Ibn Taymiyyah
Islamic scholar Ibn Taymiyyah ابن تيمية | |
---|---|
Title | Sheikh ul-Islam |
Born |
10 Rabi' al-awwal 661 AH, or January 22, 1263 CE[1] Harran, Sultanate of Rum |
Died |
20 Dhu al-Qi'dah 728 AH, or September 26, 1328 (aged 64–65)[2] Damascus, Sham |
Nationality | Sham, under Bahri Mamluk Sultanate |
Era | late High Middle Ages or Crisis of the Late Middle Ages |
Region | Middle Eastern Scholar |
Occupation | Mujtahid[3] |
Religion | Islam |
Denomination | Sunni Islam[4] |
Jurisprudence | Hanbali madhhab[4][5] |
Creed | Athari[6][7] |
Movement | Classical Salafism[8] |
Alma mater | Madrasa Dar al-Hadith as-Sukariya |
Influenced by
| |
Personal (Ism) | Ahmad; أحمد |
Patronymic (Nasab) |
ibn `Abd al-Ḥalīm ibn `Abd as-Salām ibn ʿAbd Allāh ibn al-Khidr ibn Muhammad ibn al-Khidr ibn `Ali ibn ʿAbd Allāh ibn Taymiyyah; بن عبد الحليم بن عبد السلام بن عبد الله بن الخضر بن محمد بن الخضر بن على بن عبد الله ابن تيمية |
Teknonymic (Kunya) |
Abu 'l-`Abbās; أبو العباس |
Toponymic (Nisba) |
al-Ḥarrānī;[9] الحراني |
Taqi ad-Din Ahmad ibn Taymiyyah (Arabic: تقي الدين أحمد ابن تيمية) known as Ibn Taymiyyah (22 January 1263 – 26 September 1328) was a Islamic scholar, theologian and logician. He lived during the troubled times of the Mongol invasions, much of the time in Damascus. He was a member of the school founded by Ahmad ibn Hanbal and is considered by his followers, along with Ibn Qudamah, as one of the two most significant proponents of Hanbalism. In the modern era, his adherents often refer to the two as "the two sheikhs" and Ibn Taymiyyah in particular as "Sheikh ul-Islam".[10][11] Ibn Taymiyyah sought the return of Sunni Islam to what he viewed as earlier interpretations of the Qur'an and the Sunnah, and is considered to have had considerable influence in contemporary Wahhabism, Salafism, and Jihadism.[12][13] He is renowned for his fatwa issued against the Mongol rulers declaring jihad by Muslims against them compulsory, on the grounds that they did not follow Sharia and as such were not Muslim, their claims to have converted to Islam notwithstanding. His teachings had a profound influence on Muhammad ibn Abd al-Wahhab, and other later Wahabi scholars.[5] Throughout his lifetime, Ibn Taymiyyah never got married.[14]
Name
Ibn Taymiyyah's full name is Taqī ad-Dīn Abu 'l-`Abbās Ahmad ibn `Abd al-Ḥalīm ibn `Abd as-Salām ibn ʿAbd Allāh ibn al-Khidr ibn Muhammad ibn al-Khidr ibn `Ali ibn ʿAbd Allāh ibn Taymiyyah al-Ḥarrānī[9] (Arabic: تقي الدين أبو العباس أحمد بن عبد الحليم بن عبد السلام بن عبد الله بن الخضر بن محمد بن الخضر بن على بن عبد الله ابن تيمية الحراني).
Ibn Taymiyyah's name is unusual in that it is derived from a female member of his family as opposed to a male member, which was the normal custom at the time and still is now. Taimiyatu was a woman, famous for her scholarship and piety and the name Ibn Taymiyyah was taken up by many of her male descendents.[9]
Overview
Ibn Taymiyyah had a simple life, most of which he dedicated to learning, writing, and teaching. He never married nor did he have a female companion, throughout his years.[15][16] Al-Matroudi says that this may be why he was able to engage fully with the political affairs of his time without holding any official position such as that of a judge.[17] An offer of an official position was made to him but he never accepted.[17] His life was that of a religious scholar and a political activist.[16] In his efforts he was persecuted and imprisoned on six different occasions[18] with the total time spent inside prison coming to over six years.[16][19] Other sources say that he spent over twelve years in prison.[17] His detentions were due to certain elements of his creed and his views on some jurisprudential issues.[15] However according to Yahya Michot, "the real reasons were more trivial". Michot gives five reasons as to why Ibn Taymiyyah was imprisoned, they being: not complying with the "doctrines and practices prevalent among powerful religious and Sufi establishments, an overly outspoken personality, the jealousy of his peers, the risk to public order due to this popular appeal and political intrigues."[19] Baber Johansen, a professor at the Harvard divinity school says that the reasons for Ibn Taymiyyah's incarcerations were, "as a result of his conflicts with Muslim mystics, jurists, and theologians, who were able to persuade the political authorities of the necessity to limit Ibn Taymiyyah's range of action through political censorship and incarceration."[20]
Ibn Taymiyyah's own relationship, as a religious scholar, with the ruling apparatus, who did deviate in application of shari'a law, was not always amicable.[19] It ranged from silence to open rebellion.[19] On occasions when he shared the same views and aims as the ruling authorities, his contributions were welcomed but when Ibn Taymiyyah went against the status quo, he was seen as "uncooperative" and on occasions spent much time in prison.[21] Ibn Taymiyyah's attitude towards his own rulers, was based on the actions of the companions (sahaba) when they made an oath of allegiance to the Islamic Prophet Muhammad as follows; "to obey within obedience to God, even if the one giving the order is unjust; to abstain from disputing the authority of those who exert it; and to speak out the truth, or take up its cause without fear in respect of God, of blame from anyone."[19]
Early years
Background
Ibn Taymiyyah was born in 1263 in Harran into a well-known family of theologians. His father had the Hanbali chair in Harran and later at the Great mosque of Damascus (Umayyad Mosque). Harran was a city part of the Sultanate of Rum, now Harran is a small city on the border of Syria and Turkey, currently in Şanlıurfa province of modern-day Turkish controlled Kurdistan,[22] a place to which Moses was reportedly sent to provide guidance.[23] Before its destruction by the Mongols, Harran was also well known since the early days of Islam for its Hanbali school and tradition,[24] to which Ibn Taymiyyah's family belonged.[23] His grandfather, Abu al-Barkat Majd ad-Din ibn Taymiyyah al-Hanbali (d. 1255) and his uncle, Fakhr al-Din (d. 1225) were reputable scholars of the Hanbali school of law.[25] Likewise, the scholarly achievements of ibn Taymiyyah's father, Shihab al-deen 'Abd al-Halim ibn Taymiyyah (d. 1284) were also well known.[26] According to the book 'Rethinking Islamic Studies' edited by Carl W. Ernst and Richard C. Martin, Ibn Taymiyyah believed, non-Arab Muslims are inferior to Arab Muslims.[27]
Immigration to Damascus
In 1269, Ibn Taymiyyah at the age of seven together with his father, and three brothers left the city of Harran which was completely destroyed by the ensuing Mongol invasion.[26][25] Ibn Taymiyyah's family moved and settled in Damascus, Syria, which at the time was ruled by the Mamluks of Egypt.
Education
In Damascus his father served as the director of the Sukkariyya madrasa, a place where Ibn Taymiyyah also received his early education.[28] Ibn Taymiyyah acquainted himself with the religious and secular sciences of his time. His religious studies began in his early teens, when he committed the entire Qur'an to memory and later on came to learn the Islamic disciplines of the Qur'an.[26] From his father he learnt the religious science of Fiqh (jurisprudence) and Usul al-Fiqh (principles of jurisprudence).[26] Ibn Taymiyyah learnt the works of Ahmad ibn Hanbal, al-Khallal, Ibn Qudamah and also the works of his grandfather, Abu al-Barakat Majd ad-Din.[25] His study of jurisprudence was not limited to the Hanbali tradition but he also learnt the other schools of jurisprudence.[25]
The number of scholars under which he studied Hadith is said to number more than two hundred,[15][26][29] four of whom were women.[30] Those who are known by name amount to forty hadith teachers, as recorded by Ibn Taymiyyah in his book called Arba`un Hadithan.[31] Serajul Haque says, based on this, Ibn Taymiyyah started to hear hadith from the age of five.[31] One of his teachers was the first Hanbali Chief Justice of Syria, Shams ud-Din Al-Maqdisi who held the newly created position instituted by Baibars as part of a reform of the judiciary.[25] Al-Maqdisi later on, came to give Ibn Taymiyyah permission to issue Fatawa (legal verdicts) when he became a mufti at the age of 17.[15][19][32]
Ibn Taymiyyah's secular studies led him to devote attention to Arabic language and Arabic literature by studying Arabic grammar and lexicography under Ali ibn `Abd al-Qawi al-Tuft.[26][33] He went on to master the famous book of Arabic grammar, Al-Kitab, by the Persian grammarian Sibawayhi.[26] He also studied mathematics, algebra, calligraphy, theology (kalam), philosophy, history and heresiography.[15][19][25][34] The knowledge he gained from history and philosophy, he used to refute the prevalent philosopical discourses of his time, one of which was Aristotelian philosophy.[15] Ibn Taymiyyah learnt about Sufism and stated that he had reflected on the works of; Sahl al-Tustari, Junayd of Baghdad, Abu Talib al-Makki, Abdul-Qadir Gilani, Abu Hafs Umar al-Suhrawardi and Ibn Arabi.[25] At the age of 20 in the year 1282, Ibn Taymiyyah completed his education.[35]
Life as a scholar
After his father died in 1284, he took up the then vacant post as the head of the Sukkariyya madrasa and began giving lessons on Hadith.[19][25][36] A year later he started giving lessons, as chair of the Hanbali Zawiya on Fridays at the Umayyad Mosque, on Fridays, on the subject of tafsir (exegesis of Qur'an).[19][33][37] In November 1292, Ibn Taymiyyah performed the Hajj (pilgrimage to Mecca) and when he returned 4 months later, he wrote his first book aged twenty nine called Manasik al-Hajj (Rites of the Pilgrimage), in which he criticized and condemned the bid‘ah's (innovations) which he saw take place there.[25][28] Ibn Taymiyyah represented the Hanbali school of thought during this time. The Hanbali school was seen as the most traditional school out of the four legal systems (Hanafi, Maliki and Shafii) because it was "suspicious of the Hellenist disciplines of philosophy and speculative theology."[28] He remained faithful throughout his life to this school, whose doctrines he had mastered, but he nevertheless called for ijtihad (independent reasoning by one who is qualified) and discouraged taqlid.[35]
Relationship with authorities
Ibn Taymiyyah's emergence into the public and political sphere began in 1293 at the age of 30, when he was asked by the authorities to give an Islamic legal verdict (Fatwa) on Assaf al-Nasrani, a Christian cleric accused of insulting the Islamic prophet Muhammad.[21][25][38] He accepted the invitation and delivered his fatwa, calling for the man to receive the death penalty.[21] Despite the fact that public opinion was very much on Ibn Taymiyyah's side,[28] the Governor of Syria attempted to resolve the situation by asking Assaf to accept Islam in return for his life, to which he agreed.[28] This resolution was not acceptable to Ibn Taymiyyah who then, together with his followers, protested outside the Governor's palace demanding Assaf be put to death,[28] on the grounds that any person—Muslim or non-Muslim—who insults Muhammad must be killed.[19][28] This unwillingness to compromise coupled with his attempt to protest against the Governor's actions, resulted in him being punished with a prison sentence, the first of many such imprisonments to come.[25] The French orientalist Henri Laoust says that during this incarceration Ibn Taymiyyah "wrote his first great work, al-Ṣārim al-maslūl ʿalā s̲h̲ātim al-Rasūl (The Drawn Sword against those who insult the Messenger)."[25] Ibn Taymiyyah, together with the help of his disciples, continued with his efforts against what, "he perceived to be un-Islamic practices" and to implement what he saw as his religious duty of commanding good and forbidding wrong.[19][39] Yahya Michot says that some of these incidences included: "shaving children's heads", leading "an anti-debauchery campaign in brothels and taverns", hitting an atheist before his public execution, destroying what was thought to be a sacred rock in a mosque, attacking astrologers and obliging "deviant Sufi Shaykhs to make public acts of contrition and to adhere to the Sunnah."[19] Ibn Taymiyyah and his disciples used to condemn wine sellers and they would attack wine shops in Damascus by breaking wine bottles and pouring them onto the floor.[37]
