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THE
TRADITIONS WERE RECORDED IN THE TIME OF THE PROPHET HIMSELF
The first
written compilations of Traditions were made during the caliphate of Umar ibn
Ad al-Aziz, at the beginning of the second century of Hijra. However, though
all the Traditions that would be collected and arranged in book form were in oral
circulation, most of them had already been recorded in individual collections either by
some Companions or their students.
The
overwhelming majority of the Arabs were unlettered. When the Quran began to be
revealed, a desire to learn to read and write was aroused in them. The Prophet, upon him
be peace and blessings, encouraged them to do so; it is worthy of note that among the
prisoners of war taken at the Battle of Badr those who were literate were released after
each taught ten Muslims how to read and write. It should also be kept in mind that the
first Revelation was the command: Read, in the name of your Lord, Who has created. He
created man from a clot suspended (on the wall of the womb). Read, Your Lord is the
All-Munificent, Who taught (to write) with the pen. He taught man what he had not known
(al-Alaq, 96.1-5).
Despite
the importance attached to knowledge and learning, in the early period of his
Messengership, the Prophet, upon him be peace and blessings, did not allow his Companions
to write down what they heard from him. For example, as related in the Sahih al-Muslim, he
said: Do not write anything belonging to me. Whoever has written something received from
me outside the Quran let him destroy it. This was because it was quite possible that
the Companions might confuse the Quranic verses with the sayings of the Prophet. The
Quranic Revelations were coming and recorded on sheets or on fragments of leather or
wood. Since the Quran was continuing to be revealed, it had not yet been arranged as
a complete book. Therefore, Gods Messenger did not want, as a necessary precaution,
his sayings to be written down beside the Quranic verses. He feared lest people
should be unable to distinguish the Quran from his sayings and ultimately might go
to perdition, as is explicit in the following hadith.
Abu
Hurayra narrates:
Gods
Messenger once came near us while some friends were writing down what they had heard from
him. He asked what they were writing. We are writing what we heard from you,
they answered. The Messenger warned: Do you know that the communities preceding you
went astray because they wrote down from others beside the Book of God.
Another
point worthy of note in this connection is that, as most of the Quranic Revelations
came on different occasions and there are in it concise and sometimes seemingly
ambiguous verses besides the clear and detailed ones, and the allegorical verses
beside the explicit and incontrovertible ones, and also, during an evolving movement
leading to the establishment of a purely Islamic community, some commandments came to
replace earlier ones, so too Gods Messenger, upon him be peace and blessings, spoke
on different particular occasions, and to persons of different temperaments and levels of
understanding, and also to new converts as well as to those who had accepted Islam long
before. For example, when a new convert asked him what the best deed was, he answered that
it was belief and performing the five prescribed prayers. When the same question was asked
when Jihad had priority, the answer came that the best deed was Jihad in the way of God.
Further, since his Message included all times and peoples until the Last Day, he
frequently resorted to allegories, similes, parables and metaphors. All these factors,
besides many others, might have led the Messenger, upon him be peace and blessings, to
forbid certain individuals from writing down his sayings. If everyone had written down or
narrated whatever he heard from or witnessed in Gods Messenger, without being able
to distinguish between the real and metaphorical, between the concrete and the abstract,
between the abrogated and the abrogating, between the general and the particular and
occasional, it would have caused great confusions and misunderstandings. It is because of
the same fear and concern that Umar, may God be pleased with him, sometimes warned
people against careless narration of the Prophetic Traditions.
However,
there are many Traditions which state that Gods Messenger, upon him be peace and
blessings, did allow his Companions to write down his sayings. A time came when the
Companions attained the intellectual and spiritual maturity to distinguish between the
Quran and Hadith, giving to each the attention and importance necessary and
particular to each, and to understand the circumstances relevant to each Tradition, and
Gods Messenger then encouraged them to write down his Traditions.
Abu
Hurayra relates:
Among the
Companions there is no one, except Abdullah ibn Amr ibn al-As, having as
many Traditions as I do. I did not use to write down the sayings of the Prophet, but
Abdullah did.
"Write
down, for, I swear by Him in Whose hand is my life, nothing comes out from this except
truth."
As
reported from himself, Abdullah ibn Amr used to write down whatever he heard
from Gods Messenger, upon him be peace and blessings. Some people said to him:
You are writing down everything coming from the mouth of Gods Messenger. The
Messenger is a human being. There are times when he is angered and times when he is
pleased. Abdullah referred the matter to Gods Messenger, who answered
him, pointing to his mouth: Write down, for, I swear by Him in Whose hand is my life,
nothing comes out from this except truth.
Whether
angered or pleased, Gods Messenger, upon him be peace and blessings, never spoke on
his own; out of personal caprice or whim. Whatever he spoke, is a Revelation [explicit or
implicit] revealed (al-Najm, 53.4). Every word and action of his has some bearing on the
religion of Islam. Therefore, his words and actions had to be recorded. The Companions did
this holy task, either by committing them to memory or writing them down. There is not, in
the world, another person, next to Gods Messenger, whose life is known down to its
minutest details, and has been handed down through generations so accurately. This is why
we should feel indebted to the Companions and the two or three generations after them,
including the great traditionists especially, who recorded his words and actions and
transmitted them to future generations.
A man
came to Gods Messenger and complained about his memory, saying: O Messenger of
God: We hear many things from you. But most of them slip our minds because we cannot
memorize them. Gods Messenger replied: Ask your right hand for help. The
Messenger meant that he should write down what he heard.
When
Rafi ibn Khadij asked Gods Messenger whether they could write what they heard
from him, the answer came: Write, no harm!
