Ibn Tymiyyah Sufi Sheikh
Ibn Tymiyyah Sufi Sheikh
Ibn Tymiyyah Sufi Sheikh
To our respected brother Shaikh Muhammad Adly, and to our dear internet readers, we would like to
present our final conclusions of the "debate" between myself and Shaikh Adly in the following two parts.
In the first part we will discuss Ibn Taymiyya's views on Tasawwuf. In the second part we will mention
some of the views of the Salaf and Khalaf scholars, as well as some relatively modern scholars on the
subject of Tasawwuf.
Orientalists and Modern Islamists have contributed to the misrepresentation of Ibn Taymiyya as an
enemy of Sufis. This has been propounded even more strongly lately by the scholars of the "neo-Salafi"
school, whose followers claim to strictly adhere to Ibn Taymiyya's teachings, but who in fact have
severely deviated from them in this area of understanding.
However, regardless of the desires of one group or another, the facts provide a clarification of reality:
that Ibn Taymiyya accepted Tasawwuf on the condition that it follows shari'ah, and that Ibn Taymiyya
himself was not only a Sufi follower, but was adorned with the cloak (khirqa) of shaikhhood of the Qadiri
Order.
FACT #1:
FACT #2: Ibn Taymiyya received iniation as a Sufi shaikh. The fact that Ibn Taymiyya himself was a Sufi
has been conveniently ignored by those who chose to misrepresent him, and with good reason: how
could someone say that Ibn Taymiyya opposed Sufism/Tasawwuf and that he was a Sufi/mutasawwif in
one and the same breath? Hence the corollary statement to Ibn Taymiyya's alledged anti-Tasawwuf
stance is that "he could certainly not have been a Sufi," compounding inaccuracy with speculation.
Clear proof that most of the great 'ulama and the major figures of the Four Schools of Islam were
trained in Tasawwuf exists in the specialized biographical books known as "Tabaqat." Tasawwuf was part
and parcel of the complete education of a Muslim scholar, from the beginning of the formation of the
Islamic curriculum until the gradual weakening and dismantling of the institutions and figures of Islamic
higher education in the twentieth century. This resulted in the replacement of the Islamic 'ijaza system
(being "licensed" or receiving permission to teach from one's own teacher), with the modern doctoral
system of degrees, inherited from the West.
Far from denigrating or attacking the Sufi component of the Islamic sciences like of some of our
contemporaries who claim him as their reference, Ibn Taymiyya in fact praised it in his time, endorsed it,
participated in it, and acheived its highest formal level, which is to receive the khirqah, the equivalent of
the 'ijaza or permission in Sufi terms, from a Sufi shaikh. The khirqah, representing the cloak of the
Prophet (s), is passed to a student of a Sufi shaikh, only when he is seen to be fit and fully qualified to
pass on the teachings he has acquired from his shaikh in turn to students of his own. In this he as simply
one of many among the Hanbali 'ulama who both educated him or were educated by him, to undergo
the expected training and instruction in the various disciplines of Tasawwuf appropriate to the scholarly
vocation.
Many well-read specialists of Islam are to this day still surprised to hear that the Sufis al-Ansari al-Harawi
(d. 481 H.) and 'Abdul Qadir al-Jilani (d. 561 H) were both very strong Hanbalis. When one refers to their
biographical notices in Ibn Rajab's [student of Ibn Qayyim] "Dhail 'ala Tabaqat al-Hanabila," one finds al-
Ansari referred to as "as-Sufi" and Jilani referred to as "az-zahid." Ibn Rajab's use of these terms in close
proximity, indicates their interchangeability.
Ibn Rajab's two volume biographical work covers a period of three centuries, from the middle of the 5th
century Hijri to the middle of the 8th.. Identifiable as Sufis are over one-third of all the Hanbalis scholars
treated by Ibn Rajab and other sources from the same time period.
The theory, presented by some Orientalists, that Abul Faraj Ibn al-Jawzi (d. 597 H) and Ibn Taymiyya (d.
728 H), were antithetical to Tasawwuf does not stand up to scholarly scrutiny. In fact neither of these
Hanbali doctors of law qualifies as in any way antithetical to Tasawwuf. Let us examine their record.
