The Role of Ijtihad in
Legislation Martyr
Murtada Mutahhari Translated from the Persian by Mahliqa Qara'i
Source
http://www.imamreza.net/eng/imamreza.php?id=4012
The terms 'mujtahid' and 'ijtihad' are nowadays among those which have acquired
great currency, even sanctity, among the Shi'ah. One would be surprised to know
that the term ijtihad was formerly, from the times of the Prophet (S) and for
several successive centuries, a Sunni term. It became Shia after undergoing a
change of meaning, or what would be more precise to say, the term remained
specifically Sunni for several centuries and became 'Muslim', in the wider
sense, that is, after undergoing a change of meaning and dissociating itself
from its earlier particular sense.
As to its not being a Shi'i term formerly, there is no doubt; if there is any
uncertainty, it is about the date of its acceptance by the Shi'ah. It is not
improbable that this term like several groups of people in the seventh century
was converted to Shi'ism at the hands of the absolute Ayatullah, al-'Allamah al-Hilli.
However, as we shall presently explain, the conversion came after its undergoing
a change of meaning.
Apparently, there seems to be no doubt that this term was never used by any of
the Imams of the Ahl al-Bayt (A). The terms ijtihad and mujtahid, in the sense
in which they are used by Shi'ah and Sunni fuqaha', have not been used in any of
their ahadith. Neither they themselves were ever known by the epithet 'mujtahid'
nor did they ever use it for the scholars and legists from among their
companions. Otherwise the root relating to such terms as fatwa and ifta, which
convey approximately the modern sense of ijtihad, and its derivatives do occur
in the ahadith. For instance, al-'Imam al-Baqir (A) is reported to have said to
Aban ibn Taghlib:
Sit in the mosque of al-Madinah and give fatwas for the people . Indeed I love
more like you to be seen amongst my Shi'ah.
And in a famous hadith, al-'Imam al-Sadiq (A) is reported to have said to 'Unwan
al-Basri:
Avoid giving fatwa in the way you would run away from a lion; do not make your
neck a bridge for the people.
The reason for the former unpopularity of the word is that during the early
centuries of the Islamic era - that is also the period in which the Imams of the
Ahl al-Bayt (A) lived - the word, due to the specific meaning it carried, was
not acceptable to the Imams (A). Naturally, it could not have played any role in
their teachings. However, after undergoing a gradual change of meaning, when it
came to be used in a different sense by Sunni fuqaha' themselves, it was also
adopted by Shi'ite fiqh. Now we shall briefly describe the background of the
Sunni usage of this term.
'Ijtihad' in the Sunni Tradition:
Sunni scholars narrate a hadith that the Prophet (S), while sending Mu'adh to
Yemen, asked him as to on what he would base his judgement. "In accordance with
the Book of Allah", replied Mu'adh, "But what if you don't find it there?"
inquired the Prophet (S). "According to the Sunnah of the Apostle of Allah",
replied Mu'adh. "But what if you don't find it there too?" asked the Prophet (S)
again. 'I will exert my own opinion', replied Mu'adh.
The Prophet (S) put his hand on Mu'adh's chest and said: "Thank God for
assisting His Apostle with what he loves." They have narrated other traditions
on the subject to the effect that either the Prophet (S) directly commanded his
Companions to exercise ijtihad in case they could not find a rule in the Book
and the Sunnah, or to the effect that he approved of the practice of his
Companions that practised ijtihad. To the Sunnis, this is something definite,
confirmed by consensus (ijma').
About the Holy Prophet (S) himself, they have said that some of his injunctions
were purely based on personal ijtihad not on revelation. Even in their works on
jurisprudence ('ilm al-'usul) the problem is raised whether or not the Prophet
(S) could make errors in his personal ijtihad. They have narrated traditions in
this regard and transmitted reports of the Companions as to how they justified
their own actions or those of others on the basis of ijtihad. We abstain from
quoting any of them here for the sake of brevity.
It is evident that in all the above instances the term ijtihad is not used in
its current sense, that is, making the utmost effort in deducing rules of the
Shari'ah from the related sources (adillah). The meaning of ijtihad there is
'exercising of one's opinion or judgement' (al-'amal bi al-ra'y). It means that
in a case where the Divine dicta are absent or implicit, one should see what
would be more acceptable to one's intelligence and taste, or nearer to truth and
justice, or analogous to other Islamic laws, and to adopt it for his judgement.
Accordingly, ijtihad is also accounted as one of the sources of Islamic
legislation, like the Quran and the Sunnah, although not as a source parallel to
these two. So long as a rule is to be found in the Quran and the Sunnah, the
need for ijtihad does not arise. However, in absence of relevant dicta in the
Quran, the Sunnah or ijma', ijtihad becomes a source of legislation. On this
basis, they have said that the sources of legislation are four: the Book, the
Sunnah, ijma', and ijtihad (i.e. qiyas).
Also, according to this approach, ijtihad is not synonymous with expertise in
Islamic law (faqahah), nor is the term mujtahid synonymous with faqih. Rather,
ijtihad is one of the functions of the faqih. The faqih should have knowledge of
the Quran and the hadith corpus; he should be able to distinguish the nasikh
from the mansukh, the 'amm from the khass, the mujmal from the mubayyan, and the
muhkam from the mutashabih.
