Imam Malik Ibn Anas
Shaykh Dr. Gibril Fouad Haddad
Malik ibn Anas ibn Malik ibn `Amr,
al-Imam, Abu `Abd Allah al-Humyari al-Asbahi al-Madani
(93-179), the Shaykh of Islam, Proof of the Community, Imam
of the Abode of Emigration, and Knowledgeable Scholar of
Madina predicted by the Prophet. The second of the four
major mujtahid imams, whose school filled North
Africa, al-Andalus, much of Egypt, and some of al-Sham,
Yemen, Sudan, Iraq, and Khurasan. He is the author of al-Muwatta’
("The Approved"), formed of the sound narrations of the
Prophet from the people of the Hijaz together with the
sayings of the Companions, the Followers, and those after
them. It was hailed by al-Shafi`i as the soundest book on
earth after the Qur’an, nearest book on earth to the Qur’an,
most correct book on earth after the Qur’an, and most
beneficial book on earth after the Qur’an according to four
separate narrations. Malik said: "I showed my book to
seventy jurists of Madina, and every single one of them
approved me for it (kulluhum wāta’ani `alayh), so I
named it ‘The Approved’." Imam al-Bukhari said that the
soundest of all chains of transmission was "Malik, from Nafi`,
from Ibn `Umar." The scholars of hadith call it the Golden
Chain, and there are eighty narrations with this chain in
the Muwatta’.
Among those Malik narrated from in the
Muwatta’: Ayyub al-Sakhtyani, Ja`far ibn Muhammad
(al-Sadiq), Zayd ibn Aslam, `Ata’ al-Khurasani, al-Zuhri,
Ibn al-Munkadir, `Alqama, Nafi` the freedman of Ibn `Umar,
and others. Among those who narrated from Malik: al-Zuhri,
Ibn Jurayj, Abu Hanifa, al-Awza`i, Sufyan al-Thawri, Shu`ba,
Ibn al-Mubarak, Muhammad ibn al-Hasan, `Abd al-Rahman ibn
Mahdi, Waki`, Yahya al-Qattan, al-Shafi`i, Ibn Wahb, Abu
Dawud al-Tayalisi, `Abd al-Razzaq, and many others.
The Prophet said: "Very soon will
people beat the flanks of camels in search of knowledge, and
they shall find no-one more knowledgeable than the
knowledgeable scholar of Madina." Al-Tirmidhi, al-Qadi `Iyad,
Dhahabi and others relate from Sufyan ibn `Uyayna, `Abd al-Razzaq,
Ibn Mahdi, Ibn Ma`in, Dhu’ayb ibn `Imama, Ibn al-Madini, and
others that they considered that scholar to be Malik ibn
Anas. It is also related from Ibn `Uyayna that he later
considered it to be `Abd Allah ibn `Abd al-`Aziz al-`Umari.
Al-Dhahabi said of the latter: "He possessed knowledge and
good fiqh, spoke the truth fearlessly, ordered good,
and remained aloof from society. He used to press Malik in
private to renounce the world and seclude himself."
Abu Mus`ab said: "Malik did not pray
in congregation [in the Prophet’s mosque] for twenty-five
years. He was asked: ‘What is preventing you?’ He said:
‘Lest I see something reprehensible and be obligated to
change it.’" Another narration from Abu Mus`ab states:
"After Malik left the [Prophet’s] mosque he used to pray in
his house with a congregation that followed him, and he
prayed the Jum`a prayer alone in his house." Ibn Sa`d
narrates from Muhammad ibn `Umar: "Malik used to come to the
Mosque and pray the prayers and the Jum`a, as well as
the funeral prayers. He used to visit the sick and sit in
the Mosque where his companions would came and saw him. Then
he quit sitting there, instead he would pray and leave, and
he quit attending the funeral prayers. Then he quit
everything, neither attending the prayers nor the Jum`a
in the mosque. Nor would he visit anyone who was sick or
other than that. The people bore with it, for they were
extremely fond of him and respected him too much. This
lasted until he died. If asked about it, he said: ‘Not
everyone can mention his excuse.’"
