Shaykh Muhammad Ibn Abdul Wahaab

Re: Shaykh Muhammad Ibn Abdul Wahaab

Mr Salafi, please answer the following questions for the record regarding ibn Wahhab:
1. Did he believe in the four madhabs?
2. Did he label Shia and Sufi Muslims as kaafirs?
3. Did he rebel against the Ottomon empire?
4. Was he rebuked and disowned by his father and brother?
5. Was he from Najd?
6. Did he advocate the destroying of historical shrines, such as the Prophet's home, Abu Bakr's home, Umar's home, etc?
7. Is Osama Bin Laden a Wahhabi?
8. Were the 9/11 terrorists Wahhabi?

Re: Shaykh Muhammad Ibn Abdul Wahaab

[quote=TUMS]
Mr Salafi, please answer the following questions for the record regarding ibn Wahhab:
1. Did he believe in the four madhabs?
yes he did believe in the four Madhabs as he followed the Hanbalee Madhab

  1. Did he label Shia and Sufi Muslims as kaafirs?
    the answer is in the letter, if only u read it "“as for the lies that are spread against us in order to cover the truth and to confuse people, that we consider all muslims to be disbelievers, the people of our times, and all the the peoples of the last six centuries, except those who follow us, and the lie based upon this lie, that we do not accept anyones allegiance until he testifies that he was a pagan before joinging us, and that both his parents were pagans(mushriks)(these lies can be seen in the book doctrine of Ahle sunnah wal jamma’ah vs the salafee movement p23-27)…then all of these salnders have absolutely no basis whatsoever. Everytime we heard something of these lies, we would reply “subhanak!! This is indeed a great slander and lie”. So whoever narrated this from me, will accuse me of these matters. Then he has indeed lied and slandered me.(al hadiyyah al Suniyyah p.40)"

  2. Did he rebel against the Ottomon empire?
    He wasnt Alive at that time bro. he died 200 yr b4 the Fake Saudi Munaafiqs..but for a consice file il; insha'Allaah post a file abt it.

  3. Was he rebuked and disowned by his father and brother?
    yes he was but whats yr point?? The Rasool(saw) was rebuked by many now does that mean he was wrong too?? Imaam Ahmed(rh) was imprisoned now does that mean he was wrong also? please bring forth stronger arguements as these are not challenging enuff for me.

  4. Was he from Najd?
    What is Najd? explain the area of najd to me and its definitions

  5. Did he advocate the destroying of historical shrines, such as the Prophet's home, Abu Bakr's home, Umar's home, etc?

The burden is open you to show the proof that he did and for what he reason.

  1. Is Osama Bin Laden a Wahhabi?
    HAs he ever said he was Wahaabi?

  2. Were the 9/11 terrorists Wahhabi?
    did they ever say they were Wahaabi?

so please show me me proof as the questions u have asked me are childish and the burden is upon u to show me proof of some of the points u mentioned.

Let me make it simple for you as i can imagine what kinda response you would give....A Man gets arrested for suspicion of murder and gets taken to court, who has the burden of showing proof? the man on trial or the one who are accusin him of murder?? Its obviously the ones accusin him.. The Judge will not say to that man prove you didnt murder him rather he would ask the othere to prove the man murdered.

The situation is the same here. u need to prove the the above points.

just read this and take it in to your head.....jus seriously sit back n read with yr heart as a muslim...

The Shaykh said...“and I am not one of those who calls to the belief of the Sufis nor the blind following of a faqih or one the philosophical groups, or even to the scholars that I respect myself such as ibn al qayyim, ibn katheer, al dahhabi and others, rather I call to Allaah(swt) alone, for he is one of having no partners and I call to the sunnah of the Prophet(saw). And this is what he (saw0 commanded the first and the last of nation. And I hope I do not reject any truth if it comes to me. Rather I call to Allaah(swt), his angel and the whole of creation to witness that if a word comes from you that is true, then of a surety I will accept it with all respect, and I will throw against the wall everything that goes against it, from the statements of the scholars that I respect, exept for the prophet(saw) for only he speaks nothing but the truth! (Majmu Mu'alafat 5/252)

why dnt u judge by him own writings?

so bro please provide the following then i can insha'Allaah answer you properly

-That he did not follow the Madhabs...we declare every muslim a orthodox muslim and unless proved otherwise so please show proof he didnt.

-Did Osama Ibn Laadin ever call himself a Wahaabi?? show me the proof.

-Did the 9/11 lot ever call them selves wahaabis?? show me the proof.

-that he destryoed Shrines and i think this is where some misunderstandings are but do not fear oh brother in Islaam for everything will b put into perpective!!

-explain NAjd to me. where is it? its descriptions etc etc...

lets keep the discussion btwn me n u now.

Il await yr reply.

Re: Shaykh Muhammad Ibn Abdul Wahaab

Aside from these questions, it would be quite useful if you can provide some background info, preferably in your own words about his life story, his political alliances and religious opinions that attracted some but antagonised and riled others. There's alot of murky water here that needs to be clarified and going on the defense is not helping.

Re: Shaykh Muhammad Ibn Abdul Wahaab

you tell me what u wanna know. ul hear alot of accusations against the Shaykh but if you verify what u hear ul c that these are only by those that are ignorant.

**Imaam Muhammad Ibn Abdul Wahhab was a great man, an outstanding reformer and a zealous preacher, who appeared in the Arabian Peninsula in the twelfth century A.H. He was educated by his father in his homeland,
Oyayna, a village located at Yamama in Najd, northwest to the city of Riyadh. He learnt to read the Qur’aan at a very early age and exerted himself in studies and advanced learning at the hands of his father, Shaikh Abdul Wahhab Ibn
Sulaiman, who was a great jurisprudent and the Judge of Oyayna. **

** Having attained puberty, the Shaikh traveled to Makkah and then to Medina to learn from learned personalities there. Then he went to Iraq (Basrah) to seek after knowledge. It was in Iraq that he started his mission. There he called the people to Tawheed and the Sunnah of the Prophet

. He announced that it was the duty of every Muslim to follow his or her religion (Islaam) strictly in accordance with the Qur’aan and the Sunnah. He engaged in debates and discussion with scholars and thus became famous. However, some characterless scholars rebelled against him and he faced some harms and persecutions from them. So, he left Basrah moving towards Az-zubair, then to al-Ahsa, and then finally to Huraymela, where also he faced much suffering at the hands of the wicked because he enjoined the good and forbade the evil and persuaded the rulers to punish the criminals severely. So, some of them even attempted on his life, but Allaah saved him. Then he moved to Oyayna, which was then governed by Prince Uthman Ibn Muhammad Ibn Muammar, who welcomed the Shaikh with hospitality and promised him all support and help in calling people to Islaam. **
** People in Najd at that time lived in a condition that could not be approved by any believer. Polytheism had spread widely; people worshiped domes, trees, rocks, caves or any persons who claimed to be Awliya (saints). Magic and soothsaying also had spread. When the Shaikh saw that polytheism was dominating the people and that no one showed any disapproval of it or no one was ready to call people back to Allaah, he decided to labor singly and patiently in the field. He knew that nothing could be achieved without Jihad, patience and suffering. **
** The Shaikh continued calling people to the Path of Allaah and guided them to piety, righteousness and love in the cause of Allaah. Gradually, the Shaikh became famous in and around Oyayna. People came to Oyayna to meet him from neighboring areas and villages. He also wrote to many scholars requesting their support and reminding them of their task of helping Allaah’s Religion and fighting against polytheism. Many scholars from Najd, Makkah and al-Medina accepted his request, while some disagreed with him, reproached his mission, condemned him and kept him away. **
** The Shaikh and those with him were in between two types of people; one group consisted of the ignorant people, who knew nothing about Islaam and followed deviations and innovations, superstitions, etc. which their forefathers had upheld. The Qur’aan says about them, “We found our fathers following a certain way and religion and we will indeed follow their footsteps.” The second group, on the other hand, was related to knowledge but responded negatively to the Shaikh because of their envy and also because they were ashamed and afraid that the people would question their integrity, ‘why did you keep silent without warning us against such and such evils until Abdul Wahhab appeared?’ **
** But the Shaikh carried on patiently seeking the Help of Allaah in all matters. He strove hard in studying the Qur’aan and reading useful books. He had a special skill of interpreting the Qur’aan and deducing from it. He also worked hard in studying the life of the Prophet

and the lives of his companions

. **
** The Shaikh went on teaching and preaching. Gradually, he exerted himself on practically removing polytheism when he noticed that his call to Islaam had no affect on some. One day, the Shaikh said to the governor, 'Let us demolish
the dome at the grave of Zaid Ibn al-Khatab

