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Man la yahduruh alFaqih [Electronic resources] - نسخه متنی

Howard Al-Serat

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Great Shi'i
Works

'Man
la yahduruh al-Faqih'
by Al-Saduq


Dr. I. K. A. Howard
Al-Serat, Vol. 2 (1976), No. 2


The Author


Al-Shaikh al-Saduq is the title given to Abu Ja'far Muhammad b. 'Ali
ibn Babawaih al Qummi. He was the leading traditionist of his time (4th
Century A.H.) and one of the most outstanding traditionists of Shi'ite
Islam. He earned the title of al-Shaikh al-Saduq on account of his great
learning and his reputation for truthfulness. It is a title which he also
shares with his father.


Al-Shaikh 'Ali, the father of the author, was a leading figure among
the scholars of Qumm. By the father's time the family were established as
strong adherents of Shi'ite Islam. However, it is not known how early the
family entered into Islam.[1]
Al-Shaikh al-Saduq is sometimes known as Ibn Babawaih. This is the family
name and indicates the Persian origin of the family. For Babwaih is
an Arabicized version of the Persian form Babuyah.[2]


The date of al-Shaikh al-Saduq's birth is not known exactly. However an
interesting story surrounds the circumstances of his birth. When his
father was in Iraq, he met Abul Qasim al-Husain b. Rawh, the third agent
of the Hidden Imam. During their meeting he asked the latter several
questions. Later he wrote to al-Husain b. Rawh asking him to take a letter
to the Hidden Imam. In this letter he asked for a son. Al-Husain sent back
an answer telling him that they (the Hidden Imam and al-Husain) had prayed
to God to ask Him to grant the request and he would be rewarded with two
sons. Another version of the story says three sons. The elder, or eldest,
of these sons was Muhammad, that is al-Shaikh al-Saduq, our author.


On the basis of this story, early Shi'ite scholars have placed his
birth after the year 305 A.H. probably 306 A.H. For al-Husain b. Rawh was
the agent of the Hidden Imam from 305 A.H. until his death in 326 A.H.
Al-Shaikh al-Saduq was born and grew up in Qumm. He was educated by his
father and came into close contact with all the leading scholars of
Shi'ite Islam in Qumm and studied under many of them.[3]


Qumm was one of centres of the study of Shi'ite traditions and it was
this form of religious learning which held great influence over al-Shaikh
al-Saduq. He travelled widely visiting many cities in search of traditions
and as a result the number of scholars whom he learned traditions from is
considerable. The number is put at 211.


The importance of traditions is emphasized by al-Shaikh al-Saduq and he
quotes traditions against speculative theology. His works reflect this
interest in traditions and nearly all of them take the form of
compilations of traditions. However he did write a creed of Shi'ite Islam
al-I'tiqadat. His pupil, the eminent theologian al-Shaikh al-Mufid,
wrote a correction of this creed Tashih al-i'tiqad where he
criticises him on several points.[4]


The number of al-Shaikh al-Saduq's works is considerable.[5]
Al-Tusi says that they numbered over 300 but list only 43 of them that he
has immediately in his possession, while al-Najashi lists 193 of them.
Curiously enough al-Najashi does not mention the important work Man la
y'ahduruh al-faqih! Many of the works of al-Shaikh al-Saduq have been
lost but a considerable number survive and have been published. There are
also other works not yet published but extant in manuscript form. As has
been mentioned during his life al-Shaikh al-Saduq devoted most of his
energy to the collection and compilation of traditions; he was also a
great teacher of tradition. During the last years of his life al Shaikh'
al Saduq lived in a Rayy. He had been invited there by the Buyid Rukn al
Dawla.[6] He
seems to have been well-treated and honoured there by Rukn al-Dawla and
took part in many discussions with him. However it is reported that his
teaching was eventually restricted by the Buyid Wazir Ibn 'Abbad.
The attack appears to have been aimed at traditions for several Sunni
traditionists also suffered similar restrictions at the hands of Ibn
'Abbad.[7]


Al-Shaikh al-Saduq died in al-Rayy in 381 A.H. and he was buried there.
He was probably more than 70 years of age. He left behind him many
collections of traditions which are of great importance.


