|
Chapter 14
Zahirism
Zaharism by Omar A. Farrukh, Ph. D,
Member of the Arab Academy, Damascus (Syria)
A
BACKGROUND
Since the second/eighth century, an
interminable
dispute dragged on for a long time
between
those who upheld the authority of Tradition
(ahl al-hadith)in all matters of theology
and jurisprudence, and those who advocated
opinion (ashab al-ra'i).
It was expected, as pointed out by
ibn Khaldun
in his Muqaddimah (p. 805)that the
people
of the Hijaz, particularly those of
Madinah,
should be versed in the science of
Tradition
(the sayings and doings of the Prophet
Muhammad).
With the rise of the `Abbasid Caliphate
and
the shifting of the political power
and the
religious leadership completely to
Iraq,
where the people had had less access
to the
sayings of the Prophet, and where the
aspects
of life, the agrarian problems, for
instance,
were more diverse and complicated through
the intermingling of the successive
civilizations
since times immemorial a new school,
that
of opinion, made its inevitable appearance.
The upholders of opinion, however,
did not
neglect Tradition, but they found it
necessary
to supplement Tradition with additions
drawn
from older codes and prevalent usages
or
framed by considerations of the actual
situation
in their new environment. At the same
time
an esoteric movement also began among
the
Shiites under a variety of names, the
most
current of which was the Batiniyyah
[1] (seekers
after the inner or spiritual interpretation
of revelation). The forming of this
sect
is attributed to a certain Maimun of
whose
descent we are completely in the dark.
The Batiniyyah movement took its name
from
the belief of its followers that every
zahir
(apparent state of things) has a batin
(an
inner, allegorical. hidden, or secret
meaning),
especially in connection with revelation.
[2] Since this movement adopted some
aspects
of Greek philosophy, such as emanationism,
[3] its followers were considered by
Sunni
authors to be heretics and outside
the pale
of faith. [4] During the Caliphate
of al-Mamun
(198/813-281/833) the Batiniyyah movement
was quite strong; [5] some half a century
later it was widely spread in Iraq,
Persia,
Sind (western India), and Oman (south-east
Arabia), as well as in North Africa,
but
it did not enjoy an enduring influence.
[6]
It is to be remarked, however, that
while
a number of individuals in Muslim Spain
had
shared ideas with the Batiniyyah, no
sectarian
or heretical doctrine ever struck roots
or
succeeded in winning over communities
of
any dimensions there.
So, the second/eighth century had witnessed
a heavy atmosphere of esoterism weighing
on some fundamentals of Islam such
as the
essence of God, the under standing
of the
Qur'an, and the attitude towards the
Caliphate.
Added to this there was a trend of
upholding
opinion as a valid source of jurisprudence
at the same level with the Qur'an and
the
sayings of the Prophet. At the same
time
there was also the Mu'tazilite school
which
assumed reason as a more deciding factor
than revelation in all matters of religion.
Since all these movements had chosen
Iraq
as their principal battle-field, another
school, contrary to all of them and
as extremist
as any of them appeared in Iraq itself
and
insisted on the verbal understanding
of the
Qur'an and of the sayings of the Prophet
Mubammad as the sole guiding line to
their
real meanings clothed in the words
of God
and of His Apostle. This school was
founded
by a jurist Dawud ibn 'Ali, and it
received
its name the Literalists' (Zahiriyyah)
school
from the clinging of its followers
to the
wording of the revelation and not to
the
interpretation of it.
DAWUD IBN 'ALI, HIS DOCTRINE AND HIS
SCHOOL
The family of Dawud ibn 'Ali belonged
to
Kashan, a town in the neighbourhood
of Isfahan.
His father was a secretary (katib)to
`Abd
Allah ibn Khalid, judge of Isfahan,
in the
days of the Caliph al-Mamun. [7] Dawud
himself
a was born in Kufah in 202/817. His
family
moved later to Baghdad where he was
brought
up, educated, and afterwards laid the
foundation
of his school of jurisprudence which
bore
his name al-madhhab al-Dawudi, [9]but
which
was better known as the Zahirite school
(al-madhhab
al-zahiri).
In Baghdad, Dawud ibn 'Ali attended
the lectures
of many eminent jurists, the most prominent
of whom was abu Thaur (d. 246/860);
a friend
and follower of Shafi'i. The trend
of education
he received from them made him shift
from
the Hanafite rite to that to which
his father
belonged, [10] the Shafi'ite, apparently
because most of his professors
(shuyukh)were more inclined to the
Traditionists
(ahl al-hadith)school to which Shafi'is
belonged
than to the school of the upholders
of opinion
(ashab al-ra'i)who were the followers
of
abn Hanifah par excellence. Dawud perfected
his education by an academic trip to
Nishapur
to meet Ishaq ibn Rahawaih (d. 237/851
or
238/852), [11] who also was a friend
and
follower of Shafi`i. Afterwards, he
returned
to Baghdad where he wrote his books.
Perhaps it is not very strange that
a close
and profound study of the Shafi'ite
school
of jurisprudence led Dawud ibn 'Ali
finally
to be dissatisfied with it. He forsook
it
and founded a new school, the Zahirite
school,
which recognized the Qur'an and the
Hadith
as the only sources of jurisprudence.
He
accepted, at any rate, consensus (ijma`)of
the Companions of the Prophet, but
he rejected
analogy (qiyas), opinion (ra’i), personal
approval (istihsan), and decisions
on the
authority of older generations
(taqlid)altogether. [12]
Dawud ibn 'Ali was accomplished, trustworthy,
learned, God-fearing, pious, and ascetic;
he was also versed in logic and proficient
in the art of disputation. [13] It
was said
that he believed that the Qur'an was
created
and not eternal, but it seems that
this was
only an accusation. [14] He died in
270/884
in Baghdad.
