Mufti
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A mufti (/ˈmʌfti/; Arabic: مفتي muftī; Turkish: müftü) is an Islamic scholar who is an interpreter or expounder of Islamic law (Sharia and fiqh).[1] A muftiate or diyanet is a council of muftis.
According to University of Pennsylvania professor George Makdisi's paper "Scholasticism and Humanism in Classical Islam and the Christian West", https://www.jstor.org/stable/604423, the term mufti is a direct equivalent of the later western term professor, meaning one who is qualified to profess independent opinion on a subject (same as fatwa). According to him, this was the highest level of academic credentials in classical Islamic academic tradition, above mudarris (doctor meaning teacher), and faqih (meaning Master)--a hierarchy later adopted in Western academic tradition.
William Cleveland wrote in his A History of the Modern Middle East that muftis were "experts in Islamic law qualified to give authoritative legal opinions known as fatwas; muftis were members of the ulama establishment and ranked above qadis".
Within Islamic legal schools, a mufti is considered the pinnacle in the hierarchy of scholars because of the advanced training required for the individual aspiring to be a mufti. Originally, muftis were private individuals who gave fatwas informally, regulated their own activities, and determined their own standards of the fatwa institution. A mufti could also be defined as an individual well-grounded in Islamic law.
Qualifications
A mufti will generally go through a course in iftaa, the issuance of fatwa, and the person should fulfill the following conditions set by scholars in order that he may be able to issue verdicts (fatwas):[2]
- Knowing Arabic,
- Mastering the study of principles of jurisprudence,
- Having sufficient knowledge of social realities,[3]
- Mastering the study of comparative religions,
- Mastering the foundations of social sciences,
- Mastering the study of Maqasid ash-Shari`ah (Objectives of Shari`ah),
- Mastering the study of Hadith,
- Mastering legal maxims.
Gallery
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Mufti, Mirza Huseyn Qayibzade of Tbilisi
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Travelling Mufti's of the Ottoman Empire
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Mufti, Jakub Szynkiewicz
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Mufti, Absattar Derbisali
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Ottoman Mufti
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Ottoman Mufti
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Ottoman Mufti
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Tomb of Mufti in Indonesia
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Mufti, Talgat Tadzhuddin
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Mufti delivering a sermon
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Mufti, Ebrahim Desai
See also
References
- ↑ "mufti". thefreedictionary. Retrieved 20 September 2011.
- ↑ Reaching the status of mufti by Abdurrahman ibn Yusuf Mangera.
- ↑ Ask the scholar, Islam online
External links
Look up mufti in Wiktionary, the free dictionary. |
- The ethics of Muftī by Imam Ibn Khaldûn(French)
- "Muftī". Encyclopædia Britannica (11th ed.). 1911.
- "Mufti". New International Encyclopedia. 1905.