Beseeching for Help (Istighathah)

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Beseeching for Help (Istighathah) Author:
Publisher: Minhaj-ul-Quran Publications
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Beseeching for Help (Istighathah)

Author: Dr Muhammad Tahir-ul-Qadri
Publisher: Minhaj-ul-Quran Publications
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Beseeching for Help (Istighathah)

Beseeching for Help (Istighathah)

Author:
Publisher: Minhaj-ul-Quran Publications
English

Note:

1-This Book is written be a Ahl-e-Sunnat Well-Known Scholar about this issue.

2- We have changed the title of who the writer named them in english.

Chapter 6: Purging Disblelief in Muhammad

Allāh has conferred infinite blessings on the followers of the Holy Prophet(Peace Be Upon Him and His Household) . One of these blessings is their impossibility to return to disbelief after embracing Islam. It happened in the past that the followers of a particular prophet returned to their earlier state of ignorance and disbelief after his death. But this shall not happen to the followers of the Holy Prophet(Peace Be Upon Him and His Household) . The Prophet of Allāh(Peace Be Upon Him and His Household) in the last days of his earthly sojourn had himself declared that he had no fears that his followers will relapse into disbelief after his death. As Muslims, we should reflect on his words. The Prophet(Peace Be Upon Him and His Household) who was sent to this world to quash disbelief and all forms of impermissible innovation, who is our primary source of guidance and who is our ultimate means of salvation, is saying that he has no doubts lurking in his mind about our steady and irreversible belief, while we are hurling allegations of disbelief at one another to cater to our false sense of superiority or to pamper our egotism based on prejudice and sheer stubbornness. What could be more unfortunate than this mutual incrimination?

It is narrated in a tradition:

‘Uqbah bin ‘Āmir has narrated: The Prophet (Peace Be Upon Him and His Household) one day went (to Uhud) and offered prayer for the natives (martyrs) of Uhud as it is (generally) offered for the dead. Then he returned to the pulpit and said: ‘I am your forerunner and I am a witness on you. By Allāh! I am right now seeing the basin of my fountain ( kawthar ), and I have been handed over the keys of the treasures of the earth (or the keys of the earth). I swear on Allāh, I have no fears that after me you will return to disbelief but I am apprehensive that you will try to outdo each other in acquiring worldly goods.’ [1]

This is a statement made by the Prophet(Peace Be Upon Him and His Household) himself. He has sworn on Allāh about his followers that they will not revert to disbelief. The Prophet’s words call for deep reflection and serious soul-searching. We brush aside the Prophet’s statement when we accuse one another of disbelief. This tradition has been reproduced by Imām Muslim[2] and Imām Ahmad bin Hambal[3]. Repeated references to this tradition by people of such calibre and prestige, and our dogged defiance of its contents are nothing but harrowing unawareness of the real spirit of our faith.

Istighāthah , which has been established as a valid act in Islam by countless Qur’ānic injunctions and authentic and certified traditions and which has been practised by the large majority of Muslims, is now turned into a matter of dispute and controversy, and is now being used as a convenient ploy to not only indulge in incriminating one another in disbelief but also to give vent to our personal frustrations. If we care to reflect on his words and statements, we will come to realise that to insist on the illegality of beseeching for help, either as a doctrine or in some of its actual applications, especially when its legality has been conclusively established both by the Qur’ān and thesunnah , is nothing but religious perversity. Tens of statements made by the Holy Prophet(Peace Be Upon Him and His Household) are witness to the fact that to call someone for help other than Allāh is quite consistent with Qur’ānic commands and the Prophet’s statements.

As it is reported by ‘Amr bin Shu‘ayb that his grandfather says: we were present in the company of the holy Prophet(Peace Be Upon Him and His Household) when messengers from Hawāzin tribe came and said, “O Muhammad! We belong to the same origin and tribe, and the trouble we are facing is not hidden from you, therefore, have mercy on us.” The holy Prophet(Peace Be Upon Him and His Household) replied, “Opt one of the two choices; either take away your property and wealth or have your women freed.” They opted for their women and children. Then the Messenger of Allāh(Peace Be Upon Him and His Household) added: as far as my share and the share of ‘Abd-ul-Muttalib and his children (in the spoils) is concerned, I have already given it to you. But when I have performed the noon prayer, you should all stand up and say:

Through the means of the Messenger of Allāh (Peace Be Upon Him and His Household) we seek help for our women and children from believers (or Muslims). [4]

The narrator says that when people had finished their prayer, they repeated the same words as the Prophet(Peace Be Upon Him and His Household) had advised them. These words were uttered by the sacred tongue of the holy Prophet(Peace Be Upon Him and His Household) himself and he uttered them in the form of a command. Therefore, this tradition furnishes a cogent justification for the act of beseeching for help.

