Thursday 13 August 2015

Forum: Imam Shawkani... The Sufi?!


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Imam Shawkani, who is probably one of the most (if not the most) qouted Imam along with IBn Taymiyyah by certain groups of Muslims who ... want to reform Islam to disconnect the Ummah from its great history and tradition

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Thread: Imam Shawkani... The Sufi?!
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10-02-08, 04:25 PM #1
chitownmuslim 
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Imam Shawkani... The Sufi?!
Imam Shawkani, who is probably one of the most (if not the most) qouted Imam along with IBn Taymiyyah by certain groups of Muslims who want to reform Islam, such as la- madhabi's, Salafis, and groups which emerged recently who are trying to disconnect the Ummah from its great history and tradition.. very often using his qoutes and opinions out of context and in a dishonest way.. and in many cases using his works to attack traditional Islam and the discipline of tasawwuf.. what many of these people dont know is that the Imam himself recieved permission from a shaykh to recite Naqshabandi dhikr! Imam Shawkani says in his book "Al-Badr At-Tali'i li Mahasin man Ba'ad Al-Qarn As-Sabi'i", pg. 407, while mentioning the biography of a Naqshabandi Shaykh named Abdul Wahhab bin Ja'afar:

"The Shaykh requested some of my works so I gave him "Ad-Durar" and its commentary "Ad-Darari", and I received from him permission to recite the dhikr of the Naqshabandi tariqa."

يا ربي بالمصطفى بلغ مقاصدنا وأغفر لنا ما مضى يا واسع الكرم

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10-02-08, 04:31 PM #2
RashidD 
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Re: Imam Shawkani... The Sufi?!
So you're blaming salafis for misquoting him and taking him out of context, but you give us one line alone as well?

Tell us, how are you better than them?
"Quis Custodiet Ipsos Custodes"

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10-02-08, 05:16 PM #3
chitownmuslim 
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Re: Imam Shawkani... The Sufi?!
Originally Posted by RashidD 
So you're blaming salafis for misquoting him and taking him out of context, but you give us one line alone as well?

Tell us, how are you better than them?

audhubillah, i never claimed to be "better" than anyone..

there is nothing here to misunderstand or misqoute! nor is it just half the qoute akhi, without showing the other half that changes the meaning of it.. Nothing is missing from the line i qouted and u can check for urself if i changed anything, as i mentioned the source akhi..

Jazak Allahu Khayran
Last edited by chitownmuslim; 10-02-08 at 05:23 PM.

يا ربي بالمصطفى بلغ مقاصدنا وأغفر لنا ما مضى يا واسع الكرم

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10-02-08, 05:19 PM #4
Abu 'Abdullaah 

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Re: Imam Shawkani... The Sufi?!
What does permission to recite a dhikr mean?

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10-02-08, 05:27 PM #5
chitownmuslim 
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Re: Imam Shawkani... The Sufi?!
Originally Posted by Abu 'Abdullaah 
What does permission to recite a dhikr mean?

It basically means that a person takes the tariqa from a Sufi Shaykh.. and taking a tariqa entails that one is to recite a set of daily awrad and dhikr..

يا ربي بالمصطفى بلغ مقاصدنا وأغفر لنا ما مضى يا واسع الكرم

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10-02-08, 06:25 PM #6
Abu 'Abdullaah 
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Re: Imam Shawkani... The Sufi?!
Surely one doesn't need permission from a Shaykh to make dhikr?

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10-02-08, 08:37 PM #7
Um Abdullah 
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Re: Imam Shawkani... The Sufi?!
so?
and your claim that he is the most quoted after Ibn Taimiyyah rahimahu Allah is false.

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10-02-08, 09:36 PM #8
Ibn Sina 

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Re: Imam Shawkani... The Sufi?!
Yeah, I haven't seen many quotes from Imam Shawkani (rh) .... I'd say Ibn Hajar (rh) would be next after Ibn Taymiyyah (rh) for that ....

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10-02-08, 10:39 PM #9
chitownmuslim 
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Re: Imam Shawkani... The Sufi?!
Originally Posted by Um Abdullah 
so?

so what?

and your claim that he is the most quoted after Ibn Taimiyyah rahimahu Allah is false.

again this is what i said:

Imam Shawkani, who is probably one of the most (if not the most) qouted Imam along with IBn Taymiyyah
Imam Shawkani is very heavily qouted by Salafis sister.. in my humble opinion, Imam Shawkani, alongside Ibn Taymiyya, Ibn Qayyim, and a few other alims are the most qouted by Salafiyyah.. and unfortunately, many times they qoute these alims out of context or qoute something they say early in their life which changed later on..

EXAMPLE:

Salafis mention the fact that Imam Shawkani made takfeer of Ibn Arabi, author of Futoohat Makkiya.. but what they dont mention is that this was his opinion early in his life and that later he changed his opinion about Ibn Arabi and believed that his statements were not to be understood literally but metaphorically..

يا ربي بالمصطفى بلغ مقاصدنا وأغفر لنا ما مضى يا واسع الكرم

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11-02-08, 11:27 AM #10
Um Abdullah 
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Re: Imam Shawkani... The Sufi?!
Originally Posted by chitownmuslim 
so what?

I meant "so what if he took the dhikr on the way of naqshabandi or if he was sufi"
we quote him in matters he was correct in, or to show that he also supported an opinion which you consider wrong or deviant and attack us for.
same as ash'aris and sufis quote Ibn Taimiyyah and other ahl assunnah scholars to prove something they believe or opinion of theirs.