He should be familiar with the Quranic vocabulary and terminology, know the
circumstances in which a particular verse was revealed (sha'n al-nuzul), and
have knowledge of the successive generations of narrators and transmitters of
hadith. He should also be able to reconcile the apparently conflicting
traditions. In addition to all that, he should practise ijtihad and exercise his
personal judgements in particular cases.
What was the character and basis of that ijtihad? Did the term ijtihad found in
hadith mean exercising qiyas? Did the Prophet (S) and his Companions practise
ijtihad in this sense. Did it also apply to other practices such as istihsan?
Al-Shafi'i, in his famous Risalah, has a chapter on ijtihad, which follows the
one on ijma', and is itself followed by one on istihsan. In his discussion of
the subject, al-Shafi'i draws the conclusion that the ijtihad prescribed by the
Shari'ah is confined to qiyas and that other types of ijtihad, such as istihsan,
do not have any canonical grounds. Al-Shafi'i believes that the canonical
grounds for qiyas are identical with those for ijtihad.
There were other questions that were debated by Sunni fuqaha', such as: Are
ijtihad and al-'amal bi al-ra'y confined to cases where there is no express text
(nass) or whether one may do ijtihad (called ta'awwul in this case) and exercise
his judgement despite the presence of express texts? What are the conditions
applicable to Sunnah if it is to preponderate ijtihad?
Are all traditions narrated from the Prophet (S) to be relied upon and given
precedence over ijtihad? Is reliable hadith confined to those which are mashhur
and mustafid, as Abu Hanifah believed? Who are those who had the right of
ijtihad and whose ijtihad was binding (hujjah) for the others? On what grounds
have the others no right to go against their ijtihad?
Evidently, to go into the details of each of
these questions is outside the scope of this paper. However, it is necessary to
mention some relevant points here:
1. The position of the fuqaha' and imams of the
Ahl al-Sunnah with respect to the acceptability of ijtihad, in the
above-mentioned sense, is not the same. Some of them give a wider scope to
ijtihad and qiyas and some restrict it. Some altogether reject qiyas and ijtihad.
Abu Hanifah, who lived in Iraq and was considered the jurist of the Iraqis,
because of the many conditions he required for a tradition to be acceptable, and
also on account of being distant from the centre of hadith, which was the Hijaz,
had lesser knowledge of hadith. Also due to other reasons, including his
background of kalam and logic, he took greater recourse to qiyas and on this
account was strongly opposed by the Sunni jurists of his time and those who came
after him.
Malik ibn Anas spent his life in al-Madinah and made lesser use of qiyas.
Reportedly, he did not use qiyas except in a few cases, and, according to a
report of Ibn Khallikan, was greatly repentant at the time of his death of
having taken recourse to qiyas in his fatwas even in those few cases.
Al-Shafi'i, who belonged to the Iraqi school and had studied under Abu Hanifah's
pupils and had as well studied under Malik in al-Madinah, took a middle road
between Malik and Abu Hanifah.
Ahmad ibn Hanbal was more a muhaddith than a faqih and avoided qiyas even to a
greater extent than Malik Ibn Anas.
Dawud ibn Ali al-Zahiri al-'Isfahani, the founder of the Zahiri school, was
altogether opposed to the practice of qiyas and regarded it as an innovation (bid'ah)
in the faith.
As a consequence of these differences there emerged among the Ahl al-Sunnah two
general trends: one of them was represented by the Ahl al-Hadith and the other
by the Ahl al-Ra'y. The Ahl al-Hadith, or the Traditionists, attached lesser or
no significance to qiyas and ra'y and the Ahl al-Ra'y in turn relied to a lesser
extent on ahadith.
2. Concurrently with the emergence of the Ahl
al-Ra'y and the Ahl al-Hadith, a problem that arose among the contemporary
circles of kalam was that of the rational basis of legal judgements (al-husn wa
al-qubh al-'aqliyyan). Although at first sight there seems to be no link between
these two developments, because one of them belonged to fiqh and took place in
juristic circles and the other belonged to the circles of kalam, but, as pointed
by some historians, the theory of rational basis of judgement - which was raised
by the Mu'tazilah and who staunchly defended it - was also intended to find some
kind of basis for ijtihad, i.e. qiyas and the practice of ra'y.
According to this theory, the laws of the Shari'ah were based on a series of
real benefits and harms and that human reason was capable of independently
discovering those benefits and harms inherent in things; therefore reason was
capable of discovering the purposes and criteria of the laws of religion through
ijtihad and ra'y.
This conjecture is further strengthened if we remember that the Ahl al-Hadith,
who later, in the fourth/tenth century, came to be known as Asha'riah,
represented the chief opposition to the Mu'tazilah.
3. Right from the first century, from the time
when groups of people gathered in mosques for the purpose of study and debate,
some persons debated about the issues of halal and haram. They gathered around
them pupils and adherents from among the common people, who regarded their
fatwas as authoritative and referred to them their questions about halal and
haram. Such was the beginning of the gradual development of a class of scholars
who later came to be called fuqaha'. Every region, city and group followed a
certain individual, and the rulers had not yet adopted the policy of following
the fatwas of a certain jurist as official law.
The emergence of this class of jurists did not require any special conditions.
Occasionally, social conditions demanded that one prominent individual should be
recognized by the people and followed in religious precepts. Gradually, this
resulted in the emergence of diverse legal approaches and schools, which in turn
were preserved and perpetuated by the pupils of the originator after his death.