Man la yahduruh al-faqih


This work is included in the four major books of the traditions of
Shi'ite Islam Despite the fact that many of his other works are extremely
important, this book must be regarded as his most important work However
some authorities maintain that there were five major books of traditions
and they include another of al Shaikh al Saduq's works Madinat al-'ilm,
in this number.[8]
Al-Tusi mentions that the latter work was bigger than Man la yahduruh
al-faqih.[9] It
appears that this book is no longer existant. It seems to have been
concerned with usul al-din (the principles of religion) rather than the
furu', which are the practical regulations for carrying out the shari'a,
the holy law of Islam.


As its title implies Man la yahduruh al faqih was concerned with
furu'. It has be neatly translated by E. G. Brown as "Every man his
own lawyer"[10] In
his introduction to the book al-Shaikh al-Saduq explains the circumstances
of its composition and the reason for its title. When he was at Ilaq near
Balkh, he met Sharif al-Din Abu 'Abd Allah known as Ni'mah whose full name
was Muhammad b. Al-Husain b. Al-Husain b. Ishaq b. Musa b. Ja'far b.
Muhammad b. Ali b. Al-Husain b. Ali b. Abi Talib. He was delighted with
his discourses with him andh his gentleness, kindness, dignity and
interest in religion. He brought a book compiled by Muhammad b. Zakharia
al-Razi entitled Man la yahduruh al-Talib or "Every man his own
doctor" to the attention of al-Shaikh al-Saduq. He, then, asked him to
compile a book on fiqh (jurisprudence), al-halal Wa-'1-haram
(the permitted and prohibited) al-shara-i' wa-'l-ahkam
(revealed law and (ordinary) laws) which would draw on all the works
which the Shaikh had composed on the subject. This book would be called
Man la yahduruh al-faqih and would function as a work of
reference.[11]


In fact the work represents a definitive synopsis of all the traditions
which al-Shaikh al-Saduq had collected and included in individual books on
specific legal subjects. In the lists of books of al-Shaikh al-Saduq,
individual works are attributed to him on every subject of the furu';
examples are such works as Kitab al-nikah "Book of Marriage" or
Kitab al-hajj "Book of the Pilgrimage". That this was the intention
of both the author and the learned member of Ahl al-bait is emphasised by
the author when he says that Sharif al-Din had asked him for this work
despite the fact that he had copied or heard from him the traditions of
145 books.[12]


Another element in the work that stresses that it was conceived as a
reference book to help ordinary Shi'ites in the practise of the legal
requirements of Islam is the general absence of the isnads for
traditions. The isnads - or the chain of authorities by which the
tradition had been received from the Prophet or one of the Imams - was,
and is, an all-important feature of the science of traditions. Therefore
this book was not meant to be a work for scholars, who would want to check
the authorities. Scholars could check the isnads in the numerous
individual studies compiled by al-Shaikh al-Saduq. This book was a summary
of the study of legal traditions by one of the great scholars of
traditions. Al-Shaikh al-Saduq says that he complied with the request for
him to compile the book "... because I found it appropriate to do so. I
compiled the book without isnads (asanid) so that the chains (of
authority) should not be too many (-and make the book too long-) and so
that the book's advantages might be abundant. I did not have the usual
intention of compilers (of books of traditions) to put forward everything
which they (could) narrate but my intention was to put forward those
things by which I gave legal opinions and which I judged to be correct.[13]