Ibn al-Jawzi's work Talbis Iblis is perhaps the most important single factor in keeping alive the notion of
this hostility towards Sufism. In reality, this work was not written against Tasawwuf as such at all, nor
against Sufis alone. However, it was an indictment of all unorthodox doctrines and practices, regardless
of their sources, and opposed any which were innovations in the rule of shari'ah--i.e. not found in the
Qur'an and Sunnah, wherever found in the Islamic community, especially in Ibn al-Jawzi's time. It was
written against specific innovated practices of many groups, including: philosophers (mutakallimoon),
theologians, traditionalists ('ulama al-hadith), jurists (fuqaha), preachers, philologists, poets and Sufis. It
is in no way an indictment of the subjects they studied and taught, but was an indictment of specific
introductions of innovation into their respective disciplines and fields.
Ibn al-Jawzi has written other works which are not only in favor of Tasawwuf, but present its greatest
figures in the most complimentary light. Two works considered as pillars in the field of Tasawwuf are
Safwat as-Safa and Minhaj al-Qasidin wa Mufid as-Sadiqin. In addition, full length biographies in praise
of the early Sufis have been penned by Ibn al-Jawzi, including Fada'il Hasan al-Basri (The Gracious
Character of Hasan al-Basri), and Manaqib Ibrahim bin Adham, (The Good Qualities of Ibrahim bin
Adham), Manaqib Bishr al-Hafi, Manaqib Ma'ruf al-Karkhi, "Manaqib Rabi'a al-Adawiyya. In sections of
his book al-Muntazam many biographical notices may be found in praise of Mutasawwifeen.
As for Ibn Taymiyya, one would search in vain to find in his works the least condemnation of Sufism as a
discipline. He opposed the seemingly pantheist descriptions of certain Sufis, known as "ittihadiyya," but
he showed his great admiration for the works of the Sufis Junayd Baghdadi, Sahl at-Tustari, Bayazid al-
Bistami, Abu Talib al-Makki, al-Qushayri, 'Abdul Qadir Jilani and Abu Hafs as-Suhrawardi.
At present we are in the position to go much farther and show that this allegedly great opponent of
Sufism was himself a Sufi, who belonged to more than one tariqat, but especially to that of 'Abdul Qadir
Jilani.
In a manuscript of the Hanbali 'alim, Shaikh Yusuf bin 'Abd al-Hadi (d. 909H), entitled Bad' al-'ula bi labs
al-Khirqa [found in Princeton, Sorbonne and Damascus], Ibn Taymiyya is found in a Sufi spiritual
genealogy with other well-known Hanbali scholars, all except one (Say. Jilani) heretofore unknown as
Sufis. The links in this genealogy are, in descending order:
(Both Abu 'Umar b. Qudama and his brother Muwaffaq received the khirqa directly from Abdul Qadir
Jilani himself.)
Further corroboration of two links separating him from 'Abdul Qadir Jilani comes from Ibn Taymiyya
himself, as quoted in a manuscript of the work al-Mas'ala at-Tabriziyya (manuscript, Damascus, 1186 H):
"I wore the blessed Sufi cloak of 'Abdul Qadir, there being between him and me two."
Ibn Taymiyya is quoted by Yusuf ibn 'Abd al-Hadi, affirming his Sufi affiliation in more than one Sufi
order:
"have worn the Sufi cloak [khirqata at-Tasawwuf] of a number of shaikhs belonging to various tariqas
[min turuqi jama'atin min ash-shuyukhi] , among them the Shaikh 'Abdul Qadir al-Jili, whose tariqa is the
greatest of the well-known ones."
Further on he continues: "The greatest tariqa [ajallu-t-turuqi] is that of my master [sayyidi], 'Abdul
Qadir al-Jili, may Allah have mercy on him."
[found in "Al-Hadi" manuscript in Princeton Library, Collection fol. 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.]
Additional evidence of Ibn Taymiyya's connection to the Qadiri silsila (lineage) is found in his lengthy
commentary on the seminal Sufi work by his grand-shaikh, 'Abdul Qadir Jilani, entitled "Futuh al-Ghayb."
[this is found in a Princeton manuscript, uncataloged, also in Leipzig University Library, Arabic
manuscript #223, and Istanbul University, Turkish translation, "Futuh ul-Gayb Hakkinda Yorum"]
The essence of his commentary on "Futuh al-Ghaib" is to show that Sufism, when orthodox, is
completely in consonance with the Qur'an and hadith and the consensus of the community [ijma'a]. A
Tasawwuf not based on the revealed law is heretical. In his commentary, Ibn Taymiyya upholds ilham, or
Sufi inspiration, as evidence stronger than weak analogy [qiyas], or a weak tradition [hadith,] or istis-hab
cited by those who are immersed in fiqh, or divergences of the law [khilaf], or the principles and sources
of the law [usul al-fiqh]. He places inspiration [ilham] on the level of legally valid evidence on which to
base a preference for one action as against another when all other sources fail.
