Tawassul
Dr. 'Abd al-Karim Bi-Azar Shirazi
Translated by Sayyid 'Ali Shahbaz
Vol. 5, No. 4, Summer 2000/1421
"O you who believe! Fear Allah and seek an
approach unto Him..."
(Holy Qur'an 5:35)
Over the last few centuries, the Muslims have been
wracked by severe discord and hostility over the issue of tawassul
(beseeching or supplicating) to Prophet Muhammad (s), the
Ahl al-Bayt ('a), the Saints and the Pious, to the extent
that those who reject this concept have accused its
supporters of shirk or polytheism, while the
upholders of tawassul have charged its opponents
with enmity and aversion towards the Prophet (s) and his
Infallible Household ('a). The result has led to
increasing bigotry on both sides to the benefit of their
common enemies who have increased their domination of
Muslim lands. This article is an attempt to examine and
critically study the issue of tawassul.
Definition of Tawassul
The lexical meaning of tawassul is 'nearness' or
a 'means' through which to reach a certain goal. For
instance, when it is said wa wassala ila Allah, it
means to perform a certain act for gaining proximity to
God. Accordingly wasil here means being 'desirous
of God'.[1]
According to the prominent Sunni scholar, Sayyid
Muhammad Alusi al-Baghdadi, wasilah is a means of
imploring in order to gain nearness to God through good
deeds and abstaining from sins. For example when it is
said "wasala ila kadha," it means a thing
through which nearness is gained.
As is clear from the wordings of ayah 35 of
Surah al-Ma'idah, which we quoted at the beginning of the
article, "fear Allah" is a commandment to
abstain from sin, while "seek an approach unto
Him" is an order to perform worship and acts of
devotion.[2]
Both Raghib Isfahani and 'Allamah Sayyid Muhammad
Husayn Tabataba'i opine that al-wasilah means to
reach a certain goal through desire, inclination or
willingness, and in fact wasilah towards God means
observance of His path with knowledge and worship through
adherence to the Shari'ah. In other words wasilah
is a means of communication and spiritual link between
mankind and God.
According to a narration al-wasilah is a
position in paradise which is reserved for only one
person, and Prophet Muhammad (s) has asked the ummah
to pray that this status be granted to him.[3]
a) Tawassul to the Prophet and Saints during their
Lifetime
In the opinion of the founder of the Wahhabi sect,
Muhammad ibn 'Abd al-Wahhab, and other like-minded 'ulama'
of the past, it is permissible to seek help from fellow
humans, as during wars and other affairs, if the person or
the group who is being asked or entreated has the power
and ability to help.[4]
Alusi believes that appealing to people, making them a wasilah
or means and requesting them to supplicate to God is
permissible without the least doubt, provided that the one
who is being requested is alive, whether or not the one
who is petitioned is superior than the petitioner, since
the Prophet (s) used to say to some of his companions:
"O brother do not forget us in your supplications to
Allah."
However, Alusi is of the opinion that if the one who is
being petitioned is not alive, it is not permissible to
request him for supplication. But Alusi adds that it is
permissible to supplicate at the shrine of the Prophet
(s), since the companions of the Prophet (s) used to stand
beside his shrine and supplicate with face towards the Qiblah.
b) Tawassul to the Prophet after his Death
The 'ulama' are divided whether or not it is
permissible after the death of the Prophet (s) to make him
the means of supplication with such phrases as Allahumma
inni asaluka bi-Nabiyyika (O Allah! I beseech You
through Your Prophet), or bi-jahi Nabiyyika (by the
dignity of Your Prophet), or still bi-Haqqi Nabiyyika
(for the sake of Your Prophet). We come across three
different opinions in this regard.
1. Opinion on Permissibility
All jurists including Imami, Shafi'i, Maliki, and
later-day Hanafi scholars as well as others such as the
Hanbalis, are unanimous on the permissibility of this way
of supplication, whether it was in the lifetime of the
Prophet (s), or whether it is after his passing away.[5]
The Abbasid caliph, Mansur al-Dawaniqi, once asked
Malik ibn Anas the founder of the Maliki School of
jurisprudence whether he should turn towards the shrine of
the Prophet (s) or face the Qiblah for
supplication? Malik answered him:
Why do you want to turn away from the Prophet (s)
when he (Prophet Muhammad (s)) is the wasilah
(means) for you and for your father Adam, towards Allah
on the Day of Resurrection. Turn to him (the Prophet)
and seek his intercession (shafa'at).[6]
The Sunni scholar al-Nawawi in describing the manners
and etiquette of making
pilgrimage to the shrine of Prophet Muhammad (s),
writes:
The pilgrim should face the shrine of the Messenger
of Allah (s), make him a means (tawassul) towards
reaching God and seek his wasilah as intercession (shafa'at),
in the same manner as the Bedouin who visited the
Prophet's shrine and standing beside it said: Peace unto
you O Messenger of Allah, I have heard Allah has said:
...Had they, when they had wronged themselves, come
to you and asked Allah's forgiveness and the Apostle had
asked forgiveness for them, they would certainly have
found Allah Most-Propitious, Most-Merciful. (Holy
Qur'an 4: 64).
Therefore, I have come to you for forgiveness of my
sins and seeking your intercession with Allah.[7]
Ibn Qudamah Hanbali, defining the manner of pilgrimage
to the shrine of the Prophet (s), writes in the book al-Mughni:
Stand beside the tomb of the Prophet (s), and say: I
have come to you for forgiveness of my sins and to seek
your intercession with Allah. [8]
The Shafi'ite scholar Ghazzali has allotted a special
section in his book Ihya' 'Ulum al-Din concerning
the manners of pilgrimage to the shrine of the Prophet (s)
in order to repent and seek forgiveness from Allah. He
writes:
The Prophet should be made the means (wasilah)
and the intercessor (shafi'), and with face
turned towards the tomb, the pilgrim should implore
Allah for the sake and position of the Prophet with the
words: "O Allah, indeed You have said, Had they,
who had wronged themselves, come to you and asked
Allah's forgiveness and the Apostle had asked
forgiveness for them, they would have certainly found
Allah Most-Propitious, Most-Merciful (Holy Qur'an
4:64);
O Allah, surely we have heard Your words and we obey
Your command, by coming to Your Prophet to seek his
intercession with You for our sins; how burdensome and
heavy (are sins) on our backs! We repent of
slipperiness, we confess our wrongs and our faults,
accept our repentance for his sake, make Your Prophet
intercessor for us, and exalt us for the sake of his
position and his rights with You."