(Zaid Ibn al-Khatab

was the brother of Umar Ibn al-Khattab

and a martyr, who died in the fighting against Musailimah Khaddhab in 12 A.H, he was buried and later on people built a dome on his grave). It is erected on deviation and the Prophet

has forbidden building domes or mosques on graves. Moreover, this dome has destroyed the people’s belief with polytheism. So, it must be demolished.’ **
** The Prince agreed and mobilized an army of six hundred soldiers and marched towards the grave, headed by the Shaikh. As soon as they approached the dome, the people came forward to defend it but when they saw the Prince with his army, they changed their decision. Then the Shaikh took the action of demolishing and removing the dome. Allaah removed it by his hands and Al-hamdulillah, none of its traces remains now. Similarly, there were other domes, caves, trees, etc. that were also destroyed and removed. The Shaikh, thus, continued his mission by words and action, for
which he became very famous. Also, one day a woman came to him and confessed that she had committed adultery. After realizing that she was sane, married and had confessed without external compulsion, he gave the order according to the Sunnah that she should be stoned to death as a punishment, as he had now become the Judge of Oyayna. **
** Meanwhile, the Prince of al - Ahsa (and surrounding villages) feareed the Shaikh’s position , because committing wrong, robbery, murder, etc. Were usual for them. He wrote to Prince Uthman threatening him and demanding him to kill the Shaikh. The Prince approached the Shaikh saying, “the nomad prince has sent me a message to do so and so.
We never wish to kill you, but we are afraid of the prince and we are unable to fight him. So if you think you may leave.” The Shaikh replied: “I am simply calling people to Islaam and to the fulfillment of the testimony of Faith that there is no god except Allaah and Muhammad is Allaah’s Messenger. Whoever holds fast to Islaam and upholds it truthfully, Allaah will help him and make him ruler of his enemy’s countries. And if you endure and be righteous and accept this Religion, then be glad that Allaah will help you and protect you from the nomad prince and others. Allaah will also give you power over his country and his kinfolk.” But Uthman said: “O Shaikh! But we cannot fight him nor can we stand his oppression.” So, the Shaikh had to leave Oyayna for Dareyya on foot because Uthman did not even provide him any means of transportation. **
** On reaching Dareyya, the Shaikh stayed in the house of a man who was one of the best personalities in Dareyya, but he feared the prince of Dareyya, Muhammad Ibn Suad. The Shaikh said to him, ‘be glad and hope for the best. I am simply calling the people to Allaah’s Religion, and He will undoubtedly make it victorious.’ **
** The news of Shaikh’s arrival in Dareyya reached Muhammad Ibn Suad. It is said that his wife first informed him of the Shaikh. She was a kind and pious lady and she addressed her husband saying, 'Here is a great fortune sent to you by Allaah. A man who is calling the people to Islaam, calling to the Qur’aan and the Sunnah of the Prophet

. What a good fortune! Rush to him and support him. Never resist him or stop him from that.’ Muhammad Ibn Suad accepted her advice and went to the Shaikh and made a contract with the Shaikh that he should not leave the country. **
** The Shaikh now settled in Dareyya. People started to come to him for learning from everyplace - from Oyayna, Iraq, Manfooha, Riyadh and other neighboring places. Respected, loved, supported by the people, the Shaikh arranged
lectures on various topics; Creed, the Holy Qur’aan, the Qur’aanic commentaries, Islaamic Jurisprudence and its
principles, the Hadeeth and its terminology, and others. He arranged classes for the public as well as for the selected persons. Thus, he continued his mission and activities of preaching in Dareyya. He wrote to the scholars and rulers establishing his arguments and warning them against polytheism and innovation. Because of his correspondence with
scholars and rulers and his struggling in the cause of Allaah, the Shaikh became famous. His mission continued and spread all over the Islaamic world and also other countries. It is a known fact that every favor has its envier, as every preacher has his enemies. Allaah, the Exalted, said in the Qur’aan: “And so We have appointed to every Prophet an enemy - devils among the men and Jinn - inspiring to each other adorned speech as a delusion. And had your Lord willed they could not have done it. So, leave them alone to their fabrication.” [Surah Al-An’am Verse 112] **
** When the Shaikh became famous for his teaching, and his writings received wide popularity among the people, many envious groups emerged as his opponents. One group consisted of characterless scholars who saw the truth as falsehood and falsehood as truth, and believed that building domes and invoking the engraved as pertaining to Islaam. The second group was associated with knowledge but was ignorant of the reality of the Shaikh’s mission. They simply believed others and kept aloof from the Shaikh. The third group that opposed the Shaikh consisted such people who feared the removal of their positions and ranks. They showed humility so that the supporters of the Islaamic mission might not reach them and remove their positions and take over their lands. So, some opposed him in the name of religion, while other opposed him in the name of politics though they hid under the cover of knowledge and religion and exploited the enmity of those scholars who had hated him and accused him of deviation. Sometimes, his
opponents argued that he belonged to the Khawarij, at times some criticized him out of their lack of proper knowledge, etc. Thus, the fighting between words continued through debates and arguments. He would write to them
and they would reply to him, and he would refute them, and thus numerous questions and answers were accumulated and compiled into volumes. And Al-hamdulillah, most of them have been published. Then the Shaikh turned to Jihad in 1158 A.H, he wrote to people to enter the field of Jihad and remove polytheism, which existed in their countries. **** The Shaikh, thus, strove in his preaching and Jihad for fifty years from 1158 A.H. until he died in 1206. He resorted to all methods of his mission - Jihad, preaching, resistance, debates and arguments until people adhered to obedience and demolished the domes and mosques built by them on the graves and agreed to run their affairs in accordance with Islaamic Law, discarding all rules and laws which had been applied by their fathers and forefathers. Then after the death of the Shaikh, his sons, grandson and supporters continued his mission and struggle in the cause of Allaah.**

remember judge him by his works and not be lies based on weak accusations that have no proof and whenever they accuse him of sumthin say**…**

**“Produce your proof if you are truthful.” (Al-Baqarah 2:111) **


so far they have not provided any solid proof. they have just copied and pasted accusations and even them sites they copy from do not provide proof.
**

**

Re: Shaykh Muhammad Ibn Abdul Wahaab

Dude, i think yur boring everyone now with yur cut and paste methodolgy!!!
:)

Re: Shaykh Muhammad Ibn Abdul Wahaab

iv only cut and poste those things that are better explained by others which would save me time writing. As far as evidence on refutin the claims i have not cut n paste them like others....

Thanks for yr comment but its nice to know u find it borin.

Re: Shaykh Muhammad Ibn Abdul Wahaab

yup i sure do :)

Re: Shaykh Muhammad Ibn Abdul Wahaab

so have u read the letters i typed up by The Shaykh?? what did you make of them??

Re: Shaykh Muhammad Ibn Abdul Wahaab

a bit of self advertising on your shaykhs part id say....

so why did so many people not hold the guy in high esteem?not even his contemparies!!!!

Re: Shaykh Muhammad Ibn Abdul Wahaab

Answer the question first n ul understand why they were against him. U cant find out everything at once. 1 at a time. so tell me what did u make of his letters??

Re: Shaykh Muhammad Ibn Abdul Wahaab

Bismillahir Rahmanir Rahmin,
As Salaatu Wassalaamu 'Alaiyk Ya Rasul-Allah
As Salaatu Wassalaamu 'Alaiyk Ya Habib-Allah
As-Salaatu Wassalaamu 'Alaiyk Ya-Nabi-Allah
Salawatullah 'Alaiyka

This message is in regards to the obviousness of the fitnah which has come out of the Wahabi movement. A movement which was opposed by Muhammad ibn Wahab’s own brother and father, who disowned him for the tribulatory movement that came out of his teachings. Below is an essay by the Chief Mufti of Makkah, Shaykh Ahmed Zayni Dahlan (may Allah be pleased with him):

**----------------------------------------------------------------------
**

An Essay about the Wahhabi Crimes against Islam and against Muslims

by Mawlana Shaykhu-l-Islam Ahmad Zayni Dahlan al-Makki ash-Shaf’i,
*** Chief Mufti of Mecca al-Mukarramah
*, may Allah be pleased with him.**

Introduction

            During the reign of Sultan Salim III (1204-1222 AH) many                  tribulations took place. One was the tribulation of the                  Wahhabiyyah which started in the area of al-Hijaz(1) where they                  captured al-Haramayn(2), and prevented Muslims coming from                  ash-Sham(3) and Egypt from reaching their destination to perform                  Pilgrimage (Hajj). Another tribulation is that of the French who                  controlled Egypt from 1213 A.H. until 1216 A.H. Let us here                  speak briefly about the two adversities(4), because each was                  mentioned in detail in the books of history and in separate                  treatises.
            Background On The Tribulations Of The Wahhabis 



            The fighting started between the Wahhabis and the Prince of                  Mecca, Mawlana Sharif Ghalib Ibn Bu Sa'id, who had been                  appointed by the honored Muslim Sultan as his ruling                  representative over the areas of al-Hijaz. This was in 1205 AH                  during the time of Sultan Salim III, the son of Sultan Mustafa                  III, the son of Ahmad. Previous to the outbreak of fighting, the                  Wahhabis began to build power and gain followers in their areas.                  As their territories expanded, their evil and harm increased                  They killed countless numbers of Muslims, legitimated                  confiscating their money and possessions, and captured their                  women. The founder of their wicked doctrine was Muhammad Ibn                  'Abdul-Wahhab, who originated from eastern Arabia, from the                  tribe of Banu Tamim. He lived a long life, about one-hundred                  years. He was born in 1111 AH and died in 1200 AH. His history                  was narrated as follows:
            
