Soid Ahmad

1.6K posts

Soid Ahmad

Soid Ahmad

@soidahmad

Katılım Temmuz 2014
232 Takip Edilen52 Takipçiler
Soid Ahmad
Soid Ahmad@soidahmad·
@HQconcept @YasirAlHanafi So the leadership of Saudi and UAe made those deals. Why can’t Turkey and Pakistan support? It’s not just fault of Arabs. All Sunni Muslims must unite. The issue is indeed lack of leadership with strong emaan. I don’t think public can just unite without their leaders
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ỌLALẸYẸ
ỌLALẸYẸ@HQconcept·
@soidahmad @YasirAlHanafi No, there's no issue of leadership, there's just a pact to support each other if enemies of islam come attacking. Saudi and other gulf countries have military ties with America and isreal, that is the wrong alliance. Iran would be a better ally than Christians and Jews
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Muhammad Yasir Al-Hanafi
Muhammad Yasir Al-Hanafi@YasirAlHanafi·
Being able to unite with other Muslims requires us to sacrifice our egos. Our ego acts as a barrier to many things. Without overcoming it, we won’t be able to unite with our family members, let alone other Muslims. We might even struggle to get along well with our beloved parents, let alone anyone else. Unity demands humility and sacrifice. Initiating a respectful conversation with your Muslim brother, despite your differences, may hurt our ego. But that is what is necessary. The more we humble ourselves, the weaker our ego becomes. Eventually, we gain control and are no longer driven by our weak whims. The devil tries to mislead people, but it was the devil’s ego that led him astray. Our internal enemy is more perilous than our external enemy. May Allah purify our souls. Amin.
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Soid Ahmad
Soid Ahmad@soidahmad·
@HQconcept @YasirAlHanafi I don’t think it works like that. Wituout unified leadership, this won’t work. Did it work for us in the past? They have very different objectives to us. Currently, our problem is unity of Sunnis and right leadership. There is a lack of leadership across the Muslim world.
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ỌLALẸYẸ
ỌLALẸYẸ@HQconcept·
@soidahmad @YasirAlHanafi Unity does not necessarily mean Khalifa or getting along or anything religious...sunni can unite with Shia even if it's only militarily. Qur'an 8:73 “And those who disbelieve are allies of one another. If you do not do so, there will be fitnah on earth and great corruption.”
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Soid Ahmad
Soid Ahmad@soidahmad·
@Haqiqatjou “If we do not declare those who worship idols… to be disbelievers until the proof is established, then how could we declare others to be disbelievers for lesser matters?” 📚 al-Durar al-Saniyyah, 1/104
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Daniel Haqiqatjou
Daniel Haqiqatjou@Haqiqatjou·
This person is like a more honest and consistent version of Farid, Jake, and Adnan. The result of consistently applying contemporary Wahhabi principles is not only takfir of the four madhhabs - it is also to takfir Ibn Hanbal and Ibn Taymiyya. This is why all people of learning and intellect are repulsed by Wahhabi principles, as they can see the terrible implications of these principles. Wahhabism only appeals to idiots who are incapable of logical reasoning.
أمين@ameeniooo

Khariji makes takfir on Ibn Taymiyyah for the view of udhr bil jahl in shirk, this is what happens when an AMJ watcher stays consistent with his principles

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Soid Ahmad
Soid Ahmad@soidahmad·
@Haqiqatjou As for what has been mentioned about me—that I declare disbelief upon people generally—this is from the lies of the enemies.” 📚 al-Durar al-Saniyyah, 1/37 This is what ChatGPT tells me about MIAW.
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Soid Ahmad
Soid Ahmad@soidahmad·
@Hubble121172 @YasirAlHanafi Ofcourse. It doesn’t mean, however, we have to support people cursing our respected ancestors. No unity with Shia! Sorry.
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Soid Ahmad
Soid Ahmad@soidahmad·
@Hubble121172 @RealixeTheTruth @YasirAlHanafi Bayt is the key. Ali(ra) was the valid caliph but was not the Khalifa of People of Shaam. Ameer Muawia (ra) was. There was no Kharooj. Say whatever you want Muawia (ra) and Ali (ra) are in shaa Allah both in Jannah!
