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Ebu’l A’la Mevdûdî’nin Hint Altkıtası’ndaki Hadis İnkârcılarını Eleştirisi

Year 2020, , 81 - 98, 30.06.2020
https://doi.org/10.18498/amailad.684171

Abstract

Gelenekçi Müslüman âlimlere göre, Hint Altkıtası’nda hadis inkârcılığının tarihi 19. yüzyıla kadar uzanmaktadır. Onlar, Sör Seyyid Ahmad Han’ı söz konusu bölgede İslam’ın temel kaynaklarından ikincisi olan hadislerin kaynağına ve otoritesine karşı çıkan ilk düşünür olarak kabul ederler. Sör Seyyid Ahmed Han’ın İslam ve onun temel kaynakları hakkındaki görüşlerinde, Batılı araştırmalardan büyük ölçüde etkilendiği bilinen bir gerçektir. O, çalışmalarında Batı’nın nebevî hadislere yaklaşım tarzını takip etmiş, hadislerin kökenini ve gerçekliğini sorgulamıştır. Sör Seyyid Ahmed Han’ın izinden giden Çerağ Ali ve benzeri akademisyenler bu iddiaları, hadislerin reddine götüren yeni argümanlarla geliştirmiş ve desteklemişlerdir. O dönemde Altkıta’nın gelenekçi Müslüman âlimleri, bu yeni doğan harekete dikkat çekmiş ve hadis inkârcılarının teorilerine karşı çıkmışlardır. Bu âlimlerden biri olan Ebu’l-A’la Mevdûdî, bir araştırma dergisi olan Tercemânü’l-Kur’an’da yazdığı yazılarla nebevî hadisleri savunmuş, bununla birlikte, özgün tenkid metodu onu çağdaşı âlimlerden ayırmıştır. Dolayısıyla bu çalışma onun, hadis inkârcılarının iddialarına yönelik araştırmasını ve eleştirel yaklaşımını incelemeyi hedeflemektedir.

References

  • Abdū’l-Munam al-Namar. Tarikhu’l-Islām fī’l-Hind. Leobnon: al- Mūasisatu’l-Jāmia, 1981/1401.
  • Abdū’l-Haī. Nūzhatu’l-Khawātir. 8 Volume. Leobnon: Dār Ibn Hazm, 1419/1999.
  • Abdū’l-Munam al-Namar. Kafāhu’l-Muslimīn fī Tahrīr al-Hind. Egypt: al-Haīatu’l-Misrīa, 1415/1995.
  • Abdu’r-Raūf Zaffar. Ulum al-Hadīth. Lahore: Nashriāt, 2006/1427.
  • Abdur-Rahmān. Mufakir Islām Syed Abu'l-Ala Mawdūdī. Lahore: Islamic Publications, 1418/1988.
  • Abū’l-Afāq. Abu’l-Ala Mawdūdī Sawānih. Lahore: Islamic Publicatioins, 1390/1971.
  • Abu’l-Ala Mawdūdī. Sunnat kī Ainī Haisīat. Lahore: Islamic Publications, 1423/2003.
  • Abu'l-Ala Mawdūdī. Tafhīmāt. 5 Volume. Lahore: Islamic Publications, 1387/1968.
  • Adams, Charles J. Mawdūdī and the Islamic State. New York: Oxford University Press, 1403/1983.
  • Ahmad Amin. Fajru’l-Islām. Leobnon: Dārū’l-Kutāb al-Arabī, 1969/1388.
  • Ahmad Amin. Zūamāū' l-Islāh fī’l-Asril-Hadīth. Egypt: Hindawī Foundation for Education and Culture, 1433/2012.
  • Asim Numānī. Tassawūf avr Tamīri Sīrat. Lahore: Islamic Publication, 1391/1972.
  • Iftikhār Ahmad. Syed Abu'l-Ala Mawdūdī. Faisal Abad: al-Mizān Publisher, 1421/2001.
  • Irfan Ahmed. The Princeton Encyclopedia of Islamic Political Thought (Collective). United State: Princeton University Press, 1434/2013.
  • Khādim Ilāhī Bakhsh. al-Qurānī’ūn. al-Saūdia: Maktabatū’s-Saddīq, 1420/2000.
  • Khurshid Ahmad - Zafar Ishaq Ansari. Mawlānā Mawdūdī: An Introduction to His Life and Thought. Leicester: Islamic Foundation, 1399/1979.
  • Muhammad Luqmān al-Salafī. Ihtimāmu’l-Muhaddīthīn b-Naqdi’l- Hadīth. India: Markaz al-Allama Abdū’l-Aziz b. Baz, 1420/2000.
  • Roy Jackson. Mawlana Mawdūdī and Political Islam: Authority and the Islamic State. United State: Routledge, 1431/2010.
  • Safeer Akhtar. Adeeb avr Adab. Wah cantt: Dārū’l-Maārif, 1418/1998.
  • Salāhu’d-Din Maqbūl Ahmad. Zawābi fī Wajhī’s-Sunna. India: Majmaū’l-Bahūs al-Islāmia, 1411/1991.
  • Sir Syed. Maqālāt. 16 Volume. Lahore: Majlis Taraqī Adab, 1404/1984.
  • Suyūtī, Abdūr-Rahmān. Tadrību’r-Ravī. 2 Volume. al-Riyadh: Maktabtū’l-Kavsar, 1415/1995.
  • Syed Sulaimān Nadvī. Arbūn kī Jihāz Ranī. Azamgarh: Dārū’l- Musannefīn, 1435/2014.
  • Syed Vali Reza Nasir. Mawdūdī and the Making of Islamic Revivalism. New York: Oxford University Press, 1416/1996.
  • Zebiri, Kate. "Review of Maududi and the making of Islamic fundamentalism". Bulletin of the School of Oriental and African Studies. University of London 61/1 (1998), 167-168.

