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Ijtihad

Ijtihad (/ˌɪtəˈhɑːd/ IJ-tə-HAHD;[1] Arabic: اجتهاد ijtihād [ʔidʒ.tihaːd], lit.'physical effort' or 'mental effort')[2] is an Islamic legal term referring to independent reasoning by an expert in Islamic law,[3] or the thorough exertion of a jurist's mental faculty in finding a solution to a legal question.[2] It is contrasted with taqlid (imitation, conformity to legal precedent).[3][4] According to classical Sunni theory, ijtihad requires expertise in the Arabic language, theology, revealed texts, and principles of jurisprudence (usul al-fiqh),[3] and is not employed where authentic and authoritative texts (Qur'an and hadith) are considered unambiguous with regard to the question, or where there is an existing scholarly consensus (ijma).[2] Ijtihad is considered to be a religious duty for those qualified to perform it.[3] An Islamic scholar who is qualified to perform ijtihad is called as a "mujtahid".[2][5]

Throughout the first five Islamic centuries, the practice of ijtihad continued both theoretically and practically amongst Sunni Muslims. The controversy surrounding ijtihad and the existence of mujtahids started, in its primitive form, around the beginning of the sixth/twelfth century.[6] By the 14th century, development of Islamic Fiqh (jurisprudence) prompted leading Sunni jurists to state that the main legal questions had been addressed and the scope of ijtihad was gradually restricted.[2] In the modern era, this gave rise to a perception amongst Orientalist scholars and sections of the Muslim public that the so-called "gate of ijtihad" was closed at the start of the classical era.[2][7] While recent scholarship established that the practice of Ijtihad had never ceased in Islamic history, the extent and mechanisms of legal change in the post-formative period remain a subject of debate.[8] Differences amongst the Fuqaha (jurists) prevented Sunni Muslims from reaching any consensus (Ijma) on the issues of continuity of Ijtihad and existence of Mujtahids.[6] Thus, Ijtihad remained a key aspect of Islamic jurisprudence throughout the centuries.[9] Ijtihad was practiced throughout the Early modern period and claims for ijtihad and its superiority over taqlid were voiced unremittingly.[10]

Starting from the 18th century, Islamic reformers began calling for abandonment of taqlid and emphasis on ijtihad, which they saw as a return to Islamic origins.[2] Public debates in the Muslim world surrounding ijtihad continue to the present day.[2] The advocacy of ijtihad has been particularly associated with Islamic modernist and Salafiyya movements. Among contemporary Muslims in the West there have emerged new visions of ijtihad which emphasize substantive moral values over traditional juridical methodology.[2]

Shia jurists did not use the term ijtihad until the 12th century. With the exception of Zaydi jurisprudence, the early Imami Shia were unanimous in censuring Ijtihad in the field of law (Ahkam). After the Shiite embrace of various doctrines of Mu'tazila and classical Sunnite Fiqh (jurisprudence), this led to a change.[2][11] After the victory of the Usulis who based law on principles (usul) over the Akhbaris ("traditionalists") who emphasized on reports or traditions (khabar) by the 19th century, Ijtihad would become a mainstream Shia practice.[12]

Etymology and definition edit

The word derives from the three-letter Arabic verbal root of ج-ه-د J-H-D (jahada, 'struggle'): the "t" is inserted because the word is a derived stem VIII verb. In its literal meaning, the word refers to effort, physical or mental, expended in a particular activity.[2] In its technical sense, ijtihad can be defined as a "process of legal reasoning and hermeneutics through which the jurist-mujtahid derives or rationalizes law on the basis of the Qur'an and the Sunna".[13]

The juristic meaning of ijtihād has several definitions according to scholars of Islamic legal theory. Some define it as the jurist's action and activity to reach a solution. Al-Ghazālī (d. 505/1111) defines it as the "total expenditure of effort made by a jurist for the purpose of obtaining the religious rulings." Similarly the ijtihād is defined as "the effort made by the mujtahid in seeking knowledge of the aḥkām (rulings) of the sharī‘ah (Islamic canonical law) through interpretation."[14]

From this point of view that ijtihād essentially consists of an inference (istinbāṭ) that extents to a probability (ẓann)[clarification needed][citation needed]. Thus it excludes the extraction of a ruling from a clear text as well as rulings made without recourse to independent legal reasoning. A knowledgeable person who gives a ruling on the sharī‘ah, but is not able to exercise their judgement in the inference of the rulings from the sources, is not called a mujtahid but rather a muqallid.[15]

Scriptural basis edit

Islamic scholar Asghar Ali Engineer cites a hadith related by a sahabi (companion of the Islamic prophet Muhammad) by the name of Muadh ibn Jabal (also Ma’adh bin Jabal), as the basis for ijtihad. According to the hadith from Sunan Abu-Dawud, Book 24,[16] Muadh was appointed by Muhammad to go to Yemen. Before leaving he was asked how he would judge when the occasion of deciding a case arose.

Ma’adh said, according to the Quran. The Prophet thereupon asked what he would do if he did not find the solution to the problem in the Quran, to which Ma’adh said he would govern according to the Sunnah. But when the Prophet asked if he could not find it in the Sunnah also, Ma’adh said "ana ajtahidu" (I will exert myself to find the solution). The Prophet thereupon patted his back and told him he was right.[16][17][18]

History edit

Formative period edit

During the early period, ijtihad referred to the exertion of mental energy to arrive at a legal opinion (ra'y) on the basis of the knowledge of the Divine Revelation.[13] Jurists used Ijtihad to help reach legal rulings, in cases where the Qur'an and Sunna did not provide clear direction for certain decisions. It was the duty of the educated jurists to come to a ruling that would be in the best interest of the Muslim community and promote the public good.

As religious law continued to develop over time, ra'y became insufficient in making sure that fair legal rulings were being derived in keeping with both the Qur'an and Sunna. However, during this time, the meaning and process of ijtihad became more clearly constructed. Ijtihad was "limited to a systematic method of interpreting the law on the basis of authoritative texts, the Quran and Sunna".[19]

As the practice of ijtihad transformed over time, it became religious duty of a mujtahid to conduct legal rulings for the Muslim society. Mujtahid is defined as a Muslim scholar that has met certain requirements including a strong knowledge of the Qur'an, Sunna, and Arabic, as well as a deep understanding of legal theory and the precedent; all of which allows them to be considered fully qualified to practice ijtihad.[20]

Classical era edit

Origins of the controversy edit

The controversy over the existence of Mujtahids began in its nascent form during the sixth/12th century. The fifth century Hanbali jurist Ibn 'Aqil (1040–1119) responding to a Hanafi jurist's statement, advocated for the necessity of existence of Mujtahids using scripture and reasoning. A century later, Shafi'i jurist Al-Amidi would counter the premise of Hanbalis and prominent Shafīʿis arguing that extinction of Mujtahids is possible. Over the centuries, the controversy would garner more attention with the scholars gathering around 3 camps: 1) Hanbalis and majority of Shafīʿis who denied the theoretical possibility of Mujtahid's extinction 2) a group of jurists who asserted that extinction of Mujtahids is possible but not proven 3) a group who advocated the extinction of Mujtahids.[21]

To validate their points, the scholars of Taqlid camp cited Prophetic hadiths that report the disappearance of knowledge when ignorant leaders "will give judgements" and misguide others. Muqallids also argued that Ijtihad isn't a communal obligation (fard kifaya) when it is possible to blindly imitate the laws of ancestors received through transmitted chains of narrations. Hanbalis, the staunch advocates of permanent existence of Mujtahids, countered by citing Prophetic reports which validated their view that knowledge and sound judgement would accompany the Muslim Ummah led by Mujtahid scholars until the Day of Judgment, thus giving theological implications to the controversy.[22][23] They also raised the question of leadership and interpretive religious authority to vigorously deny the possibility of an age without Mujtahids, a doctrine which they defended using both Scripultural and rational arguments. Citing Prophetic traditions such as "scholars are the heirs of the prophets", Hanbalis settled on the belief that God would not leave any age without a proper guide, i.e., Islamic Fuqaha (jurists) who solve novel issues through Ijtihad.[24]

Majority of Shafīʿi scholars too were leading advocates of Ijtihad as a fard kifaya (communal obligation). The prominent 16th century Shafi'i legal treatise Fath-ul-Mueen affirmed the existence of Mujtahids and obligated them to take the post of Qadi as fard kifaya.[25] Leading Shafīʿi jurist Al-Suyuti (1445-1505) also stipulated Ijtihad as a communal obligation, the abandonment of which would be sinful upon the whole Ummah. Shafīʿis also upheld the popular Muslim tradition of appearance of Mujaddids who would renew the religion every century. As promoters of the idea of Mujaddids; (who were assumed as Mujtahids) majority of jurists who claimed Tajdid or honoured as Mujaddids were Shafīʿis. On the other hand, some prominent Shafīʿi jurists like Al-Rafi'i (d. 623) had made statements speculating an "agreement" on the absence of Mujtahid Mutlaqs (highest-ranking Mujtahid) during his era while few others affirmed theoretical possibility of absence of Mujtahids. However, such statements had ambiguities in legal terminology and didn't stipulate an established consensus on the issue. In addition, Rafi'i himself was considered as a Mujtahid and a Mujaddid.[26]

Yahya ibn Sharaf al-Nawawi (d. 676/1277), a prominent Shafī'i Muhaddith and Jurist, who is a primary reference even for Shafiites of Taqleed camp; advocated that it isn't obligatory for laymen to adhere to a mad'hab, reinforcing the orthodox Shafī'ite pro-Ijtihad position.[27] Other prominent classical Shafī'i jurists who advocated the pro-Ijtihad position included Taj ud Din al Subki, Dhahabi, Izz ud Deen Ibn Abdussalam, Ibn al Salah, Al Bulqini, etc.[28] Taj ud Din al Subki (d. 1370) summed up the classical-era Shafi'i position in his Kitāb Mu'īd an-Ni'am wa-Mubīd an-Niqām:

"It is unacceptable to Allah, the forcing of people to accept one madhab and the associated partisanship (tahazzub) in the subsidiary issues of the Din and nothing pushes this fervour and zealously except partisanship and jealousy. If Abu Haneefah, Shafi, Malik and Ahmad were alive they would severely censure these people and they would dissassociate themselves from them."[29]

Emergence of the "closure of the gates" notion edit

In contrast to the view of these Shafiites, classical Shafi'ite theologian 'Abd al-Malik al-Juwayni (d. 1085 C.E/ 478 A.H) postulated a new doctrine on the controversy of the existence of Mujtahids. Juwaynī and his Shāfiʿī colleagues insisted that not only the disappearance of Mujtahids was possible, but that it had already happened. Juwayni's doctrine was taken by his student Ghazālī (d. 1111 C.E/ 505 A.H), al-Qaffāl al-Shāshī (d. 1113 C.E/507 A.H) and promoted in the next century by the Shafi'i scholars Fakhr al-Dīn al-Rāzī (d. 606/1209), Sayf al-Dīn al-Āmidī (d. 631/1233), and Rāfiʿī (d. 623/1226). These scholars asserted the belief that Mujtahids had already disappeared, and some would claim a consensus on this point. Thereafter, the theory of legal minimalism elucidated by Juwayni in his book Ghiyāth al-umam fī iltiyāth al zulam, penned for his Seljuk patron Nizam ul-Mulk, would be popularised. This system listed a set of core principles that implemented legal and procedural minimalism; and attempted the standardisation of Islamic courts and legal framework in the medieval Muslim World.[30]

Most significantly, the influential Islamic theologian Al Ghazzali introduced the notion of closure of Ijtihad since he viewed numerous people with inadequate knowledge of Qur'an as claiming to be Mujtahids. Ghazzali's emphasis on rigorous asceticism and imitation of traditions practised by Sufi mystics led him to attack rational enquiry and sciences like physics for contradicting religion. Owing to his status as a great scholar, numerous ulema followed his call; even though many continued to dispute it.[31][32] Intellectuals like Hasan Hanafi argue that Ghazali had tried to preclude the endeavour of Ijtihad during his era in order to establish a rigid, stable orthodoxy that could effectively challenge external enemies of Islam like the Crusaders.[33] According to Pakistani Professor of Philosophy C.A Qadir; Ghazzali's efforts had tremendous impact in limiting the scope of Ijtihad in medieval Islamic orthodxy.[34]

However, there is still a vigorous scholarly debate regarding whether Al-Ghazali had himself "closed the gates" or whether he merely continued an established policy of his scholarly predecessors or whether the gate was ever closed. According to Professor James P. Piscatori, the provision for Ijtihad in Sunni Fiqh was never "tightly shut" and remained open to some extent.[35] During the 16th century, majority of the clerical classes would claim Ghazzali's doctrine as sacrosanct and inviolable by Ijma (consensus).[36] Post-classical era, a large part of Shafīʿi scholarship would also shift to a pro-Taqleed position owing to external influence from Hanafite-Malikite Muqallid camps. Most noteworthy amongst them were Ibn Hajar al-Haytami (d. 1566). However many still defended Ijtihad while others who theoretically affirmed the disappearance of Mujtahids rejected the claim that they did in reality.[37]

Late classical period edit

Until the end of the 14th century, no voice had before actively risen to condemn the claims of mujtahids to practice ijtihad within their schools. However, the doctrine of Taqlid was steadily amassing support amongst the masses. The first incident in which muqallids openly attacked the claims of mujtahids occurred in Egypt, during the lifetime of Suyuti. Suyuti had claimed to practice the highest degree of Ijtihad within the Shafi'i school. He advocated that Ijtihad is a backbone of Sharia and believed in the continuous existence of Mujtahids.[38]

Around the 15th century, most Sunni jurists argued that all major matters of religious law had been settled, allowing for taqlid (تقليد), "the established legal precedents and traditions," to take priority over ijtihād (اجتهاد).[20][need quotation to verify] This move away from the practice of ijtihād was primarily made by the scholars of Hanafī and Malikī schools, and a number of Shafīʿis, but not by Hanbalīs and majority of Shafīʿi jurists who believed that "true consensus" (ijmāʿ اجماع), apart from that of Muhammad's Companions, did not exist" and that "the constant continuous existence of mujtahids (مجتهد) was a theological requirement."[39] Although the Ottoman clergy denied Ijtihad in theory, throughout the 16th and 17th centuries, the Ottoman Hanafite ulema had practiced Ijtihad to solve a number of new legal issues. Various legal rulings were formulated on a number of issues, such as the Waqf of movables, on drugs, coffee, music, tobacco, etc. However to support the official doctrine of "extinction of Mujtahids", the Ottoman ulema denied Ijtihad even when it was practised.[40]

