Hakikat Kitabevi Publications No: 10 answer to an enemy of islam
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“zindîqs.” Zindîqs can
deceive and corrupt Muslims, but they cannot corrupt Islam; Allâhu ta’âlâ promises that He will protect Islam. 26– Through the religion reformer, Rashîd Ridâ, says: “I do not deny the virtue and knowledge possessed by the imâms who were mujtahids. Their virtue and knowledge were beyond praise and glorification. Yet, before the mujtahids, every Muslim used to ask for documentary evidence. Those who came later ignored the documentary evidence and exalted the mujtahid imâms to the grade of prophets. They even preferred the mujtahid’s word to a hadîth. They said that the hadîth could be mansûkh (said by the Prophet at his early age, but changed by himself later) or there could be another hadîth in their imâm’s view. The mujtahids did not find it right to act in accordance with the words of the persons who could possibly go wrong or who could not know the matter and who were not safe from errors, and to lay aside the hadîth of the Prophet, who was free from error. The muqallids dissented from the Qur’ân, too, which is the evident guide and the absolute document. They said that it was not permissible to learn the religion from the Qur’ân and that only mujtahids could understand the meaning of the Qur’ân. They claimed that it was not permissible to ignore the mujtahid’s word and to act in accordance with the Qur’ân. They said that it was not permissible to say, ‘Allah says so,’ or ‘Rasûlullah says so,’ and that we should say, ‘The fiqh scholar has understood it as such.’ There is not a branch of knowledge which might exceed, with all its subjects, the capacity of most people and which can be understood only by certain people of certain times. It is a requirement of the Divine Law that the later scholars – 33 – should be more advanced than the earlier ones, for, the starting point of the later ones is where the earlier ones have left off. The Qur’ân and the Hadîth are more understandable than the books of fiqh. A person who has learned Arabic well understands them more easily. Isn’t Allâhu ta’âlâ able to explain His religion more explicitly than the men of fiqh? Rasûlullah understood what Allah meant better than anybody else, and he explained it clearly and communicated everything. “If most people had been incapable of deriving rules from the Book and the Sunna, all the people would not be held liable for these rules. One should know what one believes together with its proofs. Allah disapproves of the taqlîd and muqallids. He declares that they will not be forgiven by imitating their fathers and grandfathers. To understand that part of the religion concerning fiqh from its documents is easier than understanding the part concerning îmân. Allâhu ta’âlâ holds us liable for the difficult one. Is it ever possible that He will not hold us liable for the easy one? “Prophets did not err, but mujtahids might have made errors. Mujtahids expanded the religion and made it several times as much as it was. They drove Muslims into trouble. There cannot be employed any qiyâs in the field of ’ibâdât; nor can one add anything to ’ibâdât. [However], qiyâs and istihsân (approval of facility) can be employed in judicial decisions. The mujtahids, too, prohibited men from taqlîd.” In his sophisms, the religion reformer contradicts himself time and again. Employing logic in any branch of knowledge requires having some knowledge of that branch. The intrigues played with a bare reasoning by those who do not understand the basic knowledge of Islam do not give any result but rather bring disgrace upon themselves. It is true that those Muslims preceding the mujtahids, that is, as-Sahâbat al-kirâm, asked for documents; they did not follow one another. But they were all mujtahids. They were the people of the first century praised and lauded by Rasûlullah (sall-allâhu ’alaihi wa sallam). All as-Sahâbat al-kirâm and many of the Tâbi’ûn were mujtahids. It was necessary for a mujtahid to act in accordance with what he understood, and it was not permissible for him to follow another mujtahid. A Muslim simply does not say, “Those who came later exalted the mujtahids – 34 – to the grade of prophets,” nor does he claim that they even held them superior. For this statement stigmatizes billions of Muslims who have belonged to the four madhhabs as disbelievers. He who says or writes that a certain Muslim is a disbeliever becomes a disbeliver himself. It is even a greater slander to accuse muqallids of dissenting from the Qur’ân al-kerîm. The religion reformers should know very well that a madhhab means the way of the Book and the Sunna. He who follows an imâm al-madhhab believes that he follows the Qur’ân al-kerîm and Rasûlullah (sall-Allâhu ’alaihi wa sallam). No Muslim says, “It is not permissible to ignore the mujtahid’s word and to act in accordance with the Qur’ân,” nor has any Muslim ever said so. This is one of the abominable slanders made by religion reformers, freemasons and zindîqs against pure Muslims. Every Muslim says, “I want to adapt myself to the Qur’ân al-kerîm and the Hadîth ash-sherîf, but I myself cannot draw conclusions from them. I cannot depend on or follow the rules which I understand. I depend on and follow what the imâm al-madhhab understood, for, he was more learned than I am. He knew the eight main branches of knowledge and the twelve subsidiary branches better than I do. He feared Allâhu ta’âlâ more than I do. He did not draw conclusions from the Qur’ân al-kerîm out of his own understanding but learned from as-Sahâbat al- kirâm the meanings which had been given by Rasûlullah (’alaihi ’s- salâm). I fear much on account of the hadîth ash-sherîf, Download 2.37 Kb. Do'stlaringiz bilan baham: |
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