Imam Shawkani is very heavily qouted by Salafis sister.. in my humble opinion, Imam Shawkani, alongside Ibn Taymiyya, Ibn Qayyim, and a few other alims are the most qouted by Salafiyyah.. and unfortunately, many times they qoute these alims out of context or qoute something they say early in their life which changed later on..

EXAMPLE:

Salafis mention the fact that Imam Shawkani made takfeer of Ibn Arabi, author of Futoohat Makkiya.. but what they dont mention is that this was his opinion early in his life and that later he changed his opinion about Ibn Arabi and believed that his statements were not to be understood literally but metaphorically..
I haven't seen him quoted as heavily as you make it sound, maybe some people you came across but I haven't come across Salafis quoting him heavily.

And until now I haven't come across that example of yours, the group whom have salafi aqeedah whom I have seen taking quote out of context or taken with misunderstanding and without verification, are ahl al hadeeth of subcontinent, may Allah guide them.
but I've seen that once or twice.

oh and one tampering by a professor in Riyadh on his own, no one ordered him to do that nor did he get permission, and when they found out that he tampered with the book of adkhar by an Nawawi rahimahu Allah, he was rebuked, and the book was returned to its original form without any tamperings, but unfortunatly the tampered version spread amongest people, and was translated to English. I dont' know if the translators knew it was a tampered version or not, but we assume good of people unless we have evidence to the contrary.

The incident was mentioned in shaikh Abdul Qadir al Arnaut's (rahimahu Allah) website.

also, your shaikh G. F. Haddad has distorted translation\text and made several false accusations against our shaikhs in his writings, you will find a few examples in my blog, and there are more, I might put them up in the near future insha Allah so people won't be fooled by his lies.
Last edited by Um Abdullah; 11-02-08 at 11:29 AM.

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11-02-08, 12:49 PM #11
Hekmaa 
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Re: Imam Shawkani... The Sufi?!
Originally Posted by chitownmuslim 
It basically means that a person takes the tariqa from a Sufi Shaykh.. and taking a tariqa entails that one is to recite a set of daily awrad and dhikr..

This is not true, you do not need to be part of the Tareeqah to perform Awraad from that Tareeqah, or to pass on those awrad to others.

If the one of the pious shuyukh from the Tareeqah give a person the ijazah for a certain wird, they can give it to them without ba'iah or without them joining tareeqah.

Secondly, how Shaiykh ul Islam Ibn Taymiyah RA followed Tasawuf and how Allama Shawkani RA follow Tasawuf is very different to how some 'sufis' follow it today.

When Shaiykh ul Islam came out of the prison and he met Ibn 'ata Allah iskandari in Cairo and Ibn 'ata Allah explained how they believed in Tasawuf, which was zuhd, Tazkiyah etc, none of this rubbish we see today, Shaiykh ul Islam said there is no difference in that between the salaf. The difference is in whirling dervish and in Music, and giving bai'ah to women and having mixed dhkir etc.

So yes the imam did do dkhir of the Naqshbandi Tareeqah, but that Naqshbandi and Kabbani and co two very different worlds.

If We Had Perfect Power Like Allah Subhanahu wa Ta 'ala To Determine Our Destinies, and Perfect Vision Like Allah Subhanahu wa Ta 'ala To See The Future and Know What Is Best For Us, We Would Choose Exactly The Fate That Allah Chose For Us.

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11-02-08, 05:12 PM #12
salahuldin786 

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Re: Imam Shawkani... The Sufi?!
His admirers cite this jurist and hadith master of the Hanbali school as an enemy of Sufis, and he is the principal authority in the campaign of "Salafis" responsible for creating the present climate of unwarranted fanaticism and encouragement to ignorance regarding tasawwuf. Yet Ibn Taymiyya was himself a Sufi. However, "Salafis" are careful never to show the Sufi Ibn Taymiyya, who would severely hamper their construction of him as purely anti-Sufi.

Ibn Taymiyya's discourse on tasawwuf is riddled with contradictions and ambiguities. One might say that even though he levelled all sorts of judgments on Sufis, he was nevertheless unable to deny the greatness of tasawwuf upon which the Community had agreed long before he came along. As a result he is often observed slighting tasawwuf, questioning his Sufi contemporaries, and reducing the primacy of the elite of Muslims to ordinariness, at the same time as he boasts of being a Qadiri Sufi in a direct line of succession to Shaykh `Abd al-Qadir al-Gilani, as we show in the lines that follow.

It should be clear that the reason we quote the following evidence is not because we consider Ibn Taymiyya in any way representative of tasawwuf. In our view he no more represents tasawwuf than he represents the `aqida of Ahl al-Sunna. However, we quote his views only to demonstrate that his misrepresentation by Orientalists and "Salafis" purely as an enemy of tasawwuf does not stand to scrutiny. Regardless of the desires of one group or another, the facts provide clear evidence that Ibn Taymiyya had no choice but to accept tasawwuf and its principles, and that he himself not only claimed to be a Sufi, but also to have been adorned with the cloak (khirqa) of shaykhhood in the Qadiri Sufi Order.

