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Tawassul part 2
The specific tawassul through the Prophet is a request in
acknowledgement of his standing as the chief intercessor for the
Community before Allah, and it is a request for Allah's blessing
as effected by Allah in the person of His Prophet and His saints
-- not as effected by the latter without Allah, which is the
belief those who oppose tawassul falsely impute to those who make
tawassul. Allah has said of His Holy Prophet, Peace be upon him:
He is anxious about what you do, and merciful with the
believers. (9:128)
If they had only, when they were unjust to themselves, come
unto thee and asked Allah's forgiveness, and the Messenger had
asked forgiveness for them, they would have found Allah indeed
Oft-returning, Most Merciful (4:64)
And if they had had patience till thou camest forth unto them,
it had been better for them. And Allah is Forgiving, Merciful.
(49:5)
If only they had been content with what Allah and His Apostle
gave them, and had said, "Sufficient unto us is Allah! Allah
and His Apostle will soon give us of His bounty: to Allah do we
turn our hopes!" (9:59)
They swear by Allah to you (Muslims) in order to please you:
But it is more fitting that they should please Allah and His
Apostle, if they are Believers. (9:62)
Allah has mentioned all this about His Prophet because it is
through His Prophet that He Himself has shown His greatest mercy
and most comprehensive forgiveness, and it is by coming to the
Prophet that the believers seek to obtain these from Allah. This
is clear evidence, both now as it was then, that the mediation of
the Prophet -- for that is the meaning of intercession -- can be
sought to obtain forgiveness from Allah. The first hadith Imam
Ahmad related from Anas ibn Malik in his Musnad Anas is:
"The whole Community of the people of Madina used to take
the hand of the Prophet and rush to obtain their need with
it."
The Mufti of Mecca at the time of the spread of the Wahhabi
heresy, al-Sayyid Ahmad Ibn Zayni Dahlan (d. 1304) said in Khulasat
al-kalam:
Tawassul (using means), tashaffu` (using
intercession), and istighatha (asking help) all have the
same meaning, and the only meaning they have in the hearts of the
believers is that of tabarruk (using blessings) with the
mention of Allah's beloved ones, since it is established that He
grants His mercy to all His servants for the sake of His beloved
ones, and this is the case whether they are alive or dead,
because in either case the actual effecting agent and true
executor is Allah Himself, and these beloved ones are only
ordinary causes for Hmercy. Like any other secondary causes, they
have no effective power of influence in themselves.
The early and late Imams of the Community have said clearly
and unequivocally that tawassul through the Prophet is highly
desirable and recommended for every person. Following are some of
their words to this effect.
Imam Malik was asked the following question by the Caliph Abu
Ja`far al-Mansur: "Shall I face the qibla with my
back towards the grave of the Messenger of Allah when makind du`a
(after salams)?" He replied:
"How could you turn your face away from him when he is
the means (wasila) of your and your father Adam's
forgiveness to Allah on the Day of Resurrection? Nay, face him
and ask for his intercession (istashfi` bihi) so that
Allah will grant it to you as He said: "If they had only,
when they were wronging themselves, come unto thee and asked
Allah's forgiveness, and the Messenger had asked forgiveness for
them, they would have found Allah indeed Oft-returning, Most
Merciful (4:64).""
It is cited by al-Qadi `Iyad in al-Shifa (2:92-93) with
a sound (sahih) chain, and also cited by Samhudi in Khulasat
al-Wafa, Subki in Shifa' al-siqam, Qastallani in al-Mawahib
al-laduniyya, Ibn Jama`a in Hidayat al-salik, and
Haytami in al-Jawhar al-munazzam and Tuhfat al-zuwwar.
See also Ibn `Abd al-Hadi in al-Sarim al-munki p. 244. Ibn
Jama`a says in Hidayat al-salik (3:1381): "It is
related by the two hafiz Ibn Bashkuwal and al-Qadi `Iyad
in al-Shifa' after him, and no attention is paid to the
words of those who claim that it is forged purely on the basis of
his idle desires."
The words "he is the means (wasilat) of your and
your father Adam's forgiveness to Allah" are confirmed by
the verses whereby the Prophet is witness over all communities
and people including their Prophets (2:143, 3:81, 4:41, 33:7) as
well as the sound hadith of his intercession over all prophets on
behalf of all believers in Sahih al-Bukhari (Kitab
al-tawhid). Furthermore, it is also established from the verse
"And Adam received words from his Lord and He relented
towards him" (2:37) that Adam has been forgiven.
Imam Ahmad made tawassul through the Prophet a part of every
du`a according to the following report: `Ala' al-Din al-Mardawi
said in his book al-Insaf fi ma`rifat al-rajih min al-khilaf
`ala madhhab al-Imam al-mubajjal Ahmad ibn Hanbal (3:456):
The correct position of the [Hanbali] madhhab is that it is
permissible in one's supplication (du`a) to use as means a pious
person, and it is said that it is desirable (mustahabb). Imam
Ahmad said to Abu Bakr al-Marwazi: yatawassalu bi al-nabi fi
du`a'ih -- "Let him use the Prophet as a means in his
supplication to Allah."
The same report is found in Imam Ahmad's Manasik as
narrated by his student Abu Bakr al-Marwazi.
Similarly the lengthy wording of the tawassul according to the
Hanbali madhhab as established by the hafiz Ibn `Aqil in his Tadhkira
was cited fully by Imam Kawthari in his appendix to Shaykh
al-Islam Taqi al-Din al-Subki's al-Sayf al-saqil included
in Kawthari's edition of the latter.
The Prophet said on the authority of `Umar: "When Adam
committed his mistake he said: O my Lord, I am asking you to
forgive me for the sake of Muhammad. Allah said: O Adam, and how
do you know about Muhammad whom I have not yet created? Adam
replied, O my Lord, after You created me with your hand and
breathed into me of Your Spirit, I raised my head and saw written
on the heights of the Throne:
LA ILAHA ILLALLAH MUHAMMADUN RASULULLAH
I understood that You would not place next to Your Name but
the Most Beloved One of Your creation. Allah said: O Adam, I have
forgiven you, and were it not for Muhammad I would not have
created you."
It was transmitted through many chains and was cited by
Bayhaqi (in Dala'il al-nibuwwa), Abu Nu`aym (in Dala'il
al-nibuwwa), al-Hakim in al-Mustadrak (2:615),
al-Tabarani in his Saghir (2:82, 207) with another chain
containing sub-narrators unknown to Haythami as he stated in Majma`
al-zawa'id (8:253), and Ibn `Asakir on the authority of `Umar
ibn al-Khattab, and most of these narrations were copied in
Qastallani's al-mawahib al-laduniyya (and al-Zarqani's
Commentary 2:62).
- This hadith is declared sound (sahih) by al-Hakim in al-Mustadrak
(2:651), although he acknowledges Abd al-Rahman ibn Zayd
ibn Aslam, one of its sub-narrators, as weak. However,
when he mentions this hadith he says: "Its chain is
sound, and it is the first hadith of Abd al-Rahman ibn
Zayd ibn Aslam which I mention in this book";
al-Hakim also declares sound another version through Ibn
`Abbas.
- Al-Bulqini declares this hadith sound in his Fatawa.
- Al-Subki confirms al-Hakim's authentication (in Shifa'
al-siqam fi ziyarat khayr al-anam p. 134-135)
although Ibn Taymiyya's rejection and criticism of this
hadith was known to him and he rejects it, as well as
saying that Ibn Taymiyya's extreme weakening of Ibn Zayd
is exaggerated.
- The hadith is also included by Qadi `Iyad among the
"sound and famous narrations" in al-Shifa,
and he says that Abu Muhammad al-Makki and Abu al-Layth
al-Samarqandi mention it; Qadi `Iyad says: "It is
said that this hadith explains the verse: 'And Adam
received words from his Lord and He relented towards him'
(2:37)"; he continues to cite another very similar
version through al-Ajurri (d. 360), about whom al-Qari
said: "al-Halabi said: This seems to be the imam and
guide Abu Bakr Muhammad ibn al-Husayn ibn `Abd Allah
al-Baghdadi, the compiler of the books al-Shari`a
devoted to the Sunna, al-Arba`un, and
others.'" This is confirmed by Ibn Taymiyya in his Qa`ida
fi al-tawassul: "It is related by Shaykh Abu
Bakr al-Ajurri, in his book al-Shari`a."
- Ibn al-Jawzi also considers it sound (sahih) as he cites
it in the first chapter of al-Wafa bi ahwal al-mustafa,
in the introduction of which he says: "(In this
book) I do not mix the sound hadith with the false,"
although he knew of `Abd al-Rahman ibn Zayd's weakness as
a narrator; he also mentions the version of Maysarat
al-Fajr whereby the Prophet says: "When satan
deceived Adam and Eve, they repented and sought
intercession to Allah with my name"; Ibn al-Jawzi
also says in the chapter concerning the Prophet's
superiority over the other Prophets in the same book:
"Part of the exposition of his superiority to other
Prophets is the fact that Adam asked his Lord through the
sanctity (hurmat) of Muhammad that He relent
towards him, as we have already mentioned."
- Suyuti cites it in his Qur'anic commentary al-durr
al-manthur (2:37) and in al-Khasa'is al-kubra
(1:12) and in al-Riyad al-aniqa fi sharh asma' khayr
al-khaliqa (p. 49), where he says that Bayhaqi
considers it sound; this is due to the fact that Bayhaqi
said in the introduction to the Dala'il that he
only included sound narrations in his book, although he
also knew and explicitly mentions `Abd al-Rahman ibn
Zayd's weakness;
- Ibn Kathir mentions it after Bayhaqi in al-Bidayat wa
al-Nihaya (1:75, 1:180);
- al-Haythami in Majma` al-zawa'id (8:253 #28870),
al-Bayhaqi himself, and al-Qari in Sharh al- shifa'
show that its chains have weakness in them. However, the
weakness of Abd al-Rahman ibn Zayd was known by Ibn
al-Jawzi, Subki, Bayhaqi, Hakim, and Abu Nu`aym, yet all
these scholars retained this hadith for consideration in
their books;
- Three scholars reject it, such as Ibn Taymiyya (Qa`ida
jalila fi al-tawassul p. 89, 168-170) and his two
students Ibn `Abd al-Hadi (al-Sarim al-munki p.
61-63) and al-Dhahabi (Mizan al-i`tidal 2:504 and Talkhis
al-mustadrak), while `Asqalani reports Ibn Hibban's
saying that `Abd al-Rahman ibn Zayd was a forger(Lisan
al-mizan 3:360, 3:442).
- However, Ibn Taymiyya elsewhere quotes it and the version
through Maysara and says: "These two are like the
elucidation (tafsir) of the authentic ahadith (concerning
the same topic)" (Fatawa 2:150). The contemporary
Meccan hadith scholar Ibn `Alawi al-Maliki said:
"This indicates that Ibn Taymiyya found the hadith
sound enough to be considered a witness for other
narrations (Salih li al-istishhad wa al-i`t), because the
forged (al-mawdu`) and the false (al-batil) are not taken
as witness by the people of hadith"; al-Maliki also
quotes (without reference) Dhahabi's unrestrained
endorsement of the ahadith in Bayhaqi's Dala'il
al-nubuwwa with his words: "You must take what
is in it (the Dala'il), for it consists entirely
of guidance and light." (Mafahim yajib an
tusahhah p. 47).
