Al-Imam Al-A'zam Imam Abu Hanifa Nu'man Ibn Thabit
Shaykh Dr. Gibril Fouad Haddad
Al-Nu`man ibn Thabit al-Taymi, al-Imam
Abu Hanifa (d. 150), called "The Imam" by Abu Dawud, and
"The Imam, one of those who have reached the sky" by Ibn
Hajar, he is known in the Islamic world as "The Greatest
Imam" (al-imâm al-a`zam) and his school has the
largest number of followers among the four schools of Ahl
al-Sunna. He is the first of the four mujtahid
imams and the only Successor (tâbi`i) among them,
having seen the Companions Anas ibn Malik, `Abd Allah ibn
Abi Awfa, Sahl ibn Sa`d al-Sa`idi, Abu al-Tufayl, and `Amir
ibn Wathila.
Abu Hanifa is the first in Islam to
organize the writing of fiqh under sub-headings
embracing the whole of the Law, beginning with purity (tahara)
followed by prayer (sala), an order which was
retained by all subsequent scholars such as Malik, Shafi`i,
Abu Dawud, Bukhari, Muslim, Tirmidhi, and others. All these
and their followers are indebted to him and give him a share
of their reward because he was the first to open that road
for them, according to the hadith of the Prophet: "He who
starts something good in Islam has its reward and the reward
of those who practice it until the Day of Judgement, without
lessening in the least the reward of those who practice it.
The one who starts something bad in Islam will incur its
punishment and the punishment of all those who practice it
until the Day of Judgement without lessening their
punishment in the least." Al-Shafi`i referred to this when
he said: "People are all the children of Abu Hanifa in
fiqh, of Ibn Ishaq in history, of Malik in hadith, and
of Muqatil in tafsîr."
Al-Khatib narrated from Abu Hanifa’s
student Abu Nu`aym that the latter said: "Muslims should
make du`a to Allah on behalf of Abu Hanifa in their
prayers, because the Sunan and the fiqh were
preserved for them through him. Al-Dhahabi wrote one volume
on the life of each of the other three great Imams and said:
"The account of Abu Hanifa’s life requires two volumes." His
son Hammad said as he washed his father’s body for burial:
"May Allah have mercy on you! You have exhausted whoever
tries to catch up with you."
Abu Hanifa was scrupulously pious and
refused Ibn Hubayra’s offer of a judgeship even when the
latter had him whipped. Like al-Bukhari and al-Shafi`i, he
used to make 60 complete recitations (khatma) of
Qur’an every Ramadan: one in the day, one in the night,
besides his teaching and other duties. Ibrahim ibn Rustum
al-Marwazi said: "Four are the Imams that recited the entire
Qur’an in a single rak`a: `Uthman ibn `Affan, Tamim
al-Dari, Sa`id ibn Jubayr, and Abu Hanifa." Ibn al-Mubarak
said: "Abu Hanifa for a long time would pray all five
prayers with a single ablution."
Al-Suyuti relates in Tabyid al-Sahifa
that a certain visitor came to observe Abu Hanifa and saw
him all day long in the mosque, teaching relentlessly,
answering every question from both the scholars and the
common people, not stopping except to pray, then standing at
home in prayer when people were asleep, hardly ever eating
or sleeping, and yet the most handsome and gracious of
people, always alert and never tired, day after day for a
long time, so that in the end the visitor said: "I became
convinced that this was not an ordinary matter, but
wilâya (Friendship with Allah)."
Al-Shafi`i said: "Knowledge revolves
around three men: Malik, al-Layth, and Ibn `Uyayna." Al-Dhahabi
commented: "Rather, it revolves also around al-Awza`i, al-Thawri,
Ma`mar, Abu Hanifa, Shu`ba, and the two Hammads [ibn Zayd
and ibn Salama]."
