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Ibn Abidin

Syrian Hanafi Jurist


Syrian Hanafi Jurist

FieldValue
nationalityOttoman Empire
nameIbn ʿᾹbidīn
ابن عابدين
titleFinal verifier of the Hanafi School
birth_date1784
birth_placeDamascus, Damascus Eyalet, Ottoman Empire
death_date
death_placeDamascus, Damascus Eyalet, Ottoman Empire
religionIslam
denominationSunni
jurisprudenceHanafi
creedMaturidi
Sufi_orderQadiri
main_interestsFiqh (Islamic jurisprudence), Usul al-Fiqh (principles of jurisprudence), Islamic inheritance jurisprudence, Tafsir, Rhetoric
notable_worksRadd al-Muhtar 'ala al-Durr al-Mukhtar
influencesAbu Hanifa
Al-Sarakhsi
Burhan al-Din al-Marghinani
Al-Kasani
Abu al-Barakat al-Nasafi
Al-Haskafi
influencedAl-Maydani
'Abdullah al-Harari

ابن عابدين Al-Sarakhsi Burhan al-Din al-Marghinani Al-Kasani Abu al-Barakat al-Nasafi Al-Haskafi 'Abdullah al-Harari

Ibn 'Abidin (; full name: Muḥammad Amīn ibn ʿUmar ibn ʿAbd al-ʿAzīz ibn Aḥmad in ʿAbd ar-Raḥīm ibn Najmuddīn ibn Muḥammad Ṣalāḥuddīn al-Shāmī, died 1836 CE / AH 1252), known in the Indian subcontinent as al-Shami, was an Islamic scholar and Jurist who lived in the city of Damascus in Syria during the Ottoman era. He was the authority of the fiqh (Islamic jurisprudence) of the Hanafi madhhab (school of law). He was a state employee with the title of Amin al-fatwa. This meant that he was the mufti that people would go to when they had legal questions in Damascus. He composed over 50 works consisting of a major fatwa (legal statement) collection, many treatises, poems, and several commentaries on the works of others.

His most famous work was the Radd al-Muhtar 'ala al-Durr al-Mukhtar. This is still considered the authoritative text of Hanafi fiqh today.

Childhood

Ibn Abidin was born in Damascus in 1784. His family came from a long line of scholars and was, therefore, well respected. He studied the Qur'an starting at a very young age and received his first general degree of authorization from his first teacher, shaykh Muhammad al-Kuzbari al-Kabir, when he was about 12 years old. He was said to have memorized the Qur'an before he reached maturity. He was a very determined student. After reciting the Qur'an at his father's shop and receiving criticism for it, he sought to perfect his work and studied vigorously under several well-known scholars. After much hard work, he received four degrees of authorization.

Relationship with the state

Ibn Abidin and other state-appointed muftis had a complex relationship with the state. For example, Ibn Abidin adds a note at the end of one of his fatwas about taxes that criticizes the state's collection of taxes. "But most of the extraordinary taxes imposed on the villages these days are not for preservation of either property or people, but are mere oppression and aggression and most of the expenses of the governor and his subordinates and the buildings of his residence and the residences of his soldiers and what he pays to the messengers of the sulton…levied in our country twice yearly and there are many sums on top of it that are taken as presents to his assistants and attendants…"

Death

Ibn Abidin died on 21 Rabi al-thani in the year 1252 AH at the age of 54 years. His funeral prayer was led by his own teacher Saýīd al-Ĥalabī who broke down, weeping and clutching his own beard said: 'I was treasuring you, for what comes after my old age'. Prayers were held in the Sināniyyah mosque and he was buried – in accordance with his will – near the grave of Shaykh Álāuddin al-Ĥaşkafī, the author of Durr al-Mukhtār and next to the great muĥaddith Şāliĥ al-Jaynīnī in Damascus.

Radd al Muhtar

Main article: Radd al-Muhtar 'ala al-Durr al-Mukhtar

Ibn Abidin systematically went through the works and positions of the school with depth and preciseness. Regarding the encompassing scope of Ibn 'Abidin in Hanafi fiqh, the then Mufti of Beirut, Shaykh Muhammad Effendi al-Hulawani in Takmila Radd al-Muhtar said, "I never heard any lesson like that of Ibn 'Abidin. I would try my hardest to research the next day's topic as extensively and thoroughly as possible by reading and understanding all the gloss and commentary written on it. I would think that I had comprehended it completely. However, Ibn 'Abidin would teach us the same lesson the next day and not only cover everything that I had researched but would also provide further clarification and deeper understanding in them, and would add to it many other beneficial points than I had even come across in any of the works nor even thought about." As such, Radd al-Muhtar is considered one of the most comprehensive, encyclopaedic compilations of the Hanafi school, even more extensive than the Fatawa Hindiyya, a slightly earlier work commissioned by the Mughul emperor, Aurangzeb.

Works

Ibn Abidin wrote numerous books on subjects ranging from prayers to medicine. It was his extensive knowledge of jurisprudence that distinguished him. He wrote exegesis of previous juristic books which were far beyond common man's understanding. In this same context, he compiled his most famous book: Radd al-Muhtar 'ala al-Durr al-Mukhtar, a voluminous extension of Imam Hasfaki's Durr al mukhtar. Following are some of his major works:

  1. Radd al-Muhtar ala al-Dur al-Mukhtar: This is the most comprehensive and the most authoritative book on Ĥanafī fiqh in the world today. It has been published many times: the Būlāq edition of 1272 AH in five volumes and later in 1276 AH and 1299 AH; the Maymaniyyah edition in 1307 AH; the Istanbul edition of 1307 AH. Once again in 1323 AH, there was a Maymaniyyah edition; and later in 1323 AH, the Bābi al-Ĥalabī edition and Istanbul edition in eight volumes along with the Takmalah, which has been photo-offset a number of times hence.
  2. Al-Úqūd ad-Durriyyah fī Tanqīĥi Al-Fatāwā al-Ĥāmidiyyah [The String of Pearls: A Revision of Ĥamid's Fatāwā]: being the revision of the fatāwā of Shaykh Ĥāmiduddin al-Ímādi; published in two volumes.
  3. Ĥāshiyah álā Tafsīr al-Qāđī al-Bayđāwi:[Marginalia on the Exegesis of Bayđawi]: he made it a point to annotate it such that it contains only those points which no other mufassir [exegete] has mentioned before.
  4. Ĥāshiyah álā Ifāđātu'l Anwār Sharĥ al-Manār [Marginalia on Extensions of Radiance: an Exegesis of the Lodestar – Al-Manār of Ĥaşkafī].
  5. Ĥāshiyah álā Sharĥ At-Taqrīr wa't Taĥbīr fī'l Uşūl of ibn Amīr Ĥājj. [Marginalia on the Exegesis of Speeches and Writing on the matter of Principles of Islamic Knowledge].
  6. Fatāwā fī'l Fiqh'li Ĥanafī, containing about a hundred rulings other than those in his Risālah. It is also known as Ajwibatun Muĥaqqiqah.
  7. Al-Fawāyid al-Mukhaşşasah bi Aĥkāmi Kayy al-Ĥummaşah: An article on medicine. A brilliant doctor in earlier times had devised a novel way to extract pus from festers and abscesses using chickpea. Ibn Áābidīn has combined two separate monographs on this subject along with his own additions. The first being Al-Aĥkām al-Mulakhkhişah fī Ĥukmi Kayy al-Ĥummaşah by Shurnblāli and the second, Al-Abĥāth al-Mulakhkhişah fī Ĥukmi Kayy al-Ĥummaşah by Shaykh Ábd al-Ghanī an-Nāblūsi. He completed the manuscript in 1227 AH.
  8. Rafá at-Taraddud fī Áqdi'l Aşābiý índa't Tashahhud: A compilation of the sayings of Ĥanafī imāms in the matter of raising the index finger and make a circle with other fingers in tashahhud. Refuting the opinion of some Ĥanafīs who rule that only raising the index finger is necessary without encircling other fingers. It was completed in Rabīý al-Awwal, 1249 AH.
  9. Shifā al-Álīl wa Ball al-Ghalīl fī Ĥukmi'l Waşiyyati bi'l Khitmāti wa't Tahālīl: He wrote this to refute a practise prevalent among the people during the plague of 1228 in Damascus. The practise being circulation of a 'will' to complete khitmah [a round of reciting the Qur'an completely] and tahlīl [reciting the formula: lā ilāha illā Allāh].
  10. Tanbīh Dhawi'l Afhām álā Aĥkāmi't Tablīghi Khalf al-Imām: An explanation concerning a follower repeating the imām's takbīrs loudly during şalāt [to amplify the takbirs; a mukabbir]. This topic has been dealt with in a comprehensive manner; it starts with an introduction, has a body and ends with a conclusion. It was completed on the first of Muĥarram 1226 AH.
  11. Tanbīh al-Ghafīl wa'l Wasnān álā Aĥkāmi Hilāli Ramađān: He wrote this monograph obeying his shaykh, in which he compiledthe canonical ruling concerning the new moon, or the crescent of Ramađan according to all the four madh'habs. Apparently this was to dispel doubts arising of a controversy concerning the new moon of Ramađān in Damascus of the year 1240 AH.

References

Bibliography

  • Anwar, Muhammad. "Comparative study of insurance and Takafol (Islamic Insurance)." Pakistan Development Review. 33.4 (1994): 1315–1330. Print.
  • Calder, Norman. "The "Uqud rasm al-mufti" of Ibn Abidin." Bulletin of the School of Oriental and African Studies. 63.2 (2000): 215-228. Print.
  • El Fadl, Khaled Abou. "Islam and the Theology of Power." Middle East Report. 221 (2001): 28–33. Print.
  • Gerber, Haim. Islamic Law and Culture, 1600-1840. The Netherlands: Brill, 1999. Print.
  • Tucker, Judith E. "Muftis and Matrimony: Islamic Law and Gender in Ottoman Syria and Palestine." Islamic Law and Society. 1.3 (1994): 265–300. Print.
  • Ziadeh, Farhat J. "Equality (Kafa'ah) in Muslim Law of Mariage." American Journal of Comparative Law. 6.4 (1957): 503–517. Print.

References

  1. (2 January 2024). "What is Meant by Imam Ibn 'Abidin Being the Final Verifier of the Hanafi School?".
  2. Calder, Norman. "The" ʿUqūd rasm al-muftī" of Ibn ʿĀbidīn." Bulletin of the School of Oriental and African Studies, University of London (2000): 215-228. "Muhammad Amin b. 'Umar Ibn 'Abidin was a Hanafi-Maturidi jurist of the eighteenth and nineteenth centuries."
  3. "Imam Ibn Abidin Shami - Biography and Works at Sunniport".
  4. "Imām Ibn Áābidīn Shāmī - Biography and Works".
  5. an-Nubala (2011)
  6. Gerber (1999), 1-21
  7. Gerber (1999), 21-100
  8. Gerber (1999), 88-121
  9. Gerber (1999), 110
  10. Gerber (1999), 114
  11. Gerber (1999), 110-120
  12. Gerber (1999), 88
  13. Gerber (1999), 126
  14. Tucker (1994)
  15. Ziadeh (1957)
  16. Gerber (1999), 66
  17. (20 November 2012). "Hanafi Texts: The Difference Between Primers and Reference Works in Islamic Law".
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