- Its latter part is mentioned as a separate hadith in the
wording: "Were it not for Muhammad, I would not have
created the spheres (al-aflak)." al-Qari said
in al-Asrar al-marfu`a (#754-755):
"al-Saghani (in al-ahadith al mawdu`a p. 7)
said: "It is forged," however, its meaning is
sound (mi`nahu sahih), as Daylami has narrated on
the authority of Ibn `Abbas that the Prophet said:
"Gabriel came to me and said: O Muhammad! Were it
not for you, Paradise would not have been created, and
were it not for you, the Fire would not have been
created." And Ibn Kathir's narration has: "And
were it not for you, the world would not have been
created.""
As for Albani's rejection of
Qari's use of Daylami in support of the hadith with the
words: "I do not hesitate to declare it weak on the
basis that Daylami is alone in citing it" (Silsila
da`ifa #282), it shows an unwarranted wholesale
rejection of Daylami in lieu of a discussion of the
hadith itself, whereas the Imam of hadith Ibn Hajar
al-`Asqalani did rely on hadith narrated by Daylami, as
is shown by hadith #33 of his Arba`un fi rad`
al-mujrim `an sabb al-muslim, although Daylami is
alone in citing it!
- Ibn al-Qayyim in his Bada'i` al-fawa'id went so
far as to declare that everything was created for the
sake of human beings: hal `arifat qimata nafsik?
innama khalaqtu al-akwana kullaha laka... kullu
al-ashiya'i shajaratun wa anta al-thamara: "Have
you realized your value? I only created all the universes
for your sake... All things are trees whose fruit you
are." If this is true, then how could all humanity
be given what the Prophet is refused, who is the best of
mankind and of all creation put together?
- Following are some of the hadiths of the mention of the
Prophet's name together with Allah on the Throne and in
the heavens cited by the hadith masters, as related by
Suyuti in al-Khasa'is al-kubra (1:12-14):
- In Ibn `Asakir from Ka`b al-Ahbar: Adam said to
his son Sheeth: "O my son, you are my
successor, therefore found my successorhip upon
godwariness and the Firm Rope, and every time you
mention Allah, do mention next to His name the
name of Muhammad, for I saw his name written on
the leg of the Throne as I was between the spirit
and the clay. Then I circumambulated the heavens
and I did not see in them a single spot except
the name of Muhammad was written upon it, and
when my Lord made me inhabit Paradise I saw in it
neither palace nor room except the name of
Muhammad was written on it. I have seen his name
written on the bosom of the wide-eyed maidens of
Paradise, on the leaves of the reed-stalks and
thickets of the Garden, on the leaves of the Tree
of Bliss, on the leaves of the Lote-tree of the
Farthermost Boundary, and upon the veils and
between the eyes of the angels. Therefore, make
frequent remembrance of him, for the angels
remember him in every moment."
- Ibn `Adi and Ibn `Asakir from Anas: The Prophet
said: "When I was taken up to heaven I saw
written on the leg of the Throne:
la ilaha illallah muhammadun
rasulullah ayyadtuhu bi `ali."
- Ibn `Asakir from `Ali: The Prophet said:
"The night I was enraptured I saw written on
the Throne:
la ilaha illallah
muhammadun rasulullah
abu bakr al-siddiq `umar
al-faruq
`uthman dhu al-nurayn."
- Ibn `Adi, Tabarani in al-Awsat, Ibn
`Asakir, and al-Hasan ibn `Arafa in his famous
volume from Abu Hurayra: The Prophet said:
"The night I was enraptured and taken up to
heaven I did not pass a heaven except I saw in it
my name written: muhammadun rasulullah
with Abu Bakr at my side."
- al-Bazzar from Ibn `Umar: The Prophet said:
"When I was taken up to heaven I did not
pass a heaven except I saw in it my name written:
muhammadun rasulullah."
- al-Khatib, Ibn `Asakir, and al-Daraqutni in al-Afrad
(Reports from a single narrator), from Abu
al-Darda': The Prophet said: "The night I
was enraptured I saw a green garment on the
Throne whereupon was written in letters of light:
la ilaha illallah muhammadun
rasulullah
abu bakr al-siddiq `umar
al-faruq."
- Ibn `Asakir from Jabir: The Prophet said:
"On the gate of Paradise is written:
la ilaha illallah muhammadun
rasulullah."
- Abu Nu`aym in al-Hilya from Ibn `Abbas:
The Prophet said: "There is not in all
Paradise one tree with a single leaf but
inscribed
la ilaha illallah
muhammadun rasulullah."
- al-Hakim from Ibn `Abbas, and he graded it sahih
-- sound: "Allah revealed to `Isa the
following: Believe in Muhammad and order all
those of your Community who see him to believe in
him, for were it not for Muhammad I would not
have created Adam, nor Paradise, nor the Fire.
When I created the Throne upon the water it
shuddered. So I wrote upon it:
la
ilaha illallah muhammadun rasulullah
and it became calm." al-Dhahabi said:
"Its chain contains `Amr ibn Aws and it is
not known who he is."
- In Ibn `Asakir from Jabir through Abu al-Zubayr:
"Between Adam's shoulders is written:
muhammadun rasulullah khatam
al-nabiyyin."
Imam Shawkani said in his commentary on al-Jazari's (d. 833) `Iddat
al-hisn al-hasin entitled Tuhfat al-dhakirin bi `iddat
al-hisn al-hasin (Beirut ed. 1970), p. 37: "He
[al-Jazari] said: Let him make tawassul to Allah with His
Prophets and the salihin or saints (in his du`a). I say:
And exemplifying tawassul with the Prophets is the hadith
extracted by Tirmidhi et al. (of the blind man saying: O
Allah, I ask You and turn to You by means of Muhammad the Prophet
of Mercy) [see below]... as for tawassul with the saints, among
its examples is the hadith, established as sound, of the
Companions' tawassul asking Allah for rain by means of al-`Abbas
the Prophet's uncle, and `Umar said: "O Allah, we use as
means to You the uncle of our Prophet etc. [see below]." We
cite further below Shawkani's complete and detailed stand on
tawassul from his treatise al-Durr al-nadir.
A blind man came to the Prophet and said: "Invoke Allah
for me that he help me." He replied: "If you wish I
will delay this, and it would be better for you, and if you wish
I will invoke Allah the Exalted (for you)." He said:
"Then invoke him." The Prophet said to him: idhhab
fa tawadda', wa salli rak`atayn thumma qul -- "Go and
make an ablution, pray two rak`at, then say: "O Allah, I am
asking you (as'aluka) and turning to you (atawajjahu
ilayka) with your Prophet Muhammad (bi nabiyyika Muhammad),
the Prophet of mercy; O Muhammad (ya Muhammad), I am
turning with you to my Lord regarding my present need / I am
asking my Lord with your intercession concerning the return of my
sight (inni atawajjahu bika ila rabbi fi hajati hadhih -- another
version has: inni astashfi`u bika `ala rabbi fi raddi basari)
so that He will fulfill my need; O Allah, allow him to intercede
(with you) for me (allahumma shaffi`hu fiyya)."
It is related by Ahmad (4:138 #17246-17247), Tirmidhi (hasan
sahih gharib -- Da`awat Ch. 119), Ibn Majah (Book of Iqamat
al-salat wa al-sunnat, Ch. on Salat al-hajat #1385),
Nasa'i (`Amal al-yawm wa al-laylat p. 417-418 #658-660),
al-Hakim (1:313, 1:526), Tabarani in al-Kabir, and
rigorously authenticated as sound (sahih) by nearly
fifteen hadith masters including Ibn Hajar, Dhahabi, Shawkani,
and Ibn Taymiyya.
- The Prophet's order, here as elsewhere, carries
legislative force for all Muslims and is not limited to a
particular person, place or time; it is valid for all
generations until the end of time unless proven otherwise
by a subsequent indication from the Prophet himself,
Peace be upon him.
- The Prophet was not physically present at the assigned
time of the invocation, since he said to the blind man:
"Go and make ablution," without
adding: "and then come back in front of me."
With regard to physical absence, the living and the dead
are exactly alike, namely:absent.
- Despite the Prophet's physical absence, the wording (sigha)
for calling upon his intercession is direct address:
"O Muhammad." Such a wording -- "O
So-and-So" -- is only used with someone present and
able to hear. It should also be noted that Allah forbade
the Companions from being forward or calling out to the
Prophet in the ordinary manner used with one another
(49:1-2). The only way, therefore, that the Prophet,
Blessings and peace be upon him, could both be absent and
at the same be addressed is that the first be understood
in the physical sense and the second in the spiritual.
The above invocation was also used after the Prophet's
lifetime, as is proven by the sound (sahih) hadith
authenticated by Bayhaqi, Abu Nu`aym in the Ma`rifa,
Mundhiri (Targhib 1:473-474), Haythami, and Tabarani in
the Kabir (9:17-18) and the Saghir (1:184/201-202)
on the authority of `Uthman ibn Hunayf's nephew Abu Imama ibn
Sahl ibn Hunayf: A man would come to `Uthman ibn `Affan for a
certain need, but the latter would not pay him any attention nor
look into his need, upon which he complained of his condition to
`Uthman ibn Hunayf who told him: "Go and make ablution, then
go to the mosque and pray two rak`at, then say (this du`a),"
and he mentioned the invocation of the blind man, "then go
(to `Uthman again)." The man went, did as he was told, then
came to `Uthman's door, upon which the door-attendant came, took
him by the hand, and brought him to `Uthman who sat him with him
on top of the carpet, and said: "Tell me what your need
is." After this the man went out, met `Uthman ibn Hunayf
again, and said to him: "May Allah reward you! Previously he
would not look into my need nor pay any attention to me, until
you spoke to him." He replied: "I did not speak to him,
but I saw the Prophet when a blind man came to him complaining of
his failing eyesight," and he mentioned to him the substance
of the previous narration.
It is narrated that `Umar ibn al-Khattab, the second caliph,
would pray to Allah for rain during times of drought through the
means, the honor and intercession of the uncle of the Prophet,
`Abbas ibn `Abd Muttalib by using this supplication, "O Our
Lord! Previously, when we had a drought, we used to come to You
by means and intercession of Your Prophet. Now we are requesting
intercession through the uncle of the Prophet to grant us
rain." And it was granted. Bukhari relates it. `Umar added,
after making this supplication: "He (al-`Abbas), by Allah,
is the means to Allah" (hadha wallahi al-wasilatu
ilallahi `azza wa jall). Ibn `Abd al-Barr relates it in al-Isti`ab
bi ma`rifat al-ashab.
