Sufism and Its Misfortunes: The Four Imams
Sufism and Its Misfortunes: The Four Imams
Sufism and Its Misfortunes: The Four Imams
By Abdalla S. Alothman
The delivery of the report is determined from the medium type in which
the report was transmitted. In some variations, the narrator hears directly
from another, or hears from a middle man, or a middle man was informed
about the narration. And then, from the massive biographies available,
the credibility of each person in the chain can be inspected when tracing
the report. This is a brief summary of a science that is way too
complicated.
Stephen Schwartz authored "The Other Islam, Sufism and the Road to
Global Harmony." The book markets Sufism to the Western world as the
alternative, peaceful, esoteric Islam which deserves all the attention from
the West. His book has been glorified by the U.S. News & World Report,
where they include a review about the book which includes the following
clarification:
What is Sufism?
Sufism is the esoteric, metaphysical, and mystical tradition within Islam, similar to
and influencing [Jewish mystical] kabbalah and Catholic spirituality. It is the tradition
in Islam that looks behind the sacred texts, behind the practice, behind the outward
manifestations of the religion, seeking the inner truth, the truth of the heart.
Basically, that's Sufism: It's a religion that spans and settles in other
religions. Sufism is in Islam, Hinduism, Christianity, Buddhism, Judaism
and everywhere. It's also a religion that does not rely on texts. Unlike
other religions, however, Islam treats knowledge very precisely –
everything must be documented to be accepted. As the description above
clarifies, Sufism is not concerned with the "texts," it rather looks "behind"
the texts, and that made it very hard for Sufism to survive within Islam.
In order to survive, the Sufis have forged numerous traditions to paint the
Sufi way with legitimacy and sound scholarship. In this process, they have
targeted the "4 Imams" – the leaders of the four schools (Imam Abu
Haneefa Al-Nu'maan, Imam Malik bin Anas, Imam Al-Shaf'i, and Imam
Ahmad bin Hanbal). By targeting those Four Imams, they tried to market
Sufism as the path favored or praised by those Four Imams. If they were
successful, many people would have followed them. Unfortunately their
attempt to forge traditions and relate them to the four Imams was a
complete failure as we shall see in this paper.
In this document, we shall inspect the traditions Sufis attribute to the Four
Imams:
We have copied all traditions as they appear on Sufi websites, copying the
text of the traditions and pasting them in Google will reveal numerous
web sites that withhold these traditions. We also include the original text
of these traditions in Arabic if necessary to show if there has been any
tampering with the translations.
1. Traditions Attributed to Imam Abu Hanifa
Ibn `Abidin relates in his al Durr al mukhtar that Imam Abu Hanifa said: "If it were not for
two years, I would have perished." Ibn `Abidin comments:
For two years he accompanied Sayyidina Ja`far al-Sadiq and he acquired the spiritual knowledge
that made him a gnostic in the Way... Abu `Ali Daqqaq (Imam Qushayri's shaykh) received the path
from Abu al-Qasim al-Nasirabadi, who received it from al Shibli, who received it from Sari al-Saqati
who received it from al Ma`ruf al Karkhi, who received it from Dawud at Ta'i, who received the
knowledge, both the external and the internal, from the Imam Abi Hanifa.
The Problems:
"Abu 'Ali Al-Daqqaaq said: 'I took this Tareeqa (way) from Abi Al-
Qasim Al-Nasrabaadi'. And Abu Al-qasim Al-nasrabaadi said: 'I
took took it (the Tareeqa) from Al-Shibli (…)"
This denotes that the report is not just a mere commentary from ibn
'Aabdeen, but it is a tradition which was reported by the source ibn
'Aabdeen is commenting on: Al-Durr Al-Mukhtar, by Al-Hasafaki.
5. The Sufi who falls for such twisted traditions should ask: What
Tareeqa did Ja'afar Al-Sadiq follow? Who is his shaikh? What is the
name of the Tareeqa Ja'far Al-Sadiq formed? There are no answers
for any of those questions which forms a barrier between Imam
Ja'far al-Sadiq and the claim that he was a Sufi. Actually, in the Sufi
Land of Wonders, all scholars happen to be Sufis, even the most
notorious critics of Sufism like Imam Ahmad bin Hanbal and ibn
Taymiyya.
