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Monday, July 8, 2013

The Principles of Interpretation of the Qur'an

At the beginning of Islam it was commonly believed by some Sunnis that
if there were sufficient reason one could ignore the outward meaning
of Qur'anic verses and ascribe to them a contrary meaning. Usually the
meaning which opposed the outward literal meaning was called ta'wil,
and what is called "taw'il of the Qur'an" in Sunni Islam is usually
understood in this sense.
In the religious works of Sunni scholars as well as in the
controversies that have been recorded as taking place between
different schools, one often observes that if a particular point of
doctrine (that has been established through the consensus of the ulama
(scholars) of a school or through some other means) is opposed to the
outward meaning of a verse of the Quran that verse is interpreted by
ta'wil to have a meaning contrary to its apparent meaning.
Sometimes two contending sides supporttwo opposing views and present
Qur'anic verses inproof of their contentions. Each side interprets the
verses presented by the other side through ta'wil This method has also
penetrated more or less into Shi'ism and can he seen in some Shi'ite
theological works.
Yet, sufficient deliberation upon Qur'anic verses and the hadith of
the Household of the Prophet demonstrates clearly thatthe Holy Qur'an
with its attractive language and eloquent and lucid expression never
uses enigmatic or puzzling methods of exposition and always expounds
anysubject in a language suitable for that subject. What has been
rightly called ta'wil, or hermeneutic interpretation, of the Holy
Qur'an is not concerned simply with the denotation of words. Rather,
it is concerned with certain truths and realities that transcend the
comprehension of the common run of men; yet it is from these truths
and realities that the principles of doctrine and the practical
injunctions of the Qur'an issue forth.
The whole of the Qur'an possesses the sense of ta'wil, of esoteric
meaning, which cannot be comprehended directly through human thought
alone. Only the prophets and the pure among the saints of god who are
free from the dross of human imperfection can contemplate these
meanings while living onthe present plane of existence. On the Day of
Resurrection the ta'wil ofthe Qur'an will be revealed to every one.
This assertion can be explained by pointing to the fact that what
forces man to use speech, create words and make use of expressions is
nothing other than his social and material needs. In his social life
man is forced to try to make his fellow men understand his thoughts
and intentions and the feelings which exist within his soul. To
accomplish this end he makes use of sounds and hearing. Occasionally
alsohe uses to a degree his eyes and gestures. That iswhy between the
mute and the blind there can never be any mutual comprehension. For
whatever the blind man says the deaf cannot hear, and whatever the
mute makes understood through gestures the blind man cannot see.
The creation of words and the naming of objects have been accomplished
mostly with a material end in view. Expressions have been created for
those objects, states, and conditions that are material and available
to the senses or near to the sensible world. As can be seen in those
cases where the person addressed lacks one of the physical senses, if
we wish to speak of matters which can be comprehended through the
missing sense we employ a kind of allegoryand similitude. For example,
if we wish to describe light of color to one who is born blind, orthe
pleasures of sex to a child that has not reached the age of
adolescence, we seek to achieve our purpose through comparison and
allegory and through providing appropriate examples.
Therefore, if we accept the hypothesis that in thescale of Universal
Existence there are immense levels of reality which are independent of
the world of matter (and this is in reality the case), and that in
each generation there are among mankind but a handful who have the
capability of comprehending and having a vision of these realities,
then questions pertaining to these higher worlds cannot be understood
through common verbal expressions and modes of thought. They cannot be
referred to except by allusion and through symbolism. Since religious
realities are of this kind, the expression of the Quran in such
matters must of necessity be symbolic.
God says in His Book,
Lo! We have appointed it a Lecture in Arabic that haply ye may
understand.And Lo! in the Source of Decrees, which We possess, it is
indeed sublime, decisive. (Common comprehensioncannot understand it or
penetrate into it.) (XLIII: 3-4).He also says,
That (this) is indeed a noble Qur'an. In a book kept hidden, which
none toucheth save the purified. (LVI: 77-79).Concerning the Prophet
and his Household he says,
Allah's wish is but to remove uncleanness far from you, O Folk of the
Household, and cleanse you with a thorough cleansing. (XXXIII: 33).As
proved by these verses, the Holy Qur'an emanates from sources beyond
the comprehension of common man. No one can have a full comprehension
of the Qur'an save those servants of God whom Hehas chosen to purify.
And the Household of the Prophet are among thosepure beings.
In another place God says.
Nay, but they denied that(the Qur'an), the knowledge whereof theycould
not compass, and whereof the interpretation (in events)[ta'wil] hath
not yet come into them. (X: 40), (meaning the day of Resurrection when
the truth of things will become known).And again he says,
On the day (the Day of Resurrection) when the fulfillment [ta'wil]
thereof (of the whole Qur'an) cometh, those who were before forgetful
thereof will say.The messengers of our Lord did bring the Truth! (VII:
53).Hadith
The principle that the hadith possesses validity, as attested by the
Qur'an,is not at all disputed among Shi'ites or in fact among all
Muslims. But because of the failure of some of the early rulers of
Islam in preserving and guarding the hadith,and the excesses of a
group among the companions and followers of the Prophet in propagating
hadith literature, the corpus of hadith came to face a certain number
of difficulties.
On the one hand, the caliphs of the time prevented the writing down
and recording of the hadith and ordered any pages containing texts of
hadith to be burned. Sometimes also any increase in activity inthe
transmission and study of hadith was forbidden. In this way a certain
number of hadithwere forgotten or lost and a few were even transmitted
with a different or distorted meaning. On the other hand, another
tendency also prevailed among another group of the companions of the
Holy Prophet who had had thehonor of seeing his presence and actually
hearing his words. This group, which was respected by the caliphs and
the Muslim community, began an intense effort to propagate the hadith.
This was carried to such an extent that sometimeshadith overruled the
Qur'an and the injunctionof a Qur'anic verse was even considered
abrogated by some people through a hadith. Often the transmitters of
hadith would travel many miles and hear all the difficulties of
travelling in order to hear a single saying.
A group of outsiders whohad worn the dress of Islam and also some of
the enemies within the ranks of Islam began to change and distort some
of the hadith and thus diminished the reliability and validity of the
hadiththat was then heard and known. For this very reason Islamic
scholars began to think of a solution. They created the sciences
concerned with the biography of learned men and chains of transmission
of hadith in order to be able to discriminate between true and false
hadith.