The scholars have explained that `Umar sought the means of
al-`Abbas rather than the Prophet in order to show and
acknowledge the status of the Prophet's uncle among the people
and, more generally, of the Ahl al-Bayt or direct relatives of
the Prophet. Al-Kawthari in his Maqalat (p. 411) cites Ibn
`Abd al-Barr's commentary in al-Isti`ab that `Umar used
al-`Abbas in response to Ka`b's words: "O Commander of the
believers, the Bani Isra`il in such circumstances used to pray
for rain by means of the relatives of Prophets." It is not,
as some ignorant explainers of the hadith have fancied, because
the Prophet's means is no longer available that `Umar used
al-`Abbas as a wasila. The hadith of `Uthman ibn Hunayf and the
words of Imam Malik to al-Mansur show that the Prophet continued
to be sought by the Companions and the Followers as a wasila
or means of blessing and benefit even after he left this life.
Following is some more evidence to this effect.
Al-Darimi in the Chapter 15 of the Muqaddima
(Introduction) to his Sunan (Vol. 1 p. 43) entitled:
"Allah's generosity to His Prophet after his death,"
relates from Aws ibn `Abd Allah: "The people of Madina
complained to `A'isha of the severe drought that they were
suffering. She said: "Go to the Prophet's grave and open a
window towards the sky so that there will be no roof between him
and the sky." They did so, after which they were watered
with such rain that vegetation grew and the camels got fat."
Al-muhaddith al-Samhudi wrote in Wafa' al-wafa' (Vol. 2
p. 549): "al-Zayn al-Miraghi said: "Know that it is the
Sunna of the people of Madina to this day to open a window at the
bottom of the dome of the Prophet's room, that is, of the blessed
green dome, on the side of the qibla." I say: And in our
time, they open the door facing the noble face (the grave) in the
space surrounding the room and they gather there."
al-Bayhaqi relates with a sound (sahih) chain: "It is
related from Malik al-Dar, `Umar's treasurer, that the people
suffered a drought during the successorship of `Umar, whereupon a
man came to the grave of the Prophet and said: "O Messenger
of Allah, ask for rain for your Community, for verily they have
but perished," after which the Prophet appeared to him in a
dream and told him: "Go to `Umar and give him my greeting,
then tell him that they will be watered. Tell him: You must be
clever, you must be clever!" The man went and told `Umar.
The latter said: "O my Lord, I spare no effort except in
what escapes my power!" Ibn Kathir cites it thus from
Bayhaqi in al-Bidaya wa al-nihaya and says: isnaduhu
sahih; Ibn Abi Shayba cites it in his Musannaf with a
sound (sahih) chain as confirmed by Ibn Hajar who says: rawa
Ibn Abi Shayba bi isnadin sahih and cites the hadith in Fath
al-Bari. He identifies Malik al-Dar as `Umar's treasurer (khazin
`umar) and says that the man who visited and saw the Prophet
in his dream is identified as the Companion Bilal ibn al-Harith,
and he counts this hadith among the reasons for Bukhari's naming
of the chapter "The people's request to their leader for
rain if they suffer drought." He also mentions it in al-Isaba,
where he says that Ibn Abi Khaythama cited it.
The legal inference here is not from the dream, because
although the dream of seeing the Prophet is truthful, a dream
cannot be used to establish a ruling (hukm) due to the
possibility that the person who saw it makes an error in its
wording. Rather, the inference from this hadith is based on the
action of the Companion Bilal ibn al-Harith. The fact that Bilal
came to the grave of the Prophet, called out to him, and asked
him to ask for rain is a proof that these actions are permitted.
These actions fall under the rubric of asking the Prophet for
help (istighatha), seeking him as a means (tawassul),
and using his intermediary (tashaffu`), and none of the
Companions reprimanded him, and therefore it was understood that
such actions are among the greatest acts of drawing near to
Allah.
In his edition of Ibn Hajar, the Wahhabi scholar Ibn Baz
rejects the hadith as a valid source for seeking rain through the
Prophet, and brazenly condemns the act of the Companion who came
to the grave, calling it munkar (aberrant) and wasila
ila al-shirk (a means to associating partners to Allah). We
seek protection from Allah from ignorance and error.
The Prophet said: "My life is a great good for you, you
will relate about me and it will be related to you, and my death
is a great good for you, your actions will be presented to me (in
my grave) and if I see goodness I will praise Allah, and if see
other than that I will ask forgiveness of Him for you."
Haythami says in Majma` al-zawa'id (9:24 #91):
"Al-Bazzar relates it and its sub-narrators are all the men
of sound hadith." Qadi `Iyad cites it in al-Shifa
(1:56 of the Amman edition). Suyuti said in his Manahil
al-safa fi takhrij ahadith al-shifa (Beirut 1988/1408) p. 31
(#8): "Ibn Abi Usama cites it in his Musnad from the
hadith of Bakr ibn `Abd Allah al-Muzani, and al-Bazzar from the
hadith of Ibn Mas`ud with a sound (sahih) chain." It
is cited in Shaykh al-Islam al-Taqi al-Subki's Shifa' al-siqam
fi ziyarat khayr al-anam (The healing of the sick concerning
the visit of the Best of Creation), where he mentions that Bakr
ibn Abd Allah al-Muzani reported it, and Ibn al-Jawzi mentions it
through Bakr and then again through Anas ibn Malik in the
penultimate chapter of the penultimate section of al-Wafa,
both huffaz without giving the isnad. However, Ibn al-Jawzi
specifies in the introduction of his book that he only included
sound traditions in it. He also mentions the version through Aws
ibn Aws: "The actions of human beings are shown to me every
Thursday on the night of (i.e. preceding) Friday." See also Fath
al-Bari 10:415, al-Mundhiri's al-Targhib wa al-Tarhib
3:343, and Musnad Ahmad 4:484.
The former Grand Mufti of Egypt Shaykh Hasanayn Muhammad
Makhluf wrote in his Fatawa shar`iyya (Cairo: Dar
al-i`tisam, 1405/1985, 1:91-92):
The hadith means that the Prophet is a great good for his
Community during his life, because Allah the Exalted has
preserved the Community, through the secret of the Prophet's
presence, from misguidance and confusion and disagreement, and He
has guided the prople through the Prophet to the manifest truth;
and that after Allah took back the Prophet, our connection to the
latter's goodness continues uncut, and the extension of his
goodness endures, overshadowing us. The deeds of the Community
are shown to him every day, and he glorifies Allah for the
goodness that he finds, while he asks for His forgiveness for the
small sins, and the alleviation of His punishment for the grave
ones: and this is a tremendous good for us. There is therefore
"goodness for the Community in his life, and in his death,
goodness for the Community."
Moreover, as has been established in the hadith, the Prophet
is alive in his grave with a special "isthmus-life" (hayat
barzakhiyya khassa) stronger than the lives of the martyrs
which the Qur'an spoke about in more than one verse. The nature
of these two kinds of life cannot be known except by their
Bestower, the Glorious, the Exalted. He is able to do all things.
His showing the Community's deeds to the Prophet as an honorific
gift for him and his Community is entirely possible rationally
and documented in the reports. There is no leeway for its denial.
And Allah guides to His light whomever He pleases. And Allah
knows best.
We cite more hadiths on tawassul in section c) below.
Al-`Utbi said: "As I was sitting by the grave of the
Prophet, a Beduin Arab came and said: "Peace be upon you, O
Messenger of Allah! I have heard Allah saying: "If they had
only, when they were unjust to themselves, come unto thee and
asked Allah's forgiveness, and the Messenger had asked
forgiveness for them, they would have found Allah indeed
Oft-returning, Most Merciful" (4:64), so I have come to you
asking forgiveness for my sin, seeking your intercession with my
Lord." Then he began to recite poetry:
O best of those whose bones are buried in the deep earth,
And from whose fragrance the depth
and the height have become sweet,
May I be the ransom for a grave which thou inhabit,
And in which are found purity, bounty and munificence!
Then he left, and I dozed and saw the Prophet in my sleep. He
said to me: "O `Utbi, run after the Beduin and give him glad
tidings that Allah has forgiven him.""
A report graded mashhur (established and well-known)
and related by Nawawi, Adhkar, Mecca ed. p. 253-254, al-Majmu`
8:217, and al-Idah fi manasik al-hajj, chapters on
visiting the grave of the Prophet; Ibn Jama`a, Hidayat
al-salik 3:1384; Ibn `Aqil, al-Tadhkira; Ibn Qudama, al-Mughni
3:556-557; al-Qurtubi, Tafsir of 4:64 in Ahkam
al-Qur'an 5:265; Samhudi, Khulasat al-Wafa p. 121
(from Nawawi); Dahlan, Khulasat al-Kalam 2:247; Ibn
Kathir, Tafsir 2:306, and al-Bidayat wa al-nihayat
1:180; Abu al-Faraj ibn Qudama, al-Sharh al-kabir 3:495;
al-Bahuti al-Hanbali, Kashshaf al-qina` 5:30; Taqi al-Din
al-Subki, Shifa' al-siqam p. 52; Ibn al-Jawzi, Muthir
al-gharam al-sakin ila ashraf al-amakin p. 490; al-Bayhaqi, Shu`ab
al-iman #4178; Ibn `Asakir, Mukhtasar tarikh Dimashq
2:408; Ibn Hajar al-Haytami, al-Jawhar al-munazzam
[commentary on Nawawi's Idah]; Ibn al-Najjar, Akhbar
al-Madina p. 147. A similar report is cited through Sufyan
ibn `Uyayna (Shafi`i's shaykh), and through Abu Sa`id al-Sam`ani
on the authority of `Ali.
Al-`Utbi's account of the Arab's tawassul for forgiveness at
the Prophet's grave is famous: It is found in many books on the
subject of ziyara (visiting the Prophet's grave in Madina)
or manasik (rites of pilgrimage) by the many scholars of
the Four Schools, none of whom have rejected it or declared it
weak. See, for example, the translations of Ibn al-Jawzi, Nawawi,
and Ibn Jama`a in the last section of this book. Those of the
contemporary "Salafi" scholars who choose to contest
this report of its established grade of mashhur, do not
measure up to the reliability of a single one of the sources
named above. As for the "Salafis'" recourse to the
isolated opinions of Ibn Taymiyya or Ibn `Abd al-Hadi who have
cast aspersions on the authenticity of the report, in the words
of Ibn Jama`a: no attention is paid to it.
The sources also relate the report of Ibn Abi Fudayk, one of
the early scholars of Madina and one of Shafi`i's shaykhs, who
said: "I heard one of the authorities whom I have met say:
"It has reached us that whoever stands at the Prophet's
grave and recites: "Allah and His angels send blessings on
the Prophet..." (33:56) and then says: "May Allah bless
you, O Muhammad" (sallallahu `alayka ya Muhammad)
seventy times, an angel will call him saying: May Allah bless
you, O So-and-so; none of your needs will be left
unfulfilled."" Ibn Jama`a related it in Hidayat
al-salik 3:1382-1383, Ibn al-Jawzi in Muthir al-gharam
p. 487, Qadi `Iyad in al-Shifa', and Bayhaqi in Shu`ab
al-iman (#4169).