The Critique of Abul A'la Mawdudi on the Hadith Deniers in the Indian Subcontinent

Year 2020, , 81 - 98, 30.06.2020
https://doi.org/10.18498/amailad.684171

Abstract

According to the traditionalist Muslim scholars, the history of the denial of hadīth in the Subcontinent goes back to the 19th century, and they considered Sir Syed Ahmad Khan was the first one who challenged the provenance and authorship of ahādīth. It is a renowned fact that Sir Syed was highly inspired by western research about Islam and its primary sources. Hence, he followed the western approach to the Prophetic ahādīth in his works and put in question the codification and the authenticity of hadith. Mulawī Chiragh Ali and his fellow scholars developed and supported his theories with new arguments that later reached to the denial of hadīth. At that time, the traditionalist Muslim scholars of the Subcontinent paid attention to this new-born temptation and countered the theories of the deniers of hadīth. Syed Mawdūdī was one of them that advocated the Prophetic ahādīth through his research journal Tarjamānu'l-Qurān. However, his unique methodology in criticism distinguished him from his contemporaneous scholars. Therefore, this study deals with his research and critical approach to the theories of the deniers of hadīth. 
Summary
The dating of the western research about the second primary source of Islam could trace back to the nineteenth century which was the beginning of a new era in the west that is known for the systematical research about ahādīth. However, as a result of western research, the Modern Muslim literates over the globe are highly inspired by the sceptical theories of Orientalists regarding the provenance, authorship and legislative position of Prophetic ahādīth. The Subcontinent was one of those regions that welcomed western theories about the second source of Islamic law. Sir Syed Ahmad Khan [d. 1316/1898] was considered the first Muslim scholar that followed the western approach and put in question the codification and the authenticity of ahādīth and stated, that we do not know whether it is related to the Prophet Muhammad or the narrators. Mūlawī Chirāgh Ali [d. 1313/1895] was his alleged student that developed his theories and supported his thoughts with new arguments and concluded that we do not need the principles of ahādīth that differentiate the authentic ahādīth from the week because ahādīth itself are not reliable. 
Consequently, the theories of both teacher and student paved the way to Ahli Qurān movement due to their resemblance regarding the position of ahādīth, and finally Abdullāh Chakrālwī [d. 1333/1914] firmly founded the Jamāat Ahli Qurān and announced his position about ahādīth that only the Holy Qurān revealed to the Prophet Muhammad. Hence, he denied the legal and authoritative position of Prophetic ahādīth. The ideology of Abdullāh Chakrālwī had a significant impact on his fellow and follower scholars which introduced a bulk of scholars that were serving his thoughts in the Subcontinent such as; Mūlawī Ahmadu'd-Din Amritsarī [d. 1355/1936], Mawlānā Aslam J Rajpurī [d. 1375/1955], Allāma Mashriqī [d. 1384/1964], Niāz Fathapurī [d. 1386/1966], Dr. Ghulām Jilānī Barq [d. 1406/1985] and others. They developed their ancestor's theories related to ahādīth and explicitly stated that the Holy Qurān is enough for us.
