Hakikat Kitabevi Publications No: 10 answer to an enemy of islam
“My companions are like the stars in the sky. You will attain to the
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answer-to-an-enemy-of-islam
- Bu sahifa navigatsiya:
- “Adapt yourselves to my companions!”
- ‘If you do not know, ask those who know!’
“My
companions are like the stars in the sky. You will attain to the right path if you follow any of them!” They all could understand the Divine Meaning. In case of a matter not stated clearly in the Book or in the Sunna, they used to search through âyats and hadîths for a documentary solution, employ ijtihâd and draw a conclusion. It was not necessary or permissible for them to follow – 41 – (taqlîd) one another. Our a’immat al-madhâhib also did as as- Sahâbat al-kirâm had done. Like them, they searched for and found out evidences and drew conclusions from them. Thus, they parted into madhhabs in respect of ’ibâdât. In this way, they carried out Rasûlullah’s (’alaihi ’s-salâm) command, for, he had declared, “Adapt yourselves to my companions!” Since the new Muslims among the Tâbi’ûn did not ask as-Sahâbat al-kirâm for documentary evidences, it is not necessary for the ignorant like us to look for the proofs of the a’immat al-madhâhib. We learn the commands of Allâhu ta’âlâ by reading the books written by the a’immat al-madhâhib. These books are the explanations of the Qur’ân al-kerîm. See this man with a religious post who likens an ignorant village shepherd to a Sahâbî and recommends him to go to town frequently, look for âyats and hadîths, interpret them by himself and employ ijtihâd! While there is the facility of following an imâm al-madhhab, he gets the poor man into such difficulties! 30– The religion reformer, slighting thousands of Islamic scholars, continues as follows: “The usûl scholars’ deducing the necessity of the taqlîd from the âyat, ‘If you do not know, ask those who know!’ is a fruitless and unsound deduction and reasoning. The âyat should not be commanding the taqlîd to everybody since the taqlîd was not permissible in the events or for the person that caused the âyat’s revelation. In this âyat, Allâhu ta’âlâ commanded the polytheist Arabs to ask the Ahl al-kitâb (Believers in Holy Books) if prophets were angels or human beings. Why should this question be taqlîd while it does not mean to act in accordance with someone else’s opinion or ijtihâd without evidences? Furthermore, this matter pertains to belief. You, too, admit the fact that taqlîd is not permissible in this respect. The Qur’ân prophesies that on the Day of Resurrection the chiefs of the disbelievers will run away from those who followed them. Isn’t this information a sign of the fact that those who follow the persons whom Allah has not ordered us to follow will not be excused by Allah? Because Muslims considered some people as witnesses and turned away from the Qur’ân, we suffered disasters. The imâms whom they followed will run away from them on the Day of Resurrection, for, the great imâms and mujtahids prohibited taqlîd. You have been accustomed to taking the words of human beings, not the words of Allah and the – 42 – Prophet, as proofs.” After writing these through the mouth of the religion reformer, Rashîd Ridâ, in order to deceive his readers, writes that the preacher likes the words of the religion reformer, that he has been wrong to think of religion reformers as ignorant, and that now he appreciates the religion reformer after seeing that he is so well learned. Our Prophet (sall-Allâhu ’alaihi wa sallam) deduced from this âyat that the taqlîd of a mujtahid was necessary when carrying out every kind of action or ’ibâda. And as-Sahâbat al-kirâm taught the new Muslims among the Tâbi’ûn only how to carry out the ’ibâdât the way they themselves had learned from Rasûlullah (sall-Allâhu ’alaihi wa sallam). They did not command them to search for proofs. They deemed it sufficient for them to imitate without knowing proofs. Our a’immat al-madhâhib, who followed in the footsteps of the as-Sahâbat al-kirâm in everything they did, followed them in this respect, too. There is no difference between saying that the a’immat al-madhâhib prohibited taqlîd and saying that they deviated from the path of as-Sahâbat al-kirâm. It was true that the as-Sahâbat al-kirâm and the a’immat al-madhâhib looked for documentary evidences, and they did not follow others’ ijtihâd. But they permitted the non-mujtahids to follow mujtahids. The reformer’s claim that the âyat did not command disbelievers to practise taqlîd is to smother the matter in sophistry. Islamic scholars have not said that disbelievers were commanded to practise taqlîd; why, then, should the religion reformer be acknowledged to be right for these words of his? Allâhu ta’âlâ commanded those who did not know to ask from those who knew. And Islamic scholars, by inferencing from the âyat, have said that Muslims should ask those who know about how to do what they are going to do. This is the whole subject. There is no such thing as taqlîd or searching for evidences here. The religion reformer, inserting these into the matter, endeavours to prove himself right. It is a different subject to follow an ’âlim without seeing the documentary evidences in something which one will do. And this different subject automatically originates from the former subject: asking someone who knows about the things that should be done or that should not be done, and doing as one learns from him, means to follow Download 2.37 Kb. Do'stlaringiz bilan baham: |
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