            Muhammad Ibn 'Abdul-Wahhab started as a student of knowledge in                  the city of the Prophet, sallallahu 'alayhi wa sallam: Medina                  al-Munawwarah. Ibn 'Abdul-Wahhab's father was a good, pious man                  among the people of knowledge as was his brother, Shaykh                  Sulayman. His father, his brother, and his shaykhs (teachers of                  religion) had the foresight Ibn 'Abdul-Wahhab would innovate a                  great deal of deviation and misguidance, because of their                  observance of his sayings, actions, and inclinations concerning                  many issues. They used to reprimand him and warn people against                  him.
            Some Of The Beliefs Of Ibn 'Abdul-Wahhab


            What Ibn 'Abdul-Wahhab's father, brother, and shaykhs speculated                  about him came true--by the Will of Allah, ta'ala. Ibn 'Abdul-Wahhab                  innovated deviant and misleading ways and beliefs and managed to                  allure some ignorant people to follow him. His deviant and                  misleading ways and beliefs disagreed with the sayings of the                  scholars of the Religion. His deviant beliefs led him to label                  the believers as blasphemers! He falsely claimed visiting the                  grave of the Prophet, sallallahu 'alayhi wa sallam, and                  performing the tawassul(5) by him as shirk(6). Additionally, he                  falsely claimed visiting the graves of other prophets and                  righteous Muslims (awliya') and performing tawassul by them was                  shirk as well. He added to this by saying, "To call upon the                  Prophet, sallallahu 'alayhi wa sallam, when performing tawassul                  by the Prophet is shirk." He passed the same judgment of shirk                  on the ones who call upon other prophets and righteous Muslims (awliya')                  in performing tawassul by them.
            
            In an effort to give credibility to his innovations Ibn 'Abdul-Wahhab                  embellished his sayings by quotations which he selected from                  Islamic sources, i.e., quotations which are used as proofs for                  many issues but not the issues which Ibn 'Abdul-Wahhab was                  attempting to support. He brought false statements and tried to                  beautify them for the laymen until they followed him. He wrote                  treatises for them until they believed that most of the People                  of Tawhid(7) were blasphemers.
            Alliance With The Su'udiyy Family


            Moreover, Ibn 'Abdul-Wahhab called upon the princes of eastern                  Arabia and the people of ad-Dar'iyyah(8) to support him. They                  carried his doctrine and made this endeavor a means to                  strengthen and expand their kingdom. They worked together to                  suppress the Bedouins of the deserts until they overcame them                  and those Bedouins followed them and became foot-soldiers for                  them without pay. After that, these masses started to believe                  that whoever does not believe in what Ibn 'Abdul-Wahhab said is                  a blasphemer, and it is Islamically lawful (halal) to shed his                  blood and plunder his money.
            
            The matter of Ibn 'Abdul-Wahhab started to evidence itself in                  1143 A.H. and began spreading after 1150 A.H. Subsequently, the                  scholars--even his brother, Shaykh Sulayman and the rest of his                  shaykhs-- authored many treatises to refute him. But Muhammad                  Ibn Su'ud, the Prince of ad-Dar'iyyah in eastern Arabia,                  supported him and worked to spread his ideology. Ibn Su'ud was                  from Banu Hanifah, the people of Musaylimah al-Kadhdhab(9). When                  Muhammad Ibn Su'ud died, his son 'Abdul-'Aziz Ibn Muhammad Ibn                  Su'ud took over the responsibility of fulfilling the vile task                  of spreading the Wahhabi beliefs.
            
            Many of the shaykhs of Ibn 'Abdul-Wahhab in Medina used to say,                  "He will be misguided, and he will misguide those for whom Allah                  willed the misguidance." Things took place as per the                  speculation of the scholars. Ibn 'Abdul-Wahhab claimed his                  intention behind the madhhab he invented was "to purify the                  tawhid" and "repudiate the shirk." He also claimed people had                  been following the shirk for six-hundred years and he revived                  their Religion for them!!
            The Methodology Of Ibn 'Abdul-Wahhab


            Ibn 'Abdul-Wahhab took the verses revealed to speak about the                  blasphemers and applied them to the Muslims. The following                  examples from the Qur'an illustrate this point. Allah, ta'ala,                  said in Surat al-Ahqaf, Ayah 5:[http://www.alsunnah.ca/ASFC/fitnat1.gif](http://www.alsunnah.ca/ASFC/fitnat1.gif) 

This verse means: [Who is more astray than the one who performs supplication (du’a’) to [worship] other than Allah; the one other than Allah he supplicates to will not answer his du’a’.]
Allah, ta’ala said in Surat Yunus, Ayah 106 :
http://www.alsunnah.ca/ASFC/fitnat2.gif

This verse means: [Do not perform supplication (du’a’) to [worship] other than Allah; the one other than Allah you supplicate to will not benefit you and will not harm you.]

            The verses in the Qur'an similar to these ones are numerous.                  Muhammad Ibn 'Abdul-Wahhab gravely misinterpreted the previously                  cited verses and said: "The Muslim who asks help from the                  Prophet, sallallahu 'alayhi wa sallam, other prophets, or the                  righteous people (salihun), or who calls or asks any of them for                  intercession is like those blasphemers mentioned in the Qur'an."                  According to the false claim of Ibn 'Abdul-Wahhab, the Muslims                  who do these things are blasphemers.
            
            He also considered visiting the grave of Prophet Muhammad and                  the graves of other prophets and righteous Muslims for blessings                  as blasphemy. Allah revealed Ayah 3 of Surat az-Zumar in                  reference to the mushrikun:

http://www.alsunnah.ca/ASFC/fitnat3.gif

This verse means: [Those who worship the idols said: “We do not worship them except to achieve a higher status from Allah.”]

            Ibn 'Abdul-Wahhab falsely stated: "Those who perform tawassul                  (asking Allah by the prophets, for example) are similar to those                  blasphemers mentioned in Surat az-Zumar, Ayah 3, who claim they                  do not worship the idols except to achieve a higher status from                  Allah." He said: "The blasphemers did not believe the idols                  create anything; they believed Allah is the Creator." He gave                  his version of proof from the Qur'an by citing Surat Luqman,                  Ayah 25 and Surat az-Zumar, Ayah 38, in which Allah said:

http://www.alsunnah.ca/ASFC/fitnat4.gif

These verses mean: [If you ask them, Who created the heavens and earth?' They will say, Allah’.]

            In Surat az-Zukhruf, Ayah 87, Allah said:

http://www.alsunnah.ca/ASFC/fitnat5.gif

Which means: [If you ask them, Who created them?' They will say, Allah’.] Ibn 'Abdul-Wahhab falsely concluded from these verses that the Muslims who perform tawassul are similar to those blasphemers.

            The Scholars Refute Ibn 'Abdul-Wahhab




            In their writings to refute Ibn 'Abdul-Wahhab's sayings, the                  scholars said his deduction was false. The believers did not                  consider the prophets or the awliya' as gods and they did not                  deem them partners to Allah. Instead, they correctly believe the                  prophets and awliya' are good slaves and creations of Allah, and                  they do not deserve to be worshipped.
            
            The blasphemers intended in these verses believed their idols                  deserved Godhood. They exalted them as one would exalt his                  Creator, even though they believed the idols did not create the                  heavens and the earth. The believers, on the other hand, do not                  believe the prophets or righteous Muslims (awliya') deserve to                  be worshipped, nor do they deserve to be attributed with                  Godhood, nor do they exalt them as one would exalt God. They                  believe these people are good slaves of Allah, His beloved ones                  whom He chose, and by their blessings (barakah) Allah grants His                  mercy to His creation. Hence, when the slaves of Allah seek the                  blessings (barakah) of the prophets and righteous Muslims (awliya')                  they are seeking these blessings as a mercy from Allah. 
            
            There are many proofs and examples from the Qur'an and Sunnah                  about this basic belief of the Muslims. Muslims believe Allah is                  the Creator, the One Who grants benefit and inflicts harm, and                  the only One Who deserves to be worshipped. Muslims believe that                  no one other than Allah has the power to affect the creation.                  The prophets and righteous people do not create anything. They                  do not possess the power to bestow benefit or inflict harm on                  others, but Allah is the One Who bestows the mercy upon the                  slaves by the righteous Muslims' blessings.
            
            Hence, the belief of the blasphemers, i.e., the belief their                  idols deserve to be worshipped and have Godhood, is what makes                  them fall into blasphemy. This saying of the blasphemers, as                  previously cited in Surat az-Zumar, Ayah 3, was said in an                  effort to justify their belief when they were disproved and                  shown idols do not deserve to be worshipped.
            