Dawud ibn 'Ali was a prolific writer.
Ibn
al-Nadim enumerates about one hundred
and
fifty titles from him. [15] It seems
that
many of these titles were only chapters
of
some of his books. But there are also
titles
which represent bulky works of two
thousand,
three thousand, and even four thousand
folios
[16] each. A few of these books touched
the
fundamentals of religion, e. g., "On
the Usul," "On the Caliphate,"
"Consensus and the Refutation
of Qiyas,"
and "On the Refutation of Taqlid."
[17]Most of his other books treated
of branches
(furu`)or minor aspects of Fiqh concerning
worship and legal transactions Unfortunately,
no book has reached us from him. Ibn
Hazm,
nevertheless refers to him frequently.
Muhammad
al-Shatti (d. Damascus 1307/1889) made
a
collection of Dawud's Fiqh gleaned
from the
various works of his followers.' [18]
It was related that Dawud ibn 'Ali
admitted
analogy where the cases in question
were
obvious, [19] but it is more probable
that
he rejected analogy wholly, whether
the cases
were ambiguous or obvious. [20] As
for consensus
(ijma'), his position was totally different:
he admitted the ijma` of the Companions
of
the Prophet only, [21] on the ground
that
these Companions were in constant contact
with the Prophet and fully aware of
his intentions.
In his theology in particular he maintains,
for example, that God is hearing, seeing,
etc. But he says: "I do not say
that
He is seeing with the agency of sight
…”
[22]
Dawud ibn 'Ali re-examined all aspects
of
Fiqh on the basis of his Zahirite attitude.
The following are three examples illustrating
his trend of thought and argumentation
in
this respect.
1. Prayer on a Journey - God has said
in
the Qur'an: "And when you journey
in
the earth, there is no blame on you
if you
shorten the prayer." [23]
This led the Muslims to reduce prayer
on
a journey from four rak`ahs to only
two.
[24] Muslim jurists generally assert
that
this verse envisages cutting the prayer
short
on a journey of some duration. [25]
Dawud,
on the other hand, maintained that
since
there is no mention of the duration
of the
journey in the Qur'an, [26] prayer
should
be cut short on any journey whatever,
even
though it is a journey from one encampment
to another.
2. Fasting on a Journey - Muslims fast
in
Ramadan, the ninth month of the lunar
year.
In this connection we read in the Qur'an:
"But he among you who shall be
sick,
or on a journey, shall (not observe
the days
on which he travels but he shall) fast
the
same number of other days (when he
returns
home)." [27] It is agreed upon
by all
Sunni jurists that a Muslim may not
observe
Ramadan fasts on a journey which involves
certain hardship, either on account
of its
long duration or its difficult nature,
on
hot days for example. [28] Dawud and
his
followers assert that a Muslim should
not
observe fasts on a journey because
the wording
of the verse does not stipulate any
condition.
If a Muslim, according to Dawud, did
observe
fasts for some days on a journey, even
then
he should keep fast for the same number
of
days when he returns home, for his
fasting
while journeying was not valid. [29]
3. The Question of Usury (Riba) - Usury
is
forbidden in Islam. [30] But a difficulty
arose from a tradition concerning it.
It
is related that the Prophet Muhammad
said:
"(You may barter) gold for gold,
silver
for silver, wheat for wheat, barley
for barley,
dates for dates, and salt for salt,
only
in equivalent quantities and on the
spot.
In all other commodities you may deal
as
you like, provided (the barter is transacted)
on the spot." [31] Early Muslim
jurists
concluded from this tradition that
a quantity
of any commodity should not be bartered
for
a larger quantity of the same commodity;
otherwise, the surplus taken would
be usury
(riba). But if, for instance, a quantity
of wrought gold was bartered for a
larger
quantity of unwrought gold, the surplus
would
be a gain or, better, a wage for craftsmanship.
Furthermore, they considered the six
commodities
named by the Prophet to be examples
only;
thus bartering copper, coffee, leather,
apples,
or wool for a larger quantity of these
commodities
respectively is also regarded-by analogy-as
a form of usury. Dawud ibn `Ali, on
the other
hand, believed that the Prophet Muhammad
had named these commodities on purpose.
Had
he intended to prolong the list, nothing
would have prevented him from doing
so. Accordingly,
if a man bartered a quantity, say of
iron,
maize, apples, or pepper for a larger
quantity
of the same commodity, the surplus
would
not be usury but gain.
The jurists contemporary with Dawud
ibn 'Ali
took a very critical attitude regarding
him
and his school. [32] The Shafi'ites
in general
criticized him severely and considered
the
Zahirite school to be worthless. Al-Isfara'ini
(d. 418/1027) maintained that no account
should be taken of the Zahirites. Since
they
rejected analogy (qiyas), he asserted,
they
could not have been able to exercise
judgment
and, therefore, no one of them should
be
elevated to the position of a judge.
Some
others presumed that Dawud ibn `Ali
was ignorant;
others considered him to be a disbeliever.
Abmad ibn Hanbal (d. 241/855), the
famous
founder of the Hanbalite school, did
not
hold him in estimation. [33] Abu `Abd
Allah
Muhammad ibn Zaid al-Wasiti (d. 306/918-919),
an eminent Mu'tazilite of Baghdad,
looked
down upon the Zahirite school as ridiculous.
[34] The followers of Dawud ibn `Ali,
nevertheless,
were not only numerous but some of
them were
also prominent. [35]
Dawud ibn `Ali was succeeded, as the
head
of the Zahirite school, by his son,
abu Bakr
Muhammad ibn Dawud (c. 255/869-297/910).