We have already mentioned Ibn Taymiyya's admiration for `Abd al-Qadir Gilani, to whom he gives the title "my Shaykh" (shaykhuna) and "my Master" (sayyidi) exclusively in his entire Fatawa. Ibn Taymiyya's sufi inclinations and his reverence for `Abd al-Qadir Gilani can also be seen in his hundred-page commentary on Futuh al-ghayb, covering only five of the seventy-eight sermons of the book, but showing that he considered tasawwuf essential within the life of the Islamic community.1

In his commentary Ibn Taymiyya stresses that the primacy of the Shari`a forms the soundest tradition in tasawwuf, and to argue this point he lists over a dozen early masters, as well as more contemporary shaykhs like his fellow Hanbalis, al-Ansari al-Harawi and `Abd al-Qadir, and the latter's own shaykh, Hammad al-Dabbas:The upright among the followers of the Path - like the majority of the early shaykhs (shuyukh al-salaf) such as Fudayl ibn `Iyad, Ibrahim ibn Adham, Ma`ruf al-Karkhi, al-Sari al-Saqati, al-Junayd ibn Muhammad, and others of the early teachers, as well as Shaykh Abd al-Qadir, Shaykh Hammad, Shaykh Abu al-Bayan and others of the later masters -- do not permit the followers of the Sufi path to depart from the divinely legislated command and prohibition, even were that person to have flown in the air or walked on water.2

Elsewhere also, such as in his al-Risala al-safadiyya, Ibn Taymiyya defends the Sufis as those who belong to the path of the Sunna and represent it in their teachings and writings:The great shaykhs mentioned by Abu `Abd al-Rahman al-Sulami in Tabaqat al-sufiyya, and Abu al-Qasim al-Qushayri in al-Risala, were adherents of the school of Ahl al-Sunna wa al-Jama`a and the school of Ahl al-hadith, such as al-Fudayl ibn `Iyad, al-Junayd ibn Muhammad, Sahl ibn `Abd Allah al-Tustari, `Amr ibn `Uthman al-Makki, Abu `Abd Allah Muhammad ibn Khafif al-Shirazi, and others, and their speech is found in the Sunna, and they composed books about the Sunna.3

In his treatise on the difference between the lawful forms of worship and the innovative forms, entitled Risalat al-`ibadat al-shar`iyya wal-farq baynaha wa bayn al-bid`iyya, Ibn Taymiyya unmistakably states that that the lawful is the method and way of "those who follow the Sufi path" or "the way of self-denial" (zuhd) and those who follow "what is called poverty and tasawwuf", i.e. the fuqara' and the Sufis:The lawful is that by which one approaches near to Allah. It is the way of Allah. It is righteousness, obedience, good deeds, charity, and fairness. It is the way of those on the Sufi path (al-salikin), and the method of those intending Allah and worshipping Him; it is that which is travelled by everyone who desires Allah and follows the way of self-denial (zuhd) and religious practice, and what is called poverty and tasawwuf and the like.4

Regarding `Abd al-Qadir's teaching that the salik or Sufi wayfarer should abstain from permitted desires, Ibn Taymiyya begins by determining that Abd al-Qadir's intention is that one should give up those permitted things which are not commanded, for there may be a danger in them. But to what extent? If Islam is essentially learning and carrying out the Divine command, then there must be a way for the striver on the path to determine the will of Allah in each particular situation. Ibn Taymiyya concedes that the Qur'an and Sunna cannot explicitly cover every possible specific event in the life of every believer. Yet if the goal of submission of will and desire to Allah is to be accomplished by those seeking Him, there must be a way for the striver to ascertain the Divine command in its particularity.

Ibn Taymiyya's answer is to apply the legal concept of ijtihad to the spiritual path, specifically to the notion of ilham or inspiration. In his efforts to achieve a union of his will with Allah's, the true Sufi reaches a state where he desires nothing more than to discover the greater good, the action which is most pleasing and loveable to Allah. When external legal arguments cannot direct him in such matters, he can rely on the standard Sufi notions of private inspiration (ilham) and intuitive perception (dhawq):If the Sufi wayfarer has creatively employed his efforts to the external shar`i indications and sees no clear probability concerning his preferable action, he may then feel inspired, along with his goodness of intention and reverent fear of Allah, to choose one of two actions as superior to the other. This kind of inspiration (ilham) is an indication concerning the truth. It may be even a stronger indication than weak analogies, weak hadiths, weak literalist arguments (zawahir), and weak istisHaab which are employed by many who delve into the principles, differences, and systematizing of fiqh.5

Ibn Taymiyya bases this view on the principle that Allah has put a natural disposition for the truth in mankind, and when this natural disposition has been grounded in the reality of faith and enlightened by Qur'anic teaching, and still the striver on the path is unable to determine the precise will of Allah in specific instances, then his heart will show him the preferable course of action. Such an inspiration, he holds, is one of the strongest authorities possible in the situation. Certainly the striver will sometimes err, falsely guided by his inspiration or intuitive perception of the situation, just as the mujtahid sometimes errs. But, he says, even when the mujtahid or the inspired striver is in error, he is obedient.