Ibn `Abd al-Barr said that Malik was
the first who compiled a book formed exclusively of sound
narrations. Abu Bakr ibn al-`Arabi said: "The Muwatta’
is the first foundation and the core, while al-Bukhari’s
book is the second foundation in this respect. Upon these
two all the rest have built, such as Muslim and al-Tirmidhi."
Shah Wali Allah said something similar and added that it is
the principal authority of all four Schools of Law, which
stand in relation to it like the commentary stands in
relation to the main text. Malik composed it in the course
of forty years, having started with ten thousand narrations
until he reduced them to their present number of under
2,000.
Al-Suyuti said: "There is no mursal
narration in the Muwatta’ except it has one or
several strengthening proofs (`ādid aw `awādid)." Ibn
`Abd al-Barr composed a book in which he listed all the
narrations of the Muwatta’ that are either mursal,
or munqati`, or mu`dal, and he provided
complete sound chains for all of them except four:
"In truth I do not forget, but I am
made to forget so that I shall start a Sunna." This is the
second hadith in the book of Sahw.
"The Prophet was shown the lifespans
of people before his time, or whatever Allah willed of it,
and seemed alarmed that the lifespans of his Community were
too brief to reach the amount of deeds reached by previous
communities who lived long. Whereupon Allah gave him the
Most Precious Night (layla al-qadr), which is better
than a thousand months." This is the fifteenth hadith in the
book of I`tikaf.
Mu`adh ibn Jabal said: "The last
instruction I received from Allah’s Messenger when I put my
foot in the stirrup was: ‘Beautify your manners for the
people, O Mu`adh ibn Jabal!’" This is the first hadith of
the book of Husn al-Khuluq.
"If clouds appear towards the sea then
go northwards, that is the mark of heavyish rain." This is
the fifth hadith of the book of Istisqa’.
Among the hadith masters, al-`Iraqi
and his student Ibn Hajar agreed with Ibn `Abd al-Barr that
the above four hadiths have no chain, but others follow a
different view: Shaykh Muhammad al-Shinqiti mentioned in his
Dalil al-Salik ila Muwatta’ al-Imam Malik (p. 14)
that Shaykh Salih al-Fulani al-`Umari al-Madani said: "Ibn
al-Salah provided complete chains for the four hadiths in
question in an independent epistle which I have in my
possession, written in his own hand." Shaykh Ahmad Shakir
said: "But al-Shinqiti did not mention what these chains
were, and so the scholars cannot judge on the question."
Al-Zurqani counted as sixty-nine the
number of those who narrated the Muwatta’ directly
from Malik, geographically spread as follows:
- Seventeen in Madina, among them Abu
Mus`ab Ahmad ibn Abi Bakr al-Zuhri, whose version has
received a recent edition;
- Two in Mecca, among them al-Shafi`i;
- Ten in Egypt, among them `Abd Allah
ibn Wahb, `Abd Allah ibn Yusuf al-Tinnisi al-Dimashqi, whose
narration al-Bukhari chose, and Dhu al-Nun al-Misri;
- Twenty-seven in Iraq, among them `Abd
al-Rahman ibn Mahdi, whose narration Ahmad ibn Hanbal chose,
Yahya ibn Yahya al-Tamimi al-Hanzali al-Naysaburi, whose
narration Muslim chose, and Abu Hanifa’s student Muhammad
ibn al-Hasan al-Shaybani, whose version has been published
but greatly differs from the others and also contains other
than what is narrated from Malik, so that it became known as
Muwatta’ Muhammad;
- Thirteen in al-Andalus, among them
the jurist Yahya ibn Yahya al-Laythi "the Sage of al-Andalus"
ū thus nicknamed by Malik himself ū whose version is the
most commonly used today and is the version meant by the
term "Malik’s Muwatta’." He is mainly responsible for
the spread of the Maliki School in al-Andalus.
- Two from al-Qayrawan;
- Two from Tunis;
- Seven from al-Sham.