The increasing prominence of taqlid had at one point led most Western scholars to believe that the "gate of ijtihad" was in fact effectively closed around tenth century.[41] In a 1964 monograph, which exercised considerable influence on later scholars, Joseph Schacht wrote that "a consensus gradually established itself to the effect that from that time onwards no one could be deemed to have the necessary qualifications for independent reasoning in religious law, and that all future activity would have to be confined to the explanation, application, and, at the most, interpretation of the doctrine as it had been laid down once and for all."[Note 1]

While more recent research is said to have disproven the notion that the practice of ijtihad was abandoned in the tenth century — or even later in the 15th century — the extent of legal change during this period and its mechanisms remain a subject of scholarly debate.[8][43] The Ijtihad camp primarily consisted of Hanbalis and Shafiites, while the Taqlid camp were primarily Hanafites who were supported to a greater or lesser extent by Malikis as well as some Shafi'is.[44]

Ranking of Mujtahids edit

After the 11th century, Sunni legal theory developed systems for ranking jurists according to their qualifications for ijtihad. One such ranking placed the founders of maddhabs, who were credited with being "absolute mujtahids" (mujtahid muṭlaq) capable of methodological innovation, at the top, and jurists capable only of taqlīd at the bottom, with mujtahids and those who combined ijtihād and taqlīd given the middle ranks.[Note 2] In the 11th century, jurists required a mufti (jurisconsult) to be a mujtahid; by the middle of the 13th century, however, most scholars considered a muqallid (practitioner of taqlīd) to be qualified for the role. During that era some jurists began to ponder whether practitioners of ijtihad continued to exist and the phrase "closing of the gate of ijtihād" (إغلاق باب الاجتهاد iġlāq bāb al-ijtihād) appeared after the 16th century.[Note 3][39]

However, these rankings have been criticized for its arbitrariness. Many other distinguished scholars have been recorded by scholars as Mujtahid Mutlaqs even after the deaths of four Imams (to whom the four schools are attributed). Also, various schools were subject to transformation and evolution through time in ways that their founders had not imagined. The founders themselves had not stipulated many such rankings or classifications. Nor did they obligate strict adherence to a particular scholar or legal theory. In many cases, major parts of the legal theory were in fact developed by the later followers.[46]

The classical Hanbali theologian Taqi al-Din Ibn Taymiyya (d. 1328 C.E/ 728 A.H) was a notable figure who dissented from the prevalent Madh'hab-based ranking standardisations and classifications. Arguing that the practice of Ijtihad is allowed for every Muslim, Ibn Taymiyya writes:

"...doors of ijtihād are open even to laymen, who are permitted to practice ijtihād without fear of punishment: the muftī, the soldier and the layman. If they speak according to their ijtihād ..., intending to follow the Messenger to the extent of their knowledge, they do not deserve punishment; this is so by the consensus of the Muslims, even if they have erred in a matter for which consensus already exists."[47]

Legal schools(mad'habs) had begun to take shape by the middle of the fourth/tenth century and practice of affiliating to the madhabs began to become popular. Systematic categorisation of Mujtahids emerged during late fifth/eleventh century into ranks of excellence. By doing so, they sought to facilitate the Ijtihad of qualified Muftis. The earliest known typology of jurists is Ibn Rushd's (d. 520/1126) tripartite classification of Muftis. In this typology, the top-Mufti was a Mujtahid (like Ibn Rushd himself) while the latter two ranks weren't, i.e., a Mujtahid must independently reason on the basis of Scriptures and general principles of the school. On the other hand, Ghazzali distinguished between two ranks of Mujtahids, the independent(Mutlaq) and the affiliated(Muqayyad) in a three-rank classification. In the seventh century, Shafi'i jurist Ibn al-Salah (d. 643/1245) would elaborate a five rank classification of Muftis. During the 10th/16th century, Ottoman Shaykh al-Islam Ammad Ibn Kamal (d. 940/1533) articulated a Hanafite typology of jurists with seven ranks. Unlike the previous typologies, the latter classification was promoted by Taqlid partisans who advocated that Mujtahids ceased to exist. All these classifications created an archetype of an ideal standard to which all other typologies must conform, i.e., the founders of 4 schools. However, this typological conception of the founder Mujtahid suffered from chronological ruptures, overlooking in the process the founder's predecessors as well as his immediate intellectual history that formed a continuity. Although the founder imams were accomplished jurists, they were not as absolutely and as categorically as they were portrayed to be, starting from the 5th/11th century.[48][49] Ibn Kamal's seven-rank typology, in particular, would come under scathing criticism by other Hanafites as well, such as Muhammad Bakhit al-Muti'i (1854 or 1856 — 1935), who was the Grand Mufti of Al-Azhar.[50]

Many Islamic reformers, starting from the 18th century would criticize these classifications altogether, since these classifications assumed every Mufti in terms of leaders and followers, affiliated to the founder imams and succeeding generations who are progressively inferior to knowledge of imams.[51] Faithful to the tenets of Ibn Taymiyya and Muhammad Ibn 'Abd al-Wahhab (1792 C.E/ 1206 A.H), the Wahhabi movement called for Ijtihad and opposed Taqlid.[52] Advocating the Wahhabi stance on Ijtihad, 'Abd al-Rahman ibn Hasan Aal-Al Shaykh (1196-1285 A.H / 1782-1868 C.E), influential Qadi of the Emirate of Nejd, asserts:

".. when a scholar does his best to come to a right decision or verdict concerning a certain matter, if his verdict is right, he will get a double reward, and even if his verdict is wrong, he will still get a reward.... one who prefers the verdict of a scholar to the authorized proof, is to be severely rebuked. It is not permissible to imitate other scholars save in matters of ljithad," which do not contain a proof from the Glorious Qur'an or the Prophetic Sunnah. This is what is called by scholars, "There should be no denial in matters of ljtihad." But, as for those who disagree with this or act otherwise, they should be rebuked and blamed.. , this issue has gained the consensus of all scholars, as stated by lmam Ash-Shafi'i."[53]

The 18th-century Islamic reformer and top-most Qadi of Yemen, Al-Shawkani (1759-1839) totally rejected the theory of classification of Mujtahids. According to him, there is only one form of Ijtihad which can be practised by anybody possessing sufficient knowledge. Shawkani maintains that it is sufficient for a scholar to study one compendium in each of the five disciplines to practice Ijtihad. According to Shawkani, the Muqallids who propagate the closure of Ijtihad and argue that only the four Imams can understand Qur'an and Sunnah are guilty of:

"(telling lies) about Allah and accuse Him of being not capable of creating people that understand what is His law for them and how they must worship Him. They make it appear as if what he has enacted for them through His Book and His Messenger, is not an absolute but a temporary law, restricted to the period before the rise of the madhhabs. After their appearance, there was no Book and no Sunnah anymore [if these people are to be believed], but there emerged persons that enacted a new law and invented another religion... , by their personal opinions and sentiment."

This view would influence many 19th and 20th century Salafi reform movements.[54]

Modern era edit

During the turn of the 16th to 17th century, Sunni Muslim reformers began to criticize taqlid, and promoted greater use of ijtihad in legal matters. They claimed that instead of looking solely to previous generations for practices developed by religious scholars, there should be an established doctrine and rule of behavior through the interpretation of original foundational texts of Islam—the Qur'an and Sunna.[20][need quotation to verify]

During the 18th century, Islamic revivalists increasingly condemned the Muqallid camp through a mass of writings explaining the evils of Taqlid and advocating Ijtihad as well as defending its status as a Divinely established principle in sharia. This would often result in violence between their followers. Most prominent amongst them were Shah Waliullah Dehlawi, Muhammad ibn Abd al-Wahhab, Shawkani, Muhammad ibn Isma'il Al-San'aani, Ibn Mu'ammar, Ahmad ibn Idris al-Fasi, Uthman Ibn Fudio, Muhammad ibn Ali al-Sanusi, etc.[55]

Shah Waliullah Dehlawi was an ardent advocate of Ijtihad and considered it essential for the vigour of society. Re-inforcing the classical theory, he considered Ijtihad to be fard kifaya(communal obligation). Condemning the prevalent partisanship over Taqleed he denounced the Muqallid camp as the misguided "simpletons of our time". He considered himself as a Mujtahid of the highest rank affiliated to Hanafi school.[56][57]

In his treatise Usul al-Sittah(Six Foundations), Ibn 'Abd al-Wahhab harshly rebuked the Muqallids for raising the description of Mujtahids to humanely unattainable levels. He also condemned the practice of obligating Taqleed which deviated people away from Qur'an and Sunnah. In similar terms, Yemeni scholar Shawkani too condemned the practice of rigid Taqleed. Demonstrating the perpetual existence of Mujtahids in his works, Shawkani also argued that Ijtihad at later times was far easier due to detailed manuals unavailable for jurists of the past era.[58][59]

Amongst the eighteenth-century reformers, the most radical condemnation of Taqlid and advocacy of Ijtihad was championed by the Arabian scholar Muhammad ibn 'Abd al-Wahhab, whose uncompromising reformist efforts often turned violent. Ibn 'Abd al-Wahhab condemned the centuries-long heritage of jurisprudence (Fiqh) that coalesced into four schools ( mad'habs ) as an innovation. Challenging the authority of religious clerics, and a large portion of the classical scholarship, he proclaimed the necessity of directly returning to Qur'an and hadith, rather than relying on medieval interpretations. According to Ibn 'Abd al-Wahhab, in order to uphold true monotheism( Tawhid ), Muslims should return to the pristine Islam of the early generations (Salaf), stripped of all human additions and speculations.[60][61] In his legal treatises such as Mukhtasar al-Insaf wa al-Sharh al-Kabir , Ibn 'Abd al-Wahhab weighed in legal opinions between different schools, opening the realm to comparative Fiqh thinking and often referring the conclusions of Ibn Taymiyya.[62] This legal approach of drawing inferences directly from Qur'an and Hadith ( istinbat ), instead of taqlid to one of the 4 law schools, as well as his prohibition of Taqlid, drew sharp condemnation from the Muqallid camp. In a scathing response, Muhammad Ibn 'Abdul Wahhab accused his detractors of taking "the scholars as lords"[63] and vehemently condemned taqleed as the biggest principle of the kuffar (disbelievers), in his treatise Masa'il al-Jahiliyya ( Aspects of the Days of Ignorance) writing :

"Their religion was built upon certain principles, the greatest of which was taqleed (blind following). So this was the biggest principle for all of the disbelievers – the first and last of them"[64][65]

In face of the backlash towards Ibn 'Abd al-Wahhab's uncompromising stance in his rejection of taqlid, advocacy of Ijtihad and radical anti-madhab views,[66] the later Wahhabis became more conciliatory towards traditional four schools of Fiqh. Abdallah, the son of Ibn 'Abd al-Wahhab also toned down the radical anti-Taqlid stances by stating that they affiliate themselves to the Hanbali school and do not condemn the common people who make taqleed to the four schools of jurisprudence.[67] The earliest substantial Wahhabite treatise on Ijtihad was written by the scholar Ibn Mu'ammar (d. 1810), a student of Ibn Abd al-Wahhab and a Qadi of First Saudi state. In his treatise "Risalat al-Ijtihad wal Taqlid", Ibn Muammar gave respect to the four traditional Sunni schools of law and distinguished between two ranks of Mujtahids: independent Mujtahid and Mujtahid al-Muqayyid bound to the Imams. According to Ibn Mu'ammar, Taqlid is permissible for laymen and scholar without sufficient knowledge, but forbidden for those who can comprehend the bases of the law. Unlike Ibn 'Abd al-Wahhab, Ibn Mu'ammar permitted laypeople to make Taqleed to trustworthy scholars, with certain reservations. Despite this, he also criticized strict adherence to a madhab and denounced mad'hab fanaticism as a bid‘ah(innovation). According to Ibn Mu'ammar, the opinions of Imams should be discarded if they differ from authentic Prophetic traditions.[68][69][70]

Outlining the conventional Wahhabi legal theory which harmonised the madhhab system with the practice of Ijtihad, Ibn Mu'ammar writes:[71]

"Adopting the [revealed] proof [for a position] without considering the statements of [other] ulama is the function of the absolute mujtahid.... [Laity are] obligated to practice taqlid and to consult those with knowledge.. [But the idea that one must always follow a single school] is a false view which Satan has cast upon many claimants to knowledge. . . . [T]hey imagine that study of the proofs is a difficult matter, of which only an absolute mujtahid is capable. . . [They have even arrived at a claim] that one associated with the school of an imam is obliged to accept that school... even if it differs with the Qur'an and the sunna. Thus, the imam of the school is to the members of his school as the Prophet is to his Community,.. You will [also] find the fanatic adherents of the schools in many matters differing with the explicit positions of their imams, and following the views of the latecomers in their school,.. the books of the predecessors are hardly found among them."[72]

Ahmad Ibn Idris Al-Fasi also emphasized on the practice of ijtihad. His criticism of Taqleed of the schools of law (madhhabs) was based on three concerns. First, the need for following the Prophetic traditions.[73] Second, to reduce divisions between the Muslims.[73] Third, mercy for the Muslims, because there were 'few circumstances on which the Quran and Sunna were genuinely silent, but if there was a silence on any question, then that silence was intentional on God's part- a divine mercy.'[74] He therefore rejected any 'attempt to fill a silence deliberately left by God, and so to abrogate one of His mercies.'[74]

His student, Muhammad ibn Ali al-Sanusi also followed in his footsteps. In his work Al-Bughya, Al Sanusi advocates for the need to practice Ijtihad. The most detailed treatise by Al-Sanusi on the topic of Ijtihad is Iqaz al-wasnan fi 'l-'amal bi'l-hadith wa'l-Qur`an. Quoting Ibn Taymiyya, Al Sanusi emphasizes on the principle of fallibility of the Imams of the madhabs and the obligation to follow the Sunnah. The opinions of the four Imams should only be used for a better understanding of Fiqh. Following Ibn Hazm and Shawkani, Sanussi asserted that taqlid is bid'ah(innovation) and fully condemned it. Sanussi distinguished between the independent Mujtahid and the affiliated Mujtahid and affirmed the existence of the affiliated Mujtahid in every age. He also objected to Taqlid and emphasized that Qur'an and Sunna must be given precedence over the opinions of Mujtahids, even in cases where the 4 Imams are wrong.[75][76]

Remarkably, all these reformers shared common points of contact in Hijaz and a network of scholars with a Hijazi-Yemeni centre. Shah Waliullah Dehlawi and Muhammad Hayat as-Sindi were pupils of Muhammad Ibn Ibrahim Al Kurrani Al Kurdi as well as connected to Ibrahim Ibn Hasan Al Kurrani Al Kurdi (d. 1690) and AbuI-Baqa' al-Hasan ibn 'Ali al- Ajami (d. 1702). Al-Sanusi is also linked with these scholars via his teacher al-Badr b. 'Amir al-Mi'dani who was a student of Al-Sindi as well as via other independent chains. Al-Shawkani is connected to Ibrahim Al-Kurrani via his teacher Yusuf Ibn Muhammad.[77][78]

Outside these circles, some scholars amongst traditional Sufi circles were also in favour of Ijtihad. These included the prominent Ottoman Hanafite jurist Ibn Abidin (1784-1836) who is a scholarly authoritaty for even Hanafites of the Taqleed camp. Ibn Abidin employed Ijtihad in order to issue fatwas, using reasoning and believed that ijtihad was acceptable to use in certain circumstances. According to Ibn Abidin, Hanafite Muftis should look up to rulings of Abu Hanifa, then Abu Yusuf, then Shaybani, then Zufar and then some lesser jurists for fatwas.[79] However, if a previous Hanafi scholar hasn't found an answer to the issue, then he should employ Ijtihad to solve the novel issue.[80] According to Ibn Abidin, it is not obligatory to follow a particular mad'hab as well.[81]

Contemporary debates over Ijtihad edit

On the issue of existence of Mujtahids and continuity of Ijtihad, contemporary scholarship are divided into two diametric camps, and a third moderate camp:

1) Those who oppose Ijtihad: These include the Orientalist scholars who view that "Gates of Ijtihad are closed". Sufi groups such as Barelvis, Deobandis, etc. believe that Mujtahids have ceased to exist. Some others such as Said Nursi is not theoretically against Ijtihad, but advocates postponing Ijtihad to a later time when Muslims attain sufficient strength.