Appealing to ilham and dhawq does not mean following one's own whims or personal preferences.6 In his letter to Nasr al-Manbiji, he qualifies this intuition as "faith-informed" (al-dhawq al-imani). His point is, as in the commentary to the Futuh, that inspirational experience is by nature ambiguous and needs to be qualified and informed by the criteria of the Qur'an and the Sunna. Nor can it lead to a certainty of the truth in his view, but what it can do is give the believer firm grounds for choosing the more probably correct course of action in a given instance and help him to conform his will, in the specific details of his life, to that of his Creator and Commander.7

Other works of his as well abound in praise for Sufi teachings. For example, in his book al-ihtijaj bi al-qadar, he defends the Sufis' emphasis on love of Allah and their voluntarist rather than intellectual approach to religion as being in agreement with the teachings of the Qur'an , the sound hadith, and the imja` al-salaf:As for the Sufis, they affirm the love (of Allah), and this is more evident among them than all other issues. The basis of their Way is simply will and love. The affirmation of the love of Allah is well-known in the speech of their early and recent masters, just as it is affirmed in the Book and the Sunna and in the agreement of the Salaf.8

Ibn Taymiyya is also notorious for his condemnation of Ibn `Arabi. However, what he condemned was not Ibn `Arabi but a tiny book of his entitled Fusus al-hikam, which forms a single slim volume. As for Ibn `Arabi's magnum opus, al-Futuhat al-makkiyya (The Meccan divine disclosures), Ibn Taymiyya was no less an admirer of this great work than everyone else in Islam who saw it, as he declares in his letter to Abu al-Fath Nasr al-Munayji (d. 709) published in his the volume entitled Tawhid al-rububiyya of his Fatawa:I was one of those who, previously, used to hold the best opinion of Ibn `Arabi and extol his praise, because of the benefits I saw in his books, such as what he said in many of his books, for example: al-Futuhat, al-Kanh, al-Muhkam al-marbut, al-Durra al-fakhira, Matali` al-nujum, and other such works.9

Ibn Taymiyya goes on to say he changed his opinions, not because of anything in these books, but only after he read the Fusus.

We now turn to the evidence of Ibn Taymiyya's affiliation with the Qadiri Sufi Way and to his own acknowledgement, as related by his student Ibn `Abd al-Hadi (d. 909), that he had received the Qadiri khirqa or cloak of authority from `Abd al-Qadir al-Gilani through a chain of three shaykhs. These are no other than the three Ibn Qudamas who are among the established authorities in fiqh in the Hanbali school. This information was brought to light by George Makdisi in a series of articles published in the 1970s.10

In a manuscript of the Yusuf ibn `Abd al Hadi al-Hanbali entitled Bad' al 'ilqa bi labs al khirqa (The beginning of the shield in the wearing of the Sufi cloak), Ibn Taymiyya is listed within a Sufi spiritual genealogy with other well known Hanbali scholars. The links in this genealogy are, in descending order:

`Abd al-Qadir al-Gilani (d. 561)

Abu `Umar ibn Qudama (d. 607)
Muwaffaq al Din ibn Qudama (d. 620)
Ibn Abi `Umar ibn Qudama (d. 682)

Ibn Taymiyya (d. 728)

Ibn Qayyim al Jawziyya (d. 751)

Ibn Rajab (d. 795)(Both Abu `Umar ibn Qudama and his brother Muwaffaq al-Din received the khirqa directly from Abd al-Qadir himself.)

Ibn Taymiyya is then quoted by Ibn `Abd al Hadi as affirming his Sufi affiliation both in the Qadiri order and in other Sufi orders:I have worn the Sufi cloak of a number of shaykhs belonging to various tariqas (labistu khirqata at tasawwuf min turuqi jama'atin min al shuyukhi), among them the Shaykh `Abd al-Qadir al Jili, whose tariqa is the greatest of the well known ones.Further on he says:The greatest Sufi Way (ajall al-turuq) is that of my master (sayyidi) `Abd al-Qadir al Jili, may Allah have mercy on him.11

Further corroboration comes from Ibn Taymiyya in one of his own works, as quoted in his al Mas'ala at tabriziyya:labistu al khirqata al-mubarakata li al Shaykh `Abd al-Qadir wa bayni wa baynahu ithanI wore the blessed Sufi cloak of `Abd al-Qadir, there being between him and me two shaykhs.12

Ibn Taymiyya thus affirms that he was an assiduous reader of Ibn `Arabi's al-Futuhat al-makkiyya; that he considers `Abd al-Qadir al-Gilani his shaykh -- he even wrote a commentary on the latter's Futuh al-ghayb; and that he belongs to the Qadiriyya order and other Sufi orders. What does he say about tasawwuf and Sufis in general?

In his essay entitled al-Sufiyya wa al-fuqara' and published in the eleventh volume (al Tawassuf) of his Majmu`a fatawa IbnTaymiyya al Kubra, he states:The word sufi was not well-known in the first three centuries but its usage became well-known after that. More than a few Imams and shaykhs spoke about it, such as Ahmad ibn Hanbal, Abu Sulayman al Darani, and others. It has been related that Sufyan al-Thawri used it. Some have also mentioned that concerning Hasan al Basri.13

Ibn Taymiyya then goes on to deduce that tasawwuf originated in Basra among the generations after the tabi`in, because he finds that many of the early Sufis originated from there while he does not find evidence of it elsewhere. In this way he mistakenly reduces tasawwuf to a specific place and time, cutting it off from its links with the time of the Prophet and the Companions. This is one the aberrant conclusions which gives rise, among today's "Salafis," to questions such as: "Where in the Qur'an and the Sunna is tasawwuf mentioned?" As Ibn `Ajiba replied to such questioners:The founder of the science of tasawwuf is the Prophet himself to whom Allah taught it by means of revelation and inspiration.14 By Allah's favor, we have put this issue to rest in our lengthy exposition on the proofs of tasawwuf in the pages above.