A few years later in 1296, he took over the position of one of his teachers (Zayn al-Din Ibn al-Munadjdjaal), taking the post of professor of Hanbali jurisprudence at the Hanbaliyya madrasa, the oldest such institution of this tradition in Damascus.[25][28][40] This is seen by some to be the peak of his scholarly career.[28] The year he began his post at the Hanbaliyya madrasa, was a time of political turmoil. The Mamluk sultan Al-Adil Kitbugha was deposed by his vice-sultan Al-Malik al-Mansur Lajin who then ruled from 1297 to 1299.[41] Lajin had a desire to commission an expedition against the Christians of the Armenian Kingdom of Cilicia who formed an alliance with the Mongol Empire and taking part of the military campaign which lead to the destruction of Baghdad the capital of the Abbasid Caliphate and Harran the birthplace of Ibn Taymiyyah, for that purpose he urged Ibn Taymiyyah to call the Muslims to Jihad.[25][28]
In 1298 Ibn Taymiyyah wrote an explanation of the ayat al-mutashabihat (the unclear verses of the Qur'an) called Al-`Aqidat al-Hamawiyat al-Kubra (The creed of the great people of Hama).[42][43] The book is about divine attributes and it served as an answer to a question from the city of Hama, Syria.[42][43] At that particular time Ash'arites held prominent positions within the Islamic scholarly community in both Syria and Egypt, and they held a certain position on the divine attributes of God.[42] Ibn Taymiyyah in his book strongly disagreed with their views and this heavy opposition to the common Ash'ari position, caused considerable controversy.[42]
Ibn Taymiyyah collaborated once more with the Mamluks in 1300, when he joined the expedition against the Alawites , in the Kasrawan region of the Lebanese mountains.[21][25] Ibn Taymiyyah thought of the Alawites as "more heritical yet than Jews and Christians,"[44] (بالنصيرية هم وسائر أصناف القرامطة الباطنية أكفر من اليهود والنصارى ; بل وأكفر من كثير من المشركين),[45] and according to Carole Hillenbrand, the confrontation with the Shia's resulted because they "were accused of collaboration with Christians and Mongols."[21] Ibn Taymiyya had further active involvements in campaigns against the Mongols and their Shia allies.[28]
Second expedition against the Alawites
Ibn Taymiyyah took part in a second military offensive in 1305 against the Alawites and the Isma`ilis[46] in the Kasrawan region of the Lebanese mountains where they were defeated.[25][44][47] The Alawis eventually left the region to settle in southern Lebanon.[48]
Involvement in Mongol invasion
First invasions
The first invasion took place between December 1299 and April 1300 due to the military campaign by the Mamluks against the Armenian Kingdom of Cilicia who were allied with the Mongols.[49] The Ilkhanate army managed to reach Damascus by the end of December 1299.[49] Ibn Taymiyyah went with a delegation of Islamic scholars to talk to Ghazan Khan, who was the Khan of the Mongol Ilkhanate of Iran, to plead clemency[49] and to stop his attack on the Muslims. It is reported that none of the scholars said anything to the Khan except Ibn Taymiyyah who said:
"You claim that you are Muslim and you have with you Mu'adhdhins, Muftis, Imams and Shaykhs but you invaded us and reached our country for what? While your father and your grandfather, Hulagu were non-believers, they did not attack and they kept their promise. But you promised and broke your promise."[50]
By early January 1300 the Mongol allies, the Armenians and Georgians, had caused widespread damage to Damascus and they had taken Syrian prisoners.[49] The Mongols effectively occupied Damascus for the first four months of 1303.[39] Most of the military had fled the city, including most of the civilians.[39] Ibn Taymiyyah however, stayed and was one of the leaders of the resistance inside Damascus and he went to speak directily to the Mongol Ilkhan Mahmud Ghazan and his vizier Rashid al-Din Tabib.[19][39] He sought the release of Muslim and dhimmi prisoners which the Mongols had taken in Syria, and after discussion, secured their release.[19][28]
Second Mongol invasion
The second invasion lasted between October 1300 and January 1301.[49] Ibn Taymiyyah at this time began giving sermons on Jihad at the Umayyad mosque.[49] Ibn Taymiyyah also spoke to and encouraged the Governor of Damscus, al-Afram to achieve a victory against the Mongols.[49] He became involved with al-Afram once more, when he was sent to get reinforcements from Cairo.[49]
Third invasion and fatwa
The year 1303 saw the third Mongol invasion of Syria by Ghazan Khan.[51][52] What has been called Ibn Taymiyyah's "most famous" fatwā[53] was issued against the Mongols in the Mamluk's war. Ibn Taymiyyah declared that jihad against the Mongol attack on the Malmuk sultanate was not only permissible, but obligatory.[36] The reason being that the Mongols could not, in his opinion, be true Muslims despite the fact that they had converted to Sunni Islam because they ruled using what he considered 'man-made laws' (their traditional Yassa code) rather than Islamic law or Sharia, whilst believing that the Yassa code was better than the Sharia law. Because of this, he reasoned they were living in a state of jahiliyyah, or pre-Islamic pagan ignorance.[12] The fatwa broke new Islamic legal ground because "no jurist had ever before issued a general authorization for the use of lethal force against Muslims in battle," and was to influence modern Islamists in the use of violence against self-proclaimed Muslims.[54]
Ibn Taymiyyah called on the Muslims to Jihad once again and he also personally joined the eventual battle of Marj al-Saffar against the Mongol army.[21][51] The battle began on 20 April of that year.[51] On the same day, Ibn Taymiyyah declared a fatwa which exempted Mamluk soldiers from the fast during the month of Ramadan so that they could maintain their strength.[21][25][51] Within two days the Mongols were severely defeated and the battle was won.[51]
Facing charges against his literalism
Ibn Taymiyah was imprisoned several times for conflicting with the ijma of jurists and theologians of his day. From the city of Wasit, Iraq, a judge requested that Ibn Taymiyyah write a book on creed which led to him writing his book, for which he faced troubles, called Al-Aqidah Al-Waasitiyyah, a work on his view of the creed (`aqidah) of the salaf which included reference to the divine attributes of God.[20][33] Ibn Taymiyyah adopted the view that God should be described as he was literally described in the Qur'an and in the hadith,[33] and that all Muslims were required to believe this because it was the view held by the early Muslim community (salaf).[20] This created problems for the Islamic scholars of the time as it meant they all had to adhere to it.[20] Within the space of two years (1305–1306) four separate religious council hearings were held to assess the correctness of his creed.[20]
1305 hearing
The first hearing was held with the Shafii scholars who accused Ibn Taymiyyah of anthropomorphism.[20] At the time Ibn Taymiyyah was 42 years old. He was protected by the then Governor of Damascus, Aqqush al-Afram, during the proceedings.[20] The scholars suggested that he accept that his creed was simply that of the Hanbalites and offered this as a way out of the charge.[20] The issue being, if Ibn Taymiyyah ascribed his creed to the Hanbali school of law then it would be just one view out of the four schools which one could follow rather than a creed everybody must adhere to.[20] Ibn Taymiyyah was uncompromising and maintained that it was obligatory for all scholars to adhere to his creed.[20]
1306 hearings and imprisonment
Two separate councils were held a year later on 22 and 28 of January 1306.[20][25] The first council was in the house of the Governor of Damascus Aqqush al-Afram, who had protected him the year before when facing the Shafii scholars.[25] A second hearing was held six days later where the Indian scholar Safi al-Din al-Hindi found him innocent of all charges and accepted that his creed was in line with the "Qur'an and the Sunna".[20][25] Regardless, in April of 1306 the chief Islamic judges of the Mamluk state declared Ibn Taymiyyah guilty and he was incarcerated.[20] He was released four months later in September.[20]
Further objections after release
After his release in Damascus, the doubts regarding his creed seemed to have resolved but this was not the case.[25] A Shafii scholar, Ibn al-Sarsari, was insistent on starting another hearing against Ibn Taymiyyah which was held once again at the house of the Governor of Damascus, Al-Afram.[25] His book Al-Aqidah Al-Waasitiyyah was still not found at fault.[25] At the conclusion of this hearing, Ibn Taymiyyah and Ibn al-Sarsari were sent to Cairo to settle the problem.
Life in Egypt
Debate on literalism and imprisonment
On arrival of Ibn Taymiyyah and the Shafi'ite scholar in Cairo in 1306, an open meeting was held.[47] The Sultan of Egypt at the time was Al-Nasir Muhammad and his deputy attended the open meeting.[47] Ibn Taymiyyah was found innocent.[47] Despite the open meeting, objections regarding his creed continued and he was summoned to the Citadel in Cairo for a Munazara (legal debate), which took place on 8 April 1306. During the Munazara his views on divine attributes, specifically whether a direction could be attributed to God, were debated by the Indian Scholar Safi al-Din al-Hindi, in the presence of Islamic judges.[55][25] Ibn Taymiyyah failed to convince the judges of his position and so on the recommendation of Al-Hindi was incarcerated for the charge of anthropomorphism.[55][25] Thereafter, he together with his two brothers were imprisoned in the Citadel of the mountain (Qal‘at al-Jabal), in Cairo until 25 September 1307.[56][25][55] He was freed due the help he received from two Amir's (ruler or military ruler); Salar and Muhanna ibn Isa, but he was not allowed to go back to Syria.[25] He was then, again summoned for a legal debate but this time he convinced the judges of his views and he was allowed to go free.[55]
Trial for intercession and imprisonment
Ibn Taymiyyah continued to face troubles for his views which were found to be at odds with those of his contemporaries. His strong opposition to what he believed to be un-Islamic innovation (bid‘ah), caused upset among the prominent Sufis of Egypt including Ibn `Ata'Allah and Karim al-Din al-Amuli, and the locals who started to protest against Ibn Taymiyyah.[25] The nature of the point under contention was Ibn Taymiyyah's stance on tawassul (intercession).[25] In his view a person could not ask anyone other than God for help except on the day of judgement when intercession in his view would be possible. At the time, the people did not restrict intercession to just the day of judgement but rather they said it was allowed in other cases. Due to this Ibn Taymiyyah, now 45, was ordered to appear before the Shafii judge Badr al-Din in March 1308 and was questioned on his stance regarding intercession.[25] Thereafter, he was incarcerated in the prison of the judges in Cairo for some months.[25] After his release, he was allowed to return to Syria, should he so wish.[25] Ibn Taymiyyah however stayed in Egypt for a further 5 years.
House arrest in Alexandria
The year after his release in 1309 saw a change of power to a new Sultan in Egypt, Baibars al-Jashnakir whose reign was marked by economical and political unrest.[25] His hold on power was short lived and lasted only a year. During this time, in August of 1309, Ibn Taymiyyah was taken into custody and placed under house arrest for seven months in the new sultan's palace in Alexandria.[25] He was freed when Al-Nasir Muhammad retook the position of sultan on 4 March 1310.[25] Having returned to Cairo a week later, he was received by the sultan Al-Nasir.[25] The sultan would sometimes consult Ibn Taymiyyah on religious affairs and policies during the rest of his three-year stay in Cairo.[19][25] During this time he continued to teach and wrote his famous book Al-Kitab al-Siyasa al-shar'iyya (Treatise on the Government of the Religious Law), a book noted for its account of the role of religion in politics.[25][57][58]
Return to Damascus and later years
He spent his last fifteen years in Damascus. Ibn Taymiyyah at the age of 50 returned to Damascus on 28 February 1313 by way of Jerusalem.[25] Damascus was now under the governorship of Tankiz. In Damascus Ibn Taymiyyah continued his teaching role as professor of Hanbali fiqh. This is when he taught his most famous student, Ibn Qayyim Al-Jawziyya, who went on to become a noted scholar in Islamic history.[25] Ibn Qayyim was to share in Ibn Taymiyyah's renewed persecution.