2) Those who advocate Ijtihad: These include Salafi scholars and Islamic modernists who believe in the existence of Mujtahids. Salafis argue that Ijtihad doesn't have a gate, but only pre-requisites. Others who advocate Ijtihad include Muhammad Iqbal, Muhammad Asad, etc. Recent scholars in academia such as Wael Hallaq are also its supporters.

3) Those who take an intermediary position[82]

Islamic modernism edit

Starting in the middle of the 19th century, Islamic modernists such as Sir Sayyid Ahmed Khan, Jamal al-din Al-Afghani, and Muhammad Abduh emerged seeking to revitalize Islam by re-establish and reform Islamic law and its interpretations to accommodate Islam with modern society.[83] They emphasized the use of ijtihad, but in contrast to its original use,[84] they sought to "apply contemporary intellectual methods" such as academic or scientific thought "to the task of reforming Islam".[84] Al-Afghani proposed the new use of ijtihad that he believed would enable Muslims to think critically and apply their own individual interpretations of the innovations of modernity in the context of Islam.[84]

One modernist argument for applying ijtihad to sharia law is that while "the principles and values underlying Sharia (i.e. usul al-fiqh)" are unalterable, human interpretation of sharia is not.[85][17] Another, (made by Asghar Ali Engineer of India), is that the adaat (customs and traditions) of Arabs were used in the development of the sharia, and form an important part of it. They are very much not divine or immutable, and have no more legal justification to be part of the sharia than the adaat of Muslims—Iranians, Uzbeks, Turks, Chinese, Indians and others—living beyond the home of the original Muslim in the Arab Hejaz.

ummah was no longer a homogenous group but comprised of various cultural communities with their own age-old customs and traditions. ... When Imam Al-Shafi‘i moved from Hejaz to Egypt, which was a confluence of Arab and Coptic cultures, he realised this and changed his position on several issues.[17]

In Indonesia, following considerable debate among the ulema, Indonesian adaat "become part of Sharia as applicable in that country".[17] This use of ijtihad of adaat applies to mu’amalat (socio-economic matters such as marriage, divorce, inheritance), and not Ibadah fiqh (ritual salat, sawm, zakat, etc.). Asghar Ali Engineer argues that while the Quran was revealed in a "highly patriarchal" Arab adaat that still informs what is understood as sharia, the Quran itself has a "transcendental" vision of justice that includes "absolutely equal rights" between genders and should guide ijtihad of sharia.[17]

Islamism and Salafism edit

Contemporary Salafis are major proponents of ijtihad. They criticize taqlid and believe ijtihad makes modern Islam more authentic and will guide Muslims back to the Golden Age of early Islam. Salafis assert that reliance on taqlid has led to Islam's decline.[86]

Ahl-i-Hadith revivalist movement of subcontinent highly influenced by the thoughts of Shah Waliullah Dehlawi, Shawkani and Syed Ahmed Barelvi, fully condemn taqlid and advocate for ijtihad based on scriptures.[87] Founded in mid-19th century in Bhopal, it places great emphasis on hadith studies and condemns imitation to the canonical law schools. They identify with the early school of Ahl al-Hadith. During the late 19th century, Najdi scholars would establish contacts with Ahl-i-Hadith and many Najdi students would study under the scholars of Ahl-i-Hadith, amongst them prominent scholars.[88][89]

The Muslim Brotherhood traces its founding philosophies to al-Afghani's ijtihad. The Muslim Brotherhood holds that the practice of ijtihad will strengthen the faith of believers by compelling them to better familiarize themselves with the Quran and come to their own conclusions about its teachings. But as a political group the Muslim Brotherhood faces a major paradox between ijtihad as a religious matter and as a political one. Ijtihad weakens political unity and promotes pluralism, (which is also why many oppressive regimes reject ijtihad's legitimacy).[90]

The Iranian Ayatollah Ruhollah Khomeini envisioned a prominent role for ijtihad in his political theory of "guardianship of the jurist" (vilāyat-e faqīh).[2]

Osama bin Laden supported ijtihad. He criticized the Saudi regime for disallowing the "free believer"[90] and imposing harsh restrictions on successful practice of Islam. Thus, Bin Laden believed his striving for the implementation of ijtihad was his "duty" (takleef).[90]

Qualifications of a mujtahid edit

A mujtahid (Arabic: مُجْتَهِد, "diligent") is an individual who is qualified to exercise ijtihad in the evaluation of Islamic law. The female equivalent is a mujtahida. In general mujtahids must have an extensive knowledge of Arabic, the Qur'an, the Sunnah, and legal theory (Usul al-fiqh).[91] Sunni Islam and Shia Islam, due to their divergent beliefs regarding the persistence of divine authority, have different views on ijtihad and the qualifications required to achieve mujtahid.

Sunni edit

In the years following the death of Muhammad, Sunni Muslims practiced ijtihad and saw it as an acceptable form of the continuation of sacred instruction. Sunni Muslims justified practice of Ijtihad with a particular hadith, which cites Muhammad's approval of forming an individual sound legal opinion if the Qur'an and Sunnah contain no explicit text regarding that particular issue. As Muslims turned to the Quran and Sunnah to solve their legal issues, they began to recognize that these Divine proponents did not deal directly with certain topics of law. Therefore, Sunni jurists began to find other ways and sources for ijtihad which allowed for personal judgment of Islamic law.[92] Thus, a legal theory (usul al-Fiqh) was developed during the classical period to facilitate Ijtihad. It established a coherent system of principles through which a jurist could extract rulings on upcoming issues.[93] Only a competent Muslim of sound mind with intellectual qualifications was allowed to engage in Ijtihad. Abu'l-Husayn al-Basri (d. 436/1044) provides the earliest, complete account for the qualifications of a mujtahid, in his book "al-Mu'tamad fi Usul al-Fiqh". They include:

  • Enough knowledge of Arabic so that the scholar can read and understand both the Qur'an and the Sunnah.
  • Extensive comprehensive knowledge of the Qur'an and the Sunnah. More specifically, the scholar must have a full understanding of the Qur'an's legal contents. In regards to the Sunnah the scholar must understand the specific texts that refer to law and also the incidence of abrogation in the Sunnah.
  • Must be able to confirm the consensus (Ijma) of the Companions, the Successors, and the leading Imams and mujtahideen of the past, in order to prevent making decisions that disregard these honored decisions made in the past.
  • Should be able to fully understand the objectives of the sharia and be dedicated to the protection of the five necessities, which are life, religion, intellect, lineage, and property.[94]
  • Be able to distinguish strength and weakness in reasoning, or in other words exercise logic.
  • Must be sincere and a good person.[95]

After Basri, classical Mujtahids like Al-Shirazi (d. 467/1083), Al-Ghazzali (d. 505/1111), Al-Amidi (d. 632/1234) would also develop various criterion with minor changes. Amidi also allowed less qualified Mujtahids who didn't meet these requirements to solve issues provided he has the tools of solution.[96][97] From the declaration of these requirements of mujtahid onwards, legal scholars adopted these characteristics as being standard for any claimant of ijtihad. This allowed for mujtahids to openly discuss their particular views and reach a conclusion together. The interaction required by ijma allowed for mujtahids to circulate ideas and eventually merge to create particular Islamic schools of law (madhhabs). This consolidation of mujtahids into particular madhhabs prompted these groups to create their own distinct authoritative rules. These laws reduced issues of legal uncertainty that had been present when multiple mujtahids were working together with one another. Oftentimes, multiple rulings would be issued by jurists of the same legal school. Historical records show that throughout the tenth to nineteenth centuries, legal practitioners had consistently modified law using degrees of Ijtihad, making it flexible and adaptable to change.[90] Eventually, there developed a legal system of authoritative rulings on which influential jurists agreed. However, by the 14th century, while influential jurists held that knowledgeable legal scholars should be allowed to engage in Ijtihad , some others began to argue that there were no longer any legal scholars capable of performing Ijtihad beyond a certain limit as the founders of the four mad'habs. Despite this dispute, many high-ranking jurists upheld the practice of Ijtihad in legal rulings.[90]

Recent scholarship has largely adopted this view, concluding that Ijtihad was indispensable in Islamic legal theory. Rather than obstructing Ijtihad, the legal theory as well as its stipulated qualifications facilitated Ijtihad.[98][99]

Shia edit

Shia Muslims understand the process of ijtihad as being the independent effort used to arrive at the rulings of sharia. Following the death of the Prophet and once they had determined the Imam as absent, ijtihad evolved into a practice of applying careful reason in order to uncover the knowledge of what Imams would have done in particular legal situations. The decisions the Imams would have made were explored through the application of the Qur'an, Sunnah, ijma and 'aql (reason). It was not until the end of the eighteenth century that the title of mujtahid became associated with the term faqih or one who is an expert in jurisprudence. From this point on religious courts began to increase in number and the ulama were transformed by Shia Islamic authorities into the new producer of ijtihad.[100] Early Shiite theologians had denounced Sunni interpretative tools like Ijtihad and Qiyas ( analogical reasoning) citing reports from the Shi'i Imams. They held that Ijtihad was a deductive process based on personal conjecture to argue that it had no legal basis in the shari‘a (Islamic law). Therefore, until the 13th century, the concept of Ijtihad was denounced disparagingly by the Shi'i jurists, who wanted to construct a systematic and stable legal edifice that was devoid of any uncertainty. However, with the passage of time some Shia jurists sensed the need to respond to newer and novel circumstances.[101]

According to Usuli scholars, Mujtahids existed continuously since the 16th century and employed Ijtihad to form new laws according to altering circumstances.[102] From the late 18th century, Usuli jurists had advocated for appending 'Aql (intellect) as the fourth source of law. This enabled them to issue legal opinions based on societal needs. The Akhbari school rejected the idea of human intellect playing any role in legal reasoning.[12] In order to produce perceptive mujtahids that could fulfill this important role, Usulis developed the principles of Shia jurisprudence (Usool) to provide a foundation for scholarly deduction of Islamic law. Shaykh Murtada Ansari[103] and his successors developed the school of Shia law, dividing the legal decisions into four levels of certainty (qat), valid conjecture (zann), doubt (shakk), and erroneous conjecture (wahm). These rules allowed mujtahids to issue adjudications on any subject, that could be derived through this process of ijtihad, demonstrating responsibility to the Shia community.[100] Furthermore, according to Shia Islamic Jurisprudence a believer of Islam is either a Mujtahid (one that expresses their own legal reasoning), or a Muqallid (one performing taqlid—following or imitating a Mujtahid) and a Muhtat ("a lay Shiite who does not follow anyone, yet acts on such precaution that assures him the fulfilment of his religious obligations").[104][105] Most Shia Muslims qualify as Muqallid, and therefore are very dependent on the rulings of the Mujtahids. Therefore, the Mujtahids must be well prepared to perform ijtihad, as the community of Muqallid are dependent on their rulings. Not only did Shia Muslims require:

  • Knowledge of the texts of the Qur'an and Sunnah
  • Justice in matters of public and personal life
  • Utmost piety
  • Understanding of the cases where Shia mujtahids reached consensus
  • Ability to exercise competence and authority[106]

However, these scholars also depended on further training that could be received in religious centers called Hawza. At these centers they are taught the important subjects and technical knowledge a mujtahid need be proficient in such as:

  • Arabic grammar and literature
  • Logic
  • Extensive knowledge of the Qur'anic sciences and Hadith
  • Science of narrators
  • Principle of Jurisprudence
  • Comparative Jurisprudence[107]

Therefore, Shia mujtahids remain revered throughout the Shia Islamic world. The relationship between the mujtahids and muqallids continues to address and solve the contemporary legal issues. Participating in ijtihad, however, has been cautioned by scholars for those not properly educated in interpretation of the Qu'ran. This is narrated by Ali ibn Husayn Zayn al-Abidin, the great-grandson of Muhammad, when he cautioned Aban ibn abi-Ayyash, a fellow companion, saying, "Oh brother from 'Abd Qays, if the issue becomes clear to you, then accept it. Otherwise remain silent and defer to Allah because your interpretation from the truth will be as far from the Earth as the sky."[108]

Female mujtahids edit

Women can be Mujtahid and throughout Islamic history there were well known female Islamic scholars and Mujtahids who played an important role in traditional Islamic discourse. Aisha the wife of Muhammad was a well-known hadith scholar and a Mujtahid. She was an assertive, intelligent woman as well as an eloquent speaker. According to Urwah Ibn Zubair, Aisha was the most knowledgeable in hadith and fiqh and surpassed everyone in knowledge of poetry and medicine. Al-Zuhri studied under the well-known woman jurist of the day, Amrah bint Abdul Rahman. She was one of the most knowledgeable people of hadith and was described as an "ocean of knowledge". When the judge of Madinah heard Amrah's message, he did not feel the need to get a male opinion, although Madinah was then housing the famous Seven Jurists. Islamic scholar Akram Nadwi published a 40-volume biographical collection of female Muslim scholars wherein more than 8,000 female scholars were detailed. Other famous female Muhadditha and jurists include Zainab bint Kamal, Fatima Al Batayahiyyah, Fatimah bint Muhammad al Samarqandi, etc. Fatima Al Fihiriyya founded the University of Qarawiyyin in Fez in 859, world's first academic university that offered a degree. Scholars such as Umm al-Darda used to sit and debate with male scholars in the mosque. She was a teacher of hadith and Fiqh and also lectured in the men's section. One of her students was a Caliph.[109]