Al-Ghazzali adds:
It is recommended the pilgrim should go daily to the
Baqi' Cemetery and after saluting the Prophet (s), make
pilgrimage to the tombs of (Imam) Hasan ibn 'Ali, (Imam)
'Ali ibn al-Husayn, (Imam) Muhammad ibn 'Ali and (Imam)
Ja'far ibn Muhammad (Allah be pleased with them), and
also perform the Salat in the Mosque of Fatimah (Allah
be pleased with her).[9]
2. Opinion on Aversion
The jurist Abu Yusuf relates from his teacher Abu
Hanifah that it is not right for anyone to call Allah
except through (the Names and Attributes) Allah, since He
says: "And to Allah belong the beautiful Names, so
call on Him thereby." (Holy Qur'an 7:180).
Abu Hanifah, Abu Yusuf and Muhammad Shaybani also feel
averse in invoking God by means (tawassul) of the
Prophet and his position, on the assumption that the
creatures have no right on the Almighty Creator, and He
showers His mercy on whomever He likes.
Ibn 'Abidin, however, says in this regard: True, the
creatures have no right whatsoever upon the Creator, but
the Creator through His favours has given rights to
mankind. On this basis, he relates a hadith
concerning the manners of supplication and tawassul:
Allahumma inni asaluka bi-haqqi al-sa'ilina 'alayk
(O Allah! I beseech you for the rights that seekers have
upon You). [10]
Except for this narration of Ibn 'Abidin, we find no
opinion or view from either Abu Hanifah or his friend Abu
Yusuf in the books of Hanafi scholars concerning tawassul
to God through the wasilah (means) of the Prophet
(s).[11]
Opinion of Contemporary Hanafi Scholars on
Permissibility
Here, we will study the legal opinions (fatawa)
of contemporary Hanafi scholars on permissibility of tawassul
to the Prophet (s).
Alusi al-Baghdadi quotes Ibn 'Abd al-Salam as saying
that it is permissible to invoke Allah for the sake of the
Prophet (s), since Prophet Muhammad (s) is the leader of
the children of Adam. Alusi bases his reasoning on the hadith
(hasan and sahih) related by both Tirmidhi
and Ahmad ibn Hanbal on the authority of 'Uthman bin
Hunayf, which says that:
Once when a blind man asked the Prophet (s) to pray
to Allah to grant him eyesight, he was told to make wudu'
and recite the following supplication:
O Allah! I request you and I have turned to you
through Your Prophet, the Prophet of Mercy; O Messenger
of Allah! I have turned to you as a means towards My God
for fulfilment of this wish of mine; O Allah! Accept his
(Prophet's) intercession (shafa'at) for me.
Alusi thus believes that there is no objection in
making tawassul to God by means of the dignity (jah)
and prime position of the Prophet (s), whether it is in
his lifetime or after his death, since dignity here refers
to an attribute which is one of the attributes of Almighty
Allah. Alusi also says that tawassul by means of
dignity of a person other than the Prophet (s) is also
permissible, provided that the one who is being considered
a wasilah has a station and position of dignity in
the sight of Allah.[12]
The famous Sunni scholar of India, Shaykh Khalil Ahmad
Saharanpuri in his book al-Muhannad 'ala al-Mufannid
has collected the fatawa or legal opinions of 75
leading Sunni scholars from different parts of the Islamic
world on the permissibility of tawassul to the
shrine of Prophet Muhammad (s). He writes:
In our opinion and that of our teachers, pilgrimage
to the shrine of the Master of Messengers (my soul be
sacrificed for him) is the most exalted of proximities,
the most important of blessings, and the greatest of
means (wasilah) for attaining lofty ranks. It
could be said that it is an enjoinment almost to the
degree of obligations, even if it requires the trouble
of a journey to perform it and there is no other option
other than to make efforts with life and wealth.
Tawassul to the Prophets, saints, pious persons,
martyrs and the righteous during supplications, whether
in their lifetime or after their death, is permissible
in the following manner:
Allahumma inni atawassalu ilayka bi-fulan an tujiba
da'wati wa taqdia hajati (O Allah! I beseech you by
means of so and so a person, accept my supplication and
grant my request).[13]
Tawassul in the View of Prominent Imami 'Ulama'
According to such prominent Imami 'ulama' as
Shaykh al-Ta'ifah Tusi, Shaykh Amin al-Islam Tabrisi, 'Allamah
Sayyid Muhammad Husayn Tabataba'i, Imam Sayyid Ruhullah
Khumayni and others, wasilah means faith, love and
reverence for the Prophet (s) and obedience to him.
'Allamah Tabataba'i writes in his monumental exegesis
on the Holy Qur'an that the word al-wasilah or
'approach' as used in the Ayah "and seek an approach
unto Him" (5:35) confirms the reality of worship and
means turning submissively and supplicatingly to God, with
knowledge and practice serving as the requisite instrument
for this connection.[14]
Furthermore, elaborating on the narration found in the
Tafsir of 'Ali bin Ibrahim Qummi that the Ayah "and
seek an approach unto Him" means seeking Allah's
proximity through the Infallible Imam ('a), 'Allamah
Tabataba'i, says that this refers to obedience or adhering
to the path of the Imam ('a) in order to reach Allah.[15]
It is evident that the Prophet (s) and the Infallible
Imams ('a) who are considered the practical models of
divine law and the finest exemplars of morals and
etiquette, are the wasilah, since it is through
obedience to them and adherence to their path that one can
attain proximity to God. Likewise, as stated by prominent
Imami or Shi'ah jurists, the laws of the Shari'ah are the wasilah,
on the basis of adherence to which, proximity of Almighty
Allah is attained. Accordingly, some prominent Imami
jurisprudents like Shaykh Hurr al-'Amili, Ayatullah Abu
al-Hasan Isfahani and Imam Khumayni have used the title wasilah
for their jurisprudential treatises such as Wasa'il al-Shi'ah,
Wasilah al-Najat and Tahrir al-Wasilah,
respectively. Wasilah al-Najat or the 'Means of
Salvation' is the title of over 40 scientific treatises
written by Shi'ah 'ulama'.[16]
Thus, as ascertained by Imami scholars, the Prophet (s)
is the wasilah towards God for Muslims since he is
the best exemplar and is in fact the 'Practical Qur'an'.
So also is the Prophet's (s) infallible progeny ('a), who
along with the Book of Allah (Holy Qur'an), is the
immortal legacy of the Prophet and continuation of his
path as borne out by the Hadith al-Thaqalayn which is
unanimously confirmed by both Shi'ah and Sunni 'ulama'.
Muslims, through the wasilah of these two, hold
fast to divine laws and strive to attain Allah's
proximity, since good deeds, obedience and adherence to
the Qur'an, the Prophet (s) and his Infallible Ahl al-Bayt
('a) are the basis of shafa'at. This is better
explained by 'Allamah Tabataba'i in his exegesis:
Persons who lack any ability to attain the required
perfection are like the illiterate who wants to become
the doyen of scholars merely through recommendation,
since he neither has any basic learning nor has he the
required connection with the one who could intercede. Or
they could be compared to a slave who is disobedient to
his master, but without coming out of this state of
insubordination and disobedience wants to be forgiven
through intercession (shafa'at). In none of these
two cases intercession is beneficial, since shafa'at
is the wasilah or means for accomplishment of a cause
and is not a cause in itself to make him a doyen of
scholars in the first case, and in the second case to
avail forgiveness from the master in the state of
disobedience.[17]
Therefore, as it has been clearly mentioned in the Holy
Qur'an, if a person does not fulfil his obligations and
adherence to the path of the Prophet (s) and the
Infallible Imams ('a), he will not be considered worthy of
shafa'at, even if the Prophet (s) were to intercede
on his behalf.