Imam Malik is the connection of the
entire Islamic Community to the knowledge of the Sunna as it
was preserved by the scholars of the Prophet’s city, al-Madina.
This reference-point of his school of jurisprudence is
observed time and again in the Muwatta’ with the
phrase: "And this is what I have found (or seen) the people
of knowledge practicing." He was keenly aware of his mission
as both the transmitter and the elucidator of the Sunna.
This is characteristic of his students’ praise of him,
beginning with al-Shafi`i’s famous sayings: "No-one
constitutes as great a favor to me in Allah’s Religion as
Malik" and "When the scholars of knowledge are mentioned,
Malik is the guiding star." `Abd Allah ibn Wahb said: "Every
memorizer of hadith that does not have an Imam in fiqh
is misguided (dāll), and if Allah had not rescued us
with Malik and al-Layth (ibn Sa`d), I would have been
misguided." Abu Mus`ab recounts the following story:
I went in to see Malik ibn Anas. He
said to me: "Look under my place of prayer or prayer-mat and
see what is there." I looked and found a certain writing. He
said: "Read it." It contained the account of a dream which
one of his brothers had seen and which concerned him. Malik
recited it [from memory]: "I saw the Prophet in my sleep. He
was in his mosque and the people were gathered around him,
and he said: ‘I have hidden for you under my pulpit (minbar)
something good – or: knowledge – and I have ordered Malik to
distribute it to the people.’" Then Malik wept, so I got up
and left him.
The caliph Abu Ja`far al-Mansur had
forbidden Malik to narrate the hadith: "The divorce of the
coerced does not take effect" (laysa `ala mustakrahin /
li mukrahin talāq). Then a spy came to Malik and asked
him about the issue, whereupon Malik narrated the hadith in
front of everyone. He was seized and lashed until his
shoulder was dislocated and he passed out. When he came to,
he said: "He [al-Mansur] is absolved of my lashing." When
asked why he had absolved him, Malik replied: "I feared to
meet the Prophet after being the cause for the perdition of
one of his relatives." Ibrahim ibn Hammad said he saw Malik
being carried up and walking away, carrying one of his hands
with the other. Then they shaved his face and he was mounted
on a camel and paraded. He was ordered to deprecate himself
aloud, whereupon he said: "Whoever knows me, knows me;
whoever does not know me, my name is Malik ibn Anas, and I
say: The divorce of the coerced is null and void!" When news
of this reached Ja`far ibn Sulayman (d. 175) the governor of
Madina and cousin of al-Mansur, he said: "Bring him down,
let him go."
Imam Malik held the hadith of the
Prophet in such reverence that he never narrated anything
nor gave a fatwa unless in a state of ritual purity.
Isma`il ibn Abi Uways said: "I asked my uncle ū Malik ū
about something. He bade me sit, made ablution, sat on the
couch, and said: la hawla wa la quwwata illa billah.
He did not give a fatwa except he said it first." Al-Haytham
said: "I heard Malik being asked forty eight questions, to
thirty-two of which he replied: ‘I do not know.’" Abu Mus`ab
reported that Malik said: "I did not give fatwas
before seventy scholars first witnessed to my competence to
do it."
Malik’s ethics, together with the
states of awe and emotion which were observed on him by his
entourage, were no doubt partly inherited from great shaykhs
of his such as Ja`far al-Sadiq, Ibn Hurmuz, and Ibn Shihab
al-Zuhri. He visited his shaykh Ibn Hurmuz (d. 148) every
day from morning to night for a period of about eight years
and recounts: "I would come to Ibn Hurmuz, whereupon he
would order the servant to close the door and let down the
curtain, then he would start speaking of the beginning of
this Umma, and tears would stream down his beard."