In Shiism, there have been dozens of women who have attained the rank in the modern history of Iran (for instance, Amina Bint al-Majlisi in the Safavid era, Bibi Khanum in the Qajar era, Lady Amin in the Pahlavi era, and Zohreh Sefati during the time of the Islamic Republic).[110] There are diverging opinions as to whether a female mujtahid can be a marjaʻ or not. Zohreh Sefati and some male jurists believe a female mujtahida can become a marja‘ — in other words, they believe that believers perform taqlid (emulation) of a female mujtahid— but most male jurists believe a marjaʻ must be male.[citation needed]

See also edit

References edit

Notes edit

  1. ^ The mid-twentieth century European authority on Islamic law Joseph Schacht, said that [...] Since the 1990s, a large and growing body of research has demonstrated the continuing creativity and dynamism of Islamic legal thinking in the post-formative period, as well as probed the lively dialectic between legal rulings and social practice. While it is no longer possible to assert that "the door of ijtihad was closed" after the tenth (or, indeed, any other) century, however, there is still lively debate over the extent of legal change and the mechanisms by which it occurred.[8][42]
  2. ^ After the eleventh century, Sunnī legal literature developed rankings of jurists according to their ability to practice ijtihād. One predominant classification credited the founders of the legal schools with the distinction of being absolute mujtahids (mujtahid muṭlaq) who were capable of laying down a methodology of the law and of deriving from it the positive doctrines that were to dominate their respective schools. Accordingly, each legal school represented a different methodology for ijtihād. Next came the mujtahids who operated within each school (mujtahid muntasim or mujtahid fī al-madhhab), who followed the methodology of the school's founder but proffered new solutions for novel legal cases. The lowest rank belonged to the muqallid, the jurist-imitator who merely followed the rulings arrived at by the mujtāhids without understanding the processes by which these rulings were derived. Between the ranks of mujtahids and muqallids there were distinguished other levels of jurists who combined ijtihād with taqlīd. [...] The settling of the major areas of Islamic law gave rise to the perception, prevalent among many modern Western scholars and Sunnī lay Muslims, that jurists had come to a consensus that the so-called "gate of ijtihād" (باب الاجتهاد bāb al-ijtihād) was closed at the beginning of the tenth century.[41]
  3. ^ In the eleventh century, jurists defined a jurisconsult as being a mujtahid (i.e., one who has the ability to independently reason; the highest rank of a jurist). By the middle of the thirteenth century, however, it appears that the prerequisites were lowered, and jurisconsults were expected – by most, but not all scholars – to be muqallids (i.e., able to articulate a legal opinion based on the precedents and methodology of a particular legal school; a lower rank than mujtahid).[45]

Citations edit

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  5. ^ sometimes spelt mojtahed
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  61. ^ L. Esposito, John (2003). The Oxford Dictionary of Islam. New York: Oxford University Press. p. 123. ISBN 0-19-512558-4. (Ibn 'Abd al-Wahhab).. Proclaimed the necessity of returning directly to the Quran and hadith, rather than relying on medieval interpretations... Opposed taqlid.. Called for the use of ijtihad
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Further reading edit

  • Wael Hallaq: “Was the Gate of Ijtihad Closed?”, International Journal of Middle East Studies, 16, 1 (1984), 3–41.
  • Glassé, Cyril, The Concise Encyclopaedia of Islam, 2nd Edition, Stacey International, London (1991) ISBN 0-905743-65-2
  • Goldziher, Ignaz (translated by A And R Hamori), Introduction to Islamic Theology and Law, Princeton University Press, Princeton New Jersey (1981) ISBN 0-691-10099-3
  • Kamali, Mohammad Hashim Principles of Islamic Jurisprudence, Islamic Texts Society, Cambridge (1991) ISBN 0-946621-24-1.
  • Carlos Martínez, “Limiting the Power of Religion from Within: Probabilism and Ishtihad,” in Religion and Its Other: Secular and Sacral Concepts and Practices in Interaction. Edited by Heike Bock, Jörg Feuchter, and Michi Knecht (Frankfurt/M., Campus Verlag, 2008).

External links edit

  • Two Theories of Ijtihad
  • An Introduction to Islamic Law by Joseph Schacht
  • A Detailed Q & A on Ijtihad
  • Opening the doors of Ijtihad, essay by Fred Dallmayr on www.resetdoc.org

