CHAPTER SIX : ISSUES RELATED TO IJTIHAD
The subject of Ijtihad traditionally took up an entire
chapter of a book of al Usul. In that chapter, the author would
first deal with Ijtihad by defining it, explaining the conditions for its
validity, and differentiating between the various kinds of Ijtihad.
Thereafter, he would discuss whether or not the Prophet (PBUH) considered
Ijtihad to be a form of worship 'Ibadah, whether or not it
constituted a form of 'Ibadah for the Sahabah during the
Prophet's lifetime, whether only one answer resulting from Ijtihad on any
issue could be correct, or whether there could be several correct answers,
and when Ijtihad was and was not permitted. Then the scholars dealt with the
subject of Taqlid in the same fashion.
In the eighth century AH, Ibrahim ibn Musa al Shatibi (d 790)
wrote al Muwafaqat "The Congruences", in which he spoke of Ijtihad
in terms of its being an intellectual exercise based on two pillars. The
first pillar was complete knowledge of the grammar and syntax of the Arabic
language. He left this subject to the scholars of the Arabic language and
other writers on al Usul. The second pillar of Ijtihad, in al
Shatibi's opinion, was knowledge of the purposes behind the legislation of
the All-Wise Lawgiver.
Al Shatibi's predecessors in the field of al Usul
had never paid a great deal of attention to these purposes. Rather, the most
they had done in this direction had been to search for principal causes
'Illah. Al Shatibi, on the other hand, wrote his book in order to deal
with this important matter. Indeed, knowledge of the purposes
Maqasid of the Shari'ah is essential to understanding the legislation
of the Lawgiver. Yet, the scholars of al Usul have never given this
book the attention it deserves. This may perhaps be explained by the notion
fixed in the minds of many scholars that it is not permitted to seek reasons
for legislation by the Almighty, for the reason that such speculation cannot
be regulated or rendered precise.70 When this
is the case, or so goes the reasoning of a great many scholars, the study of
such matters is little more than a needless intellectual luxury.
Anyway, al Shatibi's book is in print and widely available;
and we can only hope that teachers of al Usul and those responsible
for drawing up curricula will direct their students' attention to this
important work; especially those who are studying al Qiyas,al Ta'lil
and Ijtihad. In our own times, the two great scholars, Ibn 'Ashur and 'Allal
al Fasi have written on the subject of the purposes of the Shari'ah.
Ibn Humam (d 861) wrote al Tahrir "The Writing", and
his student, Ibn Amir al Hajj (d 879) wrote a commentary on it entitled
al Taqrir wa al Tahbir. Both are in print. Al Tahrir is one of
the books written in the combined Hanafiyah- Mutakallimun method.
There is another commentary, by Amr Badshah, entitled Taysir al Tahrir
"Facilitating the Writing".
Al Qadi 'Ala' al Din al Mardawi (d 885) wrote a summary of
Usul Ibn Muflih71 (d 763) entitled
Tahrir al Manqul wa Tahdhib 'Ilm al Usul. This work has been researched
and edited, and is due to be published soon. The same researcher has also
dealt with Usul Ibn Muflih.
Later, Ibn al Najjar al Futuhi of the Hanbali school of legal
thought wrote a summary of Tahrir al Mardawi, and wrote an
excellent commentary on it. This commentary is considered to be one of the
best and most comprehensive of the later books about al Usul. An
incomplete version of the book was printed in Egypt before it was researched
and edited by two prominent professors, Dr. Nazih Hammad and Dr. Muhammad al
Zuhayli. Their work was published by the Center for Academic Research in the
College of Shari'ah at Makkah. Most of the book has now been published, and
what remains is at the press.
In the twelfth century AH, Muhibb Allah ibn 'Abd al Shakur al
Bihari, of the Hanafi school (d 1119 AH) wrote his famous book on
Usul, Musallam al Thubut. This is one of the most precise and
comprehensive books written by the later generation of Hanafi
scholars. The book has been printed on its own, and with a commentary, in
India; and has also been printed, with its famous commentary
Fawatih al Rahamut, on the margin of al Imam al Ghazzali's
al Mustasfa, several times.
