AL-TABARI By
GF Haddad
Muhammad ibn
Jarir ibn Yazid ibn Kathir, Abu Ja`far al-Tabari
(d. 310), one of the major mujtahid Imams and the founder of a school
of Law
which remained for 150 years after his death, then disappeared. He is
the
author of a massive commentary on the Qur'an; an equally large
universal
history; a biographical history entitled Tarikh al-Rijal; an
encyclopedia of
jurisprudence entitled al-Basit and a medium-sized work entitled Latif
al-Qawl
fi Ahkam Shara'i` al-Islam, which he abridged into a smaller work; a
book on
the dialects and sciences of the Qur'an entitled al-Qira'at wa
al-Tanzil wa
al-`Adad; the unfinished book of al-Fada'il on the immense merits of
the
Companions; al-Manasik on the rituals of Pilgrimage; Sharh al-Sunna
("Explanation
of the Sunna"); al-Musnad ("Narrations With Uninterrupted
Chains"); the unfinished Tahdhib al-Athar ("Classification of
Transmitted Reports"); Tabsir Uli al-Nahi ("Admonishment for the
Wise") for the people of Tabaristan; Ma`alim al-Huda ("Sign-Posts of
Guidance"); Ikhtilaf al-Fuqaha' ("The Differences Among the
Jurists"); Tartib al-`Ulama' ("Classification of the Scholars of
Knowledge") etc. Al-Dhahabi praises the latter book and mentions that
al-Tabari begins it with the rules of conduct for the purification of
the self
and the sayings of the Sufis.
In
one of his classes al-Tabari asked: "What is the status of one who
says:
Abu Bakr and `Umar are not two Imams of guidance?" Ibn al-A`lam
replied:
"He is an innovator." Al-Tabari said: "An innovator? Just an
innovator? Such a person is put to death! Whoever claims that Abu Bakr
and
`Umar are not two Imams of guidance is definitely put to death!"1
Al-Tabari
limited his Tafsir of the Qur'an and his great history to thirty
volumes each
out of compassion for his students, as he originally intended to write
three
hundred volumes respectively. Al-Khatib heard the linguist `Ali ibn
`Ubayd
Allah al-Lughawi say: "Muhammad ibn Jarir spent forty years writing
forty
pages a day." Abu Hamid al-Isfarayini the faqih said: "If a man
travelled all the way to China in order to obtain the Tafsir of
Muhammad ibn
Jarir it would not be too much." This alludes to the hadith narrated
from
the Prophet -- Allah bless and greet him --: "Seek knowledge even as
far
as China."2 Husaynak ibn `Ali al-Naysaburi said the first question Ibn
Khuzayma asked him was: "Did you write anything from Muhammad ibn
Jarir?" Husaynak said no. Why? came the reply. Husaynak said: "He
would not show himself, and the Hanbalis forbade people from going in
to see
him." Ibn Khuzayma said: "You did poorly. To write from him alone
would have been better for you than all those from whom you wrote." Ibn
Khuzayma himself had read al-Tabari's Tafsir in seven months, after
which he
said: "I known not, on the face of the earth, anyone more knowledgeable
than Abu Ja`far [al-Tabari], and the Hanbalis were unjust towards him."3
The
Caliph al-Muktafi requested al-Tabari to write a certain book for him.
When it
was finished, a gift was produced for him but he refused to take it. He
was
told: "You must ask for some need, whatever it is." He replied:
"I ask the Commander of the Faithful to forbid panhandling on the day
of
Jum`a." This was done as he requested.4
In
Ikhtilaf al-Fuqaha' al-Tabari mentions the differences of opinion
between
Malik, al-Awza`i, Sufyan al-Thawri, al-Shafi`i, Abu Hanifah, Abu Yusuf,
Muhammad ibn al-Hasan, and Abu Thawr. He mentions some of the jurists
among the
Companions, the Successors, and their Followers until the second
century. When
he was asked for the reason why he did not mention Imam Ahmad in his
book he
replied that Ahmad was not a jurist (faqih) but a hadith scholar
(muhaddith).
The followers of the Hanbali school disapproved of this and reportedly
roused
the people against him, preventing visitors and students from visiting
him in
the daytime, and he died and was buried in his house.
Al-Tabari's
reply is neither new nor unique of its kind. Several of those who wrote
about
the differences among jurists did not mention Ahmad ibn Hanbal. Among
them:
Al-Tahawi, al-Dabbousi, al-Nasafi, `Ala' al-Din al-Samarqandi,
al-Firahi
al-Hanafi (one of the scholars of the seventh century) in his book Dhat
al-`Uqdayn, and others of the Hanafis who wrote on the subject, all
omitted him.
