En Al-Wala Wal-Bara Part 1
En Al-Wala Wal-Bara Part 1
En Al-Wala Wal-Bara Part 1
Al‐Wala’ wa’l‐Bara’
According to the Aqeedah of the Salaf
Part 1
(With slight modification)
Author’s Note 03
Publisher’s Note 04
Foreword 05
Preface to First Edition 07
1 – Introduction 12
2 – The Declaration of Faith 16
3 – The Prerequisites of the Declaration of Faith 23
4 – Love and Hate and the Declaration of Faith 33
5 – The Declaration of Faith: On the Tongue and in the Heart 38
6 – The Effects of the Declaration of Faith on the Heart 43
7 – What Negates the Declaration of Faith 46
8 – Disbelief in Action and Conviction 59
9 – What Negates Islam 66
10 – Conclusion 74
Glossary of Arabic Terms 75
Author’s Note
This book was originally submitted in the form of a thesis for a Master’s
Degree to the Department of Aqeedah of the Umm al‐Qorah University in
Makka, ‘Saudi’ Arabia.
The examining committee comprised the following: Muhammad Qutb,
the supervisor, as chairman; Shaykh Abdur Razzaq Afifi as a member; and Dr.
Abdul Azeez Obeid as a member.
The author was granted a Master’s Degree, with excellence, on Saturday
evening, the 4th of Shaban 1401.
I am grateful to Shaykh Abdur Razzaq Afifi for writing the Foreword to
this book.
Thank you.
Thanks are also due to Omar Johnstone for translating the book into
English, to Ahmad Thomson for editing and typesetting the text and compiling
the Glossary, and to Yusuf Islam for both his moral and financial support in its
publication.
It is impossible to provide a literal translation in English of the words al‐
wala’ wa’l‐bara’, but the meaning of this Arabic term indicated, on the one hand,
drawing near to what is pleasing to Allah and His Messenger and, on the other
hand, withdrawing from what is displeasing to Allah and His Messenger, may
Allah bless him and grant him peace.
Al‐Firdous Ltd
Foreword
Praise belongs to Allah, Lord of the worlds, and may the blessings and
peace of Allah be on our Prophet Muhammad and on his family and on all his
companions.
The subject matter of this work is of paramount importance and utmost
interest for two major reasons:
Firstly, it is concerned with one of Islamʹs main foundations, namely the
qualities of al‐walaʹ waʹ1‐baraʹ, which are two major prerequisites of true faith:
al‐walaʹ is a manifestation of sincere love for Allah, His prophets and the
believers; al‐baraʹ, on the other hand, is an expression of enmity and hatred
towards falsehood and its adherents. Both are evidence of iman.
Secondly, it has been written at a very crucial time: everything has become
so mixed up that some Muslims are no longer aware of those qualities which
distinguish the believers from the non‐believers; their faith has become so weak
that they have adopted patterns of behaviour that are absolutely repugnant to a
sincere believer; they have taken the disbelievers as their friends, while
displaying enmity towards many of the believers by disparaging their character
and degrading them.
The importance of writing such a book as this in the present time is
therefore apparent.
The author has investigated the various aspects of al‐walaʹ waʹ1‐baraʹ,
quoting, along with explanatory notes and comments, many scholarsʹ statements
and arguments. He has also backed up his arguments with numerous verses
from the Qurʹan, authentic traditions from the Prophet, may Allah bless him and
grant him peace and many of the sayings of his companions and the early pious
Muslim scholars, may Allah be pleased with all of them. The author has also
verified the reliability of these sources, recording the numbers of the Qurʹanic
verses and the chapters in which they are to be found, and the books in which
the prophetic traditions and sayings are contained, as well as the degree of their
authenticity.
The authorʹs grasp of his subject, his immense erudition and the
thoroughness of his research, are all clearly apparent in this work.
I pray that this book will benefit the Muslims. I also pray that Allah the
Almighty will provide our Ummah with writers who will follow in the footsteps
of its author. There is great hope that the younger generation of Muslims will be
brought up to honour the deen of Islam and to revive those parts of it that have
been obliterated, for my Lord and your Lord is the Hearer and Answerer of our
prayers.
All praise is due to Allah. We praise Him and seek His assistance. We ask
for His forgiveness and take refuge in Him from the evil within ourselves and
from the evil of our deeds. He whom Allah guides will never be diverted yet
whomever He sends astray will never find his way. I bear witness that there is no
God but Allah, Alone, He has no partner, and I bear witness that Muhammad is
His servant and Messenger, may the blessing of Allah be upon him, his Family,
his Companions, and upon those who followed his guidance.
Allah has bestowed upon us His Mercy and Kindness by sending His
Messenger Muhammad and His Message as the final heavenly message. He has
sent this Message pure and complete. No one, except the deviated people, could
be diverted from it. He has promised happiness in this world and in the
Hereafter for the followers of His Shariʹah; those who have fully appreciated its
value and devoted themselves to convey it in accordance with Allahʹs Wishes
and the guidance of His Messenger. Allah has called them His friends and party.
He has also promised misery and degradation for those who have deviated from
His Shariʹah and His Right path. He has called them the friends and party of
Satan.
The foundation of this eternal Message is the affirmation of Tawhid,
There is no God but Allah and Muhammad is the Messenger of Allah. Ibn al‐
Qayyim said that the Word of Tawhid is the reason for which: Balances of
Justice are set up, records of deeds are registered, the day of Paradise and Hell
is appointed, creatures are divided into believers and disbelievers, pious and
evildoers, the religion of Islam is established and swords are unsheathed for
Jihad. The Word of Tawhid is Allahʹs right over all His creatures.
The reality of this Word consists of: The knowledge of what the Prophet
has brought, belief of the heart, confirmation of the tongue, obedience with love
and submission, its practice inwardly and outwardly, its application and the call
of other people to it according to oneʹs ability. Its perfection is the love for Allahʹs
sake and hate for His sake, offer and prevent for His sake, and that Allah, alone,
should be oneʹs God and Lord.
The way to achieve Tawhid is: The full following of the Prophet, inwardly
and outwardly, and the restraint of the heart from pursuing other than Allah and
His Messenger. 1
Allah says:
“O you who believe! Take not the Jews and the Christians as Awliyaʹ
(friends, protectors), they are but Awliyaʹ to one another. And if any
amongst you takes them as Awliyaʹ, then surely he is one of them.
Verily, Allah guides not those people who are the Zaalimun
(polytheists, wrong‐doers)” (Surat al‐Maʹidah: Verse 51)
Sheikh Hamad Ben Ateeq, may Allah have mercy upon him, has said:
“In the Book of Allah (Qurʹan) there is no ruling more apparent and
significant than the ruling of al‐Walaʹ Wal Baraʹ, after the requirement of
Tawhid and the prohibition of its opposite” 2
• The Muslim Ummah has fallen behind, after it abandoned Jihad, which
is the top of Islam, and followed pleasures of the world.
• It imitates other nations and become engrossed in luxuries and comfort.
• Its thoughts have been confused because it mixed up the pure principles
of Islam with heresy of human beings and philosophies of Jahiliyyah.
• It has obeyed the disbelievers and preferred worldly gains to its religion
(Islam), but it lost both this world and the Hereafter.
Therefore, facing all these aspects, a lot of questions are raised and need to
be answered according to the Book of Allah, the Sunnah of His Messenger and
the scholars. Among these questions:
• What is a Muslim?
• Who should he associate himself with?
• Who should he disassociate himself from?
• What is the ruling of those who ally with the disbelievers?
• What is the ruling of Islam with regard to the intellectual ideologies
adopted by some people from our Ummah who speak our
language and spread these ideologies?
• How can we ally and help the Muslims who are oppressed and
killed all over the world today by the disbelievers and the powers
of evil?
• What is the way for salvation from the materialistic slavery of the
West?
These issues are raised because the real meaning and application of
Tawhid is absent from everyday life of Muslims. It is so distorted that so many
people think that the confirmation of Rububiyyah (Unity of Lordship) is enough
for them to become Muwahhidun, without having to confirm Uluhiyyah (Unity
of Worship).
Real Tawhid consists of the Unity of Lordship and Unity of Worship, it is
part of the doctrine of Walaʹ and Baraʹ. May Allah have mercy upon Sheikh
Muhammad Ibn Abdul Wahhab who said:
“You will not find any people who believe in Allah and the Last
Day, making friendship with those who oppose Allah and His
Messenger, even though they were their fathers, or their sons, or
their brothers, or their kindred (people)”” 3
Nature of Islam
“Is he who was dead and We have raised him to life, and set for him a
light in which he walks among men, the same as he who is in utter
darkness from which he cannot emerge?” (6:122)
Miqdad ibn al‐Aswad 4 describes the conditions under which the Sahaba
were living at this time in this account related by Abu Naʹim in al‐Hilyyah:
“By Allah, none of the previous prophets was sent into more difficult
conditions than the Messenger of Allah, may Allah bless him and grant
him peace. His was a time of profound weakness and ignorance when
4One of the early converts to Islam. He was a cavalryman at Badr and died in 33 AH. Some have
said that he was seventy when he lived in a place called Jarf about three miles from Madinah,
where he was taken to be buried.
people could not have imagined the existence of a religion better than that
of the worship of idols.