Ghulām Ahmad Pervīz [d. 1406/1985] was a prominent scholar in the denial of hadith school of thought, who compiled more than sixty books and articles which quenched from Sir Syed and Abdullāh Chakrālwī ideology and denied the historical position of ahādīth. Therefore, he was considered the refounder of the denial of hadith movement after Abdullāh Chakrālwī in the Subcontinent. It is a well-known fact that these scholars used the local Journals and Newspapers as a tool of conveying their thoughts to the public and literate class of the society at that time. On the other hand, the traditionalist Muslim scholars followed the same platform and criticised their theories about ahādīth. 
Syed Abūʾl-Aʿlā Mawdūdī [d. 1399/1979] was one of those scholars who assessed the theories of the deniers of ahādīth through their research articles and countered them with intellectual and traditional arguments. Syed Mawdūdī published a bulk of articles in his research journal Tarjamānu'l-Qurān about the provenance, authoritative and legislative position of Prophetic ahādīth. Most of Syed Mawdūdī's articles are published along with others in his different books. However, the most popular group of his articles is the Sunnat kī Ainī Haisīat which comprises of two parts; the first one is a debate through articles with the renowned advocate of the deniers of ahādīth Dr. Abdu'l-Wadūd which is started from his questionnaire about the legislative position of ahādīth in May 1962, while the second one is about the suspicions and objections of Justice Muhammad Shafi High Court of West Pakistan that he raised in a case about ahādīth in July 1960. 
Syed Mawdūdī countered the famous theory of the deniers of hadith called Markazi Millat, which means that whenever Allah command to the Muslims to obey Allah and his beloved Prophet, it means the Islamic state. He concluded that it is an unreasonable interpretation of the Qurānic verses because if it accepted then, the Imān and Kufr would depend on the obeying of a government, which is antithetical with the real spirit of Islam. Furthermore, he highlighted that due to the nature of the present geographical division, Muslims could not have one governer and the same law. Therefore, how the Muslims over the globe will obey one Markazi Millat or might the command of obedience will consider suspended until the Muslims establish one Markazi Millat in the world, which is illogical.
Furthermore, Syed Mawdūdī criticised the theory about the fabrication of ahādīth. He concluded that it is a bassless argument that Muslim jurists agreed that fabricated ahādīth are the source of Islamic law because there is not any documented evidence or statement of an authoritative scholar regarding it, as well as, he argued that Umar bn. al-Khattāb did not ban the codification of ahādīth due to the fabrication, but he was worried that ahādīth would intermix with the Holy Qurān as Urwa bn. Zubair narrated. Besides, Syed Mawdūdī countered the theory about the schism of Ummah as the deniers of hadith believe that ahādīth could divide Muslims unity. He proved that it is the result of ahādīth that kept the Muslims from disrupting. Otherwise, they could be divided into unlimited sects. Similarly, Syed Mawdūdī assessed the theory regarding the Muhaddithūn and authentic ahādīth, that Muhaddithūn did not rely on the authenticity of ahādīth in their compilations. He concluded that it is against of common sense if they did not depend on it then why they graded it authentic.