In this way, various legal schools and sects emerged amongst the Sunnis, the
most famous of them being the Hanafi, the Shafi'i, the Maliki, the Hanbali and
the Zahiri schools.
Of course, the founders of these schools were not the only early jurists and
mujtahidun that were there. There were others who held their own legal opinions
and were not followers of anyone. However, this independence gradually
disappeared after the fourth/tenth century and no independent mujtahid emerged
after this time in the Sunni tradition. Apparently, the last person to have been
an independent mujtahid with his own independent approach in legal issues was
the well-known historian and exegete Muhammad ibn Jarir al-Tabari (d. 310/922),
who although famous for his work on history, is considered a Sunni faqih of the
first rank.
The later Sunni mujtahids were either al-mujtahid al-mutlaq al-muntasib or
mujtahid al-fatwa (also occasionally known as mujtahid al-madhhab). 'Al-mujtahid
al-mutlaq al-muntasib' means a mujtahid who is attached to one of the well-known
schools and follows the juristic approach of its founder but in deducing legal
rules, on the basis of the school's juristic principles, he may formulate his
own independent legal opinions which may be different from the legal opinions of
the founder. For instance, while being a Shafi'i or a Hanafi in jurisprudence,
he may differ with al-Shafi'is or Abu Hanifah's express fatwas in legal matters.
A number of eminent Sunni jurists are considered to belong to this class, such
as: Imam al-Haramayn al-Juwaym, Abu Hamid Muhammad al-Ghazali, Ibn al-Sabbagh,
and others.
Mujtahid al-madhhab' or 'mujtahid al-fatwa' is someone who follows the founder
of the school in all matters in which the founder has expressly given his views.
However in issues in which he does find an opinion of the founder, he may
exercise his own Ijtihad and give fatwa .
Accordingly, Ijtihad is of three kinds: independent Ijtihad, semi-independent
Ijtihad (al-'ijtihad al-mutlaq al-muntasib), and Ijtihad within the framework of
the juristic and legal positions of a school (Ijtihad al-fatwa).
In any case, the mujtahids who came after the fourth century did not find any
followers. On the other hand the mujtahids who came before this period were not
limited to the four imams of the popular schools; there were nine other eminent
jurists of whom some lived before the four imams - such as al-Hasan al-Basri -
some were their contemporaries - such as Sufyan al-Thawri - and some who came
after them - such as Dawud al-Zahiri and Muhammad Ibn Jarir al-Tabari - and all
of them had more or less followers among the people.
However, there was a gradual rise in the followers of the four imams, for,
according to al-Maqfizi in al-Khitat, al-Malik al-Zahir, the ruler of Egypt,
officially declared in the year 665/1257 that except the four schools - Shafi'i
Maliki, Hanafi and Hanbali - other schools had no official recognition and that
no judge had the right to give judgement except on the basis of the four
schools. The people were also strictly forbidden to follow any except the four
schools. This was the beginning of the restriction of the official schools to
four.'
This brief description shows that when we talk of the closure of the door of
Ijtihad in the Sunni tradition, we refer to the Ijtihad of the first kind, i.e.
independent ijtihad. As to the second kind (al-Ijtihad al-mutlaq al-muntasib)
and the third kind (ijtihad al-madhhab), their doors have remained open.
Why should the doors of independent ijtihad have been closed after the fourth
century and no one should have right to complete independence and be bound to
follow one of the imams in jurisprudence?
Why and for what reason is it not permissible today to follow anyone except the
four imams? Why should one who follows any one of the imams follow him in all
issues and have no right to follow the other three by exercising discretion in
some issues? Sunni scholars have given various answers to all of these questions
and none of them is convincing.
Shah Wali Allah Dehlawi (d. 1180/1765), in a treatise (risalah) called "al-'Insaf
fi bayan sabab al-'ikhtilaf" - which has been quoted by Farid al-Wajdi under
jahada in the Da'irat al-Ma'arif, with the remark that it is the best treatise
written on the topic - acclaims the closure of the door of independent ijtihad
and the latter scholars' imitation of one of the early imams and says: that is,
'It is a secret that God Almighty has inspired in the scholars with' to
safeguard Islam and protect the religion from disintegration. Farid al-Wajdi
himself does not approve of the prohibition on Ijtihad and does not confirm
those words of Shah Wali Allah.
Two years ago, according to what we have read in papers and have heard, the
great 'Allamah Shaykh Mahmud Shaltut, the mufti and rector of Al-'Azhar
University, with great courage characteristic of great reformers, broke this
thousand-year-old spell and officially announced that the door of ijthad is open
and that there is nothing objectionable about a follower of one school referring
to the judgements of another school in case they are supported by firmer
arguments.
He also announced in an official fatwa that it is correct to follow the Ja'fari
school of fiqh, just like the other schools. Subsequently, a chair of
comparative legal studies was established at al-'Azhar. Undoubtedly this was the
greatest step that was taken since the beginnings of Islamic jurisprudence for
the sake of the benefit and general welfare of Muslims. Its worth will be better
recognized in the future.
4. Another problem related to the subject of
Ijtihad is that of takhti'ah (admission of the possibility of error in the
judgements of the mujtahid) and taswib (confirmation of the mujtahid's
infallibility and denial of any possibility of error), which has throughout been
a topic of debate in books on kalam and usul al-fiqh. Generally, it is mentioned
in books on usul that the Shi'ah fuqaha' admit possibility of error in the
mujtahid's fatwas and are accordingly called mukhatti'ah (derived from khata':
error), whereas the Sunni fuqaha' believe that the mujtahid is always right in
his judgements, and are hence called musawwibah (derived from sawab: that which
is right).