"Alike it is for them whether you seek
forgiveness for them or seek not forgiveness for them;
Never will God forgive them..." (63:6)
3. Opinion on Non-Permissibility of Tawassul
In the opinion of Taqi al-Din Ibn Taymiyyah and later
Hanbali scholars tawassul to the person of the
Prophet (s) himself is not permissible. Tawassul
has three concepts, of which two are deemed correct, and
according to Ibn Taymiyyah, whoever rejects these two
concepts of tawassul is either an infidel or an
apostate.
1) Tawassul to the Prophet (s) to reach God is
indicative of faith and love for the Prophet (s). For
example, when it is said Allahumma asaluka bi-Nabiyyika
Muhammad (O Allah! I beseech you for the sake of your
Prophet, Muhammad (s)), it means I seek from You on the
basis of the faith and love which I have for Your Prophet.
The Ayah "and seek an approach unto Him",
is a means of approaching Allah by obedience to Him and
His Messenger, as it is said: Whoever obeys the Prophet
has indeed obeyed Allah.
This concept of tawassul is permissible in the
opinion of all 'ulama'. Ibn Taymiyyah has
considered it a pious act and has supported his views by
citing reports from certain companions of the Prophets,
the first generation of Muslims (tabi'in) and
jurists such as Ahmad Ibn Hanbal.[18]
2) The concept of tawassul as supplication or
intercession (shafa'at) of the Prophet, like the
supplication of the second caliph, which reads: "O
Allah! Whenever drought afflicted us we made tawassul
to You through our Prophet (tawassalna ilayka bi-Nabiyyina),
and now we make tawassul to You through the uncle
of our Prophet,
Send down rain for us."
3) The concept of tawassul as making an oath or
invoking Allah by the right of the Prophet (s). According
to Ibn Taymiyyah this form of tawassul was neither
done during the lifetime of the Prophet nor after him by
his companions. In this regard contemporary scholars
opposed to tawassul have quoted Abu Hanifah as
saying: Do not say asaluka bi-haqqi anbiya'ika (I
invoke You by the right of Your Prophets). [19]
Rejection of Ibn Taymiyyah's Opinion
1. The claim that the companions of the Prophet (s)
never supplicated in this manner is the understanding and
deduction of Ibn Taymiyyah. How do we know that when the
second caliph says "we make tawassul to You
through our Prophet" does not mean "for the
right of our Prophet (bi-haqqi nabiyyina)", or
is not addressed to the Prophet himself? Most Sunni 'ulama'
have given the latter meaning and from the wording of the
sentence itself the Prophet is being called upon.
2. Suppose none of the companions had made tawassul
by the right of any of the divine Prophets, it does not
mean tawassul is Haram even if some of the
companions were to explicitly prohibit such an act. The
opinion of the companions of the Prophet (s) is not
binding on the Muslim ummah, except perhaps for a
few jurisprudents, unless it is related from Prophet
Muhammad (s) himself.
Justification of the Salafiyyah on
Non-Permissibility of Tawassul
Ibn Taymiyyah in Qa'idah Jalilah, Ibn 'Abd al-Wahhab
in Kashf al-Shubahat and Muhammad Rashid Rida in Tafsir
al-Manar, opine that although during the life of
Prophet Muhammad (s), his companions would address him for
their needs, after his death they never approached his
tomb for their needs. They even forbade those who intended
to supplicate beside the Prophet's (s) tomb.
Critique
It is interesting to note that a review and analysis of
these opinions brings out different historical facts.
First of all, the predecessors, whether the companions or
the first and second generation of Muslims, never denied tawassul
to the Prophet (s), either during his lifetime or after
his passing away. It has been mentioned in the narrations
of the Ahl al-Sunnah even the first created man, Adam,
implored Allah for forgiveness through tawassul to
Prophet Muhammad (s) with the words: "O Allah! for
the sake of Muhammad (s) I beseech you to forgive my
faults." [20]
Secondly, prominent Sunni scholars such as Bayhaqi and
Ibn Abi Shaybah as well as Ahmad bin Zayni Dahlan in his Khulasah
al-Kalam, have cited a sahih (authentic) hadith,
that during the caliphate of 'Umar ibn Khattab when a
severe famine occurred, Bilal bin Harth approached the
Prophet's (s) tomb and said: "O Messenger of Allah,
pray to God to send rains for your ummah, since we
are all facing annihilation." The Prophet then
appeared in Bilal's dream and gave him the tidings of
rains.
Similarly during the caliphate of 'Uthman ibn 'Affan, a
needy person approached the Caliph and told him of his
needs. 'Uthman asked him to make wudu, offer prayer
in the mosque and then supplicate in the following manner:
O Lord! through the wasilah of our Prophet
Muhammad (s), the Messenger of Mercy, I turn my face to
You. O Muhammad (s)! through your wasilah I am
facing Your Lord and I request you to grant me my wish.
The person attained his goal. [21]
Tamassuk in the Opinion of Abu Hanifah
Ibn Taymiyyah says that taking an oath or invoking by
virtue of the creatures is haram according to the
creed (madhhab) of Abu Hanifah. [22]
Abu Hanifah, the founder of the Hanafi sect, also
opines that istidlal (rational proof) and tamassuk
(bond, holding fast) are matters of doubt or anxiety
because of two aspects. Abu Yusuf quoting his teacher Abu
Hanifah says: "It is not right for someone to call
upon Allah through any other means than Allah. He (Abu
Hanifah) was averse to saying bi-haqqi fulan (by
the right of so and so)".
Critique
First, Abu Hanifah has approached this issue with
aversion and a purely personal opinion, as is clear from
the inclusion of istidlal and tamassuk in Bab
al-Karahah of Abu al-Hasan Qaduri's Sharh Karkhi.
Abu Yusuf quoting his teacher Abu Hanifah says:
It is not right for someone to call upon God through
any other means than God. He was averse to saying for
the sake of so and so.
Secondly, a closer look at Abu Hanifah's reasoning
reveals that he himself has tried to resort to rational
argumentation in this regard when he says: "Since the
creatures have no rights on the Creator."[23]
However, Abu Hanifah's analogy falls short of clear
proofs, and does not mean the total negation of any right,
since God Himself has considered the right of the Prophets
and that of the righteous believers as binding upon Him,
as is clear from the following Ayah of the Holy
Qur'an:
Ultimately We deliver Our Apostles and those who
believe, even so it is binding upon Us that We deliver
the believers. (10:103)
The Hanafis such as Ibn 'Abidin accept this right, but
they say that the creatures have no obligatory right on
the Creator. [24]
This viewpoint, even if it is considered general, is
confined to the followers of Abu Hanifah and cannot be
imposed on all schools of Islam.