The muhaddith al-Samhudi and others also relate the account of
the Arab who sought the Prophet's means at his grave:
Al-Asma`i said: I saw a beduin stand at the Prophet's grave
and say: "O Allah, here is Your Beloved, and I am Your
servant, and Satan is Your enemy. If You forgive me, Your Beloved
will be happy, Your servant will attain victory, and Your enemy
will be angry. If You do not forgive me, Your Beloved will be
sad, Your enemy will be satisfied, and Your servant will be
destroyed. But You are more noble, O my Lord, than to allow Your
Beloved to be sad, Your enemy to be satisfied, and Your servant
to be destroyed. O Allah, the highborn Arabs, if one of their
leaders die, release one of their slaves over his grave in his
honor, and this is the leader of the worlds: therefore release me
over his grave, O Most Merciful of the Merciful!" al-Asma`i
said: "I said to him: O brother of the Arabs! Allah has
surely forgiven you and released you for the beauty of this
request."
Al-hafiz Ibn al-Jawzi relates in Kitab al-Wafa (p. 818
#1536): (Al-Hafiz) Abu Bakr al-Minqari said: "I was with
(al-Hafiz) al-Tabarani and (al-Hafiz) Abu al-Shaykh in the Mosque
of the Prophet and we were in a predicament. We became very
hungry. That day and the next we didn't eat. When it was time for
`isha, I came to the Prophet's grave and I said: "O
Messenger of Allah, we are hungry, we are hungry!" (ya
rasullallah al-ju` al-ju`) Then I left. Abu al-Shaykh said to
me: "Sit. Either there will be food for us, or death."
I slept and Abu al-Shaykh slept. Al-Tabarani stayed awake,
researching something. Then a `Alawi (descendant of `Ali) came
knocking at the door with two boys, each one carrying a palm-leaf
basket filled with food. We sat up and ate. We thought that the
children would take back the remainder but they left everything
behind. When we finished the `Alawi said: "O people, did you
complain to the Prophet? I saw him in my sleep and he ordered me
to bring something to you.""
Imam Bukhari said that he wrote his biographical book on the
subnarrators of authentic hadith al-Tarikh al-kabir [The
Great History] by the Prophet's graveside, under the light of the
moon. It is related by Ibn al-Jawzi in Sifat al-safwa
(4:147) and al-Subki in Tabaqat al-shafi`iyya al-kubra
(2:216).
Musnad Ahmad,Imam Ahmad's compilation of 30,000 mostly
sound narrations from the Prophet, was held in such high
reverence that it was read in the sixth century by a society of
devout hadith scholars from cover to cover in fifty-six sittings
before the grave of the Prophet in Madina. Where is such devotion
to the Prophet today?
Ibn Hajar said in Sulayman ibn Sunayd ibn Nashwan's
biographical notice in his al-Durar al-kamina that he
performed forty pilgrimages. On the fortieth he was seized by
fatigue and fell asleep by the side of the Noble Grave. Thereupon
he saw the Prophet who told him: "O So-and-so, how many
times have you come, and you have received nothing from me? Give
me your hand." He gave him his hand, and the Prophet wrote
upon it something against fever after which, if ever he suffered
from it, he would be cured by Allah's permission. This invocation
is: "I have sought refuge with a Master who never judges
unjustly nor leads to other than victory: go out, O fever, from
this body, nor does pain of any sort follow this." Ajluni
mentions it in Kashf al-khafa (#1175).
Finally, this is Shaykh al-Islam al-hafiz Taqi al-Din
al-Subki's invocation of tawassul through the Prophet. It is
taken from his Fatwas, Vol. 1 p. 274, at the beginning of the
fatwa entitled "The Descent of Tranquility and Peace on the
Nightlights of Madina" (tanazzul al-sakina `ala qanadil
al-madina).
Transliteration:
al-hamdu lillahi al-ladhi as`adana bi nabiyyihi sall
`alayhi wa sallama sa`adatan la tabid
wa ashhadu an la ilaha illallahu wahdahu la sharika lahu
al-wali al-hamid
wa ashhadu anna muhammadan `abduhu wa rasuluhu al-hadi ila
kulli amrin rashid
sallallahu `alayhi wa `ala alihi salatan taliqu bi jalalihi
la tazalu ta`lu wa tazid
wa sallama tasliman kathiran ila yawm al-mazid
wa ba`d fa inna Allaha ya`lamu anna kulla khayrin ana fihi
wa manna `alayya bihi fa huwa bi sababi al-nabi sallallahu
`alayhi wa sallam wa iltija'i ilayh
wa i`timadi fi tawassuli ila Allahi fi kulli umuri `alayh
fa huwa wasilati ila Allahi fi al-dunya wa al-akhira
wa kam lahu `alayya min ni`amin batinatin wa zahira.
Translation:
To Allah belongs all praise, Who has blessed us with his
Prophet,
blessings and peace be upon him, with an endless felicity.
I bear witness that there is no deity except Allah alone
without
partner, the protecting Friend, the Glorious.
I bear witness that Muhammad is His servant and messenger, the
guide to every upright matter.
May Allah send blessings and peace upon him in a manner
befitting
His majesty, with a blessing rising ever higher and increasing
And a superabundant greeting of peace until the Day of the
increase (Day of judgment).
To proceed: Verily Allah knows that every goodness in my life
which He has bestowed upon me is on account of the Prophet
and that my recourse is to him
And my reliance is upon him in seeking a means to Allah in
every matter of mine.
Verily he is my means to Allah in this world and the next.
And the gifts of Allah I owe to him are too many to count,
both the hidden and the visible.
This is the language of Ahl al-Sunna. Those whose hearts are
clean of the "Salafi" heresy embrace this language and
accept it. Those in whose hearts there is a disease find fault
with it. And praise belongs to Allah, the Lord of the worlds.
Following is a short description of Subki's stature as an Imam
in Islam, based on Nuh Keller's biographical notice in the Reliance
of the Traveller:
Abu al-Hasan Taqi al-Din al-Subki (683-756 / 1284-1355) is the
son and father of illustrious scholars and jurists all of the
Shafi`i school. He was a hadith master (hafiz), Koranic exegete,
and Islamic judge who was described by Ibn Hajar Haythami as
"the mujtahid Imam whose imamate, greatness, and having
reached the level of ijtihad (competence for independent legal
reasoning) are agreed upon," by Dhahabi as "the most
learned, eloquent, and wise in judgment of all the shaykhs of the
age," and by Sakhawi as "one of those who are named
Shaykh al-Islam" along with his son Taj al-Din. Suyuti says
of him: "He authored more than 150 works, his writings
displaying his profound knowledge of hadith and other fields and
his magisterial command of the Islamic sciences. He educated the
foremost scholars of the time, was a painstaking, accurate, and
penetrating researcher, and a brilliant debater in the
disciplines. No previous scholar attained to his achievements in
Sacred Law, of masterful inferences, subtleties in detail, and
carefully worked-out methodological principles." Salah
al-Din Safadi said of him: "People say that no one like him
has appeared since Ghazali, though in my opinion they do him an
injustice thereby, for to my mind he does not resemble anyone
less than Sufyan al-Thawri." With his vast erudition, he was
at the same time a godfearing ascetic in his personal life who
was devoted to worship and tasawwuf, though vigilant and
uncompromising in matters of religion and ready to assail any
innovation or departure from the tenets of the faith of Ahl
al-Sunna.

The evidence for tawassul through the awliya' or saints
is also abundant, and it suffices that Allah strictly warns all
believers to keep company with them when He says: "O
believers! Be wary of Allah, and keep company with the
truthful!" (9:119) and He enjoins the followership of those
who have turned to Him in true and complete repentence (31:15).
The Prophet said to al-Firasi, concerning asking from people:
"If you absolutely must ask from people, then ask from the
righteous ones" (in kunta la budda sa'ilan fas'al
al-salihin). There is no doubt that the visit of pious
persons is a Sunna in Islam for that very purpose, as shown by
the chapters to that effect entitled Bab ziyarat al-salihin
in the books of etiquette and invocations.
Some people think that if a duaa from a
holy man is answered while he is alive then he cannot help you
if he is dead. As if the
holy man or sheihk or saint is the origin of the help. But it
is always Allah who is the
source of the baraka and never a human being. So to think that
Allah can only give when
that saint is alive and when he is dead, Allah does not give
anymore, Is to say that the
source *is* the person and not Allah in the first place! But
in reality it is Allah who is
giving help in both cases: life or death.
As for the objections of some "Salafis" today that
it is not permissible to seek the blessings of saints after their
death, they are based on the false belief that Allah's influence
through the saints is in need for the saints' biological life to
be effective, and this is absurd! As we said before, Allah's gift
to the saints is independent from their being alive or dead,
since in either case the real power always belongs to Allah, and
the saints are only a secondary cause with no effective power in
itself. Moreover, the views of the early and late Imams and
scholars quoted below concerning the permissibility of tawassul
through the pious, also confirm that the objections of
"Salafis" to tawassul through the saints after their
passing from this life do not stand up to scrutiny.
It is obligatory for Muslims to believe that the abdal
or Substitute-saints exist -- so called because, as the Prophet
said, "None of them dies except Allah substitutes another in
his place" -- and that they are among the religious leaders
of the Community concerning whom there is no doubt among Muslims.
No less than Ibn Taymiyya writes at the end of his `Aqida
wasitiyya:
The true adherents of Islam in its pristine purity are Ahl
al-Sunnat wal-Jama`a. In their ranks the truthful saints (siddiqin),
the martyrs, and the righteous are to be found. Among them are
the great men of guidance and illumination, of recorded integrity
and celebrated virtue. The Substitutes (abdal) and the
Imams of religion are to be found among them and the Muslims are
in full accord concerning tguidance. These are the Victorious
Group about whom the Prophet said: "A group within my
Community manifestly continues to be in the truth. Neither those
who oppose them nor those who abandon them can do them harm, from
now on until the Day of Resurrection."
The Prophet emphasized in many authentic narrations the
benefit brought to all creation through the intercession of
Allah's saints and their standing with Him. Suyuti in his fatwa
on the abdal in his Hawi li al-fatawi provided many
examples of this type of universal intercession from which we
quote the following:
- Imam Ahmad ibn Hanbal says in his Musnad (1:112):
...
The people of Syria were mentioned in front of `Ali ibn
Abi Talib while he was in Iraq, and they said:
"Curse them, O Commander of the Believers." He
replied: "No, I heard the Messenger of Allah say:
"The Substitutes (al-abdal) are in Syria and
they are forty men, every time one of them dies, Allah
substitutes another in his place. By means of them Allah
brings down the rain, gives (Muslims) victory over their
enemies, and averts punishment from the people of
Syria.""
al-Haythami said: "The men in its chains are all
those of the sahih except for Sharih ibn `Ubayd, and he
is trustworthy (thiqa)."
- al-Hakim narrated the following which he graded sound (sahih),
and al-Dhahabi confirmed him:
`Ali said: "Do not
curse the people of Syria, for among them are the
Substitutes (al-abdal), but curse their
injustice."
Note that any religious knowledge unattainable through
ijtihad and authentically conveyed from one of the
Companions is considered a hadith by the experts of that
science.