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Soid Ahmad
Soid Ahmad@soidahmad·
@RealixeTheTruth @YasirAlHanafi Well don’t mix Ahl us Sunnah with Madkhalis: you have to keep them separate. Did Muawiya and Ahl u Shaam do Bayt of Ali (ra)? If yes and then they fought it will be Kharooj. But they didn’t do Bayt in the first place so no Kharooj. By your logic imam Hussain (ra) also did Kharooj
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RealiXe
RealiXe@RealixeTheTruth·
@soidahmad @YasirAlHanafi Noone did khurooj? A whole army of people attacked an established govt of a Caliph? Today, revolting against stupid secular nationalist states, is considered khurooj by scholars while fighting against the Caliphate of Ali is not considered khurooj by you? 🤦‍♂️
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رومی
رومی@roumieee·
@soidahmad @YasirAlHanafi Compainions ain't fighting against Zionism, and US. They ain't funding Hammas, neithee they're helping Hezbollah in Lebanon against Israel and saving Girls in Minav School.
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Soid Ahmad
Soid Ahmad@soidahmad·
@HQconcept @YasirAlHanafi Yasir can explain better what unity means. I would consider Muslim unity only under one leadership/Khalifa. Everything else is not unity.
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F Jalal
F Jalal@fredfc007·
@soidahmad @YasirAlHanafi But you are happy to prostitute yourselves to American mushrikeen and have them take care of your daughters
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Soid Ahmad
Soid Ahmad@soidahmad·
@RealixeTheTruth @YasirAlHanafi No one did Kharooj. Two great groups of Muslims fought due to misunderstanding. Both will be in Jannah in shaa Allah. We do not disrespect any companion from the side of Ali (ra) or Muawia (ra). It’s not our place to criticize any of them.
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RealiXe
RealiXe@RealixeTheTruth·
@soidahmad @YasirAlHanafi Okay, then why do you support and respect the people who committed khurooj and martyred thousands of sahaba in jamal and siffin?
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Soid Ahmad
Soid Ahmad@soidahmad·
@muftihamdard Can you post a picture. Which tweleve imams exactly as there are differences of opinion who is and who is not an imam depending on which sect you’re from :)
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Mufti Fazal Hamdard
Mufti Fazal Hamdard@muftihamdard·
The names of the Twelve Imams are written in beautiful calligraphy inside the Prophet's Mosque (Al-Masjid an-Nabawi) ﷺ in Medina.
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Soid Ahmad
Soid Ahmad@soidahmad·
Salam @mohammed_hijab. As the report from the mother of the believers Aisha (RA) is sound, the issue canbe memory, not legitimacy. Even if she misremembered her exact age, she wouldn’t have cited “9” unless it was socially accepted, indicating a norm at the time, not an exception
Mohammed Hijab@mohammed_hijab

In the broader scholarly discourse concerning the historical details of Sayyidah Aisha radiyallahu anha at the time of her marriage and its consummation the narration appearing in the Sahihayn that places these events at the ages of six and nine respectively remains the position affirmed by the vast majority of classical authorities. Yet the present discussion is strictly methodological in nature and does not endorse any alternative chronological proposal such as the figure of eighteen sometimes advanced in modern academic analyses of the sirah and maghazi literature. The sole purpose here is to illustrate through the words of the ulema themselves that the layman Neo Salafi assertion namely that every single narration contained within Sahih al Bukhari and Sahih Muslim must be accepted without the slightest academic reservation is not the nuanced position upheld by the Salaf or by the broader Sunni tradition of hadith scholarship. On matters that are purely historical and biographical rather than constitutive of legal rulings or articles of creed the classical authorities have always permitted a measured degree of critical engagement. The foundational distinction drawn by the early muhaddithun is instructive in this regard. Imam Abd al Rahman ibn Mahdi a towering figure of the second century and teacher of Imam Ahmad ibn Hanbal articulated the principle with characteristic clarity: “When reports reach us from the Prophet peace be upon him concerning the lawful and the prohibited and the legal rulings we are severe with the chains of transmission and we scrutinise the narrators. But when reports concern the virtues of actions their rewards and punishments or permissible exhortations and invocations we show leniency with the chains.” This statement recorded by al Hakim in al Mustadrak and echoed in al Suyuti’s Tadrib al Rawi reflects a consensus among the Salaf that historical and biographical akhbar precisely the category into which the age of Aisha falls allow greater flexibility than those deployed for deriving ahkam. Imam Ahmad ibn Hanbal expressed a similar view when he remarked that extreme strictness is reserved for what pertains to halal and haram while leniency befits reports of virtues stories and narratives. On purely historical questions therefore the acceptance or