But the latter was more of a poet,
litterateur,
and historian than an enthusiastic
scholar
of jurisprudence. [36] At any rate,
he propagated
the tenets of his father's school and
bestowed
on it so much prestige that the Zahirite
rite was in his own days the fourth
of the
four rites prevailing in the East,
the other
three being the Shafi'i, Maliki, and
Hanafi
rites. Abu Bakr Muhammad ibn Dawud
owes his
real fame, however, to an anthology
of love-poetry
known as Kitab al-Zahrah [37]The first
and
only extant half of this anthology
was edited
by A. R. Nykl [38] and Ibrahim Tukan.
Abu
Bakr Mubammad ibn Dawud had some inclination
towards philosophy, but philosophy
did not
constitute a component part of Zahirism
before
ibn Hazm.
In the fourth/tenth century the Zahirite
school had enjoyed its widest expansion
and the climax of its prestige. The
`Abbasid
poet ibn al-Rumi (d. 283/896) praised
abu
Bakr Muhammad ibn Dawud in a poem which
opens
with the words: "O son of Dawud!
O jurist
of Iraq!" [39] The famous historian,
Tabari (d. 310/923), though not a Zahirite,
paid close attention to Zahiri jurisprudence
and studied it with Dawud ibn `Ali
himself.
[40] The foremost jurist of the Zahirite
school in the fourth/tenth century
was Abd
Allah ibn Ahmad ibn al-Mughallis (d.
324/936),
through whom the Fiqh of Dawud ibn
`Ali became
popular in the Muslim world. [41]
In the following century the Zahirite
school
was already losing ground in the East;
and
before the middle of the century, in
the
days of the Hanbalite judge abu Ya'la
(d.
459,/1066), the Hanbalite rite took
its place.
[42] The Zahirite school, at any rate,
continued
to enjoy in Syria some prestige until
788/1386.
[43] In Egypt the school lived longer
and
had deeper roots. Al-Maqrizi (d. 845/
1442),
the famous historian of the Mamluk
age in
Egypt, was not a follower of the Zahirite
school, but he had a favourable attitude
towards Zahirism. [44]
C
THE ZAHIRITE SCHOOL IN MUSLIM SPAIN
1. Al-Balluti
The first representative of Zahirism
in Spain
was Mudhir ibn Said al-Balluti who
was born
at al-Nashsharin, a suburb of Cordova,
in
273/886. After completing his studies
at
Cordova, he travelled to Egypt and
the Hijaz
for a little over three years. On his
return,
he was appointed as judge (Qadi) in
the city
of Merida, then transferred to the
Northern
Frontiers and finally made the Chief
Justice
of Cordova, which post he held until
his
death towards the end of 355/965. He
upheld
Dawud's doctrines and defended his
views,
though, in practice, he administered
justice
according to the established law of
the country
based on the Malikite school of jurisprudence.
He was also a man of letters, poet,
theologian,
physiographer, and eloquent speaker.
In fact,
he was the real forerunner of ibn Hazm.
2. Ibn Hazm
Life and Works - Ibn Hazm was the real
founder
of the Zahirite school in Muslim Spain
and
the most famous and prominent of the
Zahiri
jurists. With him the school reached
its
zenith, and with his death it died
away.
In reality, the Zahirite rite never
recruited
a community in Muslim Spain. It came
on the
stage as a philosophy supported by
a single
man who failed to use his genius in
the right
way.
Ibn Hazm was the descendant of a non-Arab,
an Iberian in all probability, but
he preferred
to link his genealogy with a Persian
freedman
of Yazid ibn Sufyan, a brother of Mu'awiyah,
the founder of the Umayyad Caliphate
in the
East.
The family did not attain any fame
before
Ahmad ibn Said, the father of ibn Hazm,
who
became a minister to the Hajib al-Mansur
ibn abi Amir, [45] the Prime Minister
of
Hisham II, in 381/991. Ibn Hazm, who
was
born in 384/994 during the long ministerial
term of his father, was brought up
in luxurious
environment. He was fortunate enough
to have
been given a good education. The teacher
who had the greatest influence on
him was
ibn Muflit (d. 426/1035), a Zahirite
and
a follower of Dawud ibn 'Ali; he chose
to
be eclectic in matters of worship and
jurisprudence
and did not agree that one should confine
oneself to a particular school.
Ibn Hazm did not continue to enjoy
prosperity
and peace for long. With the outburst
of
the disturbances in 400/1009 and the
death
of his father only two years later,
misfortunes
began to overcome him and his family;
and
when he preferred, on this account,
to withdraw
from public life, his life became very
obscure.
A few years later, however, he decided
to
enter public life again. As a result,
he
experienced all ups and downs of life,
from
forming the cabinet to frequent imprisonments.
Six years after the fall of the Umayyad
Caliphate
in Cordova (422/1031) and the assassination
of the fugitive Hisham III, life became
unbearable
for ibn Hazm in the whole peninsula,
not
only because he was a client and partisan
of the falling dynasty, but because
he entertained
also a religious doctrine which the
rulers
and the ruled in the peninsula did
not share.
The only respite which ibn Hazm had
was during
his stay on the island of Majorca,
from 430/1039
to 440/1049. The local Governor of
Majorca
was abu al-`Abbas Ahmad ibn Rashiq,
an able
statesman and a man of letters. For
reasons
inexplicable, he invited ibn Hazm for
a sojourn
on the island. Ibn Hazm took refuge
there
and began, as soon as he could breathe
freely,
to propagate Zahirism. Since he was
supported
by the Governor, some Majorcans followed
him perhaps out of conviction, perhaps
out
of political tact-but it seems certain
that
the majority of the islanders were
not in
favour of the intruding doctrine. In
439/1047,
the famous Maliki jurist, abu al-Walid
al
Baji
(403/1013-474/1081) returned from a
journey
in the East. He held debates with ibn
Hazm
and caused his disgrace. In the following
year, ibn Hazm was obliged to leave
the island
and go back on the mainland, but he
was chased
out of every town and village in which
he
tried to secure a footing. Finally,
after
fifteen years of complete oblivion,
he found-asylm
on the estate of his own family in
Manta
Lisham where he passed away in 456/1063.