References

  • Abdū’l-Munam al-Namar. Tarikhu’l-Islām fī’l-Hind. Leobnon: al- Mūasisatu’l-Jāmia, 1981/1401.
  • Abdū’l-Haī. Nūzhatu’l-Khawātir. 8 Volume. Leobnon: Dār Ibn Hazm, 1419/1999.
  • Abdū’l-Munam al-Namar. Kafāhu’l-Muslimīn fī Tahrīr al-Hind. Egypt: al-Haīatu’l-Misrīa, 1415/1995.
  • Abdu’r-Raūf Zaffar. Ulum al-Hadīth. Lahore: Nashriāt, 2006/1427.
  • Abdur-Rahmān. Mufakir Islām Syed Abu'l-Ala Mawdūdī. Lahore: Islamic Publications, 1418/1988.
  • Abū’l-Afāq. Abu’l-Ala Mawdūdī Sawānih. Lahore: Islamic Publicatioins, 1390/1971.
  • Abu’l-Ala Mawdūdī. Sunnat kī Ainī Haisīat. Lahore: Islamic Publications, 1423/2003.
  • Abu'l-Ala Mawdūdī. Tafhīmāt. 5 Volume. Lahore: Islamic Publications, 1387/1968.
  • Adams, Charles J. Mawdūdī and the Islamic State. New York: Oxford University Press, 1403/1983.
  • Ahmad Amin. Fajru’l-Islām. Leobnon: Dārū’l-Kutāb al-Arabī, 1969/1388.
  • Ahmad Amin. Zūamāū' l-Islāh fī’l-Asril-Hadīth. Egypt: Hindawī Foundation for Education and Culture, 1433/2012.
  • Asim Numānī. Tassawūf avr Tamīri Sīrat. Lahore: Islamic Publication, 1391/1972.
  • Iftikhār Ahmad. Syed Abu'l-Ala Mawdūdī. Faisal Abad: al-Mizān Publisher, 1421/2001.
  • Irfan Ahmed. The Princeton Encyclopedia of Islamic Political Thought (Collective). United State: Princeton University Press, 1434/2013.
  • Khādim Ilāhī Bakhsh. al-Qurānī’ūn. al-Saūdia: Maktabatū’s-Saddīq, 1420/2000.
  • Khurshid Ahmad - Zafar Ishaq Ansari. Mawlānā Mawdūdī: An Introduction to His Life and Thought. Leicester: Islamic Foundation, 1399/1979.
  • Muhammad Luqmān al-Salafī. Ihtimāmu’l-Muhaddīthīn b-Naqdi’l- Hadīth. India: Markaz al-Allama Abdū’l-Aziz b. Baz, 1420/2000.
  • Roy Jackson. Mawlana Mawdūdī and Political Islam: Authority and the Islamic State. United State: Routledge, 1431/2010.
  • Safeer Akhtar. Adeeb avr Adab. Wah cantt: Dārū’l-Maārif, 1418/1998.
  • Salāhu’d-Din Maqbūl Ahmad. Zawābi fī Wajhī’s-Sunna. India: Majmaū’l-Bahūs al-Islāmia, 1411/1991.
  • Sir Syed. Maqālāt. 16 Volume. Lahore: Majlis Taraqī Adab, 1404/1984.
  • Suyūtī, Abdūr-Rahmān. Tadrību’r-Ravī. 2 Volume. al-Riyadh: Maktabtū’l-Kavsar, 1415/1995.
  • Syed Sulaimān Nadvī. Arbūn kī Jihāz Ranī. Azamgarh: Dārū’l- Musannefīn, 1435/2014.
  • Syed Vali Reza Nasir. Mawdūdī and the Making of Islamic Revivalism. New York: Oxford University Press, 1416/1996.
  • Zebiri, Kate. "Review of Maududi and the making of Islamic fundamentalism". Bulletin of the School of Oriental and African Studies. University of London 61/1 (1998), 167-168.
There are 25 citations in total.

Details

Primary Language English
Subjects Religious Studies
Journal Section Research Articles
Authors

Alam Khan 0000-0003-4527-8754

Ali Kuzudişli 0000-0002-2135-5439

Publication Date June 30, 2020
Published in Issue Year 2020

Cite

ISNAD Khan, Alam - Kuzudişli, Ali. “The Critique of Abul A’la Mawdudi on the Hadith Deniers in the Indian Subcontinent”. Amasya İlahiyat Dergisi 14 (June 2020), 81-98. https://doi.org/10.18498/amailad.684171.