The term ijtihād has originated
from a Hadīth. In the opinion of the authorities, this Hadīth is broken (munqati‘).
However, it is one of its sentences which has become a source of this all
important term of Islamic jurisprudence. It is reported that when the Prophet (sws)
sent forth Mu‘ādh to Yemen as its governor, he asked him: “How will you decide
matters?” He replied: “I will revert to the Book of God.” The Prophet (sws) then
asked: “If you do not find anything in the Book of God?” Mu‘ādh replied: “I will
look into the Sunnah of the Messenger of God.” The Prophet (sws) next asked: “If
you do not even find it there?” At this, Mu‘ādh responded by saying:
أجتهد برأي و لا آلو جهداً” (I will
form an opinion after expending full effort and will not leave any stone
unturned.”
It is the words
أجتهد برأي of this Hadīth that are
the source of this term. Scholars of usūl have always used it in the limits
ascertained by this Hadīth. In other words, ijtihād shall be done only in those
matters in which the Qur’ān and Sunnah are silent. It has no bearing on matters
which are explicitly stated in the Qur’ān and Sunnah. The reason for this is
that the injunctions of Qur’ān and Sunnah need deliberation and do not warrant
ijtihād. Scholars can repeatedly revert to them, determine their purport
and can also differ from previous authorities in their interpretation but they
cannot alter or annul any directive of the Qur’ān and Sunnah through their
ijtihād.
Thus the ambit of ijtihād is
matters in which the Qur’ān and Sunnah are silent. If the ascription of this
dialogue to Mu‘ādh and the Prophet (sws) is correct, then it is this very
fact which the Prophet (sws) has explained. Thus the questions asked were: “If
it is not found in the Qur’ān?” and “If it is not found in the Sunnah?” If one
is able to find anything in the Qur’ān, no Muslim can deviate from it. It is the
requisite of his faith to submit to it without any hesitation. The very word
“Islam” means to be obedient to God and the Prophet (sws). Some of the
illustrious thinkers of current times have wrongly interpreted certain steps
taken by the Rightly Guided Caliphs. The fact of the matter is that none of
these caliphs could even have imagined to dare alter or annul a directive of
God. What people regard as annulment or alteration is actually the implications
and insinuations of the directive which the rightly guided caliphs explained
with their practice. So instead of deriving annulment or alteration from such a
directive, people should develop the ability to reflect on the Qur’ān and Sunnah
and to understand their linguistic styles.
However, within the circle in which the
Qur’ān and Sunnah are silent, ijtihād is as essential as air and water
are to the human body. The door to ijtihād can never be closed and in
fact never was. In spite of the insistence of some people that this door had
been closed after the fourth century, scholars, jurists and experts of various
disciplines have continued to grace this world who did ijtihād in every
period of time and are doing so even today. God has blessed man with knowledge
and intellect. He has bestowed these favours on him so that he can decide his
affairs under their guidance. These affairs are both indefinite and
multifarious. Man has not been created blind and deaf so that he requires divine
guidance in every matter. The Almighty has revealed His sharī’ah only in
those affairs in which man’s knowledge and intellect need guidance. For this
reason, the directives of the sharī’ah are very limited. Thus ijtihād is
essential. In it lies the secret to development. Life cannot continue without
it. One of the significant reasons of the decadence of the Muslims is that in
their national capacity they have become devoid of the ability of research in
physical sciences and ijtihād in social sciences.
Here, it must remain in consideration
that there are no conditions for ijtihād. People should do ijtihād.
If one individual makes a mistake in it, the critique of another will correct
it. It is through this process that man progresses and highly competent
mujatahids are born. There is no doubt in the fact that if the principle of
taqlīd is accepted, then all those conditions which are stated for
ijtihād will become necessary. The reason for this is that in such a case the
real thing would not be ijtihād itself but the personality of the
mujatahid who is being regarded as the source of taqlīd. However, if like
the Companions of the Prophet (sws) and their followers, the common masses and
the scholars also base their decisions on reasoning, then it will not be the
mujtahid but the ijtihād itself which will be evaluated in congruence
with the standards put forth by knowledge and reason. In this situation, even if
a non-Muslim – not to speak of a Muslim – presents a sensible solution to a
problem, it cannot be objected to and should be accepted as a “lost treasure of
a believer”.
Consequently, it is a reality that in
current times many ijtihāds pertaining to political, economic and
administrative issues as well as those pertaining to the principles of civics
and citizenship have in fact been done by non-Muslims and Muslims have generally
accepted them. A clear example of this is democracy, democratic values and the
regulations of the institutions which have been founded under them. The
principle of democracy was given by the Qur’ān but the Muslims could not make
any system for it. This system was made by non-Muslims. In spite of this, it can
be observed that religious scholars and most religious parties not only accept
this system they have also been playing the role of the vanguard of every
movement which has been launched for its preservation and promotion. This is the
correct attitude in matters in which the Qur'ān and Sunnah are silent, and
people should adhere to this attitude.
(Translated from
Maqāmāt by Shehzad Saleem)
|