Sufyan al-Thawri praised Abu Hanifa
when he said: "We were in front of Abu Hanifa like small
birds in front of the falcon," and Sufyan stood up for him
when Abu Hanifa visited him after his brother’s death, and
he said: "This man holds a high rank in knowledge, and if I
did not stand up for his science I would stand up for his
age, and if not for his age then for his Godwariness (wara`),
and if not for his Godwariness then for his jurisprudence
(fiqh)." Ibn al-Mubarak praised Abu Hanifa and called
him a sign of Allah. Both Ibn al-Mubarak and Sufyan al-Thawri
said: "Abu Hanifa was in his time the most knowledgeable of
all people on earth." Ibn Hajar also related that Ibn
al-Mubarak said: "If Allah had not rescued me with Abu
Hanifa and Sufyan [al-Thawri] I would have been like the
rest of the common people." Dhahabi relates it as: "I would
have been an innovator."
An example of Abu Hanifa’s perspicuity
in inferring legal rulings from source-texts is his reading
of the following hadith:
The Prophet said: "Your life in
comparison to the lifetime of past nations is like the
period between the time of the mid-afternoon prayer (‘asr)
and sunset. Your example and the example of the Jews and
Christians is that of a man who employed laborers and said
to them: ‘Who will work for me until mid-day for one
qirât (a unit of measure, part of a dinar) each?’ The
Jews worked until mid-day for one qirât each. Then
the man said: ‘Who will work for me from mid-day until the
‘asr prayer for one qirât each?’ The
Christians worked from mid-day until the ‘asr prayer
for one qirât each. Then the man said: ‘Who will work
for me from the `asr prayer until the maghrib
prayer for two qirât each?’ And that, in truth, is
all of you. In truth, you have double the wages. The Jews
and the Christians became angry and said: ‘We did more labor
but took less wages.’ But Allah said: ‘Have I wronged you in
any of your rights?’ They replied no. Then He said: ‘This is
My Blessing which I give to whom I wish.’"
It was deduced from the phrase "We did
more labor" that the time of mid-day to `asr must
always be longer than that between `asr and
maghrib. This is confirmed by authentic reports whereby:
The Prophet hastened to pray zuhr
and delayed praying `asr.
The Prophet said: "May Allah have
mercy on someone who prays four rak`as before `asr.
`Ali delayed praying `asr until
shortly before the sun changed, and he reprimanded the
mu’adhdhin who was hurrying him with the words: "He is
trying to teach us the Sunna!"
Ibrahim al-Nakha`i said: "Those that
came before you used to hasten more than you to pray zuhr
and delay more than you in praying `asr." Al-Tahanawi
said: "Those that came before you" are the Companions.
Ibn Mas`ud delayed praying `asr.
Sufyan al-Thawri, Abu Hanifa, and his
two companions Muhammad ibn a-Hasan and Abu Yusuf therefore
considered it better to lengthen the time between zuhr
and `asr by delaying the latter prayer as long as the
sun did not begin to redden, while the majority of the
authorities considered that praying `asr early is
better, on the basis of other sound evidence to that effect.
Like every Friend of Allah, Abu Hanifa
had his enemies. `Abdan said that he heard Ibn al-Mubarak
say: "If you hear them mention Abu Hanifa derogatively then
they are mentioning me derogatively. In truth I fear for
them Allah’s displeasure." Authentically related from Bishr
al-Hafi is the statement: "No-one criticizes Abu Hanifa
except an envier or an ignoramus." Hamid ibn Adam al-Marwazi
said: I heard Ibn al-Mubarak say: "I never saw anyone more
fearful of Allah than Abu Hanifa, even on trial under the
whip and through money and property." Abu Mu`awiya al-Darir
said: "Love of Abu Hanifa is part of the Sunna."
Main sources:
al-Khatib, Tarikh Baghdad 13:324-356;
al-Dhahabi, Manaqib Abi Hanifa 22-36 and Tabaqat
al-Huffaz 1:168;
Ibn Hajar, Tahdhib al-Tahdhib 10:450;
Ibn Kathir, al-Bidaya wa al-Nihaya 10:114;
al-Suyuti, Tabyid al-Sahifa p. 94-95;
al-Haytami, al-Khayrat al-Hisan.
