Edited by Zahid Ghadialy from the  Book, The life of Muhammad- Haykal 
Despite the great care and precision of the hadith scholars, much of  what they regarded as true was later proved to be spurious.. In his  commentary on the collection of Muslim, al Nawawi wrote: “A number of  scholars discovered many hadiths in the collections of Muslim and  Bukhari which do not fulfill the conditions of verification assumed by  these men.” The collectors attach a greater weight to the  trustworthiness of the narrators (a subjective criteria). Their  criterion was certainly valuable, but it was not sufficient. In our  opinion the criterion for hadith criticisms as well as standard for  materials concerning the prophet life, is the one which prophet himself  gave. He said: “After I am gone differences will arise among you.  Compare whatever is reported to be mine with the book of God; that which  agrees therewith you may accept as having come from me; that which  disagrees you will reject as fabrication.” The great men of Islam right  from the very beginning observe this valid standard. It continues to be  the standard of thinkers today. Ibn Khaldun wrote: “I do not believe any  hadith or report of a companion of the prophet to be true which differs  from the common sense meaning of the Quran, no matter how trustworthy  the narrators may have been. It is not impossible that a narrator  appears to be trustworthy though he may be moved by ulterior motive. If  hadiths were criticized for their textual contents as they were for the  narrators who transmitted them, a great number would have been rejected.  It is a recognized principle that a hadith could be declared spurious  if it departs from the common sense meaning of the Quran from the  recognized principles of Shariah, the rules of Logic, the evidence of  sense, or any other self-evident truth.” This criterion given by prophet  as well as ibn Khaldun, perfectly accords with modern scientific  criticsm.
True, after Muhammad’s death the Muslims  differed, and they fabricated thousands of hadiths and reports to  support their various causes. From the day Abu Luluah, the servant of  Mughirah, killed Umar ibn al Khattab and Uthman ibn Affan assumed  caliphate, the old pre-Islamic enmity of Banu-Hashim and Banu-Ummayah  reappeared. When, upon the murder of Uthman, civil war broke out between  the Muslims, Aishah fought against Ali and Ali’s supporters  consolidated themselves into a party, the fabrication of Hadiths spread  to a point where “Ali ibn Abu Talib himself had to reject the practice  and warn against it. He reportedly said: “We have no book and no writing  to read except the Quran and this sheet which I have received from the  Prophet of God in which he specified the duties prescribed by charity.”  Apparently, this exhortation did not stop the hadith narrators from  fabricating their stories either in support of a cause they advocated,  or of a virtue or practice to which they exhorted the Muslims and which  they thought would have more appeal if vested with prophetic authority.  When Banu Ummayah firmly established themselves in power, their  protagonists among their hadith narrators deprecated the prophetic  traditions reported by the party of Ali ibn Abu talib and the later  defended these traditions and propagated them with all the means at  their disposal. Undoubtedly thy also deprecated the traditions reported  by Aishah, “Mother of the Faithful.”
A humorous piece  of reportage was given to us by ibn Asakir who wrote: “Abu Sa?d Ismail  ibn al Muthanna al Istrabadhi was giving a sermon one day in Damascus  when a man stood up and asked him what he thought about the hadith of  the prophet: “I am the city of knowledge and Ali is its gate.” Abu Sas  pondered the question for a while and then replied: “Indeed! No one  knows of this hadith except those who lived in the first century of  Islam. What the Prophet had said was rather, I am the city of knowledge;  Abu Bakr its foundation; Umar its walls; Uthman its ceiling; and Ali  its Gate.” The audience was quite pleased with his reply and asked him  to furnish them with the chain of narrators. Abu Sad could not furnish  them with the chain of narrators and was embarrassed.” Thus hadiths  were fabricated for political and other purposes. This wanton  multiplication alarmed the Muslims because many ran counter to the book  of God. The attempts to stop this wave of fabrication under the Umawis  did not succeed. When the Abbasids took over, and al Mamun assumed the  caliphate almost two centuries after the death of the Prophet, the  fabricated hadiths numbered in thousands and Hundred of thousands and  contained an unimaginable account of contradiction and variety. It was  then that the collectors applied themselves to the task of putting the  hadiths together and biographers of the prophet wrote his Biography. Al  Waqidi, ibn Hisham and Al madaini lived and wrote their books in the  days of al Mamun. They could not afford to contradict the caliphate and  hence could not apply with the precesion due to 
Prophet’s  criterion that his traditions ought to be checked against the Quran  and accepted only if they accorded therewith.
Had  this criterion, which does not differ from the modern and scientific  criticism, been applied with precision, the ancient masters would have  altered much of their writing. Circumstances of history imposed upon  them the application of it to some of their writings and not to others. The  later generation inherited their method of treating the biography of  the prophet without questioning it. Had they been true to history  they would have applied this criterion in general as well as in detail.  No reported events disagreeing with the Quran would have been spared,  and none would have been confirmed but those that agreed with the book  of the God as well as the laws of nature. Even so, these hadiths would  have subject to strict analysis and established with valid proofs and  incontestable evidence. This stand was taken by the great Muslim  scholars of the Past as well as of the present. The grand shaykh of Al  Azhar, Muhammad Mustafa al Maraghi, wrote in his foreword to the book,  The life of Muhammad by Haykal: “Muhammad- may God’s peace and blessing  be on him had only one irresistible miracle: the Quran. But it is  not irrational. How eloquent is the verse of al Busayri: God did not  try us with anything irrational. Thus, we fell under neither doubt nor  illusion.?”
In his book, Al Islam wa al Nasraniyah,  Muhammad Abduh, the great scholar and leader wrote: “Islam, therefore,  and its demand for faith in God and his unity, depend only on the  rational proof and common sense human thinking. Islam does not overwhelm  the mind with the supernatural, confuse the understanding with the  extraordinary, impose acquiescent silence by resorting to heavenly  intervention, nor does it impede the movement of thought by any sudden  cry of divinity. All the Muslims are agreed, except those hose opinions  are insignificant, that faith in God is prior to faith in prophethood  and that it is not possible to believe in the prophet except after one  has come to believe in God. It is unreasonable to demand faith in God on  the ground that the prophets or the revealed books has said so, for it  is unreasonable to believe that any book has been revealed by God unless  one already believed that God exists and that it is possible for him to  reveal a Book and send a messenger.”
I am inclined to  think that those who wrote Biographies of the Prophet agreed with this  view. The earlier generation of them could not apply to it because of  the historical circumstances in which they lived. The later generation  of them suspended the principle deliberately on account of their belief  that the more miraculous their portrayal of Prophet, the more faith this  would engender among their audience. They assumed, quite naively, that  the inclusion of these extraneous matters into his biography achieved a  good purpose. Had they lived our day and seen how enemies of Islam had  taken their arguments against Islam and its people, they would have  followed the Quran more closely and agreed with al Ghazzali, Muhammad  Abduh al Maraghi, and all other objective scholars. And had they livd  our day and age, and witnessed how their stories have alienated many  Muslim minds and hearts instead of confirming their faith, they would  have satisfied with the indubitable profs and arguments of the Book of  God.
Sunday, May 16, 2010
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