ʹThe Prophet, may Allah bless him and grant him peace, came with
the means to sever truth from falsehood, and to sever a father from his
son; for when a man whose heart Allah had filled with faith saw that his
father, son or brother were disbelievers, he would find no pleasure in
seeing them, knowing that whoever enters the Fire will be destroyed. This
is why Allah says:
Allah describes the nature of this Ignorance in the Qurʹan while at the
same time reminding the Muslims of His having guided them to the right path:
“And hold fast, all of you together, to the rope of Allah, and do not
separate. And remember Allahʹs favour to you: how you were enemies
and He made friendship between your hearts so that you became like
brothers by His grace; and (how) you were upon the brink of an abyss
of fire, and He saved you from it. Thus Allah makes clear His signs to
you, that perhaps you may be guided.” (3:103)
“When the Sahaba were shown the meaning of Ignorance and then that of
Islam, they abandoned ignorance completely. This was the effect that the
formative influence of the Qurʹan and their personal contact with the
Prophet had on them. They were the greatest generation in the history of
this mission. What was the secret of this grandeur about which we have
all heard and read so much? Their legendary stature seems dreamlike
compared to the abysmal depths to which we have now sunk. These
people threw out everything from the Ignorance of the past when they
entered Islam. They had embarked on an epic journey, leaving behind
them a short‐sighted, feeble minded world ‐ a world filled with
oppression, humiliation and the worship of money ‐ for a life full of
5Abu Naʹim, Hilyyat al‐ʹAwliyaahʹ, 1/175. It is also mentioned in Hayyat as‐Sahabah , 1/241. I
have also heard that at‐Tabarani mentions two very similar reports, one of which contains Yahya
b. Saalih in its isnad. Ath‐Thahabi confirms this, discusses it and says that its reporters are all
reliable, or sahih. This is what al‐Haythami has said in his Majmauʹ az‐Zawaaʹid, 6/17.
possibilities, shining with the light of Allah; for a world of profound
insight and vision that gave men the confidence to rise above the worship
of created things and to worship only Allah.” 6
“Allah will say on the Day of Resurrection, ʺWhere are those who love
each other only for my sake? Today they will take shelter in My shadow
and there is no other shadow today but Mine.”” 7
Umar ibn al‐Khattab reports that the Prophet, may Allah bless him and
grant him peace, said,
ʺIndeed among the servants of Allah are people who are neither
prophets nor martyrs themselves but whose place both prophets and
martyrs will envy on that Day.ʺ Those who were with him asked, ʺO
Messenger of Allah, tell us who they are.ʺ He said, ʺThey are those who
loved each other for the sake of Allah though there was no bond of
kinship between them and no thought of gain. By Allah, their faces
shine with light. They are bathed in light. When men take fright they
fear not. When men are struck with sadness they feel no sorrow.ʺ Then
he read the verse,
ʺMost surely the friends of Allah are (those) who have no fear
and who do not grieve.ʺ (10:62).
There is an urgent need to speak about this issue again, and to repeat the
correct Islamic understanding of it, now that many people have come to
misunderstand the pure ʹaqeedah that the Messenger of Allah brought us. For
the great mass of people today the declaration of faith is little more than an
empty phrase. They do not reflect on its meaning, consider its significance or
sense any of the commitment that it entails. Worse still, the problem is not only
confined to the meaning of the kalima, but also extends to the Qurʹan and the
Sunnah too, as people skim through these to find support for their own opinions
while ignoring the work of the ulama, the commentaries on the hadith, and the
tafsir of the Qurʹan. Such people think they have no need of scholars, past or
present.
The reality of worship as a vast matter encompassing the life of this world
and the Hereafter has thus been altered to include only the ritual acts of
devotion: the prayer and fasting, zakat and the hajj. But where is the complete
way of life? Whom shall we choose as friends? Who are our enemies? Whom
shall we love? Whom shall we hate? The answers to these questions are very far
from their grasp. This deen does not stop at simply saying that God is One, but
continues by asserting that there is no other divinity than He; the totality of His
Divine Names and Attributes alone befit His Grandeur and Majesty.
As Muhammad ibn Abdul Wahhab has pointed out,
“When the Prophet went to the People of the Book to warn them about
associating other things with Allah, and to urge them to accept that this
practice stood in contradiction to the Divine Unity of God, they were not
opposed to him. They started to mend their ways and to encourage one
another to accept his call. But when their religion and the foolishness of
their scholars were denounced, they turned away and declared their
enmity towards him and his companions, complaining, ʺHe questions our
intelligence, defames our religion, and insults our faith.ʺ Of course, it is
well known that the Prophet, may Allah bless him and grant him peace,
never cursed Jesus nor his mother, peace be on them, nor the angels nor
the pious dead. But when he explained that these could not help them and
could not hurt them, they claimed it was an insult.
ʹOnce we understand this point we will realize that no one has the right to
say he is a Muslim, even if he says there is only One God, unless he also
declares his enmity for the disbelievers and makes plain his anger with
them and opposition to them:
“You will not find people who believe in Allah and the Last Day
loving those who oppose Allah and His Messenger, even though
they are their fathers or their sons or their brothers or their clan.
As for such, He has written faith upon their hearts.” (58:22).
ʹIf we understand this then we must also recognize that many of those
who claim to be Muslims today really have no idea about the meaning of
the words ʺThere is no god but Allahʺ. Were we to accept their
understanding, then we could not explain the first Muslimsʹ perseverance
when under torture and in slavery, nor their patience during persecution
and exile. The Prophet, may Allah bless him and grant him peace, was the
most merciful of men; had he been able to spare his Companions these
hardships then surely he would have done so.” 8
8 Muhammad ibn Abdul Wahhab, Majmuʹat at‐Tawhid, p.19. Also Ibn Taimiyah and others.
Chapter 2
The Declaration of Faith
The meaning of the first part of the declaration of faith, ʹThere is no god
but Allahʹ, is that nothing other than Allah is worthy of worship. This denies the
attribution of divinity to all other things, and affirms it as a quality which
belongs to Allah alone. 9 Ibn Taymiyah said:
“The heart will not find complete happiness except by loving Allah and by
striving towards what is dear to Him. It is not possible to achieve this love
except by rejecting all things that compete with it. This is what the words,
ʺThere is no god but Allahʺ, mean; this is the spirit of the deen of Ibrahim
and of that of every other prophet.” 10
When someone says, ʹThere is no god but Allahʹ, he has denied one thing
and affirmed another. With these words the believer first denies all those who
reject faith, worship created things, obey the tyrant, rule by injustice or remain
content under oppression; and then he affirms his allegiance to Allah, to His
deen, to His Book, to His righteous servants, and to the Sunnah of His Prophet,
may Allah bless him and grant him peace:
“Whoever rejects false deities and believes in Allah has grasped a firm
handhold which will never break.” (2:256). 11
12 The word translated here as ʹforces of disbelief’ is ʹTaghutʹ in the original Arabic. Ibn al‐Qayyim
says that this means anything which exceeds Allahʹs limits, something that is served, obeyed or
followed. Taghut includes everyone who rules by other than the revelation of Allah and the
example of His Messenger; or which is worshipped instead of, or in addition to, Allah; or which
This is supported by ayah 2:256 just cited. The declaration of faith is a declaration
of complete loyalty to the Shariʹah:
“Follow that which is sent down to you from your Lord, and follow no
protecting friends beside Him. Little do you recollect!” (7:3)
and:
“So set your purpose (O Muhammad) for the deen as a man by nature
upright ‐ the natural way of Allah, in which He has created man.” (30:30)
“And whoever seeks a religion other than Islam, it will not be accepted
from him, and he will be one of the losers in the Hereafter.” (3:85) 13
“And from among mankind are some who take for themselves (objects
of worship as) rivals to Allah, loving them as they should only love
Allah.” (2:165)
Bogus authority advises you to act against truth and to disobey Allah:
is followed in opposition to the command of Allah. Quoted from Abd ar‐Rahman ibn Hassan,
Fath al‐Majid, p. 16.
13 Pickthall: ʹ...whoso seeketh as religion other than the Surrender (to Allah).ʹ
“They have taken as lords beside Allah their rabbis and their monks.”