ijtihad, ɑː, hahd, arabic, اجتهاد, ijtihād, ʔidʒ, tihaːd, physical, effort, mental, effort, islamic, legal, term, referring, independent, reasoning, expert, islamic, thorough, exertion, jurist, mental, faculty, finding, solution, legal, question, contrasted, w. Ijtihad ˌ ɪ dʒ t e ˈ h ɑː d IJ te HAHD 1 Arabic اجتهاد ijtihad ʔidʒ tihaːd lit physical effort or mental effort 2 is an Islamic legal term referring to independent reasoning by an expert in Islamic law 3 or the thorough exertion of a jurist s mental faculty in finding a solution to a legal question 2 It is contrasted with taqlid imitation conformity to legal precedent 3 4 According to classical Sunni theory ijtihad requires expertise in the Arabic language theology revealed texts and principles of jurisprudence usul al fiqh 3 and is not employed where authentic and authoritative texts Qur an and hadith are considered unambiguous with regard to the question or where there is an existing scholarly consensus ijma 2 Ijtihad is considered to be a religious duty for those qualified to perform it 3 An Islamic scholar who is qualified to perform ijtihad is called as a mujtahid 2 5 Throughout the first five Islamic centuries the practice of ijtihad continued both theoretically and practically amongst Sunni Muslims The controversy surrounding ijtihad and the existence of mujtahids started in its primitive form around the beginning of the sixth twelfth century 6 By the 14th century development of Islamic Fiqh jurisprudence prompted leading Sunni jurists to state that the main legal questions had been addressed and the scope of ijtihad was gradually restricted 2 In the modern era this gave rise to a perception amongst Orientalist scholars and sections of the Muslim public that the so called gate of ijtihad was closed at the start of the classical era 2 7 While recent scholarship established that the practice of Ijtihad had never ceased in Islamic history the extent and mechanisms of legal change in the post formative period remain a subject of debate 8 Differences amongst the Fuqaha jurists prevented Sunni Muslims from reaching any consensus Ijma on the issues of continuity of Ijtihad and existence of Mujtahids 6 Thus Ijtihad remained a key aspect of Islamic jurisprudence throughout the centuries 9 Ijtihad was practiced throughout the Early modern period and claims for ijtihad and its superiority over taqlid were voiced unremittingly 10 Starting from the 18th century Islamic reformers began calling for abandonment of taqlid and emphasis on ijtihad which they saw as a return to Islamic origins 2 Public debates in the Muslim world surrounding ijtihad continue to the present day 2 The advocacy of ijtihad has been particularly associated with Islamic modernist and Salafiyya movements Among contemporary Muslims in the West there have emerged new visions of ijtihad which emphasize substantive moral values over traditional juridical methodology 2 Shia jurists did not use the term ijtihad until the 12th century With the exception of Zaydi jurisprudence the early Imami Shia were unanimous in censuring Ijtihad in the field of law Ahkam After the Shiite embrace of various doctrines of Mu tazila and classical Sunnite Fiqh jurisprudence this led to a change 2 11 After the victory of the Usulis who based law on principles usul over the Akhbaris traditionalists who emphasized on reports or traditions khabar by the 19th century Ijtihad would become a mainstream Shia practice 12 Contents 1 Etymology and definition 2 Scriptural basis 3 History 3 1 Formative period 3 2 Classical era 3 2 1 Origins of the controversy 3 2 2 Emergence of the closure of the gates notion 3 2 3 Late classical period 3 3 Ranking of Mujtahids 3 4 Modern era 3 4 1 Contemporary debates over Ijtihad 3 4 2 Islamic modernism 3 4 3 Islamism and Salafism 4 Qualifications of a mujtahid 4 1 Sunni 4 2 Shia 4 3 Female mujtahids 5 See also 6 References 6 1 Notes 6 2 Citations 7 Further reading 8 External linksEtymology and definition editThe word derives from the three letter Arabic verbal root of ج ه د J H D jahada struggle the t is inserted because the word is a derived stem VIII verb In its literal meaning the word refers to effort physical or mental expended in a particular activity 2 In its technical sense ijtihad can be defined as a process of legal reasoning and hermeneutics through which the jurist mujtahid derives or rationalizes law on the basis of the Qur an and the Sunna 13 The juristic meaning of ijtihad has several definitions according to scholars of Islamic legal theory Some define it as the jurist s action and activity to reach a solution Al Ghazali d 505 1111 defines it as the total expenditure of effort made by a jurist for the purpose of obtaining the religious rulings Similarly the ijtihad is defined as the effort made by the mujtahid in seeking knowledge of the aḥkam rulings of the shari ah Islamic canonical law through interpretation 14 From this point of view that ijtihad essentially consists of an inference istinbaṭ that extents to a probability ẓann clarification needed citation needed Thus it excludes the extraction of a ruling from a clear text as well as rulings made without recourse to independent legal reasoning A knowledgeable person who gives a ruling on the shari ah but is not able to exercise their judgement in the inference of the rulings from the sources is not called a mujtahid but rather a muqallid 15 Scriptural basis editIslamic scholar Asghar Ali Engineer cites a hadith related by a sahabi companion of the Islamic prophet Muhammad by the name of Muadh ibn Jabal also Ma adh bin Jabal as the basis for ijtihad According to the hadith from Sunan Abu Dawud Book 24 16 Muadh was appointed by Muhammad to go to Yemen Before leaving he was asked how he would judge when the occasion of deciding a case arose Ma adh said according to the Quran The Prophet thereupon asked what he would do if he did not find the solution to the problem in the Quran to which Ma adh said he would govern according to the Sunnah But when the Prophet asked if he could not find it in the Sunnah also Ma adh said ana ajtahidu I will exert myself to find the solution The Prophet thereupon patted his back and told him he was right 16 17 18 History editFormative period edit During the early period ijtihad referred to the exertion of mental energy to arrive at a legal opinion ra y on the basis of the knowledge of the Divine Revelation 13 Jurists used Ijtihad to help reach legal rulings in cases where the Qur an and Sunna did not provide clear direction for certain decisions It was the duty of the educated jurists to come to a ruling that would be in the best interest of the Muslim community and promote the public good As religious law continued to develop over time ra y became insufficient in making sure that fair legal rulings were being derived in keeping with both the Qur an and Sunna However during this time the meaning and process of ijtihad became more clearly constructed Ijtihad was limited to a systematic method of interpreting the law on the basis of authoritative texts the Quran and Sunna 19 As the practice of ijtihad transformed over time it became religious duty of a mujtahid to conduct legal rulings for the Muslim society Mujtahid is defined as a Muslim scholar that has met certain requirements including a strong knowledge of the Qur an Sunna and Arabic as well as a deep understanding of legal theory and the precedent all of which allows them to be considered fully qualified to practice ijtihad 20 Classical era edit Origins of the controversy edit The controversy over the existence of Mujtahids began in its nascent form during the sixth 12th century The fifth century Hanbali jurist Ibn Aqil 1040 1119 responding to a Hanafi jurist s statement advocated for the necessity of existence of Mujtahids using scripture and reasoning A century later Shafi i jurist Al Amidi would counter the premise of Hanbalis and prominent Shafiʿis arguing that extinction of Mujtahids is possible Over the centuries the controversy would garner more attention with the scholars gathering around 3 camps 1 Hanbalis and majority of Shafiʿis who denied the theoretical possibility of Mujtahid s extinction 2 a group of jurists who asserted that extinction of Mujtahids is possible but not proven 3 a group who advocated the extinction of Mujtahids 21 To validate their points the scholars of Taqlid camp cited Prophetic hadiths that report the disappearance of knowledge when ignorant leaders will give judgements and misguide others Muqallids also argued that Ijtihad isn t a communal obligation fard kifaya when it is possible to blindly imitate the laws of ancestors received through transmitted chains of narrations Hanbalis the staunch advocates of permanent existence of Mujtahids countered by citing Prophetic reports which validated their view that knowledge and sound judgement would accompany the Muslim Ummah led by Mujtahid scholars until the Day of Judgment thus giving theological implications to the controversy 22 23 They also raised the question of leadership and interpretive religious authority to vigorously deny the possibility of an age without Mujtahids a doctrine which they defended using both Scripultural and rational arguments Citing Prophetic traditions such as scholars are the heirs of the prophets Hanbalis settled on the belief that God would not leave any age without a proper guide i e Islamic Fuqaha jurists who solve novel issues through Ijtihad 24 Majority of Shafiʿi scholars too were leading advocates of Ijtihad as a fard kifaya communal obligation The prominent 16th century Shafi i legal treatise Fath ul Mueen affirmed the existence of Mujtahids and obligated them to take the post of Qadi as fard kifaya 25 Leading Shafiʿi jurist Al Suyuti 1445 1505 also stipulated Ijtihad as a communal obligation the abandonment of which would be sinful upon the whole Ummah Shafiʿis also upheld the popular Muslim tradition of appearance of Mujaddids who would renew the religion every century As promoters of the idea of Mujaddids who were assumed as Mujtahids majority of jurists who claimed Tajdid or honoured as Mujaddids were Shafiʿis On the other hand some prominent Shafiʿi jurists like Al Rafi i d 623 had made statements speculating an agreement on the absence of Mujtahid Mutlaqs highest ranking Mujtahid during his era while few others affirmed theoretical possibility of absence of Mujtahids However such statements had ambiguities in legal terminology and didn t stipulate an established consensus on the issue In addition Rafi i himself was considered as a Mujtahid and a Mujaddid 26 Yahya ibn Sharaf al Nawawi d 676 1277 a prominent Shafi i Muhaddith and Jurist who is a primary reference even for Shafiites of Taqleed camp advocated that it isn t obligatory for laymen to adhere to a mad hab reinforcing the orthodox Shafi ite pro Ijtihad position 27 Other prominent classical Shafi i jurists who advocated the pro Ijtihad position included Taj ud Din al Subki Dhahabi Izz ud Deen Ibn Abdussalam Ibn al Salah Al Bulqini etc 28 Taj ud Din al Subki d 1370 summed up the classical era Shafi i position in his Kitab Mu id an Ni am wa Mubid an Niqam It is unacceptable to Allah the forcing of people to accept one madhab and the associated partisanship tahazzub in the subsidiary issues of the Din and nothing pushes this fervour and zealously except partisanship and jealousy If Abu Haneefah Shafi Malik and Ahmad were alive they would severely censure these people and they would dissassociate themselves from them 29 Emergence of the closure of the gates notion edit In contrast to the view of these Shafiites classical Shafi ite theologian Abd al Malik al Juwayni d 1085 C E 478 A H postulated a new doctrine on the controversy of the existence of Mujtahids Juwayni and his Shafiʿi colleagues insisted that not only the disappearance of Mujtahids was possible but that it had already happened Juwayni s doctrine was taken by his student Ghazali d 1111 C E 505 A H al Qaffal al Shashi d 1113 C E 507 A H and promoted in the next century by the Shafi i scholars Fakhr al Din al Razi d 606 1209 Sayf al Din al Amidi d 631 1233 and Rafiʿi d 623 1226 These scholars asserted the belief that Mujtahids had already disappeared and some would claim a consensus on this point Thereafter the theory of legal minimalism elucidated by Juwayni in his book Ghiyath al umam fi iltiyath al zulam penned for his Seljuk patron Nizam ul Mulk would be popularised This system listed a set of core principles that implemented legal and procedural minimalism and attempted the standardisation of Islamic courts and legal framework in the medieval Muslim World 30 Most significantly the influential Islamic theologian Al Ghazzali introduced the notion of closure of Ijtihad since he viewed numerous people with inadequate knowledge of Qur an as claiming to be Mujtahids Ghazzali s emphasis on rigorous asceticism and imitation of traditions practised by Sufi mystics led him to attack rational enquiry and sciences like physics for contradicting religion Owing to his status as a great scholar numerous ulema followed his call even though many continued to dispute it 31 32 Intellectuals like Hasan Hanafi argue that Ghazali had tried to preclude the endeavour of Ijtihad during his era in order to establish a rigid stable orthodoxy that could effectively challenge external enemies of Islam like the Crusaders 33 According to Pakistani Professor of Philosophy C A Qadir Ghazzali s efforts had tremendous impact in limiting the scope of Ijtihad in medieval Islamic orthodxy 34 However there is still a vigorous scholarly debate regarding whether Al Ghazali had himself closed the gates or whether he merely continued an established policy of his scholarly predecessors or whether the gate was ever closed According to Professor James P Piscatori the provision for Ijtihad in Sunni Fiqh was never tightly shut and remained open to some extent 35 During the 16th century majority of the clerical classes would claim Ghazzali s doctrine as sacrosanct and inviolable by Ijma consensus 36 Post classical era a large part of Shafiʿi scholarship would also shift to a pro Taqleed position owing to external influence from Hanafite Malikite Muqallid camps Most noteworthy amongst them were Ibn Hajar al Haytami d 1566 However many still defended Ijtihad while others who theoretically affirmed the disappearance of Mujtahids rejected the claim that they did in reality 37 Late classical period edit Until the end of the 14th century no voice had before actively risen to condemn the claims of mujtahids to practice ijtihad within their schools However the doctrine of Taqlid was steadily amassing support amongst the masses The first incident in which muqallids openly attacked the claims of mujtahids occurred in Egypt during the lifetime of Suyuti Suyuti had claimed to practice the highest degree of Ijtihad within the Shafi i school He advocated that Ijtihad is a backbone of Sharia and believed in the continuous existence of Mujtahids 38 Around the 15th century most Sunni jurists argued that all major matters of religious law had been settled allowing for taqlid تقليد the established legal precedents and traditions to take priority over ijtihad اجتهاد 20 need quotation to verify This move away from the practice of ijtihad was primarily made by the scholars of Hanafi and Maliki schools and a number of Shafiʿis but not by Hanbalis and majority of Shafiʿi jurists who believed that true consensus ijmaʿ اجماع apart from that of Muhammad s Companions did not exist and that the constant continuous existence of mujtahids مجتهد was a theological requirement 39 Although the Ottoman clergy denied Ijtihad in theory throughout the 16th and 17th centuries the Ottoman Hanafite ulema had practiced Ijtihad to solve a number of new legal issues Various legal rulings were formulated on a number of issues such as the Waqf of movables on drugs coffee music tobacco etc However to support the official doctrine of extinction of Mujtahids the Ottoman ulema denied Ijtihad even when it was practised 40 The increasing prominence of taqlid had at one point led most Western scholars to believe that the gate of ijtihad was in fact effectively closed around tenth century 41 In a 1964 monograph which exercised considerable influence on later scholars Joseph Schacht wrote that a consensus gradually established itself to the effect that from that time onwards no one could be deemed to have the necessary qualifications for independent reasoning in religious law and that all future activity would have to be confined to the explanation application and at the most interpretation of the doctrine as it had been laid down once and for all Note 1 While more recent research is said to have disproven the notion that the practice of ijtihad was abandoned in the tenth century or even later in the 15th century the extent of legal change during this period and its mechanisms remain a subject of scholarly debate 8 43 The Ijtihad camp primarily consisted of Hanbalis and Shafiites while the Taqlid camp were primarily Hanafites who were supported to a greater or lesser extent by Malikis as well as some Shafi is 44 Ranking of Mujtahids edit After the 11th century Sunni legal theory developed systems for ranking jurists according to their qualifications for ijtihad One such ranking placed the founders of maddhabs who were credited with being absolute mujtahids mujtahid muṭlaq capable of methodological innovation at the top and jurists capable only of taqlid at the bottom with mujtahids and those who combined ijtihad and taqlid given the middle ranks Note 2 In the 11th century jurists required a mufti jurisconsult to be a mujtahid by the middle of the 13th century however most scholars considered a muqallid practitioner of taqlid to be qualified for the role During that era some jurists began to ponder whether practitioners of ijtihad continued to exist and the phrase closing of the gate of ijtihad إغلاق باب الاجتهاد iġlaq bab al ijtihad appeared after the 16th century Note 3 39 However these rankings have been criticized for its arbitrariness Many other distinguished scholars have been recorded by scholars as Mujtahid Mutlaqs even after the deaths of four Imams to whom the four