Perfection of the soul, says Ibn Taymiyya, does not consist in mere knowledge. On the contraray, along
with the knowledge concerning Allah, there must necessarily be love [mahabba] of Allah, worship of
Allah, and the turning back to Him in repentance. Real tawhid consists in worshipping no one but Allah,
and worship calls for perfect love [kamal al-hubb], perfect veneration [kamal at-ta'zim], perfect hope,
fear, reverence, and respect [kamal ar-raja' wal-khishya wal-ijlal wal-ikram].
We intend to publish a translation of that lengthy commentary by Ibn Taymiyya on Futuh al-Ghaib in the
future.
Ibn Taymiyya's Discussion of Tasawwuf in His Majmu'a Fatawa
Here we will mention what Imam Ibn Taymiyya, mentioned about the definition of Tasawwuf, from
Volume 11,"At-Tawassuf" of "Majmu'a Fatawa Ibn Taymiyya al-Kubra," Dar ar-Rahmah, Cairo,
"Alhamdulillah, the pronunciation of the word Tasawwuf has been thoroughly discussed. From those
who spoke about Tasawwuf were not just the the Imams and Shaikhs, but also included were Ahmad bin
Hanbal, Abi Sulayman ad-Daarani, As-Sirr as-Saqati, al-Junayd al-Baghdadi, Hasan al-Basri, Ma'aruf al-
Karkhi, Abdul Qadir Jilani, Bayazid al-Bistami [one of the grandshaikhs of the Naqshbandi Tariqat] and
many others. This is a term that was given to those who were dealing with that kind of science [tazkiyyat
an-nafs and Ihsan]."
"Tassawuf has realities and states of experience which they talk about in their science. Some of it is
that the Sufi is that one who purifies himself from anything which distracts him from the remembrance
of Allah and who will be so filled up with knowledge of the heart and knowledge of the mind to the
point that the value of gold and stones will be the same to him. And Tasawwuf is safeguarding the
precious meanings and leaving behind the call to fame and vanity in order to reach the state of
Truthfulness, because the best of humans after the prophets are the Siddiqeen, as Allah mentioned
them in the verse:
'(And all who obey God and the Apostle) are in the company of those on whom is the grace of Allah:
of the prophets, the sincere lovers of truth, the martyrs and the righteous; Ah! what a beautiful
fellowship.'"
(an-Nisa', 69,70)
which translates:
"And the Sufi is in reality a kind of Siddiq (Truthful One), that Siddiq who specialized in zuhd and
worship."
"some people criticised Sufiyya and Tasawwuf and they said they were innovators, out of the Sunnah,
but the truth is they are striving in Allah's obedience[mujtahidin fi ta'at-illahi], as others of Allah's People
strove in Allah's obedience. So from them you will find the Foremost in Nearness by virtue of his striving
[as-saabiq ul-muqarrab bi hasab ijtihadihi]. And some of them are from the People of the Right hand
[Ahl al-Yameen mentioned in Qur'an in Sura Waqi'ah], but slower in their progress. For both kinds, they
might make ijtihad and in that case they might be correct and they might be wrong. And from both
types, some of them might make a sin and repent. And this is the origin of Tasawwuf. And after that
origin, it has been spread and (tasha'abat wa tanawa'at) has its main line and its branches. And it has
become three kinds:
2. Sufiyyat il-Arzaaq - the Professional Sufis (those who use Sufism for personal gain)
Imam Ibn Taymiyya mentions in volume 11, page 190 of Majmu'a Fatawi Shaikh ul-Islam Ibn Taymiyya,
edition published in Egypt by Dar ar-Rahma:
"a servant of Allah 'azza wa-Jal, cannot be considered a saint unless he is a true believer. Allah
mentions in Qur'an:
"Now surely the friends of Allah-- they shall have no fear nor shall they grieve. Those who believe
and guarded (against evil):" (Yunus, 61,62)
"My servant draws not near to Me with anything more loved by Me than the religious duties I have
enjoined upon him, and My servant continues to draw near to Me with supererogatory works so that I
shall love him. When I love him I am his hearing with which he hears, his seeing with which he sees, his
hand with which he strikes and his foot with which he walks. Were he to ask [something] of Me, I would
surely give it to him, and were he to ask Me for refuge, I would surely grant him it. I do not hesitate
about anything as much as I hesitate about [seizing] the soul of My faithful servant: he hates death and I
hate hurting him."