            How can Ibn 'Abdul-Wahhab and those who follow him find it                  permissible to equate the believers, who believed in tawhid, to                  those blasphemers, who believed in the Godhood of the idols? All                  the previously cited verses and the verses which are similar to                  them are specific to the blasphemers who associate partners with                  Allah--none of the believers are included.
            Al-Bukhariyy narrated by the route of Ibn 'Umar, may Allah raise                  their ranks, that the Prophet, sallallahu 'alayhi wa sallam,                  described the Khawarij as those who took the verses revealed                  about the blasphemers and attributed them to the believers! In                  the narration by the route of Ibn 'Umar the Prophet said: 

            [http://www.alsunnah.ca/ASFC/fitnat6a.gif](http://www.alsunnah.ca/ASFC/fitnat6a.gif)

http://www.alsunnah.ca/ASFC/fitnat6b.gif

which means: “What I fear most for my nation is a man who mis-explains the Qur’an and takes it out of context.” This hadith and the previous one apply very well to the Wahhabis.

            Proofs For Tawassul
            The Permissibility of Asking Allah for Things by Some of His                  Creation





            
            If performing tawassul had been blasphemy, then the believers,                  i.e., the Prophet, sallallahu 'alayhi wa sallam, his Companions,                  and the Salaf and Khalaf of this nation would not have done it.                  Yet it is mentioned in the sahih hadith of the Prophet that the                  Prophet used to ask Allah by saying:[http://www.alsunnah.ca/ASFC/fitnat7.gif](http://www.alsunnah.ca/ASFC/fitnat7.gif) 

which means: "O Allah, I ask You by the status of those who ask You.(10) " Without doubt, this is tawassul. The Prophet, sallallahu ‘alayhi wa sallam, used to teach this supplication (du’a’) to his Companions and order them to say it. This issue was expounded upon in different books and treatises refuting Ibn 'Abdul-Wahhab.

            There is a hadith related by al-Hakim that mentions after Adam                  ate from the tree, he performed tawassul by our Prophet,                  sallallahu 'alayhi wa sallam. He did that, because he saw the                  name of the Prophet written on the 'Arsh, Adam said: "*O                  Allah, by the dignity of this son [Muhammad], forgive this                  father [Adam].*"
            
            It was also related by Ibn Hibban, that upon the death of                  Fatimah Bint Asad, may Allah raise her rank, the Prophet,                  sallallahu 'alayhi wa sallam, with his own honorable hands, put                  her in her grave and said: "*O Allah, forgive my mother*(11)*,                  Fatimah Bint Asad, and widen her place by the status of Your                  Prophet and the prophets who came before me. You are the most                  Merciful.*"
            
            There is a hadith classified as sahih(12), that a blind man                  asked the Prophet, sallallahu 'alayhi wa sallam, to make a                  supplication (du'a') to Allah to return his sight. The Prophet                  ordered him to make ablution (wudu') and pray two rak'ahs and                  then say: 
            
            "O Allah, I ask You and direct myself to You by Your Prophet,                  Muhammad, the Prophet of Mercy. O Muhammad, I ask Allah by you                  to fulfill my need. O Allah, enable him to intercede for me."                 
            
            The blind man did what the Prophet taught him to do(13) and                  Allah brought his sight back. Moreover, as related by at-Tabaraniyy,                  the tawassul made by the blind man was used by the Companions                  and Salaf after the death of the Prophet.
            
            'Umar Ibn al-Khattab performed the tawassul by al-'Abbas (the                  uncle of the Prophet), may Allah reward their deeds, when he                  prayed the Salah of 'Istisqa'(14) with the people. There are                  other proofs mentioned in the books of the Islamic scholars but                  we will not recount them at length here.
            
            The one who pursues the saying of the Companions and their                  followers will find a great deal of proof about the validity of                  calling the prophet by saying "O Muhammad" in his presence as                  well as in his absence and in his life as well as after his                  death. In fact, many texts include the phrase which means, "O                  Muhammad". Calling the name of the Prophet, sallallahu 'alayhi                  wa sallam, is permissible. An example is the saying of the                  Companion, Bilal Ibn al-Harith, may Allah reward his deeds, when                  he went to the grave of the Prophet. He said: "O Messenger of                  Allah, ask Allah to send rain to your Nation." His saying                  contains this format(15). 
            
            Shaykh Muhammad Ibn Sulayman al-Kurdiyy(16) was among the                  authors who wrote refuting Ibn 'Abdul-Wahhab. He was Ibn 'Abdul-Wahhab's                  own shaykh. Among what he said is as follows:
            
            O Ibn 'Abdul-Wahhab, I advise you, for the sake of Allah, ta'ala,                  to hold your tongue regarding the Muslims. If you hear from                  anyone who asks for help from other than Allah that one has the                  power to effect things without the Will of Allah, then teach him                  the right thing about this issue, and show him the proofs which                  state no one other than Allah brings things from non-existence                  into existence. The one who rejects that is blasphemous. You                  have no right to label the majority of the Muslims as                  blasphemers(17) while you are deviant from the majority of the                  Muslims. In fact, it is more reasonable to consider the one who                  deviates from the majority of the Muslims as a blasphemer then                  to consider the Muslims as a nation as blasphemers--because the                  deviant one has followed a path other than the path of the                  believers. In Surat an-Nisa', Ayah 15, Allah said:

            [http://www.alsunnah.ca/ASFC/fitnat8.gif](http://www.alsunnah.ca/ASFC/fitnat8.gif) 

This ayah means: [Whomever contends with the Messenger after the right path was exposed to him and follows other than the way of the believers, Allah will leave him to whatever he followed and put him in Hell (Jahannam)].

            The Permissibility Of Visiting The Grave Of The Prophet




            Visiting the grave of the Prophet, sallallahu 'alayhi wa sallam,                  was performed by the Companions and the Salaf and Khalaf who                  came after them. Many hadiths cite the benefit of this deed and                  the scholars of Islam have written books about this matter(18). 



            Calling On Someone Other Than Allah




            Among of what was mentioned concerning calling on someone other                  than Allah, whether that one is present, absent, dead or alive,                  is the saying of the Prophet:

http://www.alsunnah.ca/ASFC/fitnat9.gif

which means: “If the animal of anyone of you went out of control in the wilderness, then call: `O slaves of Allah, help me’”, since there are slaves of Allah * who will respond to him.

            There is another hadith related by al-Bazzar in which the                  Prophet said:[http://www.alsunnah.ca/ASFC/fitna10a.gif](http://www.alsunnah.ca/ASFC/fitna10a.gif) 



            [http://www.alsunnah.ca/ASFC/fitna10b.gif](http://www.alsunnah.ca/ASFC/fitna10b.gif) 

which means: " If one of you lost something or needs help while in an open land, then let him say: “O slaves of Allah, help me.”" Another narration says:

            [http://www.alsunnah.ca/ASFC/fitna11.gif](http://www.alsunnah.ca/ASFC/fitna11.gif) 

which means “Rescue me, because Allah has created slaves whom you do not see.

            When traveling at nightfall the Prophet, sallallahu 'alyhi wa                  sallam, used to say:

            [http://www.alsunnah.ca/ASFC/fitna12.gif](http://www.alsunnah.ca/ASFC/fitna12.gif) 

which means: " O earth, my Lord and your Lord is Allah."

            When the Prophet visited the grave of Muslims, he used to say:

            [http://www.alsunnah.ca/ASFC/fitna13.gif](http://www.alsunnah.ca/ASFC/fitna13.gif) 

which means: " O people of the graves, peace be upon you."

            In the Tashahhud in as-Salah the Muslim says:

            [http://www.alsunnah.ca/ASFC/fitna14.gif](http://www.alsunnah.ca/ASFC/fitna14.gif) 

which means: " “O Prophet of Allah, may Allah protect you from infirmities, and have mercy and blessings on you.”"

            There is no harm in calling on and performing tawassul by                  someone unless one believes that someone other than Allah                  actually creates things. Hence, as long as one believes that                  only Allah creates them, there is no harm in performing tawassul.                  Likewise, attributing a certain doing to other than Allah does                  not harm unless one believes this doer actually creates. So once                  it is established the person does not believe the creating is                  for other than Allah then attributing a doing to other than                  Allah is understood in its proper context. When one says: "This                  medicine benefited me," or "This particular righteous Muslim                  benefited me," he is merely exposing the created reason of the                  benefit. These statements are also similar to when one says:                  "This food satisfied my hunger," or "This water quenched my                  thirst," or "This medicine cured me." When Muslims say such                  statements, they understand them in their proper context, i.e.,                  food, water, and medicine are only reasons, and Allah is the                  Creator of their benefit.