Salafiyyah Interpretation of Ayah 18 of Surah
al-Jinn
Another reason put forward by the Salafiyyah
such as Muhammad Rashid Rida on non-permissibility of tawassul
to the Prophet after his death is that any wasilah
for proximity to God should be a thing which God has
determined for mankind such as faith, action and
supplication. It was in the middle ages that tawassul
to the person of the Prophets and pious men became
widespread and they were considered wasa'il ila Allah (means
to Allah) by people who would invoke God by their names
and would supplicate to them at their tombs for their
needs, when supplication is a form of worship as God says
in the Holy Qur'an:
"So call you not anyone with Allah."
(72:18)
"Surely, those whom you call other than Allah
are subservient (to Allah) like unto your own
selves..." (7:194)
Critique
In answer to this objection it should be said that
every supplication is not a form of worship or even the
spirit of worship, since the root of du'a'
(supplication) is da'wat, a word which along with
its derivatives occurs frequently in the Holy Qur'an. For
instance, "...let us call (nad'u) our sons...
(3:61)" and "Make you not the addressing (du'a')
of the Prophet among you like your addressing one
another..." (24:63)
As could be discerned, in most of the 'Ayas the
word du'a' means to call or address. Accordingly
neither every nida' (call) is du'a' nor
every du'a' is 'ibadat (worship). In other
words du'a' (supplication) becomes 'ibadat
when the rules of worship such as servitude and
submissiveness to Allah are observed with acknowledgement
of the over lordship of the Almighty Creator. What
connection does this have with tawassul and tabarruk
to the Prophet (s) and the Infallible Imams ('a) and
requesting them for help and succour?
Thus, the narration al-du'a' huwa al-'ibadah
(supplication is among the acts of worship), does not
necessarily mean that every supplication is a form of
worship. [25]
Salafiyyah Interpretation of Ayahs 13-14 of Surah
al-Fatir
The Salafiyyah also resort to the following Ayah
of the Holy Qur'an as part of their attempt to discourage tawassul:
...And those whom you call upon other than Him, own
not (even) a straw. If you call on them they shall hear
not your call; and even if they hear they shall answer
you not; and on the Day of Judgement they will deny your
associating them (with Allah); and none can (ever)
inform you as the All-Aware. (35:13,14)
Critique
This Ayah refers to the polytheists who worship
idols instead of the One and Only God and supplicate to
these man-made objects in their hour of need. Allah says
here that these idols do not own even a straw, so how can
they grant anything to those who worship and prostrate
before them? No matter how fervently these idols are
called upon, they do not listen since they are inanimate
objects, and suppose even if they were to listen, they
cannot answer since they do not have the tongues.[26]
As is crystal clear for any discerning person, it has
no connection whatsoever concerning tawassul to the
Prophet (s) and the Infallible Imams ('a) or saints.
First and foremost, it is a gross mistake to place
those who seek tawassul in the same category as the
polytheists, since idolaters seek their needs from idols
and not from the Almighty Creator. But those who make tawassul
beseech Allah for their needs and regard Prophet Muhammad
(s) as a wasilah or means for the acceptance of
their supplications, since he is the Messenger of Allah.
To quote Rashid Rida himself, those who seek tawassul
are like guests who approach the host for some of their
needs, and at times request the members of the household
or friends of the hosts who have been appointed to serve
the guests, since they consider everything to be the
favour of the host.[27]
Secondly, it is a manifest error to equate with idols
the Prophet (s) who has been sent by Allah as a divine
sign and is called Habib-Allah (Friend of God) by
all Muslims. Even Ibn 'Abd al-Wahhab maintains that
Prophet Muhammad (s) is alive in his grave and his life in
the intermediary world (barzakh) is superior to the
life of the martyrs, since he hears the voices of those
who send blessings upon him.[28]
Salafiyyah Interpretation of Ayah 194 of Surah
al-A'raf
The fifth reason that the Salafiyyah such as Ibn
Taymiyyah, Muhammad Ibn 'Abd al-Wahhab and Muhammad Rashid
Rida have cited as non-permissibility of tawassul
to the Prophet (s) after his death, is the following Ayah
of the Holy Qur'an:
"Surely, those whom you call other than Allah
are subservient (to Allah) like unto your own
selves..." (7:194)
Critique
All exegetes of the Holy Qur'an have unanimously stated
that this Ayah refers to the idol-worshippers who
associate man-made objects with God in creation and in
administering the affairs of the world. In contrast, tawassul
is made by those who never regard the Prophets as partners
of Allah in creation and in running world affairs, and
neither do they worship the Last Prophet (s), since every
day several times they bear testimony that Prophet
Muhammad (s) is the servant and Messenger of Allah (ash-hadu
anna Muhammadan 'abduhu wa rasuluh). As the Holy
Qur'an says, Prophet Muhammad (s) has been sent as mercy
to the entire creation (21:107) and is a means of
acceptance of supplications, so it is natural for us to
request him to supplicate and intercede (shafa'at)
with Allah for us.
Salafiyyah Interpretation of Ayah 3 of Surah
al-Zumar
The Chief Mufti of Saudi Arabia, Shaykh 'Abd al-'Aziz
bin Baz, in his exchange of letters with Iran's Ayatullah
Muhammad Wa'iz-Zadeh Khurasani, has remarked:
The polytheists also testified to the Oneness of
Allah but as the Holy Qur'an states, they tried to
justify their worshipping of idols by saying:
"...we worship them not but (in order) that they
make us near to God..." (39:3). This is similar to
the actions of those who make tawassul to those
in the graves in order to seek proximity to Allah. [29]
Critique
'Allamah Sayyid Muhammad Husayn Tabataba'i responding
to such a reasoning says that according to the books of
religions and the testimony of idol-worshippers, hundreds
of millions of whom live in India, China and Japan,
idolatry is based on the theory that the creation of the
universe and even the deities which are worshipped, have
as their source the same Almighty God, but since He is
beyond comprehension there is no other choice but to
worship some of His closest servants such as angels,
genies and saints so that they make intercession (shafa'at)
and people may reach the proximity of God through them. In
the opinion of the polytheists, angels are like the
builder to whom the owner of the house has entrusted the
building and hence intercession (shafa'at) is
according to His discretion.