However, it is not the case that all the Sunni fuqaha' support taswib; rather,
only a small number of them have accepted this view. In any case, for the Shi'ah,
who define Ijtihad as 'the effort to deduce the real law from the sources of the
Shari'ah', it is difficult to imagine that every mujtahid should be always
right. It is not possible that whatever any mujtahid may judge should be correct
and his judgement should be the real law; for it is possible that different
mujtahids may hold divergent opinions simultaneously about a certain subject and
the same mujtahid may hold different opinions at different times about the same
issue. How is it possible that he should always be right?
The roots of the theory of taswib lie in a certain theory of Ijtihad which is
held by those who define ijtihad as the practice of qiyas and ra'y . They claim
that the laws received by the Prophet (S) through revelation are limited,
whereas issues and problems which require legislation are unlimited in number.
Therefore, the laws given by the Divine Lawgiver are not adequate to meet the
requirements.
Accordingly, God has given the right to the scholars of the Ummah, or a group of
them, to employ their personal taste and intelligence in cases where there are
no religious dicta and select something which resembles other Islamic laws and
is closer to the criteria of justice and truth. In accordance with this
reasoning, they accept the theory of taswib, for, according to this view of
ijtihad, it is itself one of the sources of the Divine Law.
The idea of taswib was unimaginable to the minds of Shi'ah jurisprudents,
because they had taken for granted the principle that every event or problem
should have a real Divine law related to it. Ijtihad, to them, meant inquiry and
effort to discover that law with the help of reliable canonical sources. Of
course, in the light of such an outlook of ijtihad it is impossible that every
mujtahid should be right.
The theory of taswib, however, does not rest on such an outlook of Ijtihad. It
rests on an outlook which regards it as impossible that God should have
legislated laws regarding every kind of situation. Because, if such were the
case, they should have been set forth in the Book and the Sunnah; but the laws
given in the Book and the Sunnah are limited in number, whereas situations are
innumerable and unlimited. Hence God has given the 'ulama' of the Ummah the
right to legislate through Ijtihad such laws as have not been given through
revelation. Since this right is God-given, the judgements of the mujtahid are
the actual laws of God.
The problem of taswib and takhti'ah has been debated a lot in books on kalam and
usul, and here our purpose was just to refer to the abovementioned point. The
above discussion related to the Sunni background of the term ijtihad; now we
shall turn to the change of meaning that this term underwent, which resulted in
its acceptance by the Shi'ah.
'Ijtihad' in the Shi'ah Tradition:
Until the fourth/tenth and the fifth/eleventh centuries we observe that whenever
the word is used by a scholar it carries the sense of qiyas and ra'y. For
instance, Shaykh Abu Ja'far al-Tusi (d. 460/1067), in his 'Uddat al-'usul,
devotes a chapter to qiyas. He devotes another chapter to Ijtihad where he
discusses one of the issues related to ijtihad, i.e. the problem of taswib and
takhti'ah. The book has another chapter entitled "Did the Prophet practise
ijtihad, and whether it was legitimate for him to practise it? Was it legitimate
for the Companions of the Prophet to practise ijtihad when they were away from
him or were in his presence?" Later, in the course of his discussion, he says:
"This controversy is basically uncalled for according to our doctrines, because,
as we have proved earlier, qiyas and ijtihad are absolutely impermissible in the
Shari'ah. ''
This remark of al-Shaykh al-Tusi shows that until his age the word Ijtihad was
still used in the sense of ra'y and qiyas.
'Ijtihad' lexically means 'putting in utmost effort' in doing something. In the
earliest days, the term in accordance with the traditions ascribed to the
Prophet (S) and the Companions, was taken to mean ijtihad bi al-ra'y, or putting
in utmost effort in the exercise of ra'y and qiyas. However, gradually it took a
wider meaning and came to mean putting in utmost effort in discovering the laws
of the Shari'ah from its reliable sources. Thus we see that al-Ghazali (d. 505/1
111) in his al-Mustasfa - although he uses the word recurringly in its earlier
sense of qiyas, for instance, when he says:
They have differed as to the permissibility of practising qiyas and ijtihad
during the days of the Prophet ... (vol. 2, p. 354)
He also uses it in the general sense of scholarly effort on the part of a faqih
It (ijtihad) means putting in of the utmost effort in doing something.
But the term has come to be used in the terminology of scholars specifically for
the mujtahids putting in of the utmost effort in acquiring the knowledge of the
laws of the Shariah. (vol. 2, p. 350)
From this time onwards we see that the term is used less frequently in the
special sense of ra'y and qiyas and takes on the sense of scholarly effort in
discovering the laws of the Shari'ah. With this change, the term found way into
the Shi'ite fiqh also, for earlier the Shi'ah had opposed it on account of their
opposition to Ijtihad bi al-ra'y, not because they were opposed to scholarly
diligence.
In any case, they did not resist its use after it changed its meaning. Probably
the first to use this term among the Shi'ah Imamiyyah scholars was al-'Allamah
al-Hilli (d. 726/1326), who accepting it used it in its second sense in his work
Tahdhib al-'usul. In that work he devotes a chapter to Ijtihad and uses it in
the sense current today. It seems that it was from this time that the Shi'ah
accepted the word or the word embraced Shi'ism.