Ibn Hazm was a very prolific writer
on different
subjects ranging from genealogical
tables
to epistemology. It is believed that
his
books were four hundred comprising
80,000 folios of some twenty million
words.
The most important of these books are
Tauq
al-Hamamah (the Dove's Neck-Ring-on
confidence
and confidents), Al-Milal w-al-Nihal
(Religions
and Sects), Al-Ihkam fi Uul al-Ahkam
(Precision
Concerning the Principles of Religious
Matters)
and Al-Muhalla bi al-Athar (the Gilded
or
Ornamented with Revelation and Tradition).
This last is a comprehensive book on
the
aspects of worship and jurisprudence
in Islam.
Ibn Hazm was also a man of letters,
poet,
and statesman, but he is more famous
as
a rationalist and theologian.
Ibn Hazm's Rationalism -In his book
Al-Milal
w-al-Nihal, ibn Hazm appears to be
a rationalist.
The problems of a priori, of time and
space
which confronted Kant (d. 1804) so
often
in his Critique of Pure Reason, had
busied
ibn Hazm in the same way It is really
astonishing
that the Muslim theologian had tackled
these
problems in the same spirit of objectivity
seven and a half centuries before the
German
philosopher. Let us take up the theory
of
knowledge as discussed by ibn Hazm.
Knowledge
arises, according to him, from the
following
(a) Sensory perception (shahadat al-hawas),
that is, observation or sensory evidence.
(b) Primary reason (badihat al-`aql
or awwal
al-`aql), that is, a priori reason
without
the use of the five senses.
(c) Proof (burhan), which goes back,
either
closely or remotely, to the evidence
of the
senses or to primary reason.
Ibn Hazm holds definitely that man
has six
senses, and that the soul grasps perceptible
objects (material objects) by the five
senses;
thus a pleasant odour is accepted by
reason
. . . thus also the soul is aware that
red
is different from green, yellow, etc.,
or
that there is a distinction between
rough
and smooth, hot and cold, etc.
The sixth sense, ibn Hazm holds, is
the soul's
knowledge of primary things; that is,
there
are some things which man can know
through
his reason as being axiomatic, without
requiring
any proof for them. "Such is the
soul's
knowledge that the part is less than
the
whole; thus the young child, who is
only
just able to discriminate, cries when
he
is given only two dates, but is satisfied
when you give him another. This is
because
the whole is greater than a part, even
though
the child cannot define the limits
of his
knowledge .... The same sense gives
the child
the knowledge that two things cannot
occupy
the same spot; you will see him fight
for
a place where he wants to sit, knowing
that
that place is not big enough for another
person, and that so long as another
person
occupies the place there is no room
for him
also …
"This is a form of primary intelligence
which is common to all except those
whose
reason is distorted … or whose bodies
are
diseased or impotent in certain respects
.... These truths of primary reason
are truly
axiomatic; they are beyond doubt and
stand
in no need of proof except to a madman
.
. . or to a scornful sophist."
Ibn Hazm's
argument for the view that these things
require
no proof is this: "To demand proof
of
anything requires time; primary reason
cannot
possibly avoid that fact .... Yet between
the soul's first learning to discriminate
phenomena and its knowing the complete
truth
of all that we have mentioned, there
is not
a single minute, nor can there be."
But ibn Hazm did not deny absolutely
the
necessity of proof to these things;
rather,
he held that such proof is a matter
for personal
acquisition which one may achieve,
while
another may not, and that it may carry
weight
only for such as have reached a high
level
of intellectual training.
Other means of acquiring knowledge,
according
to ibn Hazm, are God's naming of things
and
men's convention as represented by
the languages
of the different nations. These two
means,
however, belong to theology and are
discussed
under that topic.
Philosophy and Science - Like all Muslim
thinkers prior to his days, ibn Hazm
had
no access to Greek originals. He had
a predisposition
towards argumentation, and was versed
in
the science of dialectics (Kalam).
He claimed
to have read (evidently through translations)
the works of the Milesian and Eleatic
schools,
of Euclid and Ptolemy, of Plato and
Aristotle,
and of Alexander of Aphrodisias, and
to have
had a general knowledge of astronomy,
astrology,
and medicine. He also stated that he
was
well versed in mathematics in general
and
geometry in particular.
Ibn Hazm does not agree with Heraclitus
that
the world is in constant flow nor with
the
Eleatics that motion is non-existent.
On
Being and NonBeing, he agrees with
the Eleatics:
Non-Being is not. In keeping with his
general
trend of thought, he affirms that space
and
time are limited and that they are,
like
all other things, created by God. In
the
same way he maintains that atoms are
divisible
because it is in the power of God to
do everything,
and to this power of His, infinite
divisibility
of an atom is no exception.
In physiography, he holds that the
world
is limited and the earth is spherical
and
that the sun is larger than the earth,
but
he agrees with Anaximenes that the
sky is
like a vault over the earth. He disagrees,
however, with Pythagoras that there
is a
sister earth which helps the earth
keep itself
in the correct position. [46] The world,
at any rate, is created, but it has
existed
for a very long time.
In ethics, he touches lightly on Greek
philosophy
and maintains with Prodicus of Ceos
that
death has no pain and that it should
not
be feared. He also holds with Epicurus
and
his contemporaries that the desire
for pleasure
and the repulsion from care are the
criteria
of happiness. But building up and improvement
of character cannot be achieved by
philosophy
alone; the help of the prophets is
necessary.
In his theory of knowledge, ibn Hazm
emphasizes,
in addition to sensory perception and
primary
reason, three means of acquiring religious
knowledge which are particularly fundamental
in Islam. These are: the literal sense
of
the Qur'an, the sayings and doings
of the
Prophet Mubammad, and consensus (ijma).