rejection of a particular report after due academic examination has always been far less consequential than on matters touching usul al din or fiqh.Even within the Sahihayn themselves the classical tradition never treated every narration as immune to scholarly discussion. Consider first the muallaqat those suspended reports in which Imam al Bukhari deliberately omits part or all of the opening chain for the sake of brevity. While the overwhelming majority of these are corroborated elsewhere in the Sahih with complete isnads a significant subset approximately one hundred and sixty unique instances stand alone in suspended form. Al Hafiz Ibn Hajar al Asqalani devoted an entire monograph Taghliq al Taliq to tracing their external supports and evaluating their authenticity according to rigorous criteria. He and other luminaries such as Ibn al Salah and al Dhahabi subjected these reports to independent scrutiny demonstrating that their inclusion in the Sahih did not exempt them from further verification. This labour alone refutes any notion that the mere presence of a narration in al Bukhari rendered further academic inquiry impermissible.A still more pointed illustration emerges from the work of Imam al Daraqutni whose Kitab al Tatabbu systematically examined roughly seventy eight narrations in Sahih al Bukhari one hundred in Sahih Muslim and thirty two common to both. His critique focused on subtle ilal hidden defects in precision of transmission inversion of wording or minor interruptions without ever impugning the overall stature of the two collections. Later authorities such as Imam al Nawawi engaged these points directly sometimes accepting and sometimes rebutting them yet always within the framework of legitimate scholarly discourse. Such exchanges were regarded as the natural outworking of the science of hadith not as an assault upon the Sahihayn. Concrete examples of these ilal include his observation concerning a narration in Sahih al Bukhari on the topic of Heaven and Hell complaining to Allah where one particular chain transmitted by Ubaydallah ibn Sad inverts the order of divine destiny in its wording an issue of narrator precision that later critics such as Abu Hasan al Qabisi also highlighted. Another instance involves reports that al Daraqutni judged were not transmitted in fully mawsul form as presented but only through specific limited routes such as those of Makhramah ibn Bukayr or Abu Burdah thereby introducing a subtle discontinuity in the chain that required separate verification.Nor was this critical spirit confined to earlier centuries. Shaykh Nasir al Din al Albani whose methodology is frequently invoked by those who champion an uncompromising view of the Sahihayn himself acknowledged that his own research led him to conclude that certain narrations within these collections fall short of the sahih or even hasan standard. In a recorded statement he explained: “Allah the Exalted has granted me firmness in the study of Hadith I applied this study to some of the Hadiths that appear in Sahih al Bukhari. Thus I found that there are some Hadiths that are not considered to be on the grade of Hasan much less the level of Sahih in Sahih al Bukhari not to mention Sahih Muslim.” He reiterated that “during my knowledge based research I passed over some Hadiths in Sahih al Bukhari and Sahih Muslim and it was revealed to me that there are some Hadiths that are weak.” He reinforced this position by quoting Imam al Shafi'i who stated “Allah didn't want to complete anything except His Book.” Al Albani’s position was not a wholesale rejection of the Sahihayn but a continuation of the classical practice of evaluating individual reports on their merits even when they appear in the most authoritative compilations as heard in his lecture available at youtube.com/watch?v=9VuoM-… same principle of critical engagement is evident when one examines mawquf reports statements attributed to the Companions rather than directly to the Prophet peace be upon him that are nonetheless included in Sahih al Bukhari. A particularly illuminating example concerns Sayyidah Aisha’s declaration that no one should believe the Messenger of Allah urinated while standing for she had never seen him do so except while sitting. Despite the sound chain supporting this mawquf transmission the scholars of the ummah did not accept her testimony as an absolute and unqualified rule. It stands in direct tension with the explicit report of Hudhayfah ibn al Yaman in the same Sahih al Bukhari who personally witnessed the Prophet urinate while standing during a journey at a place of refuse. Rather than discarding one narration or the other the hadith scholars undertook detailed reconciliation concluding that Aisha spoke of the Prophet’s habitual practice in the domestic setting while Hudhayfah recorded a specific concession made under the necessity of travel. Her sentiment though conveyed through a sound chain was therefore qualified and not taken at face value. This case demonstrates that even a soundly transmitted statement from Aisha within the Sahihayn is subjected to scrutiny cross referencing and qualification rather than uncritical endorsement.This pattern of scholarly engagement extends directly to other reports transmitted by Aisha herself in Sahih