© Nuh Ha Mim Keller 1995
HOW WOULD YOU RESPOND TO THE CLAIM THAT SUFISM IS BID'A?
I would respond by looking to see how traditional ulama or Islamic scholars have viewed it. For the longest period of Islamic history--from Umayyad times to Abbasid, to Mameluke, to the end of the six-hundred-year Ottoman period--Sufism has been taught and understood as an Islamic discipline, like Qur'anic exegesis (tafsir), hadith, Qur'an recital (tajwid), tenets of faith (ilm al-tawhid) or any other, each of which preserved some particular aspect of the din or religion of Islam. While the details and terminology of these shari'a disciplines were unknown to the first generation of Muslims, when they did come into being, they were not considered bid'a or "reprehensible innovation" by the ulema of shari'a because for them, bid'a did not pertain to means, but rather to ends, or more specifically, those ends that nothing in Islam attested to the validity of.
To illustrate this point, we may note that the Prophet (Allah bless him and give him peace) never in his life prayed in a mosque built of reinforced concrete, with a carpeted floor, glass windows, and so on, yet these are not considered bid'a, because we Muslims have been commanded to come together in mosques to perform the prayer, and large new buildings for this are merely a means to carry out the command.
In the realm of knowledge, books of detailed
interpretation of the Qur'an, verse by verse and sura by sura,
were not known to the first generation of Islam, nor was the term
tafsir current among them, yet because of its benefit in
preserving a vital aspect of the revelation, the understanding of
the Qur'an, when the tafsir literature came into being,
it was acknowledged to serve an end endorsed by the shari'a and
was not condemned as bid'a. The same is true of most of
the Islamic sciences, such as ilm al-jarh wa tadil or
"the science of weighing positive and negative factors for
evaluating the reliability of hadith narrators", or ilm
al-tawhid, "the science of tenets of Islamic
faith", and other disciplines essential to the shari'a. In
this connection, Imam Shafi'i (d. 204/820) has said,
"Anything which has a support (mustanad) from the
shari'a is not bid'a, even if the early Muslims did not
do it" (Ahmad al-Ghimari, Tashnif al-adhan, Cairo:
Maktaba al-Khanji, n.d., 133).
Similarly ilm al-tasawwuf, "the science of
Sufism" came into being to preserve and transmit a
particular aspect of the shari'a, that of ikhlas or
sincerity. It was recognized that the sunna of the Prophet (Allah
bless him and give him peace) was not only words and actions, but
also states of being: that a Muslim must not only say certain
things and do certain things, but must also be something. The
shari'a commands one, for example, in many Qur'anic verses and
prophetic hadiths, to fear Allah, to have sincerity toward Him,
to be so certain in ones knowledge of Allah that one worships Him
as if one sees Him, to love the Prophet (Allah bless him and give
him peace) more than any other human being, to show love and
respect to all fellow Muslims, to show mercy, and to have many
other states of the heart. It likewise forbids us such inward
states as envy, malice, pride, arrogance, love of this world,
anger for the sake of ones ego, and so on. Al-Hakim al-Tirmidhi
relates, for example, with a chain of transmission judged
rigorously authenticated (sahih) by Ibn Main, the hadith
"Anger spoils faith (iman) as [the bitterness of]
aloes sap spoils honey" (Nawadir al-usul. Istanbul
1294/1877. Reprint.
Beirut: Dar Sadir, n.d., 6).
If we reflect upon these states, obligatory to attain or to eliminate, we notice that they proceed from dispositions, dispositions not only lacking in the unregenerate human heart, but acquired only with some effort, resulting in a human change so profound that the Qur'an in many verses terms it purification, as when Allah says in surat al-Ala, for example, "He has succeeded who purifies himself" (Qur'an 87:14). Bringing about this change is the aim of the Islamic science of Sufism, and it cannot be termed bid'a, because the shari'a commands us to accomplish the change.
