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Who or what is
a Salafi? Is their approach valid?
Their basic claim is that Islam has
not been properly understood by anyone since the prophet Mohammed
and the early Muslims--except themselves.
By Nuh Ha Mim Keller
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Mini glossary of Islamic
terms used in this article, not explained elsewhere in the text |
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Ijtihad |
the exercise of reason to
find an appropriate ruling on a matter not explicitly ruled upon in the
Quran. |
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Mujtahid |
a fully qualified religious
scholar. |
| Deen |
religion |
The word salafi or "early Muslim"
in traditional Islamic scholarship means someone who died within the first four
hundred years after the prophet Mohammed
,
including scholars such as Abu Hanifa, Malik, Shafi'i, and Ahmad ibn Hanbal.
Anyone who died after this is one of the khalaf or "latter-day Muslims".
The term "Salafi" was revived as a
slogan and movement, among latter-day Muslims, by the followers of Muhammad
Abduh (the student of Jamal al-Din al-Afghani) some thirteen centuries after the
prophet Mohammed
,
approximately a hundred years ago. Like similar movements that have historically
appeared in Islam, its basic claim was that the religion had not been properly
understood by anyone since the prophet Mohammed
and the early Muslims--and themselves.
In terms of ideals, the movement
advocated a return to a shari'a-minded orthodoxy that would purify Islam from
unwarranted accretions, the criteria for judging which would be the Qur'an and
hadith. Now, these ideals are noble, and I don't think anyone would disagree
with their importance. The only points of disagreement are how these objectives
are to be defined, and how the program is to be carried out. It is difficult in
a few words to properly deal with all the aspects of the movement and the issues
involved, but I hope to publish a fuller treatment later this year, insha'Allah,
in a collection of essays called "The Re-Formers of Islam".
As for its validity, one may note
that the Salafi approach is an interpretation of the texts of the Qur'an and
sunna, or rather a body of interpretation, and as such, those who advance its
claims are subject to the same rigorous criteria of the Islamic sciences as
anyone else who makes interpretive claims about the Qur'an and sunna; namely,
they must show:
1. that their interpretations are
acceptable in terms of Arabic language;
2. that they have exhaustive
mastery of all the primary texts that relate to each question, and
3. that they have full familiarity
of the methodology of usul al-fiqh or "fundamentals of jurisprudence"
needed to comprehensively join between all the primary texts.
Only when one has these
qualifications can one legitimately produce a valid interpretive claim about the
texts, which is called ijtihad or "deduction of shari'a" from the
primary sources. Without these qualifications, the most one can legitimately
claim is to reproduce such an interpretive claim from someone who definitely has
these qualifications; namely, one of those unanimously recognized by the Umma as
such since the times of the true salaf, at their forefront the
mujtahid Imams of the four madhhabs or "schools of jurisprudence".
As for scholars today who do not
have the qualifications of a mujtahid, it is not clear to me why they should be
considered mujtahids by default, such as when it is said that someone is
"the greatest living scholar of the sunna" any more than we could qualify a
school-child on the playground as a physicist by saying, "He is the greatest
physicist on the playground". Claims to Islamic knowledge do not come about by
default. Slogans about "following the Qur'an and sunna" sound good in theory,
but in practice it comes down to a question of scholarship, and who will sort
out for the Muslim the thousands of shari'a questions that arise in his
life. One eventually realizes that one has to choose between following the
ijtihad of a real mujtahid, or the ijtihad of some or another
"movement leader", whose qualifications may simply be a matter of reputation,
something which is often made and circulated among people without a grasp of the
issues.
What comes to many people's minds
these days when one says "Salafis" is bearded young men arguing about deen.
The basic hope of these youthful reformers seems to be that argument and
conflict will eventually wear down any resistance or disagreement to their
positions, which will thus result in purifying Islam. Here, I think education,
on all sides, could do much to improve the situation.
The reality of the case is that
the mujtahid Imams, those whose task it was to deduce the Islamic
shari'a from the Qur'an and hadith, were in agreement about most rulings;
while those they disagreed about, they had good reason to, whether because the
Arabic could be understood in more than one way, or because the particular
Qur'an or hadith text admitted of qualifications given in other texts (some of
them acceptable for reasons of legal methodology to one mujtahid but not
another), and so forth.
Because of the lack of hard
information in English, the legitimacy of scholarly difference on shari'a
rulings is often lost sight of among Muslims in the West. For example, the work
Fiqh al-sunna by the author Sayyid Sabiq, recently translated into
English, presents hadith evidences for rulings corresponding to about 95 percent
of those of the Shafi'i school. Which is a welcome contribution, but by no means
a "final word" about these rulings, for each of the four schools has a large
literature of hadith evidences, and not just the Shafi'i school reflected by
Sabiq's work. The Maliki school has the Mudawwana of Imam Malik, for
example, and the Hanafi school has the Sharh ma'ani al-athar [Explanation
of meanings of hadith] and Sharh mushkil al-athar [Explanation of
problematic hadiths], both by the great hadith Imam Abu Jafar al-Tahawi, the
latter work of which has recently been published in sixteen volumes by
Mu'assasa al-Risala in Beirut. Whoever has not read these and does not know
what is in them is condemned to be ignorant of the hadith evidence for a great
many Hanafi positions.
What I am trying to say is that
there is a large fictional element involved when someone comes to the Muslims
and says, "No one has understood Islam properly except the prophet Mohammed
and early Muslims, and our sheikh". This is not valid, for the enduring works of
first-rank Imams of hadith, jurisprudence, Qur'anic exegesis, and other
shari'a disciplines impose upon Muslims the obligation to know and
understand their work, in the same way that serious comprehension of any other
scholarly field obliges one to have studied the works of its major scholars who
have dealt with its issues and solved its questions. Without such study, one is
doomed to repeat mistakes already made and rebutted in the past.
Most of us have acquaintances
among this Umma who hardly acknowledge another scholar on the face of the earth
besides the Imam of their madhhab, the Sheikh of their Islam, or some
contemporary scholar or other. And this sort of enthusiasm is understandable,
even acceptable (at a human level) in a non-scholar. But only to the degree that
it does not become ta'assub or bigotry, meaning that one believes one may
put down Muslims who follow other qualified scholars. At that point it is
haram, because it is part of the sectarianism (tafarruq) among
Muslims that Islam condemns.
When one gains Islamic knowledge
and puts fiction aside, one sees that superlatives about particular scholars
such as "the greatest" are untenable; that each of the four schools of classical
Islamic jurisprudence has had many many luminaries. To imagine that all
preceding scholarship should be evaluated in terms of this or that "Great
Reformer" is to ready oneself for a big letdown, because intellectually it
cannot be supported. I remember once hearing a law student at the University of
Chicago say: "I'm not saying that Chicago has everything. Its just that no place
else has anything." Nothing justifies transposing this kind of attitude onto our
scholarly resources in Islam, whether it is called "Islamic Movement", "Salafism",
or something else, and the sooner we leave it behind, the better it will be for
our Islamic scholarship, our sense of reality, and for our deen.
©Nuh Ha Mim Keller 1995
Read more articles by Nuh Ha Mim
Keller here.
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