We said earlier that the opposition to qiyas was not limited to the Shi'ah and
there were schools among Sunnis who either altogether rejected it and regarded
it as a heresy or avoided it as much as possible. The Mu'tazilah, who advanced
the doctrine of al-husn wa al-qubh al'aqliyyan, backed qiyas and ra'y in their
fight against the Ahl al-Hadith who rejected it.
The Ahl al-Hadith, who later came to be called Asha'irah due to their approach
in kalam, rejected the doctrine of al-husn wa al-qubh al-'aqliyyan, claiming
that the desirability or undesirability of things is derived from the commands
and prohibitions of the lawgiver and not vice versa. As a result, they denied
reason any role in legislation of Divine laws. The controversies between the
Mu'tazilah and supporters of qiyas and ra'y on one side and the Asha'irah and
the Ahl al-Hadith on the other side revolve around the role of reason and its
share in legislation.
It must not be concluded from the above discussion that the Shi'ah opposition to
ra'y and qiyas was also based on the same reasons as those of the Asha'irah and
the Ahl al-Hadith, which was outright opposition to the role of reason in
deduction of the laws of the Shari'ah. The Shi'i opposition to qiyas and ra'y
had two reasons. The first was that the claim of the supporters of qiyas that
the Book and the Sunnah are not adequate sources of legislation was not
acceptable to the Imams of the Ahl al-Bayt (A).
In the sermons of the Nahj al-balaghah and other Shi'i compilations of hadith
the idea that the Book and the Sunnah are not adequate has been vehemently
rejected. In the Usul al-Kafi, the chapter followed by another entitled:
The chapter about referring to the Book and the Sunnah, and that verily there is
no haram or halal and nothing needed by the people that is not present in the
Book or the Sunnah.
The second reason advanced by the Shi'ah against qiyas was that it was based on
conjecture and led very frequently to error. These two reasons clearly stand out
in the books of early Shi'ah scholars, and we shall abstain from further details
for brevity's sake.
The best evidence of the fact that the Shi'ah opposition to qiyas and ra'y was
not based on a hostility to the role of reason in canonical matters is that,
from the very beginning that the Shiah jurisprudence was committed to writing,
reason was considered one of the sources (adillah) of law. The Shi'ah
jurisprudents stated that the sources of the Shari'ah are four: the Book, the
Sunnah, ijma' and 'aql (reason), whereas the Zahiris and the Ahl al-Hadith
confined the adillah to the Book, the Sunnah and ijma', and the support'ers of
ra'y and qiyas regarded them as four: the Book, the Sunnah, ijma' and qiyas.
The Shi'ah jurisprudents, while opposing qiyas and ra'y, accepted the Mu'tazilah
viewpoint about the rational basis of ethico-legal judgements, defended it and
did not oppose it like the Asha'irah and the Ahl al-Hadith. The concurrence of
views between the Shi'ah and the Mu'tazilah regarding this doctrine and its
corollaries - such as the doctrine of Divine justice - led the Shi'ah among the
Mu'tazilah to be known as 'Adliyyah and the Shi'ah left behind the Mu'tazilah in
their support of the doctrine of Divine justice.
As a result, it came to be said in scholarly circles that: "justice and tawhid
are 'Alawid and fatalism and anthropomorphism are Umayyad."
The reason for calling justice 'Alawid was that the supporters of the Ahl al-Bayt
(A) were also defenders of the doctrine of al-husn wa al-qubh al-'aqliyyan and
the doctrine of justice was a corollary to it. As to tawhid being 'Alawid, it
was on account of the belief in the unity of Divine Essence and Attributes. The
Umayyads supported jabr (fatalism) and tashbih (anthropomorphism) due to
political exigencies. The issue of the independent capacity of reason to
perceive the good and evil of things, and the subsidiary doctrine of justice,
became so much a characteristic of the Shi'ah that justice came to be recognized
as one of the principal tenets of the Shi'ite creed.
That the Shi'ite opposition to ra'y and qiyas is not to be taken to have been an
opposition to the role of reason in ijtihad becomes completely obvious when we
examine the extant documentary evidence. At the present the Shi'ah state the
principle of the interrelation of Divine laws and actual benefits and harms and
the principle of harmony between reason and religious law in these words:
Whatever is the judgement of reason, is also the judgement of the Shari'ah.
This is an incontrovertible axiom of Shi'ite jurisprudence. The above discussion
makes it clear that the Shi'ah Imamiyyah approach to ijtihad was an independent
one: it was neither bound to ra'y and qiyas, nor did it impose any bounds on
reason in the manner of the Ahl al-Hadith. The Imamiyyah jurists on the one hand
recognized the rights of reason and regarded it as one of the sources of law, on
the other hand they rejected qiyas and ijtihad bi al-ra'y in their books on
jurisprudence, in chapters devoted to qiyas. However, it would have been in
order if the latter scholars had followed the ancient ones in discussing qiyas
and ra'y in their works.