(9:31)
It also affirms four things: that the object of your worship is Allah; that
glorification and love are for Allah alone; that hope and fear are due only to
Allah; and that you are aware of Allahʹs power and might, this awareness is
Taqwa. The single and unique goal of the believer is to worship Allah and none
other than Him. Thus, the believerʹs love is for Allah alone:
“And those who believe are stronger in their love for Allah.” (2:165)
Hope too, is placed exclusively in Allah and one fears nothing but Him:
‘If Allah afflicts you with some hurt, there is no one who can remove it
except Him; and if He desires good for you, there is no one who can
repel His bounty. He strikes with it whom He wishes of his servants. He
is the Forgiving, the Compassionate.” (10:107) 14
Lastly, the believer is conscious of Allah and aware of the danger of His
displeasure and of His wrath. It is taqwa that causes a person to abandon
disbelief and disobedience, to devote himself entirely to Allah and to obey His
law and His command. Ibn Masʹood said:
“When you act in obedience to Allah, in the light of Allah, you hope for
Allahʹs reward. When you abandon disobedience of Allah, in the light of
Allah, you fear Allahʹs punishment.” 15
Whoever recognizes these things must sever all links to anything other
than Allah and free his heart from falsehood. Thus Allah tells us that Ibrahim, as
well as our own Prophet, may the blessings and peace of Allah be on them,
smashed the idols that their people took as gods and rejected all who
worshipped them:
“There is a good example for you in Ibrahim and those with him, when
they told their people: Surely we disassociate ourselves from you and
all that you worship beside Allah. We have done with you. And there
16 Risaʹil fi ʹAqaʹid al‐Islam, Muhammad ibn Abdul Wahhab, eds. Rashid Rida, p.35.
17 ibid.
18 Ar. Kalimat at‐Taqwa : Wa ʹalzamahum kalimat at‐taqwaa wa kaanu ʹahaqqa bihaa wa
ʹahlahaa. (Qurʹan 48:26): ʹAnd imposed upon them the word of self‐restraint, for they were
worthy of it and meet for it.ʹ (Pickthall). Muhammad Asad translates this term as ʹthe word of
God‐consciousnessʹ and notes that it implies that ʹtheir consciousness of God and of His all‐
pervading power enabled them to bear the ʺstubborn disdainʺ of their enemies with inner calm
and sincerity.ʹ (Asad, The Message of the Quran, p.790, Gibralter, 1980). Its translation as ʹfearʹ
above is most appropriate due to the context of al‐Qahtaniʹs discussion.
19 107‐198 AH; Imam Shafiʹi said of him, ʹWere it not for Imams Malik and ibn ʹUyaynah, the
learning of the Hijaz would have been lost.ʹ Imam Ahmad said, ʹI have not seen anyone more
knowledgeable in the Sunnah than ibn ʹUyaynah.ʹ
ʺWhen Allah was satisfied with their sincerity, He commanded His
Prophet to order them to pray. He ordered them to do this and they did it.
By Allah, if they had not done this their first act would not have helped
themʺ. 20
ʺWhen Allah was satisfied with the sincerity of their prayers, He told His
Prophet to order them to migrate to Madeenah. By Allah, if they had not
done this neither their first act nor their prayers would have helped them.ʺ
ʺWhen Allah was satisfied with the sincerity of their hearts in this, He
commanded them to return to Makkah to fight their fathers and their
brothers until these said the Word which they had said, established the
same prayer and joined the same migration. He commanded them to do
this and they did it. One of them even came with the head of his father
and said, ʹO Messenger of Allah, here is the head of a leader of the
disbelievers.ʹ By Allah, if they had not done this their first act, their
prayers and their migration would not have helped them.ʺ
ʺWhen Allah was satisfied with the sincerity of their hearts in this, He told
His Messenger to order them to complete the rite of Tawwaf and to shave
their heads in humility, which they did. By Allah, if they had not done this
their first act, their prayers, their migration and their combat with their
fathers would not have helped them.ʺ
ʺWhen Allah was satisfied with the sincerity of their hearts in this He told
the Prophet, may Allah bless him and grant him peace, to take a part of
their money by which to purify themselves. He commanded them to do
this and they did, giving much and giving little. By Allah, if they had not
done this their first act, their prayers, their migration, their combat with
their fathers and their tawwaf would not have helped them.ʺ
ʺWhen Allah was satisfied with the sincerity of their hearts which were
now in harmony with the nature and limits of faith, He said to them:
“This day I have perfected your deen for you and have completed
My blessings to you, and have chosen for you as your deen al‐
Islam.” (5:3)
20There is an inconsistency in the account here. The text says ʹIf they had not done this neither
their first act nor their prayers would have helped them.ʹ As Shaykh al‐Qahtani points out in a
footnote, this wording is odd. Logically it should say ʹhad they not done this their first act would
not have helped them.ʹ This alternative is more clear and has been used above. The discrepancy is
probably due to a scribeʹs error. (Trans).
ʺWhoever abandoned any part of faith was a disbeliever as far as we were
concerned. If this was from neglect we would correct him, but he would
be lacking in our eyes. This is the Sunnah. Relate it on my behalf to
whoever may ask you about it.ʺ 21
and also:
“Allah (Himself) is Witness that there is no god but Him ‐ and (so are)
the angels and the people of knowledge ‐Who sustains His creation
with justice; there is no god but Him, the Almighty, the Wise.” (3:18).
“Surely the (true) believers are only those who believe in Allah and His
Messenger and then do not doubt, but struggle with their wealth and
their selves in the way of Allah. These are the sincere.” (49:15).
ʹThe Messenger of Allah, may Allah bless him and grant him peace, said,
ʺI bear witness that there is no god but Allah, and that I am the
Messenger of Allah. No one will come to Allah with these words, never
doubting any of it, without entering paradise. ʺ 26
ʺNone will come to Allah with these words, never doubting any of it,
and not see paradiseʺ
ʺWhoever you find beyond this room, who bears witness with firmness
in his heart that there is no god but Allah, give him glad tidings of
paradise.ʺ 27
“And even so We sent not a warner before you (O Muhammad) into any
township but that its luxurious ones said: ʹSurely we found our fathers
following a religion, and we are following in their footsteps.ʹ (And the
warner) said: ʹWhat! Even though I bring you better guidance than what
you found your fathers following?ʹ They answered: ʹSurely we are
disbelievers in what you bring.ʹ So we requited them. Then see the
nature of the consequence for the rejecters!” (43:23‐25).
And He says:
“Then shall We save Our Messengers and those who believe in the
same way (as before). It is incumbent upon Us to save the believers.”
(10:103)
and also:
“For when it was said to them, ʹThere is no god but Allah,ʹ they were
scornful, and said: ʹShall we forsake our gods for a mad poet?ʹ” (37:35‐
36).
and:
“None of you has believed until his desires are in accordance with what
I have come to you with.” 29
This refers to the perfection of your obedience and of your desire to obey.
Furthermore, Allah says:
“But no, by your Lord, they will not believe (truly) until they make you
the judge of what is in dispute between them, and find within
themselves no dislike of what you decide, and submit with full
submission.” (4:65).
Ibn Kathir points out that in this ayah Allah makes an oath upon Himself
and swears that no one has believed until he accepts the authority of the Prophet
in all matters. This is the truth that the believer must apply to himself both in
public and in private. This is why He says in the ayah:
“and find within themselves no dislike of what you decide, and submit
with full submission”
That is, ʹthey accept your judgement in their hearts and find no difficulty
in themselves in following what you have decided.ʹ Thus they submit to it
completely, with no pressure or coercion, and without argument. This point was
made again when the Prophet, may Allah bless him and grant him peace, said,
ʺBy He in Whose hand is my soul, none of you has believed until his
desires are in accord with what I have come to you with.ʺ 30
“Alif. Lam. Mim. Do people imagine that they will be left (at ease)
because they say, ʹWe believeʹ, and will not be tested with affliction?
Surely We tested those who were before you. Thus Allah certainly
knows those who are sincere, and He certainly knows those who lie.
“(29:1‐3).
And He says:
“And of mankind are some who say: ʹWe believe in Allah and in the
Last Day,ʹ when they believe not. They think they are tricking Allah and
those who believe, but they trick no one except themselves; but they do
not perceive this. In their hearts is a disease and Allah increases their
disease. A painful punishment is theirs because they lie.” (2:8‐10).
In a sahih hadith, Muʹaadh ibn Jabal reports that the Prophet, may Allah bless
him and grant him peace, said,
“No one will say, ʺThere is no god but Allah, Muhammad is the
Messenger of Allahʺ, sincerely from his heart without Allah forbidding
him the Fire.” 31
Ibn al‐Qayim remarks that sincerity with regard to the words, ʹThere is no
god but Allahʹ, must depend on your compliance with, and acceptance of, the
obligations which this statement places upon you. These obligations are
represented by the Shariʹah, which itself is an elaboration of the declaration of
faith. It means that you believe in whatever Allah has revealed, that you follow
His commandments and avoid what He has forbidden. One who is truly sincere
in this belief will abide by it completely. The complete protection of the Shariʹah
is only assured by complete compliance with it. Likewise, complete security from
punishment only comes from complete obedience to it. 32
The Prophet, may Allah bless him and grant him peace, said,
“As for those who give lip service to the words, ʺThere is no god but
Allahʺ, but then follow Satan in disobedience and contentiousness, their
actions have made clear the emptiness of their words and the weakness of
their belief:
“And who goes farther astray than he who follows his desires
without guidance from Allah?” (28:50)
and:
“Do not follow desire so that it lures you away from the way of
Allah.” (38:26).’ 34
and also:
“And they are not ordered to anything else other than to worship Allah,
keeping the deen pure for Him, as men by nature upright.” (98:5).