schools are attributed Also various schools were subject to transformation and evolution through time in ways that their founders had not imagined The founders themselves had not stipulated many such rankings or classifications Nor did they obligate strict adherence to a particular scholar or legal theory In many cases major parts of the legal theory were in fact developed by the later followers 46 The classical Hanbali theologian Taqi al Din Ibn Taymiyya d 1328 C E 728 A H was a notable figure who dissented from the prevalent Madh hab based ranking standardisations and classifications Arguing that the practice of Ijtihad is allowed for every Muslim Ibn Taymiyya writes doors of ijtihad are open even to laymen who are permitted to practice ijtihad without fear of punishment the mufti the soldier and the layman If they speak according to their ijtihad intending to follow the Messenger to the extent of their knowledge they do not deserve punishment this is so by the consensus of the Muslims even if they have erred in a matter for which consensus already exists 47 Legal schools mad habs had begun to take shape by the middle of the fourth tenth century and practice of affiliating to the madhabs began to become popular Systematic categorisation of Mujtahids emerged during late fifth eleventh century into ranks of excellence By doing so they sought to facilitate the Ijtihad of qualified Muftis The earliest known typology of jurists is Ibn Rushd s d 520 1126 tripartite classification of Muftis In this typology the top Mufti was a Mujtahid like Ibn Rushd himself while the latter two ranks weren t i e a Mujtahid must independently reason on the basis of Scriptures and general principles of the school On the other hand Ghazzali distinguished between two ranks of Mujtahids the independent Mutlaq and the affiliated Muqayyad in a three rank classification In the seventh century Shafi i jurist Ibn al Salah d 643 1245 would elaborate a five rank classification of Muftis During the 10th 16th century Ottoman Shaykh al Islam Ammad Ibn Kamal d 940 1533 articulated a Hanafite typology of jurists with seven ranks Unlike the previous typologies the latter classification was promoted by Taqlid partisans who advocated that Mujtahids ceased to exist All these classifications created an archetype of an ideal standard to which all other typologies must conform i e the founders of 4 schools However this typological conception of the founder Mujtahid suffered from chronological ruptures overlooking in the process the founder s predecessors as well as his immediate intellectual history that formed a continuity Although the founder imams were accomplished jurists they were not as absolutely and as categorically as they were portrayed to be starting from the 5th 11th century 48 49 Ibn Kamal s seven rank typology in particular would come under scathing criticism by other Hanafites as well such as Muhammad Bakhit al Muti i 1854 or 1856 1935 who was the Grand Mufti of Al Azhar 50 Many Islamic reformers starting from the 18th century would criticize these classifications altogether since these classifications assumed every Mufti in terms of leaders and followers affiliated to the founder imams and succeeding generations who are progressively inferior to knowledge of imams 51 Faithful to the tenets of Ibn Taymiyya and Muhammad Ibn Abd al Wahhab 1792 C E 1206 A H the Wahhabi movement called for Ijtihad and opposed Taqlid 52 Advocating the Wahhabi stance on Ijtihad Abd al Rahman ibn Hasan Aal Al Shaykh 1196 1285 A H 1782 1868 C E influential Qadi of the Emirate of Nejd asserts when a scholar does his best to come to a right decision or verdict concerning a certain matter if his verdict is right he will get a double reward and even if his verdict is wrong he will still get a reward one who prefers the verdict of a scholar to the authorized proof is to be severely rebuked It is not permissible to imitate other scholars save in matters of ljithad which do not contain a proof from the Glorious Qur an or the Prophetic Sunnah This is what is called by scholars There should be no denial in matters of ljtihad But as for those who disagree with this or act otherwise they should be rebuked and blamed this issue has gained the consensus of all scholars as stated by lmam Ash Shafi i 53 The 18th century Islamic reformer and top most Qadi of Yemen Al Shawkani 1759 1839 totally rejected the theory of classification of Mujtahids According to him there is only one form of Ijtihad which can be practised by anybody possessing sufficient knowledge Shawkani maintains that it is sufficient for a scholar to study one compendium in each of the five disciplines to practice Ijtihad According to Shawkani the Muqallids who propagate the closure of Ijtihad and argue that only the four Imams can understand Qur an and Sunnah are guilty of telling lies about Allah and accuse Him of being not capable of creating people that understand what is His law for them and how they must worship Him They make it appear as if what he has enacted for them through His Book and His Messenger is not an absolute but a temporary law restricted to the period before the rise of the madhhabs After their appearance there was no Book and no Sunnah anymore if these people are to be believed but there emerged persons that enacted a new law and invented another religion by their personal opinions and sentiment This view would influence many 19th and 20th century Salafi reform movements 54 Modern era edit During the turn of the 16th to 17th century Sunni Muslim reformers began to criticize taqlid and promoted greater use of ijtihad in legal matters They claimed that instead of looking solely to previous generations for practices developed by religious scholars there should be an established doctrine and rule of behavior through the interpretation of original foundational texts of Islam the Qur an and Sunna 20 need quotation to verify During the 18th century Islamic revivalists increasingly condemned the Muqallid camp through a mass of writings explaining the evils of Taqlid and advocating Ijtihad as well as defending its status as a Divinely established principle in sharia This would often result in violence between their followers Most prominent amongst them were Shah Waliullah Dehlawi Muhammad ibn Abd al Wahhab Shawkani Muhammad ibn Isma il Al San aani Ibn Mu ammar Ahmad ibn Idris al Fasi Uthman Ibn Fudio Muhammad ibn Ali al Sanusi etc 55 Shah Waliullah Dehlawi was an ardent advocate of Ijtihad and considered it essential for the vigour of society Re inforcing the classical theory he considered Ijtihad to be fard kifaya communal obligation Condemning the prevalent partisanship over Taqleed he denounced the Muqallid camp as the misguided simpletons of our time He considered himself as a Mujtahid of the highest rank affiliated to Hanafi school 56 57 In his treatise Usul al Sittah Six Foundations Ibn Abd al Wahhab harshly rebuked the Muqallids for raising the description of Mujtahids to humanely unattainable levels He also condemned the practice of obligating Taqleed which deviated people away from Qur an and Sunnah In similar terms Yemeni scholar Shawkani too condemned the practice of rigid Taqleed Demonstrating the perpetual existence of Mujtahids in his works Shawkani also argued that Ijtihad at later times was far easier due to detailed manuals unavailable for jurists of the past era 58 59 Amongst the eighteenth century reformers the most radical condemnation of Taqlid and advocacy of Ijtihad was championed by the Arabian scholar Muhammad ibn Abd al Wahhab whose uncompromising reformist efforts often turned violent Ibn Abd al Wahhab condemned the centuries long heritage of jurisprudence Fiqh that coalesced into four schools mad habs as an innovation Challenging the authority of religious clerics and a large portion of the classical scholarship he proclaimed the necessity of directly returning to Qur an and hadith rather than relying on medieval interpretations According to Ibn Abd al Wahhab in order to uphold true monotheism Tawhid Muslims should return to the pristine Islam of the early generations Salaf stripped of all human additions and speculations 60 61 In his legal treatises such as Mukhtasar al Insaf wa al Sharh al Kabir Ibn Abd al Wahhab weighed in legal opinions between different schools opening the realm to comparative Fiqh thinking and often referring the conclusions of Ibn Taymiyya 62 This legal approach of drawing inferences directly from Qur an and Hadith istinbat instead of taqlid to one of the 4 law schools as well as his prohibition of Taqlid drew sharp condemnation from the Muqallid camp In a scathing response Muhammad Ibn Abdul Wahhab accused his detractors of taking the scholars as lords 63 and vehemently condemned taqleed as the biggest principle of the kuffar disbelievers in his treatise Masa il al Jahiliyya Aspects of the Days of Ignorance writing Their religion was built upon certain principles the greatest of which was taqleed blind following So this was the biggest principle for all of the disbelievers the first and last of them 64 65 In face of the backlash towards Ibn Abd al Wahhab s uncompromising stance in his rejection of taqlid advocacy of Ijtihad and radical anti madhab views 66 the later Wahhabis became more conciliatory towards traditional four schools of Fiqh Abdallah the son of Ibn Abd al Wahhab also toned down the radical anti Taqlid stances by stating that they affiliate themselves to the Hanbali school and do not condemn the common people who make taqleed to the four schools of jurisprudence 67 The earliest substantial Wahhabite treatise on Ijtihad was written by the scholar Ibn Mu ammar d 1810 a student of Ibn Abd al Wahhab and a Qadi of First Saudi state In his treatise Risalat al Ijtihad wal Taqlid Ibn Muammar gave respect to the four traditional Sunni schools of law and distinguished between two ranks of Mujtahids independent Mujtahid and Mujtahid al Muqayyid bound to the Imams According to Ibn Mu ammar Taqlid is permissible for laymen and scholar without sufficient knowledge but forbidden for those who can comprehend the bases of the law Unlike Ibn Abd al Wahhab Ibn Mu ammar permitted laypeople to make Taqleed to trustworthy scholars with certain reservations Despite this he also criticized strict adherence to a madhab and denounced mad hab fanaticism as a bid ah innovation According to Ibn Mu ammar the opinions of Imams should be discarded if they differ from authentic Prophetic traditions 68 69 70 Outlining the conventional Wahhabi legal theory which harmonised the madhhab system with the practice of Ijtihad Ibn Mu ammar writes 71 Adopting the revealed proof for a position without considering the statements of other ulama is the function of the absolute mujtahid Laity are obligated to practice taqlid and to consult those with knowledge But the idea that one must always follow a single school is a false view which Satan has cast upon many claimants to knowledge T hey imagine that study of the proofs is a difficult matter of which only an absolute mujtahid is capable They have even arrived at a claim that one associated with the school of an imam is obliged to accept that school even if it differs with the Qur an and the sunna Thus the imam of the school is to the members of his school as the Prophet is to his Community You will also find the fanatic adherents of the schools in many matters differing with the explicit positions of their imams and following the views of the latecomers in their school the books of the predecessors are hardly found among them 72 Ahmad Ibn Idris Al Fasi also emphasized on the practice of ijtihad His criticism of Taqleed of the schools of law madhhabs was based on three concerns First the need for following the Prophetic traditions 73 Second to reduce divisions between the Muslims 73 Third mercy for the Muslims because there were few circumstances on which the Quran and Sunna were genuinely silent but if there was a silence on any question then that silence was intentional on God s part a divine mercy 74 He therefore rejected any attempt to fill a silence deliberately left by God and so to abrogate one of His mercies 74 His student Muhammad ibn Ali al Sanusi also followed in his footsteps In his work Al Bughya Al Sanusi advocates for the need to practice Ijtihad The most detailed treatise by Al Sanusi on the topic of Ijtihad is Iqaz al wasnan fi l amal bi l hadith wa l Qur an Quoting Ibn Taymiyya Al Sanusi emphasizes on the principle of fallibility of the Imams of the madhabs and the obligation to follow the Sunnah The opinions of the four Imams should only be used for a better understanding of Fiqh Following Ibn Hazm and Shawkani Sanussi asserted that taqlid is bid ah innovation and fully condemned it Sanussi distinguished between the independent Mujtahid and the affiliated Mujtahid and affirmed the existence of the affiliated Mujtahid in every age He also objected to Taqlid and emphasized that Qur an and Sunna must be given precedence over the opinions of Mujtahids even in cases where the 4 Imams are wrong 75 76 Remarkably all these reformers shared common points of contact in Hijaz and a network of scholars with a Hijazi Yemeni centre Shah Waliullah Dehlawi and Muhammad Hayat as Sindi were pupils of Muhammad Ibn Ibrahim Al Kurrani Al Kurdi as well as connected to Ibrahim Ibn Hasan Al Kurrani Al Kurdi d 1690 and AbuI Baqa al Hasan ibn Ali al Ajami d 1702 Al Sanusi is also linked with these scholars via his teacher al Badr b Amir al Mi dani who was a student of Al Sindi as well as via other independent chains Al Shawkani is connected to Ibrahim Al Kurrani via his teacher Yusuf Ibn Muhammad 77 78 Outside these circles some scholars amongst traditional Sufi circles were also in favour of Ijtihad These included the prominent Ottoman Hanafite jurist Ibn Abidin 1784 1836 who is a scholarly authoritaty for even Hanafites of the Taqleed camp Ibn Abidin employed Ijtihad in order to issue fatwas using reasoning and believed that ijtihad was acceptable to use in certain circumstances According to Ibn Abidin Hanafite Muftis should look up to rulings of Abu Hanifa then Abu Yusuf then Shaybani then Zufar and then some lesser jurists for fatwas 79 However if a previous Hanafi scholar hasn t found an answer to the issue then he should employ Ijtihad to solve the novel issue 80 According to Ibn Abidin it is not obligatory to follow a particular mad hab as well 81 Contemporary debates over Ijtihad edit On the issue of existence of Mujtahids and continuity of Ijtihad contemporary scholarship are divided into two diametric camps and a third moderate camp 1 Those who oppose Ijtihad These include the Orientalist scholars who view that Gates of Ijtihad are closed Sufi groups such as Barelvis Deobandis etc believe that Mujtahids have ceased to exist Some others such as Said Nursi is not theoretically against Ijtihad but advocates postponing Ijtihad to a later time when Muslims attain sufficient strength 2 Those who advocate Ijtihad These include Salafi scholars and Islamic modernists who believe in the existence of Mujtahids Salafis argue that Ijtihad doesn t have a gate but only pre requisites Others who advocate Ijtihad include Muhammad Iqbal Muhammad Asad etc Recent scholars in academia such as Wael Hallaq are also its supporters 3 Those who take an intermediary position 82 Islamic modernism edit Main article Islamic modernism Starting in the middle of the 19th century Islamic modernists such as Sir Sayyid Ahmed Khan Jamal al din Al Afghani and Muhammad Abduh emerged seeking to revitalize Islam by re establish and reform Islamic law and its interpretations to accommodate Islam with modern society 83 They emphasized the use of ijtihad but in contrast to its original use 84 they sought to apply contemporary intellectual methods such as academic or scientific thought to the task of reforming Islam 84 Al Afghani proposed the new use of ijtihad that he believed would enable Muslims to think critically and apply their own individual interpretations of the innovations of modernity in the context of Islam 84 One modernist argument for applying ijtihad to sharia law is that while the principles and values underlying Sharia i e usul al fiqh are unalterable human interpretation of sharia is not 85 17 Another made by Asghar Ali Engineer of India is that the adaat customs and traditions of Arabs were used in the development of the sharia and form an important part of it They are very much not divine or immutable and have no more legal justification to be part of the sharia than the adaat of Muslims Iranians Uzbeks Turks Chinese Indians and others living beyond the home of the original Muslim in the Arab Hejaz ummah was no longer a homogenous group but comprised of various cultural communities with their own age old customs and traditions When Imam Al Shafi i moved from Hejaz to Egypt which was a confluence of Arab and Coptic cultures he realised this and changed his position on several issues 17 In Indonesia following considerable debate among the ulema Indonesian adaat become part of Sharia as applicable in that country 17 This use of ijtihad of adaat applies to mu amalat socio economic matters such as marriage divorce inheritance and not Ibadah fiqh ritual salat sawm zakat etc Asghar Ali Engineer argues that while the Quran was revealed in a highly patriarchal Arab adaat that still informs what is understood as sharia the Quran itself has a transcendental vision of justice that includes absolutely equal rights between genders and should guide ijtihad of sharia 17 Islamism and Salafism edit Contemporary Salafis are major proponents of ijtihad They criticize taqlid and believe ijtihad makes modern Islam more authentic and will guide Muslims back to the Golden Age of early Islam Salafis assert that reliance on taqlid has led to Islam s decline 86 Ahl i Hadith revivalist movement of subcontinent highly influenced by the thoughts of Shah Waliullah Dehlawi Shawkani and Syed Ahmed Barelvi fully condemn taqlid and advocate for ijtihad based on scriptures 87 Founded in mid 19th century in Bhopal it places great emphasis on hadith studies and condemns imitation to the canonical law schools They identify with the early school of Ahl al Hadith