All of these books were written following the methods
mentioned above, and all of them concentrated on supporting their author's
Madhab and refuting those of his opponents. From the sixth century
until the present, there is no book to be found which is concerned with
presenting Usul al Fiqh as a research tool that will protect the
Muslim jurist from making errors in Ijtihad; apart from one remark made in
passing by al Shaykh Mustafa Abd al Razzaq in his book Tamhid li al
Tarikh al Falsafah al Islamiyah "Preface to the History of Islamic
Philosophy". His student, Dr. Nashshar, tried to explain this remark in his
book Manahij al Bahth "Methods of Research".
In the thirteenth century AH, al Qadi al Shawkani (d 1255)
wrote his well-known book on Usul, Irshad al Fuhul "Guidance of the
Masters". This book, despite its diminutive volume, presents different
opinions in the field of al Usul, and the evidence given by the
proponents of each, in a brief but excellent fashion. The author also states
which of the opinions he prefers. This book, which has been printed several
times is a useful one for the student of Usul al Fiqh and
comparative studies in jurisprudence. However, to the best of our knowledge,
it has not been included in the curriculum of any institute, despite its
suitability.
Muhammad Siddiq Khan (d 1307) summarized this work in a book
entitled Husul al Ma'mul min 'Ilm al Usul "The attainment of the
Hoped For in the Science of al Usul", which is in print.
Indeed, Irshad al Fuhul is considered to be an
accurate summary of al Zarkashi's al Bahr al Muhit; and al
Mahallawi's Tashil al Usul is considered to be a summary of
Irshad al Fuhul.
After this period, we find that the study of al Usul
has followed either one of two major trends:
-
Writing study guides, summaries and notes. This has been done by
the professors at various colleges of Shari'ah and Law in order to make the
study of Usul al Fiqh easier for their students; after they realized
that their students were unable, or unwilling, to study this subject. Certainly,
these notes represent no sort of advance in the field; and in most cases they
are mere attempts at recasting the issues of Usul al Fiqh in a
simplified modern idiom. The following scholars, al Marsafi, al Mahallawi, al
Khudari, Abd al Wahhab Khallaf,al Shinqiti, al Sayis, Mustafa 'Abd al khaliq, 'Abd
al Ghani 'Abd al Khaliq, Abu Zahrah, Abu Nur Zuhayr, Ma'ruf al Dawalibi, 'Abd al
Karim al Zaydan, Zaki al Din Sha'ban, Muhammad Sallam Madkur, and others, all
wrote books which were originally lectures they had delivered in the colleges of
Law and Shari'ah where they taught.
-
The second trend has been the writing of university theses on
different aspects of this science, and the researching and editing of
unpublished manuscripts. Undoubtedly, both aspects of this trend are of great
benefit, and I certainly do not intend to demean the efforts of anyone; but
these nonetheless fall short of achieving any sort of development in the field,
and the science of Usul al Fiqh remains in the same place our
predecessors left it in the sixth century AH.
From the above, we may draw the following conclusions:-
1. Nothing of the discipline now known as Usul al Fiqh
had emerged, with its particular terminology, during the time of the Prophet (PBUH)
or his Sahabah.
Nonetheless, almost all of the various Ijtihad processes employed
during these two periods could be classified under the principles articulated by
this science. The reason for this is that they used to derive detailed legal
rulings on particular issues from the sources of law as a matter of instinct,
just as they used to speak Arabic instinctively, or without being aware of the
grammatical rules which were still unknown at the time.
2. The first scholar to compile a book about the principles of
the science of Usul al Fiqh was al Imam Muhammad ibn Idris al Shafi'i
(150-204 AH).