            The general proofs mentioned in this summary are enough to                  refute Ibn 'Abdul-Wahhab. The scholars of Islam have expounded                  on this issue in several treatises.
  1. Al-Hijaz refers to the western part of Arabia which includes Mecca and Medina.
    2) Al-Haramayn refers to Mecca and Medina.
    3) Ash-Sham refers to the area that includes Syria, Lebanon, Jordan, and Palestine.
    4) Only the first adversity will be presented in this booklet.
    5) Tawassul is asking Allah for goodness by a prophet, righteous believer, etc.
    6) Shirk refers to associating partners to Allah.
    7) The People of Tawhid refers to the Muslims.
    8) Ad-Dar’iyyah is a region north of the city of Riyad, Saudi Arabia.
    9) Musaylimah al-Kadhdhab was a blasphemous man who claimed the status of prophethood for himself after the death of Prophet Muhammad. He was killed by the Muslims during the caliphate of Abu Bakr, may Allah raise his rank.
    10) Ibn Majah and others related this hadith and the-Hafidh, Ibn Hajar, deemed it a strong hadith.
    11) The Prophet called her `my mother’ out of likening her to his real mother.
    12) Sixteen hafidhs of hadith classified this hadith as sahih, including at-Tirmidhiyy, at-Tabaraniyy, al-Bayhaqiyy, as-Subkiyy, among others.
    13) It is clear in the narrations of this hadith, the blind man was not in the session of the Prophet when he did as the Prophet ordered him.
    14) Salah of ‘Istisqa’ refers to performing a specific prayer which includes making supplication for rain.
    15) Al-Bayhaqiyy related this hadith and classified it as Sahih.
    16) Shaykh Muhammad Ibn Sulaym al-Kurdiyy was the one who wrote al-Hashiyah on the explanation of Ibn Hajar to the text of Bafadl.
    17) It is mentioned in a hadith it is easier for the devil to trick the lonely person who is away from other Muslims. The Prophet, sallallahu al 'alayhi wa sallam, while encouraging the Muslims to perform the prayers in congregation said:

          [http://www.alsunnah.ca/ASFC/fitnatb1.gif](http://www.alsunnah.ca/ASFC/fitnatb1.gif) 
    

which means: “Moreover, the wolf will eat the lonely lamb.”

            18) Among these hadiths is the one related by ad-Daraqutniyy                  that the Prophet said: "On the Day of Judgment, I will intercede                  for the one who visits my grave with the good intention."

Re: Shaykh Muhammad Ibn Abdul Wahaab

^^

Reading the above post makes me happy and glad that Allah :swt: guided from the ,misguidance of the Barelvis…Otherwise I too would be writing hateful stuff against my Muslim brothers like this Ya-Sultan-e-Madina guys…

Re: Shaykh Muhammad Ibn Abdul Wahaab

defo bcos no evidence has been provided by these blindfollowing brelvis who believe they are the only sunnees on this planet

Alhamdullilah i am upon the ahlus sunnah and the ones who can prove there aqeedah but evidence of qur'aan and sunnah.

May Allaah(swt) guide you brelvis and yr pirs and yr so called 'Shaykhs'.

Re: Shaykh Muhammad Ibn Abdul Wahaab

Another point which needs to be addressed, are the obvious attempts at trying to take the heat off of the obviousness of the region of Najd being that of ONLY the province in Saudi Arabia, East of the blessed province of Hijaz which encompasses Makkah, Madinah, and Ta'if. It should be understood, that for someone to attempt to say that Iraq is an-Najd that hte prophet (sal'Allahu 'alaiyhi wa sallam) was referring to, has no basis whatsoever. He (saws) was standing in Madinah when this hadith was spoken by the prophet (saws) and he pointed exactly towards the East when he (saws) said it. Look at any map in the world, and the city which lies almost with 100 percent accuracy, East of Madinah, is the city of Riyadh, which sits in the Saudi Arabian province called Najd.

Another point to consider here, is that the word Najd itself in Arabic means mountainous rocky land. all of southern Iraq is flat terrain with a mixture of marshland and plains. How is it, that all of a sudden, Iraq is being called Najd? Meanwhile the current day province of Najd in Saudi Arabia is rocky and high land as compared to those lands surrounding it, and has even mountains in many places, that is not at all flat??? It is too obvious as to the inconsistencies in the thesis of those who falsely claim that Najd refers to Iraq, when it has absolutely nothing to do with Iraq at all. Iraq, by the way dear muslim brothers and sisters, was not called Iraq, it was called Mesopotamia, and before that it was called Babylon. I am a history major this is why I know.

Below for everyone's convenience, is an article which in full detail describes as to why the region of Najd is NOT Iraq but in reality is in Saudi Arabia.

bismi’Llahi’r-Rahmani’r-Rahim

It is striking that not one of the great muhaddiths, mufassirs, grammarians, historians, or legistsof Islam has emerged from the region known as Najd, despite the extraordinary and blessed profusion of such people in other Muslim lands. This essay offers to Muslims with open minds an explanation of this remarkable fact.

**The Hadith of Najd: a correction

**
On occasion the pro-Najdi apologists also cite the etymological sense of the Arabic word najd, which means ‘high ground’. Again, a brief consultation of an atlas resolves this matter decisively. With the exception of present-day northern Iraq, which was not considered part of Iraq by any Muslim until the present century (it was called ‘al-Jazira’), Iraq is notably flat and low-lying, much of it even today being marshland, while the remainder, up to and well to the north of Baghdad, is flat, low desert or agricultural land. Najd, by contrast, is mostly plateau, culminating in peaks such as Jabal Tayyi’ (1300 metres), in the Jabal Shammar range. It is hard to see how the Arabs could have routinely applied a topographic term meaning ‘upland’ to the flat terrain of southern Iraq (the same territory which proved so suitable for tank warfare during the ‘Gulf War’, that notorious source of dispute between Riyadh’s ‘Cavaliers’ and ‘Roundheads’).

Confirmation of this identification is easily located in the hadith literature, which contains numerous references to Najd, all of which clearly denote Central Arabia. To take a few examples out of many dozens: there is the hadith narrated by Abu Daud (Salat al-Safar, 15), which runs: ‘We went out to Najd with Allah’s Messenger (Allah bless him and give him peace) until we arrived at Dhat al-Riqa‘, where he met a group from Ghatafan [a Najdite tribe].’ In Tirmidhi (Hajj, 57), there is the record of an encounter between the Messenger (Allah bless him and give him peace) and a Najdi delegation which he received at Arafa (see also Ibn Maja, Manasik, 57). In no such case does the Sunna indicate that Iraq was somehow included in the Prophetic definition of ‘Najd’.
Further evidence can be cited from the cluster of hadiths which identify the miqat points for pilgrims. In a hadith narrated by Imam Nasa’i (Manasik al-Hajj, 22), ‘A’isha (r.a.) declared that ‘Allah’s Messenger (Allah bless him and give him peace) established the miqat for the people of Madina at Dhu’l-Hulayfa, for the people of Syria and Egypt at al-Juhfa, for the people of Iraq at Dhat Irq, and for the people of Najd at Qarn, and for the Yemenis at Yalamlam.’ Imam Muslim (Hajj, 2) narrates a similar hadith: ‘for the people of Madina it is Dhu’l-Hulayfa - while on the other road it is al-Juhfa - for the people of Iraq it is Dhat Irq, for the people of Najd it is Qarn, and for the people of Yemen it is Yalamlam.’
These texts constitute unarguable proof that the Prophet (Allah bless him and give him peace) distinguished between Najd and Iraq, so much so that he appointed two separate miqat points for the inhabitants of each. For him, clearly, Najd did not include Iraq.
There are many hadiths in which the Messenger (Allah bless him and give him peace) praised particular lands. It is significant that although Najd is the closest of lands to Makka and Madina, it is not praised by any one of these hadiths. The first hadith cited above shows the Messenger’s willingness to pray for Syria and Yemen, and his insistent refusal to pray for Najd. And wherever Najd is mentioned, it is clearly seen as a problematic territory. Consider, for instance, the following noble hadith:Amr ibn Abasa said: ‘Allah’s Messenger (Allah bless him and give him peace) was one day reviewing the horses, in the company of Uyayna ibn Hisn ibn Badr al-Fazari. ...] Uyayna remarked: "The best of men are those who bear their swords on their shoulders, and carry their lances in the woven stocks of their horses, wearing cloaks, and are the people of the Najd." But Allah’s Messenger (Allah bless him and give him peace) replied: "You lie! Rather, the best of men are the men of the Yemen. Faith is a Yemeni, the Yemen of [the tribes of] Lakhm and Judham and Amila. ...] Hadramawt is better than the tribe of Harith; one tribe is better than another; another is worse ...] My Lord commanded me to curse Quraysh, and I cursed them, but he then commanded me to bless them twice, and I did so ...] Aslam and Ghifar, and their associates of Juhaina, are better than Asad and Tamim and Ghatafan and Hawazin, in the sight of Allah on the Day of Rising. ...] The most numerous tribe in the Garden shall be [the Yemeni tribes of] Madhhij and Ma’kul.’ (Ahmad ibn Hanbal and al-Tabarani, by sound narrators. Cited in Ali ibn Abu Bakr al-Haythami, *Majma‘ al-zawa’id wa manba‘ al-fawa’id *[Cairo, 1352], X, 43).

The Messenger says ‘You lie!’ to a man who praises Najd. Nowhere does he extol Najd - quite the contrary. But other hadiths in praise of other lands abound. For instance: Umm Salama narrated that Allah’s Messenger (Allah bless him and give him peace) gave the following counsel on his deathbed: ‘By Allah, I adjure you by Him, concerning the Egyptians, for you shall be victorious over them, and they will be a support for you and helpers in Allah’s path.’ (Tabarani, classed by al-Haythami as sahih Majma‘, X, 63].) (For more on the merit of the Egyptians see Sahih Muslim, commentary by Imam al-Nawawi [Cairo, 1347], XVI, 96-7.)

