origin permitted that may lead to harm; in such case, that matter will
be prohibited.
Article 9
Ijtihad is a duty of sufficiency and every Muslim reserves
the right to perform Ijtihad provided he meets all its prerequisites.
The Islamic Shari’ah has
made Ijtihad to deduce the Shari’ah rules from the address of the
Legislator – i.e. from the Shari’ah texts which are revealed by Allah
(swt) to the Messenger of Allah
- an obligation upon the Muslims. The fact
that Ijtihad is an obligation has been confirmed through several
narrations. The Messenger of Allah
said: “If a ruler were to give a ruling, so he
made Ijtihad and reached the sound rule, he would get double the reward.
However, if he were to give a ruling and he made Ijtihad but reached the wrong
rule, he would still get a reward” (agreed upon through Amru Bin Al-Aas). He
also said: “and a man judged people without
knowledge, he is in Hell fire” (transmitted by the compilers of the Sunan and Al-Hakim and
Al-Tabarani with a Sahih chain). This confirms that the
judge must be acquainted with what he judges on. It is also reported that he
said to Ibn Mas’ud: “Judge by the Book
and the Sunnah wherever you found (the ruling) in them, and if you don’t find
the ruling in them then do Ijtihad” as mentioned by al-Amidi in al-Ahkam
and al-Razi in al-Mahsul. He
said to Mu’ath and Abu Moussa Al-Ash’ari when
he was about to dispatch them to Yemen: “What will you judge by?” They said: “If we
did not find the rule in the Book or in the Sunnah, we would make analogy between the two matters and
whichever were closest to what is right, we would act upon” (mentioned by
Al-Amidi in aAl-Ahkam and Abu Al-Husain in Al-Mu’tamad). This
analogy is in itself an Ijtihad to deduce the rule, and the Messenger of
Allah
approved it. It is also reported that the
Messenger of Allah
said to Mu’ath when he appointed him as
governor to Yemen: “What will you rule by?” He said: “By the Book of Allah.” He
said: “What if you do not find the rule?” He
said: “By the Sunnah of the
Messenger of Allah.” He said: “What if you do not find the rule?” He said: “I
will exert my own opinion.” Upon this the Messenger of Allah
said: “Praise be to Allah Who guided the envoy
of the Messenger of Allah to what satisfies His Messenger” (transmitted by Ahmad and Al-Tirmidhi and
Al-Darimi and Abu Dawud and was authenticated by Al-Hafiz Ibn Kathir Al-Basrawi
who said that the narration is Hasan Mashur and relied upon by the scholars of Islam).
This clearly indicates the
approval of the Messenger of Allah
with regard to Mu’ath’s performance of Ijtihad.
Furthermore, the knowledge of the rules is linked and is related to Ijtihad
since the realisation and the comprehension of the rules could not be
established without it. Hence, Ijtihad becomes obligatory because the Shari’ah
principle stipulates: “Whatever is necessary to establish a duty
is in itself a duty”.
In origin, the deduction of the
rules is performed by Mujtahideen (those capable of Ijtihad)
because the knowledge of Allah’s rule in a given matter cannot be reached
except through Ijtihad, and Ijtihad therefore becomes
indispensable. The scholars of Usul Al Fiqh (the
principles of jurisprudence) have indicated that Ijtihad is a duty of
sufficiency upon the Muslims and that it is forbidden for Muslims to be without
a single Mujtahid at any given time, and that if they all agreed upon
forsaking Ijtihad, they would be sinful because the only way to know the
Shari’ah rules is through Ijtihad. Therefore, if an era were
devoid of at least one Mujtahid upon whom it could be relied in
perceiving the rules, it would lead to the paralysis of the Shari’ah and
this is forbidden. Besides, the Shari’ah texts make it incumbent upon
Muslims to perform Ijtihad because these Shari’ah texts (i.e. the
Book and the Sunnah and nothing else) have not come in a detailed manner
but rather in a general manner that can be applied to every reality faced by
humanity. Their understanding and the deduction of the rule of Allah require
the exhausting of efforts in order to obtain the Shari’ah rule from them
for every matter. This Ijtihad is not an impossible task nor is it
extremely difficult; rather, it is the process of exhausting one’s effort in
order to acquire the Shari’ah rules with the least amount of doubt. In
other words, it is the understanding of the Shari’ah texts with the
exhausting of one’s utmost effort in order to attain this understanding and to
perceive the Shari’ah rule. This is in fact within everyone’s reach. Ijtihad
was natural and evident to the Muslims in the early times and it had no
prerequisites. However, since the understanding of the classical Arabic
language started to weaken and since people started to devote less attention to
discerning the Deen, it has become incumbent upon the Mujtahid to
know the narrated evidences (adillah sam’iyyah) from which the
principles and the rules are deduced. It has also become incumbent upon him to
discern the meaning of expressions which are commonly used in the classical
Arabic language and in the usage of rhetoric. There are no other conditions
apart from these two to performing Ijtihad. Therefore, in addition to
being a duty of sufficiency upon the Muslims, Ijtihad is within the
reach of all the Muslims. These are all the evidences for this article.
Article 10
All the Muslims
should bear the
responsibility of Islam. There are no clergymen in Islam and the State should
prohibit any sign of their presence among the Muslims.
Although Mujtahids are
scholars, however not every scholar is necessarily a Mujtahid since a
scholar could either be a Mujtahid or a Muqallid (imitator). If
the Muslim were to take the Shari’ah rule in order to act upon, then, it
requires some consideration: if he took the rule from a Mujtahid, he in
this case would be emulating the Mujtahid. If he took it from a non-Mujtahid,
he would be learning that rule from the person he had taken it from, and he
would not be emulating him. However, if the Muslim was to take the rule in
order to learn it, he would be learning the rule irrespective of whether he
took it from a Mujtahid or a non Mujtahid. Therefore, these
scholars - whether Mujtahids or otherwise - are not clergymen since none
of them has any right to legitimise or prohibit anything and they are just like
any other Muslim regarding every single Shari’ah rule. None of them
should distinguish himself from the rest of the Muslims in anything with
regards to the Shari’ah rules regardless of how high his rank is in
terms of knowledge, Ijtihad and respect. Hence, what is haram for
others does not become allowed for the scholar and nor does the wajib
upon others become mandub (recommended) for him. He is rather like any
other individual Muslim. Therefore, the idea of clergymen held by Christians
has no existence in Islam. The concept of clergymen is specific to Christians
because a clergyman does legitimise and prohibit rules to them. Thus,
attributing such a term to the Muslim scholar might give the impression of
attributing the Christian concept to the Muslim scholars despite the fact that
Muslim scholars do not allow and nor do they prohibit anything. Therefore, it
is not fitting to attribute the term of clergyman to a Muslim scholar.
There are explicit narrations
prohibiting the emulation of Christians and Jews. Abu Sa’id Al-Khudri narrated
that the Messenger of Allah
said: “You shall follow the ways of those before
you inch by inch and yard by yard; even if they were to enter a lizard’s hole
you would follow them. We said: O Messenger of Allah, the Jews and the
Christians? He (saw) said: Who else?” (Agreed upon with the words from Muslim) This
narration has been said within the context of prohibition. Hence, the emulation
of the Jews and the Christians is - as it stands - prohibited, let alone if
this emulation were to lead to the generating of a Kufr concept among
the Muslims. Considering the Muslim scholar as a clergyman is an emulation of
the Christians who regard their scholars as clergymen and it also transfers the
Christian concept of clergyman to the Muslim scholar; therefore, it is strictly
prohibited in terms of emulation and it is classified as even more strictly
prohibited in terms of introducing the concept. Therefore, it would be wrong to
refer to the Muslim scholar as a clergyman and it is forbidden for the scholars
to consider themselves as clergymen according to the Christians’ concept of
clergyman. If someone was found claiming this according to the understanding
mentioned, he will be prohibited and punished since he will have committed a
prohibited act. In addition, the Prophet
did not differentiate from the companions in
terms of a specific dress or appearance. Al-Bukhari reported in his Sahih
from Anas Bin Malik who said: “While we were sitting with the Prophet
in the mosque, a man entered upon
a camel into the mosque, then he tied it and said to them: "Which one of you is Muhammad?" The
Prophet
was leaning between us so we
said: "this white man who is leaning". And so the man said to him:
"O Ibn ‘Abd Al-Muttalib" Then, the Prophet
said to him: "I have
answered you…"” For these reasons, this article has been drafted.
Article 11
Conveying the Islamic
Da’wa (call to Islam) is
the fundamental task of the State.
This article has been drafted
because as well as being an obligation upon the Muslims, conveying the Islamic Da’wa
is also an obligation upon the State. Although conveying the call to Islam
forms a part of the implementation of Shari’ah in the relationships and although
it is a Shari’ah rule that the State must implement as the individual
Muslim does, it is considered as the basis upon which its relationships with
other states is built. In other words, it is the basis upon which the whole of
the State’s foreign policy is built. Therefore, conveying the Islamic Da’wa
is the State’s main task.
The evidence that conveying the
call to Islam is an obligation is reflected in the words of Allah (swt) “And
this Quran has been revealed to me so that I warn you with it and those whom it
reaches” (TMQ 6:19); meaning to warn whoever this Quran reaches. Hence,
the warning is to you Muslims and it is also a warning to those whom you convey
it to; thus, it is an invitation to them to convey it on behalf of the
Messenger of Allah
. In other words, it
is not only a warning to you but rather a warning to you and to all those whom
the Quran reaches. The Messenger of Allah
said: “May Allah brighten a person who had heard
my saying, perceived it, memorised it and conveyed it; for one may be conveying
Fiqh (knowledge) to someone who is more of a Faqih than him” (in Musnad
Al-Shafi’i through ‘Abd Allah Bin Mas’ud). Allah (swt) also said "Let there arise from among
you a group calling to the goodness” (TMQ 3:104), and the goodness is Islam. He
(swt) also says "Who is better in speech than one who calls to Allah"
(TMQ 41:33),
in other words to the Deen of Allah. All of these texts
indicate that conveying the call to Islam is obligatory and this obligation is
general and encompasses the State as well as the Muslims as a whole.