Abu Hurayrah reports that the Prophet, may Allah bless him and grant
him peace, said,
33 Al‐Hakim, al‐Mustadrak, 1/70; he said that its isnad was sahih, and ad‐Dhahabi confirmed him
in this.
34 Imam ibn Rajab, Kalimat al‐Ikhlaas, p.28.
ʹCertainly Allah has forbidden the Fire for anyone who says, ʺThere is
no god but Allahʺ, and who seeks by these words only the pleasure of
Allahʹ. 36
Two of the Prophetʹs companions report that he, may Allah bless him and
grant him peace, said,
ʹWhenever someone says from his heart in singular devotion, his tongue
pure in belief, ʺThere is no god but Allah alone; He has no partner; His
is the dominion, His is the praise, and He has power over all thingsʺ,
Allah opens a path for this in the heavens and smiles 37 upon whomever
from among the people of the earth has said it, and it is the right of the
servant of Allah upon whom He smiles that his request be grantedʹ. 38
Allah has given us a clear example of the contrast between absolute and
flawed devotion to Him in this ayah from the Qurʹan:
al‐Kabir, (2/477), where Yaʹqub ibn ʹAsim says, ʹTwo of the Prophetʹs companions told me ... etc.ʹ
This Yaʹqub is one of Imam Muslimʹs authorities. Ibn Hibban confirms this as well. If the isnad is
sahih, then the hadith is sound.
39 cf. Ibn Taimiyah, Iqtida as‐Sirat al‐Mustaqim, p.451.
“This example contrasts the servant whose devotion is to Allah alone with
the one whose devotion is shared out among many. The latter is likened to
a slave jointly owned by men who quarrel over him: to each of them he
owes a duty and each of them make demands of him. His situation totally
confounds him. He can find no way and no means to satisfy all of their
conflicting and contradictory demands. The former, however, has but one
master. He knows what he wants from him and does his duty to him, so
he finds the road clearly marked before him. Are these two the same? Not
at all: the man whose service is to one master benefits from the comfort
and security, peace of mind and certainty that unite his actions and his
goals with the means of achieving them; but the man with the quarrelling
masters is shaken by torment. He can find no way out; if he pleases one
the others are unhappy. The reality of the Unity of God is contained in this
example, as is the truth about its antithesis, polytheism. The heart of the
believer, rooted in the truth of Godʹs Unity, is a heart through which
guidance from Allah flows that is, inspired only by Him and dutiful to
Him alone.” 40
“Are (many) different lords better, or Allah the One, the Almighty?”
(12:39) 41
Islam requires submission to Allah alone; whatever else one has submitted
to in this way must be abandoned. This is the true significance of the words,
ʹThere is no god but Allahʹ, since whoever submits to Allah and to something
other than Him at the same time, has associated something with Allah. Allah
does not forgive this. Whoever fails to submit to Him has scorned His worship:
The seventh prerequisite is to love the declaration of faith, to love all that
it requires and all that it implies, to love all those who act upon it and who hold
to all that it stands for and to feel anger at whatever contradicts it. Allah says:
And He says:
“O you who believe! Whoever of you becomes a rebel against his deen,
(know that in his place) Allah will bring a people whom He loves and
who love Him, humble towards the believers, harsh towards the
disbelievers, striving in the way of Allah, and not fearing the blame of
any blamer.” (5:54).
The Prophet, may Allah bless him and grant him peace, said,
The signs of love for Allah are to give precedence to this love and to
suppress your desires: to conquer your desire for what angers your Lord and to
feel anger towards it; to ally yourself with Allah, His Messenger, and those who
are with them; to oppose whoever opposes Him; and to follow in the footsteps of
His Messenger, may Allah bless him and grant him peace, accepting his
guidance. 43
Ibn al‐Qayim said in a poem:
42 Sahih Bukhari, Kitab al‐Iman, 1/60; Sahih Muslim, Kitab al‐Iman, 1/66.
43 Hafiz al‐Hakami, Maʹarij al‐Qubul, 1/383.
We have seen men claim to submit, yet their loyalties are many. They put
their trust here, and their hope there, and their love is without consequence.ʹ 44
“Let not the believers take disbelievers for their friends in preference to
believers. Whoever does this has no connection with Allah unless you
are guarding yourselves against them as a precaution. Allah bids you to
beware (only) of Himself. And to Allah is the journeying.” (3:28).
And He says:
“Say, (O Muhammad, to mankind): ʹIf you love Allah, follow me; Allah
will love you and forgive you your wrong actions. Allah is Forgiving,
Compassionate.ʹ Say: ʹObey Allah and the Messenger.ʹ And if they turn
away, then surely Allah does not love the disbelievers.” (3:31‐32).
“They long for you to disbelieve even as they disbelieve, so that you
may be the same (as them). So do not choose friends from among them
until they go out in the way of Allah.” (4:89)
and also:
“O you who believe! Do not take the Jews and the Christians for
friends. They are friends of one another. And whoever of you takes
them for friends is (one) of them. Surely Allah does not guide
wrongdoing people.” (5:51)
and lastly:
“O you who believe! Whoever of you becomes a rebel against his deen,
(know that in his place) Allah will bring a people whom He loves and
who love Him, humble towards the believers, harsh towards the
disbelievers, striving in the way of Allah, and not fearing the blame of
any blamer” (5:54).
We will mention only a few of the many hadith and reports of the
Companions on this subject: Imam Ah‐mad reports from Jarir ibn Abdullah that
the Prophet, may Allah bless him and grant him peace, made him swear an oath
to ʹoffer counsel to every Muslim and to steer clear of every disbeliever.ʹ 45 Ibn
Shayba reports that the Prophet said,
“The strongest bond of faith is love for the sake of Allah and enmity for
His sake.” 46
“The strongest bond of faith is loyalty for the sake of Allah and
opposition for His sake, love for the sake of Allah and enmity for His
sake.” 47
“Whoever loves for the sake of Allah, and hates for the sake of Allah, and
whoever seals a friendship for His sake, or declares an enmity for His
sake, will receive, because of this, the protection of Allah. No one may
taste true faith except by this, even if his prayers and fasts are many.
People have come to build their relationships around the concerns of the
world, but it will not benefit them in any way.” 48
“There is a good example for you in Ibrahim and those with him, when
they told their people: ʹSurely we disassociate ourselves from you and
all that you worship beside Allah. We have done with you. And there
has arisen between us and you enmity and hate for ever until you
believe in Allah only.” (60:4) 49
All this leads us to conclude that loyalty for the sake of Allah really means
to love Allah and to come to the assistance of His deen; it is to love those who are
obedient to Him and to come to their help. Opposition for the sake of Allah is to
feel anger at the enemies of Allah and to struggle against them. Because of this
Allah has called the first group the ʹparty of Allahʹ and the second the ʹparty of
Satanʹ:
And He says:
“Those who believe do battle for the cause of Allah; and those who
disbelieve do battle for the cause of idols. So fight the friends of Satan.
Surely Satanʹs strategy is always weak.” (4:76).
It is well known that Allah has never sent a Prophet on His mission
without also raising up opponents against him. Allah says:
“And when their Messengers brought them clear proofs (of Allahʹs
Sovereignty), they exulted in the knowledge which they (themselves)
possessed. And that which they had become accustomed to mock befell
them.” (40:83).
ʹThe declaration of faith, ʺThere is no god but Allahʺ, requires you to love
only for the sake of Allah, to hate only for the sake of Allah, to ally
yourself only for the sake of Allah, to declare enmity only for the sake of
Allah; it requires you to love what Allah loves and to hate what Allah
50 Abridged from Muhammad ibn Abdul Wahhab, Kashaf ash‐Shubuhat, 3rd edition, p.20
hates.ʹ 51 It also requires you to ally yourself to the Muslims wherever you
find them and to oppose the disbelievers even if they are your closest
kin.”
“Whoever says, ʺThere is no god but Allahʺ, shall not enter the Fire.ʺ
Muhammad ibn Abdul Wahhab points out that this is the greatest proof
we have of the real meaning of the declaration of faith, since neither life nor
property are protected simply by pronouncing these words; indeed there is no
significance at all in just saying them, nor in advocating them, nor even in calling
on Allah alone. Your life and your property are not protected until you actually
deny whatever you used to worship beside Allah; and if you have any doubt or
hesitation about that, then you are still outside Islam. 56
This should make clear the error of the Murjiʹa sect 57 , who said that faith
was equivalent to knowledge, and disbelief to ignorance, and who in this way
severed deeds from belief. Everyone knows that the pagans of Makkah
understood what the Prophet, may Allah bless him and grant him peace, meant
by saying, ʹThere is no god but Allahʹ. They understood it and they believed it,
53 See Sahih Bukhari, Kitab alAnbia’, 6/512, (3470); and Sahih Muslim, Kitab atTawba, 4/2118,
(2766).
