REFUTATION
OF THE FOREGOING ESSAY
Now
consider may discussion on what al-Fakihani has said in this
brief essay.
In
connection with this statement that he could not find any basis
for the Meelad Shareef in the Quran and the Sunnah, our submission
is that the negation of the knowledge of a thing does not necessarily
imply the negation of the existence of that thing (i.e. someone
not having knowledge of a thing does not necessarily mean that
that thing does not in reality exist). The Imam of the Huffaz,
Abdul Fadl Ahmad Ibn Hajar (radi Allahu anhu) has extracted
a basis for the Meelad Shareef from the Sunnah. One more basis
I have extracted, which will be mentioned later.
Al-Fakihani
has stated that the Meelad Shareef is an innovation invented
by useless and idle people, who are slaves of their stomachs
and on whom the lower desires of the Nafs predominate. Further,
having explained the different kinds of rules he stated that
it is neither Wajib, nor Mandub, since neither did the Shari'ah
demand it nor did the Sahabah, the Tabi'un and the Ulama of
the early generations celebrate it. In this connection we say,
as stated earlier, that it was a just Sultan who was an Alim
who started the Meelad Shareef with the objective of obtaining
nearness to Allah. There were many Ulama and pious people with
him, yet none of them deemed it reprehensible. On the contrary,
Ibn Dihyah (such an eminent Alim of that time) liked the celebration
of the Meelad Shareef, and wrote a book for the Sultan on this
subject (as mentioned earlier). These were all Ulama of the
earlier generations who liked the Meelad Shareef, who supported
and confirmed it and did not criticise or refute it. (This is
itself a self-evident proof that al-Fakihani's allegations are
wrong).
Then
there remains his statement that the Meelad Shareef is not even
Mandub in reality, which the Shari'ah has demanded. In this
regard our submission is that the demand of the Shari'ah is
known sometimes through a Nass (an explicit textual statement
in the Quran or in the Hadith literature) and sometimes through
Qiyas (analogical deduction). For the Meelad Shareef, although
no Nass is to be found, yet from those two bases in the Sunnah
which are mentioned further on, Qiyas can definitely be made
(i.e., when Qiyas is applied on those two bases the commendability
- being Mandub - of the Meelad Shareef can be realised).
DIFFERENT
CATEGORIES OF BID'AH (INNOVATION)
His
statement that the Meelad Shareef can also not be Mubah because
the Ijma' of the followers of Islam is that anything that is
a Bid'ah (innovation) in religion cannot be Mubah, is one that
is not accepted. This is because Bid'ah (innovations) are not
classified only as Haraam or Makruh, but they can also be Mubah
as well as Mandub or Wajib.
Imam al-Nawawi (radi Allahu anhu) says in "Tahdhib al-Asma wal
Lugat": "Bid'ah in the Shari'ah is the invention of that which
was not there in the period of the Messenger of Allah, and it
is divided into two categories, Hasanah (or good) and Qabihah
(or evil)."
Shaikh
Izzuddin Ibn Abd al-Salaam (radi Allahu anhu) writes in "al-Qawa'id":
"Bid'ah is divided into Wajib, Haraam, Mandub, Makruh and Mubah.
And the way to know to which category it belongs is to examine
it together with the laws of Shari'ah. If it falls with those
laws that deal with what is Wajib, then it is Wajib; if with
those laws that deal with what is Haraam, then it is Haraam;
if with the laws dealing with what is Mandub, then Mandub; if
the laws dealing with what is Makruh, then Makruh; if with the
laws dealing with what is Mubah, then Mubah".
After this he went on to give examples of the five kinds of
Bid'ah and wrote: "As for Bid'ah that is Mandub, its examples
are the setting up of inns and educational institutions and
very good action which was not there in the first age. Among
the latter are Tarawih, discussion on the intricacies of Tasawwuf
and debates. And among these is the convening of assemblies
for deduction of laws in connection with problems providing
that the motive thereof is to seek the pleasure of Allah Ta'ala".
Al-Baihaqi
(radi Allahu anhu) in "Manaqib al-Shafi'i" has transmitted with
his isnad (chain of narrators) from Imam al-Shafi'i (radi Allahu
anhu) himself, that he said: "The new things that are brought
about are of two kinds. One kind is that which is brought about,
inconsistent with something in the Quran or the Sunnah or with
some Athar or some Ijma'. This is the category of Bid'ah Dalalah
(heretic innovation). The second kind is that which is brought
about from good things which are not inconsistent with any of
the above".
Umar
(radi Allahu anhu) did say about standing in prayer in the month
of Ramadaan, "What a good Bid'ah this is!" meaning that this
is a new thing which was not there before and being a new thing
it does not contradict anything that went before.
THE
BID'AH THAT IS MANDUB
This
refutes al-Fakihani's statement that the Meelad Shareef cannot
also be Mubah. But on the contrary it is a Bid'ah that is Makruh.
This is because the Meelad Shareef is of that category of new
matters which involve no inconsistency with anything in the
Quran or the Sunnah, or with any Athar or Ijma'. Thus, this
is not blameworthy (i.e. from the point of view of the Shari'ah,
there is no evil in it), as in the statement of Imam al-Shafi'i
(radi Allahu anhu) and it is a good action which, even though
(in its present form) was not done in the first age, was brought
about afterwards.
The
invitation to partake of food and drink in which there is no
sin, is an act of goodness for sure. Therefore, in connection
with the Meelad Shareef, that assembly in which someone, out
of his lawfully earned wealth, invites his family, relatives
and friends to partake of food and drink in which there is no
action against the Shari'ah - that assembly is a Bid'ah (innovation)
that is Mandub (commendable), as is clear from the above quoted
statements of Shaikh Izzuddin Ibn Abd al-Salam (radi Allahu
anhu).