al Bukhari including the well known narration concerning her age at the time of marriage and consummation. Just as her mawquf testimony on the Prophet’s manner of urination was weighed against parallel evidence rather than accepted at face value so too are her statements about her own early life placed in conversation with additional historical indicators. In one narration she describes herself as a young girl who had not yet committed much of the Qur’an to memory when Surah al Qamar was revealed placing the event in the context of the early Medinan period after the Hijrah. This is juxtaposed by scholars with the chronological data surrounding her sister Asma bint Abi Bakr who was consistently reported to be ten years her senior. Asma’s own death at the advanced age of one hundred in the year seventy three after the Hijrah supplies an independent timeline that some classical and later analysts have brought to bear on the broader question of Aisha’s birth year and the precise dating of the marriage. In yet another narration Sahih al Bukhari 2297 Aisha states that since she reached the age when she could remember things she has seen her parents worshipping according to the right faith of Islam and she recounts events from the period of early persecution before the Hijrah including Abu Bakr’s attempted emigration to Ethiopia. This recollection of conscious memory from the pre Hijrah era implies that she must have been well beyond the age of one at the time of those events yet under the strict traditional calculation tied to consummation at nine shortly after the Hijrah she would have been no more than an infant during that persecution. The point is not to reject any single report but to illustrate that the ummah’s hadith scholars have routinely subjected even Aisha’s own transmissions soundly chained as they are to this kind of comparative historical analysis exactly as they did with her statement on the Prophet’s urination. The presence of such ikhtilaf within the pages of the Sahihayn themselves shows that academic discussion of these details has always been part of the Sunni tradition.Comparable caution appears in cases involving transmissions that carry Israelite content. A striking instance is the narration found in Sahih Muslim describing the days of creation land on Saturday mountains on Monday and so forth which certain major authorities including Imam al Bukhari and Yahya ibn Ma’in explicitly identified not as a statement of the Prophet but as originating from Ka’b al Ahbar the learned Jewish convert. Despite an apparently sound chain the content itself prompted its reclassification away from the Prophetic corpus. In Sahih al Bukhari itself hadith 7361 Muawiyah radiyallahu anhu remarks of Ka’b that he was among the most truthful of those who transmit from the People of the Book yet sometimes his words turned out to be false. Such examples underscore that even reports supported by strong chains were not immune to rejection or qualification when historical and biographical scrutiny revealed Israelite influence or internal inconsistencies.It is also important to recognise why many of the classical scholars of the past did not delve more deeply into this particular historical question. In their time there was simply little impetus or external pressure to do so the age of Aisha was not a major point of polemical attack against the Prophet peace be upon him or Islam as it has become in certain modern contexts. Had a scholar of the calibre of al Hafiz Ibn Hajar al Asqalani been aware that this matter would one day constitute one of the primary lines of attack upon the character of the Holy Prophet peace be upon him it is entirely conceivable that he and others would have approached the issue with even greater scrutiny and produced a more exhaustive analysis.In sum the tradition of the Salaf and the classical Sunni muhaddithun has consistently maintained that rigorous academic discussion of individual narrations even those appearing in the Sahihayn remains both permissible and necessary particularly when the material in question belongs to the domain of history and biography. Such discussion in no way undermines the overarching reliability of these collections nor does it constitute rejection of the Sunnah as a whole. Applied to the historical question of Sayyidah Aisha’s age any conclusion reached through sincere evidence based inquiry whatever that conclusion may be carries no implication whatsoever for a Muslim’s aqeedah. It remains a matter of ikhtilaf in the realm of akhbar not a challenge to the foundations of iman. This is not a moral issue the Prophet’s marriage to Aisha fourteen hundred years ago is very much fully defensible within its historical cultural and revelatory context. Rather the discussion serves to show those who disbelieve in Islam that even if they hold a strong view on the perceived immorality of this practice it does not undermine the religion itself. The ummah’s scholars have always distinguished between what touches the core of religion and what pertains to the details of sirah on the latter scholarly difference has been tolerated without the slightest accusation of deviation. May Allah grant us all the guidance to pursue knowledge with integrity and to preserve the unity of the community.