But, adds 'Allamah Tabataba'i, in the Holy Qur'an tawassul
to the Prophets is in the manner of an intermediary and is
not something independent, and for this reason it has not
been considered as shirk or polytheism. Similarly, the
polytheists have been reproached in the Holy Qur'an not
because of seeking intercession (shafa'at) but
because of worshipping other than God.[30]
Salafiyyah Interpretation of Ayah 10 of Surah
Yunus
Shaykh Bin Baz in his answers to Ayatullah Wa'iz-Zadeh
has also cited the following Ayah of the Holy
Qur'an as another instance of non-permissibility of tawassul,
saying that in his opinion Muslims who uphold tawassul
to the Prophet (s) are like idolaters who seek
intercession from objects which are of no use:
"And they worship beside Allah which can neither
hurt them nor profit them, and they say: these are our
intercessors with Allah..." (10:18)
Critique
First, this Ayah has no connection with Muslims
since they do not worship any thing or object except
Allah.
Secondly, as said earlier, addressing the Prophet is
not meant to worship him but to request him for
supplication and intercession.
Thirdly, it is a matter of surprise to compare the
Prophet to those whom the Holy Qur'an says "can
neither hurt them nor profit them," since the fact
cannot be denied that obedience to the Prophet is to the
benefit of Muslims and disobedience to him, whether during
his lifetime or after his death, is certainly detrimental
to them. Similarly, the supplication and intercession of
the Prophet for those who are eligible, whether in worldly
life or in the Hereafter, is profitable for the Muslims as
unanimously confirmed by the 'ulama'.
Fourthly, it is a grave error to equate the belief of
the Muslims that Prophet Muhammad (s) is the intercessor,
with the belief of the polytheists "these (idols) are
our intercessors with Allah," since God has
explicitly rejected their claim as lies.
"...those who take guardians besides Him, (say)
we worship them not but (in order) that they make us
near to Allah; surely Allah will judge between them
about what they differ; surely Allah does not guide the
one who is a liar and an ingrate." (39:3)
As is clear from the wordings of the Holy Qur'an the
polytheists who make such claims are liars. They are not
conscious of God, neither do they worship Him or prostrate
to Him nor have they any faith in their Unseen Creator:
"And when it is said to them prostrate you in
obeisance to the Rahman (the Beneficent God),
they say: Who is Rahman? Shall we prostrate in
obeisance unto what you bid us? And it (only) adds to
their flight (from the truth)." (25:60)
Non-Permissibility of Tawassul to the Dead
Another claim put forward by the Salafiyyah is
that, on the basis of evidences tawassul to Prophet
Muhammad (s) during his lifetime is acceptable but after
his death there is lack of evidence to support the view
that tawassul was ever made to him.[31]
Critique
The contemporary Sunni scholar Dr. Ramadan Buti of the
University of Damascus, rejects this viewpoint of the Wahhabiyyah
sect. He says tawassul to Prophet Muhammad (s) and
things pertaining to him is permissible, whether during
his lifetime or after his death, since things or items
related to him are not necessarily linked to his lifetime
such as tabarruk (sacred relics) or tawassul,
as is confirmed by Sahih al-Bukhari, Chapter on the
hair of the Prophet.
No Muslim would ever attribute to other than the One
and Only God the effect of anything related to the person
of the Prophet (s) during his life or after his death. If
a person were to hold the opposite view that this effect
is independent in itself, he would be considered an
infidel. Accordingly, the tabarruk of the Prophet
(s) and tawassul to him and to things related to
him, does not mean attributing the blessed effect to his
personal influence independent of God, but is an
indication of the fact that as the Last Divine-Sent
Messenger he is the 'Best of Creation' and is the 'Mercy
of Allah' for the entire creation. Therefore tawassul
to him is a means of gaining proximity to Allah and His
infinite Mercy for mankind. It was in this sense that the
companions sought tawassul to the Prophet and
things related to him. Likewise, it is recommended to seek
intercession (shafa'at) through the pious persons
such as the Ahl al-Bayt ('a) of the Prophet (s).
Sunni authorities including Shawkani, Ibn Qudamah
Hanbali, San'ani and others are unanimous on this issue as
was made clear concerning the request for rain. In view of
these facts, Dr. Buti calls it a strange confusion by the Wahhabiyyah
to make difference between the lifetime of the Prophet and
after his death.[32]
To quote Professor Hasan bin 'Ali al-Saqqaf, polytheism
(shirk) is polytheism either in this world or in
the next, whether or not the person through whom people
are seeking tawassul to God, is alive. But, he
adds, without the least doubt tawassul to Prophet
Muhammad (s) is supported by the general rules of
permissibility, and includes both his lifetime and after
his death as well as in the Hereafter.[33]
Tawassul to the Dead is Addressing the Non-Existent
Muhammad bin 'Abd al-Wahhab writes: Tawassul to
a person who is alive has no objection, but tawassul
to the dead is to address the non-existent and is an
absurd, ugly and despised act.
Critique
- This statement is a clear violation of Allah's words
in the Holy Qur'an:
"Reckon not those who are slain in the way of
Allah, to be dead; Nay! They are alive and are being
sustained by their Lord." (3:169)
2. It is also in contradiction to the saying of Prophet
Muhammad (s) as recorded in Sahih al-Bukhari, Sahih
Muslim and all other authoritative (Sihah)
Sunni works. After the Battle of Badr the Prophet (s)
stood near the well of the same name and addressed the
dead with ayah 46 of Surah al-A'raf. When
some of his companions objected that how could the dead
hear him, the Prophet (s) replied: "You are not more
hearing than them."[34]
3. It is in opposition to the statements of Islamic
intellectuals such as al-Ghazzali who writes in Ihya' 'Ulum
al-Din: "Some people think death as extinction
and state of non-existent, and those who hold such beliefs
have no faith and actually mean to deny Allah and the
Hereafter."
Hafiz al-Nawawi in al-Majmu' fi Sharh al-Muhadhdhab
which says that while standing beside the tombs of
Prophets, especially the shrine of Prophet Muhammad (s),
it is recommended to request them to supplicate to God for
our needs, since they are alive and as the Holy Qur'an
says: "are being sustained by their Lord."
(3:169)[35]
Shaykh Khalil Ahmad Saharanpuri who states his fatwa
and that of 75 'ulama' of different Islamic lands
as follows: In our view, Prophet Muhammad (s) is alive in
his holy tomb and his life is similar to worldly life but
without its duties. 'Allamah Jalal al-Din Suyuti writes in
his book Anba' al-Azkiya' bi-Hayat al-Anbiya' on
the authority of Shaykh Taqi al-Din Subki that the proof
of the life of Prophets and martyrs in their graves is the
prayer offered by Prophet Moses in his own tomb as
mentioned in a hadith. In this regard Shaykh Shams
al-Islam Muhammad Qasim has written a booklet titled Ab-i
Hayat.[36]
4. Ibn 'Abd al-Wahhab in answer to Shaykh Ja'far Najafi
said that seeking help from the dead is an absurd act. But
how could this be called shirk since there is no
connection between absurdity and polytheism? And if tawassul
with fellow humans is considered shirk, then how
could the difference between tawassul to the living
and tawassul to the dead, be ascertained?