As for the fact that conveying
the Da’wa must be the State’s main activity, its evidence is derived
from the words and actions of the Prophet
. He
said “I have been ordered to fight people until
they profess that there is no god but Allah. If they said it, their lives and
their wealth would be inviolable to me, except that which is by right, and
their account is with Allah” (agreed upon, with the wording from Muslim).
Al-Bukhari reported from ‘Urwah B. Al-Ja’d from the Prophet
: “The horse which is
tied to its forelock is good until the day of Judgement” and the horse
is an allusion to the continuation of the obligation of Jihad. Additionally, Jihad
is not restricted to whether the leader is righteous or immoral since it also
indicates the continuation of the Jihad
with the righteous and immoral as long as they are Muslim. Al-Bukhari used this
narration as evidence for Jihad
continuing with the righteous and the immoral leader when he separated a
section with the title “Chapter Jihad Continues with the Righteous and the
Immoral due to the words of the Prophet
“The horse which is tied to its forelock
is good until the day of Judgement””. Ahmad also used it as an evidence
in the same manner as Al-Bukhari. And in the same manner, it is reported by Said Bin
Mansur through Anas who said that the Messenger of Allah
said “and Jihad has been on-going since Allah
sent me and will continue until the last generation of my Ummah fight the
Dajjal; it shall not be discontinued by the tyranny of a tyrant nor by the
justice of a just”. This Hadeeth was also narrated by Abu Dawud and Al-Tirmidhi didn’t
comment on it). So the order to fight until those who
resist say that there is no god but Allah and that Muhammad is the Messenger of
Allah, serves as evidence about the obligation of conveying the call to Islam
upon the State. The fact that this conveying, which is Jihad, is ongoing until the last of the Ummah fights the Dajjal
is evidence that the State’s constant activity is Jihad that is not permitted to be disrupted. The two narrations
together indicate that the call to Islam is a constant action that is not to be
interrupted; therefore, it is the main duty because the main duty is the action
that is constantly performed under all circumstances and without any
disruption.
Besides, the Messenger of Allah
was in a constant state of Jihad ever since he settled in Madinah
until he
departed this world and Jihad was the main activity. The rightly guided Khulafaa’
came after him and followed in his footsteps assuming Jihad as their main duty. So the State that the Messenger of Allah
founded and headed undertook Jihad as its main duty; when he (saw)
departed, the State was headed by the Khulafaa’ from among the
Companions and similarly the State’s main task was Jihad. Therefore, the evidence stipulating that conveying the
Islamic Da’wa is the State’s main task is derived from the Sunnah
and the Ijma’ of the Companions.
Additionally, the Messenger of
Allah
used to convey the call to Islam since Allah
(swt) sent him as a Prophet until he departed this world. He
was the Head of State in Madinah and since he
settled there he made his foreign policy the main activity and the State’s
focus of attention. The activities undertaken ranged from raids, expeditions,
intelligence gathering and signing treaties. All these activities were for the
sake of conveying Islam and its Da’wa to all people. When the Messenger
of Allah
sensed the strength of the State and its
ability to convey the Da’wa internationally, he dispatched twelve envoys
simultaneously to twelve monarchs inviting them to Islam, amongst them the
Kings of Persia and Rome. Muslim reported from Anas Bin Malik: “The
Prophet of Allah wrote to Kisra and Caesar and Al-Najashi and to every powerful
one calling them to Allah”. When he
was satisfied about the might of the State
within the Arabian Peninsula and about the spread of the Da’wah among
the Arabs and people started to embrace the Deen of Allah (swt) in
droves, he
looked towards conquering the Romans; hence,
the battles of Mu’ta and Tabuk took place. This also serves as evidence that
conveying the Da’wa is an obligation upon the State and that it is its
main task.
Article 12
The Book, the Sunnah,
the Ijmaa’ of the Sahabah and the Qiyas (analogy) are the
only evidences considered in Shari’ah laws, and it is not permitted to
adopt any legislation from other than these evidences.
This article does not imply that
the State will adopt a method of Ijtihad; it rather means that the State
will follow a specific method when adopting the Shari’ah rules. This is
because the adoption of the Shari’ah rules could either be obligatory in
some cases or, in other cases, permitted for the State. If this adoption were
to be conducted in two contradictory methods, it would lead to a contradiction
in the basics upon which the adoption has been conducted. Therefore, the State
ought to adopt a specific method in adopting the Shari’ah rules. Three
reasons prompted the adoption of such a method in the adoption of rules:
Firstly, the rule by which the
Muslim should proceed is a Shari’ah rule and not a rational rule; in
other words, it is the rule of Allah in the matter and not the rule laid down
by man. Therefore, the evidence from which this rule is deduced must be what
the Revelation has brought.
Secondly, the confirmation that
the evidence - from which the rule has been deduced - has been brought by way
of Revelation must be conclusive. In other words, it is imperative that the
evidence, from which the Shari’ah rule has been deduced, has conclusive
and decisive, not indefinite, evidence that it has been brought by way of
Revelation. This is because it is part of the Usul (foundations) and not
part of the branches; thus, to be most likely or probable is not sufficient
since it is part of the ‘Aqidah matters and not part of the Shari’ah
rules. This is so because the evidence required to deduce the rule from is
evidence which has come by way of Revelation, not just any evidence. Therefore,
it is imperative to decisively confirm that it has been brought by way of
Revelation and the process of confirming that it has been brought by Revelation
is an ‘Aqidah matter not a Shari’ah rule. Therefore, it is
imperative to establish that the evidence has come by way of Revelation by
definite evidence because matters of ‘Aqidah can only be taken
conclusively.
Thirdly, what is conclusive is
that man’s behaviour in life proceeds according to his concepts about life.
Although the viewpoint about life has the ‘Aqidah as its basis, it is
nevertheless formed of a host of concepts, criteria and convictions which are
existent in the Ummah. Not all of these thoughts, which are reflected in
this host of concepts, criteria and convictions are part of the matters of ‘Aqidah.
Rather, some of them are from the matters of ‘Aqidah and others are part
of Shari’ah rules, and since rules are deduced with the least amount of
doubt it is therefore feared that if the origin of the rules has not been
conclusively confirmed as being brought by way of Revelation, then some of the
non-Islamic thoughts may creep into the Ummah
due to the presence of Shari’ah rules deduced from a foundation which
Revelation has not brought in the first instance. If it is widespread and used
over a long period of time it will influence the viewpoint about life held by
the Ummah and consequently affects its behaviour. Accordingly, it is
imperative to confirm that the evidences, upon which rules to be implemented by
the State are deduced, must be those evidences brought by Revelation.
It is for these three reasons
that the adoption of a specific method, according to which the Shari’ah
rules are adopted, is imperative. As for the fact that the evidences are
confined exclusively to the four general evidences mentioned above, this is
confirmed through study. We have studied and scrutinised the evidences that
have been confirmed by a conclusive evidence to have been brought by way of
Revelation and we have not found anything other than these four at all.
As for the Quran, the evidence
about the fact that it has been brought by way of Revelation from Allah (swt)
in letter and spirit is conclusive. The miracle of the Quran serves as
conclusive evidence that it is indeed the Word of Allah (swt) and not the word
of man. Therefore, the conclusive evidence has been established that the Quran
is the Word of Allah (swt). The Quran itself, which has been conclusively
confirmed as being the Word of Allah by the evidence of the miracle, states
that it is Revelation that descended upon the Messenger of Allah
; Allah (swt) says: “With
it came down the Faithful Spirit * To your heart so that you admonish” (TMQ 26:193-4);
“And this Quran has been revealed to me” (TMQ
6:19);
“Say I only warn you according to
Revelation” (TMQ 21:45);
“We have not sent down the Quran to you so
that you become distressed” (TMQ 20:1);
“As to you the Quran is bestowed upon you” (TMQ 27:6);
“It is We Who have sent down the Quran in
stages” (TMQ 76:23)
and “We revealed to you an Arabic
Quran” (TMQ 42:7).
These are conclusive evidences
establishing the fact that the Quran has been brought by way of Revelation from
Allah (swt).
As for the Sunnah, the
conclusive evidence about the fact that it is Revelation which has come from
Allah (swt) in meaning, and that the Messenger of Allah
expressed it by his own words is what came
clearly indicated in the Verses of the Quran. Allah (swt) says: “Nor
does he speak of his desire. It is no less than Revelation sent down to him” (TMQ
53:3-4);
“We have sent you Revelation as We sent it
to Nuh and the prophets after him” (TMQ 4:163);
“I only follow what is revealed to me” (TMQ
6:50);
“Say truly I only follow what is revealed to
me by my God” (TMQ 7:203);
“Say I do but warn you according
to Revelation” (TMQ 21:45)
And Allah (swt) says “and
whatever the Messenger brought to you, take, and whatever he forbids you,
abstain from it” (TMQ 59:7)
These are clear evidences
denoting that whatever the Messenger of Allah
has uttered in terms of the Sunnah has
come by way of Revelation; they also serve as clear evidences denoting that
Allah (swt) has explicitly ordered us in the Quran to abide by what the
Messenger of Allah
ordered us and to abstain from what he
prohibited for us. This command is general.
Hence, the evidence about the fact that the Sunnah has come by way of
Revelation is conclusive because it has been established by a conclusive
Quranic text that is definite in its intended indication.