The first comprehensive book on the subject was the
Risalah, which he wrote in response to a request from al Imam 'Abd al
Rahman ibn al Mahdi (135-198 AH). This was after the two famous schools of
Fiqh, the school of Ahl al Hadith, led by al Imam Malik ibn Anas
(93-179 AH), and the school of Ahl al Ra'i, led by al Imam Abu
Hanifah (70-150 AH), had become established and widespread.
Following the widespread circulation of these two legal
schools of thought, there arose between the followers of these two schools,
in addition to the political, theological and philosophical conflicts of the
period, what can be described as "The Fiqh Controversy".72
3. Usul al Fiqh is a method of research for the jurist,73
and its place in Fiqh is analogous to that of Logic in Philosophy.74
Therefore, it was defined as "the aggregate, considered per se, of legal proofs
and evidence that, when studied properly, will lead either to certain knowledge
of a Shari'ah ruling or to at least a reasonable assumption concerning the same;
the manner by which such proofs are adduced, and the status of the adducer."75
So, Usul al Fiqh offers comprehensive guidelines
which protect the Mujtahid from making mistakes in the various ways
he uses source material for the purpose of deriving legal judgements.76
Nonetheless, it was not used in this way until al Imam al Shafi'i put it to
use in his "New" Fiqh.77
4. An important fact which should be borne in mind is that
scholars studied Fiqh, and made pronouncements concerning it, before
anyone began to speak of its Usul (apart from al imam al Shafi'i in his
"New" Fiqh).
Thus, the role given by others to Usul al Fiqh was
little more than that of justification for legal pronouncements
Fatawa that they made on specific issues, and of the substance of
argument and debate among them. They did not view Usul al Fiqh as a
comprehensive legal guideline, or as a methodology capable of regulating the
entire legal system. The jurists
Fuqaha, when faced with questions and situations, used to refer these
back directly to the relevant evidence, without feeling the need to have
recourse to the general principles articulated in Usul al Fiqh.
So, al Imam Abu Hanifah gave Fatawa on nearly half a
million issues,78 which his students learnt
and passed on. But, the legal principles on which al Imam Abu Hanifah based
these Fatawa were never transmitted with anything like an
uninterrupted line of authority from him,79
apart from a few reports in which he refers to some of the sources of his
Ijtihad. He said, in one of those reports:
"I follow the book of Allah, and if I find no solution there,
I follow the Sunnah of the Prophet, peace be on him. If I find no solution in
either the Qur'an or the Sunnah, I follow whichever of the pronouncements of the
Sahabah I prefer, and leave whichever I wish. If there is a pronouncement
on a particular matter by any of the Sahabah, I would not adopt any
other opinion made by any other scholar. But, if I found a solution only in the
opinions of Ibrahim, al Sha'bi, Ibn Sirin, Hasan al Basri, 'Ata' or Sa'id ibn al
Musayyab, I would make Ijtihad just as they did."80
When some people tried to turn the Khalifah, al
Mansur, against him, Abu Hanifah wrote to the Khalifah:
"The situation is not as you have heard, 0 Amir al
Mu'minin! I work according to the Book of Allah, then according to the
Sunnah of the Prophet, then according to the judgements of Abu Bakr, 'Umar, 'Uthman
and 'Ali, then according to the judgements of the rest of the Sahabah.
Then, if there are any differences between their pronouncements, I resort to
al Qiyas. No one of Allah's creatures is inherently closer to Him than any
other."81
When he was accused of preferring al Qiyas to an
explicit text Nass in the Qur'an, he replied: "By Allah, those who
say that we prefer al Qiyas to a Nass have lied and
slandered us. Is there any need for al Qiyas after [finding an
explicit] Nass?"82
5. It is quite obvious that from the beginning of the Umawi
period until the destruction of the Islamic Khilafah, authority and
leadership in the Ummah were in the hands of those who were not qualified to
perform Ijtihad, whilst the responsibility for Ijtihad passed to the 'Ulama'
who had no authority. And it is difficult to find exceptions to this state of
affairs, apart from the Khilafah of 'Umar ibn 'Abd al 'Aziz, from whom
many judgements involving questions of jurisprudence have been narrated. This
situation had the far-reaching effect of separating Fiqh and its
Usul from the practical aspects of Muslim life, so that in many cases these
subjects became theoretical and idealistic.83
Essentially, both subjects became descriptions of how Muslim life ought to be;
not how it really was, or what it might become.