5. Here Ibn 'Abd al-Wahhab has contradicted his own
opinion, since as we saw earlier in this article he
believed that Prophet Muhammad (s) is alive in his tomb
and said that this state of life of the Prophet (s) is
superior than the life of the martyrs. Ibn 'Abd al-Wahhab
also said that the Prophet (s) hears the voice of those
who send blessings on him.[37]
6. Farid Wajdi mentions in his encyclopaedia:
In our era God has opened two of the windows of
knowledge for us and the proof of this two windows
confirms beyond an iota of doubt that man has a soul
which without the need of the physical body can lead its
own independent life.[38 ]
From the 19th century onwards the science of spiritism
or contacts with the souls of the departed has been
discovered and developed upon by the world's researchers
after precise study and experiments in this regard. In the
US and Europe, the summoning of the souls of the departed
is part of the world of science.[39]
The information which modern scientists have discovered
after witnessing the summoning of souls, is yet another
instance of the fact that the human being has an
independent soul outside the physical body that does not
perish with death. The connection of the souls of the
departed with the living is the finest proof of the
independence and immortality of the soul, and most of its
capability concerning many works is with the permission of
Almighty God.[40]
The souls of the righteous and pious persons which have
been released from the mortal world have acquired superior
perception and consciousness and in their ascendant
journey are free of the limits of time and space. They
penetrate with ease the skies and the depths of the oceans
to observe the grandeur of God's creation.
Blocking of Means (Sadd-i Dhara'i')
Some of the Wahhabi 'ulama' such as Dr.
Muhammad bin Sa'd Suway'ir who is one of the deputies of
Shaykh Bin Baz, say that tawassul and tabarruk
are permissible for 'ulama' who are cognizant of
the essence of faith, but this is forbidden for the common
people, who are prone to drift towards polytheism and who
might gradually start believing in the personal influence
of the Prophet and saints in the granting of boons and
prevention of the detrimental things. Therefore, it is
obligatory to stop them from tawassul and tabarruk
in the name of Blocking of Means.
Critique
Ayatullah Wa'iz-Zadeh rejecting the Wahhabi
theory against tawassul says:
When the permissibility or recommendation for this
act has been confirmed with rational proof, it is not
permissible to prohibit tawassul for such
unfounded fears that the ignorant might give it the
colour of polytheism. If such was the case, the Prophet
(s) himself would have prohibited people as a precaution
from seeking blessing, visiting the graves or kissing
the sacred black stone (Hajar al-Aswad) at the
holy Ka'bah. On the contrary, judicious measures for
checking possible deviation is for the 'ulama' to
exercise greater control.[41]
Takfir of Shi'ah for Tawassul
Ibn Taymiyyah, despite his extreme and biased approach
for prohibiting tawassul, has admitted:
This is a controversial issue and to accuse of heresy
those who make tawassul is haram and is a
sinful act, since no one has said that a person making tawassul
to the Prophet (s) after his death is a kafir.
This is an ambiguous issue and there are no certain
proofs in this regard. Kufr is confirmed when a
person rejects any of the tenets of faith deliberately
and being fully aware. Therefore, those who accuse a
person of heresy for making tawassul deserve the
most severe punishment.[42]
It is unfortunate that the blind prejudice which the
colonial powers had skilfully exploited to create
differences among Sunni Muslims as a result of the Wahhabiyyah
opposition to the issue of tawassul, has been
widened to sow discord between Sunni and Shi'ah Muslims
and to label the Shi'ah as kafir (infidel) or mushrik
(polytheist) on the allegation that they seek their
requests from other than God. To quote Ayatullah
Wa'iz-Zadeh, those who do not permit tawassul and tabarruk
are only a fraction of a minority among the 'ulama'
of the Muslim world, and despite their efforts over the
past seven centuries, have not been able to convince the
upholders of tawassul.[43]
Thus, as should be clear, according to the statement of
Ibn Taymiyyah the issue of tawassul is a moral one
and does not concern the principles of faith, since a kafir
is the one who rejects any of the tenets of Islam.
Extreme Form of Tawassul among the Ahl al-Sunnah
It is a common sight in many countries to see the Ahl
al-Sunnah approach the graves of pious persons to pray
and supplicate for their needs. In Egypt, Iraq and Turkey,
and many other lands --India, Pakistan, Syria, Central
Asia, North Africa-- it is an accepted practice by the
masses to visit the tombs of saints and holy personages to
make tawassul and seek blessings. Dr. Mustafa
Mahmud writes that people in Egypt flock to the tomb of
Rifa'i and Ibrahim Dasuqi and cry loudly with such phrases
as: Madad Ya Rifa'i (help me O Rifa'i), Shifa' bi-Yadika
Ya Sayyidi Ibrahim Dasuqi (In your hands lie the remedy, O
my Lord Ibrahim Dasuqi).[44]
The Egyptians also visit the tomb of Shafi'i, the
founder of the Shafi'ite sect, for tawassul, while
in Baghdad, the Hanafis do the same at the tomb of Abu
Hanifah. In Turkey, the people seek their needs at the
tomb of the Prophet's eminent companion Abu Ayyub Ansari.
It is also a habit among people in Egypt and other places
to send written petitions to the tomb of Shafi'i, and wail
and cry at the graves of pious persons for things which
none except the Almighty God has the power to grant.
When Wahhabi 'ulama' come across such
scenes among the Ahl al-Sunnah they brand these
Muslims as polytheists and follow the same assumption
against the Shi'ah, concerning whom they have little or no
information, and sometimes go to extreme by labelling them
apostates who should be killed.
Purity of Monotheism in Shi'ah Supplications
The prayers and acts of worship among the Shi'ah have
the purest form of monotheism derived from the guidelines
of Prophet Muhammad (s) and the Ahl al-Bayt ('a). For
instance, Shi'ah do not put their forehead during
prostration on carpet, cloth, plastic or synthetic
material, since Imam Ja'far al-sadiq ('a) has said:
Worldly people are slaves of victuals and clothing,
hence it is not right for a person who is in the act of
offering his prayer to Allah to place his forehead on
the deity of the worshippers of the world.[45]
Likewise, Shi'ah Muslims recite the supplications
taught by the Prophet (s) and his Ahl al-Bayt ('a) in
which all requests are directed to Almighty Allah. The
Infallible Imams ('a) have also dissuaded people from
being distracted by external appearances and losing sight
of the reality and substance of the supplications.
Shi'ah 'ulama' have strived to preserve the path
of the Prophet (s) and his Ahl al-Bayt ('a). Grand
Ayatullah Sayyid Husayn Burujirdi was averse to
prostration being made on a clay tablet having the
outlines of a dome or structure. In their jurisprudential
manuals, both Ayatullah Burujirdi and Imam Khumayni have
the following to say concerning prostration at holy
shrines:
It is haram to prostrate to anyone except
Allah. If the act of prostration in front of the shrines
of the Infallible Imams ('a) is a form of thanksgiving
to God, there is no objection, otherwise it is haram.