As for the Ijma’ of the
Companions, which is considered a Shari’ah evidence, it means the
general consensus of the Companions that such rule is a Shari’ah rule,
or their general consensus that the rule pertaining such and such matter is so
and so. Hence, if they unanimously consented about a certain rule as being a Shari’ah
rule, their Ijma’ (general consensus) would be considered a Shari’ah
evidence.
The evidence for this is
reflected in two matters: firstly, Allah (swt) praised them in the Quran
through a text that is conclusive and definite in meaning. Allah (swt) said: “The
vanguards and the first from among the Muhajirin and the Ansar, and those who
followed them in all the good deeds, Allah is well pleased with them as they
are with Him, and He prepared for them gardens under which rivers flow so as to
dwell therein forever; that is the great success.” (TMQ 9:100)
This praise by Allah (swt) of the
Muhajirin (emigrants), the Ansar (Helpers) and those who followed
them with righteousness, due to their emigration and their support, is a praise
of the Companions because those praised are the Companions and the meaning of
the verse is confined to them. This praise is for all of them and the
truthfulness of those whom Allah (swt) praises in such a way is conclusive.
The second matter is that we have
taken our Deen from those Companions
since they are the ones who transmitted to us the very Quran that had descended
upon our master Muhammad
. Hence, if we
assumed that a flaw were to creep into one single matter from among what they
had agreed upon, this means that the flaw could creep into the Quran; in other
words, the flaw could creep into the Deen
which we had taken from them and this is impossible from the angle of Shari’ah.
Therefore, although it would not be rationally impossible for the Companions to
unanimously agree upon an erroneous matter - for this could happen since they
are only human - however, this could not possibly happen to them from the Shari’ah
point of view since if this were possible, it would then be possible for error
to creep into the Deen. In other words, it would be possible for error
to creep into the fact that this Quran that we have today is the very same
Quran that descended upon our master Muhammad
, and this is
impossible from the Shari’ah
point of view; thus, it would be impossible for them to generally
consent on something erroneous.
This serves as a conclusive proof
that the Ijma’ of the Companions is a Shari’ah evidence. In
addition, Allah (swt) says: “We have without doubt sent down the Quran
and We will assuredly protect it” (TMQ 15:9). Therefore, Allah (swt) has promised
to protect the Quran and he who transmitted this Quran is he who protected it;
thus, this serves as evidence about the truthfulness of their Ijma’ in
transmitting and compiling the Quran. Hence, it serves as proof about the
soundness of their general consensus because if it were possible for their
consensus to be flawed, it would be possible for the transmission of the Quran
to be flawed and it would be possible for it to be unprotected. Therefore,
since the non-protection of the Quran is impossible, as indicated by the Verse,
then it is impossible for error to creep into its transmission or its compiling
or its protection. Hence, the Ijma’ of the Companions is a conclusive
evidence.
However, what should be made
absolutely clear is that the Ijma’ of the Companions stipulating that
such and such rule is a Shari’ah rule is simply uncovering an evidence;
in other words, there exists for this rule an evidence derived either from the
action, words or silence of the Messenger of Allah
, and that the
Companions transmitted the rule but did not transmit the evidence. Hence, their
transmission of the rule discloses the fact that there exists an evidence for
that rule. Therefore, their general consensus does not mean that their personal
opinions are in agreement over a specific matter for their personal opinions
are not Revelation and each one of them is not infallible; thus, a companion’s
opinion cannot be regarded as a Shari’ah evidence. This is because the Shari’ah
evidence must be brought by way of Revelation in order to be considered as Shari’ah
evidence, and the Companions’ opinions are not like that; therefore, they
cannot be considered as Shari’ah evidence whether these were the
opinions upon which they agreed or the opinions over which they disagreed. For
this reason, the Ijma’ of the Companions does not mean their agreement
upon one single opinion, it rather means their general consensus about the fact
that a rule is a Shari’ah rule, or such and such rule is a Shari’ah
rule; in this case, it is not their opinion but rather a general consensus that
it is from Shari’ah; hence, the Ijma’ of the Companions is simply
uncovering an evidence.
As for Qiyas, it is also Shari’ah
evidence. Linguistically it means estimating and in the Usul terminology it is the making
of analogy between a known matter upon another known matter in order to either
confirm a rule for both of them or to disclaim it for both of them due to a
mutual factor between them. Thus, it is comparing the rule of a known matter to
another known matter due to their association in the ‘Illah (the reason)
of the rule. Accordingly it is the extending of the root to the branch or in
other words the joining of the branch to the root. The meaning of
carrying a known fact upon a known fact means that one of them shares the same
rule with the other, so the rule of the root is established for the branch, and
the branch shares the same rule as the root. This rule of the root could be a
confirmation; Al-Bukhari reported from Ibn Abbas “A woman from Juhaynama
came to the Prophet
and said: 'My mother made an oath to do
the pilgrimage but she didn’t fulfil it before her death, so should I go on her
behalf?' He
said: 'Yes, do the pilgrimage on her
behalf – do you see that if your mother had a debt you would have paid it off,
so repay the debt to Allah since Allah is more worthy of it being fulfilled'”.
Here the Messenger of
Allah
compared the debt to Allah to the debt of the
human and stated that its settlement would suffice. In this instance, the rule
is a confirmation that the settlement of the debt would suffice.
The rule of the root that is
compared with could also be a disaffirmation as is the case in what is reported
on the authority of Umar (ra) who asked the Prophet
about the kiss of the one who is fasting and
whether it breaks the fast. The Prophet
then asked, “What if you rinsed your mouth
out with water (while you were fasting), would that break your fast?” He
replied “No” authenticated by Al-Hakim and confirmed by Al-Dhahabi. Here the Messenger of Allah
compared the kiss of a fasting person to the
rinsing out of one’s mouth in that it does not invalidate the fast. Hence, the
rule in this context is a disaffirmation, in this case the non-invalidation of
the fast.
The meaning of this analogy being
based upon a common factor between the two matters is that the ‘Illah (Shari’ah
reason) of the root is also found in the branch. It is on the basis of this ‘Illah
that the carrying over takes place and this ‘Illah is the common factor
between the compared and the compared with or in other words, between the root
and the branch. An example of this is reflected when the Messenger of Allah
was asked about the purchase of dates by
ripened dates: “He said “Would the Rutab become
lighter if it dried?” They said: “Yes.” So he
said “In which case, no” (reported by Abu Ya’la with these words from
Sa’d Bin Abi Waqqas and authenticated by Al-Hakim and Ibn Hibban). Here, the Messenger
of Allah
asked about the ‘Illah that exists in
the usurious money, which is the increase, and whether it was also found in the
sale of Rutab for dates, and when he
knew of its presence, he confirmed the rule of
Riba (usury) for such as type of sale, and so he (said) “in which
case, no”. In other words, it is forbidden to exchange such commodity
as it is because it decreases in weight once it is dried; thus, the Messenger
of Allah
asked about the mutual factor which is the Shari’ah
‘Illah of Riba.
This is the definition of Qiyas
according to the Shari’ah. This definition has been obtained from the
narrations of the Messenger of Allah
. Ibn Abbas narrated: “A
woman came to the Messenger of Allah
and said: “O Messenger of Allah, my mother
passed away before being able to fulfil a fast that she had vowed to Allah. Do
I fast on her behalf?” He
said: “What if your mother had a debt and you
paid it off would that suffice her?” She said: “Yes.” He
said: “Then fast on behalf of your mother” (reported by Muslim). It is narrated by ‘Abd Allah Bin Al-Zubair
that a man asked the Messenger of Allah
: “O
Messenger of Allah, my father was an old man when Islam came, and could not
ride an animal, do I perform Hajj on his behalf?” He
said: “What if your father had a debt and you
paid it off on his behalf, would that suffice him?” He said: “Yes.” So he
said: “Then do perform Hajj on behalf of your father” (reported by Ahmad
with a chain authenticated by Al-Zain, and reported similarly by Al-Darimi).
In these two narrations, the
Messenger of Allah
linked the debt to Allah (swt) in fasting and in Hajj onto the debt to the human and
they are both the linkage of a known matter upon another known matter, i.e. the
association of the debt to Allah with the debt to the human in confirming that
their settlement on one’s behalf would suffice. This is so because both of
these matters are debts; thus the mutual factor between them is the debt and
this is the ‘Illah and the rule that has been confirmed for both of them
is the sufficing of the settlement. This is the reality of Qiyas
according to the Shari’ah from the Shari’ah text. Therefore, this
definition is a Shari’ah rule that must be implemented and it is the
binding rule of Allah upon the one who deduces it and upon the one who imitates
it either as a Muttabi’ (a Muqallid who queries the evidence) or
as an ‘Ammi (a Muqallid who did not query the evidence). It is
like any other Shari’ah rule, deduced from a Shari’ah evidence,
because the Shari’ah definitions and principles deduced from the Shari’ah
evidences are Shari’ah rules like all other Shari’ah rules.
This Qiyas is based upon
the ‘Illah or in other words upon the common factor between the known
linked matter and the known matter it is linked to; that is, between the root
and the branch. Hence, if the ‘Illah is found, that is if the mutual
factor is found between the compared and the compared with, then Qiyas
can be done; otherwise, Qiyas does not take place at all. This ‘Illah
would be considered a Shari’ah evidence if it were mentioned in a Shari’ah
text or if it were analogous with what is listed by a Shari’ah text
because the ‘Illah upon which the Qiyas is based has been
mentioned by Shari’ah.