Three years after his arrival in the city, Ibn Taymiyyah became involved in efforts to deal with the increasing Shia influence amongst the Muslims.[25] An agreement had been made in 1316 between the amir of Mecca and the Ilkhanate ruler Öljaitü, brother of Ghazan Khan, to allow a favourable policy towards Shi'ism in Mecca, a city that houses the holiest site in Islam, the Kaaba.[25] Around the same time the Shia theologian Al-Hilli, who had played a crucial role in the Mongol rulers decision to make Shi'ism the state religion of Persia,[59][60] wrote the book, Minhaj al-Karamah (The Way of Charisma'),[19] which dealt with the Shia doctrine of the Imamate and also served as a refutation of the Sunni doctrine of the caliphate.[61] To counter this Ibn Taymiyyah wrote his famous book, Minhaj as-Sunnah an-Nabawiyyah, as a refutation of Al-Hilli's work.[62]
Fatwa on divorce and imprisonment
In 1318 Ibn Taymiyyah wrote a treatise that would curtail the ease with which a Muslim man could divorce his wife. Ibn Taymiyyah's fatwa on divorce was not accepted by the majority of scholars of the time and this continued into the Ottoman era.[63] However, almost every modern Muslim nation-state has come to adopt Ibn Taymiyyah's position on this issue of divorce.[63] At the time he issued the fatwa, Ibn Taymiyyah revived an edict by the sultan not to issue fatwas on this issue but he continued to do so, saying, "I cannot conceal my knowledge".[25][64] As in previous instances, he stated that his fatwa was based on the Qur'an and hadith. His view on the issue was at odds with the Hanbali doctrine.[25] This proved controversial among the people in Damascus as well as the Islamic scholars and the authorities who were against him on the issue.[65]
According to the scholars of the time, an oath of divorce counted as a full divorce and they were also of the view that three oaths of divorce taken under one occasion counted as three separate divorces.[65] The significance of this was, that a man who divorces the same partner three times is no longer allowed to remarry that person until and if that person marries and divorces another man.[65] Only then could the man, who took the oath, remarry his previous wife.[65] Ibn Taymiyyah accepted this but rejected the validity of three oaths taken under one sitting, to count as three separate divorces as long as the intention was not to divorce.[65] Moreover, Ibn Taymiyyah was of the view that a single oath of divorce uttered but not intended, also does not count as an actual divorce.[25] He stated that since this is an oath much like an oath taken in the name of God, a person must expiate for an unintentional oath in a similar manner.[65]
Due to his views and also by not abiding to the sultan's letter two years before forbidding him from issuing a fatwa on the issue, three council hearing were held, in as many years (1318, 1319 and 1320), to deal with this matter.[25] The hearing were overseen by the Viceroy of Syria, Tankiz.[25] This resulted in Ibn Taymiyyah being imprisoned on 26 August 1320 in the Citadel of Damascus.[25] He was released about five months and 8 days later,[64] on 9 February 1321, by order of the Sultan Al-Nasir.[25] Ibn Taymiyyah was reinstated as teacher of Hanbali law and he resumed teaching.[64]
Risāla on visiting tombs and final imprisonment
Ibn Taymiyyah had written a risāla (a treatise) in 1310 called Ziyārat al-ḳubūr[25] or according to another source, Shadd al-rihal.[64] It dealt with the validity and permissibility of making a journey to visit the tombs of prophets and saints (Wali).[64] It is reported that in the book "he condemned the cult of saints".[25] He declared that, the one who visits the Prophet's grave commits innovation (bidah). Criticism of the book arose after nearly 16 years of Ibn Taymiyyah writing it. and he was arrested and imprisoned at the age of 63, on 18 July 1326, in the Citadel of Damascus with an order from the sultan also prohibiting him from issuing any further fatwas.[25][64] The reason for his arrest was his declaration that the one who travels to visit the Prophet's grave commits innovation (bidah). His student Ibn Qayyim was also imprisoned with him in the Citadel.[64]
Life in prison
Ibn Taymiyyah referred to prison as "a divine blessing".[19] During his incarceration he wrote that, "when a scholar forsakes what he knows of the Book of God and of the sunnah of his messenger and follows the ruling of a ruler which contravenes a ruling of God and his messenger, he is a renegade, an unbeliever who deserves to be punished in this world and in the hereafter."[19]
Whilst in prison he faced opposition from the Maliki and Shafii Chief Justices of Damascus, Taḳī al-Dīn al-Ik̲h̲nāʾī[25] He remained in prison for over two years and ignored the sultan's prohibition, by continuing to deliver fatwas.[25] During his incarceration Ibn Taymiyyah wrote three works which are extant; Kitāb Maʿārif al-wuṣūl, Rafʿ al-malām, and Kitāb al-Radd ʿala ’l-Ik̲h̲nāʾī (The response to al-Ik̲h̲nāʾī).[25] The last book was an attack on Taḳī al-Dīn al-Ik̲h̲nāʾī, and explained his views, on saints (wali).[25]
Death
Ibn Taymiyyah fell ill in early September 1328 and died at the age of 65, on 26 September of that year, whilst in prison at the Citadel in Damascus.[25] Once this news reached the public, there was a strong show of support for him from the people.[66] After the authorities had given permission, it is reported that thousands of people came to show their respects.[66] They gathered in the Citadel and lined the streets up to the Umayyad mosque which was and is still close by.[66] A Janaza (funeral prayer) was held in the citadel by the sheikh, Muhammad Tammam, and a second was held in the mosque.[66] A third and final funeral prayer was held by Ibn Taymiyyah's brother, the sheikh, Zain al-Din.[66] He was buried in Damascus, in Maqbara Sufiyya (the cemetery of the Sufis), of whom he was a severe critic. His brother Sharafuddin had been buried in that cemetery before him.[67][68][69]
Oliver Leaman says that being deprived of the means of writing led to Ibn Taymiyyah's death.[33] It is reported that two hundred thousand men and fifteen to sixteen thousand women attended his funeral prayer.[37][70] Ibn Kathir says that in the history of Islam, only the funeral of Ahmad ibn Hanbal received a larger attendance.[37] This is also mentioned by Ibn `Abd al-Hadi.[37] Caterina Bori says that, "In the Islamic tradition, wider popular attendance at funerals was a mark of public reverence, a demonstration of the deceased's rectitude, and a sign of divine approbation."[37]
Ibn Taymiyya is said to have "spent a lifetime objecting to tomb veneration, only to cast a more powerful posthumous spell than any of his Sufi contemporaries."[71] On his death, his personal effects were in such demand "that bidders for his lice-killing camphor necklace pushed its price up to 150 dirhams, and his skullcap fetched a full 500."[71][72] A few mourners sought and succeeded in "drinking the water used for bathing his corpse."[71][72] His tomb received "pilgrims and sightseers" for 600 years.[71] Almost 600 years after his death, the large Sufi cemetery where he was buried in was razed for redevelopment by French colonial authorities. His grave alone was left untouched after the Arab demolition teams "insisted" that his grave "was too holy to touch." His resting place is now "in the parking lot of a maternity ward", though as of 2009 its headstone was broken, according to author Sadakat Kadri.[73][74]
Students
Among those Ibn Taymiyyah taught, some went on to become accomplished Islamic Scholars.[25] His students came from different backgrounds and belonged to various different schools (madhabs).[75] His most famous students were Ibn Qayyim Al-Jawziyya and Ibn Kathir.[76] Ibn Qayyim wrote the famous poem "O Christ-Worshipper" which examined the dogma of the Trinity propounded by many Christian sects. Ibn Kathir became an influential scholar who wrote one of the most famous tafsīr's of the Qur'an called, Tafsir Ibn Kathir. His other students include:[25][33][75][77]
- Al-Dhahabi
- Al-Mizzi
- Ibn Abd al-Hadi
- Ibn Muflih
- Imad al-din al-wasiti
- Najm al-Din al-Tufi
Legacy
Al-Matroudi says that Ibn Taymiyyah, "was perhaps the most eminent and influential Ḥanbalī jurist of the Middle Ages and one of the most prolific among them. He was also a renowned scholar of Islam whose influence was felt not only during his lifetime but extended through the centuries until the present day."[15] Ibn Taymiyyah's admirers often deemed him as Sheikh ul-Islam, an honorific title with which he is sometimes still termed today.[78][79][80] The medieval Shafiite scholar Ibn Hajar al-`Asqalani said that calling Ibn Taymiyyah "Sheikh ul-Islam, will continue tomorrow just as it was yesterday".[15] In reference to this Al-Matroudi says, "Ibn Hajar has been right so far and will most likely continue to be so in the future."[15] The Ash'ari historian Al-Maqrizi said, regarding the rift between the Ash'ari's and Ibn Taymiyyah, "People are divided into two factions over the question of Ibn Taymiyyah; for until the present, the latter has retained admirers and disciples in Syria and Egypt."[25] Rapoport and Ahmad say that, "Ibn Taymiyya was, by almost universal consensus, one of the most original and systematic thinkers in the history of Islam."[39]
Both his supporters and rivals grew to respect Ibn Taymiyyah because he was uncompromising in his views.[21] Al-Dhahabi praised him as "the brilliant shaykh, imam, erudite scholar, censor, jurist, mujtahid, and commentator of the Qur'an," but acknowledged that Ibn Taymiyyah's cantankerous and disparaging manners alienated even his admirers because even his opponents noted his "genius and the rarity of his faults".[15][39]
Ibn Taymiyyah's works served as an inspiration for later Muslim scholars and historical figures, who have been regarded as his admirers or disciples.[25] One such person was Ibn Rajab, who wrote a book called Al-Qawa'id al-Fiqhiyyah, on the history of Hanbalism.[25] Others include; the Hajib of Damascus Katbugha al-Mansuri, the viceroy of Egypt Arghun al-Nasiri and the sixteenth century Jerusalemite qadi and Palestinian historian Mujir al-Din.[25]
In the contemporary world, he may be considered at the root of Wahhabism, the Senussi order and other later reformist movements.[9][81] Ibn Taymiyyah has been noted to have influenced Rashid Rida, Abul A`la Maududi, Sayyid Qutb, Hassan al-Banna, Abdullah Azzam, and Osama bin Laden.[16][36][82][83][84]
The militant organization Islamic State in Iraq and the Levant used a fatwa of Ibn Taymiyyah to justify the burning alive of Jordanian pilot Muath al-Kasasbeh.[85]
Ibn Taymiyya's fatwa on Alawites as "more infidel than Christians and Jews" has been recited by Muslim Brotherhood affiliated scholar Yusuf al-Qaradawi[86][87] and the Syrian rebel Islamist leader of Jaysh al-Islam Zahran Alloush.[88]
Influences
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Ibn Taymiyyah was taught by scholars who were renowned in their time.[89] However, there is no evidence that any of the contemporary scholars influenced him.[89]
A strong influence on Ibn Taymiyyah was the founder of the Hanbali school of Islamic jurisprudence, Ahmad ibn Hanbal.[89] Ibn Taymiyyah was trained in this school and he had studied Ibn Hanbal's Musnad in great detail, having studied it over multiple times.[90] Though he spent much of his life following this school, in the end he renounced taqlid (blind following).[35]
His work was most influenced by the sayings and actions of the Salaf (first 3 generation of Muslims) and this showed in his work where he would give preference to the Salaf over his contemporaries.[89] The modern Salafi movement derives its name from this school of thought.[89]
Views
God's Attributes
Ibn Taymiyyah said that God should be described as he has described himself in the Qur'an and the way Prophet Muhammad has described God in the Hadith.[25][33] He rejected; the Ta'tili's who denied these attributes, those who compare God with the creation (Tashbih) and those who engage in esoteric interpretations (ta'wil) of the Qur'an or use symbolic exegesis.[25] Ibn Taymiyyah said that those attributes which we know about from the two above mentioned sources, should be ascribed to God.[25] Anything regarding God's attributes which people have no knowledge of, should be approached in a manner, according to Ibn Taymiyyah, where the mystery of the unknown is left to God (called tafwid) and the Muslim's submit themselves to the word of God and the Prophet (called taslim).[25] Henri Laoust says that through this framework, this doctrine, "provides authority for the widest possible scope in personal internationalization of religion."[25]
In 1299 Ibn Taymiyyah wrote the book Al-Aqida al-hamawiyya al-kubra, which dealt with, among other topics, theology and creed. When he was accused of anthropomorphism, a private meeting was held between scholars in the house of Al-Din `Umar al-Kazwini who was a Shafii judge.[25][91] After careful study of this book, he was cleared of those charges.[25] Ibn Taymiyyah also wrote another book dealing with the attributes of God called, Al-Aqidah Al-Waasitiyyah. He faced considerable hostility towards these views from the Ash'ari's of whome the most notable were, Taqi al-Din al-Subki and his son Taj al-Din al-Subki who were influential Islamic jurists and also chief judge of Damascus in their respective times.[25]
Ibn Taymiyyah's highly intellectual discourse at explaining "The Wise Purpose of God, Human Agency, and the Problems of Evil & Justice" using God's attributes as a means has been illustrated by Dr. Jon Hoover in his work Ibn Taymiyyah's Theodicy of Perpetual Optimism.[92]
On the Division of Tawhid
Ibn Taymiyyah supported the academic division of tawhid into three classifications; Rububiyyah (Allah is the Lord of all existence and disposer of all affairs), Uluhiyyah (singling out the oneness of Allah in worship) and Asmaa wa sifaat (the affirmation of the Names and Attributes of Allah).[93] His works discuss the pagans at the time of revelation as accepting Allah's Rububiyyah but rejecting His Uluhiyyah, whereby they continued to worship idols.