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Soid Ahmad
Soid Ahmad@soidahmad·
@mohammed_hijab As the report from Aisha bint Abi Bakr (RA) is sound, the issue is memory, not legitimacy. Even if she misremembered her exact age, she wouldn’t have cited “9” unless it was socially accepted, indicating a norm at the time, not an exception.
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Mohammed Hijab
Mohammed Hijab@mohammed_hijab·
In the broader scholarly discourse concerning the historical details of Sayyidah Aisha radiyallahu anha at the time of her marriage and its consummation the narration appearing in the Sahihayn that places these events at the ages of six and nine respectively remains the position affirmed by the vast majority of classical authorities. Yet the present discussion is strictly methodological in nature and does not endorse any alternative chronological proposal such as the figure of eighteen sometimes advanced in modern academic analyses of the sirah and maghazi literature. The sole purpose here is to illustrate through the words of the ulema themselves that the layman Neo Salafi assertion namely that every single narration contained within Sahih al Bukhari and Sahih Muslim must be accepted without the slightest academic reservation is not the nuanced position upheld by the Salaf or by the broader Sunni tradition of hadith scholarship. On matters that are purely historical and biographical rather than constitutive of legal rulings or articles of creed the classical authorities have always permitted a measured degree of critical engagement. The foundational distinction drawn by the early muhaddithun is instructive in this regard. Imam Abd al Rahman ibn Mahdi a towering figure of the second century and teacher of Imam Ahmad ibn Hanbal articulated the principle with characteristic clarity: “When reports reach us from the Prophet peace be upon him concerning the lawful and the prohibited and the legal rulings we are severe with the chains of transmission and we scrutinise the narrators. But when reports concern the virtues of actions their rewards and punishments or permissible exhortations and invocations we show leniency with the chains.” This statement recorded by al Hakim in al Mustadrak and echoed in al Suyuti’s Tadrib al Rawi reflects a consensus among the Salaf that historical and biographical akhbar precisely the category into which the age of Aisha falls allow greater flexibility than those deployed for deriving ahkam. Imam Ahmad ibn Hanbal expressed a similar view when he remarked that extreme strictness is reserved for what pertains to halal and haram while leniency befits reports of virtues stories and narratives. On purely historical questions therefore the acceptance or rejection of a particular report after due academic examination has always been far less consequential than on matters touching usul al din or fiqh.Even within the Sahihayn themselves the classical tradition never treated every narration as immune to scholarly discussion. Consider first the muallaqat those suspended reports in which Imam al Bukhari deliberately omits part or all of the opening chain for the sake of brevity. While the overwhelming majority of these are corroborated elsewhere in the Sahih with complete isnads a significant subset approximately one hundred and sixty unique instances stand alone in suspended form. Al Hafiz Ibn Hajar al Asqalani devoted an entire monograph Taghliq al Taliq to tracing their external supports and evaluating their authenticity according to rigorous criteria. He and other luminaries such as Ibn al Salah and al Dhahabi subjected these reports to independent scrutiny demonstrating that their inclusion in the Sahih did not exempt them from further verification. This labour alone refutes any notion that the mere presence of a narration in al Bukhari rendered further academic inquiry impermissible.A still more pointed illustration emerges from the work of Imam al Daraqutni whose Kitab al Tatabbu systematically examined roughly seventy eight narrations in Sahih al Bukhari one hundred in Sahih Muslim and thirty two common to both. His critique focused on subtle ilal hidden defects in precision of transmission inversion of wording or minor interruptions without ever impugning the overall stature of the two collections. Later authorities such as Imam al Nawawi engaged these points directly sometimes accepting and sometimes rebutting them yet always within the framework of legitimate scholarly discourse. Such exchanges were regarded as the natural outworking