Figurative relation between belief and disbelief

To hold the holy Prophet(Peace Be Upon Him and His Household) and the saints and pious people of Allāh in reverence and to beseech them for help is quite compatible with the basic principles of Islamic faith. But sometimes the petitioners, while addressing these favourites of Allāh, employ words, which are reserved only for Allāh and, therefore, according to some religious scholars, commit disbelief. This conclusion is based on a fundamental misconception as these scholars fail to draw the vital distinction between the literal and figurative sense of these words. They interpret these modes of address or the vocative forms in a literal sense and thus wring a perverse conclusion from them. It is an admitted fact that these modes of address are used only for Allāh in their absolute sense, therefore, to use them for any other creature is obviously disbelief and for a Muslim it is simply inconceivable. Thus a basic distinction must be drawn between their literal and figurative meaning. The literal sense applies to Allāh alone and no creature, whether he is a prophet or a saint, can arrogate to himself this exclusive divine prerogative. Therefore, the petitioner is using the words only figuratively and it is in this sense alone that they are generally interpreted. The allegation of disbelief against these people is quite misplaced; it reflects rather the twisted consciousness of those who hurl such malicious allegations against them. The petitioners are, in fact, immune to disbelief. For instance:

1- O, the most reverend (Prophet) of all creatures! I have no one else as my (helper) except you whose help should I seek at a time when I am engulfed by troubles and calamities.

2- There are five (friends) for me with which I extinguish the intensity of a lethal epidemic. (These are:) the holy Prophet Muhammad(Peace Be Upon Him and His Household) , ‘Alī, both of his sons (Hasan and Husayn) and Fātimah.

3- All this is an expression of your mercy and magnanimity that I am still surviving in the midst of trouble and turmoil.

4- I beg the charity of your magnanimous eye as there is no one except you to bail me out in this hour of distress.

5- All people have some support to rely upon when they are down and out, but I have no one else except you to turn to when I am in trouble.

Similarly, some Muslims in different situations, while addressing the Holy Prophet(Peace Be Upon Him and His Household) use these words like “O Messenger of Allāh! We have no other shelter except you.” If we interpret these words in their literal sense, obviously we would like to conclude that the person using them is committing disbelief. But the fact is that a Muslim is not using them in their absolute sense. Any Muslim who uses these words is fundamentally motivated by the belief that the power of the Holy Prophet(Peace Be Upon Him and His Household) is only derivative as it is contingent on divine will. He is in fact saying through his mode of address: ‘after Allāh, the Prophet(Peace Be Upon Him and His Household) is my place of shelter, and after Allāh, it is his support that can serve as a means of help and salvation for a sinner like myself.’ Thus he is not equating the Prophet(Peace Be Upon Him and His Household) with Allāh Who is unique and from Whose favour the Prophet(Peace Be Upon Him and His Household) derives his exceptional status among the creatures of Allāh. So he is saying: ‘I have no one else except you among Allāh’s creatures and I have no expectations from other creatures except you.’ Thus he is not elevating the Prophet(Peace Be Upon Him and His Household) to the level of divinity, he is only stressing his exceptional status among the creatures. Though we normally do not use these ambiguous words during intermediation or at the time of beseeching help from others, nor do we encourage others to make use of them to pre-empt even the slightest suspicion of disbelief, we also regard it as necessary to propose that a person using these words figuratively and derivatively should not be accused of disbelief in a fit of misplaced enthusiasm or an overplay of religious sentiment.