By contrast, if this ‘Illah were not mentioned in a Shari’ah text and it
were not analogous with that which is listed in a Shari’ah text, such a Qiyas
would not be considered a valid Qiyas,
nor a Shari’ah evidence. This is because the reason upon which it is
based has not been mentioned by a Shari’ah text; thus such Qiyas
could not be from Shari’ah and consequently it cannot be a Shari’ah
evidence.
Evidence about this Qiyas
being a Shari’ah evidence is reflected in the fact that the Shari’ah
text in which the ‘Illah is mentioned or analogous with what is
mentioned in the Shari’ah text could either come from the Book, the Sunnah
or from the Ijma’ of the Companions. These three evidences have been
confirmed as being Shari’ah evidences through conclusive proof; thus,
the evidence of the Shari’ah ‘Illah is conclusive and that is the
evidence of Qiyas. This is so because the Shari’ah reason found
in the rule that is mentioned by the text, which acts as the root, is what
makes the rule in the branch a Shari’ah rule and it is what makes Qiyas
feasible for without it Qiyas would not have existed in the first place.
Therefore, its evidence will also serve as evidence for Qiyas.
This Shari’ah Qiyas
has been demonstrated to us by the Messenger of Allah
and he
considered it a Shari’ah evidence. The
Companions also proceeded according to it and adopted it as a Shari’ah
evidence when they deduced the Shari’ah rules. It has been reported that
the Messenger of Allah
said to Mu’ath and Abu Moussa Al-Ash’ari when
he was about to dispatch them to Yemen: “What will you judge by?” They said: “If
we did not find the rule in the Book or in the Sunnah, we would make analogy between the two matters and
whichever were closest to what is right, we would act upon it” (mentioned by
Al-Amidi in Al-Ahkam and Abu Al-Husain in Al-Mu’tamid). Here
Mu’ath and Abu Moussa explicitly stated that they would use Qiyas and
the Messenger of Allah
approved
this; therefore this serves as proof that Qiyas is a Shari’ah
evidence.
It is reported on the authority
of Ibn Abbas that a woman came to the Messenger of Allah
and said: “My mother has died and she has a month’s
fasting on her neck.” So the Messenger of Allah
said: “What if your mother had a
debt, would you settle it?” She said: “Yes.” Upon this he
said: “Then the debt to Allah is
more worthy of being settled” (reported by Al-Bukhari). Here the Messenger of Allah
wanted to teach this woman so he joined the
debt to Allah to the debt of the human in the obligation of settling the debt
and its sufficing, and this is exactly Qiyas itself. It is reported on
the authority of Umar Bin al-Khattab (ra) who asked the Prophet
about the kiss of the one who is fasting and
whether it breaks the fast. The Prophet
then asked “What if you rinsed your mouth out with
water would (while you were fasting), would that break your fast?” He replied
“No” (authenticated
by al-Hakim and confirmed by Al-Dhahabi). Here the Messenger of
Allah
rejected the rule of invalidating the fast for
the act of kissing while fasting by comparing it with the act of rinsing out
the mouth while fasting, which does not invalidate the fast, because neither of
them enters the belly. Thus it was an explanation of the rule through the use
of Qiyas.
In these three texts, the rule
was not only given an ‘Illah, as in the case in many texts that denote Qiyas,
rather, Qiyas itself was also approved, taught and explained through
them and this serves as a valid argument stipulating that Qiyas is a Shari’ah
evidence.
This is as far as the Messenger
of Allah
is concerned. As for the Companions, it is
reported that they used Qiyas as Shari’ah evidence in several
matters. One example is what has been narrated by Said Bin Mansur in his Sunan
from Al-Qasim Bin Muhammad “ A man died and left behind his two
grandmothers, his mother’s mother and his father’s mother, and so Abu Bakr came
and gave the mother of his mother a sixth and left the mother of his father,
and so a man from the Ansar said to him: “You gave the inheritance of a dead
man to a woman who if she had died, the same man would not have inherited her;
and you excluded the woman whom the man would have inherited all her legacy had
she been the one who died”, and so he divided the sixth between them” .
This event was also mentioned by Al-Ghazali in Al-Mustasfa and Al-Amidi
in Al-Ihkam. Here, the Companions compared the inheritance of the living
from the dead with the inheritance of the dead to the living by assuming that
the dead was living and the living was dead; thus, concluding that the mutual
factor - the kinship between the two persons - is the same in both instances.
When Abu Bakr heard this Qiyas, he submitted to it, implemented it and
retracted from his own opinion.
Similar to this is what was
reported that Umar (ra) wrote to Abu Musa Al-Ash’ari saying: “Get
acquainted with the similar and the identical matters and then make analogy
between the matters according to your opinion” (This was mentioned by Al-Shirazi in Tabaqat
Al-Fuqaha’ and was narrated by Al-Bayhaqi in Al-Ma’rifa Min Kitab Adab
Al-Qadi). Umar (ra) was the Amir of the believers
while Abu Musa was a judge in this instance. Similarly, it was said to Umar
(ra) that Samra had taken wine from
Jewish traders as tithe which he then turned into vinegar and sold so Umar (ra) said: “May
Allah damn Samra, did he not know that the Messenger of Allah
say: “May Allah curse the Jews; fats have been
made unlawful to them, so they embellished them and sold them and ate from the
proceeds” (reported by
Muslim). Here, Umar (ra)
compared wine with fat and concluded that its prohibition stipulates the
prohibition of its sale. Another example is when Umar (ra) was not sure about
the penalty of the seven who took part in the killing of one man so ‘Ali (ra)
said to him: “O Amir of the believers! What if a group of people were to take part
in a theft, would you cut their hands?” He said: “Yes.” So ‘Ali said to him:
“So likewise” (mentioned by ‘Abd Al-Razzaq in Al-Musannaf). This is a Qiyas between the
killing and the theft, and all this indicates that Qiyas is Shari’ah
evidence deduced from the Sunnah and the Ijma’ of the Companions.
Hence, what has been confirmed through the Messenger of Allah
is the Sunnah and what has been
confirmed through the Companions is considered an “Ijma’ Sukuti” (Silent Consensus) because the Companions who utilised Qiyas did so in the
presence and the full knowledge of the rest of the Companions, and none of them
condemned it; therefore, it was a general consensus.
However, the Sunnah and
the Ijma’ of the Companions have both been reported by way of individual
report (Ahad narrations), thus they are considered as indefinite
evidence. Therefore, the conclusive evidence about the fact that Qiyas
is a Shari’ah evidence is reflected in what we mentioned with regard to
the Illah being mentioned in the Shari’ah text, that is, in the
Book and the Sunnah or in the Ijma’ of the Companions. These
three evidences have been confirmed as being Shari’ah evidences by way
of conclusive evidence. Therefore, they act as the evidence for Qiyas
because they are the evidence for the Illah.
It has been conclusively
established that these four evidences, the Book, the Sunnah, the Ijma’
of the Companions and Qiyas have come by way of Revelation from Allah
(swt). Apart from these four, no other evidence has been established through
conclusive evidence. The fact that they are not established by conclusive
evidence is clear since those who use them as evidence do not claim that the
proof that they are Shari’ah evidences is a definitive proof. The fact that they are not confirmed as
(decisive) Shari’ah evidences is clear from the lack of conformity of
the evidences which they bring forward – in their consideration as Shari’ah
proofs – upon the issue that they are trying to establish the evidence upon. In
other words, it is clearly apparent that there is a mistaken inference in what
they present from the evidences upon what they are claiming, such as: the
consensus of the Muslims, Al-Masalih Al-Mursalah or Al-Istihsaan
and similar to them from the Shari’ah evidences.
So, those who claim that the
consensus of the Muslims is a Shari’ah evidence draw their conclusion
from the words of the Prophet
: “My Ummah
will not gather upon a misguidance”. Ibn Hajr mentioned the narration
as being Mashhur with many different paths, though all of them have
debate around them, and in any case, this does not contain a proof since the
misguidance here means apostasy from the Deen and not mistakes and with
this meaning it was mentioned in the narration: “My Ummah will not gather
upon a misguidance (Dalalah), and so stick to the group (Jama’at), since the
Hand of Allah is with the group” (reported by Al-Tabarani with a chain
whose men are all trustworthy through Ibn Umar). This is correct since the
Islamic Ummah would never unite upon apostasy from Islam. However, they
could possibly unite upon a mistake and the simplest evidence for that is that
the Islamic Ummah united upon leaving behind the work to establish the Khalifah
for a long period and that was consensus upon a mistake.
With respect to those who say
that seeking the benefits and repelling the harms is a Shari’ah Illah
for the Shari’ah rules and apply Qiyas accordingly, they infer
this by the words of Allah (swt): “And we did not send you except as a
Mercy to the ‘Aalameen (mankind and jinn and all that exists)” (TMQ 21:107).
So, they consider the fact that he
is a mercy as a Shari’ah Illah,
and there cannot be mercy except through the attainment of the benefits and the
repulsion of harm, and therefore, it is a Shari’ah Illah for the
legislation. This inference is incorrect from two angles; the first is that the
subject was his
being sent, or in other words, the fact he
was a Messenger, and not the Shari’ah
laws. If we submit that the intention of sending him
was his message i.e. the Shari’ah, the
subject would be the whole of Shari’ah from the matters of ‘Aqidah
and rules collectively and not the Shari’ah rules alone. The second
issue is that the fact that sending him
as a mercy for the universe is only a
clarification for the Hikma (wisdom) behind sending the Prophet
; in other words,
what would occur as a consequence of sending him. In the same manner, the words of Allah (swt):
“And we did not create Jinn and Mankind except to worship” (TMQ 51:56),
in other words, the result of creating them would be the worship so it is the Hikma
of their creation and not the ‘Illah for their creation. Likewise His
(swt) words: “That they may witness things that are of benefit to them” (TMQ 22:28).