It would have helped to define the exact limits of the prohibited form of qiyas,
which would have been better understood. This would have prevented some
individuals from waging a battle against reason under the pretext of opposition
to qiyas. In fact it would have been better for scholars to devote a separate
chapter to reason and rational grounds in their works on jurisprudence, in which
they could delineate more precisely the role of reason and also discuss,
secondarily, the inadmissibility of qiyas. In view of this author, the absence
of any discussion by the latter scholars about the inadmissible form of qiyas
and the limits of the role of reason in legislation has been more or less
detrimental to Shi'ah fiqh and ijtihad.
We should know that the great secret of Islam, from the viewpoint of the Imams
of the Ahl al-Bayt (A), is the principle that the general laws of the Book and
the Sunnah are sufficient for satisfying the religious needs of Muslims for all
time, and that they have no need of ra'y and qiyas. It is characteristic of all
Islamic laws that they are not only not hindersome to human progress in any era,
but are conducive to it by guiding and directing it in the right direction.
All that is needed to grasp this great secret is to have an enlightened and firm
grasp of the vital issues. This great secret of the resourcefulness of Islam can
also be called 'the great secret of ijtihad'. To be certain, if an independent
chapter were devoted to the above topic in books on jurisprudence, some of the
existing contradictions and constraints in the relationship between fiqh and
progress would have been eliminated. This problem requires an independent study
and here we shall abstain from going into further details.
In the course of history, those Sunni schools of fiqh which were more rigid and
formalistic and allowed lesser role to reason in deduction of laws, either
disappeared gradually or the number of their followers diminished. The Zahiris,
who followed Dawud ibn 'Ali, became altogether extinct. The Hanbali school,
which after the Zahiri is the most rigid and formalistic of Sunni schools,
gradually lost followers, and had it not been for the appearance of Ibn
Taymiyyah, who provided the material on which Wahhabism was later to thrive,
perhaps today the number of followers of the Hanbali school would have been very
small.
The school of Malik spread only in North Africa and Maghrib, away from the
centres of Islamic culture, and, as Ibn Khaldun says, the cause of the spreading
of the school of Malik in North Africa and Maghrib was that the inhabitants were
Beduins who lived away from the centres of science and culture. In any case, the
rigid and formalistic Sunni schools declined and lost followers with the passage
of time.
Akhbarism in the Imamiyyah Tradition:
One of the most surprising as well as regrettable phenomena was the emergence of
Akhbarism among the Shi'ah in the early eleventh/seventeenth century. Akhbarism
was a hundred times more rigid and formalistic than either the Zahiri or the
Hanbali school. Its emergence must be considered a great catastrophe in the
Shi'ah world whose effects more or less survive to the present day, causing
stagnation and obscurantism in the Shi'ah Muslim society.
The founder of Akhbarism was Mulla Amin Astarabadi, who expounded his beliefs in
his famous book Fawa'id al-madaniyyah. Mulla Amin, as his book shows, was a
brilliant and learned man. In general, those who found a school, no matter how
baseless, rigid and false its teachings may be, are brilliant and intelligent
men. A dullard cannot found a school and gather followers around himself. The
dullards, however, are influenced by those brilliant individuals and become
their loyal followers.
Amin Astarabadi claims to have discovered some truths which nobody before him
had succeeded in knowing. Also, he claims a kind of Divine inspiration for
himself; in the introduction to the Fawa'id al- madaniyyah, he says:
And you (i.e. the reader), after having gone through our book, will find in it
truths untouched by any of the early or latter philosophers, legists,
scholastics, and jurisprudents, and yet they are only a sample of what my Lord,
the Almighty and the Supreme, has granted to me.
In this book he challenges even the philosophers and the mutakallimun, as
occasionally he has to discuss some issues related to philosophy and kalam.
In the book's tenth chapter, he discusses the meaning of nafs al-'amr. The
eleventh chapter is named by him "Fi bayan aghlat al-'Asha'irah wa al-Mu'tazilah
fi awwal al-wajibat" ("On the mistakes of the Ashai'rah and the Mu'tazilah about
the first obligations"). In the twelfth, he cites the mistakes of Muslim
philosophers and theologians.
Amin Astarabadi under different pretexts, tried to deny the legal authority (hujjiyyah)
of three of the four well-known sources of law, that is, the Quran, ijma', and 'aql,
thus recognizing only the Sunnah as the reliable source. As to the Quran, he
claimed that no one has the right to refer directly to the Quran and to
interpret it. Only the Infallible Imams have such a right.
Our duty is to refer to their ahadith.Only those parts of the Quran that have
been explained in hadith may be referred to for legal purposes; other parts
whose exegesis does not exist in hadith may not be acted upon. Also in order to
deny the authenticity of the text of the Quran, Amin Astarabadi raised the issue
of its corruption (tahrif).
As to ijma', he denied its validity, considering it an innovation (bid'ah) of
the Sunnis. He also offered many arguments to deny the authority of reason. On
the contrary, with respect to ahadith he went to the other extreme and claimed
that all the traditions, especially those of al-Kafi, Man la yahdruruhu al-faqih,
al-Tahdhib and al-'Istibsar are of certain authenticity and legally binding. He
ferociously attacked al- 'Allamah al-Hilli, who had classified traditions into
sahih, muwaththaq, hasan, and da'if, and occasionally insults the 'Allamah and
his followers in his book.