Sources of Shari'a
Of the four fundamental sources of the sharia accepted by thirteenth century Sunni jurists—
- Qur'an,
- sunnah,
- consensus of jurists (ijma), and
- qiyas (analogical reasoning),
—Ibn Taymiyyah opposed the use of consensus of jurists, replacing it with the consensus of the "companions" (sahaba).[17][94]
Like all Islamic jurists Ibn Taymiyyah believed in a hierarchy sources for the Sharia. Most important was the Quran, and the sunnah or any other source could not abrogate a verse of the Qur'an.[95] (For him, an abrogation of a verse, known in Arabic as Naskh, was only possible through another verse in the Qur'an.[95]) Next was sunnah which other sources (besides the Quran) must not contradict.
Consensus (ijma)
Concerning Consensus (ijma), he believed that consensus of any Muslims other than that of the companions of Muhammad could not be "realistically verifiable" and so was speculative,[17] and thus not a legitimate source of Islamic law (except in certain circumstances).[17] The consensus (ijma) used must be that of the companions found in their reported sayings or actions.[95] According one supporter, Serajul Haque, his rejection of the consensus of other scholars was justified, on the basis of the instructions given to the jurist Shuraih ibn al-Hârith from the Caliph Umar, one of the companions of Muhammad; to make decisions by first referring to the Qur'an, and if that is not possible, then to the sayings of the Prophet and finally to refer to the agreement of the companions like himself.[96]
An example of Ibn Taymiyyah use of his interpretation was in defense of the (temporary) closing of all Christian churches in 1299 in the Mamluk Sultanate of Egypt. The closing was in violation of a 600-year-old covenant with Christian dhimmi known as the Pact of Umar. But as Ibn Taymiyyah pointed out, while venerable, the pact was written 60 years or so after the time of the companions and so had no legal effect.[94]
Analogy (qiyas)
Ibn Taymiyyah considered the use of analogy (qiyas) based on literal meaning of scripture as a valid source for deriving legal rulings.[17][97] Analogy is the primary instrument of legal rationalism in Islam.[39] He acknowledged its use as one of the four fundamental principles of Islamic jurisprudence.[98] Ibn Taymiyyah argued against the certainty of syllogistic arguments and in favour of analogy (qiyas). He argues that concepts founded on induction are themselves not certain but only probable, and thus a syllogism based on such concepts is no more certain than an argument based on analogy. He further claimed that induction itself depends on a process of analogy. His model of analogical reasoning was based on that of juridical arguments.[99][100] Work by John F. Sowa have, for example, have used Ibn Taymiyyah's model of analogy.[100] He attached caveats however to the use of analogy because he considered the use of reason to be secondary to the use of revelation.[17] Ibn Taymiyyah's view was that analogy should be used under the framework of revelation, as a supporting source.[17]
There were some jurists who thought rulings derived through analogy could contradict a ruling derived from the Qur'an and the authentic hadith.[17] However, Ibn Taymiyyah disagreed because he thought a contradiction between the definitive canonical texts of Islam, and definitive reason was impossible[17] and that this was also the understanding of the salaf.[101] Racha el-Omari says that on an epistemological level, Ibn Taymiyyah considered the Salaf to be better than any other later scholars in understanding the agreement between revelation and reason.[101] One example for this is the use of analogy in the Islamic legal principle of maslaha (public good) about which Ibn Taymiyya believed, if there were to be any contradiction to revelation then it is due to a misunderstanding or misapplication of the concept of utility.[39][102] He said that to assess the utility of something, the criteria for benefit and harm should come from the Qur'an and sunnah, a criteria which he also applied to the establishment of a correct analogy.[39][102]
An example of Ibn Taymiyyah's use of analogy was in a fatwa forbidding the use of hashish one the grounds that it was analogous to wine, and users should be given 80 lashes in punishment. "Anyone who disagreed was an apostate, he added, whose corpse ought not to be washed or given a decent burial."[94]
Reason (`Aql)
Issues surrounding the use of reason ('Aql) and rational came about in relation to the attributes of God for which he faced much resistance.[39] At the time the Islamic scholars thought the attributes of God as stated in the Qur'an were contradictory to reason so sought other explanations instead.[39] Ibn Taymiyyah believed that reasons itself validated the entire Qur'an as being reliable and in light of that he argued, if some part of the scripture was to be rejected then this would render the use of reason as an unacceptable avenue through which to seek knowledge.[39] He thought that the most perfect rational method and use of reason was contained within the Qur'an and sunnah and that the theologians of his time had used rational and reason in a flawed manner.[39]
Criticism of the Grammarians
Ibn Taymiyyah had mastered the grammar of Arabic and one of the books which he studied was the book of Arabic grammar called Al-Kitab, by Sibawayh.[103] In later life he met the Qur'an commentator Abu Hayyan al-Gharnati to whom he expressed that, "Sibawayh was not the Prophet of Syntax nor was he infallible. He committed eighty mistakes in his book which are not intelligible to you."[103] Ibn Taymiyyah is thought to have severely criticized Sibawayh but the actual substance of those criticisms is not known because the book that Ibn Taymiyyah wrote, al-Bahr, within which he wrote the criticisms has been lost.[103] He stated that when there is an explanation of an Ayah of the Qur'an or a Hadith, from the Prophet himself, the use of philology or a grammatical explanation becomes obsolete.[104] He also said one should refer only to the understanding of the Salaf (first three generations of Muslims) when interpreting a word within the scriptural sources.[39] However he did not discount the contributions of the grammarians completely.[105] Ibn Taymiyyah stated that the Arabic nouns within the scriptural sources have been divided by the fuqaha (Islamic jurists) into three categories; those that are defined by the shari'a, those defined by philology (lugha) and finally those that are defined by social custom (`urf).[104] For him each of these categories of nouns had to be used in their own appropriate manner.[106]
Madh'hab
Ibn Taymiyyah censured the scholars for blindly conforming to the precedence of early jurists without any resort to the Qur'an and Sunnah. He contended that although juridical precedence has its place, blindly giving it authority without contextualization, sensitivity to societal changes, and evaluative mindset in light of the Qur'an and Sunnah can lead to ignorance and stagnancy in Islamic Law. Ibn Taymiyyah likened the extremism of Taqlid (blind conformity to juridical precedence or school of thought) to the practice of Jews and Christians who took their rabbis and ecclesiastics as gods besides God. In arguing against taqlid, he said the salaf, who in order to better understand and live according to the commands of God, had to make ijtihad using the scriptural sources.[36] The same approach, in his view, was needed in modern times.[36]
Ibn Taymiyyah believed that the best role models for Islamic life were the first three generations of Islam (Salaf); which constitute Muhammad's companions, referred to in Arabic as Sahaba (first generation), followed by the generation of Muslims born after the death of Muhammad known as the Tabi'un (second generation) which is then followed lastly by the next generation after the Tabi'un known as Tabi' Al-Tabi'in (third generation). Ibn Taymiyyah gave precedence to the ideas of the Sahaba and early generations, over the founders of the Islamic schools of jurisprudence.[25] For Ibn Taymiyyah it was the Qur'an, the sayings and practices of Muhammad and the ideas of the early generations of Muslims that constituted the best understanding of Islam. Any deviation from their practice was viewed as bid‘ah, or innovation, and to be forbidden. He also praised and wrote a commentary on some speeches of Abdul-Qadir Gilani.[107] He criticized the views and actions of the Rafaiyah.