During the late 19th century Najdi scholars would establish contacts with Ahl i Hadith and many Najdi students would study under the scholars of Ahl i Hadith amongst them prominent scholars 88 89 The Muslim Brotherhood traces its founding philosophies to al Afghani s ijtihad The Muslim Brotherhood holds that the practice of ijtihad will strengthen the faith of believers by compelling them to better familiarize themselves with the Quran and come to their own conclusions about its teachings But as a political group the Muslim Brotherhood faces a major paradox between ijtihad as a religious matter and as a political one Ijtihad weakens political unity and promotes pluralism which is also why many oppressive regimes reject ijtihad s legitimacy 90 The Iranian Ayatollah Ruhollah Khomeini envisioned a prominent role for ijtihad in his political theory of guardianship of the jurist vilayat e faqih 2 Osama bin Laden supported ijtihad He criticized the Saudi regime for disallowing the free believer 90 and imposing harsh restrictions on successful practice of Islam Thus Bin Laden believed his striving for the implementation of ijtihad was his duty takleef 90 Qualifications of a mujtahid edit Mujtahid redirects here For the Twitter activist see Mujtahidd activist A mujtahid Arabic م ج ت ه د diligent is an individual who is qualified to exercise ijtihad in the evaluation of Islamic law The female equivalent is a mujtahida In general mujtahids must have an extensive knowledge of Arabic the Qur an the Sunnah and legal theory Usul al fiqh 91 Sunni Islam and Shia Islam due to their divergent beliefs regarding the persistence of divine authority have different views on ijtihad and the qualifications required to achieve mujtahid Sunni edit In the years following the death of Muhammad Sunni Muslims practiced ijtihad and saw it as an acceptable form of the continuation of sacred instruction Sunni Muslims justified practice of Ijtihad with a particular hadith which cites Muhammad s approval of forming an individual sound legal opinion if the Qur an and Sunnah contain no explicit text regarding that particular issue As Muslims turned to the Quran and Sunnah to solve their legal issues they began to recognize that these Divine proponents did not deal directly with certain topics of law Therefore Sunni jurists began to find other ways and sources for ijtihad which allowed for personal judgment of Islamic law 92 Thus a legal theory usul al Fiqh was developed during the classical period to facilitate Ijtihad It established a coherent system of principles through which a jurist could extract rulings on upcoming issues 93 Only a competent Muslim of sound mind with intellectual qualifications was allowed to engage in Ijtihad Abu l Husayn al Basri d 436 1044 provides the earliest complete account for the qualifications of a mujtahid in his book al Mu tamad fi Usul al Fiqh They include Enough knowledge of Arabic so that the scholar can read and understand both the Qur an and the Sunnah Extensive comprehensive knowledge of the Qur an and the Sunnah More specifically the scholar must have a full understanding of the Qur an s legal contents In regards to the Sunnah the scholar must understand the specific texts that refer to law and also the incidence of abrogation in the Sunnah Must be able to confirm the consensus Ijma of the Companions the Successors and the leading Imams and mujtahideen of the past in order to prevent making decisions that disregard these honored decisions made in the past Should be able to fully understand the objectives of the sharia and be dedicated to the protection of the five necessities which are life religion intellect lineage and property 94 Be able to distinguish strength and weakness in reasoning or in other words exercise logic Must be sincere and a good person 95 After Basri classical Mujtahids like Al Shirazi d 467 1083 Al Ghazzali d 505 1111 Al Amidi d 632 1234 would also develop various criterion with minor changes Amidi also allowed less qualified Mujtahids who didn t meet these requirements to solve issues provided he has the tools of solution 96 97 From the declaration of these requirements of mujtahid onwards legal scholars adopted these characteristics as being standard for any claimant of ijtihad This allowed for mujtahids to openly discuss their particular views and reach a conclusion together The interaction required by ijma allowed for mujtahids to circulate ideas and eventually merge to create particular Islamic schools of law madhhabs This consolidation of mujtahids into particular madhhabs prompted these groups to create their own distinct authoritative rules These laws reduced issues of legal uncertainty that had been present when multiple mujtahids were working together with one another Oftentimes multiple rulings would be issued by jurists of the same legal school Historical records show that throughout the tenth to nineteenth centuries legal practitioners had consistently modified law using degrees of Ijtihad making it flexible and adaptable to change 90 Eventually there developed a legal system of authoritative rulings on which influential jurists agreed However by the 14th century while influential jurists held that knowledgeable legal scholars should be allowed to engage in Ijtihad some others began to argue that there were no longer any legal scholars capable of performing Ijtihad beyond a certain limit as the founders of the four mad habs Despite this dispute many high ranking jurists upheld the practice of Ijtihad in legal rulings 90 Recent scholarship has largely adopted this view concluding that Ijtihad was indispensable in Islamic legal theory Rather than obstructing Ijtihad the legal theory as well as its stipulated qualifications facilitated Ijtihad 98 99 Shia edit Shia Muslims understand the process of ijtihad as being the independent effort used to arrive at the rulings of sharia Following the death of the Prophet and once they had determined the Imam as absent ijtihad evolved into a practice of applying careful reason in order to uncover the knowledge of what Imams would have done in particular legal situations The decisions the Imams would have made were explored through the application of the Qur an Sunnah ijma and aql reason It was not until the end of the eighteenth century that the title of mujtahid became associated with the term faqih or one who is an expert in jurisprudence From this point on religious courts began to increase in number and the ulama were transformed by Shia Islamic authorities into the new producer of ijtihad 100 Early Shiite theologians had denounced Sunni interpretative tools like Ijtihad and Qiyas analogical reasoning citing reports from the Shi i Imams They held that Ijtihad was a deductive process based on personal conjecture to argue that it had no legal basis in the shari a Islamic law Therefore until the 13th century the concept of Ijtihad was denounced disparagingly by the Shi i jurists who wanted to construct a systematic and stable legal edifice that was devoid of any uncertainty However with the passage of time some Shia jurists sensed the need to respond to newer and novel circumstances 101 According to Usuli scholars Mujtahids existed continuously since the 16th century and employed Ijtihad to form new laws according to altering circumstances 102 From the late 18th century Usuli jurists had advocated for appending Aql intellect as the fourth source of law This enabled them to issue legal opinions based on societal needs The Akhbari school rejected the idea of human intellect playing any role in legal reasoning 12 In order to produce perceptive mujtahids that could fulfill this important role Usulis developed the principles of Shia jurisprudence Usool to provide a foundation for scholarly deduction of Islamic law Shaykh Murtada Ansari 103 and his successors developed the school of Shia law dividing the legal decisions into four levels of certainty qat valid conjecture zann doubt shakk and erroneous conjecture wahm These rules allowed mujtahids to issue adjudications on any subject that could be derived through this process of ijtihad demonstrating responsibility to the Shia community 100 Furthermore according to Shia Islamic Jurisprudence a believer of Islam is either a Mujtahid one that expresses their own legal reasoning or a Muqallid one performing taqlid following or imitating a Mujtahid and a Muhtat a lay Shiite who does not follow anyone yet acts on such precaution that assures him the fulfilment of his religious obligations 104 105 Most Shia Muslims qualify as Muqallid and therefore are very dependent on the rulings of the Mujtahids Therefore the Mujtahids must be well prepared to perform ijtihad as the community of Muqallid are dependent on their rulings Not only did Shia Muslims require Knowledge of the texts of the Qur an and Sunnah Justice in matters of public and personal life Utmost piety Understanding of the cases where Shia mujtahids reached consensus Ability to exercise competence and authority 106 However these scholars also depended on further training that could be received in religious centers called Hawza At these centers they are taught the important subjects and technical knowledge a mujtahid need be proficient in such as Arabic grammar and literature Logic Extensive knowledge of the Qur anic sciences and Hadith Science of narrators Principle of Jurisprudence Comparative Jurisprudence 107 Therefore Shia mujtahids remain revered throughout the Shia Islamic world The relationship between the mujtahids and muqallids continues to address and solve the contemporary legal issues Participating in ijtihad however has been cautioned by scholars for those not properly educated in interpretation of the Qu ran This is narrated by Ali ibn Husayn Zayn al Abidin the great grandson of Muhammad when he cautioned Aban ibn abi Ayyash a fellow companion saying Oh brother from Abd Qays if the issue becomes clear to you then accept it Otherwise remain silent and defer to Allah because your interpretation from the truth will be as far from the Earth as the sky 108 Female mujtahids edit Women can be Mujtahid and throughout Islamic history there were well known female Islamic scholars and Mujtahids who played an important role in traditional Islamic discourse Aisha the wife of Muhammad was a well known hadith scholar and a Mujtahid She was an assertive intelligent woman as well as an eloquent speaker According to Urwah Ibn Zubair Aisha was the most knowledgeable in hadith and fiqh and surpassed everyone in knowledge of poetry and medicine Al Zuhri studied under the well known woman jurist of the day Amrah bint Abdul Rahman She was one of the most knowledgeable people of hadith and was described as an ocean of knowledge When the judge of Madinah heard Amrah s message he did not feel the need to get a male opinion although Madinah was then housing the famous Seven Jurists Islamic scholar Akram Nadwi published a 40 volume biographical collection of female Muslim scholars wherein more than 8 000 female scholars were detailed Other famous female Muhadditha and jurists include Zainab bint Kamal Fatima Al Batayahiyyah Fatimah bint Muhammad al Samarqandi etc Fatima Al Fihiriyya founded the University of Qarawiyyin in Fez in 859 world s first academic university that offered a degree Scholars such as Umm al Darda used to sit and debate with male scholars in the mosque She was a teacher of hadith and Fiqh and also lectured in the men s section One of her students was a Caliph 109 In Shiism there have been dozens of women who have attained the rank in the modern history of Iran for instance Amina Bint al Majlisi in the Safavid era Bibi Khanum in the Qajar era Lady Amin in the Pahlavi era and Zohreh Sefati during the time of the Islamic Republic 110 There are diverging opinions as to whether a female mujtahid can be a marjaʻ or not Zohreh Sefati and some male jurists believe a female mujtahida can become a marja in other words they believe that believers perform taqlid emulation of a female mujtahid but most male jurists believe a marjaʻ must be male citation needed See also editPortal nbsp IslamReferences editNotes edit The mid twentieth century European authority on Islamic law Joseph Schacht said that Since the 1990s a large and growing body of research has demonstrated the continuing creativity and dynamism of Islamic legal thinking in the post formative period as well as probed the lively dialectic between legal rulings and social practice While it is no longer possible to assert that the door of ijtihad was closed after the tenth or indeed any other century however there is still lively debate over the extent of legal change and the mechanisms by which it occurred 8 42 After the eleventh century Sunni legal literature developed rankings of jurists according to their ability to practice ijtihad One predominant classification credited the founders of the legal schools with the distinction of being absolute mujtahids mujtahid muṭlaq who were capable of laying down a methodology of the law and of deriving from it the positive doctrines that were to dominate their respective schools Accordingly each legal school represented a different methodology for ijtihad Next came the mujtahids who operated within each school mujtahid muntasim or mujtahid fi al madhhab who followed the methodology of the school s founder but proffered new solutions for novel legal cases The lowest rank belonged to the muqallid the jurist imitator who merely followed the rulings arrived at by the mujtahids without understanding the processes by which these rulings were derived Between the ranks of mujtahids and muqallids there were distinguished other levels of jurists who combined ijtihad with taqlid The settling of the major areas of Islamic law gave rise to the perception prevalent among many modern Western scholars and Sunni lay Muslims that jurists had come to a consensus that the so called gate of ijtihad باب الاجتهاد bab al ijtihad was closed at the beginning of the tenth century 41 In the eleventh century jurists defined a jurisconsult as being a mujtahid i e one who has the ability to independently reason the highest rank of a jurist By the middle of the thirteenth century however it appears that the prerequisites were lowered and jurisconsults were expected by most but not all scholars to bemuqallids i e able to articulate a legal opinion based on the precedents and methodology of a particular legal school a lower rank than mujtahid 45 Citations edit ijtihad Collins English Dictionary 13th ed HarperCollins 2018 ISBN 978 0 008 28437 4 a b c d e f g h i j k l Rabb Intisar A 2009 Ijtihad In John L Esposito ed The Oxford Encyclopedia of the Islamic World Oxford Oxford University Press ISBN 978 0 19 530513 5 a b c d John L Esposito ed 2014 Taqiyah Ijtihad The Oxford Dictionary of Islam Oxford Oxford University Press ISBN 978 0 19 512558 0 John L Esposito ed 2014 Taqlid The Oxford Dictionary of Islam Oxford Oxford University Press ISBN 978 0 19 512558 0 sometimes spelt mojtahed a b B Hallaq Wael March 1984 Was the Gate of Ijtihad Closed International Journal of Middle East Studies 16 1 20 33 doi 10 1017 S0020743800027598 JSTOR 162939 S2CID 159897995 via JSTOR Gould Rebecca January 2015 Ijtihad against Madhhab Legal Hybridity and the Meanings of Modernity in Early Modern Daghestan Comparative Studies in Society and History 57 1 50 51 doi 10 1017 S0010417514000590 JSTOR 43908333 S2CID 121170987 via JSTOR a b c Marion Katz 2015 The Age of Development and Continuity 12th 15th Centuries CE In Emon Anver M Ahmed Rumee eds The Oxford Handbook of Islamic Law Oxford University Press pp 436 458 doi 10 1093 oxfordhb 9780199679010 013 14 ISBN 978 0 19 967901 0 E Campo Juan 2009 Encyclopedia of Islam New York Facts On File Inc p 346 ISBN 978 0 8160 5454 1 ijtihad has in fact been a key aspect of Islamic jurisprudence for centuries thereafter B Hallaq Wael March 1984 Was the Gate of Ijtihad Closed International Journal of Middle East Studies 16 1 20 doi 10 1017 S0020743800027598 JSTOR 162939 S2CID 159897995 via JSTOR Rahman Fazlur 2000 REVIVAL AND REFORM IN ISLAM A Study of Islamic Fundamentalism Oxford England One World Publications Oxford pp 63 64 ISBN 1 85168 204 X a b Mohammad Farzaneh Mateo 2015 The Iranian Constitutional Revolution and the Clerical Leadership of Khurasani Syracuse New York Syracuse University Press p 6 ISBN 978 0 8156 3388 4 a b Hallaq Wael 2005 The Origins and Evolution of Islamic Law Cambridge University Press Kayadibi Saim 2017 Principles of Islamic Law and the Methods of Interpretation of the Texts Uṣul al Fiqh Kuala Lumpur Islamic Book Trust p 349 ISBN 978 967 0526 33 1 Kayadibi Saim 2017 Principles of Islamic Law and the Methods of Interpretation of the Texts Uṣul al Fiqh Kuala Lumpur Islamic Book Trust p 350 ISBN 978 967 0526 33 1 a b The Office of the Judge Kitab Al Aqdiyah Book 24 Number 3585 University of Southern California Center for Muslim Jewish Engagement Retrieved 28 September 2016 a b c d e ALI ENGINEER ASGHAR 1 February 2013 Is Sharia immutable Dawn Retrieved 27 September 2016 see also Hannan Shah Abdul Islamic Jurisprudence Usul Al Fiqh Ijtihad Muslim tents Retrieved 27 September 2016 Esposito John Ijtihad The Islamic World Past and Present Oxford Islamic Studies Online dead link a b c Esposito John Ijtihad The Islamic World Past and Present Oxford Islamic Studies Online Archived from the original on October 22 2014 Retrieved April 28 2013 B Hallaq Wael March 1984 Was the Gate of Ijtihad Closed International Journal of Middle East Studies 16 1 Cambridge University Press 21 26 doi 10 1017 S0020743800027598 JSTOR 162939 S2CID 159897995 via JSTOR B Hallaq Wael March 1984 Was the Gate of Ijtihad Closed International Journal of Middle East Studies 16 1 Cambridge University Press 22 25 doi 10 1017 S0020743800027598 JSTOR 162939 S2CID 159897995 via JSTOR B Hallaq Wael 1986 On the Origins of the Controversy about the Existence of Mujtahids and the Gate of Ijtihad Studia Islamica 63 Maisonneuve amp Larose 139 140 doi 10 2307 1595569 JSTOR 1595569 via JSTOR a href Template Cite journal html title Template Cite journal cite journal a More than one of number and issue specified help A Rabb Intisar 2013 8 Islamic Legal Minimalism Legal