Shi'ism and the Transmitted Sciences

The Islamic sciences, which owe their existence to the ulama of Islam
who organized andformulated them, are divided into the two categories
of intellectual ('aqli) and transmitted (naqli). The intellectual
sciences include such sciences as philosophy and mathematics. The
transmitted sciences are those which depend upon transmission from
some source, such as the sciences of language, hadith, or history.
Without doubt the major cause for the appearanceof the transmitted
sciences in Islam is the Holy Qur'an. With the exception of a few
disciplines such as history, genealogy, and prosody the other
transmitted sciences haveall come into being under the influence of
the Holy Book. Guided by religious discussions and research, Muslims
began to cultivate these sciences, of which the most important are
Arabic literature (grammar, rhetoric, and the science of metaphors)
and the sciences pertaining to the external form of religion
(recitation of theQur'an, Qur'anic commentary (tafsir) hadith,
biography of learned men, the chain oftransmission of hadith, and the
principles of jurisprudence).
Shi'ites played an essential role in the foundation and establishment
of these sciences. In fact, the founders and creators of many of these
sciences were Shi'ites. Arabic grammar was put into a systematic form
by Abu'l-Aswad al-Du'ali, one of the companions of the Holy Prophet
and by Ali. Ali dictated an outline forthe organization of the science
of Arabic grammar. One of the founders of the science of eloquence
(rhetoric and the science o metaphors) was Sahib ibn 'Ahbad a Shi'ite,
who was a vizier of the Buyids.
The first Arabic dictionaryis the Kitab al-Ayn composed by the famous
scholar, Khalil ibn Ahmad al-Basre the Shi'ite who founded the science
of prosody. He was also the teacher of the great master of grammar,
Sibuwayh.
The Qur'anic recitation ofAsim goes back to Ali through one
intermediary, and 'Abdallah ibn 'Abbas, whoin hadith was the foremost
among the companions, was a student of Ali. The contributions of the
Household of the Prophetand their associates in hadith and
jurisprudenceare well known. The founders of the four Sunni schools of
law are known to have associated with the fifth and sixth Shi'ite
Imams. In the principles of jurisprudence the remarkable advances
accomplished by the Shi'ite scholar Wahid Bihbahani and followed by
Shaykh Murtada Ansari have never been matched in Sunni jurisprudence
according to existing evidence.