The verse describes the Hikma from the Hajj, that is, the
result that may be gained from the Hajj. His Words,“Truly prayer prevents
great sins and Munkar” (TMQ 29:45), describe the Hikma for
the prayer; in other words, the result that may be reached from prayer and so
on. So, the verse here is not in the context of specifying an Illah
because the Illah is the thing that due to its presence the rule is
found or, in other words, is legislated. In order to understand the underlying Illah
in the text, it is imperative that it must be an attribute and this attribute
must indicate the underlying ‘Illah, in that it is the Sabab (reason/cause)
for the legislation or in other words that the legislation was for its sake,
and in such a circumstance it is an inseparable attribute which is never
absent, since the cause always results in the effect and therefore if the Illah
is found then the effect is found.
The words “mercy for the
‘Aalameen” (TMQ 21:107) and the rest of the previous verses,
even if they are considered as attributes and within the verses are the letters
that would indicate an underlying Illah, the context of the words does
not indicate the existence of an Illah because they could be absent and
because the legislation was not for its sake. Accordingly, the Islamic Shari’ah
could be a mercy for the one who believes in it and who acts according to it,
such as: the first generations of Muslims, and it could be an affliction for
whoever disbelieves in it, such as the disbelievers. So, the sending of the
Messenger
is an affliction upon the disbelievers and
they are from the ‘Aalameen. Additionally, the Islamic message is
present today. This is since the sending has practically taken place and with
that the Muslims who themselves believe in that message are today in hardship.
So, it is not the sending alone, that is the existence of the Shari’ah
alone, that is a mercy, and for that reason it is not an Illah for it.
Based upon that, attaining the benefits and repelling the harms is not a Shari’ah
Illah; so, it is not taken as a basis for Qiyas.
As for those who say that
rationality is from the Islamic evidences, we say that the discussion is about
the Shari’ah rule or what is considered, with the most probability, as
the rule of Allah. This is not present except in what came by Revelation, and
the Revelation did not mention the rationality, and for that reason, there is
no evidence whether conclusive or inconclusive to be found that states that
rationality is from the Shari’ah evidences for the Shari’ah
rules; so it is not considered to be from the Shari’ah evidences at all.
With respect to those who say
that the opinion of the companion is from the Shari’ah evidences, they deduce
this by saying that the two evidences for the Ijma’ of the Companions
are evidences for the single companion as well, since the praise for them
(collectively) is also praise for one of them. In the same manner, since there
cannot be shortcomings in their conveyance (of the Deen) collectively,
there can be no doubt with respect to the conveyance of one person from amongst
them. Additionally, the words of the Messenger of Allah
, “My
companions are like stars, whichever of them you follow you are guided”, support
the opinion of a companion being an evidence. This deduction is incorrect since
the praise of the Prophet
for the companions collectively not
individually is a proof that the Ijma’ of the Companions is a Shari’ah
evidence and the fact that the Companions did not convey the Quran individually
is a proof that their consensus is a Shari’ah evidence. Rather, the Shari’ah
evidence is the praise upon them and the fact that they collectively agree that
a rule is the Shari’ah rule. So the evidence is two matters, praise and
consensus and these are not found in the individual companion. In which case,
the issue of praise and the conveyance of the Quran are not suitable to be
proofs that the words of whoever conveyed the Quran from those whom Allah (swt)
praised are Shari’ah evidences because in the same manner that Allah
(swt) praised the Companions, He (swt) also praised those who followed them,
and since the conveyance of the Quran even if by those whom Allah (swt) has
praised does not make the words of the one who conveyed it a Shari’ah
evidence, and due to that the inference made is invalid. What indicates the
invalidity of this inference is that what an individual companion conveyed and
what he narrated from the narrations is not considered to be definite – rather
it is indefinite. Therefore, “The old man and woman if they commit
fornication then stone them both” is not considered to be a verse from
the Quran even though it was conveyed by a companion since there was no Ijma’
upon it. In the same manner, the narrations that are transmitted by the
Companions from the singular reports are not considered definite - rather they
are indefinite.
This is different from the Ijma’
of the Companions since what they agreed upon unanimously as being from the
Quran is considered to be Quran and to be definite, and what they agreed upon
unanimously in terms of narrations and were transmitted from them by Mutawatir
(successive multiple chains) are considered to be definite evidences.
Accordingly, the difference is vast between what the Companions agreed upon
unanimously - where there is no disagreement, meaning it is definite and the
one who denies it is a disbeliever - and what the single companion narrated
which is indefinite and the one who denies it is not considered to be a
disbeliever. Therefore, Ijma’ of the Companions is Shari’ah
evidence whereas the opinion of the individual companion is not considered to
be from the Shari’ah evidences. In addition to that, contrary to the Ijma’
of the Companions who do not agree upon a mistake, the individual companion can
make mistakes and he is not free from them. The Companions used to differ over
issues and each of them adopted a different opinion from the other; so, if the
opinion of the companion were a proof then the proofs of Allah (swt) would be
in disagreement and contradictory. Therefore, the opinion of a companion is not
considered to be Shari’ah evidence.
As for those who say “the Shari’ah
of those before us is Shari’ah for us”, they use the following words of
Allah (swt) as evidence: “Truly We have sent the revelation to you as We
sent the revelation to Nuh” (TMQ 4:163), “He (swt) has ordained
the same Deen for you that He ordained for Nuh” (TMQ 42:13) and His (swt) words “Then,
We (swt) have sent the revelation to you (O Muhammad
saying) Follow Millat Ibrahim” (TMQ 16:123).
These verses indicate that we are
addressed by the legislation of the previous Prophets. In addition, the very
duty of the Messenger
is that he came to inform about what Allah
(swt) has obliged us to adhere to. Due
to that, every letter in the Quran and every action that emanated from the
Prophet
, any word that he
pronounced or any confirmation from him must be adhered to except what was
mentioned as being specific to him or other than him. So we are ordered by
everything that is mentioned by the Quran or by narration except when a Shari’ah
text comes to explain that it is specific to the Companions of the previous Shara’ih
(plural of Shari’ah), and we are ordered by whatever has not mentioned
in such a manner since Allah did not mention it in the Quran without reason
and, therefore, we must be addressed by it.
This inference is incorrect. With
respect to the verses, the intention of the first verse is that revelation is
sent to him
in the same way it was sent to other Prophets,
and the purpose of the second verse is that the basis of Tawheed (belief
in Oneness of Allah(swt)) was legislated and that was what Nuh was ordained
with. The intended meaning of the third verse is to follow the root of Tawheed
since the word “Millat” means: the root of Tawheed. All the verses from this type are in this
manner, such as His (swt) words: “So follow their guidance” (TMQ 6:90) and
other verses. As for His (swt) words “Truly, We did send down the Taurat,
therein was guidance and light, by which the Prophets judged” (TMQ 5:44),
Allah (swt) by this meant the Prophets of the Tribe of Israel and not Muhammad
, and the Muslims
only have one Prophet. As for what is narrated from Abu Hurayrah that the
Messenger of Allah
said: “The Prophets are brothers from
Allat (i.e. different mothers), they have various mothers and their Deen is
one” (reported by Muslim), the meaning of “their Deen is one” is the Tawheed which
is the basis that none differed upon. It does not mean what was sent from the Deen is one with all of them since we
understand the opposite from His (swt) words: “And for each from you We
have prescribed a law and a clear way” (TMQ 5:48). From this, it becomes clear
that these evidences are not suitable to be inferred from, and the inference
from them to prove that the Shari’ah from before us is a Shari’ah
for us is incorrect.
On the other hand, there are
evidences that decisively forbid the following of the Shari’ah of those
before us whether it came in the Quran,
the Sunnah or not in both. Allah (swt) said: “And whoever
seeks a Deen other than Islam, it will never be accepted of him” (TMQ 3:85) and
Allah (swt) said: “Truly the Deen with Allah is Islam” (TMQ 3:19).
So, when there is a Shari’ah text stating that for anyone to embrace any
Deen other than the Deen of Islam is conclusively not
accepted, then how can it be requested from the Muslims to follow it? Allah
(swt) says: “And We have sent down to you the Book in truth, confirming
the scripture that came before it and supreme over it” (TMQ 5:48),
the supremacy of the Quran over the previous Books does not mean that it was a
confirmation for them since it is said in the same verse “confirming”
and so it rather means that it is an abrogation of them. Also, there is an Ijma’
that the Shari’ah of Islam is an abrogation for all the previous Shara’ih.
More than that, Allah (swt) says: “Or were you witnesses when death
approached Ya’qub? When he said to his sons: ‘What will you worship after me?’
They said ‘We shall worship your God, the God of your fathers Ibrahim and
Ismail and Ishaq, One God, and to Him we submit (as Muslims) * That was an
Ummah that has passed away. They shall receive the reward of what they earned
and you of what you earn. And you will not be asked about what they used to do”
(TMQ
2:133-4). So, Allah (swt) informs us that He will not ask us about what
those Prophets did, and if we are not accounted about their actions, then we
will not be accounted about their Shari’ah since conveying it and
working according to it is from their actions. What we are not accountable for,
we are not commanded with it and it is unnecessary for us. Additionally, it is
narrated from Jaber that the Prophet
said: “I have been given five that no
one before me was given; each Prophet was sent to his people specifically and I
have been sent to each Red and Black (that is, the whole of mankind)” (Reported
by Muslim) and from Abu Hurayrah that the Prophet
said “I have been preferred over the
Prophets by six” (reported by
Muslim), and then he
mentioned them and amongst them was “And
I was sent to all of the Creation”. Hence, the Prophet
has narrated that every Prophet before our
Prophet
was only sent specifically to their people;
so, he was not sent to other than his people and they were not obliged by the Shari’ah
of a Prophet other than their own. Therefore, it is confirmed that no one from
the Prophets were sent to us and so their Shari’ah cannot be a Shari’ah
for us. This is supported by what is mentioned clearly in verses from the Quran
“And to Thamud their brother Saleh”, “And to ‘Aad their brother Hud”,
“And to Madyan their brother Shuaib” (TMQ 11:50, 61, 84).