Ibn al-Fardi said in his chronicle of the scholars of al-Andalus, upon
mentioning Abu Muhammad `Abd Allah ibn Muhammad al-Asili al-Maliki,
that the
latter wrote a book concerning the differences of Malik, al-Shafi`i,
and Abu
Hanifa called al-Dala'il fi Ummahat al-Masa'il ("The Proofs For The
Paramount Questions"). He states:
The author of
Kashf al-Zunun said that Muhammad ibn `Abd
al-Rahman al-Samarqandi al-Sakhawi5 who died in Mardin in 721 in `Umdat
al-Talib li Ma`rifa al-Madhahib ("The Reliance of the Student of the
Knowledge of the Schools") mentioned the differences among jurists and
said in the end: `I placed in my book the views of al-Nu`man [Abu
Hanifa],
Ya`qub [Abu Yusuf], Muhammad [ibn al-Hasan al-Shaybani] and their
excellent
companions, also Shafi`i, Malik, and all in which they differed with
the
Shi`as. May Allah give them life and every reward.' Therefore the
position of
Ahmad in his view is lesser than the Three, and similar to that of
Dawud
al-Zahiri and the Shi`a.6
Nor
did al-Ghazzali, who also wrote about ikhtilaf, mention Ahmad in his
Wajiz; nor
did Abu al-Barakat al-Nasafi in his al-Wafi. As for the authors of
books of
history and geography, Ibn Qutayba did not mention Ahmad in Kitab
al-Ma`arif;
al-Maqdisi does mention him in Ahsan al-Taqasim fi Ashab al-Hadith, but
he does
not include him among the Ashab al-Fiqh, while he includes Dawud
al-Zahiri. Ibn
`Abd al-Barr wrote al-Intiqa' fi Fada'il al-Thalatha al-Fuqaha' ("The
Hand-Picked Excellent Merits of the Three Great Jurisprudent Imams:
Malik,
Shafi`i, and Abu Hanifa"). The anonymous `Umda al-`Arifin ("Reliance
of the Knowers") mentions as the fourth of the Four Imams not Ahmad,
but
Sufyan al-Thawri. Al-Ghazzali said: "He and Ahmad were of the most
famous
Imams for their strong fear of Allah, and for the small number of their
followers. As for now, the School of Sufyan is abandoned, and the
consensus of
the Muslims is around the four known schools." Al-Khatib al-Baghdadi in
his biographies of the scholars of Baghdad, similarly reserves the
highest
level of jurisprudence for al-Shafi`i, while he names Ahmad "the master
of
hadith scholars" (sayyid al-muhaddithin).
Was
al-Tabari a Shafi`i? Abu Muhammad al-Farghani - one of the most
important
narrators of the books of al-Tabari - is reported in the books of
history as
saying: "Harun ibn `Abd al-`Aziz related to me: Abu Ja`far al-Tabari
said
to me: `I have given rulings according to the fiqh of al-Shafi`i for
ten years
in Baghdad, and Ibn Bashshar al-Ahwal (the teacher of Ibn Surayj) took
it from
me.' When al-Tabari's learning increased, his striving and research led
him to
produce all that he produced from among the categories of knowledge in
his
books, and he left nothing except he gave Muslims advice about it." The
authors of the books of biographical layers (Tabaqat) are unanimous
that he is
a mujtahid mutlaq (capable of independent legal reasoning), but they
differ on
the question whether he is also at the same time a follower of the
Shafi`i
school like Abu Thawr, who is considered both a mujtahid mutlaq and a
follower
of al-Shafi`i.7 Al-Asnawi and al-Sharqawi did not mention him in their
biographies of the Shafi`is, while [Abu Ishaq] al-Shirazi says in the
introduction to his "Biographical-Layers [of the Jurists]" that he is
considered outside the Shafi`is. Ahmad Ibn Qasim al-`Abbadi (d.
~1585CE) says
"he is among our scholars" in the Tabaqat al-Shafi`iyyin. Rafi`i in
al-Muharrar says: "Due to his differences, Ibn Jarir is no longer
considered of those in our madhhab, although he is counted among the
layers of
the companions of al-Shafi`i." Nawawi mentions this in Tahdhib al-Asma'
wa
al-Lughat. This important distinction is often overlooked by the
chroniclers
who are interested in enlarging the numbers of their imam's followers
and including
prestigious names among them, such as Ibn Abi Ya`la's inclusion of Abu
`Ubayd
Ibn Sallam in Tabaqat al-Hanabila, and Ibn al-Subki's inclusion of
al-Bukhari
in Tabaqat al-Shafi`iyya.
An
incident was related to have taken place between al-Tabari and some
Hanbalis in
Baghdad over the explanation of the verse of the Exalted Station
[17:79],
whereby al-Tabari reportedly to have recited:
subhana
man laysa lahu anisun wa ma lahu fi `arshihi jalisu
Glory
to Him Who has no comrade
nor companion sitting with Him on
His
Throne!
Upon
hearing this, the account goes, the irate Hanbalis pelted al-Tabari
with their
inkwells and he sought shelter in his house.8 The report seems dubious
in light
of al-Tabari's lengthy defense, in his Tafsir, of Mujahid's narration
of the
Prophet's -- Allah bless and greet him -- seating on the Throne next to
Allah.