Qays ibn Sa‘d narrated that Allah’s Messenger (Allah bless him and give him peace) said: ‘Were faith to be suspended from the Pleiades, men from the sons of Faris [south-central Iran] would reach it.’ (Narrated in the Musnads of both Abu Ya‘la and al-Bazzar, classified as Sahih by al-Haythami. Majma‘, X, 64-5. See further Nawawi’s commentary to Sahih Muslim, XVI, 100.)

Allah’s Messenger said: ‘Tranquillity (sakina) is in the people of the Hijaz.’ (al-Bazzar, cited in Haythami, X, 53.)

On the authority of Abu’l-Darda (r.a.), the Messenger of Allah (Allah bless him and give him peace) said: ‘You will find armies. An army in Syria, in Egypt, in Iraq and in the Yemen.’ (Bazzar and Tabarani, classified as sahih: al-Haythami, Majma‘, X, 58.) This constitutes praise for these lands as homes of jihad volunteers.

‘The angels of the All-Compassionate spread their wings over Syria.’ (Tabarani, classed as sahih: Majma‘, X, 60. See also Tirmidhi, commentary of Imam Muhammad ibn Abd al-Rahman al-Mubarakfuri: Tuhfat al-Ahwadhi bi-sharh Jami‘ al-Tirmidhi, X, 454; who confirms it as hasan sahih.)

Abu Hurayra narrated that Allah’s Messenger (s) said: ‘The people of Yemen have come to you. They are tenderer of heart, and more delicate of soul. Faith is a Yemeni, and wisdom is a Yemeni.’ (Tirmidhi, Fi fadl al-Yaman, no.4028. Mubarakfuri, X, 435, 437: hadith hasan sahih. On page 436 Imam Mubarakfuri points out that the ancestors of the Ansar were from the Yemen.)

‘The people of the Yemen are the best people on earth’. (Abu Ya‘la and Bazzar, classified as sahih. Haythami, X, 54-5.)

Allah’s Messenger (s) sent a man to one of the clans of the Arabs, but they insulted and beat him. He came to Allah’s Messenger (Allah bless him and give him peace) and told him what had occurred. And the Messenger (s) said, ‘Had you gone to the people of Oman, they would not have insulted or beaten you.’ (Muslim, Fada’il al-Sahaba, 57. See Nawawi’s commentary, XVI, 98: ‘this indicates praise for them, and their merit.’)

The above hadiths are culled from a substantial corpus of material which records the Messenger (Allah bless him and give him peace) praising neighbouring regions. Again, it is striking that although Najd was closer than any other, hadiths in praise of it are completely absent.

This fact is generally known, although not publicised, by Najdites themselves. It is clear that if there existed a single hadith that names and praises Najd, they would let the Umma know. In an attempt to circumvent or neutralise the explicit and implicit Prophetic condemnation of their province, some refuse to consider that the territorial hadiths might be in any way worthy of attention, and focus their comments on the tribal groupings who dwell in Najd.
**The Tribe of Tamim

**The best-known tribe of Central Arabia are the Banu Tamim. There are hadiths which praise virtually all of the major Arab tribal groups, and to indicate the extent of this praise a few examples are listed here:

Allah’s Messenger (s) said: ‘O Allah, bless [the tribe of] Ahmas and its horses and its men sevenfold.’ (Ibn Hanbal, in Haythami, Majma‘, X, 49. According to al-Haythami its narrators are all trustworthy.)

Ghalib b. Abjur said: ‘I mentioned Qays in the presence of Allah’s Messenger (s) and he said, "May Allah show His mercy to Qays." He was asked, "O Messenger of God! Are you asking for His mercy for Qays?" and he replied, "Yes. He followed the religion of our father Ismail b. Ibrahim, Allah’s Friend. Qays! Salute our Yemen! Yemen! Salute our Qays! Qays are Allah’s cavalry upon the earth."’ (Tabarani, declared sahih by al-Haythami, X, 49.)

Abu Hurayra narrated that Allah’s Messenger (s) said: ‘How excellent a people are Azd, sweet-mouthed, honouring their vows, and pure of heart!’ (Ibn Hanbal via a good (hasan) isnad, according to Haythami, X, 49.)

Anas b. Malik said: ‘If we are not from Azd, we are not from the human race.’ (Tirmidhi, Manaqib, 72; confirmed by Mubarakfuri, X, 439 as hasan gharib sahih.)

Abdallah ibn Mas‘ud said: ‘I witnessed Allah’s Messenger (Allah bless him and give him peace) praying for this clan of Nakh‘.’ Or he said: ‘He praised them until I wished that I was one of them.’ (Ibn Hanbal, with a sound isnad. Haythami, X, 51.)

On the authority of Abdallah ibn Amr ibn al-As, who said: ‘I heard Allah’s Messenger (Allah bless him and give him peace) saying: "This command [the Caliphate] shall be in Quraysh. No-one shall oppose them without being cast down on his face by Allah, for as long as they establish the religion."’ (Bukhari, Manaqib, 2.)

The hadith which appears to praise Tamim is hence not exceptional, and can by no stretch of the imagination be employed to indicate Tamim’s superiority over other tribes. In fact, out of this vast literature on the merits of the tribes, only one significant account praises Tamim. This runs as follows: Abu Hurayra said: ‘I have continued to love Banu Tamim after I heard three things concerning them from Allah’s Messenger (s.w.s.). "They will be the sternest of my Umma against the Dajjal; one of them was a captive owned by ‘A’isha, and he said: ‘Free her, for she is a descendent of Ismail;’ and when their zakat came, he said: ‘This is the zakat of a people,’ or ‘of my people’."’ (Bukhari, Maghazi, 68.)

This hadith clearly indicates that the rigour of the Tamimites will be used for, and not against, Islam in the final culminating battle against the Dajjal; and this is unquestionably a merit. The second point is less significant, since all the Arabs are descendents of Ismail; while the variant readings of the third point make it difficult to establish its significance in an unambiguous way. Even the most positive interpretation, however, allows us to conclude no more than that the Messenger (Allah bless him and give him peace) was pleased with that tribe at the moment it paid its zakat. As we shall see, its payment of zakat proved to be short-lived.

Far more numerous are the hadiths which explicitly critique the Tamimites. These hadiths are usually disregarded by pro-Najdite apologists; but traditional Islamic scholarship demands that all, not merely some, of the evidence be mustered and taken as a whole before a verdict can be reached. And a consideration of the abundant critical material on Tamim demonstrates beyond any doubt that this tribe was regarded by the Messenger (Allah bless him and give him peace) and by the Salaf as deeply problematic.

An early indication of the nature of the Tamimites is given by Allah himself in Sura al-Hujurat. In aya 4 of this sura, He says: ‘Those who call you from behind the chambers: most of them have no sense.’ The occasion for revelation (sabab al-nuzul) here was as follows:

‘The "chambers" (hujurat) were spaces enclosed by walls. Each of the wives of Allah’s Messenger (Allah bless him and give him peace) had one of them. The aya was revealed in connection with the delegation of the Banu Tamim who came to the Prophet (s.w.s.). They entered the mosque, and approached the chambers of his wives. They stood outside them and called: "Muhammad! Come out to us!" an action which expressed a good deal of harshness, crudeness and disrespect. Allah’s Messenger (Allah bless him and give him peace) waited a while, and then came out to them. One of them, known as al-Aqra‘ ibn Habis, said: "Muhammad! My praise is an ornament, and my denunciation brings shame!" And the Messenger (Allah bless him and give him peace) replied: "Woe betide you! That is the due of Allah."’ (Imam Muhammad ibn Ahmad ibn Juzayy, al-Tashil [Beirut, 1403], p.702. See also the other tafsir works; also Ibn Hazm, Jamharat ansab al-‘Arab [Cairo, 1382], 208, in the chapter on Tamim.)

In addition to this Qur’anic critique, abundant hadiths also furnish the Umma with advice about this tribe. Since the tacit acceptance of the Prophet (Allah bless him and give him peace) constitutes a hadith, we may begin with the following incident.

This relates to a famous poem by Hassan ibn Thabit (r.a.). The Tamimites were late converts to Islam, joining the religion, after much resistance, only in the Year of Delegations (‘am al-wufud), which was the ninth year of the Hijra. They hence miss the virtue of sabiqa, of precedence in Islam. Coming at last to the Prophet (s.w.s.), the Tamim insisted on a public debate against him, and he appointed Hassan to reply to the Tamimites’ vain boasting about their tribe. Hassan’s ode, which completely defeated and humiliated them by describing the low status of their tribe, can be considered evidence for the Prophet’s (Allah bless him and give him peace) own view of Tamim, since the condemnation was given in his presence, and there is no record of his criticising it. (Diwan Hassan ibn Thabit [Beirut, 1966], p.440; for full details of the incident see Barquqi’s commentary in the same volume. See also Ibn Hisham, Sira [Guillaume translation], p.631.)