- Tabarani said in his Mu`jam al-awsat:
Anas
said: The Prophet said: "The earth will never lack
forty men similar to the Friend of the Merciful [Prophet
Ibrahim], and through them people [Muslims] receive rain
and are given victory (over their enemies). None of them
dies except Allah substitutes another in his place."
Qatada said: "We do not doubt that al-Hasan
[al-Basri] is one of them."
Ibn Hibban narrates it in al-Tarikh through Abu
Hurayra as: "The earth will never lack forty men
similar to Ibrahim the Friend of the Merciful, and
through you (Muslims) are helped, receive your
sustenance, and receive rain."
- Imam Ahmad also narrated in the Musnad (5:322):
The
Prophet said: "The Substitutes in this Community are
thirty like Ibrahim the Friend of the Merciful. Every
time one of them dies, Allah substitutes another one in
his place."
Hakim Tirmidhi cites it in Nawadir al-usul and
Ahmad's student al-Khallal in his Karamat al-awliya'.
Haythami said its men are those of the sahih except `Abd
al-Wahid, who was declared trustworthy by al-`Ijli and
Abu Zar`a [as well as Yahya ibn Ma`in].
- Abu Dawud through three different good chains in his Sunan
(English #4273), Imam Ahmad in his Musnad (6:316),
Ibn Abi Shayba in his Musannaf, Abu Ya`la,
al-Hakim, and Bayhaqi narrated:
Umm Salama the wife of
the Prophet said: "Disagreement will occur at the
death of a Caliph and a man of the people of Madina will
come forth flying to Mecca. Some of the people of Mecca
will come to him, bring him out against his will and
swear allegiance to him between the Corner and the Maqam.
An expeditionary force will then be sent against him from
Syria but will be swallowed up in the desert between
Mecca and Madina, and when the people see that, the
Substitutes (abdal) of Syria and the best people (`asaba)
of Iraq will come to him and swear allegiance to
him..."
- Imam Ahmad cited in Kitab al-zuhd, also Ibn Abi
al-Dunya, Abu Nu`aym, Bayhaqi, and Ibn `Asakir narrated
from Julays:
Wahb ibn Munabbih said: I saw the Prophet
in my sleep, so I said: "Ya Rasulallah, where are
the Substitutes (budala') of your Community?"
So he gestured with his hand towards Syria. I said:
"Ya Rasulallah, aren't there any in Iraq?" He
said: "Yes, Muhammad ibn Wasi`, Hassan ibn Abi
Sinan, and Malik ibn Dinar, who walks among the people
similarly to Abu Dharr in his time."
Imam Ibn Hajar al-Haytami said in his book al-Khayrat
al-hisan fi manaqib al-imam Abi Hanifa al-Na`man, chapter 35:
When Imam al-Shafi`i was in Baghdad, he would visit the grave
of Imam Abu Hanifa, give him salam, and then ask Allah for the
fulfillment of his need through his means (yatawassal ilallah
ta`ala bihi fi qada' hajatihi).
Imam Kawthari mentioned in his Maqalat (p. 412) that
the hafiz al-Khatib al-Baghdadi mentions Shafi`i's tawassul
through Abu Hanifa in the beginning of his Tarikh Baghdad
with a sound chain.
Haytami also said in many places in his book al-Sawa`iq
al-muhriqa li ahl al-dalal wa al-zandaqa: "Imam Shafi`i
made tawassul through the Family of the Prophet [Ahl al-bayt]
when he said:
Al al-nabi dhari`ati wa hum ilayhi wasilati
arju bihim u`ta ghadan bi yadi al-yamini sahifati
The Family of the Prophet are my means and my
intermediary to him. Through them I hope to be
given my record with the right hand tomorrow.
al-Khatib relates that al-hafiz Abu Nu`aym said: considered it
incumbent upon all Muslims to invoke Allah for Abu Hanifa in
their prayer due to his preservation of the Prophet's Sunan
and fiqh for them. This is explained by the fact that
among Abu Hanifa's merits that are exclusive to him is his
standing as the first in Islam to have compiled a book of fiqh.
Al-Hafiz Abu `Ali al-Ghassani relates in Ibn al-Subki's Tabaqat
al-Shafi`iyya 2:234: Abu al-Fath Nasr ibn al-Hasan al-Sakani
al-Samarqandi came to us in 464 and said: "We had a drought
in Samarqand some years ago. The people made the istisqa' prayer
but they did not get rain. A saintly man named al-Salah came to
the judge and said to him: "I have an opinion I would like
to show you. My opinion is that you come out followed by the
people and that you all go to the grave of Imam Muhammad ibn
Isma`il al-Bukhari and make istisqa' (prayer for rain)
there. Perhaps Allah will give us rain." The judge said:
"What a good opinion you have." He came out and the
people followed him, and he prayed for rain in front of them at
the grave while people wept and sought the intercession of the
one that was in it. Allah sent such heavy rain that those who
were in Khartenk (where this took place, 3 miles away from
Samarqand) could not reach Samarqand for seven days because of
the rain's abundance."
The late mufti of Lebanon al-Shahid al-Shaykh Hasan Khalid
said in his fatwa on tawassul on September 16, 1980 (Reprinted in
the Waqf Ikhlas offset reprint of Sayyid Ahmad ibn Zayni Dahlan's
book Fitnat al-wahhabiyya 1992):
Tawassul was declared permissible in our own time by the Mufti
of the world, our Shaykh the savant Abu al-Yusr `Abidin. We went
with him to Nawa, a place in Hawran wherein is buried the Shaykh
Muhyiddin al-Nawawi. When we arrived at his grave, our Shaykh Abu
al-Yusr ordered us to ask Allah the Exalted for our need in front
of him and said to us: "The du`a (invocation) at his grave
is answered."
Ibn al-Jawzi in his biographies of the awliya entitled Sifat
al-safwa lists many of those at whose graves tabarruk
(seeking blessing) and tawassul is recommended. Among them:
Abu Ayyub al-Ansari: "al-Waqidi said: It has reached us
that the Eastern Romans visit his grave and seek rain through his
intercession when they suffer from droughts." 1:243. Mujahid
said: "People would uncover the space above his grave and it
would rain."
Ma`ruf al-Karkhi (d. 200H): "His grave can be seen in
Baghdad, and one seeks blessings with it. Al-hafiz Ibrahim
al-Harbi (d. 285H) -- Imam Ahmad's companion -- used to say:
"Ma`ruf's grave is proven medicine."" 2:214 Ibn
al-Jawzi adds: "We ourselves go to Ibrahim al-Harbi's grave
and seek blessings with it." 2:410
Al-Hafiz al-Dhahabi also relates Ibrahim al-Harbi's saying
about Ma`ruf al-Karkhi: "Ma`ruf's grave is proven
medicine." Siyar a`lam al-nubala' 9:343.
Abu al-Hasan al-Daraqutni said: "We used to seek
blessings from Abu al-Fath al-Qawasi's grave." 2:471.
Abu al-Qasim al-Wa`iz: "His grave can be sin Ahmad ibn
Hanbal's cemetary and it is sought for blessings." [Notice
on `Abd al-Samad ibn `Umar ibn Muhammad ibn Ishaq] 2:482.
Al-Hafiz Abu al-Qasim Ibn `Asakir says in Musnad Abi `Uwana
(1:430): "Abu `Abd Allah Muhammad ibn Muhammad ibn `Umar
al-Saffar said to me that the grave of Abu `Uwana in Isfarayin
[near Naysabur] is a Place of visitation for the whole world (mazar
al-`alam) and a Place for obtaining blessing for the entire
creation (mutabarrak al-khalq)."
Al-hafiz Diya' al-Din al-Maqdisi al-Hanbali said in his book al-Hikayat
al-manthura (Zahiriyya ms. 98, an autograph) that he heard
the hafiz `Abd al-Ghani al-Maqdisi al-Hanbali say that something
like an abcess appeared on his upper arm for which there was
found no medicine. He came to Ahmad ibn Hanbal's grave and
applied his arm against it, after which he found himself healed.
Imam Kawthari said that he read this account in Diya' al-Din's
own handwriting: Maqalat al-Kawthari (Riyadh and Beirut:
Dar al-ahnaf, 1414/1993) p. 407, 412.

There is no contradiction in asking Allah both with or without
an intermediary, although in reality there are always several
kinds of intermediary present, beginning with one's own state,
obedience, belief, acts, sincerity, etc. Only those with
deficient knowledge or imperfect belief imagine that the person
who asks Allah through an intermediary has associated another to
his worship of Allah. The Prophet explained this to the
Companions once and for all when he said to Abu Bakr al-Siddiq:
"Help is not sought with me [i.e. in reality], help is
sought with Allah." He did not say to Abu Bakr: Asking me is
forbidden and constitutes association to Allah, but he explained
to him that by the Prophet is but the most effective intermediary
to asking Allah.
The meaning of the hadith is elucidated by the Qur'anic
verses: "You did not throw when you threw, but Allah
threw" (8:17) and: "Those who swear allegiance unto
thee swear allegiance only unto Allah" (48:10). Further, the
Prophet said, "I did not bear you but Allah bore you."
Thus the meaning of the hadith "Help is not sought with
me" is:
(Even if I am the one ostensibly being asked
for help,) I am not the one being asked for help,
in reality Allah Himself is being asked.
The hadith "Help is not sought with me" must
therefore be interpreted in the light of the fact that asking for
help applies to whoever the help comes from including in respect
to causation and acquisition [i.e. secondary causes]; this is
what the Arabic means and the Shari`a permits. This meaning is
supported by the hadith in Bukhari (Kitab al-Tawhid) touching on
intercession on the Day of Resurrection, in which people sought
help from Adam, then Musa, then Muhammad, on him be Allah's
blessings and peace, and the latter replies: "I can do
it."
It is essential to understand that it is not, in reality, the
Prophet who is the ultimate object of supplication, nor is he the
one who grants it, but he is the best means of forwarding it to
Allah and for its being granted by Allah. This is clear in the
Prophet's prayer to Allah, in his words, "through Your
Prophet and the Prophets before me" and "through those
who ask" in the following two hadiths:
On the authority of Abu Sa`id al-Khudri, may Allah be pleased
with him: He relates that the Messenger of Allah said: "The
one who leaves his house for prayer and then says: "O Allah,
I ask you by the right of those who ask you and I beseech you by
the right of those who walk this path unto you that my going
forth bespeak not of levity, pride nor vainglory nor done for the
sake of repute. I have gone forth in the warding off your anger
and for the seeking of your pleasure. I ask you, therefore, to
grant me refuge from hell fire and to forgive me my sins. For no
one forgive sins but yourself." Allah will accept for his
sake and seventy thousand angels will seek his forgiveness."
It is related in Musnad Ahmad 3:21, Ibn Majah
(Masajid), al-Mundhiri in al-Targhib 1:179, Ibn Khuzayma
in his Sahih, Ibn al-Sani, and Abu Nu`aym. Ghazali
mentions it in the Ihya and `Iraqi said: "It is hasan."