[46]
A Glance at the Supplications of the Ahl al-Bayt ('a)
As acknowledged by the prominent Sunni scholar Mahmud
Alusi in his exegesis on the Holy Qur'an, in none of the
supplications that have been taught by the Ahl al-Bayt
('a), there is tawassul to the person of the
Prophet.[47]
If we go through the books of supplications of the
Shi'ah such as Mafatih al-Jinan, we find that all
supplications of the Infallible Imams ('a) are directed
solely at God, and all addresses begin with Allahumma,
Ya Allah, Ya Rabb, and other attributes of
God such as Ya Rahman, Ya Rahim, Ya Dhu
al-Jalal wa al-Ikram, etc.
Sayyid Muhammad Hasan Musawi, writing on the famous Du'a'
Tawassul which is directed at the Prophet (s) and the
Infallible Imams ('a), says:
The purpose of tawassul to the pious believers
is that they are being requested to supplicate to Allah
to deliver the person in need from his affliction, since
the supplication of these saintly figures is accepted by
Allah.[48]
The Du'a' Tawassul which is found in Mafatih
al-Jinan is the same supplication of tawassul
which all Sunni narrators of hadith unanimously
regard as sahih (authentic) and relate that the
Prophet taught it to a blind man who recovered his
eyesight by reciting it.[49]
Conclusion
Therefore, in conclusion we can state with authority
the following points, since tawassul is an accepted
principle in the life of a sincere and God-fearing Muslim,
and whatever disputes that have been fanned are due to
bigotry and lack of proper understanding of Islam:
- Controversy over the issue of tawassul is not
a matter of discord between Shi'ah and Sunni Muslims,
but it is a difference of opinion between the Salafiyyah
sect and the rest of Muslims.
- Most of the differences of the Salafiyyah Wahhabis
are with the extremist Sufis who believe in
reincarnation, and with the Sunni masses who often
make emotional tawassul at graves and seek
their needs from the departed such as Abu Hanifah (and
'Abd al-Qadir Gilani) in Baghdad, Shafi'i, Rifa'i,
Dasuqi and others in Egypt, Idris in Morocco and Abu
Ayyub Ansari in Turkey - as well as Khawajah Mu'in
al-Din Chishti and numerous others in India, and Data
Ganj Bakhsh and Sufi saints in Pakistan.
- In fact, the Salafiyyah and the Wahhabis
have the least differences with Shi'ah Muslims since
Shi'ah recite the supplications of the Ahl al-Bayt
('a) which contain the purest form of monotheism.
However, because of their non-familiarity with the
Shi'ah they accuse them of polytheism and in their
ignorance brand them infidels.
- In all the supplications of the Ahl al-Bayt ('a) the
addressee is Almighty Allah alone, even in the famous Du'a'
Tawassul, which the Sunnis say with unanimity was
taught by Prophet Muhammad (s) to a blind person who
subsequently regained his eyesight.
- Du'a' tawassul
, where devotion is expressed to
the Prophet (s) and his Infallible Ahl al-Bayt ('a),
is not exclusively meant for the Shi'ah but was widely
popular among the Sunnis until Ibn Taymiyyah and later
Ibn 'Abd al-Wahhab came on the scene with their weird
interpretation. For instance, the poetical composition
of tawassul to the 14 Infallibles found in the
works of prominent poets of the Ahl al-Sunnah
such as the Persian poet Shaykh Sa'di and the Sufi
Khalid Naqhsbandi -- as well as the famous Spanish
Muslim gnostic and philosopher Shaykh Muhyi al-Din Ibn
al-'Arabi.
- As part of their misinformation campaign against tawassul,
the Salafiyyah attempt to exploit certain Ayahs
of the Holy Qur'an which refer to the polytheists who
worship idols instead of the One and Only God and who
seek their wants from these lifeless man-made objects.
However, it is clear that equating those who seek tawassul
to the Prophet (s) with the polytheists and infidels
is an erroneous idea, since tawassul-seekers,
unlike the idolators, address the Almighty Creator and
seek their needs from Him by making the Prophet (s) a wasilah
for acceptance of prayer. On the other hand, the idols
have no connection with God and are nothing more than
inanimate objects made by man, while Prophet Muhammad
(s) is the manifest sign of Allah, the Messenger of
Allah and Mercy to the creation. Allah has also given
him power, both in this world and in the next, to
supplicate and intercede for his true followers. The Wahhabi
contention of the period of Barzakh of the
Prophet (s) lacks any rational explanation and is
against the view of the 'ulama' of all other
sects of the Ahl al-Sunnah.
- Those who wish to make the Prophet (s) the
intercessor without being obedient to the Holy Qur'an
and the Ahl al-Bayt ('a), have been likened by Shi'ah 'ulama'
such as 'Allamah Tabataba'i, to a wishful person who
wants to become the sage of the age without learning
or studying anything.
Notes:
[1]. Refer to the Arabic
lexicons Lisan al-'Arab, Asas al-Balaghah
and Tartib al-Qamus al-Muhit for meaning of wasala.
[2]. Alusi, Ruh al-Ma'ani,
vol. 6, p. 124-128.
[3]. Tabrisi, Majma' al-Bayan,
vol. 6, p. 86; Sahih Muslim, vol. 1, p. 289.
[4]. Nida'-i Wahdat,
Ibn 'Abd al-Wahhab's treatise to Shaykh Ja'far Najafi.
[5]. Sharh al-Mawahib,
vol. 8, p. 304; al-Majmu', vol. 8, p. 274; Ibn 'Abidin,
vol. 5, p.254; al-Fatawa al-Hindiyyah, vol. 1, p.
266 and vol. 5, 318; Fath al-Qadir, vol. 8, p. 297,
298 and al-Futuhat al-Rabbaniyyah 'ala al-Azkar al-Nabawiyyah,
vol. 5, p. 36.
[6]. Sharh al-Mawahib,
vol. 8, p. 304-5; Wafa' al-Wafad, vol. 4, p. 1371; al-Qawanin
al-Fiqhiyyah, p. 148; and Sharh Ibn al-Hasan 'ala
al-Risalah al-Qirwani, vol. 12, p. 478).
[7]. Al-Majmu', vol.
8, p. 274; Fayd al-Qadir, vol. 2, p. 134; I'anah
al-Talibiyyin, p. 315.
[8]. Al-Mughni ma' al-Sharh,
vol. 3, p. 588; al-Sharh al-Kabir ma' al-Mughni,
vol. 3, p. 494.
[9]. Abu Hamid Muhammad al-Ghazzali',
Ihya' 'Ulum al-Din, vol. 1, pp. 258-261.