It is more pertinent to realise that we should not entertain unnecessary suspicions about the integrity of their faith; instead of making them hostages of our crude sense of justice, we should display a reasonable degree of open-mindedness to give them the benefit of doubt. Before hurling at them the accusation of disbelief, we should try to probe into their real intentions; before convicting them, we should presume them innocent and refrain from equating their figurative expressions with literal statements. We all know, and only a sense of perversion can contradict this gut feeling, that these petitioners seeking help from others believe in divine unity, which is quite consistent with the basic postulates of Islamic faith and attested by the Messengership of the Holy Prophet(Peace Be Upon Him and His Household) . They offer prayer and payzakāt . When they follow the basic tenets of Islam, not as an eyewash but as a demonstration of commitment, then it will not be an act of wisdom to drive them out of the fold of Islam simply because they use a string of ‘undesirable’ expressions in their supplications in a figurative sense. Truly speaking, they are “more sinned against than sinning”[5] as the punishment seems to exceed their innocuous act. Anas bin Māik has reported that the Prophet(Peace Be Upon Him and His Household) said:

Anyone who prays like us and makes our qiblah as his qiblah and eats our slaughtered meat, so he is a Muslim for whom Allāh and His Messenger (Peace Be Upon Him and His Household) are both responsible. So do not break Allāh’s responsibility. [6]

In view of this sound tradition, there is hardly any scope left to level the allegation of infidelity against the Muslims who use these words figuratively. This figurative application is sanctioned by the Qur’ān and thehadīth and demonstrated by the practice of the Companions, not sparingly but frequently and therefore, its reality cannot be denied. And there is no harm to declare their application as a valid act if a believer uses them figuratively. According to the correct Islamic belief, a person who believes that Allāh alone is the Creator and the Master, and He alone has empowered His creatures to perform different acts, and He is absolutely independent of the leanings and cravings of the living and the dead, that is, it is the exclusive divine privilege to grant or reject the wish of a creature, no matter how highly placed he is, such a person is a true believer and a true Muslim. This is precisely what is meant by divinity and this is exactly what Islam stands for. It is proved by Jibrīl’s dialogue with Maryam (Mary) in which he had stressed his derivative power in relation to the absolute power of Allāh. It meant that his act was not self-prompted but both sanctioned and sanctified by the will of the Lord who is One and Unique. The Qur’ān declares it in these words:

So that I should bless you with a pure son. [7]

When the chief of Allāh’s creatures of light can attribute these figurative words to himself, and Allāh Himself is reinforcing them in the Qur’ān, then if a creature of flesh and bone attributes them to the holy Prophet(Peace Be Upon Him and His Household) , then what crime has he committed or what sin has he perpetrated? What is urgently needed is to understand the essence of the Qur’ān itself so that the Muslims stop condemning one another, inflating one set of beliefs while deflating others, and in the process giving a bad name to their faith. This is the only way to preserve the integrity of our religion and to retain the purity of our faith.

The last word

Here, summing up the discussion, we would like to rephrase the vital point stated earlier that, in the present times, some people have cast aside the basic difference between the literal and figurative meanings in the interpretation of Qur’ānic verses. Moreover, their interpretation is marked by imbalance and extremism, which blatantly violates the basic principles of Qur’ānic exegesis. They prop up their interpretation on the literal sense and are not willing to concede the figurative sense. This is the reason that their interpretations are deflected from the established and authentic consensus of the traditions and the early religious leaders and scholars deeply charged with the true spirit of their faith and make sheer opinion and speculation as the basis of their conclusions. This is nothing but individualism gone haywire. They are interjecting undesirable innovations into our religious fabric and disfiguring its texture by their insensible and insensitive deviations from certified and well-documented explanations. The other group that has discarded the sobering crutches of balance has displayed such extremism in its application and patronage of the figurative sense that it appears to have lost all sense of balance, while balance is a sine qua non of all sane interpretation. If we keep in view the Qur’ānic sense of balance, the chasm between the two extremes can be abridged and the Muslim community will be transformed once again into an indivisible unity. This is the only way to preserve our faith and to perpetuate a correct interpretation of the nature and essence of divine unity.

References

[1]. Bukhārī narrated this tradition in hisas-Sahīh with different words at six various places, i.e. b. ofjanā’iz (funerals) ch.71 (1:451#1279); b. ofmanāqib (virtues) ch.22 (3:1317#3401); b. ofmaghāzī (the military expeditions led by the Prophet) ch.14, 25 (4:1486, 1498-9 #3816, 3857); b. ofriqāq (softening of hearts) ch.7, 53 (5:2361, 2408#6062, 6218); Tabarānī,al-Mu‘jam-ul-kabīr (17:278-80#767-70); Bayhaqī,as-Sunan-ul-kubrā (4:14); Baghawī,Sharh-us-sunnah (14:39-41#3822-3); and ‘Alī’ al-Hindī inKanz-ul-‘ummāl (14:416#39122).