The second portion of the tradition:
Under the light of the above facts, the following analysis takes place:
[1] For Al-Hasafki's report to be true, Abu Ali Al-Daqqaaq must have
heard from Abu Al-Qasim Al-Nasrabaadi; This however, cannot be
verified. This is the first gap.
[2] If the first gap is filled, however, we can safely conclude that Al-
Nasrabaadi could have heard from his shaikh, Al-Shibli… But…
[3] Al-Shibli lived his first six (6) years, before his shaikh Al-Sari Saqti
died! That, means that Al-Shibli took the Tareeqa and completed the task
when he reached the age of six. Of course, that's another gap.
[5] Imam Al-Thahbi (in Siyar A'laam Al-Nubalaa-a) denied the possibility
that Ma'rouf Al-Karkhi met with Dawoud Al-Taa-ee. However, if we bend
the impossible and make it possible, then...
[6] … we must assume that Dawoud Al-Taa-ee renounced the world and
left his shaikh Abu Hanifa before the latter's death in 8 years – and this is
unusual in the Sufi land of wonders.
2. Traditions Attributed to Imam Malik
The popular tradition Sufis cite about Imam Malik is the following:
"He who practices Tasawwuf without learning Sacred Law corrupts his faith, while he who
learns Sacred Law without practicing Tasawwuf corrupts himself. Only he who combines the
two proves true."
"It is related by the muhaddith Ahmad Zarruq (d. 899), the hafiz `Ali al-Qari al-Harawi
(d. 1014), the muhaddiths `Ali ibn Ahmad al `Adawi (d. 1190) and Ibn `Ajiba (d. 1224),
and others."
ﱠﻑ
ْ ﺗﺼﻮ
ﻣﻦ َﱠ
َ ﻭ،ﻪ ﻭﻟﻢ ﻳﺘﺼﻮﻑ ﻓﻘﺪ ﺗﻔﺴﻖْ ﺗﻔﻘ
ﻣﻦَ) :ﺍﻹﻣﺎﻡ ﻣﺎﻟﻚ ﺭﺣﻤﻪ ﷲ ﺗﻌﺎﻟﻰ
ِ ﻳﻘﻮﻝ
(ﱠﻖ
َ ﺑﻴﻨﻬﻤﺎ ﻓﻘﺪ ﺗﺤﻘ
ﻭﻣﻦ ﺟﻤﻊ،ﻭﻟﻢ ﻳﺘﻔﻘﻪ ﻓﻘﺪ ﺗﺰﻧﺪﻕ
The Problems:
Moreover, none of the Maliki scholars who inspected the traditions – like
Alqurtubi, ibn 'Abd Al-barr, or Alquraafi, and others – mentioned this
tradition. Also, this tradition does not appear in the traditions of Malik,
such as Almuwatt-a, or Almudawwana by Imam Suhnoon, or even
Almukhtasar – those sources contain the authentic teachings of Imam
Malik.
[2] Zarrouq Almaghrbi is the first reporter, he died in 899 A.H. The gap
between the two is 720 years, and that makes it impossible to accept that
Zarrouq Almaghribi heard from Imam Malik. So the first reporter should
be confidently discarded.
[3] Ali Al-qari Al-Harawi died in 1014 A.H. The gap between him and Malik
is 835 years! For this report to be true, there should be at least 13
narrators between Ali Al-Qari and Imam Malik. However, we only see Ali
Al-Qari alone; And that makes it impossible for the two to meet and
communicate with one another.
[4] Ali Al-Adawi died in 1190 A.H. The gap between him And Malik is 1011
years.
[5] Ibn 'Ajiba died in 1224 A.H. The gap between him and Malik is 1045
years.
The dates show that it is impossible for any of these people to meet Imam
Malik and hear from him. And this makes the tradition a poorly forged
hadeeth that deserves to be discarded due to failing basic analysis.