In his book al-Mukhtasar al-Fatawa al-Masriyya, published by al-Madani Publishing House, 1980, page
603:
"The miracles of saints are absolutely true and correct, by the acceptance of all Muslim scholars. And
the Qur'an has pointed to it in different places, and the Hadith of the Prophet (s) have mentioned it, and
whoever denies the miraculous power of saints are only people who are innovators and their followers."
"what is considered as a miracle for a saint is that sometimes the saint might hear something that
others do not hear and they see something that others do not see, while not in a sleeping state, but in a
wakened state of vision. And he can know something that others cannot know, through revelation or
inspiration."
All that Imam Ibn Taymiyya says about the subject of Tasawwuf is found in a large book (volume 11)
consisting of 704 pages only about Tasawwuf.
And we would like to mention briefly what he said on page 314, about the hadith Qudsi [i.e. related
from Allah Himself]:
"Which means that Allah is expressing: 'I will seek revenge against anyone who comes against My
saints like an aggressive lion.'"
He said:
"Allah Almighty will unveil to his saints states that have never been given before and give them
support without measure.... If that saint will begin to speak from the things of the unseen, past or
present or future it is considered from "Bab al'ilm al-khaariq" the miraculous unseen knowledge....
Anything that a saint does which is from unveiling to people or to listeners or curing or healing or
teaching knowledge, it is accepted... and we have to thank Allah for it."
"the great Sufi shaikhs are the best shaiks to be known and accepted, such as:
Hasan al-Basri,
Ibrahim bin al-Adham [very famous sufi, known as Sultan of the Ascetics],
Siri as-Saqati,
Shaikh Hammad,
"THOSE GREAT SUFI PEOPLE WERE THE LEADERS OF HUMANITY, AND THEY WERE CALLING TO WHAT
IS RIGHT AND FORBIDDING WHAT IS WRONG."
In Majmu'a Fatawa Ibn Taymiyya, published by Dar ar-Rahmat, Cairo, Vol, 11, page 497. Book of
Tassuwuf), Ibn Taymiyya says:
"You have to know that the rightly-guided shaikhs must be taken as guides and examples in the Din, as
they are following in the footsteps of the Prophets and Messengers. And the Way (tariqat) of those
shaikhs is to call people to Allah's Divine Presence and obedience to the Prophet."
Here we find Ibn Taymiyya calling for people to take a guide and mentioning that each guide has his own
method (tariqat) in calling people to the Prophet's ways.
"And the shaikhs whom we need to take as guides are our examples that we have to follow, as when
on the Hajj, (the pilgrimage) one needs a guide [daleel] to reach the Ka'aba, these shaikhs are our guide
[daleel] to Allah and our Prophet (s)."
Ibn Taymiyya quotes from Bayazid al-Bistami, who said, on page 510, Volume 10:
"...the great Sufi shaikh Bayazid al-Bistami and the famous story about him when he saw God in a
vision (kashf) and said to Him: 'O Allah what is the way to You?' And Allah responded 'Leave yourself and
come to Me.'"
This quotation is an indication of the need for zuhd (self-denial or abstention from the worldly life), as
that was the path followed by Bayazid al-Bistami.
So we see from the above quotes, that Ibn Taymiyya was accepting many shaikhs by quoting them and
urging people to follow guides to show the way to obey God and to obey the Prophet (s).
Imam Ibn Taymiyya Explains Those Who are Speaking about Fana'
In Book 2, volume 2, pages 396-397 of Majmu'a Fatawi Ibn Taymiyya, published by Dar ar-Rahmat, Cairo,
Ibn Taymiyya speaks about subject of fana' also known is Sufism as annihilation. He said,
"This state of love is the state of many people that are from the people of Love to Allah 'azza wa jall,
they are the people of the love of Allah and the People of the Will (al-Irada) of Allah (it is typical of many
of the people that love God and seek Him.) Because that person has vanished in his lover, in Allah 'azza
wa jall--through the intensity of the love, because He vanished in Allah's love, not his own ego's love.