The Method of Shi'ism in Authenticating the Hadith

Shi'ism, in addition to seeking to authenticate the chain of
transmission of hadith, considers the correlation of the text of the
hadith with the Qur'an as a necessary condition for its validity. In
Shi'ite sources there are many hadith of the Prophet and the Imams
with authentic chains of transmission which themselves assert that a
hadith contrary to the Qur'an has no value. Only that hadith can be
considered valid which isin agreement with the Qur'an.
Basing itself on these hadiths, Shi'ism does not act upon those
hadiths which are contrary to thetext of the Qur'an. As for hadiths
whose agreement or disagreement cannot be established according to
instructions received from the Imams they are passed by in silence
without being accepted or rejected.
Needless to say there are also within Shi'ism those who, like a group
amongthe Sunnis act on any hadith whatsoever whichthey happen to find
in different traditional sources.
The Method of Shi'ism in Following the Hadith
A hadith heard directly from the mouth of the Prophet or one of the
Imams is accepted as is the Qur'an. As for hadiths received through
intermediaries, the majority of Shi'ites act upon them if their chain
of transmission is established at every step or if there exists
definite proof concerning their truth, and, if they are concerned with
principles of doctrine which require knowledge and certainty,according
to the text of the Qur'an. Other than these two kinds of hadith, no
other hadith has any validity concerning principles of doctrine, the
invalid hadith being called "tradition with a sincere transmitter"
(khabar wahid). However, in establish in the injunctions of the
Shari'ah, because of reasons that have been given, Shi'ites act also
on a tradition which is generally accepted as reliable. Therefore, it
can be said that for Shi'ism a certain and definitely established
hadith is absolutely binding and must be followed, while a hadith
which is not absolutely established but which is generally considered
as reliable is utilized only in the elaboration of the in junctions of
the Shari'ah.

Biographies, - Hazrat Safiyyah (R.A)

She was the daughter of Hayi, Who was a descendant of Hadhrat Harun
(a.s) the brother ofMoosa (a.s). She was first married to Salam bin
Mishkam and then to Kinallah bin Abi Huqaiq at the time of Khevbar.
Kinallah was killed in the battle and she was captured by the Muslims.
Hadhrat Dahya Kalbi (Radhiyallaho anha) requested for a maid, and the
Prophet Mohammad (صلى الله عليه وسلم) made her over to him. At this,
the other Sahabah approached the Prophet Mohammad (صلى الله عليه وسلم)
and said:
"O, Prophet of Allah! Banu Nazir and Banu Quraizah (the Jewish tribes
of Madinah) will feel offended to see the daughter of a Jewish chief
working as a maid. We therefore suggest that she may be taken as your
own wife."
The Prophet Mohammad (صلى الله عليه وسلم)paid a reasonable sum of
money to Hadhrat Dahya (r.a) as ransom, and said toSafiyyah: "You are
now free; if you like you can go back to your tribe or can be my
wife."
She said: "I longed to be with you while I was a Jew. How can I leave
you now, when I am a Muslim?�
This is probably a reference to the fact that she once saw in her
dream a portion of the moon falling into her lap.When she mentioned
herdream to Kinanah, he smote her face so severely that she developed
a mark on her eye. He said: "You seem to be desiring to become the
wife of the King of Madinah."
Her father is also reported to have treated her similarly when she
related the same or similar dream to him. Sheagain saw (in her
dream)the sun lying on her breast. When she mentioned this to her
husband, he remarked:
"You seem to be wishing to become the Queen of Madinah."
She says: "I was seventeen when I was married to the Prophet Mohammad
(صلى الله عليه وسلم) . She came to live with the Prophet Mohammad (صلى
الله عليه وسلم) when he was camping at the first stage from Khaiber.
Next morning, he said to the Sahabah: "Let everybody bring whatever he
has got to eat."
They brought their own dates, cheese, butter, etc.A long leather sheet
was spread and all sat round it to share the food among themselves.
This was the Walimah for the marriage.
She died in Ramadan, 50 A. H., when she was about 60.