The Maliki shaykh Ibn Qunfudh al-Qusantini (d. 810) wrote:
It was the practice of the Pious
Predecessors and the Imams of the past that whenever the
Prophet was mentioned in their presence they were
overwhelmed by reverence, humbleness, stillness, and
dignity. Ja`far ibn Muhammad ibn `Ali ibn al-Husayn ibn `Ali
ibn Abi Talib would turn pale whenever he heard the Prophet
mentioned. Imam Malik would not mention a hadith except in a
state of ritual purity. `Abd al-Rahman ibn al-Qasim ibn
Muhammad ibn Abu Bakr al-Siddiq would turn red and stammer
whenever he heard the Prophet mentioned. As for `Amir ibn `Abd
Allah ibn al-Zubayr ibn al-`Awamm al-Asadi (one of the early
Sufis), he would weep until his eyes had no tears left in
them. When any hadiths were mentioned in their presence they
would lower their voices. Malik said: "The Prophet’s
sacredness (hurma) is in death is as his sacredness
was in life."
Qutayba said: "When we went to see
Malik, he would come out to us adorned, wearing kuhl
on his eyes, perfumed, wearing his best clothes, sit at the
head of the circle, call for palm-leaf fans, and give each
one of us a fan." Muhammad ibn `Umar: "Malik’s circle was a
circle of dignity and courtesy. He was a man of majestic
countenance and noblity. There was no part for self-display,
vain talk, or loud speech in his circle. His reader would
read for all, and no-one looked into his own book, nor asked
questions, out of awe before Malik and out of respect for
him."
When the caliph al-Mahdi sent his sons
Harun and Musa to learn from Malik, the latter would not
read to them but told them: "The people of Madina read
before the scholar just like children read to the teacher,
and if they make a mistake, he corrects them." Similarly
when Harun al-Rashid with his own two sons requested Malik
to read for them, he replied: "I have stopped reading for
anybody a long time ago." When Harun requested the people to
leave so that he could read freely before Malik, the latter
also refused and said: "If the common people are forbidden
to attend because of the particulars, the latter will not
profit." It is known that Malik’s way in the transmission of
hadith, like Ibn al-Musayyib, `Urwa, al-Qasim, Salim, Nafi`,
al-Zuhri, and others, was `ard ("reading by the
student") and not samā` ("audition from the shaykh"),
although the student states by convention, in both cases:
"So-and-so narrated to us."
The caliph Harun al-Rashid said to
Malik after hearing his answers to certain questions he put
to him: "You are, by Allah! the wisest of people and the
most knowledgeable of people." Malik replied: "No, by Allah!
O Leader of the Believers." He said: "Yes! But you keep it
hidden. By Allah! If I live, I shall put your sayings in
writing like the mushafs are put down in writing, and
I shall disseminate them to the ends of the world." But
Malik refused.
When one of the caliphs manifested his
intention to replace the Prophet’s wooden pulpit with a
pulpit of silver and jewels Malik said: "I do not consider
good the hindrance of the people from access to the
Prophet’s relics." (lā ara an yuhrama al-nāsu athara
rasulillah.)
Among Malik’s sayings:
From Ibn Wahb: "Knowledge Allah places
wherever He wills. It does not consist in narrating a lot."
From Ibn Wahb: "The saying has reached
methat none renounces the world and guards himself except he
will speak wisdom."
From Ibn Wahb: "Knowledge diminishes
and does not increase. Knowledge has diminished incessantly
after the Prophets and the Books."
From `Abd Allah ibn `Abd al-Hakam:
"The Companions differed in the Branches (al-furū`)
and split into factions (tafarraqū), and each one of
them was correct in himself."
From Ja`far ibn `Abd Allah: "We were
with Malik when a man came and asked him: ‘O Abu `Abd Allah!
"The Merciful is established over the Throne" (20:5):
how is He established?’ Nothing affected Malik as much as
that man’s question. He looked at the ground and started
prodding it with a twig he held in his hand until he was
completely soaked in sweat. Then he lifted his head and
said: ‘The "how" of it is inconceivable; the "establishment"
part of it is not unknown; belief in it is obligatory;
asking about it is an innovation; and I believe that you are
a man of innovation.’ Then he gave an order and the man was
led out."