The first and foremost source of knowledge
is the literal sense of the text of
the Qur'an.
This must follow from the context of
the
fifty-ninth verse of the fourth Surah,
"O
ye who believe! obey Allah and obey
the Messenger
and those of you who are in authority,
and
if ye have a dispute concerning any
matter
refer it to Allah and to the Messenger
.
. . ." The text of the Qur'an
must be
understood literally unless the words
in
question are used metaphorically and
in
a way current among the early Arabs.
No divergence
is allowed from the text of the Qur'an
except
where one verse is modified or abrogated
by another. [47] A total dependence
on the
Qur'an is made possible by the fact
that
every aspect of life and every need
of men,
material or spiritual, is treated in
the
Qur'an or provided for in it. God says,
"We
have neglected nothing in the Book."
This implicit meaning was reiterated
explicitly
in this verse: "This day have
I perfected
for you your religion and completed
My favour
to you and chosen for you Islam as
a religion."
The second source of knowledge is the
Tradition,
the sayings and actions of the Prophet
Muhammad.
Ibn Hazm accepts the true hadith or
the Sunnah
when related in a sure way and by reliable
men in a connected chain which reaches
the
Prophet Muhammad. The Prophet is certainly
trustworthy, and ibn Hazm quotes in
this
connection from the Qur'an: "Nor
does
he speak out of desire. It is naught
but
revelation that is revealed."
[48]
Ibn Hazm accepts, as a third source
of knowledge,
consensus (ijma`) or general agreement
of
the Companions of the Prophet but on
a further
condition that all of them should
have been
aware of the matter agreed upon and
that
no one of them should have shown any
disagreement
or hesitation about it. In contradistinction
to the other schools of jurisprudence
in
Islam, the Hanafite school in particular,
ibn Hazm rejects all other sources
of jurisprudence
such as intuition (ilham), hearsay
(khabar),
interpretation (tawil), deduction (istinbat),
personal approval (istihsan), refraining
from the unseemly (ihtiyat), legitimating
a matter passed over in silence (dalil
al
khitab), looking for a reason in matters
other than, mentioned in the Qur'an
(ta'lil),
and holding a belief on the ground
that it
has been held by one's predecessors
or some
prominent contemporaries (taqlid).
Only the
Prophet Muhammad must be taken as a
model
in all matters of belief and behaviour.
He
equally rejected, and more forcibly,
analogy
(qiyas) and opinion (ra'i) or that
which
a man conceives as true butt without
a proof,
or that which a man chooses out of
mere desire.
The Muslims should not abide by the
beliefs
and laws preached by prophets prior
to Muhammad
unless they are accepted by Islam as
well.
Ibn Hazm's views about God, His essence
and
His attributes, are: God is one and
unique;
He is incorporeal; so nothing resembles
Him
nor does He take the shape of anything
He
has created. He is the creator of everything,
of time, of space, and even of His
own Throne.
He is eternal, all-powerful and all-knowing.
His power and knowledge as well as
all His
other names are eternal.
God cannot be conceived of as ruled
by space
and time, since He existed before there
were
space and time, for these were also
created
by Him. The verses in which God says
of Himself:
"The God of mercy sitteth on His
Throne"
[49] and "Then He directed Himself
to
the heaven," [50] ibn Hazm affirms
with
the Asharites that God's sitting or
settling
Himself on the Throne is known; but
how it
is done is unknown.
God has no attributes which modify
His essence:
His qualities are names and not adjectives,
nor are they derived from adjectives.
He
says of Himself: "God's are the
fairest
names. Invoke Him by them." [51]
Thus,
only these names, ninety-nine in number,
by which God has named Himself, may
be said
to be His; we are not allowed to call
Him
by names which He has not mentioned
as His,
for example, the happy, the healthy,
the
beloved, the noble, or the brave, although
these titles are, in themselves, true
of
Him and cherished by us. We are also
not
allowed to call Him by names, derived
from
the verbs with which He predicated
Himself.
God says: "And when they (the
disbelievers)
meet the faithful they say, `We believe';
but when they are apart with their
satans
(comrades), they say, `Verily we hold
with
you and at them we only mock.' God
shall
mock at them." [52] God says further:
"And they (the Jews) plotted,
and God
plotted: but of those who plot, God
is the
best." [53] He also says: "And
the heaven-with our hands have We built
it
up." [54] In spite of all that,
says
ibn Hazm, we cannot call God the mocker,
plotter, or builder, simply because
He did
not call Himself by these name. Moreover,
we do not interpret His names to know
how
or why He is called thus: He called
Himself,
for instance, the hearer, the One who
sees,
but we cannot say that He has the sense
of
hearing or of sight.
Furthermore, God speaks in the Qur'an
of
His (one) hand, of His two hand, and
of
His hands; so we may ascribe to Him
one hand,
two hands, or many hands. In the Qur'an
He
speaks also of His eye and of His eyes,
but
not of two eyes of His. According to
ibn
Hazm, we may ascribe to God either
one eye
or ascribe to Him eyes, but not two
eyes.
When we speak of God's eye hand, or
face,
we do not mean, at any rate, that He
has
members similar to ours. On the contrary,
the words: face, eye, and hand are
used as
free metaphors to mean simply God.
And though God is incorporeal, ibn
Hazm asserts
that the Muslims would see Him on the
Day
of Judgment. [55] They cannot see Him,
for
certain, with the power of sight in
their
eyes but perhaps with the power which
is
called by some thinkers "the sixth
sense."
Regarding our knowledge of God, ibn
Hazm
says, we do not maintain that we come
to
know Him by primary reason, for we
do not
want to run the risk of being refuted
by
somebody asserting that his primary
reason
does not lead him to the knowledge
of God.