[2]. Narrated in hisas-Sahīh , b. offadā’il (virtues) ch.9 (4:1795 #30/2296).

[3]. Narrated in his Musnad (4:149, 153-4).

[4]. Nasā’ī, Sunan , b. of hibah (gifts) 6:262-3.

[5]. Shakespeare, King Lear .

[6]. Bukhārī narrated it in hisas-Sahīh , chs. ofqiblah , ch.1 (1:153#384); and Nasā’ī in hisSunan , b. ofaymān wa sharā’i‘ahū (8:105).

[7]. Qur’ān ( Maryam, Mary) 19:19.

Glossary

athar: pl.aathar . lit. relating. Generally used for ahadith related by one of the Companions, as distinguished from one of the Prophet’s own.

da‘if: an inaccurate narration which does not qualify to be eithersahih (sound) orhasan (fair), and hence cannot be used as a basis of an Islamic opinion.

din: an Arabic word for religion. It is more specifically used for the religion and revealed books of the prophets and the messengers. It is a comprehensive term covering not only religious rites and rituals but also applies to all aspects of life and provides guidance in all of its pursuits, whilemadhab (religion) is restricted to man’s spiritual life and regulates its relationship with God alone.

dinar: an ancient gold coin.

du‘a’: lit. to call someone; making supplication to Allah.

gharib: ahadith or version reported by one reliable or unreliable narrator which differs in context with anotherhadith or version reported by a group of reliable narrators. Agharib hadith can besahih (sound) orda‘if (weak).

ghawth: lit. one to whom we can cry for help. A mediator; a title given to a saint of the highest order.

hadith: pl.hadiths orahadith . The sayings, practice and approved traditions of the Prophet Muhammad(Peace Be Upon Him and His Household) .

Hafiz: lit. a guardian or protector. (1) one of the names of God, al-Hafiz. (2) a governor, guardian of the Makkan temple. (3) one who has committed the whole of the Qur’an to memory. (4) one who has committed one hundred thousandhadiths to memory.

hajj: the yearly pilgrimage of the Muslims to Makkah.

hasan: ahadith , narrated by a reliable chain of transmission though not approaching the grade ofsahih (sound)hadith , but records a complete chain of narrators up to the Prophet(Peace Be Upon Him and His Household) .

Imam: one who leads people in prayers; an eminent Islamic scholar.

‘Isa: name of Allah’s penultimate messenger, Jesus.

Jibril (Peace Be Upon Him) : the archangel Gabriel who brought the revelations of Allah to His messengers.

jihad: the wordjihad , in terms of the acquisition of a desirable and commendable objective, carries a number of meanings.Jihad is striving against the evils of the self, and it is also the struggle waged for the propagation of Islam and the integrity of Ummah. For example, to launchjihad through tongue and pen for the improvement and development of the Islamic society; an armed struggle against the exploitive forces is alsojihad but this is ‘minorjihad ’ while a perpetual struggle against the evil wishes of one’s self is ‘majorjihad ’.Jihad is one of the cardinal articles of Islam.

kawthar: lit. abundance. A pond in Paradise.

Maryam: the Prophet ‘Isa’s mother; Mary.

mawdu‘: amawdu‘ tradition narrated by a liar, a narrator whose act of lying in relating traditions has been proved.

sahih: sound. Ahadith with an unbroken chain of narrators ranging from the Prophet Muhammad(Peace Be Upon Him and His Household) and approaching an era through reliable narrators without beingshadh (odd) ormu‘allal (faulty) in between the two cross relaters.

shari‘ah: lit. road. It is a legal modality of a people based on the revelation of their prophet/messenger. The lastshari‘ah is that of Islam that abrogates all previousshari‘ahs .

sunnah: pl.sunnahs . lit. the path, way or a form, the customary practice of a person or a group of people. It has come to refer almost exclusively to the legal way or ways, orders, statements and acts of worship, etc., of the Prophet Muhammad(Peace Be Upon Him and His Household) which have become the models to be followed by the Muslims.

surah: a chapter of the holy Qur’an. There are 114 chapters in the holy Qur’an.

Ya‘qub (Peace Be Upon Him) : the prophet Jacob.

Yusuf (Peace Be Upon Him) : the prophet Joseph.

zakat: a yearly fixed percentage of wealth and property of the Muslims liable to zakat to be paid to the poor and the needy of the Muslim Community. It is obligatory, as it is one of the five indispensable pillars of Islam.