And he will recall Allah, not recalling himself, remember Allah not remembering himself, visualizing Allah
[yastashhid], not visualizing himself, existing in Allah, not in the existence of himself. When he reaches
that stage, he no longer feels his own existence. And that is why he says in this state, "Ana al-Haqq" (I
am the Truth), or "Subhanee. (Glory to Me!)" and he will say "maa fil jubba ill-Allah" (there is nothing in
this cloak except Allah), because he is drunk in the love of God and this is a pleasure and happiness that
he cannot control."
"This [matter] has in it Haqq and there is in it Batil. But when someone will enter a state with his
fervor intense love ('ishq) to Allah, he will enter a state of absentmindedness, and when he enters the
state of absentmindedness, he will find himself as if he is accepting the [concept] ittihad. 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. Because the pen does not condemn the crazy except when he is restored to sanity.
And when that person is in that state and he was wrong in what he did, he will be under Allah's address:
"Rabbana laa tuakhidhna in-nasseeena aw akhtaana" "O Our Lord, do not take us to task if we
forget or make mistakes." (Baqara, 286)
"And Allah says in other verse, "wa laa junaaha 'alaykum fimaa akhtaatum bihi" "there is no blame on
you if you unintentionally do a mistake."
"As long as he is not drunk through something that is prohibited, it is accepted, but if it were
prohibited, (the intention was bad) then he is not excused."
"And because of that [situation] many of the saints, like 'Abdul Qadir Jilani, have an excuse, becasue
they are in a state of love ('ishq)."
That subject is also mentioned in a whole chapter in detail from page 337 -page 343, entitled:
This title means:"the Word of Annihhilation found in Sufism explained in Three Ways." This chapter
describes in detail the concept of fana'.
WRAPUP
For now we consider this to be the conclusion of our presentation of Sufism, and as a completion of our
"debate" with Shaikh Muhammad Adly.
From what has preceded, including our presentation of the opinions of many different scholars, from
Imam Abu Hanifa, through Ibn Taymiyya, and up to the present, such as Ibn Abdul Wahhab, how is it
possible that one rejects what all these great and knowledgable scholars have never denied, nay they
supported, namely the Science of Tasawwuf? Are we going to consider ourselves and our opinion better
than the opinions of Ibn Taymiyya, Ibn Qayyim and other great scholars? Are we going to say that the
opinion of the students of MSA-Net and SRI and the shaikhs of today, are more valid than Ibn Taymiyya,
whose opinions we have mentioned, who have put several large books on the validity and reality of
Tasawwuf, and never considered that Tasawwuf as something to be denied in Islam?
The Prophet (s) ordered us to follow the Jama'at, when he said, "'alaykum bi ijma'a al-Muslimeen"
("Hold to the Consensus of the Muslims") and "alaykum bis-sawaad il-'aazam" ("Hold to the Majority").
Who are better representatives of "sawad al-'azaam" and "ijma'a al-Muslimeen" than these great
scholars and imams, whom we have mentioned and quoted extensively from here and in articles in the
past?
It is as if the students and shaikhs of today are saying "everyone who came before us were wrong and
we are right," and this comes from arrogance. So it is better for everyone and for ourselves, and for
every true Muslim to read more, to investigate more and to examine more in order to know the truth
and reality. And it is unbefitting Muslims to be like parrots, repeating the phrases taught them by their
master, which have no reality nor basis in fact.
Muhammad Adly knew and understood that reality, as he is a scholar, given those titles by Azhar and
Rabitah, as mentioned in his own c.v. He was unable to answer our questions as he knew that no scholar
ever denied Tasawwuf. So how could he accuse Ibn Taymiyya of bida'? Instead he preferred to keep
quiet, though we were sending post after post privately to his intermediary on the net asking for some
response from his side. This means he was unwilling or unable to give an answer and therefore this is
our wrapup of the "debate."
So we respectfully request the readers who are skeptical of our conclusions, and who doubt our
quotations and who suspect our scholarship: go and look for yourself--read what Ibn Taymiyya, Ibn
Qayyim and other scholars of Islam wrote and don't throw out wild accusations.
We are worshipping Allah alone, and praising the prophet Muhammad (s) as a sincere and praiseworthy
servant of Allah, and respecting our guides and our shaikhs; not as some would accuse us, of
worshipping them. May Allah guide all who read these words to the reality and truth of Islam.
May Allah enlighten all of us to the goodness which is Islam.