Islamic law and polity
Ibn Taymiyya believed that Islamic policy and management was based on Quran 4:58,[108] and that the goal of al-siyasa (politics, the political) should be to protect al-din (religion) and to manage al-dunya (worldly life and affairs). Religion and the State should be inextricably linked, in his view,[25] as the state was indispensable in providing justice to the people, enforcing Islamic law by enjoining good and forbidding evil, unifying the people and preparing a society conducive to the worship of God.[25] He believed that "enjoining good and forbidding wrong" was the duty of every state functionary with charge over other Muslims, from the caliph to "the schoolmaster in charge of assessing children's handwriting exercises."[109][110]
Ibn Taymiyyah supported giving broad powers to the state. In Al-siyasa al-Shar`iyah, he focused on duties of individuals and punishments rather than rules and procedural limits of authorities.[110] Suspected highway robbers who would not reveal their accomplices or the location of their loot, for example should be held in detention and lashed for indefinite periods.[110] He also allowed the lashing of imprisoned debtors, and "trials of suspicion" (da`sawi al-tuham) where defendants could be convicted without witnesses or documentary proof.[111]
Henri Laoust said that Ibn Taymiyyah never propagated the idea of a single caliphate but believed the Muslim ummah or community would form into a confederation of states.[25] Laoust further stated that Ibn Taymiyyah called for obedience only to God, and the Islamic Prophet Muhammad, and he did not put a limit on the number of leaders a Muslim community could have.[25] However Mona Hassan, in her recent study of the political thoughts of Ibn Taymiyyah, questions this and says laoust has wrongly claimed that Ibn Taymiyyah thought of the caliphate as a redundant idea.[112] Hassan has shown that Ibn Taymiyyah considered the Caliphate that was under the Rashidun Caliphs; Abu Bakr, Umar, Uthman, and Ali, as the moral and legal ideal.[112] The Caliphate in his view could not be ceded "in favour of secular kingship (mulk).[112]
Jihad
Ibn Taymiyyah was noted for emphasis he put on the importance of jihad and for the "careful and lengthy attention" he gave "to the questions of martyrdom" in jihad, such as benefits and blessings to be had for martyrs in the afterlife.[113] He asserted that martyrdom and eternal rewards and blessings, . He wrote that, "It is in jihad that one can live and die in ultimate happiness, both in this world and in the Hereafter. Abandoning it means losing entirely or partially both kinds of happiness."[114]
He defined jihad as:
"It comprehends all sorts of worship, whether inward or outward, including love for Allah, being sincere to Him, relying on Him, relinquishing one’s soul and property for His sake, being patient and austere, and keeping remembrance of Almighty Allah. It includes what is done by physical power, what is done by the heart, what is done by the tongue through calling to the way of Allah by means of authoritative proofs and providing opinions, and what is done through management, industry, and wealth."[115]
He gave a broad definition of what constituted "aggression" against Muslims and what actions by non-believers made jihad against them permissible. He declared
"It is allowed to fight people for (not observing) unambiguous and generally recognized obligations and prohibitions, until they undertake to perform the explicitly prescribed prayers, to pay zakat, to fast during the month of Ramadan, to make the pilgrimage to Mecca and to avoid what is prohibited, such as marrying women in spite of legal impediments, eating impure things, acting unlawfully against the lives and properties of Muslims and the like. It is obligatory to take the initiative in fighting those people, as soon as the Prophet's summons with the reasons for which they are fought has reached them. But if they first attack the Muslims then fighting them is even more urgent, as we have mentioned when dealing with the fighting against rebellious and aggressive bandits."[113][116]
In the modern context, his rulings have been used by some Islamist groups to declare jihad against various governments.[117]
Innovation (Bid`ah)
Even though Ibn Taymiyyah has been called a "theologian",[118] he totally rejected `ilm al-kalam, known as "Islamic theology", as well as some aspects of Sufism and Peripatetic philosophy, as an innovation (Bid‘ah).[76]
Ibn Taymiyyah opposed giving any undue religious honors to mosques (even that of Jerusalem, the Al-Aqsa Mosque), to approach or rival in any way the Islamic sanctity of the two most holy mosques within Islam, Masjid al-Haram (in Mecca) and Al-Masjid al-Nabawi (in Madina).[119] As to the practice of making journey for the sole purpose of visiting a mosque, Ibn Taymiyyah has said in his books; Majmu'at al-Rasail al-Kubra, Minhaj al-Sunna and Majmu'at Fatawa, that, "Journey must not be made except to three mosques; Masjid al-Haram, Masjid al-Nabawi and Masjid Al-Aqsa".[9][120][121][122] Regarding this Serajul Haque says that, "In the opinion of Ibn Taymiyyah only these three mosques have been accepted by the Prophet as the object of journeys, on account of their excellence over all other mosques and places of prayer.[123] Ibn Taymiyyah uses a saying (hadith) of the Islamic prophet Muhammad in Bukhari and Muslim to justify his view that it is not permitted to journey exclusively to any mosque than Mecca, Medina, or Jerusalem.[123]
The ruler Sabuktegin was praised by Ibn Taymiyyah for censuring groups that he considered heretical. Ibn Taymiyyah stated that Sabuktegin, "commanded that Ahlul Bidah be publicly cursed on the minbars, and as a result the Jahmiyyah, Rafida, Hululiyah, Mu'tazilah, and Qadariyah were all publicly cursed, along with the Asharites."
Pilgrimage to tombs and intercession
Ibn Taymiyyah considered the veneration and making pilgrimage to the tomb of saints (ziyārat al-qubūr) as an innovation.[76][124] Ibn Taymiyyah said that to make a pilgrimage or journey to the tomb of a Sufi, Wali or the Prophets, is comparable to worshipping something besides God (Shirk).[76][124] To make a pilgrimage to Muhammad's grave for the sole purpose of seeking intercession or aassistance was deemed by Ibn Taymiyyah as impermissable.[125] He said that only God should be asked for help and that it is only God that can give assistance.[124] He uses passages from the Qur'an to support his view and uses a hadith of the Prophet where he advised his companion Ibn Abbas that when a person requires anything, he should ask God.[124] Ibn Taymiyyah said that seeking the assistance of God through intercession is allowed, as long as the other person is still alive.[124] The evidence he uses for this is another hadith, where the people due to the lack of rain, asked Muhammad to pray to God to provide rain, to which he agreed and rain did fall but after the Prophet had died and a similar circumstance arose, the people did not go to his grave.[124] Ibn Taymiyyah, regarding those who ask assistance from a Sufi or a wali, says that, "those who do so are kuffar, infidels."[124] As for those who ask assistance from the grave of the Prophet or a Sheikh, he called them mushrik, someone who is engaged in shirk.[124] Howerver, Ibn Taymiyyah was not completely against the visitation of tombs, provided that they only go to pray for the dead person and that they seek benefit from God alone.[124]
Mutakallimun
The mutakallimun are scholars who engage in ilm al-Kalam (rationalst theology) and they were criticised by Ibn Taymiyyah for their use of rationalist theology and philosophy.[75] He said that the method of kalam was used by the Mu`tazilites, Jahmites and Ash`ari's.[75] Ibn Taymiyyah considered the use of philosophical proofs and kalam to be redundant because he saw the Qur'an and the Sunna as superior rational proofs.[75] Ibn Taymiyyah said that these explanations were not grounded in scriptural evidence such as the philosophical explanation of the divine attributes of God or the proof of God using the cosmological argument.[75] He said that the call to Islam was not made using such methods by the Qur'an or the Prophet and that these theories have only caused errors and corruption.[75] The mutakallimun called their use of rationalst theology usul al-din (principles of religion) but Ibn Taymiyyah said that the use of rationalist theology has nothing to do with the true usul al-din which comes from God and to state otherwise is to say that the Prophet neglected an important aspect of Islam.[75] Ibn Taymiyyah says that the usul al-din of the mutakallimun, deserve to be named usul din al-shaytan (principles of Satanic religion).[75]
Ibn Taymiyyah's attempts to focus attention onto Qur'anic rationality was taken up by his student Ibn Qayyim, to the exception of his other followers.[75] This focus on traditionlist rationlism was also taken up by Musa Bigiev.[75]
Sufism
Ibn Taymiyyah rejected two views associated with Sufism. For one he said that some Sufis insulted God with their monism, a doctrine (seemingly similar to pantheism) that God "encompasses all things".[126] This rejection included denouncing the views of the monist Ibn Arabi.[25] For the second he said that the view that spiritual enlightenment is of a greater importance than obeying the sharia was a failure to properly follow the example of Muhammad.[126] On Ibn Arabi, and Sufism in general, Henri Laoust says that Ibn Taymiyyah mentions that, "he allowed himself to be deluded, in his youth, by the Futuhat of Ibn al-Arabi, before discovering how subtly heretical they were. He never condemned Ṣūfism in itself, but only that which he considered to be, in the case of too many Ṣūfis, inadmissible deviations in doctrine, ritual or morals, such as monism, antinomianism or esotericism."[25]
Ibn Taymiyyah's own writing in his book Majmu Fatawa shows that he did not completely discount Sufism when he said, "the right attitude towards Sufism, or any other thing, is to accept what is in agreement with the Qur'an and the Sunna, and reject what does not agree".[127] He did write positively about some Sufis such as Abdul-Qadir Gilani.[33]
Shi'a Islam
Ibn Taymiyyah was extremely critical of Shia and considered them religiously bankrupt, among the most morally depraved people and the root cause of many Islamic ills.[128] His severe critique of Twelver Shia in his book, Minhaj as-Sunnah an-Nabawiyyah, was written in response to the book Minhaj al-karama fi ma'rifat al-imama, by the Shia theologian Al-Hilli.[129] He focused his criticisms to the similarity between Shia, Christians and Jews.[129]
Regarding the Shia mourning for Husayn on Ashura, Ibn Taymiyyah considered Husayn's martyrdom as a divinely bestowed honour—not a major tragedy. He also argued that such mourning was never instructed by Muhammad and that the Islamic response to recent (let alone ancient) loss is not extravagant mourning but to endure the loss with patience and trust in God. However, he also believed those who celebrated on Ashura were anti-Shia zealots ("al-nawasib") or ignorant people.[130]
Christianity
He wrote polemics against Christians.[126]
Non-Muslims
Ibn Taymiyyah strongly opposed borrowing from Christianity or other non-Muslim religions. In his text On the Necessity of the Straight Path (kitab iqtida al-sirat al-mustaqim) he preached that the beginning of Muslim life was the point at which "a perfect dissimilarity with the non-Muslims has been achieved." To this end he opposed the celebration of the observance of the birthday of the Islamic prophet Muhammad or the construction of mosques around the tombs of Sufi saints saying: "Many of them (the Muslims) do not even know of the Christian origins of these practices."[131]
Economic views
He elaborated a circumstantial analysis of market mechanism, with a theoretical insight unusual in his time. Regarding the power of supply and demand, Ibn Taymiyyah said, "If desire for goods increases while its availability decreases, its price rises. On the other hand, if availability of the good increases and the desire for it decreases, the price comes down."[132] His discourses on the welfare advantages and disadvantages of market regulation and deregulation, have an almost contemporary ring to them.[133]
Assessment
Salafism
Ibn Taymiyyah is thought by some to be the main influence behind the emergence of Salafism. He placed an emphasis on understanding Islam as it was understood by the salaf (first three generations of Muslims).[39]
Modern Islamism
Various concepts within modern Islamism can be attributed to Ibn Taymiyyah.[19] His influence is noted by Yahya Mochet who says Ibn Taymiyyah "has thus become a sort of forefather of al-Qaeda."[19] One reason for this was his categorising the world into distinct territories: the domain of Islam (dar al-Islam), where the rule is of Islam and sharia law is enforced; the domain of unbelief (dar-al-kufr) ruled by unbelievers; and the domain of war (dar al-harb) which is territory under the rule of unbelievers who are involved in an active or potential conflict with the domain of Islam.[19][134] (Ibn Taymiyyah included a fourth. When the Mongols, whom he considered unbelievers, took control of the city of Mardin[135] the population included many Muslims. Believing Mardin was neither the domain of Islam, as Islam was not legally applied with an armed forces consisting of Muslims, nor the domain of war because the inhabitants were Muslim,[135] Ibn Taymiyyah created a new "composite" category, known as dar al-`ahd.[19][136])
A second concept is making a declaration of apostasy (takfir) against a Muslim who does not obey Islam.[19] But at the same time Ibn Taymiyyah maintained that no one can question anothers faith and curse them as based on one's own desire, because faith is defined by God and the Prophet.[19] He said, rather than cursing or condemning them, an approach should be taken where they are educated about the religion.[19] A further concept attributed to Ibn Taymiyyah is, "the duty to oppose and kill Muslim rulers who do not implement the revealed law (shari'a).[19]
Ibn Taymiyyah's role in the Islamist movements of the twentieth and twenty first century have also been noted by, the previous Coordinator for Counterterrosims at the United States Department of State, Daniel Benjamin who labels the chapter on the history of modern Islamic movements in his book The Age of Sacred Terror, as "Ibn Taymiyya and His children".[39][137] Yossef Rapoport, a reader in Islamic history at Queen Mary, however, says this is not a probable narrative.[39]
Mardin fatwa and the Mardin Conference
One of Ibn Taymiyyah's most famous fatwas is regarding the Mongols who had conquered and destroyed the Abbasid caliphate in 1258 and had, then converted to Islam.[136] Once they were in control of Mardin, they behaved unjustly with their subjects so the people of Mardin asked Ibn Taymiyyah for a legal verdict regarding the classification of the territory under which they live.[136] He categorized the territory as dar al-`ahd which in some ways is similar to dar al-kufr (domain of unbelievers).[136] Included in his verdict was declaring the Mongol ruler Ghazan and other Mongols who did not accept shari'a in full, as unbelievers.[138][139] According to Nettler and Kéchichian, Ibn Taymiyyah affirmed that Jihad against the Mongols, " was not only permissible but obligatory because the latter ruled not according to Sharīʿah but through their traditional, and therefore manmade, Yassa code. This essentially meant that Mongols were living in a state of jāhilīyah (ignorance)."[36] The authors further state that his two famous student, Ibn Qayyim and Ibn Kathir, agreed with this ruling.[36] He called for a defensive jihad to mobilise the people to kill the Mongol rulers and any one who supported them, Muslim or non-Muslim.[19][138] Ibn Taymiyyah when talking about those who support the Mongols said, "Everyone who is with them (Mongols) in the state over which they rule has to be regarded as belonging to the most evil class of men. He is either an atheist (zindīq) or a hypocrite who does not believe in the essence of the religion of Islam. This means that he (only) outwardly pretends to be Muslim or he belongs to the worst class of all people who are the people of the bida` (heretical innovations)."[140] Yahya Mochet says that, Ibn Taymiyyah's call to war was not simply to cause a "rebellion against the political power in place" but to repel an "external enemy".[19]
In 2010 a group of Islamic Scholars at the Mardin conference argued that Ibn Taymiyyah's famous fatwa about the residents of Mardin when it was under the control of the Mongols was misprinted into an order to "fight" the people living under their territory, whereas the actual statement is, "The Muslims living therein should be treated according to their rights as Muslims, while the non-Muslims living there outside of the authority of Islamic Law should be treated according to their rights."[135] They have based their understanding on the original manuscript in the Al-Zahiriyah Library, and the transmission by Ibn Taymiyyah's student Ibn Muflih.[141] The particapents of the Mardin conference also rejected the categorization of the world into different domains of war and peace, stating that the division was a result of the circumstances at the time.[136] The participants further stated that the division has become irrelevant with the existence of nation states.[136]
Works
Ibn Taymiyyah left a considerable body of work, ranging from 350 according to his student Ibn Qayyim Al-Jawziyya[142] to 500 according to his student al-Dhahabi.[36][143] Oliver Leaman says that Ibn Taymiyyah produced some 700 works in the field of Islamic sciences.[33] His scholarly output has been described as immense with a wide scope and its contents "bear the marks of brilliant insights hastility jotted down".[39] It is the case however, that his works are not yet fully understood but efforts are being made, at least in the western languages to gain an adequate understanding of his writings.[39] In his early life, his work was mostly based on theology and the use of reason in interpretation of scriptural evidences, with later works focusing on; refutation of Greek logic, questioning the prevalent practices of the time, and anti-Christian and anti-Shi'i polemics.[39] Ibn Taymiyyah's total works have not all survived and his extant works of thirty five volumes, are incomplete.[39] Extant books and essays written by ibn Taymiyyah include:
- A Great Compilation of Fatwa (Majmu al-Fatwa al-Kubra) This was collected centuries after his death, and contains several of the works mentioned below – Thirty six volumes.