6. The writers and historians of this science classified it among
the sciences of the Shari'ah that are based on transmitted evidence,84
even though some writers said that its principles are taken from the Arabic
language, the rational sciences, and certain other Islamic disciplines.85
One of the most prominent writers in the field, al Imam al Ghazzali, wrote:
The noblest sciences are those in which reason 'Aql
and received evidence Sama' are married, and in which conclusions based
on reason accompany those based on revelation. The science of Fiqh and its
Usul is one of these sciences. It draws equally from the purity of
revelation and the best of reason. Yet, it does not rely purely on reason in a
way that would be unacceptable to revealed law, nor is it based simply on the
kind of blind acceptance that would not be supported by reason.86
The statements of al Imam al Ghazzali and other writers on
the subject of al Usul enable us to suggest that there are three
sources of Fiqh:
-
Wahy Divine revelation: this
includes both the recited, or the inimitable Qur'an, and the unrecited, or the
Sunnah.
-
'Aql or reason: to explain the
texts, to seek ways in which they may be applied and ways in which various parts
may be connected to the whole, to search for the reasons behind legislation that
seems to have no reason, to derive laws in matters for which the Lawgiver did
not lay down an explicit judgement in the texts, and other similar matters which
can be defined and explained.
-
Experience, customs and the public interest.
All the Usul, both those which scholars have agreed
upon and those concerning which there are disagreements, may be classified
under the above three headings, as follow: The Qur'an, the Sunnah, al
Ijma', al Qiyas, the idea that what is basically beneficial is
permitted and what is basically harmful is prohibited,
al Istishab and al Istihsan. In addition, the pronouncements
of the Sahabah which were well-known among them and which none of
them opposed; the principle of always adopting the least rigorous
alternative; studying a few of the available relevant cases for purposes of
comparison; common interest and customs which were neither commanded nor
prohibited in any Islamic source; the conclusion that there is no law when
there is nothing to indicate any law; the laws of nations before Islam, and
closing the door on justifications.
7. There were certain factors in our history, some of which were
mentioned above, that both intimidated and imposed many restrictions upon us.
Thus, the focus of our Islamic mentality and intellectual attention was diverted
to minor issues, so that we were distracted from thinking in comprehensive
terms, characteristics considered to be the distinguishing features of Islamic
thought. This had a far-reaching effect on the way we dealt with Fiqh and on the
solutions we produced, in that these also bore the same characteristics and
features.
8. It is well-known that in every science and sphere of life,
there are some matters that naturally accept development, that sometimes require
it in order to realize their full potential. Yet, there are other matters that
are fixed and immutable. According to the logic of Islam, the two must be
integrated. Hence Usul al Fiqh has fixed rules which cannot be changed,
and others which rely on continual development and renewal. This is clear from
the foregoing discussion of Ijtihad.
Hence, while we urge all Muslim scholars not to begin from a
vacuum, but to benefit from the reasoning and Ijtihad of the scholars who
went before them, we affirm that no one can claim that it is obligatory to
follow any Mujtahid in matters where his pronouncements were based
solely on his individual reasoning. The best we can say in this matter is
that his pronouncements are "an opinion, and an opinion can be shared."87
9. From studying the methods of the early Muslims, it is clear to
us that their aim was not simply to ascertain the law and then to produce
Fatawa. On the contrary, their objective was always the establishment of
Allah's rule through the application of His law. What this means, essentially,
is that the circumstances surrounding the application of law cannot be separated
from the conditions attached to it.