The Sufis thump two traditions which they relate to Imam Al-Shaf'i:
1. "Al-hafiz al-Suyuti relates in Ta'yid al-haqiqa al-`aliyya that Imam al-Shafi`i said:
I accompanied the Sufis and received from them but three words: their statement that
time is a sword: if you do not cut it, it cuts you; their statement that if you do not keep your
ego busy with truth it will keep you busy with falsehood; their statement that deprivation is
immunity." (Source)
The Problems:
: ﻭﻓﻲ ﺭﻭﺍﻳﺔ, ﺻﺤﺒﺖ ﺍﻟﺼﻮﻓﻴﺔ ﻓﻠﻢ ﺃﺳﺘﻔﺪ ﻣﻨﻬﻢ ﺳﻮﻯ ﺣﺮﻓﻴﻦ:"ﻗﺎﻝ ﺍﻟﺸﺎﻓﻌﻲ ﺭﺿﻲ ﷲ ﻋﻨﻪ
ﻧﻔﺴﻚ ﺇﻥ ﻟﻢ ﺗﺸﻐﻠﻬﺎ: ﻭﻗﻮﻟﻬﻢ. ﺍﻟﻮﻗﺖ ﻛﺎﻟﺴﻴﻒ ﺇﻥ ﻟﻢ ﺗﻘﻄﻌﻪ ﻗﻄﻌﻚ:ﺳﻮﻯ ﺛﻼﺙ ﻛﻠﻤﺎﺕ ﻗﻮﻟﻬﻢ
". ﺍﻟﻌﺪﻡ ﻋﺼﻤﺔ: ﻭﻗﻮﻟﻬﻢ.ﺑﺎﻟﺤﻖ ﺷﻐﻠﺘﻚ ﺑﺎﻟﺒﺎﻁﻞ
Alsiyooti didn't say that Al-Shaf'i said: "… and received" as the Sufis
translate the tradition, he said: "fa lam astafid…" meaning, "I did not
benefit from them except three words:…"
That doesn't look like Imam Al-Shaf'I is praising the Sufis, but it looks like
he is criticizing them because there is nothing beneficial to learn from
them except those three words.
Of course this tradition comes in more than one narration, one of them
begins with: "I accompanied the Sufis for ten years, and I have not
benefitted from them except three words…" (Reported by ibn Alqayyim
and others.)
Sorry, but that doesn't look like praising, but totally the opposite. Not to
mention that the tradition lacks a supporting chain which makes it devious
and worthy of rejection. However, we will pass by authentic traditions – in
a while – with proper supporting chains.
2. "The muhaddith al-`Ajluni also relates in his book Kashf al khafa wa muzil al albas that
Imam Shafi`i said:
Three things in this world have been made lovely to me: avoiding affectation,
treating people kindly, and following the way of tasawwuf." (Source)
The Problems:
The gap between the two is 958 years. And due to the lack of a
supporting chain, we can only conclude that Al-Ajlouni heard directly from
Imam Al-Shaf'i, and this is impossible due to the 958-years gap.
Arabic Source:
ﺣﺪﺛﻨﺎ، ﺣﺪﺛﻨﺎ ﻣﺤﻤﺪ ﺑﻦ ﺃﺑﻲ ﻳﺤﻴﻰ،ﺣﺪﺛﻨﺎ ﻣﺤﻤﺪ ﺑﻦ ﻋﺒﺪ ﺍﻟﺮﺣﻤﻦ ﺣﺪﺛﻨﻲ ﺃﺑﻮ ﺍﻟﺤﺴﻦ ﺑﻦ ﺍﻟﻘﺘﺎﺕ
ﻟﻮﻻ ﺃﻥ ﺭﺟﻼ ﻋﺎﻗﻼ ﺗﺼﻮﻑ ﻟﻢ ﻳﺄﺕ: ﺳﻤﻌﺖ ﺍﻟﺸﺎﻓﻌﻲ ﻳﻘﻮﻝ: ﻗﺎﻝ،ﻳﻮﻧﺲ ﺑﻦ ﻋﺒﺪ ﺍﻷﻋﻠﻰ
[9/ ﺝ، ﺃﺑﻮ ﻧﻌﻴﻢ ﺍﻷﺻﺒﻬﺎﻧﻲ، ]ﺗﺤﻔﺔ ﺍﻷﻭﻟﻴﺎء.ﺍﻟﻈﻬﺮ ﺣﺘﻰ ﻳﺼﻴﺮ ﺃﺣﻤﻖ
It came to my attention that some Sufis have once again distorted the
meaning of this tradition and translated it as:
“If a rational man does not become a Sufi he does not reach noon except he is a dolt!”