He categorically rejected the very principle of Ijtihad (even in its latter
sense in which the Shi'ah fuqaha' had accepted it) and regarded it as an
innovation in the faith. No one has any right to follow anyone except an
infallible Imam, he claimed. He brought the entire force of his opposition to
bear against reason and its authority. He claimed that all innovations involving
reason - such as regarding Ijtihad as legitimate, considering the zawahir
(apparent meanings of the Quranic verses) to be of binding authority,
classifying ahadith into weak and strong, inquiring into the reliability of
transmitters of ahadith and the like - came into vogue because the fuqaha' have
followed the practitioners of qiyas, the scholastics, philosophers, and
logicians to rely upon reason.
Now, if Mulla Amin were to prove that reason is liable to error except in
matters relating to objects of sense - experience or those which are derived
from it (such as the concepts of mathematics), the fuqaha' would no longer go
after Ijtihad and reason. Accordingly, he advanced rather forceful arguments to
disprove the authority of reason in matters which are not perceptual or derived
from sense-experience. He is especially keen to prove that metaphysics and
theology, since they are based on pure reasoning, are devoid of any value; hence
the title of the twelfth chapter of the Fawa'id al-madaniyyah:
On part of the errors of philosophers and Muslim theosophers (hukama') in their
sciences and that their cause-as we have proved earlier-is that no one who deals
with the issues whose preliminaries are extra-sensible is secure from error
except the Infallible Ones (the Prophet [S], Fatimah [A], and the twelve Imams
[A]).
There, he discusses some well-known problems of philosophy, such as the
necessity of an intervening rest between two reciprocating straight line
motions, that something which is necessarily associated with some impossibility
is also impossible, the problem of precedence, and the problem of the
preponderance of will.
On the whole, he is of the opinion that reason can be a guide only in the study
of problems related to the natural sciences, which are based upon
sense-experience, and in that of mathematics, whose concepts are derived from
such experience or are closely related to it, but not in problems of theology
and metaphysics. This view agrees totally with the outlook of the European
empiricists of the sixteenth century. Incidentally, the period in which
Astarabadi lived approximately coincides with that of the emergence of
empiricism in Europe.
It is not known whether his views were original or he had borrowed them. All
that we know about him at the present is that he lived in Makkah for nearly ten
years where he studied under Muhammad Astarabadi, to whom he refers as a faqih,
a mutakallim, and philosopher. After that he had spent several years at al-Madinah.
But we know nothing about how he came to adopt those views, whether he had
innovated them or had borrowed them from someone else ...
Amin Astarabadi himself, and his followers as well, do not consider him as the
founder of a new school called Akhbarism. Rather they consider him a revivalist
who restored the way of the early Shi'ah scholars of hadith. They claim that
their way is the same as that of the early Shi'ah that was followed until the
times of al-Shaykh al-Saduq and from which the people were gradually led astray
by such scholars as Ibn Abi 'Aqil, Ibn Junayd, al-Shaykh al-Mufid, al-Sayyid al-Murtada,
and al-Shaykh al-Tusi, who brought in reason and ijtihad to temper with Divine
commands. Shaykh Yusuf ibn Ahmad al-Bahram (d. 1186/1772), the author of al-Hada'iq
al-nadrah, who was himself a moderate Akhbari, in the tenth muqaddimah of al-Hada'iq
al-nadrah, under a heading style "Fi hujjiyyat al-dafiil al-'aqli" (On the legal
validity of rational grounds), cites the following words of Sayyid Ni'mat Allah
al-Jaza'iri from the latter's work Anwar al-nu'maniyyah:
To be certain, a majority of our companions (i.e. the Shi'ah) followed a group
of our opponents, among them philosophers. naturalists, or Ahl al-Ra'y and
others, who, relying upon reason and its arguments. cast away the teachings of
the prophets when they did not agree with their intellects.
In these words, which hint at excommunication, Sayyid Ni'mat Allah al-Jaza'iri
considers the majority of Shi'ah scholars - and along with them the
philosophers, the naturalists, and those who follow ra'y and qiyas to be
heedless of the teachings of prophets, merely on the ground that they recognize
the authority of reason. By the 'majority' he means all the scholars who came
after al-Shaykh al-Saduq, as if until that time all Shi'ah had been Akhbaris.
In fact Akhbarism had never existed before as a school with distinct doctrines
such as those based on the denial of the authority of the zawahir of the Quran,
the denial of the authority of reason, impermissibility of the taqlid of anyone
except the Ma'sum and so on. It is true that there were some who seldom went
beyond quoting traditions in their books - even quoting them verbatim in their
fatawa. But the fact is that the abundance of ahadith on the one hand, and the
accessibility to the Imams of the Ahl al-Bayt (A) on the other, had been the
major cause that the need for ijtihad and the need to deduce particular rules
from general laws had not yet been felt.
Al-Shaykh al-Tusi, in the introduction to al-Mabsut, says: "I had heard from the
'Ammah (i.e. the Sunnis) the criticism that our fiqh is limited because we do
not practise qiyas and ra'y and is therefore also inadequate for answering all
the problems. For years I had been desirous of writing a.work on legal deduction
without having recourse to qiyas and ra'y, deducing in it particular rules (furu')
from the fundamental general principles (usul) that we have been taught in
traditions. However, various preoccupations and hindrances prevented it." Then
he adds:
My determination was weakened further by the absence of any desire on the part
of this sect (i.e. the Imamiyyah) towards it and their indifference in this
regard; because they have compiled the traditions which they relate with their
familiar vocabulary, to the extent that if in a problem different words to which
they are not used to are employed to convey the same sense, they consider it as
an odd thing.