Nawawi mentions only Ibn al-Sani's two chains in the Adhkar
and says they are da`if (weak). However, Ibn Hajar
al-`Asqalani says it is hasan in al-Amali al-masriyya
(#54) and also in the Takhrij of Nawawi's book, explaining
that the latter neglected Abu Sa`eed al-Khudri's narration and
omitted to mention Ibn Majah's. See Imam Kawthari's remarks on
this hadith below.
The Prophet also said on the authority of Anas ibn Malik:
"O Allah, grant forgiveness to my mother, Fatima Bint Asad,
and make vast for her the place of her going in [i.e. her grave]
by right of thy Prophet and that of those prophets who came
before me" and so on until the end of the hadith.
Tabarani relates it in al-Kabir and al-Awsat.
Ibn Hibban and al-Hakim declare it sound. The "Fatima"
referred to here is the mother of Sayyidina `Ali who raised the
Prophet. Ibn Abi Shayba on the authority of Jabir relates a
similar narrative. Similar also is what Ibn `Abd Al-Barr on the
authority of Ibn `Abbas and Abu Nu`aym in his Hilya on the
authority of Anas Ibn Malik relate, as al-Hafiz al-Suyuti
mentioned in the Jami` al-Kabir. Haythami says in Majma`
al-zawa'id: "Tabarani's chain contains Rawh ibn Salah
who has some weakness but Ibn Hibban and al-Hakim declared him
trustworthy. The rest of its sub-narrators are the men of sound
hadith." Imam al-Kawthari says about this hadith in his Maqalat
(p. 410): "It provides textual evidence whereby there is no
difference between the living and the dead in the context of
tawassul, and this is explicit tawassul through the Prophets,
while the hadith of Abu Sa`id al-Khudri, "O Allah, I ask You
by the right of those who ask You" constitutes tawassul
through the generality of Muslims, both the living and the
dead."
The Prophet used to say after the two rak`at of the Dawn
prayer: "O Allah, Lord of Jibril, of Israfil, of Mika'il,
and Lord of Muhammad the Prophet: I seek refuge in You from the
Fire..."
Nawawi mentions in the Adhkar that it was narrated by
Ibn al-Sani, and Ibn Hajar graded it hasan or fair as
mentioned by Ibn `Allab in his Commentary on the Adhkar
(Vol. 2 p. 139). Shaykh Muhammad ibn `Alawi al-Maliki said:
"The specific mention of the above in his du`a is understood
as tawassul, as if he were saying: "O Allah, I ask You and I
seek as means to You Jibril, Israfil, Mika'il, and Muhammad the
Prophet. Ibn `Allan referred to this in his commentary."

The following legal opinion on tawassul was given by Shaykh
Salih al-Na`man, the Secretary of the Section of Ifta' and
Religious Education at the Ministry of Religious Endowments (wizarat
al-awqaf) of the Syrian Arab Republic in the city of Hama,
Syria on March 22, 1980. It is reproduced in full in the 1992
Waqf Ikhlas reprint of Sayyid Ahmad Zayni Dahlan's section of his
history of Islam al-Futuhat al-islamiyya on the Wahhabi
sect entitled Fitnat al-wahhabiyya.
Text of the fatwa:
"Praise belongs to Allah the Lord of the Worlds.
Blessings and Peace on our Master Muhammad and on his Family and
all his Companions.
"From the slave who is poor and in need of Him, the
Secretary of Legal Opinions in the city of Hama (Syria) and the
Preacher in the Madfan Mosque, to the brother who asked a
question, Sayyid `Ashiq al-Rahman in Wilayatullah Abad in India:
Warm greetings and blessings. To proceed: You have asked a
question on a legal issue, and this answer is given after some
delay because I was away in the Hijaz.
"You asked about al-tawassul ilallah ta`ala bi
al-anbiya' wa al-mursalin -- seeking/using means to Allah the
Exalted with/through/by means of the Prophets and the Messengers
-- and about hukmu man tawassal the law's position with
regard to the person who makes tawassul. This is the answer:
"Praise belongs to Allah the Exalted! Seeking or using
means (al-tawassul) to Allah through his Prophet or the
Prophets or the Righteous (al-salihin) or with the deeds (a`mal)
that are done purely for His glorious countenance: There is no
legal prohibition against it, because Allah the Exalted said:
"Seek ye the means to Him" and "Had they but come
to thee when they had wronged themselves, and asked Allah
forgiveness, and the Messenger had asked forgiveness for them,
they would have found Allah Oft-Returning, Merciful," and
because the Companions -- may Allah be well pleased with them --
used to seek a means through Allah's Messenger, as narrated
concerning the blind man who used Allah's Messenger as a means
(to obtain his request) and his eyes were opened.
"The Community has reached consensus on the fact that
tawassul is permissible as long as one's belief is sound (idha
sahhat al-`aqida), and the consensus of the Community
constitutes a legal proof (ijma` al-umma hujjatun shar`iyya);
as the Prophet said: "My Community shall not agree on an
error." As for the claim of some extremists (ghulat)
of the Wahhabiyya whereby the law's position with regard to the
person who makes tawassul is that it is shirk (worshipping
other than Allah together with Him): there is no proof for such a
claim either legally or rationally, because the person who makes
tawassul does not contravene the Prophet's order: "If you
ask, ask Allah, and if you seek help, seek help from Allah."
Rather, he is asking Him through one beloved to Him in order that
his supplication be answered, and this is what our Glorious and
Majestic Lord likes from us. How then can we judge that he is
committing shirk when he is not a mushrik (one who
commits shirk). Such an act the law considers abominable
and our religion declares itself innocent of it, since it has
been said: "Whoever declares a believer to be an disbeliever
has committed disbelief."
"Our master Usama ibn Zayd killed a mushrik after the
latter had said: "There is no god but Allah" (la
ilaha illallah). When news of this reached Allah's Messenger
he condemned our master Usama in the strongest terms and he said
to him: "How can you kill him after he said la ilaha
illallah?" He replied: "But he said it with the
sword hanging over his head?" The Prophet said again:
"How can you kill him after he said la ilaha illallah?"
He replied: "O Messenger of Allah, he said it in
dissimulation (taqiyyatan)?" The Prophet said:
"Did you split his heart open (to
see)?" and he did not cease to reprove him until Usama
wished that he had not entered Islam until after he had killed
that man so that he might have been forgiven all his past sins
through belief.
"From this and other narrations we conclude that some of
the Wahhabis today may be guilty of hastening to accuse others of
disbelief (takfir), as they have done in the past with
hundreds of thousands in the Hijaz whom they massacred even as
they were saying la ilaha illallah, and as the Kharijis
have done in the time of our Master `Ali -- may Allah ennoble his
countenance.
"In short, tawassul is not prohibited, rather it is
legally commendable (mustahsanu shar`an), and it is not
permitted to cast the label of shirk on the believer. This
is what will be found in the
established books of Islamic law. And Allah knows best."
6 Jumada I 1400
22 March 1980
Signature of the Secretary of Fatwas in Hama
Seal of the Ministry of Religious Endowments
District of the Muhafazat of Hama, Syria

The following fatwa on tawassul was given by Shaykh Abu
Sulayman Suhayl al-Zabibi the Imam of the Mosque of Najjarin in
Damascus. It is reproduced in full in the 1992 Waqf Ikhlas
reprint of Sayyid Ahmad Zayni Dahlan's section of his history of
Islam already cited.
Text of fatwa:
"In the Name of Allah the Merciful the Beneficent, and
Blessings and Peace upon our Master Muhammad and upon his
Excellent and Pure Family and all those who follow them with
excellence until the Day of judgment.
"To proceed, you have sent us a letter in which you ask
the fatwa concerning belief in tawassul through the Prophets and
Messengers, Blessings and Salutations be upon them, and the text
of your question is: Is the person who believes in this
(tawassul) a mushrik (one who worships other than Allah
together with Him) or a kafir (disbeliever), and is his
worship -- such as salat, zakat, hajj, and sawm --
sound or void (sahiha am fasida)? And you have asked for
an exposition from the Glorious Book because it is the first
source of legislation, and from the True Sunna because it holds
the second rank in the derivation of proofs after the Noble
Qur'an, and from the Consensus (ijma`) and the sayings of
the pious early generations, may Allah be well pleased with them,
because they are closer than us to the full understanding of
Allah's Book and the Sunna of His Messenger.
"This is the answer which I give while asking Allah's
help and His power and might:
Belief (i`tiqad) in tawassul through the Prophets and
Messengers, Blessings and Peace be upon them, and through the
Righteous Friends of Allah (al-awliya' al-salihin) upon
whose goodness, righteousness, uprightness, and friendship with
Allah there is general agreement, is true belief, not disbelief,
and I consider it permissible, not forbidden; and
The person seeking such as the above as a means to Allah in
order that his need be fulfilled is a believer and one who
declares the oneness of Allah, not one who worships other than
Allah together with Him, and all his acts of worship are sound.
"Among the proofs for this from Qur'an: Allah the Blessed
and the Exalted said: "O ye who believe, fear Allah and seek
ye the means to Him" in sura al-ma'ida verse 34 juz' 4. Some
of the scholars of Islam have derived from this verse a proof for
the legality of seeking help and a means to Allah through the
righteous ones among His servants, and of considering them a
means between Allah the Almighty and His servants for the
fulfillment of needs provided that the person making tawassul
believes that the effective doer (al-fa``al) is Allah and
none other. If one thinks otherwise, he has committed disbelief,
may Allah the Exalted protect us!
"Also among the proofs from Qur'an for tawassul is the
saying of Allah the the Blessed and the Exalted: "Had they
but come to thee when they had wronged themselves, and asked
Allah forgiveness, and the Messenger had asked forgiveness for
them, they would have found Allah Oft-Returning, Merciful"
from sura al-Nisa' verse 63 juz' 5. Ibn Kathir said in
explanation of this verse: "Allah the Exalted advises those
who disobey and those who sin, when they commit their mistakes
and disobedience, to come to Allah's Messenger and seek Allah's
forgiveness in his presence and ask him (the Prophet) to forgive
them. If they do this, Allah relents towards them, grants them
mercy, and forgives them. And this is why He said: "They
would have found Allah Oft-Returning, Merciful."
"Ibn Kathir continues: "A large number of the
scholars, among whom is Shaykh Abu Mansur al-Sabbagh in his book al-Shamil,
have mentioned the well-known account related by al-`Utbi who
said: "As I was sitting by the grave of the Prophet, a
Beduin Arab came and said: "Peace be upon you, O Messenger
of Allah! I heard that Allah said: "If they had only, when
they were unjust to themselves, come unto thee and asked Allah's
forgiveness, and the Messenger had asked forgiveness for them,
they would have found Allah indeed Oft-returning, Most
Merciful," so I have come to you asking forgiveness for my
sin, seeking your intercession with my Lord (mustashfi`an bika
ila rabbi)." Then he began to recite poetry:
O best of those whose bones are buried in the deep earth,
And from whose fragrance the depth and the height have become
sweet,
May my life be the ransom for a grave which thou inhabit,
And in which are found purity and bounty and munificence!
"Then he left, and I dozed and saw the Prophet in my
sleep. He said to me: O `Utbi, run after the Beduin and give him
glad tidings that Allah has forgiven him."" This is the
end of Ibn Kathir's discourse."