54 Ibn al‐Qayim, Madarij as‐Salikin, 1/330‐332.
57 The Murjiʹa sect believed that belief is all that is needed to reach the Garden.
but they arrogantly refused to acknowledge it; so their faith in the One God, the
Provider, the Bringer of Life and Death, did not benefit them at all. When the
Prophet told them,
they said:
ʹDoes he make the gods One God? Surely that is an astounding thing.ʹ”
(38:5).
The strange thing is that while the disbelievers know that the declaration
of faith is more than just saying the words, some people who claim to be
Muslims do not. They think that these reports mean that a simple utterance of
the words, ʹThere is no god but Allahʹ, with none of their meaning entering the
heart, is all that is required. But wiser people understand that it means that there
is no creator other than Allah: no other provider, giver of life, bringer of death,
and no other who holds all things in his hand. However, there is still no benefit
to be gained by knowing what the declaration of faith means if you are without
any belief. This throws new light on the meaning of those reports in which the
Prophet, may Allah bless him and grant him peace, mentions the simple
repetition of these words, such as:
“I have been ordered to struggle against people until they say, ʺThere is
no god but Allah.” 58
Some people hope to imply by this that whoever recites the declaration of
faith is not a disbeliever, and that we should not oppose him, regardless of
whatever else he does. These people should recall that the Prophet, may Allah
bless him and grant him peace, fought the Jews and cursed them even though
they said, ʹThere is no god but Allahʹ. Not only this, but also the Companions of
the Prophet fought the Bani Hanifa who not only said, ʹThere is no god but Allah
and Muhammad is the Messenger of Allahʹ, but also prayed and claimed to be
Muslims; this was the same for the people whom Ali ibn Abi Talib burned alive
for saying that he was an incarnation of Allah.
However, when you ask these people about the case of someone who
denies the rising of the dead, they say that he has disbelieved and that we should
fight him, even if he says, ʹThere is no god but Allahʹ. They agree that whoever
“O you who believe! When you go out (to fight) in the way of Allah, be
careful, and do not say to one who offers you peace: ʹYou are not a
believer,ʹ seeking the chance profits of this life (so that you may despoil
him). With Allah are plenteous spoils. You too were like this once, and
Allah gave you hope, so be careful; surely Allah is well aware of what
you do.” (4:94).
This verse indicates the necessity of restraint until such time as you are
sure about the situation, since Allah says: ʹbe carefulʹ. If it becomes clear that
someone is at odds with Islam, then fight him. If this were not the case, then the
command to verify the situation before fighting would be meaningless.
Similarly the Prophet, may Allah bless him and grant him peace, said of
the Kharijites,
ʹWherever you find them fight them, for were I to discover them I
would destroy them utterly, as the people of ʹAd were destroyed.’ 59
60Muhammad ibn Abdul‐Wahhab, Kasf ash‐Shubuhat, p.40. The Kharijites believed that
committing major wrong actions turns a Muslim into an unbeliever.
Chapter 6
The Effects of the Declaration of Faith on the Heart
“Allah did not bestow upon His servants a greater blessing than the
knowledge that there is no god but Allah. For the people of Paradise these
words are the same as fresh rain is to a people who live on the parched
Earth. By it the scales of Heaven and Hell are set. Because of it the
Messengers were sent into battle. Whoever declares it to be so, his wealth
and his life are protected, but whoever denies it shall find himself
destroyed. It is the key to paradise, and the single call of all the
Messengers.” 62
“If a man says to his brother”O disbeliever!ʺ, then one of them has
fallen into it.” 65
ʹA person may keep the law of Allah, not exceeding the limits nor
approaching what has been forbidden, hastening to good works and the
fulfillment of Allahʹs commands, only according to the depth of his faith.
ʹAllah has referred to someone who observes part of the Revelation and
leaves part of it aside as believing in the part that he observes and disbelieving in
the part that he does not. He says:
ʹAllah says that they agreed to His covenant, which He also commanded
them to keep. Part of it was that they would not kill each other, or drive each
other out of their homes. He then says that they disobeyed His commands and a
party of them then attacked the other and drove them away. This was how they
disbelieved in the Revelation that came to them. Then He ends by saying that
they would ransom some of the defeated party out of respect for their covenant
with Allah. So they believed in the part of it that they observed, and disbelieved
in the part of it that they ignored.
ʹIn action and conviction, faith is the opposite of disbelief. In a well known
hadith, the Prophet, may Allah bless him and grant him peace, makes a
distinction between action and conviction when he tells us:
And whoever does not judge by what Allah has revealed, such are
disbelievers. (5:44)
He, may Allah bless him and grant him peace, also said,
ʹWhile from the point of view of their outward actions we can say that
they are disbelievers, we can not claim that these same deeds constitute
recalcitrance in the face of, or rejection of, belief. This explains the words of the
Prophet, may Allah bless him and grant him peace, when he said,
ʹDo not turn on each other like disbelievers after I have gone,
tormenting one another.ʹ
and also,
ʹHe disbelieves in them, but it is not like the one who disbelieves in
Allah and his Angels and his Books and his Messengers.ʹ
‘This was related in a separate report as ʹdisbelief that does not take one
out of the communityʹ, and again, ʹdisbelief that is less than disbelief, oppression
that is less than oppression, and corruption that is less than corruption.ʹ ʹThis is
clear to whoever really understands the Qurʹan, for Allah has called the man
who rules by other than the Revelation a disbeliever, and He has called whoever
disputes what has been revealed to His Messenger a disbeliever, but these two
are not cast from the same mould. ʹConsider:
And whoever goes beyond the limits of Allah certainly wrongs himself.
(65:1)
‘It is clear that we are dealing with two kinds of wrong doing here. In the
Qurʹan, the disbelievers are called ʹcorruptʹ:
“And He misleads by it only the corrupt; those who break the covenant
of Allah after ratifying it.” (2:26‐27)
and also:
“Truly We have revealed to you clear signs, and only the corrupt will
disbelieve in them.” (2:99)
ʹThere are many more such examples; but the believer too is called
ʹcorruptʹ, as these ayat show:
O you who believe! If a corrupt person brings you some news, then
verify it, or else you may unknowingly cause hardship to people, and
then be sorry for what you have done. (49:6)
And those who accuse honourable women but do not bring four
witnesses, whip them (with) eighty lashes and never (afterward) accept
their testimony. They indeed are corrupt. (24:4)
Surely whoever ascribes partners to Allah, for him Allah has forbidden
the Garden. His abode is the Fire. For wrongdoers there will be no
helpers. (5:72)
and also:
And whoever hopes for the meeting with his Lord, let him do righteous
works, and associate no partner in the worship due only to his Lord.
(18:110)
ʹOn this same subject of Lesser Shirk, the Prophet, may Allah bless him
and grant him peace, said,
‘This was related by Abu Dawood and others. 68 However, it is well known
that swearing an oath by something other than Allah does not take one out of the
community of the Muslims, and it does not make someone a disbeliever. In the
same vein the Prophet said,
68 Abu Dawood, Kitab al‐Iman, 3/570, (3251) Tirmidhi, Kitab al‐Iman 5/253 (1535); also ash‐
Shawqani in Nayl al‐Awtar, 8/257, stating that al‐Hakim says it is Sahih.
69 Imam Ahmad, al‐Musnad 4/403; al‐Albani includes it in his al‐Jamiʹa as‐Saghir, 3/333, (3624)
He also said,
ʺThere are four characteristics by which you can recognise the total
hypocrite; whoever exhibits one of them exhibits an attribute of
hypocrisy: when he speaks he lies; when he makes an agreement he
breaks it; when he argues he behaves despicably; and when you trust
him he betrays youʺ.
ʹThis is the behaviour of a hypocrite; it does not necessarily rule out faith,
but if it takes root and establishes itself, it could in time completely remove a
person from Islam, even if he still prays and fasts and claims that he is a Muslim.
Faith should correct the hypocritical behaviour of the believer, but if there is no
faith, then the growth of hypocrisy will proceed until, like a cancer, it completely
fills the heart.
ʹAccording to Ismail ibn Saad, 71 this was supported by Imam Ahmad. He
said, ʺI asked Ahmad ibn Hanbal for his opinion about the condition of someone
who, while continuing to pray and pay zakat and fast, is afflicted by persistent
major wrong actions that he finds impossible to resist. He replied that this is the
subject of the hadith,
70 Sahih Bukhari, Kitab al‐Iman, 1/89, (33,34); Sahih Muslim, Kitab al‐Iman 1/78, (58,59)
71 One of the companions of Imam Ahmad; see Ibn Abu Yaʹla, Tabaqat al‐Hanabila, 1/104.
72 Sahih Muslim, Kitab al‐Iman, 1/76, (57).
ʹan imbiber is not a believer while he is engaged in drinking; a thief is
not a believer while he is in the act of stealingʹ.