Ibn Taymiyya continues:Tasawwuf has realities (haqa'iq) and states of experience (ahwal) which the Sufis mention in their science... Some say that the Sufi is he who purifies himself from anything which distracts him from the remembrance of Allah and who becomes full of reflection about the hereafter, to the point that gold and stones will be the same to him. Others say that tasawwuf is safeguarding of the precious meanings and leaving behind pretensions to fame and vanity, and the like. Thus the meaning of sufi alludes to the meaning of siddiq or one who has reached complete Truthfulness, because the best of human beings after prophets are the siddiqin, as Allah mentioned in the verse:Whoever obeys Allah and the Apostle, they are in the company of those on whom is the grace of Allah: of the prophets, the truthful saints, the martyrs and the righteous; ah, what a beautiful fellowship! (4:69)

They consider, therefore, that after the Prophets there is no one more virtuous than the Sufi, and the Sufi is, in fact, among other kinds of truthful saints, only one kind, who specialized in asceticism and worship (al-sufi huwa fi al haqiqa naw`un min al-siddiqin fahuwa al-siddiq alladhi ikhtassa bi al zuhdi wa al '`ibada). The Sufi is "the righteous man of the path," just as others are called "the righteous ones of the `ulama" and "the righteous ones of the emirs"...[Here Ibn Taymiyya denies the Sufis' claim that they represent Truthfulness after the Prophets, and he makes their status only one among many of a larger pool of truthful servants. This stems from his earlier premise that tasawwuf originated later and farther than the Sunna of the Prophet. We have already mentioned that this premise was incorrect. All of the Sufis consider that the conveyors of their knowledge and discipline were none other than the Companions and the Successors, who took it from none other than the Prophet himself. In this respect the Sufis and the great Companions and Successors are not differentiated in essence, although they are differentiated in name, by which precedence is given to the Companions and the Successors according to the hadith of the Prophet.

Then Ibn Taymiyya arbitrarily separates Sufis and scholars into two seemingly discrete groups, whereas we have seen that all the Sufis were great scholars, and that many of the greatest scholars were Sufis. Al-Junayd anticipated such high-handed distinctions in his famous statement: "This knowledge of ours is built of the Qur'an and the Sunna." Also addressing this important mistake in his Tabaqat al-kubra, Sha`rani quotes al-Junayd and goes on to state:Every true Sufi is a scholar is Sacred Law, though the reverse is not necessarily true.15]Some people criticized the Sufis and said that they were innovators and out of the Sunna... but the truth is that they are exercising ijtihad in view of obeying Allah just as others who are obedient to Allah have also done. So from them you will find the Foremost in Nearness (al-sabiq al-muqarrab) by virtue of his striving, while some of them are from the People of the Right Hand... and among those claiming affiliation with them, are those who are unjust to themselves, rebelling against their Lord. These are the sects of innovators and free-thinkers (zindiq) who claim affiliation to the Sufis but in the opinion of the genuine Sufis, they do not belong, for example, al-Hallaj.[Here Ibn Taymiyya's inappropriate citing of al-Hallaj is far more symptomatic of his own misunderstanding of tasawwuf that it is illustrative of the point he is trying to make. In reality, as `Abd al-Qahir al-Baghdadi said of al-Hallaj, "his case (among the Sufis) is not clear, though Ibn `Ata' Allah, Ibn Khafif, and Abu al-Qasim al-Nasir Abadi approved of him."16 Furthermore, we have already mentioned that major scholars in Ibn Taymiyya's own school rejected the charges leveled against al-Hallaj, and even considered him a saint, such as Ibn `Aqil and Ibn Qudama. Can it be that Ibn Taymiyya was unaware of all these positions which invalidate his point, or is he merely affecting ignorance?]Tasawwuf has branched out and diversified and the Sufis have become known as three types:

Sufiyyat al haqa'iq: the Sufis of Realities, and these are the ones we mentioned above;
Sufiyyat al arzaq: the funded Sufis who live on the religious endowments of Sufi guest-houses and schools; it is not necessary for them to be among the people of true realities, as this is a very rare thing
Sufiyyat al rasm: the Sufis by appearance only, who are interested in bearing the name and the dress etc.17
About fana' -- a term used by Sufis literally signifying extinction or self-extinction -- and the shatahat or sweeping statements of Sufis, Ibn Taymiyya says:This state of love is characterize many of the People of Love of Allah and the People of Seeking (Ahl al irada). A person vanishes to himself in the object of his love -- Allah through the intensity of his love. He will recall Allah, not recalling himself, remember Allah and forget himself, take Allah to witness and not take himself to witness, exist in Allah, not to himself. When he reaches that stage, he no longer feels his own existence. That is why he may say in this state: ana al haqq (I am the Truth), or subhani (Glory to Me!), and ma fi al-jubba illa Allah (There is nothing in this cloak except Allah), because he is drunk in the love of Allah and this is a pleasure and happiness that he cannot control...