Nor may we allow that the knowledge
of God
can be acquired by the art of reasoning,
by argumentation or proof; since the
masses
are not capable of such dialecticism.
Failing
to attain knowledge of God through
these
channels, some come to the conclusion
that
He does not exist. Nor may we allow
authority
or hearsay to be the criteria of the
knowledge
of God, because these cannot lead to
real
conviction. We know God only through
revelation
to the Prophet who is trustworthy and
whose
word should be accepted on its face
value.
Ibn Hazm does not believe in the absolute
free-will of man. Predestination, according
to him, is nothing but the command
of God
that a thing should follow a definite
course.
Allah has created in man aptitudes,
and every
man behaves in compliance with his
aptitudes.
Accordingly, we. may say that all actions
of men, good and bad, are ultimately
created
by God.
Ibn Hazm was a polemist by nature,
and often
right in his contentions. As Hitti
says,
"In this work [Al-Milal w-al-Nihal]
he pointed out difficulties in the
biblical
narratives which disturbed no other
minds
till the rise of higher criticism in
the
sixteenth century." Yet he is
to blame
for the harsh language he used in his
attacks
on all religions and sects indiscriminately.
On some occasions he attacked even
some of
those who shared with him the same
doctrine.
Faith and Islam, says ibn Hazm, are
one and
the same thing. Islam had abrogated
all anterior
religions. Therefore, no religion precedent
to Islam should be followed, because
every
religion except Islam is obsolete and,
consequently,
annulled. Muhammad is the Prophet to
all
nations; he preached religion according
to
the prescription of God to him; and
when
he died revelation ceased. Islam was
made
complete; it is impossible either to
add
anything to it, or deduct anything
from it,
or make any change in it in any way.
The best people are the messengers
of God;
next are the prophets not entrusted
with
any mission to any people. After them
are
the Companions of the Prophet Muhammad.
These
last differ in their prestige in accordance
with their efforts in the service of
Islam
and their personal character and behaviour,
determined by the truth and ideals
established
by the Qur'an and the sayings and actions
of the Prophet Muhammad.
D
ZAHIRISM AFTER IBN HAZM
For a certain period Zahirism constituted
in the East a school of jurisprudence,
but
in Muslim Spain it never grew beyond
a persecuted
philosophy. Even as a philosophy it
began
to decline there after the death of
ibn Hazm.
It is true that ibn Hazm built a Zahirite
system of dogma and revised Muslim
law from
that standpoint, but his views enjoyed
only
a restricted acceptance in the Muslim
West.
In the East they found practically
no echo.
This. is due to the uncompromising
attitude
he had taken in all matters of creed,
worship,
and legal transactions as well as to
the
harsh language he used while speaking
of
all those who did not share with him
the
views he entertained. The Zahirites
in the
East, and the Hanbalites too, have
always
preferred to follow Dawud ibn 'Ali,
though
very little Fiqh has reached us from
him.
The few attempts to introduce Zahirism
into
North Africa were due largely to political
considerations. On the Andalusian
soil Zahirism
found support or acceptance with individuals
here and there. Ibn `Abd al-Barr (368-463/978-1071),
the famous traditionist and biographer,
had
some leaning towards it.
A young contemporary of ibn Hazm and
of ibn
`Abd al-Barr, al-Humaidi was a historian
and biographer of established fame.
He was
a declared Zahirite. When the persecution
of the followers of the Zahirite school
reached
a high pitch in Muslim Spain, he left
his
native land, went to the East, and
settled
down in Baghdad where he died forty
years
later. Al-Humaidi was the first man
to introduce
ibn Hazm's works into the East, but
there
they made no impression.
One would expect, despite all persecution,
that Zahirism should have had numerous
followers
for a certain period at least, as has
been
the case with most other movements.
Ibn al-Athir
says: [56] "There was in the Muslim
West a multitude of them (of the Zahirites)
called the Hazmiyyah or followers of
ibn
Hazm." Asin Palacios tried to
draw a
complete list of them. [57] Some of
these
were, to be sure, Zahirites or with
Zahirite
leanings. But a number of those who
were
considered by him to be such were certainly
not. That al-Ghazali was antagnostic
to the
Batinites [58] and was one who advocated
a strict religious behaviour and showed
a
dislike for all innovations, as we
see clearly
in all his works, does not make him
a Zahirite,
and less so a follower of ibn Hazm,
as Asin
Palacias tried to ahow. [59] Nor can
we agree
with Asin Palacios that ibn Rushd (Averroes)
wars a Zahirite on the mere fact that
he
quoted ibn Hazm three times [60] in
his Tahafut
al-Tahafut. Ibn Rushd mentioned also
the
Zahirites once with disdaine [61] and
twice
with indifference. [62] Moreover, his
theme
in his two small but worthy epistles,
Fasl
al-Maqal and Manahij al Adillah, is
that
the masses cannot rise or be raised
above
the literal meaning of the Law, while
the
thinkers are called upon to ponder
on the
intentions of religion.
With the advance of the sixth/twelfth
century,
Zahirism became a problem in the Muslim
West,
in Spain, and in North Africa: while
the
masses behaved on the narrowest Zahirite
lines, Zahirism itself was being fought
on
every side. Philosophy was equally
combated.
The rationalist thinker ibn Tufail
[63] furnishes
us with a very clear picture of the
situation
there; a few enlightened individuals
were
living in the midst of a multitude
of common
people unwilling and incapable of thinking
for themselves.
Notes:
[1] Shahrastani, vol. II, p. 29; cf.
p. 5.
[2] Ibid., p. 29, cf. pp. 31 f.
[3] Ibid., pp. 29f.
[4] Farq, pp. 14, 142; cf. pp. 152,
169,
17 7 , 182, 216; cf. Shahrastani, vol.
II,
pp. 31 f.
[5] Nubadh, Introd., p. 4.