of the science of hadith not as an assault upon the Sahihayn. Concrete examples of these ilal include his observation concerning a narration in Sahih al Bukhari on the topic of Heaven and Hell complaining to Allah where one particular chain transmitted by Ubaydallah ibn Sad inverts the order of divine destiny in its wording an issue of narrator precision that later critics such as Abu Hasan al Qabisi also highlighted. Another instance involves reports that al Daraqutni judged were not transmitted in fully mawsul form as presented but only through specific limited routes such as those of Makhramah ibn Bukayr or Abu Burdah thereby introducing a subtle discontinuity in the chain that required separate verification.Nor was this critical spirit confined to earlier centuries. Shaykh Nasir al Din al Albani whose methodology is frequently invoked by those who champion an uncompromising view of the Sahihayn himself acknowledged that his own research led him to conclude that certain narrations within these collections fall short of the sahih or even hasan standard. In a recorded statement he explained: “Allah the Exalted has granted me firmness in the study of Hadith I applied this study to some of the Hadiths that appear in Sahih al Bukhari. Thus I found that there are some Hadiths that are not considered to be on the grade of Hasan much less the level of Sahih in Sahih al Bukhari not to mention Sahih Muslim.” He reiterated that “during my knowledge based research I passed over some Hadiths in Sahih al Bukhari and Sahih Muslim and it was revealed to me that there are some Hadiths that are weak.” He reinforced this position by quoting Imam al Shafi'i who stated “Allah didn't want to complete anything except His Book.” Al Albani’s position was not a wholesale rejection of the Sahihayn but a continuation of the classical practice of evaluating individual reports on their merits even when they appear in the most authoritative compilations as heard in his lecture available at youtube.com/watch?v=9VuoM-… same principle of critical engagement is evident when one examines mawquf reports statements attributed to the Companions rather than directly to the Prophet peace be upon him that are nonetheless included in Sahih al Bukhari. A particularly illuminating example concerns Sayyidah Aisha’s declaration that no one should believe the Messenger of Allah urinated while standing for she had never seen him do so except while sitting. Despite the sound chain supporting this mawquf transmission the scholars of the ummah did not accept her testimony as an absolute and unqualified rule. It stands in direct tension with the explicit report of Hudhayfah ibn al Yaman in the same Sahih al Bukhari who personally witnessed the Prophet urinate while standing during a journey at a place of refuse. Rather than discarding one narration or the other the hadith scholars undertook detailed reconciliation concluding that Aisha spoke of the Prophet’s habitual practice in the domestic setting while Hudhayfah recorded a specific concession made under the necessity of travel. Her sentiment though conveyed through a sound chain was therefore qualified and not taken at face value. This case demonstrates that even a soundly transmitted statement from Aisha within the Sahihayn is subjected to scrutiny cross referencing and qualification rather than uncritical endorsement.This pattern of scholarly engagement extends directly to other reports transmitted by Aisha herself in Sahih al Bukhari including the well known narration concerning her age at the time of marriage and consummation. Just as her mawquf testimony on the Prophet’s manner of urination was weighed against parallel evidence rather than accepted at face value so too are her statements about her own early life placed in conversation with additional historical indicators. In one narration she describes herself as a young girl who had not yet committed much of the Qur’an to memory when Surah al Qamar was revealed placing the event in the context of the early Medinan period after the Hijrah. This is juxtaposed by scholars with the chronological data surrounding her sister Asma bint Abi Bakr who was consistently reported to be ten years her senior. Asma’s own death at the advanced age of one hundred in the year seventy three after the Hijrah supplies an independent timeline that some classical and later analysts have brought to bear on the broader question of Aisha’s birth year and the precise dating of the marriage. In yet another narration Sahih al Bukhari 2297 Aisha states that