Answer: Answer: Any religious practice which has no real basis in
the Quran and Sunnah of the Prophet, may Allah be pleased with him, is a bid`at
ie a religious innovation which is a highly condemned transgression in Islam.
The Prophet of Allah declared unequivocally:
"The most detestable of practices [in religion] are
those innovated in it, and each innovation is a deviation [from the right
path]." (Muslim, Kitaab-ul-Jum`a)
The authentic sources of the Sunnah suggest no indication
of the existence of any practice of recitation of the Quran to benefit the
deceased during the days of the Prophet (sws), neither by an individual nor by a
group of people collectively. Imam Shaf`i had, therefore, rightly pointed out:
"Had there been any virtue in practising it [recitation
for the departed], they [the companions of the Prophet] would certainly have
taken lead in adopting it." (Ibni Katheer, Surah Najm)
Recitation of the Quran to benefit the dead is, therefore,
unquestionably a bid`at. The Quran, moreover, clearly states that in the life to
come each soul would be rewarded or punished for its very own deeds:
"Man shall receive only that for which he strove."
(53:39)
It is therefore, difficult to imagine how the benefit of
recitation of the Quran by someone living can be transferred to the account of
someone dead? The very idea that the living can influence the record of
performance of the dead seems alien to the spirit of Islam. The Quran urges its
believers to reform their conduct before it is too late ie before the inevitable
moment of death arrives. The concept of transfer of credit of virtues, on the
contrary, suggests that it is never too late: Even though you'd be dead, your
record would be open for improvement. Anybody who holds this belief would,
therefore, have hardly any urgency to reform before death, for death, after all,
is not going to be, in his opinion, the end of the world for his deeds.
There is a tradition of the Prophet, may Allah be pleased
with him, which says:
"When a person dies, his record is sealed except [for
the credit he continues to receive] from three areas: philanthropic acts which
continue to benefit others after his death, scholarly works which continue to
enlighten others, and the prayers of pious children for the deceased." (Daarmi)
All the three possibilities of the post-death benefit
mentioned in the tradition are in fact extensions of the deceased person's very
own acts. Philanthropic acts, of course, are initiated by the individual himself
in his life time. Same is the case with the light of knowledge that continues to
serve others. Prayers of the pious children too owe their origin to the expired
individual's own efforts in bringing them up to the standards of piety.
There is, therefore, no room for a credit accruing to an
individual's account of deeds because of an act not attributable to his own
efforts. Transfer of credit of virtuous acts to the account of the dead, we may
conclude, is an idea not consistent with Islamic teachings. |