- Minhaj as-Sunnah an-Nabawiyyah (The way of the Prophet's Sunna) – Four volumes.[144]
- al-Aqidah al-Waasitiyyah (The Creed to the People of Wāsiṭ)
- Al-Jawāb al-Ṣaḥīḥ li-man baddala dīn al-Masīh (Literally,"The Correct Response to those who have Corrupted the Deen (Religion) of the Messiah"; A Muslim theologian's response to Christianity) – Seven Volumes.
- Darʾ taʿāruḍ al-ʿaql wa al-naql ("Averting the Conflict between Reason and [religious] Tradition").[145] Also, called Al-Muwāfaqa (Harmony) – Ten volumes.
- al-Aqeedah Al-Hamawiyyah (The Creed to the People of Hama, Syria)
- al-Asma wa's-Sifaat (Allah's Names and Attributes) – Two volumes
- Kitbal al-Iman (Book of faith)
- as-Sarim al-Maslul ‘ala Shatim ar-Rasul—The Drawn Sword against those who insult the Messenger. Written in response to an incident in which Ibn Taymiyyah heard a Christian insulting Muhammad.
- Fatawa al-Kubra
- Fatawa al-Misriyyah
- ar-Radd 'ala al-Mantiqiyyin (The refutation of the Logicians)[19]
- Naqd at-Ta'sis
- al-Uboodiyyah (Subjection to God)
- Iqtida' as-Sirat al-Mustaqim' (Following The Straight Path)
- al-Siyasa al-shar'iyya (The book of governance according to the shari'a)[19]
- at-Tawassul wal-Waseela
- Sharh Futuh al-Ghayb (Commentary on Revelations of the Unseen by Abdul-Qadir Gilani)
- al-Hisba fi al-Islam (The Hisba in Islam) – A book on economics[19]
Some of his other works have been translated to English. They include:
- The Friends of Allah and the Friends of Shaytan
- Kitab al Iman: The Book of Faith
- Diseases of the Hearts and their Cures
- The Relief from Distress
- Fundamentals of Enjoining Good & Forbidding Evil
- The Concise Legacy
- The Goodly Word
- The Madinan Way
- Ibn Taymiyya against the Greek logicians
- Muslims Under Non-Muslim Rule
Lost works
Many of Ibn Taymiyyah's books are thought to be lost. Their existence is known through various reports written by scholars throughout history as well as some treatises written by Ibn Taymiyyah.[146] Some of his notable lost works include:
- al-Bahr al-Muhit – Forty volumes tafsir of the Qur'an (written in the prison of Damascus) – Ibn Hajar al`Asqalani mentions the existence of this work in his book, al-Durar al-Kamina.[146]
See also
Bibliography
- Rapoport, Yossef (9 April 2010). Ibn Taymiyya and His Times. OUP Pakistan. ISBN 0-19-547834-7.
- Hoover, Jon (28 May 2007). Ibn Taymiyya's Theodicy of Perpetual Optimism. Brill. ISBN 9004158472.
Encyclopaedias
- P. J. Bearman, Th. Bianquis, C. E. Bosworth, E. van Donzel, W. P. Heinrichs (ed.). Encyclopaedia of Islam Online. Brill Academic Publishers. ISSN 1573-3912.
References
- ↑ al-Bazzar, The Imam, the Hafidh Abu Hafs ‘Umar bin ‘Ali. "His Upbringing". The Lofty Virtues of Ibn Taymiyyah (PDF). p. 7.
- ↑ al-Bazzar, The Imam, the Hafidh Abu Hafs ‘Umar bin ‘Ali. "His Death and the Immense Crowd That Attended His Funeral". The Lofty Virtues of Ibn Taymiyyah (PDF). p. 32.
- ↑ Al-Matroudi, Abdul Hakim (2006). The Hanbali School of Law and Ibn Taymiyyah. Routledge. p. 53. ISBN 0-415-58707-7.
- 1 2 Ibn Taymiyyah, Ahmad ibn ʻAbd al-Ḥalīm (1999). Kitab Al-Iman. Kuala Lumpur: Islamic Book Trust. ISBN 978-967-5062-28-5. Retrieved 16 January 2015.
- 1 2 "Ibn Taymiyyah". Encyclopedia Britannica. Retrieved 16 January 2015.
- ↑ Halverson, Jeffry R. (2010). Theology and Creed in Sunni Islam. Palgrave Macmillan. p. 48. ISBN 0-230-10279-4.
- ↑ Spevack, Aaron (2014). The Archetypal Sunni Scholar: Law, Theology, and Mysticism in the Synthesis of Al-Bajuri. State University of New York Press. p. 45. ISBN 978-1-4384-5370-5.
- ↑ Jonathan A.C. Brown. "Salafism – Islamic Studies – Oxford Bibliographies". Oxford Bibliographies. Retrieved 10 February 2015.
- 1 2 3 4 5 Haque, Serajul (1982). Imam Ibn Taimiya and his projects of reform. Islamic Foundation Bangladesh.
- ↑ Abu Zayd Bakr bin Abdullah, Madkhal al-mufassal ila fiqh al-Imam Ahmad ibn Hanbal wa-takhrijat al-ashab. Riyadh: Dar al 'Aminah, 2007
- ↑ Reynolds, Gabrield Said (2012). The Emergence of Islam: Classical traditions in contemporary perspective. Minneapolis: Fortress Press. p. 178. ISBN 978-0-8006-9859-1.
- 1 2 Kepel, Gilles, The Prophet and the Pharaoh, (2003), p.194
- ↑ Kepel, Gilles (2003). Jihad: The Trail of Political Islam.
- ↑ "The Battle for Saudi Arabia: Royalty, Fundamentalism, and Global Power – As'Ad Abukhalil – Google Books". Retrieved 2016-02-09.
- 1 2 3 4 5 6 7 8 9 10 Al-Matroudi, Abdul Hakim Ibrahim (2015-02-14). "Ibn Taymīyah, Taqī al-Dīn". Oxford Islamic Studies Online. Oxford University Press. Retrieved February 14, 2015.
- 1 2 3 4 Esposito, John L. (2003). Unholy War: Terror in the Name of Islam. Oxford University Press. p. 45. ISBN 0-19-516886-0.
- 1 2 3 4 5 6 7 8 9 10 11 Al-Matroudi, Abdul-Hakim (2015-02-14). "Ibn Taymīyah, Taqī al-Dīn Aḥmad". Oxford University Press. Retrieved February 14, 2015.
- ↑ An-Na`im, Abdullahi Ahmed (2010). Islam and the Secular State: Negotiating the Future of Shari`a. Harvard University Press. p. 76. ISBN 0-674-03456-2.
- 1 2 3 4 5 6 7 8 9 10 11 12 13 14 15 16 17 18 19 20 21 22 23 24 25 26 27 28 29 30 31 32 Michot, Yahya (2012). The Princeton Encyclopedia of Islamic Political Thought. Princeton University Press. pp. 238–241. ISBN 0-691-13484-7.
- 1 2 3 4 5 6 7 8 9 10 11 12 13 14 Bearman, Peri (2007). The Law Applied: Contextualizing the Islamic Shari'a. I.B.Tauris. pp. 263–264. ISBN 1-84511-736-0.
- 1 2 3 4 5 6 7 8 Hillenbrand, Carole (1999). The Crusades: Islamic Perspectives. Edinburgh University Press. p. 242. ISBN 0-7486-0630-0.
- ↑ Kurdistan
- 1 2 Hastings, James (1908). Encyclopædia of Religion and Ethics. Volume;7. Morrison and Gibb Limited. p. 72.
- ↑ Al-Dhahabi, Muhammad ibn Ahmad. Tadhkirat al-huffaz. Haidarabad. p. 48.
- 1 2 3 4 5 6 7 8 9 10 11 12 13 14 15 16 17 18 19 20 21 22 23 24 25 26 27 28 29 30 31 32 33 34 35 36 37 38 39 40 41 42 43 44 45 46 47 48 49 50 51 52 53 54 55 56 57 58 59 60 61 62 63 64 65 66 67 68 69 70 71 72 73 74 75 76 77 78 Laoust, Henri (2012). ""Ibn Taymiyya." Encyclopaedia of Islam, Second Edition.". BrillOnline. Retrieved 2015-01-28.
- 1 2 3 4 5 6 7 Haque 1982, p. 6.
- ↑ Ernst, Martin, Carl W., Richard C. Rethinking Islamic Studies: From Orientalism to Cosmopolitanism.
- 1 2 3 4 5 6 7 8 9 10 11 12 Michel, Thomas (1985). "Ibn Taymiyya: Islamic Reformer". Studia missionalia. Volume 34. Rome, Italy: Pontificia Università Gregorian.
- ↑ Al-Dimashqi al-Hanbali, Ibn `Abdul-Hadi. Al-'Uqud ad-Dariat. p. 3.
- ↑ Al-Hanbali, Ibn al-`Imad (1932). Shadharat al-Dhahab. Cairo. pp. 385, 383, 404.
- 1 2 Haque 1982, pp. 38–44.
- ↑ Ibn Taimiya, Taqi ad-Din (1996). Sharh Al-Aqeedat-il-Wasitiyah. Dar-us-Salam. p. 9.
- 1 2 3 4 5 6 7 8 9 Leaman, Oliver (2006). The Qur'an: An Encyclopedia. Taylor & Francis. pp. 280–282. ISBN 0-415-32639-7.