since she reached the age when she could remember things she has seen her parents worshipping according to the right faith of Islam and she recounts events from the period of early persecution before the Hijrah including Abu Bakr’s attempted emigration to Ethiopia. This recollection of conscious memory from the pre Hijrah era implies that she must have been well beyond the age of one at the time of those events yet under the strict traditional calculation tied to consummation at nine shortly after the Hijrah she would have been no more than an infant during that persecution. The point is not to reject any single report but to illustrate that the ummah’s hadith scholars have routinely subjected even Aisha’s own transmissions soundly chained as they are to this kind of comparative historical analysis exactly as they did with her statement on the Prophet’s urination. The presence of such ikhtilaf within the pages of the Sahihayn themselves shows that academic discussion of these details has always been part of the Sunni tradition.Comparable caution appears in cases involving transmissions that carry Israelite content. A striking instance is the narration found in Sahih Muslim describing the days of creation land on Saturday mountains on Monday and so forth which certain major authorities including Imam al Bukhari and Yahya ibn Ma’in explicitly identified not as a statement of the Prophet but as originating from Ka’b al Ahbar the learned Jewish convert. Despite an apparently sound chain the content itself prompted its reclassification away from the Prophetic corpus. In Sahih al Bukhari itself hadith 7361 Muawiyah radiyallahu anhu remarks of Ka’b that he was among the most truthful of those who transmit from the People of the Book yet sometimes his words turned out to be false. Such examples underscore that even reports supported by strong chains were not immune to rejection or qualification when historical and biographical scrutiny revealed Israelite influence or internal inconsistencies.It is also important to recognise why many of the classical scholars of the past did not delve more deeply into this particular historical question. In their time there was simply little impetus or external pressure to do so the age of Aisha was not a major point of polemical attack against the Prophet peace be upon him or Islam as it has become in certain modern contexts. Had a scholar of the calibre of al Hafiz Ibn Hajar al Asqalani been aware that this matter would one day constitute one of the primary lines of attack upon the character of the Holy Prophet peace be upon him it is entirely conceivable that he and others would have approached the issue with even greater scrutiny and produced a more exhaustive analysis.In sum the tradition of the Salaf and the classical Sunni muhaddithun has consistently maintained that rigorous academic discussion of individual narrations even those appearing in the Sahihayn remains both permissible and necessary particularly when the material in question belongs to the domain of history and biography. Such discussion in no way undermines the overarching reliability of these collections nor does it constitute rejection of the Sunnah as a whole. Applied to the historical question of Sayyidah Aisha’s age any conclusion reached through sincere evidence based inquiry whatever that conclusion may be carries no implication whatsoever for a Muslim’s aqeedah. It remains a matter of ikhtilaf in the realm of akhbar not a challenge to the foundations of iman. This is not a moral issue the Prophet’s marriage to Aisha fourteen hundred years ago is very much fully defensible within its historical cultural and revelatory context. Rather the discussion serves to show those who disbelieve in Islam that even if they hold a strong view on the perceived immorality of this practice it does not undermine the religion itself. The ummah’s scholars have always distinguished between what touches the core of religion and what pertains to the details of sirah on the latter scholarly difference has been tolerated without the slightest accusation of deviation. May Allah grant us all the guidance to pursue knowledge with integrity and to preserve the unity of the community.
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Rogue Theist
Rogue Theist@XAverroes·
The problem with the Salafis, Wahabis and their ilk is they continue to insist worship belongs to God alone.
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Pehalwaaan
Pehalwaaan@Pehalwaaan·
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