[6] GAL, I, p. 194; Suppl., I, p. 312.
[7] Sam’ani, p. 226.
[8] His full name was abu Sulaiman
Dawud
ibn 'Ali ibn Khalaf.
[9] Sam’ani, pp. 224, 255ff.
[10] Goldziher, p. 28 n.
[11] Tarikh Baghad, vol. VIII, p. 369.
[12] Fihrist, p. 216; Subki, vol. II,
pp.
46; cf. p. 44.
[13] Fihrist, p. 216; Subki, vol. II,
pp.
42; 44, 46.
[14] Subki, vol. II, pp. 43 f.
[15] Fihrist, pp. 38, 216f.
[16] A folio comprises about twenty
lines
(cf. Fihrist, p. 159).
[17] Fihrist, pp. 216, 217; Sub ki,
vol.
II, p. 46.
[18] Risalah fi Masa'il al-Imam Dawud
al-Zahiri,
an epistle (containing) the questions
decided
by Dawud the Zahirite (publ. Damascus
1330/1912),
erroneously thought by Brockelmann
(GAL,
Suppl., I, p. 312) to be by Dawud ibn
'Ali
himself. He states the date of its
publication
as 1930 which is also a mistake, perhaps
a misprint for 1330 A. H.
[19] Subki, vol. II, p. 46, line 1;
vgl.
Goldziher, p. 36.
[20] Subki, vol. II, p. 46, line 7.
[21] Al-Ihkam, vol. IV, p. 147.
[22] Al-Milal, vol. II, p. 140.
[23] Qur'an, ii, 184, 185.
[24] Muslims perform five prayers per
day:
one of two rak'ahs (units of movements),
one of three rak'ahs and three of four
rak'ahs
each. To cut, a prayer short is to
reduce
a prayer of four rak`ahs to only two.
[25] Cf. Malik, pp. 146-48, etc.
[26] Mafatih, vol. III, p. 444, quoted
by
Goldziher, p. 47; cf. Shatli, p. 12.
[27] Qur'an, iv, 101.
[28] Cf. Malik, p. 294 (No. 22).
[29] Shatti, p. 13 bottom.
[30] Qur'an, ii, 275, 276, 278; iii,
130;
iv, 159; xxx, 39.
[31] Sahih Muslim, Cairo, 1331;1912,
vol.
V, p. 44, lines 8ff., cf. 44ff.
[32] Subki, vol. II, pp. 43, 46.
[33] Ibid., cf. p. 43. Cf. ibn Khallikan,
Cairo, Bulaq, 1299 A. H., vol. I, p.
4; GAL,
Suppl., I, 66f; Nubadh, Introd., p.
4.
[34] Fihrist, p. 172.
[35] Sam’ani, pp. 224-26.
[36] Fihrist, p. 216.
[37] Kitab al-Zahrah (The Book of the
Flower),
the first half (published by the University
of Chicago Press, Chicago, Illinois),
printed
at the Catholic Press, Beirut, 1932.
[38] An Arabist Orientalist, born in
Bohemia
13133/1885 whose academic activities
since
1340/1921 belong to his sojourn in
the United
States. He is versed in very many languages,
old and new, eastern and western. He
is the
representative of the Arabic theory
in the
rise of troubadour poetry in southern
France.
[39] Ibn Khallikan, vol. II, pp. 140-41.
[40] Fihrist, p. 234.
[41] Sam’ani, p. 227.
[42] Nubadh, loc. Cit.
[43] Fihrist, p. 217.
[44] Goldziher, pp. 194-96.
[45] Al-Mansur ibn abi `Amir was Prime
Minister
to Hisham II who was a weakling. He
usurped
the power and ruled Muslim Spain virtually
for fifty year and as Prime Minister
for
twenty-six years. He died in 392/1002.
[46] See Al-Milal, vol. V, p. 58; cf.
Ueberweg,
vol. I, p. 68 line 34
[47] Al-Muhalla, vol. I, p. 52; Ihkam,
vol.
IV, p. 107, of.. pp. 59ff.; Nubadh,
p. 28.
[48] Al-Ihkam, vol. IV, p. 147
[49] Qur'an, vii, 53; x, 3; xiii, 2;
xxv,
59; xxxii, 4; lvii, 4.
[50] Ibid., x1i, 11.
[51] Ibid., vii, 180.
[52] Ibid., ii, 15.
[53] Ibid., iii, 54.
[54] Ibid., li, 47.
[55] Ibid., lxxv, 23
[56] Ibn al-Athir, vol. XII, p. 61;
cf. Taj,
vol. VIII, p. 245: cf. Asin. p. 280.
[57] Asin, pp. 280-329.
[58] Al-Munqidh min al-Dalal, Damascus.
Ist
ed., 1352/1934, pp. 5, 16, 44-47.
[59] Asin, p. 299; cf. pp. 297-300.
[60] Ibid., pp. 208, 542, 580.
[61] Tahafut al-Tahafut, pp. 3111 f.
[62] Ibid., pp. 12, 429.
[63] Ibn Tufail, .pp. 126f., 136ff.
(second
ed., pp. 178f., 188ff.) Translation
by Ockley,
pp. 101 (157f.), 116-19 (171-76). See
also
Ibn Tufail and His Philosophical Romance
(1st ed.), pp. 58f., 77-83 (second
ed.),
pp. 37f., 57-61.