A further hadith concerning Tamim runs as follows:

On the authority of Imran ibn Husayn (r.a.): ‘A group of Tamimites came to the Prophet (s.w.s.), and he said: "O tribe of Tamim! Receive good news!" "You promise us good news, so give us something [money]!" they replied. And his face changed. Then some Yemenis came, and he said: "O people of Yemen! Accept good news, even though the tribe of Tamim have not accepted it!" And they said: "We accept." And the Prophet (Allah bless him and give him peace) began to speak about the beginning of creation, and about the Throne.’ (Bukhari, Bad’ al-Khalq, 1.)

The harsh waywardness of the Tamimi mentality documented in the Qur’an and Hadith casts an interesting light on the personality of Abu Jahl, the arch-pagan leader of Quraysh. Abu Jahl, with his fanatical hatred of the Prophet (s.w.s.), must have been shaped by the Tamimi ethic in his childhood. His mother, Asma’ bint Mukharriba, was of the tribe of Tamim. (al-Jumahi, Tabaqat Fuhul al-Shu‘ara, ed. Mahmud Shakir [Cairo, 1952], p.123.) He also married the daughter of ‘Umayr ibn Ma‘bad al-Tamimi, by whom he had his son, predictably named Tamim. (Mus‘ab ibn Abdallah, Nasab Quraysh [Cairo, 1953], p.312.)

An attribute recurrently ascribed to the Tamimites in the hadith literature is that of misplaced zeal. When they finally enter Islam, they are associated with a fanatical form of piety that demands simple and rigid adherence, rather than understanding; and which frequently defies the established authorities of the religion. Imam Muslim records a narration from Abdallah ibn Shaqiq which runs: ‘Ibn Abbas once preached to us after the asr prayer, until the sun set and the stars appeared, and people began to say: "The prayer! The prayer!" A man of the Banu Tamim came up to him and said, constantly and insistently: "The prayer! The prayer!" And Ibn Abbas replied: "Are you teaching me the sunna, you wretch?"’ (Muslim, Salat al-Musafirin, 6.)
**
Banu Tamim and the Khawarij

**Perhaps the best-known of any hadith about a Tamimite, which again draws our attention to their misplaced zeal, is the hadith of Dhu’l-Khuwaysira:

Abu Sa‘id al-Khudri (r.a.) said: ‘We were once in the presence of Allah’s Messenger (Allah bless him and give him peace) while he was dividing the spoils of war. Dhu’l-Khuwaysira, a man of the Tamim tribe, came up to him and said: "Messenger of Allah, be fair!" He replied: "Woe betide you! Who will be fair if I am not? You are lost and disappointed if I am not fair!" And Umar (r.a.) said, "Messenger of Allah! Give me permission to deal with him, so that I can cut off his head!" But he said: "Let him be. And he has companions. One of you would despise his prayer in their company, and his fast in their company. They recite the Qur’an but it goes no further than their collarbones. They pass through religion as an arrow passes through its target."’ Abu Sa‘id continued: ‘I swear that I was present when Ali ibn Abi Talib fought against them. He ordered that that man be sought out, and he was brought to us.’ (Bukhari, Manaqib, 25. For the ‘passing through’ see Abu’l-Abbas al-Mubarrad, al-Kamil, chapter on ‘Akhbar al-Khawarij’ published separately by Dar al-Fikr al-Hadith [Beirut, n.d.], pp.23-4: ‘usually when this happens none of the target’s blood remains upon it’.)

This hadith is taken by the exegetes as a prophecy, and a warning, about the nature of the Kharijites. There is a certain type of believing zealot who goes into religion so hard that he comes out the other side, with little or nothing of it remaining with him. One expert who confirms this is the Hanbali scholar Ibn al-Jawzi, well-known for his hagiographies of Ma‘ruf al-Karkhi and Rabi‘a al-Adawiya. In his book Talbis Iblis. (Beirut, 1403, p.88) under the chapter heading ‘A Mention of the Devil’s Delusion upon the Kharijites’ he narrates the hadith, and then writes: ‘This man was called Dhu’l-Khuwaysira al-Tamimi. ...] He was the first Kharijite in Islam. His fault was to be satisfied with his own view; had he paused he would have realised that there is no view superior to that of Allah’s Messenger (s.w.s.).’

Ibn al-Jawzi goes on to document the development of the Kharijite movement, and the central role played by the tribe of Tamim in it. Hence (p.89) ‘The commander of the fight [against the Sunnis, at Harura] was Shabib ibn Rab‘i al-Tamimi’; also (p.92) ‘Amr ibn Bakr al-Tamimi agreed to murder Umar’. All this even though their camp sounded like a beehive, so assiduously were they reciting the Qur’an (p.91).

The Kharijite movement proper commenced at the Siffin arbitration, when the first dissenters left the army of the khalifa Ali (k.A.w.). One of them was Abu Bilal Mirdas, a member of the tribe of Tamim (Ibn Hazm, 223), who despite his constant worship and recitation of the Qur’an became one of the most brutal of the Kharijite zealots. He is remembered as the first who said the Tahkim - the formula ‘The judgment is Allah’s alone’ - on the Day of Siffin, which became the slogan of the later Kharijite da‘wa.

In his long analysis of the Kharijite movement, Imam Abd al-Qahir al-Baghdadi also describes the intimate involvement of Tamimites, and of Central Arabians generally, noting that the tribes of Yemen and Hijaz contributed hardly anyone to the Kharijite forces. He gives an account of Dhu’l-Khuwaysira’s later Kharijite activities. Appearing before Imam Ali ibn Abi Talib (k.A.w.) he says: ‘Ibn Abi Talib! I am only fighting you for the sake of Allah and the Hereafter!’ to which Imam Ali replies: ‘Nay, you are like those of whom Allah says, "Shall I inform you who are the ones whose works are most in loss? It is they whose efforts are astray in the life of this world, but who think that they are doing good!" [Kahf, 103].’ (Imam Abd al-Qahir al-Baghdadi, al-Farq bayn al-firaq [Cairo, n.d.], 80; see the note to p.76 for the full identification of Dhu’l-Khuwaysira.)

As Imam Abd al-Qahir gives his account of the early Kharijite rebellions, replete with appalling massacres of innocent Muslim civilians, he makes it clear that the leaders of each of the significant Kharijite movements hailed from Najd. For instance, the Azariqa, one of the most vicious and widespread Khariji movements, were led by Nafi‘ ibn al-Azraq, who was from the Central Arabian tribe of Banu Hanifa (Abd al-Qahir, 82). As the Imam records, ‘Nafi and his followers considered the territory of those who opposed them to be Dar al-Kufr, in which one could slaughter their women and children. ...] They used to say: "Our opponents are mushriks, and hence we are not obliged to return anything we hold in trust to them.’ (Abd al-Qahir, 84.) After his death in battle, ‘the Azariqa pledged their allegiance to Ubaydallah ibn Ma’mun al-Tamimi. Al-Muhallab then fought them at Ahwaz, where Ubaidallah ibn Ma’mun himself died, along with his brother Uthman ibn Ma’mun and three hundred of the most fanatical of the Azariqa. The remainder retreated to Aydaj, where they pledged their allegiance to Qatari ibn al-Fuja’a, whom they called Amir al-Mu’minin.’ (Abd al-Qahir, 85-6.) The commentator to Abd al-Qahir’s text reminds us that Ibn Fuja’a was also of Tamim (p.86).

The Azariqa, who massacred countless tens of thousands of Muslims who refused to accept their views, had a rival in the Najdiyya faction of the Kharijites. These were named after Najda ibn Amir, a member of the tribe of Hanifa whose homeland is Najd; Najda himself maintained his army in Yamama, which is part of Najd. (Abd al-Qahir, 87.)

As is the way with Kharijism in all ages, the Najdiyya fragmented amid heated arguments generated by their intolerance of any dissent. The causes of this schism included the Kharijite attack on Madina, which came away with many captives; and different Kharijite ijtihads over sexual relations with Muslim women who, not being Kharijites, they had enslaved. Three major factions emerged from this split, the most dangerous of which was led by Atiyya ibn al-Aswad, again of the tribe of Hanifa. Following Najda’s death, his own faction split, again into three, one of which left Najd to raid the vicinity of Basra (Abd al-Qahir, 90-1).

The last major Kharijite sect was the Ibadiyya, which, in a gentler and much attenuated form, retains a presence even today in Zanzibar, southern Algeria, and Oman. The movement was founded by Abdallah ibn Ibad, another Tamimi. Its best-known doctrine is that non-Ibadis are kuffar: they are not mu’mins, but they are not mushriks either. ‘They forbid secret assassinations [of non-Ibadis], but allow open battles. They allow marriages [with non-Ibadis], and inheritance from them. They claim that all this is to aid them in their war for Allah and His Messenger.’ (Abd al-Qahir, 103.)