As
recorded in the Sunan of al-Darimi, Gods Messenger advised: Record knowledge by
writing.
During
the conquest of Makka, Gods Messenger gave a sermon. A man from the Yemen, named Abu
Shah, stood up and said: O Gods Messenger! Please write down these [words] for
me! The Messenger ordered: Write down for Abu Shah!
Compilation
of the Traditions
Ali,
the fourth Caliph, carried, attached to his sword, a sheet in which were written the
commandments about the blood money to compensate for injuries and the sanctification of
Madina and some other matters. Ibn Abbas left behind a camel-load of books, which
mostly contain what he had heard from Gods Messenger and other Companions.
Gods Messenger sent a letter to Amr ibn Hazm, which contained commandments
about the blood money for murders and injuries and the law of retaliation. This letter was
handed down to his great grandson, Abu Bakr ibn Muhammad. Likewise, a scroll transferred
from Gods Messenger to Abu Rafi was handed down to Abu Bakr ibn Abd
Al-Rahman ibn Harith, belonging to the first generation after the Companions. One of the
leading scholars of this generation, Mujahid ibn Jabr, saw the compilation of
Abdullah ibn Amr, called al-Sahifat al-Sadiqa. Ibn al-Athir, a renowned
historian, writes that this compilation contained around a thousand Traditions. Half of
them were recorded in authentic books of Tradition, with the chain, from Amr ibn
Shuayb, from his father, from his grandfather respectively.
Like Ibn
Abbas, Jabir ibn Abdullah al-Ansari left behind a voluminous book containing
the sayings he had heard from Gods Messenger, upon him be peace and blessings.
Al-Sahifat al-Sahiha is another of the important sources of Hadith from that earliest
period. Hammam ibn Munabbih, the compiler of that Sahifa, followed Abu Hurayra whenever he
went and wrote down the Prophetic sayings reported by him. This compilation has recently
been published by Muhammad Hamidullah, and proven, through carbon dating, to belong to the
period thirteen centuries ago. Almost all of the Traditions contained in it can be found
either in Musnad ibn Hanbal or the Sahihayn, Bukhari and Muslim.
After
these first simple compilations, the Caliph Umar ibn Abd al-Aziz, who
reigned between 99-101 after the Hijra, decided all the authentic Traditions whether in
oral or written circulation, should be compiled into books systematically. He ordered the
governor of Madina, Abu Bakr ibn Muhammad ibn Amr ibn Hazm, to supervise this task.
Muhammad ibn Shihab al-Zuhri, renowned for his profound learning and very keen
intelligence, undertook the task, and acquired the honour of being the first
official compiler of Traditions.
This
movement of official compilation launched by Umar ibn Abd
al-Aziz did not become restricted to the activities of Imam ibn Shihab al-Zuhri in
Madina. The same task was performed by Abd al-Malik ibn Abd al-Aziz ibn
Jurayj in Makka. Said ibn Abi Aruba in Iraq, Awzai in Damascus, Zayd ibn
Qudama and Sufyan al-Thawri in Kufa, Hammad ibn Salama in Basra and Abdullah ibn
al-Mubarak in Khorasan.
Classification of the compiled Traditions
This
period of official and systematic compilation was followed by the period of classification
of the compiled Traditions, done by eminent traditionists such as Abu Dawud al-Tayalisi,
Musaddad ibn Musarhad, al-Humaydi and Ahmad ibn Hanbal, who brought out their Musnads, and
also Abd al-Razzaq ibn Hammam and others who formed their Musannafs. Ibn Abi
Dhib and Imam Malik put the title of al-Muwatta to their books. Yahya ibn
Said al-Qattan and Yahya ibn Said al-Ansari should also be mentioned among the
pre-eminent figures of this period.
The period of the greatest Traditionists
Then came
the period of the greatest traditionists of the history of Islam. The authors of the six
world-famous books of Tradition, namely Bukhari, Muslim, Abu Dawud, Nasai, Tirmidhi,
and Ibn Maja, appeared in this period. These most celebrated persons and some others
almost as illustrious as them like Yahya ibn Main, included in their collections the
most authentic Traditions which they judged according to the most strict criteria. For
example, in order to receive a hadith, Imam Bukhari went to a man who was renowned for his
reliability and piety. Nevertheless, he saw him hold his hat towards his animal as if
there were something in it to eat, to entice it towards himself. Bukhari asked the man
whether there was something in the hat to feed the animal. The man said, No!.
Bukhari left the man without taking the hadith from him, because, in his view, one who
could deceive an animal in this way might also deceive people. Such were the exacting
criteria applied when judging the reliability of narrators.
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The critics of the books of Traditions
In short,
the Prophetic Traditions were either written down or memorized during the time of the
Companions. When the first Islamic century ended, they had a wide circulation, in oral or
written form. Upon the order of Umar ibn Abd al-Aziz, eminent scholars
undertook the first official compilation of ahadith in different centres. The
authentic Traditions were distinguished from fabricated ones with utmost care and
according to most sensitive criteria. Then came the period of classification. It was
followed by the most systematic and accurate compilation or collection accomplished by the
pre-eminent and most famous figures of the science of Hadith. Later, new authentic books
of Traditions were added to them. Also, the illustrious critics of Tradition such as ibn
Hajar al-Asqalani, Ibn Abd al-Barr, Dhahabi, Ibn al-Jawzi and Zayn al-Din al-Iraqi
reviewed all the Traditions and brought about large compendiums about narrators.
The Sunna
of the Prophet, upon him be peace and blessings, has thus been handed down to us through
most reliable channels. No one has the right to cast doubt upon this second source of
Islam, which approaches the Quran in purity, authenticity and unquestionability.
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