Ibn Hazm, Al-Muhalla, Vols. I and II,
Cairo,
1348/1929; Ibtal al-Qiyas (extract
in Goldziher,
Die Zahiriten); Al-Ihkam al-Ahkum,
8 Parts,
Cairo, 13451348/1926-1929; Al-Milal
w-al-Nihal
(Religions and Sects), 5 Vols., Cairo,
13171327/1899-1909;
al-Nubadhfi Usul al-Fiqh al-Zahiri
(Hints
to the Fundamentals of Zahiri Jurisprudence),
with an Introduction by Muhammad Zahid
al-Kauthari,
Cairo, 1360/1940; Tauq al-Hamamah,
Damascus;
Kitab al-Akhlaq w-al-Siyar (Book of
Ethics
and Behaviour); Cairo, n. d.; Rasa'il
Ibn
Hazm, 1st series, Cairo & Baghhhdad,
n. d.; Said al-Afghani, Ibn ,Hazm wa
Risalat
al-Mufadalati bain al-Sahabah (Ibn
Hazm and
His "Epistle on the Classification
of
the Companons of the Prophet"),
Damascus
1359/1940; Roger Arlandez, Grammare
et theologie
chez Ibn Hazm de Cordoue, Paris, 1956;
Asin
Palaeios, Abenhazam de Cordoba y su
historia
critica de las ideas religioses, 5
Vols.,
Madrid, 1927; Charles M. Bakewell Source
Book in Ancient Philosophy, New York,
1907;
ibn Bashkuwal, Kitab al-Silah, Cairo,
1374/1955;
T. J. de Boer, The History of Philosophy
in Islam, London, 1933; 'Abd Allah
Muhammad
al-Humaidi, Jadhwat alMuqtabis . .
., Cairo,
1372/1952; Encyclopaedia of Islam;
ibn al-Faradi,
Tarikh al-'Ulama' . . . bi al-Andalus,
2
Vols., Cairo, 1373/1954; 'Abd al-Qahir
al-Baghdadi,
al-Farq bain al-Firaq (on Muslim Sects),
Cairo, 1328/1910; ibn al-Nadim, Kitab
al-Fihrist,
Leipzig, 1871-1872; von Carl Broekelmann,
Geschichte der arabischen Litteratur,
2 Vols.,
Leiden, 1898, 1902; Supplementbande,
3 Vols.,
Leiden, 1937, 1938, 1939-1942; I. Goldziher,
Le livre du Mohammed Ibn Toumert, Introduction
par I, Algiers, 1903; Die ,Zahiriten,
Leipzig,
1884; Philip K. Hitti, History of the
Arabs,
London, 1949; ibn al-Athir, Tarikh-i
Kamil,
Leiden, 1851-1871: Muhammad abu Zahrah,
Ibn
Hazm, Cairo, 1373/1953; ibn Khallikan,
Wafayat
al-A'yan . . ., 3 Vols., Gotha, 1835-1850;
ibn Tufail, Qisaatu Hayy Ibn Yaqzan,
Damascus,
1354/1935; second ed., 1359/1940; ibn
Tumart,
Ta'aliq Muhammad Ibn Tumart, ed. I.
Goldziher,
1903; ibn 'Idhari, al-Maghrib fi Akhbar
al-Maghrib
(History of the Muslim West), Leiden,
1948,
1951; W. Ivanow, Alleged Founder of
Isma'ilism,
Bombay, 1946; al-Firuzabadi, al- Qamss
al-Muhit,
4 Vols., Cairo, 1344; D. B. Macdonald,
Development
of Muslim Theology, Jurisprudence andConstitutional
Theory, London, 1903;. Subbi Mahmassani.
Falsafat al-Tashri' fi al-Islam (The
Philosophy
of Jurisprudence in Islam), 1st ed.,
Beirut,
1365/1946; translated into Urdu Falsafah-i
Shari'at-i Islam, Lahore,
1955; Malik ibn Anas, al-Muwatta' (A
collection
of the Traditions of the Prophet Muhammad.),
ed. Fu'ad 'Abd al-Baqi, Cairo, 1370/1951;
'Abd al-Wahid al-Murrakushi, al-Mu'jib
fi
Akhbar al-Maghrib (History of North
Africa),
Cairo, 1368/1949; al-Ghazali, al-Munqidh
min al-Dalal, Damascus, 1352/1934;
ibn Khaldun,
Muqaddimah, Beirut, 1956; al-Maqqari,
Nafh
al-Tib (History of Muslim Spain), Leiden,
1885-1889; abu al-Hasan al Nubati,
Kitab
al-Marqabat al-'Ulya'. . ., ed. Levi-Provencal
under the title: Tarikh Qudat al-Andalus
(History of the Judges of Muslim Spain),
Cairo, 1948; A. R. Nykl, Hispano-Arabic
Poetry,
Baltimore, 1946; Simon Ockley, The
Improvement
of Human Reason Exhibited in the Life
of
Hai Ibn Yakdhan, London, 1708; Marmaduke
Pickthall, The Meaning of the Glorious
Koran,
London, 1952; Revue de l'academie arabe
de
Damas (Majallat al-Majma al-'Ilm al-'Arabi
[in Axabic]), vol. XXII, No. 2 (Apr.
1948),
pp. 201-18; al-Sam’ani, Kitab al-Ansab
(extract
in Goldziher, Die Zahiriten); Shahrastani,
Al-Milal w-al-Nihal (Religions and
Sects);
Shams al-Din al-Dhahabi, Siyar al-Nubala'
(biography of ibn Hazm), an extract,
Damascus,
1360/1941; A. J. Arberry, Sufcam, London,
195b; Taj al-Din al-Subki, Tabaqat
al-Shafi’yyatt
al-Kubra, 6 Vols., Cairo, 1323-1324/19051906;
'Abd al-Rahman al-Sulami, Tabaqat al-Sufiyyah,
Cairo, 1373/1953; Sayyid al-Murtada
al-Zabidi,
Taj al-`Arus min Jawahir al-Qamus,
Cairo;
ibn Rushd, Tahafut al- Tahafut, Beirut,
1930;
von Friedrich Ueberweg, Grundriss der
Geschichte
der Philosophie, 11th ed., Berlin,
1928.
|