Al-Tusi makes it clear that the biggest impediment in his writing of such a book
was that it was not yet customary among the Shi'ah to practise ijtihad and to
deduce particulars from universals.
As said before, there had not emerged any great jurist until that time who could
officially practise ijtihad and deduce particular rules from the general
principles. There had been some - such as al-Shaykh al-Saduq, Ibn al-Walid, and
others - whose method was based on narration of traditions, not on a discursive
study of the subject. Even if they wrote any book on kalam, their argument
consisted mainly of traditions. It was they whom al-Shaykh al-Tusi calls 'muqallidah'
(imitators) and criticizes them. Al-Sayyid al-Murtada - as quoted in the
introduction to al-Sara'ir by Ibn Idris - refers to them as ashasb al-hadith min
ashabina (the 'ahl al-hadith' from among our companions), and al-'Allamah al-
Hilli, in Tahdhib al-'usul, calls them 'al-'akhbariyyun min ashabina' (the 'akhbaris'-traditionists-from
among our companions).
Perhaps it is on this account that al-Shahristani, in al-Milal wa al-
nihal,divides the Imamiyyah into the subsects of mu'tazilah and akhbaris. In the
first volume of his work, he says:
When there came to be divergence in the traditions narrated from their Imams, as
time passed every group of them took its own way, and some of the Imamiyyah
became either Mu'tazilah, or Waidiyyah, or Tafdiliyyah, or Akhbariyyah, or
Mushabbihah, or Salafiyyah.
However, it is quite certain and definite that in the early era there was no
school opposed to that of ijtihad and legal deduction amongst the Shi'ah to have
challenged the authority of the zawahir of the Quran or the authority of reason
in order to defend hadith.
The appearance of Akhbarism, as I have said before, was a catastrophe for the
scientific and intellectual life of the Shi'ah. Many individuals came to adopt
its teachings and came to look down upon reason and rationalism. They made
reflection upon the Quran a taboo and, instead of making the Quran the criterion
for the acceptability of hadith, made hadith a criterion for the Quran.
Fortunately there emerged eminent personalities among the mujtahidun and usulis
who fought the influence of the Akhbaris. Among them the names of Wahid
Behbahani and Shaykh Murtada al-'Ansari - may God elevate their station - stand
high. To describe in detail the services of these two personages is beyond the
scope of the present study.
By the way, it should not remain unsaid that the struggle against Akhbarism was
a difficult and complex matter because its teachings took a deceptive and
self-righteous stance which misled the public. It was for this reason that they
rapidly gained influence and popularity after Amin Astarabadi ...
As is known, there broke out severe and bloody conflict towards the end of the
second/eighth century and the beginning of the third/ninth between the Ahl al-Hadith
wa al-Sunnah, who resemble the Shi'ah Akhbaris, and the Mu'tazilah, who believe
in the role of reason and the validity of rational arguments.
Al-Ma'mun (r. 198-218/813- 833), who was personally a man of learning, supported
the Mu'tazilah and backed them in the controversy about the createdness of the
Quran. He sent out a circular declaring those who denied the creaturehood of the
Quran as heretics, who had no right to be judges and preside over the courts of
law nor was their testimony to be accepted in the courts. As a result the
Mu'tazilah attained great power during al-Ma'mun's reign. More philosophical
works than at any other time were translated into Arabic during al-Ma'mun's
reign and rationalism became prevalent When al-Mutawakkil (r. 232-247/846-861)
came to power, he reversed the tide by throwing the weight of his support behind
the Ahl al-Hadith. The Mu'tazilah were proscribed and the publication of
philosophy was banned. Al-Mas'udi, in Muruj al-dhahab, writes:
When the caliphate fell to al-Mutawakkil, he ordered the people to abstain from
discussion and debate and whatever they were used to in the days of al-Mu'tasim
and al-Wathiq. He directed them to adopt compliance and imitation.
Al-Mutawakkil's support for the Ahl al-Hadith wa al-Sunnah - who like the Shi'ah
Akhbaris had a deceptively self-righteous stance, spoke untiringly of submission
and devotion and persistently chanted the phrase qala Rasul Allah ('so said the
Apostle of Allah') - had an extraordinary effect on the people, to whom it
appeared to be a defence of the Prophet. For this reason, al-Mutawakkil, despite
his tyranny and debauchery, came to assume saintly image in the popular mind.
The Mu'tazilah could never recover from that blow. And we, the Shi'ah, should
thank God that there arose no Mutawakkil in the era of the emergence of the
Shi'ah Akhbaris, who were a hundred times more obscurantists and formalistic
than the Ahl al-Hadith wa al-Sunnah, in their defence.
However, we should note the point that even though the Akhbari onslaught was
defeated through the courageous resistance of a number of the followers of the
school of ijtihad, but the Akhbari thinking was not completely destroyed.
Whenever the champions of ijtihad have made any headway and wherever they have
put their feet, Akhbari thinking had to recede and disappear. But Akhbari
obscurantism still rules in those places where they were not able to reach.
How often we come across mujtahids who do ijtihad with an Akhbari brain. Many of
the kind of things which are published in the name of the 'teachings of the Ahl
al-Bayt' and come to the market, but which strike dagger into the back of the
Ahl al-Bayt of the Prophet (S), are no more than the remnants of the thought of
Mulla Muhammad Amin Astarabadi.