"Here now is the proof from the noble hadith. The
following hadith was extracted by the fmasters of hadith among
the imams: Ibn Khuzayma in his Sahih (whose rank
approximates that of Sahih Muslim), al-Nasa'i in his book `Amal
al-yawm wa al-layla, al-Tirmidhi in his Jami`
and he said of it:
hasan sahih gharib, that is, with respect to the fact
that only Abu Ja`far `Umayr ibn Yazid al-Khutami al-Madani thumma
al-Basri narrates it, and he is thiqa (trustworthy)
according to Nasa'i and Ibn Ma`in, therefore the fact that it is
gharib does not jeopardize its rank of sahih. Ibn Majah also
narrated it and confirmed Abu Ishaq [Ibn Rahawayh] who declared
it sahih, and so did al-Hakim in his Mustadrak who
said: "It is sound according to the criterion of Bukhari and
Muslim," and Dhahabi confirmed him.
"From `Uthman ibn Hunayf: He was with the Prophet at the
time a blind man came to him complaining of his lack of
eyesight... [Hadith of the blind man follows.] This is a sound
hadith in which the Prophet explicitly orders those who have a
certain need to make tawassul and call him in his absence -- both
in his life and after his death. This is precisely what the
Companions understood from him, as his order to any given person
in the Community is directed to all the Community in every time
as long as there is no proof that it is specific to an
individual. What then if there is proof to the contrary -- i.e.
that it is not specific to an individual? For Tabarani related in
his Mu`jam al-kabir and Mu`jam al-saghir that a man
in need used to try to visit `Uthman ibn `Affan frequently...
[Hadith of the man in need follows.] Tabarani said the hadith was
sound and Bayhaqi narrated it in Dala'il al-nubuwwa with a
good chain."
Abu Sulayman Suhayl al-Zabibi
Imam of Masjid al-Najjarin
(Damascus, Syria)

Fatwa of Mustafa
ibn Ahmad al-Hasan al-Shatti al-Hanbali al-Athari al-Dimashqi
(1856-1929 C.E)
From the 1994 Waqf Ikhlas offset reprint of Shatti's al-Nuqul
al-shar`iyya fi al-radd `ala al-wahhabiyya (The Legal
Proof-Texts Concerning the Reply to the Wahhabi Sect)
Allah said:
1. Fa istaghathahu al-ladhi min shi`atihi (28:15)
"The man of
his [Moses'] own people appealed to him [P: asked him for
help] against his foe."
2. Wa law annahum idh zalamu anfusahum ja'uka fa
istaghfarullah... (4:64) "If they had only, when they
were unjust to themselves, come unto thee [Muhammad] and asked
Allah's forgiveness, and the Messenger had asked forgiveness for
them [P:
and asked forgiveness of the messenger], they would have found
Allah indeed Oft-returning, Most Merciful."
If a Wahhabi says: "This is specific to him (the Prophet)
being alive," we say: There is unanimity and the clearest
evidences about the Prophet being alive in his honored grave.
The rule of this noble verse is applicable now and any time
Allah will. This is why you see that all scholars recommend
reading this verse when visiting his honored grave. This fact
cannot be hidden from anybody who studied the sayings of the
scholars in this respect. There is no need to detail it again.
Anyone who claims a contrary interpretation has to bring evidence
to that effect. And how will he get such evidence when many other
verses teach the believers to seek shelter with the Prophet?
Among such verses are: al-nabiyyu awla bil mu'minina min
anfusihim (33:6) "The Prophet is closer to the believers
than their own selves, and his wives are (as) their
mothers," and wa ma arsalnaka illa rahmatan lil `alamin
"We did not send you except as a Mercy to the worlds. This
is exactly what was understood by the father of humanity, Adam,
from the juxtaposition of the name of the Prophet to Almighty
Allah's name. Adam understood that the Prophet is the
intermediary and the means to Him. So he sought intercession
through him to his Lord in order to be forgiven. And he was
forgiven as has been established.
As for the verses and ahadith which have been put forward by
the Wahhabis such as the following: ud`uni astajib lakum
(40:60) "Call on [P: pray unto] me; I will answer [P: hear]
your prayer"; fa firru ila Allah (51:50)
"Therefore flee unto Allah"; wa in yamsask Allahu bi
durrin fa la kashifa lahu illa hu (6:17, 10:107) "If
Allah touch thee with affliction, none can remove it [P: relieve
therefrom] but He", "If Allah do touch thee with hurt,
there is none can remove it but He"; wa nahnu aqrabu
ilayhi min habl al-warid (50:16) "For We are nearer to
him than his jugular vein"; Hadith: idha ista`anta fa
ista`in billah "If you ask for help, then ask help from
Allah" etc.: These verses do not support the Wahhabis' claim
that it is prohibited to use the means of prophets and the pious.
This is very clear. Those who agree among Muslims about the
permissibility and recommendability of seeking the prophets and
pious ones as means never meant to suppose any effective power as
originating in them. They never believed such a belief at all!
Rather, all Muslims believe that Allah Almighty is the doer of
His own free deliberation, and He alone is the giver and taker of
existence, of benefit, and harm. This is one of the basic beliefs
in Islam. The scholars never considered seeking the means of
prophets and the pious ones as consisting in mimman ittakhadha
min dunillahi andadan or "taking equals other than
Allah" as the Wahhabis have claimed.
And how dare they use for evidence to support their school of
thought verses like: wa la ya'murukum an tattakhidhu
al-mala'ikata wal-nabiyyina arbaban (3:80) "[P:] And He
commanded you not that ye should take the angels and the Prophets
for lords" and the like! This is a clear manipulation of
the meaning of the verse and a use of something out of its proper
place. For if you mention the specious argument of those who
forbid using an intermediary, namely that they see the common
people often requesting from the pious ones, whether living or
dead, what should properly be requested only from Allah Almighty:
and that is open to question in our opinion and not a proven fact
as Ibn Taymiyya overtly mispresents it with in many of his books
and treatises. For he discusses something to that effect in
relation to the hadith of the blind man when he begins with the
words: "Concerning this [tawassul] there is the hadith of
the blind man..." This is a summation of his opposition to
the issue at hand: "And they find that the common people say
to the saint (wali): "Do such-and-such for me,"
and these words that they use suggest an influence on their part
which properly belongs only to Allah Almighty."
I answer: These confusing expressions must be interpreted
figuratively, and the proof for its having to be taken
figuratively is that they originate in the mouth of a pure
monotheist (muwahhid). Therefore, if the common person is
asked of the soundness of his belief in what he is saying, he
will answer that Allah alone is the Most Effective Doer (al-fa`al)
without partner; and that he asks of those great ones who are
honored by Allah and brought near Him because they mean by that
to use them as their intermediaries to reach their goal which is
Allah Almighty. The reason that they have recourse to the pious
ones is that the latter have been placed high by Allah Himself
and He is the One who holds them in such consideration and they
obtain what they desire from Him, as He Himself has said.
We concede that it is good to recommend to the common people
that they observe the path of good manners towards Allah Almighty
in masking their requests; indeed it is a part of ordering the
good and forbidding the reprehensible. However, it is not correct
for us to forbid them from seeking means and using help in
absolute terms. How can that be done when Allah Almighty said:
"The man of his [Moses'] own people appealed to him against
his foe" (28:15)?

Repudation
of those who compare asking intercession to the Christian
worship of Jesus and the saints, and of those who limit the
quantity of permissible Salawat on the Prophet in any way or form
As for the heinous comparison, from near or far, of Muslims
making tawassul through the Prophet to the Christian worship of
Jesus, or Muslims making tawassul through awliya to the Christian
worship of saints, we ask Allah to reform those who make such
comparand stray so widely from the right path in their views as
to forget, by ignorance or design, that Muslims are strict
monotheists who worship Allah alone and use the blessings of
particular acts, times, places, and persons to benefit them, not
as objects of worship. If you persist in not seeing the
difference between taking one as an object of worship on the one
hand, and using one as a means to obtain blessings on the other,
we ask Allah from protection from such misguidance, for
persistance in making analogies between the doctrines of Muslims
and Christians in disregard of their fundamental disparity is a
characteristic of the enemies of Islam.
One deviant sect in particular among these enemies of tawassul
are the bukhala' or misers who wish to curtail sending
"too much blessings and peace" on the Prophet on the
pretense that it would foster worship of the Prophet. They claim
-- and what a detestable claim -- that "Praising him too
much would be like ascribing a partner to Allah." Subhan
Allah! The Prophet explicitly declared their status in the hadith
when he said: "The miser (bakhil) is he before whom
my name is mentioned and he does not invoke blessings ane peace
upon me."
Allah said:
"Verily, Allah and His angels send blessings on the
Prophet. O believers! Invoke blessings upon him, and utmost
greetings." (33:56)
The bukhala' have declared their opposition to Allah
Himself, since Allah Himself is sending his salat on the
Prophet. If Allah does something, can anyone compete with Him in
that? If not, and if He gives the order nevertheless to do the
same, then how can that that same thing ever be "too
much"? Even one salat of Allah on His Prophet is more
than all the salawat jinn and mankind can ever make, even
if they made it forever. For that reason, our salat on the
Prophet can never be enough, nor does it consist of anything at
all on our part, but is only our asking more salat from
Allah on him: Allahuma salli `ala Muhammad, i.e.
"O Allah, we beg You to send Your salat on Your
Prophet."
It is beyond us how anyone can dare say that there is too much
praise for the Prophet when his very name is the Praised One. The
scholars have even said that Allah has cut the name of the
Prophet from His Own Name, as we shall explain insha ALlah in the
section on the Prophet's Names. Suffice it to say here that the
names of Muhammad, Ahmad, and Mahmud: "Praised One, Most
Praised, and Praiseworthy," were never given to any one
person before or after him. And Allah said, as read by al-Baydawi
in his Commentary:
Allah suffices as witness
(that) Muhammad is the Messenger of Allah.
(48:28-29)
What differentiates the Muslims from the Jews? The Jews say la
ilaha illallah but they never like to say Musa rasulullah.
They are stingy in love for their Prophet. Christians similarly
refuse to say `Isa rasulullah although for other reasons.
Both groups refuse to say Muhammadun rasulullah and that
is where we differ. You cannot be Muslim without the latter, even
if you are a believer in God. This makes the second part of the
shahada a requirement for entering Islam, and thus belief in the
Prophet is a means for salvation from error and punishment. Allah
never accepts anyone to come to Him saying "I love You
directly": instead they must obey the order "If you
indeed love Allah, then follow me, and Allah will love you"
(3:31). Therefore love of Allah can only proceed from love of the
Prophet and its sign is to praise him an invoke blessings upon
him often, as he requested in the hadith akthiru al-salat
`alayya ("Send much blessings upon me") which we
cite below.
The scholars have explained that Allah's salawat or
sending of blessings stands for rahma -- mercy--, while
the believers' salawat or invocation of blessings stands
for du`a -- supplication. This verse on the salawat
of Allah and His angels is absolute in sense and unrestricted
with respect to quantity and time. In other words Allah and
His angels send blessings, peace, mercy, honor, gifts, and
salutations upon the Prophet at all times and with boundless
abundance. Allah orders the believers to invoke blessings
upon him similarly, that is: incessantly, as far as they are
able.