This matter has in it both truth and falsehood. Yet when someone enters through his fervor a state of ecstatic love (`ishq) for Allah, he will take leave of his mind, and when he enters that state of absentmindedness, he will find himself as if he is accepting the concept of ittihad (union with Allah). I do not consider this a sin, because that person is excused and no one may punish him as he is not aware of what he is doing. The pen does not condemn the crazed person except when he is restored to sanity (and commits the same act). However, when he is in that state and commits wrong, he will come under Allah's address:O Our Lord, do not take us to task if we forget or make mistakes (2:286), There is no blame on you if you unintentionally make a mistake.18

The story is mentioned of two men whose mutual love was so strong that one day, as one of them fell in the sea, the other one threw himself in behind him. Then the first one asked: "What made you fall here like me?" His friend replied: "I vanished in you and no longer saw myself. I thought you were I and I was you"... Therefore, as long as one is not drunk through something that is prohibited, his action is accepted from him, but if he is drunk through something prohibited (i.e. the intention was bad) then he is not excused.19

The above pages show the great extent of Ibn Taymiyya's familiarity with the broad lines of tasawwuf. Such knowledge was but part of the complete education of anyone who had a claim to learning in his day and before his time. It did not constitute something extraneous or foreign to the great corpus of the Islamic sciences. And yet, similarly to his case in `aqida which we have unravelled in the previous pages, Ibn Taymiyya's misunderstanding of tasawwuf massively outweighed his understanding of it. This point was brought to light with quasi-surgical precision by the great Sufi Shaykh Ibn `Ata' Allah in the debate he held with Ibn Taymiyya in the mosque of al-Azhar in Cairo.

--------------------------------------------------------------------------------

1 The commentary is found in volume 10:455-548 of the first Riyadh editionof the Majmu` fatawa Ibn Taymiyya.

2 Majmu` fatawa Ibn Taymiyya 10:516.

3 Ibn Taymiyya, al-Safadiyya (Riyad: matabi` hanifa, 1396/1976) 1:267.

4 Ibn Taymiyya, Majmu`at al-rasa'il wa al-masa'il (Beirut: lajnat al-turath al-`arabi) 5:83.

5 Majmu` fatawa Ibn Taymiyya 10:473-474.

6 Ibid. 10:479.

7 Ibn Taymiyya, Majmu`a al-rasa'il wal-masa'il 1:162.

8 Ibn Taymiyya, al-Ihtijaj bi al-qadar (Cairo: al-matba`a al-salafiyya, 1394/1974) p. 38.

9 Ibn Taymiyya, Tawhid al-rububiyya in Majmu`a al-Fatawa al-kubra (Riyad, 1381) 2:464-465.

10 George Makdisi, "L'isnad initiatique soufi de Muwaffaq ad-Din ibn Qudama," in Cahiers de l'Herne: Louis Massignon (Paris: Editions de l'Herne, 1970) p. 88-96; "Ibn Taimiya: A Sufi of the Qadiriya Order," in American Journal of Arabic Studies I (Leiden: E.J. Brill, 1974) p. 118-129; "The Hanbali School and Sufism," in Boletin de la Asociacion Espanola de Orientalistas 15 (Madrid, 1979) p. 115-126.

11 Ibn `Abd al Hadi, Bad' al 'ilqa bi labs al khirqa, ms. al-Hadi, Princeton Library Arabic Collection, fols. 154a, 169b, 171b 172a; and Damascus University, copy of original Arabic manuscript, 985H.; also mentioned in at Talyani, manuscript Chester Beatty 3296 (8) in Dublin, fol. 67a.

12 Manuscript Damascus, Zahiriyya #1186 H.

13 Ibn Taymiyya, Majmu`a al-fatawa al-kubra 11:5.

14 Ibn `Ajiba, Iqaz al-himam p. 6.

15 al-Sha`rani, al-Tabaqat al-kubra 1:4.

16 `Abd al-Qahir al-Baghdadi, Usul al-din p. 315-16.

17 Ibn Taymiyya, Majmu`a al-fatawa al-kubra 11:16-20.

18 Op. cit. 2:396 397.

19 Op. cit. 10:339.

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12-02-08, 08:20 AM #13
al faqeer 
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Re: Imam Shawkani... The Sufi?!
Originally Posted by Um Abdullah 
I meant "so what if he took the dhikr on the way of naqshabandi or if he was sufi"
we quote him in matters he was correct in, or to show that he also supported an opinion which you consider wrong or deviant and attack us for.
same as ash'aris and sufis quote Ibn Taimiyyah and other ahl assunnah scholars to prove something they believe or opinion of theirs.

I haven't seen him quoted as heavily as you make it sound, maybe some people you came across but I haven't come across Salafis quoting him heavily.

And until now I haven't come across that example of yours, the group whom have salafi aqeedah whom I have seen taking quote out of context or taken with misunderstanding and without verification, are ahl al hadeeth of subcontinent, may Allah guide them.
but I've seen that once or twice.

oh and one tampering by a professor in Riyadh on his own, no one ordered him to do that nor did he get permission, and when they found out that he tampered with the book of adkhar by an Nawawi rahimahu Allah, he was rebuked, and the book was returned to its original form without any tamperings, but unfortunatly the tampered version spread amongest people, and was translated to English. I dont' know if the translators knew it was a tampered version or not, but we assume good of people unless we have evidence to the contrary.

The incident was mentioned in shaikh Abdul Qadir al Arnaut's (rahimahu Allah) website.

also, your shaikh G. F. Haddad has distorted translation\text and made several false accusations against our shaikhs in his writings, you will find a few examples in my blog, and there are more, I might put them up in the near future insha Allah so people won't be fooled by his lies.

Yeah

You handpick what suits your khalafi aqeedah , then claim it to be the way of the Salaf  .

oldest trick in the khalafi book .