“And whoever does not judge by what Allah has revealed, such are
disbelievers.” (5:44)
ʹThe point is that someone can combine in his heart faith and disbelief,
devote himself to Allah alone and at the same time associate something else with
Him, be God‐fearing and also boldly defiant, be hypocritical and sincere. This is
one of the fundamental positions of the ahlʹul‐sunnah, who differ in this with
lovers of innovation and invention in religion, the Kharijites, 73 and the
Muʹtazilites, 74 the Qadirites, 75 and their like.
ʹThe other point that this matter raises relates to the doctrine that
maintains that sinners may be brought out of the Fire or may remain in it. There
is ample evidence from the Qurʹan and the Sunnah to support this, as well as that
provided by the agreement of the companions and by natural reasoning. Allah
says:
‘Here Allah confirms their belief in Him together with their Shirk. ʹAnd
again:
73 The Kharijites believed that committing major wrong actions turns a Muslim into a disbeliever
74 The Muʹtazilites believed that the Qurʹan was a created thing and that it is impossible for Allah
to be seen. They did not believe in the punishment in the grave, nor in intercession.
75 The Qadirites believed that the creation has free will, inde‐pendant of the will of Allah, and
‘So their submission and obedience to Allah is confirmed, while their faith
is denied.
ʹWhen faith is mentioned in the Qurʹan, it means absolute faith; for
example:
Surely the (true) believers are only those who believe in Allah and His
Messenger and then do not doubt, but struggle with their wealth and
their selves in the way of Allah. (49:15)
ʹThese people are not hypocrites in the real sense of the word: they are
Muslims by virtue of their obedience to Allah and His Messenger; however, they
are not believers, even though there was some faith in them that brought them
out from among the disbelievers.
ʹImam Ahmad continued saying,
This proves that a man may be a hypocrite and a Muslim at the same
time.ʺ
‘In this way showing off is regarded as Shirk, for if a man hopes to be seen
doing good works then he has combined Shirk with Islam. And if one rules a
land by something other than what Allah has revealed, or does something that
the Messenger of Allah has called disbelief, while he is at the same time devoted
to Islam and to the observance of its Shariʹa, then he has combined disbelief with
Islam.
ʹWe have already said that every disobedient person is one of the people
of disbelief, just as all of those who are obedient should be counted among the
people of faith. So when you see an obedient person you may call him a believer
or you may not. Likewise when you see a disobedient person you may call him a
disbeliever and then again you may not. It is not a matter of saying absolutely
this way or that: this one is a Muslim that one is not. Rather, we are dealing here
with two things: one is a name, a word, while the other is a legal category.
ʹAs for the word, we can easily say that if the shoe fits then wear it, but as
for the category, the question is, does a particular trait or characteristic actually
constitute disbelief or not? When we speak of words and what they designate we
speak about something that may be legal or linguistic; but when we speak about
specific categories of this kind then we have narrowed the meaning to the strict
legal sense of the term.
ʹOur final point is that just because someone possesses one of the
characteristics of faith, it is not necessarily accurate to call him a believer; and
conversely, just because someone possesses one of the characteristics of disbelief,
it is not necessarily accurate to call him a disbeliever. One would not, for
example, call everyone who had some knowledge a scholar, for knowledge is not
the same as understanding. Not everyone with some knowledge of fiqh is a
faqih; nor would you say that everyone who knows something about medicine is
a doctor.
ʹNevertheless, this does not mean that you are prevented from calling
someone a believer, a hypocrite, or a disbeliever, if his behaviour justifies it. As
the Prophet, may Allah bless him and grant him peace, said,
and he said,
and lastly,
76 This section is taken entirely from Ibn al‐Jawaziyaʹs Kitab as‐Salat, pp. 25‐31.
Chapter 8
Disbelief in Action and Conviction
Disbelief in Rulers
A few of the terms that appear in the preceding text of Ibn al‐Qayim al‐
Jawziya have been misunderstood in the past, especially those dealing with
political rule. Ibn al‐Qayim has pointed out that to rule by something other than
what Allah has revealed is lesser disbelief. It is felt that some further explanation
of this is necessary in order to avoid any confusion.
The Muslim community was founded on the adherence to and application
of the Shariʹah right from the time of its establishment by the Messenger of Allah,
may Allah bless him and grant him peace. This was also the case in the time of
the rightly guided Caliphs, and the Umayyads continued their tradition.
Although some of them twisted it, the law that they applied to the people
was the Shariʹah, whose protection, guidance and justice everyone enjoyed.
When the Abbasids succeeded them, the law by which they ruled was again the
Shariʹah, although at times people were hard pressed to realise it. Finally, the
Tartars arrived and Hulaqu imposed their traditional law, known as the ʹYasaqʹ,
upon the subject peoples. We will return to this subject again later.
Everything else being equal, the opinions of the founders of the Muslim
community, such as Ibn al‐Qayim, are beyond reproach; and if a ruler is guilty of
greed, nepotism, corruption, or anything similar, then such behaviour is without
doubt a disbelief that is ʹless than disbelief.ʹ
However, what has befallen the Muslims in modern times is that our
rulers have pushed the Shariʹah of Allah aside, describing it as backward and
reactionary, and claiming that it is ill‐suited to modern life and the technological
age. This is, in fact, a new kind of rejection of faith that has arisen in the life of the
Muslim community.
Furthermore, these ignorant claims do not just end here; rather these
rulers have pursued them totally, and have replaced the Shariʹah with French,
English and American law, and with ʹsocialist humanismʹ or its like, drawn from
the myriad variations of ignorant disbelief, exchanging a pearl for a glass bead.
The proofs against them are overwhelming, not the least of which is what has
just been quoted from Ibn al‐Qayim who states,
Indeed there is no disagreement at all about it: to put the Shariʹah aside
with the claim that it is lacking and deficient, and then to claim that some other
law is superior to it, and so to water it down to suit the fashion of the times, is
blatant disbelief.
Ibn al‐Qayim also states that the ruler who does not stick to the letter of
the law or who neglects it in some way, but who is otherwise ʹdevoted to Islam
and to the observance of its Shariʹahʹ commits lesser disbelief. This ʹdevotedʹ
ruler is the one to whom we apply the ruling of ʹlesser disbelief. But this is clearly
not the case of the ruler who replaces the Shariʹah with his own law.
Then there is the matter of legislation regarding the things that the
Shariʹah permits or forbids. Our ulamaʹ, both past and present, are all agreed that
this is the exclusive preserve of Allah, Who holds all creation in His hand.
Whoever claims this right for himself has claimed one of Allahʹs Divine
Attributes and has set himself up as an object worthy of worship along with
Him. We will examine this point in more detail later.
To override the Divine law and to impose instead of it the fleeting desires
of man, is one of the acts that our ulamaʹ have always said takes a person out of
Islam; and this could not be otherwise. No one can deny this.
Allah says:
Thus we all recognise that it is Allah Who determines our faith and our
disbelief. He is the Creator of the heavens and the earth, the Master of all power
and authority, and governance and leadership. 77
Muhammad ibn Ibrahim Al‐ash‐Shaykh explains the words of Imam
Ahmad which were mentioned earlier ‐ ʹThis is real disbelief about which there is
no doubt in anyoneʹs mindʹ ‐ saying,
Ibn al‐Qayim also says, ʹThe fact of the matter is that the phrase, ʺrule by
other than what Allah has revealed”, refers to all disbelief, both greater and
lesser, according to the circumstances. If a ruler understands the obligation to
rule in accordance with what Allah has revealed, but refuses to do so out of
77 See Sayid Qutubʹs comments on this ayah in his Fi Dhilal al‐Quran, (3/1297). See also Tafsir Ibn
Kathir
78 Tahkim al‐Qawanin, p.l.
disobedience, while knowing full well that this exposes him to the threat of
punishment, then this is a case of lesser disbelief.
ʹBut if he believes that this is not an obligation and that he is able to
choose this or that, when he knows that the only option is the rule of Allah, then
this is greater disbelief. Finally, if his error is because of ignorance, then the
ruling that applies to him is the same as for anyone else who makes a mistake.ʹ 79
ʹThere is no doubt that whoever does not believe in the obligation to rule
by what Allah has revealed to His Messenger, may Allah bless him and
grant him peace, is a disbeliever. Whoever sanctions another to rule a
people in whichever way he pleases, without reference to what Allah has
revealed, is a disbeliever. He may claim to be just, but there is no people
who would not claim to be just, even if this justice were only discernible to
the powerful amongst them.