From all this, it is clear that
the Shara’ih of those who came before us is not Shari’ah for us
for three reasons: the first of them being that the proofs used as evidence
only indicate the basis of Tawhid and do not indicate that all of the Shara’ih
of the Prophets is one. Secondly, the Shari’ah texts which mention the
prohibition of following any Shari’ah other than the Shari’ah of
Islam, and thirdly every Prophet was sent to his people specifically and we are
not from his people so he is not a Messenger for us. We are, therefore, not
addressed by his Shari’ah and are not bound by it. In that case, the Shari’ah
of those before us is not considered from the Shari’ah evidences.
This is with regards to their use
of the verses as proof. However, with respect to their inference that the
Messenger
came to convey from Allah everything that must
be adhered to, this is correct as to what he informed us that we must adhere to
from Allah which is the Shari’ah that he came with. However, it is not
correct (their inference) with respect to what he
did not order us to adhere to. So, the Prophet
conveyed to us from Allah (swt) about the circumstances of those before us from
the previous nations, but he informed us of that for the sake of example and
admonition and not for us to be bound by their Shari’ah. So, the stories
of the Prophets, as well as their affairs and the affairs of their nations,
were narrated to us and their circumstances and what rules they used to follow
were made clear to us. In addition, all of that was only for the sake of
example and admonition and nothing else and it was not in order to be bound by
their Shari’ah.
With respect to the stories and
to the news (akhbaar), it is apparent that they came for admonition and
lessons and this does not need any proof, and as for the conditions of the
nations and what they used to follow in terms of rules, this was mentioned in
way of reports about them and they were not mentioned from the perspective of
being bound by them. They are like stories that came to explain the
circumstances of the previous Prophets and the previous nations.
Above and beyond this, several of
these rules contradict the Islamic Shari’ah in their details; therefore,
if we were addressed by them, we would have been addressed by two different Shara’ih
and this is not possible. As an illustration from the legislation of Sulayman,
Allah (swt) said: “He inspected the birds and
said ‘What is the matter that I see not the hoopoe? Or is his among the
absentees? I will surely punish him with a severe torment, or slaughter him,
unless he brings me a clear reason” (TMQ 27:20-1) and there is no difference amongst the Muslims regarding the
prohibition of the punishment of the bird and even if it was disobedient;
rather, there is no difference even regarding the invalidity of punishing any
animal and there are Shari’ah texts that came regarding this. The
Prophet (saw) said: “The beasts damage is Jubaar” (agreed upon
through Abu Hurayrah); it is mentioned in Al-Muheet dictionary: “The
Jubaar is like the cloud which destroyed the cowardly, and Jubaar is loss and
invalid”. Therefore, the damage caused by livestock, as well as the
bird, is not indemnified (i.e. the owner is not liable).
With respect to the Shari’ah
of Musa, Allah (swt) says: “We forbade them every (animal) with undivided
hoof and We forbade them the fat of the ox and sheep except what adheres to
their backs or their entrails, or is mixed up with a bone” (TMQ 6:146),
and in the Shari’ah of Islam all of that has been made
permitted for the Muslims by His (swt) word: “and your food is permitted
for them” (TMQ 5:5), and this fat is from our food so it is
permitted for them. The words of Umm Maryam in the Quran, “I have vowed
to you what is in my womb to be dedicated to Your services” (TMQ 3:35),
are part of the Shari’ah of the people at the time of Zakariyyah and
this is not permitted in Islam in origin. The words, “Every food was
permitted for Bani Israi’l except what Isra’il forbade upon herself” (TMQ 3:93), are
part of the Shari’ah of Ya’qub and in Islam it is not permitted to
prohibit oneself from what Allah (swt) allowed; He (swt) says: “Why do
you prohibit what Allah made permitted for you” (TMQ 66:1). The Shari’ah of the People of the Book
at the time of the companions of the Cave includes, “The ones who won
their point said verily we shall build a place of worship over them” (TMQ 18:21),
and this is prohibited in Islam; the Prophet
said “Truly, those who if a good man
died from amongst them would build a place of worship over his grave are the
most evil of creation” (agreed upon).
Part of the Shari’ah of
Musa are the words “And We ordained therein for them Life for Life, eye
for eye, nose for nose, ear for ear, tooth for tooth and wounds Qisaas (equal
for equal)” (TMQ 5:45), while we do not take from this because we are not
ordered with it and only other than us were ordered by it. Islam only obligated
us with retaliation from all of these and in other issues by His (swt) words: “So
whoever transgresses against you then transgress likewise against him” (TMQ 2: 194),
His (swt) saying, “And if you punish, then punish them with the like of
that which you were afflicted” (TMQ 16:126) and His (swt) words “The
recompense for an evil is an evil like thereof” (TMQ 42:40). In addition,
His (swt) words “and wounds Qisas” (TMQ 5:45) conflicts with Qisas (recompense)
in Islam since the Qisas in Islam is the fine, and there is nothing in
the Torah about accepting the fine. Rather, the fine is only in Islamic law and
the fine is the blood money; so, the blood money for what falls short of life
is called the fine. Likewise, many rules about Qisaas in the stories
that have been narrated about the previous Prophets and nations, explaining
their circumstance and what they used to follow from laws, contradict the laws
of Islam; so how can we be addressed by them?
It cannot be said that these laws
have been abrogated by the Islamic Shari’ah since they were narrated
without restriction and the laws which have come to us did not come as
abrogation for laws before us. Rather they came as a Shari’ah for us and
there is no relationship between these laws. Accordingly, the issue of
abrogation is not found and the call regarding it is a claim that has no
backing since abrogation is the nullification of the rule which is understood
from a previous Shari’ah text by a subsequent one, such as the words of
the Messenger
: “I used to
prohibit you from visiting the graves so visit them” (reported by
Muslim through Buraydah), and the report of Al-Rabi’ in his Musnad
through Ibn Abbas, “I used to prohibit you from visiting the grave, so
visit them”: therefore, the nullification and raising of
the previous rule by a subsequent Shari’ah text is abrogation.
Therefore, for abrogation to take place there must be an abrogated rule that
was revealed before the abrogating rule, and for an indication to be present in
the abrogating text that it is an abrogation for that rule, and anything other
than this is not considered to be abrogation. The mere difference between two
rules or contradiction between them does not make one of them an abrogation for
the other; rather, there must be an indication in the abrogating text which
indicates that it is an abrogation for a specific rule. Accordingly, these
rules, narrated from the previous Shara’ih, are not abrogated by the
rules of Islam which differs with them or contradicts them since there is
nothing which indicates that. Furthermore, there is no relationship between
them and the rules of Islam in legislation; so, they are abrogated by the
abrogation of the previous Shara’ih by the Shari’ah of Islam and
not by laws specific to them that came to abrogate them. With this, it is clear
that the inference that we are addressed by what the Messenger
came with and are restricted by it as being an
invalid inference since we are addressed by what came to us with him
from the legislation of Islam and restricted
by that, and we are not addressed by what he related to us from the stories of
the previous Prophets and their narrations, and neither are we addressed by
what he explained to us from the circumstances of the previous nations and what
laws they used to follow. Accordingly, it has become
apparent with clarity that the legislation of those before us is not
legislation for us and the invalidity of considering it being from the Islamic
evidences is also apparent.
However, if another Shari’ah
text is found with the laws from the Shari’ah of those before us which
indicates that we are addressed by them, then, in that case, this rule would
become found in the Book or in the Sunnah, and alongside it a Shari’ah
text would be found that indicates that we are addressed by it in our Shari’ah
and the address of the Legislator (swt) for us existed there which indicates
that it is for us and so it would be obligatory to take action upon it then.
However, this would not be because it was a Shari’ah of those before us
but because of the address found in the same rule that is for us; in other
words, because Allah (swt) addressed us by it and the Messenger
informed us that it was from the Shari’ah
which he had come with, i.e. the laws of Islam.
It becomes apparent to the one
who follows the laws that have come in the Book, the Sunnah and the
previous Shara’ih that the text that comes indicating that we are
addressed by it, that it is from our Shari’ah, could come in three
circumstances:
Firstly, when the verse which the
rule came with begins by directing the address towards us such as the verse
regarding Kanz (hoarded wealth), Allah (swt) says: “O you who
believe! Truly there are many of the rabbis and monks who devour the wealth of
mankind on falsehood, and hinder (them) in the way of Allah. And those who
hoard up gold and silver and spend them not in the way of Allah, announce unto
them a painful torment” (TMQ 9:34). Allah (swt) has addressed us
with this verse; so, whatever it mentioned is a Shari’ah for us.
Accordingly, Kanz is prohibited in our Shari’ah even though part
of the verse that prohibited it was explaining the circumstances of the rabbis
and monks.
Secondly, when the
verse which came with the rule has come with a word which indicates generality,
such as the verses which mention ruling by other than what Allah has revealed.
Allah (swt) says “And whosoever rules by other than what Allah has
revealed then such are the disbelievers” (TMQ 5:44). So, the word
“whosoever” indicates generality and this means that it encompasses us and thus
we are addressed by it. Similarly, Allah (swt) says: “And whosoever rules
by other than what Allah has revealed then such are the oppressors” (TMQ 5:45), and
in the same way “And whosoever rules by other than what Allah has
revealed then such are the sinful ones” (TMQ 5:49).