If, having understood the above, we wish to restore this
science to its rightful place among the Islamic sciences, and transform it
into a method of research into the source evidence of the Shari'ah from
which we may derive rulings on, and solutions to, our contemporary problems,
(thus maintaining the sovereignty of the Shari'ah), we must do the
following:
i. Review the topics covered by this science, and eliminate those
without relevance to the modern scholar or jurist. These might include, Hukm
al Ashya' Qabl al Shar" "Rulings before the Shari'ah", Shukr al Mun'im
"How one is required to thank the Almighty Bestower",
Mabahith Hakimiyyat al Shar' "Studies about the Sovereignty of the
Shari'ah", and excessive concern with definitions. We should also dispense with
disputes concerning the uncommon Qira'at Shadhdhah "Alternate
Recitations" of the Qur'an, and the Arabic nature of the entire Qur'an.
Likewise, we should now end the long disagreement about single-narrator Hadith
by saying that if such a narration is proven to have met the conditions of being
authentic Sahih it will be acceptable, and laws may be derived from it.
Moreover, we should re-examine all the conditions, laid down
by certain early jurists, that seem to have been dictated by circumstances.
For example, the condition that a Hadith should not contradict the general
principles they established, that it should not be narrated by other than a
Faqih, that it should not contradict al Qiyas, or the
traditions of the people of Madinah, or the explicit meaning Zahir
of the Qur'an. Or the condition that a Hadith, if it deals with a common
issue or hardship or affliction, must be widely known. All of these
conditions should be rejected, and the same must be done with other
conditions which were and are still controversial and a source of
disagreement among Muslims, and which still occupy the time of scholars.
ii. Undertake linguistic studies relating to Fiqh which will
examine the styles of expression used by the Arabs at the time of the Prophet (PBUH),
and note the stages of development which these styles later passed through, and
the various meanings assigned to words in current usage at the time. This will
enable us to understand the texts as they should be understood.
iii. Pay special attention to the methods and the principles
involved in performing Ijtihad, such as al Qiyas,
al Istihsan, al Maslahah, and others, and study them from a historical
perspective, taking into account the circumstances which dictated the
pronouncements of the Mujtahidun. We should also try to instil a
juristic frame of mind into those who are researching in the fields of al
Fiqh and al Usul.
iv. Realize that it is impossible at this time for there to be a
Mujtahid Mutlaq, or one who is a legal authority (on the interpretation of
the sources) in his own right, to pass judgements on issues. As long as this is
so, academic councils are the best alternative.
In order to enable these councils to meet the needs of the
Ummah in matters of legislation, they should be composed of experts whose
specializations cover all aspects of life, and who would be able to clearly
perceive any problem presented to them. In addition to this, they would have
to have complete knowledge of the general rules and principles of the
Shari'ah of Islam. Such councils would also include jurists of the highest
level possible, knowledgeable in both the sciences of the Shari'ah and the
detailed source evidence. Perhaps one of our great jurists was referring to
this idea when he was approached by someone who wanted to break his fast in
the month of Ramadan and the jurist told the man to seek the
opinion of a trustworthy Muslim doctor; adding that if the doctor considered
the fast injurious to his health, then it would be permissible for him to
abstain.
v. We must make it easier for specialists in other fields to
study what they need of the sciences of the Shari'ah.
vi. We must become familiar with the Fiqh of the
Sahabah and Tabi'un; and especially with the principles on
which they derived their judgements. In particular, the Fiqh of the Khulafa'
Rashidun and their contemporaries deserves deep study. Then, this knowledge
may be presented to those whose task it is to formulate legislation and make
judgements in response to the demands of contemporary Muslim society.
vii. We need to take an interest in knowing the aims and purposes
of the Shari'ah, and in developing the study of this matter, by setting down
rules and guidelines.
And Allah is the Giver of Tawfiq (success and prosperity)!
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