Furthermore, since the best remembrance is la ilaha
illallah, a Muslim does not remember Allah except he also
remembers the Prophet since he says directly after it: muhammadun
rasulullah. This is established by Allah's saying:
"Remember Me and I shall remember you" (2:152) as
elucidated by the hadith: "Whoever invokes blessings upon me
once, Allah sends ten blessings upon him." In this
connection al-hafiz Sakhawi said:
Just as in the testimony of faith (shahada) Allah has
placed His Messenger's blessed name next to His own sacred name
and has said that he who obeys the Prophet obeys Him and he who
loves the Prophet loves Him, in the same manner He has related
our invoking blessings upon the Prophet to His own blessings upon
us. Therefore just as Allah said about His remembrance: Remember
Me and I will remember you, likewise is His assurance: Allah
sends ten blessings on the one who invokes a single blessing on
the Holy Prophet, as it is established in the sound hadith.
Sakhawi mentions on the same page al-Qadi Abu Bakr ibn
al-`Arabi's similar explanation of the verse: "Whoso brings
a good deed shall have ten the like of it" (6:160) as
referring to the good deed of invoking blessings on the Prophet,
in the light of the aforementioned hadith.
Anyone who dares claim that there is a limitation in quantity,
quality, timeliness, or in any other aspect of invoking blessings
and peace upon the Prophet has erred and strayed from the Qur'an,
the Sunna, and the Religion of Islam. Be warned, O Muslims who
love your Prophet -- and every Muslim loves his Prophet -- about
the dissemination of such false advice in your midst, which
typifies the logic of those who cannot differentiate between
worship and respect and are remiss in both, and typifies the
hatred of non-Muslims for the central symbol of the Religion of
Muslims -- Blessings and Peace upon him. Diminishing one's praise
of the Prophet on the pretense that "it would foster his
worship" is to imitate Iblis, who refused to prostrate to
Adam on the claim that he only worships Allah.
Such are those who desire to extinguish Allah's light, but
Allah will perfect His light in spite of them. None but
non-Muslims cringe at the enthusiasm of the believers in invoking
blessings on their Prophet. Such enthusiasm proceeds directly
from the Prophet's own joy when he received news from heaven of
the immense mercy granted his Community for invoking blessings
upon him:
Sahl ibn Sa`d narrates: Allah's Messenger came out and met Abu
Talha. The latter rose and went to him saying: "My father
and mother be sacrificed for you, O Messenger of Allah! I see joy
and delight in your countenance?" The Prophet said:
"Yes, for Gabriel has just come to me saying: O Muhammad,
whoever among your Community invokes blessings upon you once,
Allah records for Him ten meritorious deeds, erases from his
register ten evil deeds, and raises him ten degrees because of
it." al-Sakhawi said: "Our shaykh (Ibn Hajar) graded it
hasan without doubt."
Another extremely important reason why one must incessantly
invoke blessings on the Prophet is that it is established in the
hadith that "the du`a or invocation of the believer
is suspended between heaven and earth as long as the invocation
of blessings and peace upon your Prophet does not accompany
it." Tirmidhi narrates this hadith from `Umar in the section
of his Sunan entitled Sifat al-salat `ala al-nabi,
and al-Qadi Abu Bakr ibn al-`Arabi comments it thus:
The chain of men who narrate this is sound and both Malik and
Muslim have cited it though not Bukhari. Such an utterance on the
part of `Umar can only be a Prophetic legislation because it is
not subject to opinion. It is strengthened by Muslim's narration
of the Prophet's words: "If you hear the mu'adhdhin,
repeat his words after him then invoke blessings upon me... then
ask Allah to grant me al-wasila..."
It is established that invoking blessings on the Prophet is
especially meritorious on Friday according tthe following hadith:
"Invoke blessings upon me abundantly on Friday because is
is a day that is (particularly) witnessed and the angels witness
it (abundantly). As soon as a person invokes blessings on me his
invocation is shown to me until he ends it." Abu al-Darda'
said: "Even after (your) death?" The Prophet replied:
"Verily, Allah has forbidden the earth to consume the bodies
of Prophets."
The Prophet explicitly confirmed that the believer gains by
invoking blessings and peace upon him without restriction even he
ceases all other forms of du`a. This is established in the
following hadith:
Ubayy ibn Ka`b said: "After one third of the night the
Prophet used to get up. One such time he said: O People! Remember
Allah! The rajifa [first blow of the Trumpet] is upon us!
The radifa [second blow of the Trumpet] follows it. Death
has come." Ubayy said: ya rasulallah inni ukthiru
al-salata `alayka fa kam aj`al laka min salati "O
Messenger of Allah, I make much salawat upon you as a
habit. How much of my prayer should I devote to you?" The
Prophet said: "As much as you like." Ubayy said:
"A quarter?" The Prophet said: "As you like, but
if you add to that it will be better for you." Ubayy then
mentioned a third, then a half, then two thirds, and always the
Prophet answered: "As you like, but if you add to that it
will be better for you." Finally Ubayy said: ya
rasulallah inni uridu an aj`ala salati kullaha lak "O
Messenger of Allah, I want to devote my entire prayer (i.e. du`a)
to you." Whereupon the Prophet said: "Then you will be
freed from care and your sins will be forgiven."
(Another version has: "Then Allah will suffice you in the
matter of your worldly life and your hereafter.")
The scholars of Islam have contributed many commentaries on
this important hadith, of which we cite the following from Shaykh
al-Islam Ibn Hajar al-Haytami's Fatawa hadithiyya and from
al-hafiz al-Sakhawi's al-Qawl al-badi`:
[Haytami:] It is understood from the wording of these
narrations that the meaning of the word salat in the
expression: "I shall devote my salat to you" is du`a'
-- invocation... Then the meaning is: "There is a time in
which I make du`a on behalf of myself: how much of that should I
devote to you?" If this is established firmly, then consider
what the Shaykh al-Islam al-hafiz Ibn Hajar said as reported from
him by his student al-hafiz al-Sakhawi who particularly commended
this saying of his: "This hadith constitutes a tremendous
principle of the Religion for whoever makes du`a after his
recitation and says: O Allah, grant our Master Allah's Messenger
the reward of this worship."
[Sakhawi:] Salat in this hadith means invocation (du`a')
and habitual devotion (wird) in the following sense:
"There is a time in which I make du`a on behalf of myself:
how much of that should I devote to you?" The Prophet did
not consider that he should place a limit for him in this respect
in order not to close the gate of superabundance for him.
Accordingly he persisted in giving Ubayy the choice at the same
time as he stressed for him surplus in invocation until Ubayy
said: "I shall devote my entire prayer to you." That
is: I shall invoke blessings upon you instead of asking anything
for myself. Whereupon the Prophet said: "Then you will be
freed from care," that is: do not worry either for your
Religion or for your worldly need, because invoking blessings on
me includes both remembrance of Allah and rendering honor to the
Prophet; and the sense of this is an indication to Ubayy that he
is actually invoking for himself, as confirmed by the Prophet's
report on behalf of his Lord: "Whoever is occupied from
beseeching Me because of remembering Me, I shall grant him the
best of what I grant those who beseech." Know then that if
you make most of your worship consist in invoking blessings upon
your Prophet, Allah will suffice you in the matter of your
worldly life and your hereafter.
However, according to the party of the bukhala -- the
mean and miserly -- to follow the Prophet's advice in this matter
"would foster his worship"! How far is this
"Salafi" opinion from the Qur'an and the Sunna! In
1,400 years of sending salawat on the Prophet far more
abundantly than in our age, we have never witnessed what they
claim; how then do they want us to fear its occurrence now? And
have they forgotten that the Prophet specifically said:
"Those closest to me in the hereafter are those who invoked
blessings upon me the most (in dunya)" and "No people
sit at length without mentioning Allah and invoking bleeeings on
His Prophet except they will incur dissatisfaction from Allah
(or: dissatisfaction on the Day of resurrection): if He likes He
will punish them and if He likes He will forgive them"?
Rather, they are intent on hindering Muslims from expressing love
for their Prophet through invoking blessings upon him,
celebrating his birth, reading his life, and encouraging each
other towards knowing him and loving him more than their own
parents and children. For this is the great characteristic of
this Community which its enemies wish to eradicate: we know our
Prophet; we keep his status high; we prefer his Sunna to all
other lifestyles; and we cherish his love among us more dearly
than our own lives and properties.
Following is a list of the principal benefits obtained by
invoking blessings on the Prophet as compiled by the hafiz
al-Sakhawi in his book devoted to the topic, entitled: al-Qawl
al-badi` fi al-salat `ala al-habib al-shafi` (The Radiant
Discourse Concerning the Invocation of Blessings on the Beloved
Intercessor):
Among the rewards of one who performs salat upon
Allah's Messenger are the following:
The salat -- blessing -- of Allah, His angels, and His
Prophet on that person; the expiation of his faults; the
purification of his works; the exaltation of his rank; the
forgiveness of his sins; the asking of forgiveness for him by his
own salat; the recording of rewards the like of Mount Uhud
for him and his repayment in superabundant measure; the comfort
of his world and his hereafter if he devotes his entire salat
to invoking blessings upon him; the obliteration of more faults
than that effected by the manumission of a slave; his deliverance
from affliction because of it; the witnessing of the Prophet
himself to it; the guarantee of the Prophet's intercession for
him; Allah's pleasure, mercy, and safety from His anger;
admission under the shade of the Throne for him; preponderance of
his good deeds in the Balance; his admission to drink from the
Prophet's Pond; his safety from thirst and deliverance from the
Fire; his ability to cross the Bridge swiftly; the sight of his
seat in Paradise before he dies; numerous wives in Paradise; the
preponderance of his salat over more than twenty military
conquests; its equivalency to giving alms to the needy; its being
zakat and purification for him; his wealth and possessions
will increase because of its blessing; more than one hundred of
his needs will be fulfilled through it; it constitutes worship;
it is the most beloved of all deeds to Allah; it beautifies
meetings; it cancels out poverty and mduress; it lets him expect
and find goodness everywhere; it makes him the most deserving of
goodness; he benefits from it as well as his children and theirs,
as well as those to whom its reward is gifted in the register of
his good deeds; it brings him near to Allah and to His Prophet;
it is a light that helps him against his enemies; it cleans his
heart of hypocrisy and rust; it commands the love of people and
the sight of the Prophet in dreams; it forbids slander (ghiba)
against him;
In sum, it is among the most blessed, most meritorious, most
useful of deeds in Religion and in the life of the world, and
carries desirable rewards other than all this for those who are
clever and eager to acquire the deeds which constitute treasures
for them, and harvest the most flourishing ang glowing of hopes.
They do this by focusing on the deed that includes all these
tremendous merits, noble qualities, manifold and all-encompassing
benefits which are not found together in any other. Nor do they
characterize any other human action or speech except this: sallahu
`alayhi wa sallama tasliman kathiran -- May Allah bless him
and greet him abundantly.