Maxims and Lawmaking When Jurists Disappear In Cook Michael Haider Najam Rabb Intisar Sayeed Asma eds Law and Tradition in Classical Islamic Thought New York NY Palgrave Mcmillan p 151 ISBN 978 0 230 11329 9 Makhdoom bin Sheikh Muhammad Al Gazzali Ahmad Zainuddin 2008 Chapter 19 Judgements Fath ul Mu een Mangalore Karnataka Punkavanam Bookstall Al Maktabatul Ghazzaliyya pp 626 631 B Hallaq Wael March 1984 Was the Gate of Ijtihad Closed International Journal of Middle East Studies 16 1 Cambridge University Press 25 28 doi 10 1017 S0020743800027598 JSTOR 162939 S2CID 159897995 via JSTOR Aaliyah Abu 17 October 2012 Practical Steps for Learning Fiqh Thehumblei Archived from the original on 3 May 2020 Ansari Abu Khuzaimah 2 April 2017 Answering the Book Refutation of Those Who Do Not Follow The Four Schools PART 4 Was it The Norm to Only Follow the Four Madhabs in the seventh and eighth Century amp The Existence of Other Madhabs Salafi Research Institute Archived from the original on 28 November 2020 Ansari Abu Khuzaimah 2 April 2017 Answering the Book Refutation of Those Who Do Not Follow The Four Schools and that Taqlid of them is Guidance Salafi Research Institute Archived from the original on 28 November 2020 Mu eed an Na am Wa Mubeed an Naqam pg 76 A Rabb Instisar 2013 8 Islamic Legal Minimalism Legal Maxims and Lawmaking When Jurists Disappear In Cook Michael Haider Najam Rabb Intisar Sayeed Asma eds Law and Tradition in Classical Islamic Thought New York NY Palgrave Mcmillan pp 150 151 153 157 ISBN 978 0 230 11329 9 Ariani Arimbi Diah 2009 Reading Contemporary Indonesian Muslim Women Writers Representation Identity and Religion of Muslim Women in Indonesian Fiction Amsterdam Amsterdam University Press p 195 ISBN 9789089640895 Murphy Caryle 2007 Passion for Islam Shaping the Modern Middle East The Egyptian Experience Scribner p 317 ISBN 978 1416569572 Hardy Roger 2010 1 Dream of Revolt The Muslim Revolt A Journey Through Political Islam London Hurst amp Company p 18 ISBN 978 1 84904 031 0 Naseem Rafiabadi Hamid 2002 Emerging From Darkness Ghazzali s Impact on the Western Philosophers New Delhi Sarup amp Sons p 293 ISBN 81 7625 310 3 Janin Hunt Kahlmeyer Andre 2007 3 The Sharia and its Jurists Islamic Law The Sharia from Muhammad s Time to the Present Jefferson North Carolina McFarland amp Company p 67 ISBN 978 0 7864 2921 9 Goldziher Ignaz 1981 VI Later Developments Introduction to Islamic theology and Law Translated by Hamori Andras Hamori Ruth Princeton New Jersey USA Princeton University Press pp 244 245 ISBN 0 691 07257 4 B Hallaq Wael March 1984 Was the Gate of Ijtihad Closed International Journal of Middle East Studies 16 1 Cambridge University Press 3 41 doi 10 1017 S0020743800027598 JSTOR 162939 S2CID 159897995 via JSTORA B Hallaq Wael March 1984 Was the Gate of Ijtihad Closed International Journal of Middle East Studies 16 1 Cambridge University Press 27 doi 10 1017 S0020743800027598 JSTOR 162939 S2CID 159897995 via JSTOR a b DeLong Bas Natana J 2004 Wahhabi Islam From Revival and Reform to Global Jihad First ed Oxford University Press USA p 106 ISBN 0 19 516991 3 B Hallaq Wael March 1984 Was the Gate of Ijtihad Closed International Journal of Middle East Studies 16 1 Cambridge University Press 30 32 doi 10 1017 S0020743800027598 JSTOR 162939 S2CID 159897995 via JSTOR a b Intisar A Rabb 2009 Ijtihad The Oxford Encyclopedia of the Islamic World Oxford University Press ISBN 978 0 19 530513 5 Schacht Joseph 1964 An Introduction to Islamic Law Clarendon Press pp 70 71 Wael B Hallaq On the origin of the Controversy about the Existence of Mutahids and the Gate of Ijtihad Studia Islamica 63 1986 129 B Hallaq Wael March 1984 Was the Gate of Ijtihad Closed International Journal of Middle East Studies 16 1 Cambridge University Press 29 doi 10 1017 S0020743800027598 JSTOR 162939 S2CID 159897995 via JSTOR Lapidus Ira M 2014 A History of Islamic Societies Cambridge University Press p 218 ISBN 978 0 521 51430 9 B Hallaq Wael 2004 AUTHORITY CONTINUITY AND CHANGE IN ISLAMIC LAW New York Cambridge University Press pp 120 135 ISBN 0 521 80331 4 Al Atawneh Muhammad 2010 4 Modern Wahhabi Jurisprudence Wahhabi Islam Facing the Challenges of Modernity Koninklijke Brill NV Leiden The Netherlands Brill p 66 ISBN 978 90 04 18469 5 B Hallaq Wael 2004 AUTHORITY CONTINUITY AND CHANGE IN ISLAMIC LAW Cambridge UK Cambridge University Press pp 1 30 ISBN 0 521 80331 4 B Hallaq Wael March 1984 Was the Gate of Ijtihad Closed International Journal of Middle East Studies 16 1 Cambridge University Press 28 30 doi 10 1017 S0020743800027598 JSTOR 162939 S2CID 159897995 via JSTOR Atif Ahmad Ahmad 2012 The Fatigue of the Shari a New York Palgrave MacMillan pp 39 40 ISBN 978 1 349 34292 1 Peters Rudolph September 1980 Ijtihad and Taqlid is 18th and 19th century Islam PDF Die Welt des Islams XX 3 4 University of Amsterdam 131 145 Archived from the original PDF on 17 February 2019 Al Atawneh Muhammad 2010 4 Modern Wahhabi Jurisprudence Wahhabi Islam Facing the Challenges of Modernity Koninklijke Brill NV Leiden The Netherlands Brill p 64 ISBN 978 90 04 18469 5 Faithful to the tenets of Ibn Taymiyya and Muḥammad Ibn ʿAbd al Wahhab contemporary Wahhabis champion ijtihad and restrict blind taqlid Ibn Hasan Aal Sheikh Abdur Rahman 2002 38 Taking Scholars or Rulers as Partners Besides Allah Fath al Majeed Sharh Kitab al Tawhid Divine Triumph Explanatory Notes on the Book of Tawheed Translated by Al Halawani Ali As Sayed El Mansoura Egypt Dar al Manarah pp 369 370 ISBN 977 6005 18 7 Peters Rudolph September 1980 Ijtihad and Taqlid is 18th and 19th century Islam PDF Die Welt des Islams XX 3 4 University of Amsterdam 131 145 Archived from the original PDF on 17 February 2019 B Hallaq Wael March 1984 Was the Gate of Ijtihad Closed International Journal of Middle East Studies 16 1 Cambridge University Press 32 doi 10 1017 S0020743800027598 JSTOR 162939 S2CID 159897995 via JSTOR Baljon J M S 1986 Religion and Thought of Shah Wali Allah Dihlawi 1703 1762 Brill Academic Pub pp 87 88 Fateh Muhammad Aazadi Muhammad Burfat Fateh Muhammad Ghulam 2013 Sociological Thought of Shah Wali Ullah PDF Pakistan Journal of Islamic Research 12 129 143 via iri aiou edu pk ibn Abd al Wahhab Muhammad The Six Foundations PDF Salafi Publications Archived PDF from the original on 20 December 2020 B Hallaq Wael March 1984 Was the Gate of Ijtihad Closed International Journal of Middle East Studies 16 1 Cambridge University Press 32 33 doi 10 1017 S0020743800027598 JSTOR 162939 S2CID 159897995 via JSTOR C Martin Richard 2004 Encyclopedia of Islam and the Muslim World New York Macmillan Reference USA pp 728 6 ISBN 0 02 865603 2 Ibn Abd al Wahhab along with other Muslim reformers of the eighteenth century was one of the most important proponents of independent legal judgment ijtihad of his time Among the innovations condemned by Ibn Abd al Wahhab was the centuries long heritage of jurisprudence fiqh that coalesced into four Sunni schools of law Ibn Abd al Wahhab challenged the authority of the religious scholars ulema not only of his own time but also the majority of those in preceding generations scholars had injected unlawful innovations bida into Islam he argued In order to restore the strict monotheism tawhid of true Islam it was necessary to strip the pristine Islam of human additions and speculations Thus Ibn Abd al Wahhab called for the reopening of ijtihad L Esposito John 2003 The Oxford Dictionary of Islam New York Oxford University Press p 123 ISBN 0 19 512558 4 Ibn Abd al Wahhab Proclaimed the necessity of returning directly to the Quran and hadith rather than relying on medieval interpretations Opposed taqlid Called for the use of ijtihad M Zarabozo Jamal al Din 2005 The Life Teachings and Influence of Muhammad ibn Abdul Wahhab Riyadh Saudi Arabia The Ministry of Islamic Affairs Endowments Dawah and Guidance Kingdom of Saudi Arabia pp 148 151 ISBN 9960 29 500 1 M Bunzel Cole 2018 MANIFEST ENMITY The Origins Development and Persistence of Classical Wahhabism 1153 1351 1741 1932 Near Eastern Studies Princeton NJ Princeton University 49 50 57 58 155 156 he rails against Ibn ʿAbd al Wahhab for drawing inferences directly from the Qurʾan and the ḥadith istinbaṭ as opposed to emulating taqlid one of the four law schools Ibn al Ṭayyib also criticizes Ibn ʿAbd al Wahhab for claiming ijtihad prohibiting taqlid he describes his position with respect to scholarly authority as neither taqlid nor ijtihad but rather ittibaʿ where they are not agreed I submit the matter to God and His prophet To do otherwise he says in the same letter invoking Q 9 31 would be to take the scholars as lords ittikhadh al ʿulamaʾ arbaban M Zarabozo Jamal al Din 2005 The Life Teachings and Influence of Muhammad ibn Abdul Wahhab Riyadh Saudi Arabia The Ministry of Islamic Affairs Endowments Dawah and Guidance Kingdom of Saudi Arabia p 107 ISBN 9960 29 500 1 Thus ibn Abdul Wahhab noted about those who blindly follow Their religion is built upon some principles the greatest being taqleed It is the greatest maxim for all the disbelievers from the first to the last of them Ibn Abd al Wahhab Muhammad Masa il al Jahiliyya Aspects of the Days of Ignorance Their religion was built upon certain principles the greatest of which was taqleed blind following So this was the biggest principle for all of the disbelievers the first and last of them E Campo Juan 2009 Encyclopedia of Islam New York Facts On File Inc p 704 ISBN 978 0 8160 5454 1 Wahhabism also was opposed to key doctrines held by most Sunni ulama such as adherence taqlid to the cumulative tradition of jurisprudence fiqh Shaykh Abd Allaah Bin Muhammad Bin Abd Al Wahhaab on Fiqh Ijtihaad Madhhabs and Taqlid Wahhabis com August 2011 Archived from the original on 7 May 2017 And also we are upon the madhhab of Imaam Ahmad bin Hanbal in the matters of jurisprudence and we do not show rejection to the one who made taqleed of one of the four Imaams Peters Rudolph September 1980 IJTIHAD AND TAQLID IN 18TH AND 19TH CENTURY ISLAM PDF Archived PDF from the original on 10 May 2019 ibn Naṣir ibn Muʿammar Ḥamad Risalah fi l Ijtihad wa l Taqlid Treatise on Ijtihad and Taqlid Jeddah Dar al Andalus The lay people haven t ceased since the time of the Companions the Successors and their followers asking their scholars about rulings of the shari ah Scholars in turn have readily responded to such queries without necessarily mentioning proofs nor did they forbid this to them in the least So this is a point of consensus on the lawfulness of the laity making taqlid of their mujtahid scholars and that they are only required to do this of one whom they consider to be a scholar Taqlid amp Madhhabs The Good Bad and the Ugly 1 2 The Humble i 8 November 2017 Archived from the original on 2 January 2018 E Vogel Frank 2000 Islamic Law and Legal System Studies of Saudi Arabia Leiden The Netherlands Brill pp 66 67 70 73 ISBN 9004110623 E Vogel Frank 2000 Islamic Law and Legal System Studies of Saudi Arabia Leiden The Netherlands Brill pp 66 67 70 ISBN 9004110623 a b Dajani Samer Reassurance for the Seeker p 12 a b Sedgwick Mark Saints and Sons p 15 S Vikor Knut June 1995 The development of ijtihad and Islamic reform 1750 1850 Archived from the original on 10 March 2018 Peters Rudolph September 1980 Ijtihad and Taqlid in 18th and 19th Century Islam PDF University of Amsterdam Archived PDF from the original on 17 February 2019 S Vikor Knut June 1995 The development of ijtihad and Islamic reform 1750 1850 Archived from the original on 10 March 2018 Peters Rudolph September 1980 Ijtihad and Taqlid in 18th and 19th Century Islam PDF University of Amsterdam Archived PDF from the original on 17 February 2019 Gerber 1999 88 Gerber 1999 126 Sultan al Ma soomee al Khajnadee Shaykh Muhammad 5 WILL IT BE ASKED IN THE GRAVE ABOUT WHICH MADHHAB ONE FOLLOWED THE BLIND FOLLOWING OF MADHHABS PDF Kesgin Salih 2011 A CRITICAL ANALYSIS OF THE SCHACHT S ARGUMENT AND CONTEMPORARY DEBATES ON LEGAL REASONING THROUGHOUT THE HISTORY OF ISLAMIC JURISPRUDENCE The Journal of International Social Research 4 19 160 163 via Sosyalarastirmalar Com Ijtihad Reinterpreting Islamic Principles for the 21st Century PDF United States Institute of Peace Special Report United States Institute of Peace Retrieved May 3 2013 a b c Voices of a New Ijtihad Center for Dialogues NYU Archived from the original on 2016 01 05 Retrieved May 2 2013 Hussain Tanveer 16 November 2013 Immutability of the Islamic Laws quranicteachings org Retrieved 12 April 2018 Ungureanu Daniel Wahabism Salafism and the Expansion of Islamic Fundamentalist Ideology PDF Ai I Cuza University of Iasi Retrieved May 2 2013 John L Esposito ed 2014 Ahl i Hadith The Oxford Dictionary of Islam Oxford Oxford University Press doi 10 1093 acref 9780195125580 001 0001 ISBN 9780195125580 Meijer Roel 2014 Between Revolution and Apoliticism Nasir al Din al Albani and his Impact on the Shaping of Contemporary Salafism Global Salafism Islam s New Religious Movement New York Oxford University Press pp 61 63 ISBN 978 0 19 933343 1 Commins David 2006 The Wahhabi Mission and Saudi Arabia London I B Tauris p 145 ISBN 1 84511 080 3 a b c d e Indira Falk Gesnik June 2003 Chaos on the Earth Subjective Truths versus Communal Unity in Islamic Law and the Rise of Militant Islam The American Historical Review 108 3 Oxford University Press 710 733 doi 10 1086 529594 JSTOR 10 1086 529594 Mujtahid The Oxford Dictionary of Islam Archived from the original on August 8 2014 Retrieved 1 May 2013 El Shamsy Ahmed Ijtihad bi al Ray The Oxford Encyclopedia of the Islamic World Oxford Islamic Studies Online Archived from the original on February 4 2016 Retrieved 1 May 2013 B Hallaq Wael March 1984 Was the Gate of Ijtihad Closed International Journal of Middle East Studies 16 1 Cambridge University Press 4 10 doi 10 1017 S0020743800027598 S2CID 159897995 via JSTOR Sharia Religions BBC Retrieved 4 May 2022 Kamali Mohammad Hashim 1991 Principles of Islamic Jurisprudence Cambridge Islamic Texts Society pp 374 377 B Hallaq Wael March 1984 Was the Gate of Ijtihad Closed International Journal of Middle East Studies 16 1 Cambridge University Press 6 9 doi 10 1017 S0020743800027598 JSTOR 162939 S2CID 159897995 via JSTOR Hashim Kamali Muhammad 1991 Chapter Nineteen Ijtihad or Personal Reasoning Principles of Islamic Jurisprudence International Islamic University Malaysia pp 322 323 B Hallaq Wael March 1984 Was the Gate of Ijtihad Closed International Journal of Middle East Studies 16 1 Cambridge University Press 4 33 doi 10 1017 S0020743800027598 JSTOR 162939 S2CID 159897995 via JSTOR Hashim Kamali Muhammad 1991 Chapter Nineteen Ijtihad or Personal Reasoning Principles of Islamic Jurisprudence International Islamic University Malaysia pp 323 325 a b Momen Moojan 1985 An Introduction to Shia Islam The History and Doctrines of Twelver Shi ism New Haven Yale University Press p 186 Takim Liyakat 2022 2 Usul al Fiqh and Ijtihad in Shi ism Shi ism Revisited Ijtihad and Reformation in Contemporary Times New York United States of America Oxford University Press p 66 doi 10 1093 oso 9780197606575 001 0001 ISBN 9780197606575 To further vindicate their practice the scholars cited traditions from the Imams that denounced Sunni interpretive tools like those of analogical deduction qiyas and independent reasoning ijtihad The negative stance toward Sunni legal practices was premised on the view that ijtihad was a deductive process based on personal conjecture and therefore had no legal basis in the shari a Due to this the term ijtihad was used in a disparaging way by the Shi is until the thirteenth century The denunciation of ijtihad during this period also indicates that Shi i jurists wanted to construct a legal edifice that was devoid of any doubt or uncertainty With the passage of time Shi i fuqaha sensed the need to respond to newer issues and novel circumstances Mohammad Farzaneh Mateo 2015 The Iranian Constitutional Revolution and the Clerical Leadership of Khurasani Syracuse New York Syracuse University Press p 91 ISBN 978 0 8156 3388 4 Shaykh Murtada Ansari Mohammadreza Kalantari ed 19 January 2017 Research Seminar Lost in Translation Taqlid and Marja iyya in Shiite Islam AlMahdi Institute Retrieved 2 September 2022 Jannati Muhammad Ibrahim 17 March 2013 The Term Ijtihad The Forth Definition of Ijtihad Ijtihad Its Meaning Sources Beginnings and the Practice of Ray Al Islam org Retrieved 2 September 2022 Mutahhari Murtada 2 March 2013 The Principle of Ijtihad in Islam Retrieved 1 May 2013 Mutahhari Murtada 2 March 2013 The Principles of Ijtihad in Islam Retrieved 1 May 2013 al Kulayni Muhammad ibn Ya qub 2015 Al Kafi Volume 6 ed NY Islamic Seminary Incorporated ISBN 978 0 9914308 6 4 The Lost Female Scholars of Islam Emel Archived from the original on 13 January 2021 See Mirjam Kunkler and Roja Fazaeli The Life of Two Mujtahidas Female Religious Authority in 20th Century Iran in Women Leadership and Mosques Changes in Contemporary Islamic Authority ed Masooda Bano and Hilary Kalmbach Brill Publishers 2012 127 160 SSRN 1884209Further reading editWael Hallaq Was the Gate of Ijtihad Closed International Journal of Middle East Studies 16 1 1984 3 41 Glasse Cyril The Concise Encyclopaedia of Islam 2nd Edition Stacey International London 1991 ISBN 0 905743 65 2 Goldziher Ignaz translated by A And R Hamori Introduction to Islamic Theology and Law Princeton University Press Princeton New Jersey 1981 ISBN 0 691 10099 3 Kamali Mohammad Hashim Principles of Islamic Jurisprudence Islamic Texts Society Cambridge 1991 ISBN 0 946621 24 1 Carlos Martinez Limiting the Power of Religion from Within Probabilism and Ishtihad in Religion and Its Other Secular and Sacral Concepts and Practices in Interaction Edited by Heike Bock Jorg Feuchter and Michi Knecht Frankfurt M Campus Verlag 2008 External links editIjtihad against the Text Two Theories of Ijtihad An Introduction to Islamic Law by Joseph Schacht A Detailed Q amp A on Ijtihad Opening the doors of Ijtihad essay by Fred Dallmayr on www resetdoc org Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title Ijtihad amp oldid 1216258004 Qualifications of a mujtahid, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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