- ↑ see aqidatul-waasitiyyah daarussalaam publications
- 1 2 3 Haque 1982, p. 8.
- 1 2 3 4 5 6 7 8 Nettler, Ronald L.; Kéchichian, Joseph A. (2015-02-14). ""Ibn Taymīyah, Taqī al-Dīn Aḥmad." The Oxford Encyclopedia of Islam and Politics". Oxford Islamic Studies Online. Oxford University Press. Retrieved February 14, 2015.
- 1 2 3 4 5 6 Bori, Caterina (2010). "Ibn Taymiyya wa-Jama`atuhu: Authority, Conflict and Consensus in Ibn Taymiyya's Circle". Ibn Taymiyya and His Times. Oxford University Press. ISBN 0-19-547834-7.
- ↑ Schmidt-Leukel, Perry (2007). slam and Inter-Faith Relations: The Gerald Weisfeld Lectures 2006. SCM Press. p. 125. ISBN 0-334-04132-5.
- 1 2 3 4 5 6 7 8 9 10 11 12 13 14 15 16 17 18 19 20 21 Rapoport, Yossef; Ahmed, Shahab (2010). "Introduction". Ibn Taymiyya and His Times. Oxford University Press. ISBN 0-19-547834-7.
- ↑ K. S. Lambton, Ann (2004). "The extinction of the caliphate: Ibn Jama'a and Ibn Taymiyya". State and Government in Medieval Islam: An Introduction to the Study of Islamic Political Theory. Routledge. p. 143. ISBN 0-19-713600-1.
- ↑ Williams Clifford, Winslow (2013). State Formation and the Structure of Politics in Mamluk Syro-Egypt, 648-741 A.H./1250-1340 C.E. V&r Unipress. p. 163. ISBN 3-8471-0091-2.
- 1 2 3 4 Haque 1982, p. 9.
- 1 2 Watt, William Montgomery (2008). Islamic Philosophy and Theology. Transaction Publishers. p. 160. ISBN 0-202-36272-8.
- 1 2 Rougier, Bernard (2008). Everyday Jihad: The Rise of Militant Islam Among Palestinians in Lebanon. Harvard University Press. p. 162. ISBN 0-674-03066-4.
- ↑ Ibn Taymiyyah [Majmoo` al-Fatawa 35/145] إبن تيمية مجموع الفتاوي ٣٥/١٤٥English translation of the Fatwa
- ↑ Lapidus, Ira M. (2012). Islamic Societies to the Nineteenth Century: A Global History. Cambridge University Press. p. 295. ISBN 0-521-73298-0.
- 1 2 3 4 Haque 1982, p. 10.
- ↑ Lebanon Country Study Guide Volume 1 Strategic Information and Developments. Int'l Business Publications. 2012. p. 44. ISBN 0-7397-3913-1.
- 1 2 3 4 5 6 7 8 Hoover, Jon. "Taymiyyan Studies". Retrieved February 14, 2015.
- ↑ "SCHOLARS BIOGRAPHIES \ 8th Century \ Shaykh al-Islaam Ibn Taymiyyah". Fatwa-online.com. Retrieved 2010-06-09.
- 1 2 3 4 5 Aigle, Denise (2007). "The Mongol Invasions of Bilād al-Shām by Ghāzān Khān and Ibn Taymīyah's Three "Anti-Mongol" Fatwas" (PDF). Mamluk Studies Review (The University of Chicago): Page 105. Retrieved January 29, 2015.
- ↑ Hawting, Gerald (2005). Muslims, Mongols and Crusaders. Routledge. p. 116. ISBN 0-7007-1393-X.
- ↑ Janin, Hunt. Islamic Law: The Sharia from Muhammad's Time to the Present by Hunt Janin and Andre Kahlmeyer, McFarland and Co. Publishers, 2007 p.79
- ↑ Kadri, Sadakat (2012). Heaven on Earth: A Journey Through Shari'a Law from the Deserts of Ancient Arabia ... macmillan. p. 187. ISBN 978-0-09-952327-7.
- 1 2 3 4 Haque 1982, p. 11.
- ↑ Haque 1982, p. VII.
- ↑ Jackson, Roy (2006). Fifty Key Figures in Islam. Routledge. p. 130. ISBN 0-415-35468-4.
- ↑ Cooper, Barry (2005). New Political Religions, Or an Analysis of Modern Terrorism. University of Missouri Press. pp. 96–97. ISBN 0-8262-1621-8.
- ↑ Ali, Kecia (2007). Islam: The Key Concepts. Routledge. p. 125. ISBN 0-415-39639-5.
- ↑ Clarke, Lynda (2001). Rationalism in the School of Bahrain: A Historical Perspective, in Shīʻite Heritage: Essays on Classical and Modern Traditions. Global Academic Publishing. p. 336.
- ↑ A. Saleh, Walid (2004). The Formation of the Classical Tafsīr Tradition. Brill Academic Pub. p. 220. ISBN 9004127771.
- ↑ N. Keaney, Heather (2013). Medieval Islamic Historiography: Remembering Rebellion. Routledge. p. 108. ISBN 0-415-82852-X.
- 1 2 Saleh, Walid (2010). "Ibn Tayimiyah and the Rise of Radical Hermeneutics: An Analysis of "An Introduction to the Foundation of Quranic Exegesis". Ibn Taymiyya and His Times. Oxford University Press. ISBN 0-19-547834-7.
- 1 2 3 4 5 6 7 Haque 1982, p. 12.
- 1 2 3 4 5 6 Winter, Michael (2004). The Mamluks in Egyptian and Syrian Politics and Society. BRILL. pp. 191–220. ISBN 9004132864.
- 1 2 3 4 5 Haque 1982, p. 14.
- ↑ George Makdisi, A Sufi of the Qadiriya Order, p 123.
- ↑ Juan Eduardo Campo, Encyclopedia of Islam, p 340. ISBN 1-4381-2696-4
- ↑ Haque 1982, p. 15.
- ↑ `Anhuri, Salim. Majallat al-Majma' al-'Ilmi al-'Arabi bi-Dimashq 27. pp. 11,193.
- 1 2 3 4 Kadri, Sadakat (2012). Heaven on Earth: A Journey Through Shari'a Law from the Deserts of Ancient Arabia …. macmillan. p. 135. ISBN 978-0-09-952327-7.
- 1 2 Laoust, Henri, Essai sur les doctrines sociales et politiques de Taki-d-Din Ahmad b Timiya, Cairo, 1939, pp.149–50
- ↑ Kadri, Sadakat (2012). Heaven on Earth: A Journey Through Shari'a Law from the Deserts of Ancient Arabia ... macmillan. pp. 177–8. ISBN 978-0-09-952327-7.
- ↑ Yahya Michot, [www.saphirnews.com/Pour-une-tombe-a-Damas_a4483.html Pour une tombe a Damas]|Rédigé par Yahya Michot | Jeudi 21 Septembre 2006
- 1 2 3 4 5 6 7 8 9 10 11 Ozervarli, M. Sait (2010). "The Qur'anic Rational Theology of Ibn Taymiyya and his Criticism of the Mutakallimun". Ibn Taymiyya and His Times. Oxford University Press. ISBN 0-19-547834-7.
- 1 2 3 4 Nettler, Ronald L. (2015-02-13). "Ibn Taymīyah, Taqī al-Dīn Aḥmad". Oxford Islamic Studies Online. Oxford University Press. Retrieved February 14, 2015.
- ↑ Matroudi, Abdul Hakim (2006). The Hanbali School of Law and Ibn Taymiyyah: Conflict Or Conciliation. Routledge. p. 203. ISBN 0-415-58707-7.
- ↑ R. Hrair Dekmejian, Islam in Revolution: Fundamentalism in the Arab World, pg. 40. Part of the Contemporary issues in the Middle East series. Syracuse University Press, 1995. ISBN 978-0-8156-2635-0
- ↑ Index of Al Qaeda in Its Own Words, pg. 360. Eds. Gilles Kepel and Jean-pierre Milelli. Harvard University Press, 2008. ISBN 978-0-674-02804-3
- ↑ David Bukay, From Muhammad to Bin Laden: Religious and Ideological Sources of the Homicide Bombers Phenomenon, pg. 194. Transaction Publishers, 2011. ISBN 978-1-4128-0913-9
- ↑ "He has strongly influenced modern Islam for the last two centuries. He is the source of the Wahhābīyah, a strictly traditionist movement founded by Muḥammad ibn ʿAbd al-Wahhāb (died 1792), who took his ideas from Ibn Taymiyyah’s writings. Ibn Taymiyyah also influenced various reform movements that have posed the problem of reformulating traditional ideologies by a return to sources.
- ↑ Esposito, John L. "Ibn Taymiyah". Oxford Islamic Studies Online. Oxford University Press. Retrieved February 13, 2015.
- ↑ Makdisis, Ussama (2010). Faith Misplaced: The Broken Promise of U.S.-Arab Relations: 1820–2001. PublicAffairs. p. 322. ISBN 1-58648-680-2.
- ↑ Dekmejian, R. Hrair (1995). Islam in Revolution: Fundamentalism in the Arab World. Syracuse University Press. p. 40. ISBN 0-8156-2635-5.
- ↑ http://arabic.cnn.com/middleeast/2015/02/04/ibn-taymiyah-islam-quran
- ↑ http://archive.arabic.cnn.com/2013/middle_east/5/31/qardawi.syria-speech/
- ↑ Abdo, Geneive (7 June 2013). "Why Sunni-Shia conflict is worsening". CNN. Retrieved 12 September 2013.
- ↑ ""moderate" commander boosting the morale of his troops by telling them that alawites are more infidels than christians and jews". Liveleak.com. Retrieved 19 August 2015.
- 1 2 3 4 5 Haque 1982, p. 7.
- ↑ Al-Kutubi, Shakir (1881). Fawat al-Wafayat. p. 35.
- ↑ Krawietz, Birgit (2012). Islamic Theology, Philosophy and Law: Debating Ibn Taymiyya and Ibn Qayyim al-Jawziyya. de Gruyter. p. 195. ISBN 3-11-028534-7.
- ↑ Hoover, Jon (2007). Ibn Taymiyya's Theodicy of Perpetual Optimism ([Online-Ausg.]. ed.). Leiden: Brill. pp. xii, 276. ISBN 9789004158474.
- ↑ See Ibn Taymiyya and His Times (Studies in Islamic Philosophy), Oxford University Press, ISBN 0-19-547834-7
- 1 2 3 Kadri, Sadakat (2012). Heaven on Earth: A Journey Through Shari'a Law from the Deserts of Ancient Arabia …. macmillan. pp. 130–1. ISBN 978-0-09-952327-7.
- 1 2 3 Haque 1982, pp. 66-67.
- ↑ Haque 1982, pp. 66–67.
- ↑ Haque 1982, p. 68.
- ↑ Haque 1982, p. 67.
- ↑ Ruth Mas (1998). "Qiyas: A Study in Islamic Logic" (PDF). Folia Orientalia 34: 113–128. ISSN 0015-5675.
- 1 2 De Moor, Aldo (2003). Conceptual Structures for Knowledge Creation and Communication: 11th International Conference on Conceptual Structures. Springer. pp. 16–36. ISBN 3-540-40576-3., pp. 16–36
- 1 2 El-Omari, Racha (2010). "Ibn Taymiyya's Theology of the Sunna through His Polemics with the Ash‘arites.". Ibn Taymiyya and His Times, Proceedings of a Conference Held at Princeton University. Oxford University Press. ISBN 0-19-547834-7.
- 1 2 Opwis, Felicitas Meta Maria (2010). Maṣlaḥah and the Purpose of the Law: Islamic Discourse on Legal Change from the 4th/10th to 8th/14th Century. Brill. p. 189. ISBN 9789004184169.
- 1 2 3 Haque 1982, p. 20.