From Ibn Wahb: "We were with Malik
when a man asked him: ‘O Abu `Abd Allah! "The Merciful is
established over the Throne" (20:5): how is His
establishment?’ Malik lowered his head and began to sweat
profusely. Then he lifted up his head and said: ‘"The
Merciful is established over the Throne" just as He
described Himself. One cannot ask "how." "How" does not
apply to Him. And you are an evil man, a man of innovation.
Take him out!’ The man was led out."
From Yahya ibn Yahya al-Tamimi and
Malik’s shaykh Rabi`a ibn Abi `Abd al-Rahman: "We were with
Malik when a man came and asked him: ‘O Abu `Abd Allah!
"The Merciful is established over the Throne" (20:5):
how is He established?’ Malik lowered his head and remained
thus until he was completely soaked in sweat. Then he said:
‘The establishment is not unknown; the "how" is
inconceivable; belief in it is obligatory; asking about it
is an innovation; and I do not think that you are anything
but an innovator.’ Then he ordered that the man be led out."
From Ma`n: "Disputation (al-jidāl)
in the Religion fosters self-display, does away with the
light of the heart and hardens it, and bequeaths aimless
wandering."
From Ma`n and others: "There are four
types of narrators one does not take from: An outright
scoffer, even if he is the greatest narrator; an innovator
who invites people to his innovation; someone who lies about
people, even if I do not charge him with mendacity in hadith;
and a righteous, honorable worshipper if he does not
memorize what he narrates." Malik’s last clause refers to
the two conditions sine qua non of the trustworthy
narrator, who must possess not only moral uprightness (`adāla)
but also accuracy in transmission (dabt). The clause
elucidates the paradox current among hadith scholars whereby
"No-one lies more than the righteous." The reason for this
is that the righteous do not doubt the Muslim’s attribution
of a saying to his Prophet, and so they accept it without
suspicion, whereas al-Shafi`i said: "If Malik had the
slightest doubt about a hadith, he discarded the entire
hadith." Dr. Nur al-Din `Itr said: "The manner of the
righteous who narrate everything indiscriminately stems from
purity of heart and good opinion, and the scholars have said
about such narrators: ‘Lies run off their tongue without
their intending it.’" There is a fundamental difference
between the latter and those who deliberately forge lies or
narrate forgeries passed for hadith, and who are condemned
by the Prophet’s saying: "Whoever lies about me willfully,
let him take now his seat in the Fire!"
From Ibn al-Qasim: "Malik used to say:
‘Belief increases.’ He would stop short of saying that it
decreases."
From Ibn Abi al-Zubayr: "I saw `Ata’
ibn Abi Rabah enter the [Prophet’s] Mosque, then take hold
of the pommel of the Pulpit, after which he faced the
Qibla [to pray]."
In the Muwatta’: "Shaving the
moustache is an innovation." It is elsewhere related that
Malik himself was tall, heavyset, imposing of stature, very
fair, with white hair and beard but bald, with a huge beard
and blue eyes; he "detested and condemned" shaving of the
moustache, and he always wore beautiful clothes, especially
white.
Narrated by Ibn Abi Zayd: "The turban
was worn from the beginning of Islam and it did not cease to
be worn until our time. I did not see anyone among the
People of Excellence except they wore the turban, such as
Yahya ibn Sa`id, Rabi`a, and Ibn Hurmuz. I would see in
Rabi`a’s circle more than thirty men wearing turbans and I
was one of them; Rabi`a did not put it down until the
Pleiades rose and he used to say: ‘I swear that I find it
increases intelligence.’ Jibril was seen in the image of
(the Companion) Dihya (ibn Khalifa) al-Kalbi wearing a
turban with its extremity hanging between his
shoulder-blades." Ashhab said: "When Malik wore the turban
he passed it under his chin and let its extremity hang
behind his back, and he wore musk and other scents."
Main sources: Abu Nu`aym, Hilya al-Awliya’
6:345-392 #386; al-Dhahabi, Siyar A`lam al-Nubala’
7:382-437 #1180; M. Fouad `Abd al-Baqi, Introduction to
Malik’s Muwatta’.