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12-02-08, 12:41 PM #14
Um Abdullah 
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Re: Imam Shawkani... The Sufi?!
Originally Posted by al faqeer 
Yeah

You handpick what suits your khalafi aqeedah , then claim it to be the way of the Salaf  .

oldest trick in the khalafi book .

sufis do the same thing

and we don't mention his opinions to prove that we are on haqq, because our beliefs are not based on his opinions rahimahu Allah.

read again what I said:

or to show that he also supported an opinion which you consider wrong or deviant and attack us for.
we already have Salaf who had same beliefs as ours.

The Aqeedah (Beliefs) of the Pious Salaf
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12-02-08, 12:52 PM #15
al faqeer 
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Re: Imam Shawkani... The Sufi?!
Originally Posted by Um Abdullah 
sufis do the same thing

and we don't mention his opinions to prove that we are on haqq, because our beliefs are not based on his opinions rahimahu Allah.

read again what I said:

we already have Salaf who had same beliefs as ours.

Sorry lady , but you need to get your facts straight .

Your beliefs are not based on that of Muhammad ibn Abdillah PBUH , its based upon M abdulwahab instead Ibn Taymiyah and Al albani and the gang all as a whole from the khalad who all hand picked from the salaf and said : 'this is what the salaf followed'  .

You have 0 salaf with your beliefs , you have hand picked beliefs from what they believed .

easy to prove you are really khalafis not salafis  .

I can accommodate u if u like ?

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12-02-08, 01:37 PM #16
Um Abdullah 
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Re: Imam Shawkani... The Sufi?!

إذا نطق السفيه فلا تجبه فخير من إجابته السكوتُ
فإن كلمته فرَّجت عنه وإن خلَّيتَهُ كَمَداً يَمُوتُ

When the foolish one speaks, do not reply to him,
For better than a response (to him) is silence;

And if you speak to him you have aided him,
And if you left him (with no reply),
in extreme sadness he dies!

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12-02-08, 02:53 PM #17
chitownmuslim 
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Re: Imam Shawkani... The Sufi?!
Originally Posted by Um Abdullah 
I meant "so what if he took the dhikr on the way of naqshabandi or if he was sufi"
Then ur whole rejection of tasawwuf as a legit Islamic tradition is baseless and weak, because nearly every great alim for the past 14 centuries was a Sufi!

we quote him in matters he was correct in, or to show that he also supported an opinion which you consider wrong or deviant and attack us for.
same as ash'aris and sufis quote Ibn Taimiyyah and other ahl assunnah scholars to prove something they believe or opinion of theirs.

Exactly what I was trying to say! thanks for proving my point.. Salafis, go around searching in the books of alims for qoutes which agree or somewhat agree with them, and present it as the alims opinion without mentioning background or details about the alim which may change the meaning of his opinion or qoute..

example:
Salafis qoute Imam Izz bin Abdus Salam's negative opinion of Ibn Arabi which he expressed in one of his books, and do not mention that the Imam himself was a Shaykh of tasawwuf who believed that dhikr of the Lafzul Jalala (saying: "Allah, Allah, Allah..) is among the greatest of dhikrs.. or qoute Imam Suyuti's opinion on delving into imlul Kalam and mantiq without mentioning the fact the Shaykh himself was a Ash'ari..

I haven't seen him quoted as heavily as you make it sound, maybe some people you came across but I haven't come across Salafis quoting him heavily.

he is qouted heavily ukhti.. ive come across many Salafis who qoute his opinions on controversial matters such as following madhabs, the mawlid, etc..

And until now I haven't come across that example of yours, the group whom have salafi aqeedah whom I have seen taking quote out of context or taken with misunderstanding and without verification, are ahl al hadeeth of subcontinent, may Allah guide them.
but I've seen that once or twice.

Ive came across MANY, even from the Middle East.. and i think the root of this problem is that Salafis just grab the books of scholars and read them on their own without bothering to sit with a Shaykh who has ijaza in the book, or is at least knowledgable, and they handpick the stuff they want, and leave out important stuff..

oh and one tampering by a professor in Riyadh on his own, no one ordered him to do that nor did he get permission, and when they found out that he tampered with the book of adkhar by an Nawawi rahimahu Allah, he was rebuked, and the book was returned to its original form without any tamperings, but unfortunatly the tampered version spread amongest people, and was translated to English. I dont' know if the translators knew it was a tampered version or not, but we assume good of people unless we have evidence to the contrary.

sis, plz dont get me started on that! It is well known how much the Salafis have tampered with the books of Ahlus Sunnah and deleted qoutes which were problematic to them..

also, your shaikh G. F. Haddad has distorted translation\text and made several false accusations against our shaikhs in his writings, you will find a few examples in my blog, and there are more, I might put them up in the near future insha Allah so people won't be fooled by his lies.

Shaykh G.F. Haddad is not my Shaikh ukhti, although I do think he's a knowledgable scholar in matters of fiqh and aqida.

يا ربي بالمصطفى بلغ مقاصدنا وأغفر لنا ما مضى يا واسع الكرم

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12-02-08, 03:02 PM #18
chitownmuslim 
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Re: Imam Shawkani... The Sufi?!
Originally Posted by Hekmaa 
This is not true, you do not need to be part of the Tareeqah to perform Awraad from that Tareeqah, or to pass on those awrad to others.

Yup that is true, and I know that.. I meant to say in the specific case of Imam Shawkani, it seemed from what he said, that he recieved all the awrad of that tariqa..