- 1 2 Haque 1982, p. 21.
- ↑ Haque 1982, pp. 20-21.
- ↑ Haque 1982, pp. 21-24.
- ↑ G. F. Haddad (1996-03-20). "IBN TAYMIYYA ON FUTOOH AL-GHAYB AND SUFISM". Retrieved 2011-03-24.
- ↑ Alshamsi, Mansoor Jassem (2011). Islam and Political Reform in Saudi Arabia: The Quest for Political Change. Routledge. p. 54. Retrieved 19 September 2015.
- ↑ Ibn Taymiyya, Le traite de droit public d'ibn Taimiya. Translated by Henri Laoust. Beirut, 1948, p.12
- 1 2 3 Kadri, Sadakat (2012). Heaven on Earth: A Journey Through Shari'a Law from the Deserts of Ancient Arabia ... macmillan. p. 139. ISBN 978-0-09-952327-7.
- ↑ Kadri, Sadakat (2012). Heaven on Earth: A Journey Through Shari'a Law from the Deserts of Ancient Arabia ... macmillan. pp. 139–40. ISBN 978-0-09-952327-7.
- 1 2 3 Hassan, Mona (2010). "Modern Interpretations and Misinterpretations of a Medieval Scholar: Apprehending the Political Thought of Ibn Taymiyyah.". Ibn Taymiyyah and His Times. Oxford University Press. ISBN 0-19-547834-7.
- 1 2 DeLong-Bas, Natana J. (2004). Wahhabi Islam: From Revival and Reform to Global Jihad (First ed.). New York: Oxford University Press, USA. pp. 252–3. ISBN 0-19-516991-3.
- ↑ Peters, Rudolph (1996). Jihad in Classical and Modern Islam: A Reader. Princeton: Marcus Wiener. p. 48.
- ↑ Bin Bayyah, The Concept of Jihad.
- ↑ Peters, Rudolph (1996). Jihad in Classical and Modern Islam: A Reader. Princeton: Marcus Wiener. p. 52.
- ↑ Esposito, John L. (2015-02-14). "Ibn Taymiyyah, Taqi al-Din Ahmad". Oxford Islamic Studies Online. Oxford University Press. Retrieved February 14, 2015.
- ↑ Hallaq, Wael B. (October 2011). "Ibn Taymiyya Against the Greek Logicians". Oxford Scholarship Online. Retrieved 20 September 2015.
- ↑ "A Muslim Iconoclast (Ibn Taymiyyeh) on the 'Merits' of Jerusalem and Palestine", by Charles D. Matthews, Journal of the American Oriental Society, volume 56 (1935), pp. 1–21. [Includes Arabic text of manuscript of Ibn Taymiyya's short work Qa'ida fi Ziyarat Bayt-il-Maqdis قاعدة في زيارة بيت المقدس]
- ↑ Ibn Taymiyyah, Taqi al-Din (1905). Majmu'at al-Rasail al-Kubra 2. Cairo. pp. 53–63.
- ↑ Ibn Taymiyyah, Taqi al-Din (1903). Minhaj al-Sunna al-Nabawiya 1. Bulaq. p. 132.
- ↑ Ibn Taymiyyah, Taqi al-Din (1908). Majmu'at Fatawa 2. Cairo. p. 185.
- 1 2 Haque 1982, p. 84.
- 1 2 3 4 5 6 7 8 9 Haque 1982, pp. 78–81.
- ↑ Haque 1982, p. 83.
- 1 2 3 Reynolds 2012, p. 174.
- ↑ Kim, Heon Choul (2008). The Nature and Role of Sufism in Contemporary Islam: A Case Study of the Life, Thought and Teachings of Fethullah Gulen. ProQuest. p. 10. ISBN 978-0-549-70579-6.
- ↑ Memon, Muhammad Umar, ed. (1976). Ibn Taimiya's Struggle Against Popular Religion: With an Annotated Translation of His Kitab iqtida as-sirat al-mustaqim mukhalafat ashab al-jahim (reprint ed.). Walter de Gruyter. p. 361. ISBN 9783111662381.
- 1 2 al-Jamil, Tariq (2010). "Ibn Taymiyya and Ibn al-Mutahhar al-Hilli: Shi`a Polemics and the Struggle for Religious Authority in Medieval Islam". Ibn Taymiyyah and His Times. Oxford University Press. ISBN 0-19-547834-7.
- ↑ Marion Holmes Katz (2007). The Birth of The Prophet Muhammad: Devotional Piety in Sunni Islam. Routledge. p. 116. ISBN 978-1-135-98394-9.
- ↑ Muhammad `Umar Memon, Ibn Taymiyya's Struggle against Popular Religion, with an annotated translation of Kitab Iqitada, the Hague, (1976) p.78, 210
- ↑ Hosseini, Hamid S. (2003). "Contributions of Medieval Muslim Scholars to the History of Economics and their Impact: A Refutation of the Schumpeterian Great Gap". In Biddle, Jeff E.; Davis, Jon B.; Samuels, Warren J. A Companion to the History of Economic Thought. Malden, MA: Blackwell. p. 28. doi:10.1002/9780470999059.ch3. ISBN 0-631-22573-0.
- ↑ Baeck, Louis (1994). The Mediterranean tradition in economic thought. Routledge. p. 99. ISBN 0-415-09301-5.
- ↑ Chopra, Ramesh (2005). Encyclopedic Dictionary of Religion (A-F) 1. Isha Books. pp. 211–212. ISBN 8182052858.
- 1 2 3 al-Turayri,, Shaykh Abd al-Wahhab. "The Mardin Conference – Understanding Ibn Taymiyyah’s Fatwa". MuslimMatters. Retrieved 29 May 2011.
- 1 2 3 4 5 6 Bassiouni, M. Cherif (2013). The Shari'a and Islamic Criminal Justice in Time of War and Peace. Cambridge University Press. p. 200. ISBN 1-107-68417-X.
- ↑ Benjamin, Daniel; Simon, Steven (2003). The Age of Sacred Terror: Radical Islam's War Against America. Random House Trade. pp. VI. ISBN 0-8129-6984-7.
- 1 2 Farr, Thomas F. (2008). World of Faith and Freedom: Why International Religious Liberty Is Vital to American National Security. Oxford University Press. p. 227. ISBN 0-19-517995-1.
- ↑ Freeden, Michael (2013). The Oxford Handbook of Political Ideologies. Oxford University Press. p. 633. ISBN 0-19-958597-0.
- ↑ Aaron, David (2008). In Their Own Words. RAND Corporation. p. 46. ISBN 0-8330-4402-8.
- ↑ "A religious basis for violence misreads original principles". The National. Retrieved 2012-10-04.
- ↑ "Ibn Taimiyah". Usc.edu. Retrieved 2010-06-09.
- ↑ M.M. Sharif, A History of Muslim Philosophy, Pakistan Philosophical Congress, p. 798
- ↑ "Ibn Taymiyya's Critique of Shī‘ī Imāmology. Translation of Three Sections of his "Minhāj al-Sunna", by Yahya Michot, The Muslim World, 104/1–2 (2014), pp. 109–149.
- ↑ Jaffer, Tariq (2014-11-28). Razi: Master of Quranic Interpretation and Theological Reasoning. Oxford University Press. p. 118. ISBN 978-0-19-994799-7.
- 1 2 Haque 1982, p. 16.
Further reading
- Kepel, Gilles – Muslim Extremism in Egypt: The Prophet and pharaoh. With a new preface for 2003. Translated from French by Jon Rothschild. Berkeley & Los Angeles: University of California Press, 2003. See pp. 194–199.
- Little, Donald P. – "Did Ibn Taymiyya have a screw loose?", Studia Islamica, 1975, Number 41, pp. 93–111.
- Makdisi, G. – "Ibn Taymiyya: A Sufi of the Qadiriya Order", American Journal of Arabic Studies, 1973
- Sivan, Emmanuel – Radical Islam: Medieval Theology and Modern Politics. Enlarged edition. New Haven & London: Yale University Press, 1990. See pp. 94–107.
- Michot, Yahya – Ibn Taymiyya: Against Extremisms. Texts translated, annotated and introduced. With a foreword by Bruce B. LAWRENCE. Beirut & Paris: Albouraq, 2012, xxxii & 334 p. — EAN 9782841615551.
- Michot, Yahya – Ibn Taymiyya: Muslims under Non-Muslim Rule. Texts translated, annotated and presented in relation to six modern readings of the Mardin fatwa. Foreword by James Piscatori. Oxford & London: Interface Publications, 2006. ISBN 0-9554545-2-2.
- Michot, Yahya – "Ibn Taymiyya's 'New Mardin Fatwa'. Is genetically modified Islam (GMI) carcinogenic?" in The Muslim World, 101/2, April 2011, pp. 130–181.
- Michot, Yahya – "From al-Ma’mūn to Ibn Sab‘īn, via Avicenna: Ibn Taymiyya's Historiography of Falsafa," in F. OPWIS & D. REISMAN (eds.), Islamic Philosophy, Science, Culture, and Religion. Studies in Honor of Dimitri Gutas (Leiden – Boston: Brill, 2012), pp. 453–475.
- Michot, Yahya – "Between Entertainment and Religion: Ibn Taymiyya's Views on Superstition," in The Muslim World, 99/1, January 2009, pp. 1–20.
- Michot, Yahya – "Misled and Misleading… Yet Central in their Influence: Ibn Taymiyya's Views on the Ikhwān al-Safā’," in The Ikhwān al-Safā’ and their Rasā’il. An Introduction. Edited by Nader EL-BIZRI. Foreword by Farhad DAFTARY (Oxford: Oxford University Press, in association with the Institute of Ismaili Studies, Epistles of the Brethren of Purity), 2008, pp. 139–179.
- Michot, Yahya – "Ibn Taymiyya's Commentary on the Creed of al-Hallâj," in A. SHIHADEH (ed.), Sufism and Theology (Edinburgh, Edinburgh University Press, 2007), pp. 123–136.
- Michot, Yahya – "A Mamlûk Theologian's Commentary on Avicenna's Risāla Aḍḥawiyya. Being a Translation of a Part of the Dar’ al-Ta‘āruḍ of Ibn Taymiyya, with Introduction, Annotation, and Appendices, Part I," in Journal of Islamic Studies, 14:2, Oxford, 2003, pp. 149–203.
- Michot, Yahya – "A Mamlûk Theologian's Commentary on Avicenna's Risāla Aḍḥawiyya. Being a Translation of a Part of the Dar’ al-Ta‘āruḍ of Ibn Taymiyya, with Introduction, Annotation, and Appendices, Part II," in Journal of Islamic Studies, 14:3, Oxford, 2003, pp. 309–363.
- Michot, Yahya – "Ibn Taymiyya on Astrology. Annotated Translation of Three Fatwas," in Journal of Islamic Studies, 11/2, Oxford, May 2000, pp. 147–208.
- Michot, Yahya – "Ibn Taymiyya's Critique of Shī‘ī Imāmology. Translation of Three Sections of his Minhāj al-Sunna," in The Muslim World, 104/1–2, Hartford, Jan–April 2014, pp. 109–149.
- Michot, Yahya – "An Important Reader of al-Ghazālī: Ibn Taymiyya," in The Muslim World, 103/1, Hartford, January 2013, pp. 131–160.
External links
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- Why Study...Ibn Taymiyya, with Jon Hoover, University of Nottingham
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- Britannica Concise Encyclopedia
- Fatwa of Mardin by Ibn Taymiyya
- Books by Ibn Taymiyyah
- Collection of internet articles/resources
- The Life, Struggles, Works and Impact of Shaikh ul-Islam Ibn Taymiyyah
- Shaykh ul-Islam Ibn Taymiyyah's letters from prison
- Between Shaykul-Islaam Ibn Taymiyyah and Contemporary Takfiris On The Issue of Rebellion Against Tyranny and Injustice
- Diagram of teachers and students of Ibn Taymiyah
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