At the practical level, the nature of this
science of purifying the heart (like virtually all other
traditional Islamic disciplines) requires that the knowledge be
taken from those who possess it. This is why historically we find
that groups of students gathered around particular sheikhs to
learn the discipline of Sufism from. While such tariqas or
groups, past and present, have emphasized different ways to
realize the attachment of the heart to Allah commanded by the
Islamic revelation, some features are found in all of them, such
as learning knowledge from a teacher by precept and example, and
then methodically increasing ones iman or faith by applying this
knowledge through performing obligatory and supererogatory works
of worship, among the greatest of latter being dhikr or the
remembrance of Allah. There is much in the Qur'an and sunna that
attests to the validity of this approach, such as the hadith
related by al-Bukhari that:
Allah Most High says: "....My slave approaches Me with
nothing more beloved to Me than what I have made obligatory upon
him, and My slave keeps drawing nearer to Me with voluntary works
until I love him. And when I love him, I am his hearing with
which he hears, his sight with which he sees, his hand with which
he seizes, and his foot with which he walks. If he asks me, I
will surely give to him, and if he seeks refuge in Me, I will
surely protect him (Sahih al-Bukhari. 9 vols. Cairo 1313/1895.
Reprint (9 vols. in 3). Beirut: Dar al-Jil, n.d., 5.131:
6502)--which is a way of expressing that such a person has
realized the consummate awareness of tawhid or
"unity of Allah" demanded by the shari'a, which entails
total sincerity to Allah in all one's actions. Because of this
hadith, and others, traditional ulama have long
acknowledged that ilm or "Sacred Knowledge" is
not sufficient in itself, but also entails amal or "applying
what one knows"--as well as the resultant hal or
"praiseworthy spiritual state" mentioned in the hadith.
It was perceived in all Islamic times that when a scholar joins between these aspects, his words mirror his humility and sincerity, and for that reason enter the hearts of listeners. This is why we find that so many of the Islamic scholars to whom Allah gave tawfiq or success in their work were Sufis. Indeed, to throw away every traditional work of the Islamic sciences authored by those educated by Sufis would be to discard 75 percent or more of the books of Islam. These men included such scholars as the Hanafi Imam Muhammad Amin Ibn Abidin, Sheikh al-Islam Zakaria al-Ansari, Imam Ibn Daqiq al-Eid, Imam al-Izz Ibn Abd al-Salam, Abd al-Ghani al-Nabulsi, Sheikh Ahmad al-Sirhindi, Sheikh Ibrahim al-Bajuri, Imam al-Ghazali, Shah Wali Allah al-Dahlawi, Imam al-Nawawi, the hadith master (hafiz, someone with 100,000 hadiths by memory) Abd al-Adhim al-Mundhiri, the hadith master Murtada al-Zabidi, the hadith master Abd al-Rauf al-Manawi, the hadith master Jalal al-Din al-Suyuti, the hadith master Taqi al-Din al-Subki, Imam al-Rafi'i, Imam Ibn Hajar al-Haytami, Zayn al-Din al-Mallibari, Ahmad ibn Naqib al-Misri, and many many others.
Imam al-Nawawi's attitude towards Sufism is plain
from his work Bustan al-arifin [The grove of the
knowers of Allah] on the subject, as well as his references
to al-Qushayris famous Sufi manual al-Risala al-Qushayriyya
throughout his own Kitab al-adhkar [Book of
the remembrances of Allah], and the fact that fifteen out of
seventeen quotations about sincerity (ikhlas) and being
true (sidq) in an introductory section of his largest
legal work (al-Majmu: sharh al-Muhadhdhab. 20 vols.
Cairo n.d. Reprint. Medina: al-Maktaba al-Salafiyya, n.d.,
1.1718) are from Sufis who appear by name in al-Sulamis Tabaqat
al-Sufiyya [The successive generations of Sufis]. Even Ibn
Taymiyya (whose views on Sufism remain strangely unfamiliar even
to those for whom he is their "Sheikh of Islam")
devoted volumes ten and eleven of his Majmu al-fatawa to Sufism,
while his student Ibn Qayyim al-Jawziyya wrote his three-volume
Madarij al-salikin as a detailed commentary on Abdullah
al-Ansaris Manazil al-sairin, a guide to the maqamat or
"spiritual stations" of the Sufi path. These and many
other Muslim scholars knew firsthand the value of Sufism as an
ancillary shari'a discipline needed to purify the heart, and this
was the reason that the Umma as a whole did not judge Sufism to
be a bid'a down through the ages of Islamic civilization, but
rather recognized it as the science of ikhlas or
sincerity, so urgently needed by every Muslim on "a
day when wealth will not avail, nor sons, but only him who brings
Allah a sound heart" (Qur'an 26:88). And Allah
alone gives success.
© Nuh Ha Mim Keller 1995