Thirdly, if the verse
ends with something that draws our attention to the laws which are within it,
such as the verse of Qisas where Qarun was mentioned; Allah (swt) says: “Truly
Qarun was one of Musa’s people, but he behaved arrogantly towards them. And we
gave him of the treasures, that of which the keys would have been a burden to a
body of strong men” until His (swt) words: “Know you not that the
disbelievers will never be successful” (TMQ 28:76-82). This verse is followed
directly afterwards by His (swt) words: “That home of the Hereafter, We
shall assign to those who do not want grandeur in the land nor do mischief. And
the good end is for the Muttaqun” (TMQ 28:83), and so the verses became
an address to the Messenger
and to the believers. This draws attention to
the laws which came (within them) when it is said: “those who do not want
grandeur” and these were rules regarding Qaroon who wanted grandeur in
the land but there is what indicates that we are addressed by these laws.
In these three
circumstances, laws of the verses of previous people will be considered as laws
from the Islamic Shari’ah since there is something that indicates that
we are addressed by them and we adopt them in their characteristic as laws from
the Islamic Shari’ah and not from the characteristic that they were from
a Shari’ah of those before us since the Shari’ah of those who
came before us is not a Shari’ah for us.
With regards to those
who say that Istihsaan (application of discretion in a legal decision)
is from the Shari’ah evidences, they are not able to come with single or
even indefinite evidence from the Shari’ah that supports their claim. Istihsaan
can be explained by those who take it as a Shari’ah evidence that: it is
evidence which occurs to the Mujtahid when he or she is unable to make
it apparent due to the lack of help to express it. It is also explained that it
is to leave an aspect from amongst the aspects of Ijtihad without the completeness of the words for another aspect
which is stronger than it and which would be like an unexpected factor on the
first. In the same manner, it is explained that it is in an issue to abandon
the rule comparable to it to another rule due to a stronger aspect that
necessitates this move. Additionally, it is explained that it is to cut off an
issue from comparable ones.
Istihsaan is divided into two
categories; the first is Istihsaan Qiyasi and the second is Istihsaan
of necessity. Istihsaan Qiyasi is to abandon the rule of an apparent Qiyas
that comes to fore for a different rule by another Qiyas which is more
subtle and hidden, but is a stronger proof, with a more satisfying viewpoint
and a more correct derivation. An example of this is: if a person bought a car
from two people in one agreement as a loan from them. Then, one of the two
creditors was given part of this debt. However, he didn’t have the right to take it specifically;
rather, his partner in the debt has a right to claim his part of the receipt
since he (the first creditor) has appropriated it from the combined sale price
in the single sale. Moreover, the appropriation of either of the two partners
from the price of the combined sale between them is the appropriation of both
the partners, in other words, it is an appropriation for the partnership and it
is not for either of them to take specifically. So, if whatever was taken is
destroyed while it is in the possession of the one who received it before the
second partner took his share from it, then the deduction from the Qiyas
is that it would be taken away from the total sum of the two, or in other words
from the total sum of the partnership. However, in Istihsaan the loss
would be considered to be taken only from the one who had received it and the
loss would not be counted against the second partner according to Istihsaan
since in origin he is not inseparable from the partnership of the one who
received it; rather, he is able to leave what is received by the appropriator
and become attached to the debtor by himself specifically. The other examples
follow in the same manner. This is Istihsaan Qiyasi.
As for Istihsaan
of necessity, it is what contradicts the rule of Qiyas by taking into
account an incumbent necessity or a required benefit in order to fulfil the
need or prevent the hardship. This occurs when the rule from the Qiyas
leads to a hardship or a problem in some issues and so it is abandoned at that
time by Istihsaan for another rule which would remove the hardship and
repel the problem. This is like the example of the employee since his
possession with respect to what he is employed upon is considered to be an Amanat
(trust); so there is no liability (to be paid) if it is damaged while it is
with him as long as he was not negligent. Therefore, if someone employed a
person to work in his house to sew clothes for someone else for one month, he
is considered a private employee. Then, if the clothes were damaged while they
are in the employee’s possession without any transgression from him, there is
no payment of liability because he possessed it as a trust. Additionally, if
someone employed someone to work in his shop to sew clothes for others and he
used to sew clothes for all the people, then he is a general employee. So, if
the clothes are destroyed while they are in this employee’s possession without
any transgression from him then there is no liability since he held them as a
trust in the same manner. However, according to Istihsaan, there is no
liability upon the private employee while there is for the general employee so
that he (the general employee) would not accept more work than he is able to do
since he might destroy the peoples’
wealth.
This is the summary
of Istihsaan and its evidences. It is apparent that they are not
evidences; rather, they are simply rational amendments that are neither from
the Book nor from the Sunnah. They do not even reach the level of being
considered indefinite proofs let alone conclusive proofs that Istihsaan is
from the Shari’ah evidences. This is from one angle and from another
angle; whatever comes about from rational amendment is void.
With respect to the
explanations of Istihsaan, all of them are invalid. As for the first
explanation that the evidence is sensed in the mind of the Mujtahid and
that he or she does not know what it is, it is not permitted to consider
something an evidence as long as it remains unknown since the lack of ability
to make it clear and apparent proves that it is not clear to the Mujtahid and that he or she lacks
knowledge of it; so, it is not correct to be from amongst the Shari’ah
evidences. As for the other explanations, all of their meanings are the same,
i.e. to abandon similar issues to the issue at hand for another stronger view,
in other words, to abandon Qiyas for stronger evidence. If these
explanations intend by the “stronger evidence”, a text from the Book or the Sunnah,
then this is not Istihsaan; it
is rather preference of the text, so it is deducing from the text which
would be deduction by the Book or the Sunnah and not deduction by Istihsaan.
If the “stronger evidence” is the mind by what it considers as benefit and this
is the intended meaning, then this is invalid since Qiyas is built upon
the Shari’ah ‘Illah which is determined by the text and it is the
address of the Legislator (swt) to us. The mind and the benefit are not Shari’ah
texts and nor are they another ‘Illah stronger than the text; rather,
there is no relationship between the mind and benefit with the Shari’ah
text (i.e. what came as Revelation). For that reason, this abandonment is
invalid.
This is regarding the
explanations. As for the categorisation of Istihsaan, the invalidity of Istihsaan
Qiyasi has become clear from the invalidity of the second explanation,
which was to abandon the similar issues to the issue. Also, their consideration
that it is a hidden Qiyas is invalid because it has no relationship with
Qiyas; rather, it is simply reasoning by benefit (making the benefit an ‘Illah).
Regarding the example of the price of a combined sale which was sold in one agreement,
it is not correct to differ in the rule, the loss of the wealth which one of the two partners
appropriated, that it is a loss from the wealth of the partnership, for what
one of the two partners appropriated from the wealth is from the appropriation
of the partnership. Because the wealth, irrespective of whether it was the sold
car or its price, is the wealth of the partnership and not the wealth of one of
the partners; so its loss is the loss of the wealth of the company just like
its appropriation is an appropriation of the wealth of the company. So, this
beneficial (Maslahi) abandonment has no place and it contradicts the Shari’ah.
As for the Istihsaan
of necessity, its invalidity is clear in that it is ruled by the mind
and what the mind perceives as benefit; it is not a Shari’ah text and
the adopted reason (‘Illah) is preferred to the Shari’ah text
(that is, the comprehension of Shari’ah text). All of this is invalid
without any necessary discusssion. Then, to make the shared employee liable and
the private employee not liable is to prefer something without evidence to make
it preferred and it contradicts with the Shari’ah text. It was reported by Al-Bayhaqi in Sunan
Al-Kubra from ‘Amr B. Shu’ayb from his father from his grandfather that the
Messenger
said: “then
there is no liability upon the one who takes a trust”. Similarly,
through Al-Qasim Bin Abdul Rahman that ‘Ali and Ibn Mas’ud said: “there is no
liability upon the one who takes a trust”, and in his Sunan Al-Bayhaqi
reports from Jaber that Abu Bakr ruled that a deposit which had been kept in a
bag, which was burnt and so was destroyed, was not to receive any liability in
exchange; so, there is no liability upon anyone given a trust at all since the
expression of the narration “no” is a negation of the genus (no liability)
which indicates generality, and so it encompasses every one holding a trust
whether they were a private employee or a general employee.
By this it is
apparent that Istihsaan is not from the Shari’ah evidences, and
it is not correct to consider it from the Shari’ah evidences since there
is no proof at all, definite or indefinite, whether from the Quran, from the Sunnah
or from the Ijma’ of the Companions that indicates that it is from the
evidences. This is besides the fact that it is using the mind as evidence which
makes it invalid and that some of its examples contradicts Shari’ah
texts.
As for those who say
that Al-Masalih Al-Mursalah are from the Shari’ah evidences, in
the same manner they are also unable to bring any proof for it; however, they
consider the reasons behind the whole of the Shari’ah to be the
obtaining of interests and the repulsion of harms. In the same way, they
consider the reason behind each specific Shari’ah rule to be the
obtaining of the interest or the repulsion of the harm. However, some of them
make it a condition that the consideration that something is itself a benefit
needs to be found mentioned in a text from the Shari’ah or mentioned
that it is a type of interest but some of them do not make this a condition;
rather, they consider the Maslahah (benefit) a Shari’ah evidence
even if there is no mentioning of the consideration of it or its type in a Shari’ah
text. This is because it comes under the general Masalih by which the
benefits are sought and the harms are avoided.