ʹIndeed many of those who like to call themselves Muslims still rule
according to the traditions of their people, traditions which have nothing
to do with the Revelation of Allah, such as the ancient Bedouin codes of
honour. Their princes were to be obeyed and they thought that their
traditions were more appropriate to their people than the Shariʹah
revealed by Allah. This is disbelief. Many people have accepted Islam yet
rule only by force of habit which, like an addiction, demands its own
continued observance. If any of them come to realise that it is not
permitted for them to rule by anything other than by what Allah has
revealed, yet still refuse to do so, and endorse a rule that is against what
Allah has revealed, then they are disbelievers.ʹ 80
By Allah, truly we were clearly wrong when we made you equal with
the Lord of the Worlds. (26:97‐98)
Praise be to Allah, Who has created the heavens and the earth,
and Who has appointed darkness and light. Yet those who
disbelieve ascribe rivals to their Lord. (6:1)
ʹThis means that they set up others as equals or rivals to Him, loving
them, serving them, and sanctifying them, as they should serve Allah and
glorify Him. They do not believe that a human being is really equal to
Allah in terms of actions or attributes, but they nevertheless ascribe to a
human being these Divine characteristics. And while they do this,
conferring upon a human being the same love, devotion, and reverence as
they should to Allah, they also know that there is a difference between
them and Allah. The answer to this paradox lies in the declaration of faith,
ʺThere is no god but Allahʺ.ʹ
Disbelief by Conviction
And they denied them (Allahʹs signs), even though their selves
acknowledged them, out of ignorance and arrogance. (27:14)
And He said to His Messenger, may Allah bless him and grant him peace:
In truth they do not deny you (O Muhammad), but wrongdoers flout the
signs of Allah. (6:33)
Shall we put faith in two human beings like ourselves, and whose
people are our slaves? (23:47)
The disbelief of Abu Talib was also like this. He trusted the Prophet, may
Allah bless him and grant him peace, and had no doubt as to his truthfulness,
but was overcome by zeal for his clan, fearing to offend them by recognising the
prophethood of his nephew.
Third, disbelief by evasion is to turn away from the Prophet, may Allah
bless him and grant him peace, and his message. These people neither listen to
him, nor believe him; they do not deny him, associate with him, oppose him, or
pay the slightest attention to anything that he says at all. This is like the disbelief
of one of the Bani Abd Yalil who told the Prophet, ʹBy God, I will just say this to
you. If what you say is true you are the most noble person I would ever oppose,
and if you are lying you are the most odious person I can imagine speaking
with.ʹ 81
Fourth, disbelief through doubt is that which neither affirms nor denies
the trustworthiness of the Messenger, may Allah bless him and grant him peace,
but which raises some doubt about it. It is not possible to maintain this position
for very long. Either people turn totally away from the clear signs of the
truthfulness of the Prophet, may Allah bless him and grant him peace, or they
turn to it and commit themselves to belief; but in either case doubt does not
remain.
Fifth, disbelief through hypocrisy is when people say that they believe,
while concealing denial in their hearts; this is the greatest form of hypocrisy.
As for Shirk, it is of two types: greater, which takes one out of the
community, and lesser, which does not. With regard to Greater Shirk, Allah says:
81Muhammad Hamid al‐Faqi notes here that many of those who call themselves by Muslim
names and follow the Jews and the Christians, giving one another great respect and claiming in
their ignorance and foolishness that the way to progress and civilisation is in modernisation and
westernisation, are in this category of disbelief. Madarij as‐Salakin, 1/228/ margins.
Surely Allah does not forgive it when partners are ascribed to Him. He
forgives everything except this for whomever He wishes. (4:116)
Muhammad ibn Abdul Wahhab has explained that there are four kinds of
Greater Shirk: these can occur when asking for help; in acts of devotion; when
offering obedience; and in extending love towards something other than Allah,
in a manner which should only be directed to Allah.
Allah speaks of supplication with these words:
And when they sail on ships they pray to Allah, making their faith pure
for Him only; but when He brings them safe to land, then they ascribe
partners (to Him). (29:65)
About the Shirk of those who devote themselves to something other than
Allah, He says:
Whoever desires the life of the world and its attractions, We shall repay
them for their actions in it, and in it they will not be wronged. These are
they for whom there is nothing in the Hereafter except the Fire.
Whatever they try in it is in vain and whatever they are used to doing is
fruitless. (11:15‐16)
They have taken their rabbis and their monks as lords instead of Allah.
(9:31)
Also, in the hadith related by Ibn Hatim who, when he heard the Prophet
recite this verse asked, ʹBut did they really worship them?’ the Prophet, may
Allah bless him and grant him peace, replied,
ʹCertainly they did, for they forbade them what was permitted and they
permitted them what was forbidden, and in this they followed them;
this is how they worshipped them.ʹ 82
82 Tirmidhi, Kitab at‐Tafsir, 8/248, (3094); also Ibn Kathir, 4/77; al‐Albani classifies it as hassan.
And from among mankind are some who take for themselves (objects of
worship as) rivals to Allah, loving them as they should (only) love
Allah. (2:165) 83
Hypocrisy, too, may take a person out of the community. Ibn Taimiya
explains this, saying, ʹThere is a Greater Hypocrisy, the likes of which will take
you to the deepest pit of Hell, like the hypocrisy of Abdullah ibn Ubayy and
others. It includes denial of the Messenger, may Allah bless him and grant him
peace, rejection of some part of the Revelation, failure to believe in the obligation
of obedience, joy at the setbacks of the Prophetʹs deen or displeasure at its
successes, or some other element that can only mean enmity towards Allah and
His Messenger, may Allah bless him and grant him peace. 84
Apostasy is a type of disbelief that comes after belief. This is the case of
whoever declares disbelief and acts upon it, or takes pleasure in it willfully, even
though he may be acting against his own heart. The ulamaʹ have discussed this at
length and have said that an apostate is the one who disbelieves after having
previously submitted himself to Islam, whether by word, by deed, or by belief.
They have established that whoever declares his disbelief is a disbeliever even if
he has spoken without conviction, and does not act upon it. The only exception
to this is someone who has been compelled against his will.
In the same way, if someone performs an act of disbelief, he too is a
disbeliever, even if he acts without conviction and makes no declaration of
disbelief. This is also true if disbelief arises in his heart and overwhelms and
conquers him, even though he made no declaration of it and does not act upon it.
This is quite clear from what has been written on the subject. Anyone who has
any knowledge of the deen must have come across this at some time. 85
The ulamaʹ have mentioned ten actions that negate Islam. These are:
First, associating other deities with the worship of the One God Who has
no partners. Allah says:
Surely Allah does not forgive it when partners are ascribed to Him. He
forgives everything except this for whomever He wishes. (4:116)
This is because they dislike what Allah has revealed, so He makes their
actions fruitless. (47:9)
Say: Was it Allah and His signs and His Messenger that you ridiculed?
Make no excuse. You have disbelieved after your belief. (9:65‐66)
And they did not teach it (magic) to anyone until they had said: ʹSurely
we are only a temptation, so do not disbelieve (in the guidance of
Allah).ʹ (2:102)
Ninth, belief that it is not necessary to follow the Prophet, may Allah bless
him and grant him peace, and that it is permitted to step outside the law of
Allah, as al‐Khidr did when he exceeded what had been revealed to Moses. This
is disbelief.
Tenth, willful neglect of Allahʹs deen, neither learning it nor acting upon
it. Allah says:
And who does greater wrong than he who is reminded of the signs of
his Lord, and then turns away from them. Surely We shall requite the
guilty. (32:22)
Whoever does not judge by what which Allah has revealed: such are
disbelievers. (5:44)
and:
Whoever does not judge by what Allah has revealed: such are
wrongdoers. (5:45)
and:
Whoever does not judge by what Allah has revealed: such are corrupt.
(5:47)
And He says:
and:
But no, by your Lord, they will not believe (truly) until they make you
the judge of what is in dispute between them, and find within
themselves no dislike of what you decide, and submit with full
submission. (4:65)
and:
Or have they partners (with Allah) who have made lawful for them in
their religion what Allah has not allowed? (42:21)
And they say: ʹWe believe in Allah and in the Messenger, and we obey.ʹ
Then after that a group of them turn away. Such are not believers. And
when they appeal to Allah and His Messenger to judge between them,
then a group of them dislike it; but if they had been in the right then
they would have come to him willingly. Is there a disease in their
hearts, or do they have doubts, or are they afraid that Allah and His
Messenger will wrong them in judgement? Certainly such are
wrongdoers. Surely the saying of (all true) believers when they appeal
to Allah and His Messenger to judge between them is only that they
say: ʹWe hear and we obey.ʹ And such are the successful. (24:47‐51)
And whoever opposes the Messenger after the guidance (of Allah) has
been made clear to him, and follows other than the way of the believers,
We appoint for him that to which he himself has turned, and expose
him to Hell a wretched journeyʹs end! (4:115)
Then Allah exposes the claims of those who say they are believers, but
who prefer to be ruled by disbelievers:
Have you not seen those who pretend that they believe in what is
revealed to you, and in what was revealed in the past, how they want to
go for judgement (in their disputes) to false deities even though they
have been ordered to reject them? Satan wishes to mislead them far
astray. And when it is said to them: ʹCome to what Allah has revealed
and to the Messenger,ʹ you see the hypocrites turn away from you in
aversion. (4:60‐61)
One of our ulamaʹ summed this up nicely when he compared the person
who wishes to substitute secular law for the Shariʹah to a beetle that loves the
smell of urine and faeces but hates the fragrance of roses and musk. 87
And He says:
Surely those who dispute with Allah and His Messenger will be among
the most humiliated. (58:20)
The worst form of dispute is to oppose Allah and His Messenger and to
turn away from the Shariʹah of Allah, and the Sunnah of His Prophet, may Allah
bless him and grant him peace. The humiliation that the Muslims are today
experiencing throughout the world is only a natural consequence of their having
abandoned the Shariʹah. Muslims today are numerous but they are like flotsam
on a full tide. They have been seduced by the basest of nations and conquered by
the most degenerate of people.