Al-Shaikh al-Saduq also gives an account of some of the earlier works
which he referred to. These works were the books of Hariz b. 'Abd Allah
al-Sijistani - he died during the life time of Imam Ja'far al-Sadiq; the
book of 'Ubaid Allah b. 'Ali al-Halabi - who was also a contemporary of
Imam Ja'far; the books of Ali b. Mahziyar - who took traditions from Imam
'Ali al-Rida, Imam Muhammad al-Jawad and Imam al-Hadi; the books of
al-Husain b. Sa'id - who also heard traditions from those three Imams; the
Nawadir of Ahmad b. Muhammad b. 'Isa - who died in 297 A.H. and
also heard traditions from those three Imams; the Kitab nawadir
al-hikma of Muhammad b. Yahya b. 'Imran al-Ash'ari; Kitab al-rahma
of Sa'd b. 'Abd Allah - who died in 299 A.H. or 301 A.H.; the Jami'
of Muhammad b. al-Hasan - who was one of the teachers of the Shaikh
and died in 343 A.H.; the Nawadir of Muhammad b. Abi 'Umayr - who
died in 218 A.H.; the Kitab al-Mahasin of Ahmad b. Abi 'Abd Allah
al-Barqi (i.e. Ahmad b. Muhammad b. Khalid al-Barqi) who died in 274 A.H.
or 280 A.H. (this book has been published in Teheran); and the Risala
which his father had written to him. The Shaikh goes on to mention
that he also consulted many other works whose names occur in the
book-lists.[14] This
inclusion of the list of some of the works consulted is useful evidence
that the works of both al-Shaikh al-Saduq and his predecessor, al-Kulaini,
who compiled the first of the four major books of Shi'ite traditions,
al-Kafi, represent the culmination of works of traditions which had
been compiled in a continuous process from the earliest times and at least
from the time of Imam Ja'far al-Sadiq.


In addition to these references which the author gives in his
introduction he frequently refers to his own works during the course of
the book. Thus at the end of his Bab nawadir al-hajj (Chapter of
Exceptional Traditions of the Pillgrimage), he says: "I have published
these nawadir with isnads with others in Kitab jami',
nawadir al-hajj."[15]


Another feature of the work is the method used by the author. He does
not leave the traditions to speak for themselves but frequently draws
rules from the traditions or explains their meaning. In a summary of the
various traditions on the pilgrimage, he gives a long outline of all the
rituals which should be performed by the faithful with very few traditions
intervening in his outline.[16]


The book covers most of the points concerned with the furu'
(practices) of fiqh jurisprudence. It is not arranged in
chapters (kutub) but in smaller sections (abwab), with the
various categories such as fasting and pilgrimage following closely after
each other. As indicated, its lack of isnads and al-Shaikh
al-Saduq's own explanations make it an extremely useful compendium of law
for ordinary Shi'ite Muslims of the period.


The book, naturally as one of the four major works of traditions, has
had many commentaries written on it. Among the great Shi'ite writers who
have written such commentaries are al-Sayyid Ahmad b. Zain al-'Abidin
al-'Alawi al-'Amili (died 1060 A.H.) and Muhammad Taqi al-Majlisi al-Awwal
(died 1070 A H ).[17] The
book itself has been recently published in four volumes in Teheran.


Notes:
Cf. "Introduction" by al-Sayyid Hasan al-Musawi al-Khurasan in his
edition of Man la yahduruh al-faqih (4 volumes Teheran, 1390), I,
pages h-w
A. A. Fyzee, A Shi'ite Creed (Calcutta, 1942),
p.8 footnote 2
Cf. al-Sayyid Hasan al-Musawi al-Khurasan,
"Introduction", op cit, I, pages z-t
W. Madelung, "Imamism and Mu'tazilite Theology",
Le Shi'isme Imamite, (Paris 1970), 21
Al-Shaikh al-Tusi, al-Fihrist (Mashhad 1351
A.H.S.), 303
Cited by A. A. Fyzee, op cit., 11, 16
Cited by W. Madelung, op cit., 20
Al-Sayyid Hasan al-Musawi al-Khurasan, op cit.,
page Ar
Al-Shaikh al-Tusi, loc cit
Cited by A. A. Fyzee, op cit., 6
Man la yahduruh al-faqih, I, 2-3
Ibid, I. 3
Ibid
Ibid, I, 3-5
Ibid, II, 311
Ibid, II, 311
For a full list cf. "Introduction", ibid
pages Aba-Ana


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