Secondly, how Shaiykh ul Islam Ibn Taymiyah RA followed Tasawuf and how Allama Shawkani RA follow Tasawuf is very different to how some 'sufis' follow it today.
emphasis on the word "some".. there are some deviant Sufis who've done a LOT of harm to the name of tasawwuf, i dont deny that at all.. however this does not mean that the whole discipline of tasawwuf should be thrown away, or that we think negative of all Sufis..

When Shaiykh ul Islam came out of the prison and he met Ibn 'ata Allah iskandari in Cairo and Ibn 'ata Allah explained how they believed in Tasawuf, which was zuhd, Tazkiyah etc, none of this rubbish we see today, Shaiykh ul Islam said there is no difference in that between the salaf. The difference is in whirling dervish and in Music, and giving bai'ah to women and having mixed dhkir etc.

good example, I agree..

So yes the imam did do dkhir of the Naqshbandi Tareeqah, but that Naqshbandi and Kabbani and co two very different worlds.

I cant comment on that, as I am not in any way affiliated with the Haqqani tariqa, or Kabbani, nor do I agree with everything they say or do..

يا ربي بالمصطفى بلغ مقاصدنا وأغفر لنا ما مضى يا واسع الكرم

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12-02-08, 03:13 PM #19
chitownmuslim 
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Re: Imam Shawkani... The Sufi?!
Originally Posted by Um Abdullah 
sufis do the same thing
we already have Salaf who had same beliefs as ours.

nope.. name one person of the Salaf who said that Allah (swt) is sitting on the throne haqeeqatan, bila kayf..

or that Allah (swt) moves, or that he is touching the throne, or that he speaks when he likes and is quiet when he likes.. or that he moves down from above the throne to earth, or that he has literal hands, fingers, face, shins, etc..

يا ربي بالمصطفى بلغ مقاصدنا وأغفر لنا ما مضى يا واسع الكرم

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12-02-08, 05:17 PM #20
Um Abdullah 
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Re: Imam Shawkani... The Sufi?!
same old false claims.
I can sit and reply to you all day, but I am not going to, becuase it will be the same thing, long arguments and fights.

insha Allah in future I will have my quotes of Salaf and Imams of sunnah compiled in one place and ready translated for everyone to see.

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12-02-08, 05:21 PM #21
chitownmuslim 
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Re: Imam Shawkani... The Sufi?!
Originally Posted by Um Abdullah 
same old false claims.
I can sit and reply to you all day, but I am not going to, becuase it will be the same thing, long arguments and fights.

insha Allah in future I will have my quotes of Salaf and Imams of sunnah compiled in one place and ready translated for everyone to see.

LoL.. false claims?

ok ukhti, you can just admit that their are no khabars from the salaf, with sahih isnads, of them saying this stuff..

يا ربي بالمصطفى بلغ مقاصدنا وأغفر لنا ما مضى يا واسع الكرم

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12-02-08, 07:24 PM #22
Um Abdullah 
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Re: Imam Shawkani... The Sufi?!
laugh as much as you like, soon you will see, insha Allah.

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13-02-08, 05:33 AM #23
al faqeer 
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Re: Imam Shawkani... The Sufi?!
Originally Posted by Um Abdullah 

إذا نطق السفيه فلا تجبه فخير من إجابته السكوتُ
فإن كلمته فرَّجت عنه وإن خلَّيتَهُ كَمَداً يَمُوتُ

When the foolish one speaks, do not reply to him,
For better than a response (to him) is silence;

And if you speak to him you have aided him,
And if you left him (with no reply),
in extreme sadness he dies!

Nah its more like i struck a nerve in a Khalafi head 

Which is easy to do since their whole school is so easy to tear apart .
here let me re type what i said to Rub the salt in your khalafi wounds .

Sorry lady , but you need to get your facts straight .

Your beliefs are not based on that of Muhammad ibn Abdillah PBUH taught , its based upon M abdulwahab instead Ibn Taymiyah and Al albani and the gang all as a whole from the khalaf who all hand picked from the salaf and said : 'this is what the salaf followed' .

You have 0 salaf with your beliefs , you have hand picked beliefs from what they believed .

easy to prove you are really khalafis not salafis .

I can accommodate u if u like ?

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13-02-08, 05:35 AM #24
al faqeer 
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Re: Imam Shawkani... The Sufi?!
Originally Posted by Um Abdullah 
laugh as much as you like, soon you will see, insha Allah.

Look in a mirror lady , Imam Mahdi a.s. wont be a M abdulwahab or Albani or Taymiyaah follower thats for sure .

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13-02-08, 10:47 AM #25
Ibn Khattab   
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Re: Imam Shawkani... The Sufi?!
subhnallah bro have some respect for your sisters in the deen.

Obviously there are differences but we shouldnt go so deep into such that we insult each other, lets have some adab inshallah.

Watch this: http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=nvM7L5Wm7q0

‎"If she's not on the deen, she's not fit to be your queen. If he hasn't got imaan, he's not fit to be your man."

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13-02-08, 11:07 AM #26
al faqeer 
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Re: Imam Shawkani... The Sufi?!
Originally Posted by Ibn Khattab 
subhnallah bro have some respect for your sisters in the deen.

Obviously there are differences but we shouldnt go so deep into such that we insult each other, lets have some adab inshallah.

What was bad adab ?

Take it easy .

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