Al-Tabari went to great length to show that the report is authentic
from the
perspectives both of transmission and reason as we mentioned in Part
Four of
this book. Furthermore, Ibn al-Jawzi's report is not found anywhere
else. What
is well-established is that the Hanbalis persecuted al-Tabari for
failing to
mention Imam Ahmad in his book as we showed. Another reason mentioned
by
al-Dhahabi, was the antagonism between al-Tabari and the Hanbali Abu
Bakr ibn
Abi Dawud, who falsely accused him of being a Rafidi. May Allah have
mercy on
them. SAN 11:291-301 #2696.
NOTES
1In Ibn
Hajar, Lisan al-Mizan (5:101).
2Narrated
from Anas by al-Bayhaqi in Shu`ab al-Iman and
al-Madkhal, Ibn `Abd al-Barr in Jami` Bayan al-`Ilm, and al-Khatib
through
three chains at the opening of his al-Rihla fi Talab al-Hadith (p.
71-76 #1-3)
where our shaykh Dr. Nur al-Din `Itr declares it weak (da`if). Also
narrated from
Ibn `Umar, Ibn `Abbas, Ibn Mas`ud, Jabir, and Abu Sa`id, all through
very weak
chains. The hadith master al-Mizzi said it has so many chains that it
deserves
a grade of fair (hasan), as quoted by al-Sakhawi in al-Maqasid
al-Hasana.
Al-`Iraqi in his Mughni `an Haml al-Asfar similarly stated that some
scholars
declared it sound (sahih) for that reason, although al-Hakim and
al-Dhahabi
correctly said no sound chain is known for it. Ibn `Abd al-Barr's
"Salafi" editor Abu al-Ashbal al-Zuhayri declares the hadith hasan in
Jami` Bayan al-`Ilm (1:23ff.) but all the above fair gradings actually
apply to
the wording: "Seeking knowledge is an obligation upon every Muslim."
The first to declare this hadith forged is Ibn al-Qaysarani (d. 507) in
his
Ma`rifa al-Tadhkira (p. 101 #118). This grading was kept by Ibn
al-Jawzi in his
Mawdu`at but rejected, among others, by al-Suyuti in al-La'ali'
(1:193),
al-Mizzi, al-Dhahabi in Talkhis al-Wahiyat, al-Bajuri's student Shams
al-Din
al-Qawuqji (d. 1305) in his book al-Lu'lu' al-Marsu` (p. 40 #49), and
notably
by the Indian muhaddith Muhammad Tahir al-Fattani (d. 986) in his
Tadhkira
al-Mawdu`at (p. 17) in which he declares it hasan.
Al-Munawi,
like Ibn `Abd al-Barr, gave an excellent explanation of the hadith in
his Fayd
al-Qadir (1:542). See also its discussion in al-`Ajluni's Kashf
al-Khafa' under
the hadith: "Seeking knowledge is an obligation upon every Muslim,"
itself a fair (hasan) narration in Ibn Majah because of its many chains
as
stated by al-Mizzi, although al-Nawawi in his Fatawa (p. 258) declared
it weak.
Cf. al-Sindi's Hashya Sunan Ibn Majah (1:99) and al-Sakhawi's
al-Maqasid
al-Hasana (p. 275-277).
3Narrated by
Ibn al-Athir in al-Kamil fi al-Tarikh (8:134-136)
[year 310]; al-Khatib in Tarikh Baghdad (2:164); Ibn Kathir in
al-Bidaya
(11:166); and al-Dhahabi in the Siyar (11:294, 297 #2696).
4The Prophet
-Allah bless and greet him - said: "Whoever
begs people for money so that he can accumulate it is asking for a hot
coal.
Therefore let one [who begs] take little, and consider it much."
Narrated
from Abu Hurayra by Muslim and Ahmad. And: "One of you keeps begging
until
when he meets Allah Most High, there is not a piece of flesh left on
his
face." Narrated from Ibn `Umar by Bukhari and Muslim. See the Reliance
of
the Traveller (p. 774, r39.0) for the legal ruling on begging.
5This is not
Ibn Hajar's student Shams al-Din Muhammad ibn `Abd
al-Rahman ibn Muhammad ibn Abi Bakr al-Sakhawi al-Shafi`i, who died in
902 in
Madina and is buried in al-Baqi` near the grave of Imam Malik - may
Allah be
well pleased with them.
6The claim
that Ahmad's jurisprudence is similar to that of the
Shi`a is strange, but its resemblance to the Zahiri school has often
been
suggested.
7Imam
al-Suyuti also described himself as both a mujtahid mutlaq
and a follower of the Shafi`i school in his book al-Radd `Ala Man
Akhlada Ila
al-Ard wa Jahila Anna al-Ijtihada Fi Kulli `Asrin Fard ("The Refutation
of
Those Who Cling to the Earth and Ignore That Scholarly Striving is a
Religious
Obligation in Every Age").
8Frederik
Kern cites this account in his introduction to his
edition of al-Tabari's Ikhtilaf al-Fuqaha' (Cairo, 1902).
Allah's
blessings
and peace on the Prophet, his Family, and his Companions, and Praise
belongs to
Allah, Lord of the worlds.