What happened in their silly translation is that they tampered with the
conditional instrument LAWLA / ( ﻟﻮﻻthe first word) and made it all by
themselves, and without respect to the Arabic language – they've made it
an instrument of negation, and this is wrong. LAWLA is a plain instrument
used as a conditional ( )ﺃﺩﺍﺓ ﺷﺮﻁ ﻏﻴﺮ ﺟﺎﺯﻣﺔand categorized along with:
LAWW, LAWMAA, and ITHAA. So in other ways:
"A man does not become a lunatic by noon, because he did not become a
Sufi in the beginning of the day."
That means the Messenger (S) and all the Companions were lunatics
because they were NOT Sufis. This only makes sense to Sufis, although
it's only a typical form of abusing and distorting basic grammatical
principles as it usually happens in the Sufi Land of Wonders.
Think about the Sufi translation for a while: How could a rational man be
rational if he is not a Sufi in the first place? So if the rational man is not a
Sufi in the beginning of the day, he can't be a lunatic in the midst of the
day just because he is not a Sufi, because – according to the Sufi
translation – he is already a lunatic for rejecting Sufism since the
beginning of the day.
Perhaps some might know that many Sufi shaikhs were lunatics and
ended up in mental confinements like Al-Shibli, the student of Junayd, he
used to enter trances where he would lose his mind and his students
would take him to be confined in a Maristan (mental hospital) until he gets
back to his senses. And also Ibn Rajab Al-Hanbali presents the biography
of Ahmad bin Ibrahim bin Abdil-Rahman bin Mas'ood bin 'Umar Al-Waasiti
Al-Huzaami, in Volume 2, Page 256 of his book: Thayl Tabaqaat Al-
Hanaabila, where we are informed about this great Sufi shaikh:"… He died
in 711 A.H. in the small Maristan (nut house) in Damascus." And many
Sufis were like that due to the Sufi rituals and practices.
That's why Al-Shaf'i linked the Sufis with lunacy – many of their great
figures were lunatics who ended up or used to be common patients in
mental hospitals.
I this is not what was intended in the report given by Abu Na'eem, then
read on.
The tradition above is mentioned two pages before #2, which also clarifies
the position of Al-Shaf'i according to Abu Na'eem.
In Arabic:
ﺳﻤﻌﺖ: ﻗﺎﻝ، ﺣﺪﺛﻨﺎ ﺍﺑﻦ ﺻﺎﻋﺪﺍ، ﺣﺪﺛﻨﺎ ﺃﺑﻮ ﺍﻟﺤﺴﻦ ﺍﻟﺒﻐﺪﺍﺩﻱ،ﺣﺪﺛﻨﺎ ﺃﺑﻮ ﻣﺤﻤﺪ ﺑﻦ ﺣﻴﺎﻥ
. ﺃﺳﺲ ﺍﻟﺘﺼﻮﻑ ﻋﻠﻰ ﺍﻟﻜﺴﻞ:ﺍﻟﺸﺎﻓﻌﻲ ﻳﻘﻮﻝ
This school – The Hanbali school – consist of the most notorious scholars
who have criticized Sufism and Sufis, and Ibn Hanbal is no exception.
Nevertheless, the Sufis do not hesitate to forge traditions to Ibn Hanbal
that falsely convey that Sufism is worthy to follow. We shall see the two
traditions Sufis use to thump Sufism on Ibn Hanbal's behalf.
"O my son, you have to sit with the People of Sufism, because they are like a fountain of
knowledge and they keep the Remembrance of Allah in their hearts. They are the ascetics
and they have the most spiritual power." [Tanwir al-Qulub, p. 405, by Shaikh Amin al-
Kurdi.] (Source)
The Problems:
[1] This is a very interesting tradition, regardless of its forgery. The Sufis
never asked themselves what natural responses will float when the
audience receive this tradition and wonder:
• Why didn't the son (Abdullah) take his father's advice and follow the
Sufis? (It is not known that the son followed the Sufis or any Sufi
Tariqa).