[10]. Al-Mausu'ah al-Fiqhiyyah,
section 14, p. 160.
[11]. Ibid.
[12]. Tafsir Ruh al-Ma'ani,
vol. 6, 128.
[13]. Shaykh Khalil Ahmad
Saharanpuri, 'Aqa'id Ahl al-Sunnah wa al-Jama'ah fi
radd al-Wahhabiyyah wa al-Bid'ah, translated into
Persian by 'Abd al-Rahman Sarbazi, p. 86.
[14]. Al-Mizan fi
Tafsir al-Qur'an, vol. 6, p. 328-332.
[15]. Ibid.
[16]. Refer to Shaykh Aqa
Buzurg Tehrani, al-Dhari'ah ila Tasanif al-Shi'ah,
vol. 25, p. 69-92.
[17]. Tafsir al-Mizan,
vol. 11, p. 15 (Dar al-'Alami print, Beirut).
[18]. Ibn Taymiyyah, Qa'idah
Jalilah fi al-Tawassul wa al-Wasilah, pp. 63, 64 &
95, as cited in al-Mausu'ah al-Fiqhiyyah al-Kuwaitiyyah.
[19]. Muhammad Rashid
Rida, al-Manar, vol. 6, pp. 369-377.
[20]. Bayhaqi, Dala'il
al-Nabuwwah, vol. 5, p. 489 (Dar al-Kitab al-'Ilmiyyah
print, Beirut), cited from al-Mausu'ah al-Fiqhiyyah al-Kuwaitiyyah,
vol. 24; al-Mustadrak, vol. 2, p. 615, Ibn
Taymiyyah, al-Fatawa, vol. 1, p. 150, Jalal al-Din
Suyuti, Tafsir Durr al-Manthur, vol. 1, pp. 142-149
(Dar al-Fikr print, Beirut, 1983).
Translator's note: Suyuti is more elaborate when on p.
147, he says Adam supplicated to Allah by the right of
Prophet Muhammad and his progeny (Allahumma bi-haqqi
Muhammad wa Al-i Muhammad) He further quotes the
Prophet (s) on the authority of 'Abdullah Ibn 'Abbas as
saying that the words taught to Adam by God to seek
forgiveness were: By the right of Muhammad, and 'Ali, and
Fatimah, and Hasan and Husayn).
[21]. Al-Tabarani, al-Mu'jam
al-saghir, vol. 1, p. 183, (Maktabah al-Salafiyyah
print) cited in al-Mausu'ah al-Fiqhiyyah al-Kuwaitiyyah,
vol. 24.
[22]. Al-Mausu'ah al-Fiqhiyyah
al-Kuwaitiyyah, vol. 7, p. 263; Qa'idah Jalilah,
p. 51.
[23]. 'Allamah Sayyid
Muhammad Hasan Musawi, Nida' Wahdat, pp. 260-261.
[24]. Al-Mausu'ah al-Fiqhiyyah
al-Kuwaitiyyah, vol. 14, p. 160.
[25]. Manawi, al-Fayd,
vol. 3, p. 540; Hasan bin 'Ali Saqqaf, al-Tandid bi-man
Addada al-Tawhid, pp. 30-40.
[26]. Tafsir al-Jalalayn;
Baydawi, Anwar al-Tanzil, vol. 2, 270
[27]. Tafsir al-Manar,
vol. 1, p. 59.
[28]. Ibn ''Abd al-Wahhab,
Risalah Kashf al-Shubahat, cited in al-Rasul
Yad'ukum, p. 295.
[29]. Risalatan Bayn
al-Shaykhayn al-Ustadh Muhammad Wa'iz-Zadeh Khurasani wa
al-Ustadh 'Abd al-'Aziz bin 'Abdullah bin Baz, pp.
32-33.
[30]. 'Allamah Tabataba'i,
Majmu'ah-yi Maqalat, pp. 313-317.
[31]. Risalatan Bayn
al-Shaykhayn, p. 41.
[32]. Dr Buti, Ramadan,
Fiqh al-Sunnah, tenth edition, p. 355.
[33]. Hasan bin 'Ali al-Saqqaf,
al-Ta'liq 'ala Risalatayn, Risalah at-Taqrib
Quarterly, No. 17, 1418 AH, p. 69.
[34]. Sahih al-Bukhari,
vol. 14, p. 111, Dar Ihya' al-Turath, Beirut; Sahih
al-Muslim, chapter 51, pp. 76-77; Musnad Ahmad ibn
Hanbal, vol. 1, p. 26 & vol. 2, pp. 31 & 131; Musnad
Tiyalisi, hadith 403.
[35]. Al-Majmu',
vol. 8, p. 274, chapter on manners of pilgrimage.
[36]. Shaykh Khalil Ahmad
Saharanpuri, 'Aqa'id Ahl al-Sunnah wa al-Jama'ah fi
radd al-Wahhabiyyah wa al-Bid'ah, translated into
Persian by 'Abd al-Rahman Sarbazi, pp. 82-88.
[37]. Ibn 'Abd al-Wahhab,
Risalah Kashf al-Shubahat, cited in al-Rasul
Yad'ukum, p. 295.
[38].
Da'irah al-Ma'arif Qarn al-'Ishrin (20th Century
Encyclopaedia), under the topic of 'Ruh' (Soul), vol. 14,
p. 365.
[39]. Refer for details
to Leone Danny's "World After Death", pp.
78-82.
[40]. Dr. Bi-Azar Shirazi,
'Abd al-Karim, Gozashteh va Ayandeh-ye Jahan, pp.
96-101.
[41]. Risalatan Bayn
al-Shaykhayn, p. 17.
[42]. Majmu'ah Fatawa
Ibn Taymiyyah, vol. 1, p. 106, as cited in al-Mausu'ah
al-Fiqhiyyah al-Kuwaitiyyah, vol. 14, pp. 163-164.
[43]. Risalatan Bayn
al-Shaykhayn, pp. 17-18.
[44]. Mustafa Mahmud, Asrar
al-Qur'an, Dar al-Ma'arif, second edition, p. 77.
[45]. Shaykh Hurr al-'Amili,
Wasa'il al-Shi'ah, vol. 3, p. 591.
[46]. Ayatullah Burujirdi,
Tawdih al-Masa'il, p. 172; Imam Khumayni, Tahrir
al-Wasilah, vol. 1, p. 150, and also in Risalah-ye
Novin, vol. 1, p. 148.
[47]. Ruh al-Ma'ani,
vol. 6, p. 128.
[48]. Sayyid Muhammad
Hasan Musawi, Risalah dar Kitab wa Sunnat, Majmu'ah
Maqalat, Kitab Nida'-e Wahdat, Tehran, Chehel-Sutun
Publishers, p. 259.
[49]. Sunan Tirmidhi,
vol. 5, p. 569, Matba'ah al-Halabi, Egypt, cited in al-Mausu'ah
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