Al-Masalih Al-
Mursalah may be defined as:
every interest which has no text narrated in the Shari’ah with respect
to it or its type. So, the meaning of Mursalah is that it is not
mentioned in evidence. They said that if the Maslahah was itself
mentioned in a specific text, such as teaching, reading and writing, or was
from a general text which mentioned its type which confirmed its consideration,
such as the enjoining of every type of good and the forbiddance of all the acts
of evil, then in these two situations it is not considered to be from Al-Masalih
Al-Mursalah. Rather, Al-Masalih Al-Mursalah is forwarded from the
evidence, in other words, there is no evidence found upon it; instead, it is
derived from the generality of the Shari’ah being sent to gain the
interests and repel the harms. However, there is a difference made between the Shari’ah
interests and those which are not legitimate since the Shari’ah
interests are those that agree with the intentions (Maqasid) of the Shari’ah,
and the interests that are illegitimate are those which contradict the
intentions of the Shari’ah. So, Al-Masalih Al-Mursalah that are
considered to be a Shari’ah evidence are those which agree with the
intentions of the Shari’ah, and those which contradict with the
intentions of the Shari’ah are not considered to be from Al-Masalih
Al-Mursalah; consequently, it is not a Shari’ah evidence. Hence, Al-Masalih
Al-Mursalah are those that the Shari’ah texts indicate its
consideration in a general manner, and accordingly, specific Shari’ah
rules are built upon its basis when there is no Shari’ah text regarding
the event or anything which is comparable to it, in which case the interest
would be the Shari’ah proof.
This is the summary
of Al-Masalih Al-Mursalah and it is invalid from two angles:
Firstly: the Shari’ah
texts from the Quran and the Sunnah are connected to specific actions of
the worshipper; so, they are the Shari’ah evidence for the rule of the Shari’ah
in that action, and they are not connected with the interests and no evidence
came for the interest. When Allah (saw) said: “Let there be a pledge
taken” (TMQ
2:283), and when He (swt) said: “O you who believe when you
contract a debt for a fixed period write it down” (TMQ 2:282),
and when He said: “Take witnesses whenever you make a commercial
contract” (TMQ 2:282), He
(swt) was explaining only the rules of mortgaging, writing down debts and
witnessing the sale. He (swt) did not make it evident whether this was an
interest or not, neither by expression nor by indication, and the text does not
convey whether this rule was an interest or not, neither from close nor far or
by any aspect from its various angles. So, from what angle is it said that
these interests are indicated by the Shari’ah in order for this interest
to be considered and subsequently to be considered as Shari’ah evidence?
Additionally, the Shari’ah
Illal (plural of Illah) came in the same manner as the Shari’ah
texts; connected to the actions of the worshipper and as evidence upon the
indication of the Shari’ah rule in that action, and did not come to
explain the interest nor the indication of the interest. So, when Allah (swt)
says: “in order that it may not become a fortune used by the rich among
you” (TMQ
59:7), “so that there may be no difficulty to the believers in
respect of the wives of their adopted sons” (TMQ 33:37) and when He
(swt) says: “to attract the hearts of those who have been inclined” (TMQ 9:60), He
(swt) is only clarifying the ‘Illah distributing the wealth amongst the
poor rather than the rich in order to prevent the circulation of the wealth
amongst the rich, and clarifying that the ‘Illah of marrying the
Messenger
to Zaynab is to be an explanation of the
permissibility for someone to marry his
adopted son’s wife, and clarifying that the Illah for giving (money) in
order to attract the hearts is the need for the State to bind the hearts
together. So, He (swt) did not explain that this was benefit; rather, the
explanation was that a specific issue was the Illah of a specific rule
without any regard given to the interest or its absence and absolutely without
any consideration to it. So, from what angle then, can it be said that the Shari’ah
indicates these reasons such that the interests can be considered Shari’ah
evidence? If the Shari’ah texts did not indicate that the Shari’ah
came for the interest, neither in its indications upon the rule nor in its
indications for the Illah of the rule, then it is not possible for it to
be said that the texts indicate specific interests or by their type since
nothing at all came regarding this in the Shari’ah texts. Accordingly,
the invalidity of the claim that the Shari’ah texts came as a proof for
specific interests or by their type has become clear, and from greater
reasoning, the interests that were not mentioned by a text from the Shari’ah
that indicates that they are from the Shari’ah evidences are also not
considered.
Secondly, they made a
condition for Al-Masalih Al-Mursalah that for them to be Mursalah,
there must be no narration of a text in the Shari’ah that indicates that
they are considered, neither specifically nor by their type, and so their
stipulation is that there should not be a specific proof for it from the Shari’ah
and it is rather understood from the intentions of the Shari’ah. This
alone is enough to make it void in the view of the Shari’ah because the
lack of a proof which indicates it is enough to reject it since the rule sought
is the rule of the Shari’ah and not the rule from the mind. Therefore,
in order to consider it as being from the Shari’ah, it is imperative
that there is a proof which indicates that it is found in what came with the
Revelation, i.e. the Book and the Sunnah. So, the stipulation that there
is no text from the Shari’ah that indicates it is sufficient to reject
it as being from the Shari’ah.
With respect to Al-Masalih
Al-Mursalah being understood from the intentions of the Shari’ah,
the intentions of the Shari’ah are not a Shari’ah text which can
be understood such that what is understood from them can be considered a proof,
and so there is no value in what is understood from them as far as using them
as evidence for Shari’ah law. Furthermore, what is meant by the
intentions of the Shari’ah? If what is intended by it is what the texts
indicate, such as the prohibitions of fornication, stealing, murder, alcohol
and apostasy from Islam, then this is not an intention of the Shari’ah;
rather, it is the law for the actions of the worshipper and there is no looking
beyond the indication of the text. So, there is no place to consider that this
law which was understood from the text is Shari’ah evidence; rather, it
is a Shari’ah rule. By greater reasoning, there is no account given to
what the mind imagines from that law as being the purpose of the Shari’ah
to be from the Shari’ah evidences. So, how would you consider that which
is conceived from the mere imagination as a purpose of the Shari’ah to
be a Shari’ah evidence?!! Based upon this, the validity of what is
understood from the intentions of the Shari’ah is completely and utterly
void.
As for what is
intended by what is understood from all the wisdom (Hikma) of the Shari’ah,
i.e. the wisdom behind sending the Messenger
and the fact that he was a mercy for all creation,
then this is a Hikma not an Illah, and the Hikma may or
may not be attained. Accordingly, it is not taken as a basis used as evidence
due to the possibility of its absence; therefore, by greater reasoning, what is
understood from the Hikma cannot be taken as a basis that is used for evidence.
Due to this, it would
be incorrect to consider that what is understood from what is known as the
intentions of the Shari’ah as being from the Shari’ah evidences.
It is also the case from this angle that the notion that what is understood to
be from the purpose of the Shari’ah to be Shari’ah evidence is
completely void. Accordingly, the invalidity of the notion that Al-Masalih
Al-Mursalah is from the Shari’ah evidences has become clear.
This is from the
angle of the causes that made them consider that Al-Masalih Al-Mursalah is
Shari’ah evidence. As for the angle
of the Shari’ah proof that they are from the Shari’ah evidences,
there is absolutely no Shari’ah proof for that at all whether from the
Book or the Sunnah; neither a conclusive proof nor an indefinite one.
For this reason, it is incorrect to consider Al-Masalih Al-Mursalah as
being from the Shari’ah evidences.
From all of this, it becomes
clear that the evidence that the Revelation came with from Allah (swt), which
are confirmed with definite proof, are the four evidences and nothing else, and
they are: the Book, the Sunnah, the Ijma’ of the Companions and Qiyas
whose Illah is from the Shari’ah, and other than these four
evidences have no definite proof that indicates them. Accordingly, it has
become apparent that the Shari’ah evidences are only these four alone.
However, it should be clear that
the rules deduced from evidences other than these four, from amongst the rules
that an Imam considered as Shari’ah rules, are Shari’ah
rules in the eyes of those who advocate them and those who oppose them because
there exists a vague evidence denoting that they are considered as evidences.
Hence, the one who considers the general consensus of the Ummah as being
a Shari’ah evidence and who then goes on to deduce from this a rule;
consequently, this rule would become a Shari’ah rule in his or her eyes
and a binding Shari’ah rule upon him or her, and he or she would be
forbidden from taking another rule instead. The same rule also becomes a Shari’ah
rule in the eyes of those who oppose it but it does not become a binding Shari’ah
rule upon them. The same applies to 'the
Shari’ah of those before us is a Shari’ah for us', Al-Masalih
Al-Mursalah, Istihsaan and rationality.
Hence, every rule deduced from any
of these evidences is considered a Shari’ah rule in the eyes of those
who advocate that what the rule has been deduced from is part of the Shari’ah
evidences and in the eyes of those who oppose it as well. However, it is only a
binding Shari’ah rule upon the one who deduces it and not binding upon
the one who holds a different understanding. This is like the rules deduced
from the texts since the difference in understanding the text does not make the
deduced rule a Shari’ah rule in the eyes of the one who deduced it and
illegitimate in the eyes of the one that opposed him or her in this
understanding. Rather, it is a Shari’ah rule from the viewpoint of all
the Muslims as long as the possibility of reaching such understanding from the
text is possible; in other words, as long as the doubted evidence (shubhat
daleel) exists. However, it is not considered a binding rule upon all the
Muslims but only binding upon the one who has deduced it and the one who has
emulated it, and not binding upon the one who has opposed it. Nonetheless, in
any case it is a Shari’ah rule. Likewise, the rule deduced from an
evidence is exactly like the rule deduced from the text; it is considered a Shari’ah
rule in the eyes of all the Muslims whether for those who considered it a Shari’ah
evidence or for those who did not consider it a Shari’ah evidence,
provided the doubted evidence is existent, such as in the case of the previous
evidences which we refuted their consideration as the Shari’ah
evidences.
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