• Even more: Why didn't the father apply this advice himself and follow
the Sufis or a Sufi Tariqa?
[3] Focusing on the translation, we see that "they are like a fountain of
knowledge," and "they have the most spiritual power" – this shows that
the Sufis have tampered the forged tradition. Does the reader get the
idea? It's not only a forged tradition, but even the translation is forged.
Here is the Arabic text of the forged tradition which the Sufis translated
from:
Notes:
• Only this portion (colored in blue) has been translated, the above has
been dismissed in the Sufi translation. The portion above includes Ibn
Hanbal's first advice to his son Abdullah to stay away from the Sufis,
and then he met Abu Hamza Albaghdadi, and changed his opinion
about the Sufis.
2. Muhammad ibn Ahmad al-Saffarini al-Hanbali (d. 1188) relates in his Ghidha' al-albab li-
sharh manzumat al-adab from Ibrahim ibn `Abd Allah al-Qalanasi that Imam Ahmad said
about the Sufis:
"I don't know people better than them." Someone said to him: "They listen to music
and they reach states of ecstasy." He said: "Do you prevent them from enjoying an
hour with Allah?" (Source)
Problems:
[3] Al-Saffarini's source comes directly from a report from Ibn Al-Akhdhar
who related the report to Al-Qalanasi, and here it is in Arabic:
[4] The point above shows another gap between Alqalanasi and Ibn Al-
Akhdhar from one side, and Alqalanasi and Imam Ahmad bin Hanbal from
another side.
[5] Imam Al-Thahabi treated this tradition in Volume 3, Page 120, of his
book Meezain Al-I'tidaal, under the entry: Ali bin Al-Hasan Al-Tarsousi, Al-
Thahbi said: "He (Ali bin Al-Hasan Al-Tarsousi) is a Sufi who inserted
(forged) the story of Imam Ibn Hanbal praising the Sufis and correcting
their ways; Al-Ateeqi narrated this story from him (Al-Tarsousi)."
[6] Al-Haafith Ibn Hajar also treated this tradition in Volume 4, Page 220,
in his book Lisaan Al-Meezan, under the entry: Ali bin Al-Hasan Al-
Tarsousi, Ibn Hajar said: "[Al-Tarsousi] is a Sufi who inserted a story
about Imam Ahmad bin Hanbal in an attempt to praise the Sufis. His story
was embraced and narrated by Al-Ateeqi." On the other hand, Al-Ateeqi's
narrative can be found in Al-Tiyooriyaat, a collection of traditions compiled
by Abu Al-Husain Al-Tiyoori.
As it is clear, the first and the second reports are fully fabricated.
Conclusion
The Sufi struggle to gain acceptance has been an ongoing attempt that
has never stopped throughout many centuries. However, delicate analysis
on sources makes it hard for forgeries to take place without being
questioned or discovered.
Because Sufism itself is a complete insertion onto Islam, the Sufis have
strived to gain legitimacy of their program and tradition.
In the early ages, the Sufis of today were the heretics of the past, while
the ascetics of the past where the ones who were addressed as "Sufis."
Those Sufis of the past were very different than the Sufis of this age;
They were not the Dancers of the Hadra and the Mawlid, they were not
the show-off type who would appear in public and pierce themselves with
skewers and sharp objects, they were not the grave worshipers, they
were not the ones who would seek rescue from the dead.
Those Sufis – the Sufis of the past – have nothing to do with the Sufis of
today, they were not even addressed as "Sufis," but rather they were
called 'ubbaad or zuhhaad. Later on, and to gain legitimacy, the heretics
hijacked the term Sufi and used it to broadcast their beliefs. To gain
acceptance, they forged traditions on the behalf of the Four Imams to
prove the correctness of their twisted program. This has been discussed in
this document.
Many thanks goes to Aljanoubi (the Southerner) and many others who
have exposed this forgery.
Abdalla S. Alothman
َ
( ) ﻋﺒﺪﺍﷲ ﺳﻌﻴﺪ ﻋﺒﺪﺍﷲ ﻋﺒﺪﺍﻟﻠﻄﻴﻒ ﺍﻟﻌﺜﻤﺎﻥ