The best-known woman among the Kharijites was Qutam bint ‘Alqama, a member of the Tamimite tribe. She is remembered as the one who told her bridegroom, Ibn Muljam, that ‘I will only accept you as my husband at a dowry which I myself must name, which is three thousand dirhams, a male and a female slave, and the murder of Ali!’ He asked, ‘You shall have all that, but how may I accomplish it?’ and she replied, ‘Take him by surprise. If you escape, you will have rescued the people from evil, and will live with your wife; while if you die in the attempt, you will go on to the Garden and a delight that shall never end!’ (Mubarrad, 27.) As is generally known, Ibn Muljam was executed after he stabbed imam Ali (k.A.w.) to death outside the mosque in Kufa.

Muslims anxious not to repeat the tragic errors of the past will wish to reflect deeply upon this pattern of events. Tens of thousands of Muslims, fervently committed to the faith and outstanding for their practical piety, nonetheless fell prey to the Kharijite temptation. The ulema trace the origins of that temptation back to the incident of Dhu’l-Khuwaysira, who considered himself a better Muslim than the Prophet himself (s.w.s.). And he, like the overwhelming majority of the Kharijite leaders who followed in his footsteps, was a Tamimi. Of the non-Tamimi Kharijites, almost all were from Najd.

**The Ridda: the First Fitna

*There is a further issue which Muslims will wish to consider when forming their view of Najd. This is the attitude of the Najdis following the death of the Messenger (s.w.s.). The historians affirm that the great majority of the rebellions against the payment of *zakat which broke out during the khilafa of Abu Bakr (r.a.) took place among Najdis. Moreoever, and even more significantly, many of the the Najdi rebellions were grounded in a strange anti-Islamic ideology. The best-known of these was led by Musaylima, who claimed to be a prophet, and who established a rival shari‘a which included quasi-Muslim rituals such as forms of fasting and dietary rules. He also prescribed prayers three times a day. As leader of a rival religion, he and his Najdi enthusiasts were in a state of baghy, heretical revolt against due caliphal authority, and Abu Bakr (r.a.) sent an army against them under Khalid ibn al-Walid. In the year 12 of the Hijra Khalid defeated the Najdis at the Battle of al-Aqraba, a bloody clash that centred on a walled garden which is known to our historians as the Garden of Death, because many great Companions lost their lives there at the hands of the Najdis. (See Abdallah ibn Muslim Ibn Qutayba, Kitab al-Ma‘arif [Cairo, 1960], p.206; Ahmad ibn Yahya al-Baladhuri, Futuh al-buldan [repr. Beirut, n.d., 86.] An indication of the continuity of Najdi religious life is given by the non-Muslim traveller Palgrave, who as late as 1862 found that some Najdi tribesmen continued to revere Musaylima as a prophet. (W. Palgrave, Narrative of a year’s journey through Central and Eastern Arabia [London, 1865], I, 382.)

The other ringleader of Najdi rebellion against the khilafa was a woman known as Sajah, whose full name was Umm Sadir bint Aws, and who belonged to the tribe of Tamim. She made claims to prophethood in the name of a rabb who was ‘in the clouds’, and who gave her revelations by which she succeeded in uniting sections of the Tamim who had argued among themselves over the extent to which they should reject the authority of Madina. Leading several campaigns against tribes who remained loyal to Islam, the Najdi prophetess is said to have thrown in her lot with Musaylima. Other than this, little is known of her fate. (Ibn Qutayba, Ma‘arif, p.405; Baladhuri, Futuh, pp.99-100.)**

Recent Najdi Tendencies*It is well-known that the Najdi reformer, Muhammad ibn Abd al-Wahhab, was a Tamimi. The violence and *takfir associated with the movement which carries his name surely bears more than a coincidental resemblance to the policies and mindset of the Tamimi Kharijites of ancient Najd. Consider, for instance, the following massacre, of the Shi‘a of Karbala in April 1801, as described by a Wahhabi historian:

Saud made for Karbala with his victorious army, famous pedigree horses, and all the settled people and bedouin of Najd ...] The Muslims (i.e. the Wahhabis) surrounded Karbala and took it by storm. They killed most of the people in the markets and houses. One cannot count their spoils. They stayed there for just one morning, and left after midday, taking away all the possessions. Nearly two thousand people were killed in Karbala. (Uthman ibn Bishr, Unwan al-Majd fi Tarikh Najd (Makka, 1349), 1, 121-122.)

It is hard to distinguish this raid, and the brutality of its accomplishment, from the Khariji raids from Najd into the same region a thousand years earlier.

Muhammad Finati, an Italian convert to Islam who served with the Caliphal army which defeated the Wahhabis, wrote a long first-hand account of the extreme barbarism of the Najdi hordes. For instance:

Such among us as fell alive into the hands of these cruel fanatics, were wantonly mutilated by the cutting off of their arms and legs, and left to perish in that state, some of whom, in the course of our retreat, I myself actually saw, who had no greater favour to ask than that we would put them to death. (G. Finati, *Narrative of the Life and Adventures of Giovanni Finati *(London, 1830), I, 287).

It is sometimes claimed that the days when ‘all the settled people and bedouin of Najd’ would happily commit such mass murder are long gone, and that Wahhabism has become more moderate. But another, more recent example, shows otherwise. In 1924, the Wahhabi army entered the city of Ta’if, plundering it for three days. The chief qadi and the ulema were dragged from their houses and slaughtered, while several hundred other civilians lost their lives. (Ibn Hizlul, Tarikh Muluk Al Sa‘ud [Riyadh, 1961], pp.151-3.) After giving the the Sunni population of the Hijaz this terrorist lesson, ‘Ibn Saud occupied Mecca with Britain’s tacit blessing’ (Alexei Vassiliev, A History of Saudi Arabia [London, 1998], p.264).**

*A good deal of material concerning Najd and Tamim has been preserved from the time of the Salaf. If we reject the method of some Najdi apologists, a method based on the highly selective quotation of hadiths coupled with the blind imitation of opinions expressed by late-medieval commentary writers, we may reach some reasonably settled and authoritative conclusions regarding Central Arabia and its people. The Qur’an, the sound Hadith, and the experience of the Salaf overwhelmingly concur that Central Arabia is a region of *fitna. The first of all fitnas in Islam emerged from that place, notably the arrogance of Dhu’l-Khuwaysira and his like, and also the apostasy and fondness for false prophets which caused such difficulty for Abu Bakr (r.a.). Subsequently, the Kharijite heresy, overwhelmingly Najdi in its roots, cast a long shadow over the early history of Islam, dividing the Muslims, distracting their armies from the task of conquering Byzantium, and injecting rancour, suspicion, and bitterness among the very earliest generations of Muslims. Only the most determined, blinkered and irresponsible Najdi sympathiser could ignore this evidence, transmitted so reliably from the pure Salaf, and persist in the delusion that Najd and the misguided, literalistic rigorism which it recurrently produces, is somehow an area favoured by Allah.

And Allah knows best. May He unite the Umma through love for the early Muslims who refused bigotry, and may He preserve us from the trap of Kharijism and those who are attracted to its mindset in our time. Amin.

Re: Shaykh Muhammad Ibn Abdul Wahaab

It is the other way around gentlemen, they betrayed the Ottoman Sultan and led rebel raids into makkah and madinah, plundered, robbed, and killed other muslims. Forget about talking about others dear members of this forum, but I am talking about murdering other Muslims which was undertaken and known as an historical fact by the raiders from East of Hijaz.

May Allah Jalla Jalalu save Ummatur-Rasul-lillah (sal' Allahu alaiyhi wa ala alihi wa sallam) from the trials and tribulations of al-Masih ad-Dajjal, and all those who support him.

Ya Allah, may we remain under the protection of our Rasul (saws) and make it known once again our love, respect, and honour for Your most beloved (saws). Ameen.

Re: Shaykh Muhammad Ibn Abdul Wahaab

Asalaam'alaykum people. I am currently read the articles posted by bro sultan and trying to** verify(something we should all be doing)** the Hadeeths and Ayaahs and seeing the correct context of these. it might take me a day or 2(Allaah(swt) knows best) but il post any info.

I have already spotted a few errors. Insha'Allaah be patient oh seekers of truth.

Re: Shaykh Muhammad Ibn Abdul Wahaab

Since I was a Barelvi with a family history of having Peeri Mureedi in my family, I think I am best capable of understanding what brother Sultan feels…I too was brainwashed by the Barelvi scholars to hate the true scholars and true Islam because it took us away from the Fitnah of Barelviat…

I always felt as if Wahabbism (strict adherence to Quran and Sunnah and junking all that is outside their fold) was a creation of the shaitaan…

It is truly later I understood where the true Shaitaniyat lay…It was in the innovations, exaggerations, man made stories and Aqaaids of the Barelvis and their scholars…

So I reject everything that Barelviat has to offer and embrace only the true Quran and Sunnah by the grace of Allah :swt:…

Otherwise I too would be saying nonsense that the Holy Prophet :saw: neither had a shadow, roses grew where his sweat dropped, he was always sheltered by a cloud, he is still alive and amongst us, he had knowledge of the unseen which did not necessarily come from Allah :swt:…

Re: Shaykh Muhammad Ibn Abdul Wahaab

This really isn't going anywhere. Enough bickering already. I think we can all find better topics to discuss.

Different sides have different opinions and lets leave it at that.