Indeed, the words of the Prophet, may Allah bless him and grant him
peace, have come true: He said,
A large part of the imbalance in Muslim life today is due to the handiwork
of men who, disguised as scholars, have persuaded people to substitute human
speculation for the Shariʹah of Allah. Surely they will carry the full burden of
their actions, and also that of those whom they have lead astray, until the Day of
Resurrection. Islam will not be sullied by them. May Allah preserve the ulamaʹ
from among our rightly guided predecessors who guarded the gates of Islam so
that none of its enemies could penetrate beyond them.
Ibn Kathir discusses the condition of the Muslim Nation in the days of the
Tartars. Discussing in his Tafsir the ayah:
87 Abi Hibbatuʹllah Ismaʹil al‐Khateeb, Tahdheer Al alI‐man ʹan alHukm bighayri ma Anzalaʹr‐
Rahman, in Rasaʹil al‐Muniriya, 1139.
88 Abu Baud, Kitab al‐Malahim, 4/484. (4297); Mishkat al‐Masabih; also alBaihaqi; al‐Albani
classifies it as sahih.
Is it a judgement of the time of ignorance that they seek??(5:50)
he says,
‘If the ruler who rules by other than the Revelation of Allah challenges the
legal obligation to rule by the Shariʹah then he is outside Islam. This is the
meaning of what has been reported by al‐Tabari on the authority of Ibn
Abbas, who said that there is no disagreement among the ulamaʹ about
someone who challenges the legitimacy of the Shariʹah; that this is a
fundamental point about which everyone agrees; and that anyone who
challenges a fundamental point of belief or even a secondary issue that all
the ulamaʹ are agreed about or who denies any part of the Revelation out
of hand, is a disbeliever and is not a part of this Community. 90
91 ibid. p.7.
drinking or theft. Allah has called this ʹdisbelief, so it is more grave than
other wrong actions which have not been described in this fashion. 92
Allah says:
And whoever of you takes them for friends is (one) of them. Surely
Allah does not guide wrongdoing people. (5:51)
92 ibid
Chapter 10
Conclusion
From whatever perspective you look, the picture is the same. From the
leanings of the heart, to the imitation of the disbelieversʹ godless ways, to the
adoption of their laws, to the exposing of our own shame to them, almost every
aspect of our lives is subjected to the disbelievers in some way or another.
An awareness of the true nature of our belief and its antithesis is
accordingly of vital importance, for this alone will make us watchful over our
own behaviour, which must be based upon what the Shariʹah requires, and not
upon other peopleʹs fantasies and desires.
You must ally yourself only to Allah, and to His Messenger, and to the
believers, and you must cut yourself off from whoever or whatever else demands
to be followed, desired or feared and turns you away from Allah and His
Messenger, may the blessings and peace of Allah be on him and on his family
and on his companions and on all who follow him and them in what they are
able, with sincerity, until the Last Day.
Glossary of Arabic Terms
Allah taʹAla: Allah, the Most High, the Lord of all the worlds. Allah, the
supreme and mighty Name, indicates the One, the Existent, the Creator, the
Worshipped, the Lord of the Universe. Allah is the First without beginning and
the Last without end and the Outwardly Manifest and the Inwardly Hidden.
ahluʹl‐sunnah waʹ1‐jamaʹa: the people who follow the sunnah of the
Prophet Muhammad, may Allah bless him and grant him peace, and who hold
together as a community on that basis.
ʹalim: a man of knowledge from amongst the Muslims who acts on what
he knows
ʹaqeedah: belief or faith firmly based on how things are, rather than on
how they may be imagined. Thus ʹaqeedah can only fully be derived from an
original revelation from Allah and from the sayings of the Messenger to whom it
was revealed: in this age, the Qurʹan and the Prophet Muhammad, may Allah
bless him and grant him peace
ayah: a sign, a verse of the Qurʹan.
ayat: the plural of ayah.
baraʹ: withdrawing from and opposing all that is displeasing to Allah and
His Messenger, may Allah bless him and grant him peace.
bidʹa: innovation, changing the original teaching of the Prophet
Muhammad, may Allah bless him and grant him peace, in a
deen: the life‐transaction, submission and obedience to a particular system
of rules and practices, a debt of exchange between two parties, in this usage
between the Creator and the created. Allah says in the Qurʹan: Surely the deen
with Allah is Islam. (3.19).
faqih: a scholar of fiqh who by virtue of his knowledge can give an
authoritative opinion or judgement
fiqh: Islamic jurisprudence, the science of the application of the shar
fisq: corruption.
fuqaha: the plural of faqih.
hadith: reported speech, particularly of, or about, the Prophet
Muhammad, may Allah bless him and grant him peace.
hadith qudsi: those words of Allah on the tongue of His Prophet, may
Allah bless him and grant him peace, which are not part of the Revelation of the
Qurʹan
hajj: the annual pilgrimage to Makka which every Muslim who has the
means and ability must make once in his or her life‐time; the performance of the
rites of the hajj in the protected area which surrounds the Kaʹaba. The hajj is one
of the indispensable pillars of Islam.
halal: permitted by the shariʹah.
haram: forbidden by the shariʹah; also a protected area, an inviolable place
or object
hasan: good; a category of hadith which is reliable, but which is not as
well authenticated as one which is sahih.
hijrah: emigration in the way of Allah. Islam takes its dating from the
hijrah of the Prophet Muhammad, may Allah bless him and grant him peace,
from Makka to Madina, in 622 A.
ihsan: the state of being hasan; being absolutely sincere to Allah in
oneself; it is to worship Allah as though you see Him, knowing that although
you do not see Him, He sees you.
imam: the one who leads the prayer, an eminent scholar.
iman: acceptance, belief, trust, in Allah, a gift from Him. Iman is to believe
in Allah, His angels, His revealed Books, His messengers, the Last Day, the
Garden and the Fire, and that everything is by the Decree of Allah, both the good
and the evil.
Islam: peace and submission to the will of Allah, the way of life embodied
by all the prophets, given its final form in the prophetic guidance brought by the
Prophet Muhammad, may the blessings and peace of Allah be on him. The five
pillars of Islam are the affirmation of the shahada, doing the salat, paying the
zakat, fasting the month of Ramadan, and doing the hajj once in a life‐time if you
are able.
isnad: the written record of the names of the people who form the chain of
human transmission, person to person, by means of which a hadith is preserved.
One of the sciences of the Muslims which was developed after the Prophet
Muhammadʹs death, may Allah bless him and grant him peace, is the science of
assessing the authenticity of a hadith by assessing the reliability of its isnad.
jahiliyyah: the time of ignorance, before the coming of Islam.
jihad: struggle, particularly warfare, to establish and defend Islam.
Inwardly, the jihad is to oppose whatever in your self is displeasing to Allah.
Outwardly, it is oppose kufr by word and action.
jinn: unseen beings created from smokeless fire who co‐habit the earth
together with mankind
Kaʹaba: the cube‐shaped building at the centre of the Haram in Makka,
originally built by the Prophet Ibrahim, peace be on him, and rebuilt with the
help of the Prophet Muhammad, may Allah bless him and grant him peace; also
known as the House of Allah. The Kaʹaba is the focal point which all Muslims
face when doing the salat. This does not mean that Allah lives inside the Kaʹaba,
nor does it mean that the Muslims worship the Kaʹaba. It is Allah Who is
worshipped and Allah is not contained or confined in any form or place or time
or concept.
kafir: a person who commits kufr, the opposite of a mumin.
kaflrun: the plural of kafir.
kalima: the declaration: There is no god but Allah, Muhammad is the
Messenger of Allah
kufr: to cover up the truth, to reject Allah and His Messenger, may the
blessings and peace of Allah be on him.
la ilaha illaʹllah: there is no god but Allah.
makruh: disapproved of, without being forbidden, by the shariʹah.
marfuʹ: a hadith from a companion of the Prophet Muhammad containing
words attributed to the Prophet Muhammad, may Allah bless him and grant him
peace.
Muhammad ar‐Rasuluʹllah: Muhammad is the Messenger of Allah, may
the blessings and peace of Allah be on h
muhsin: someone who possesses the quality of ih‐san, who remembers
Allah constantly.
mumin: someone who possesses the quality of iman, who trusts in Allah
and accepts His Messenger, may Allah bless him and grant him peace.
muminun: the plural of mumin.
munafiq: a hypocrite; the hypocrites amongst the Muslims outwardly
profess Islam on the tongue, but inwardly reject Allah and His Messenger, may
Allah bless him and grant him peace, siding with the kafirun against the
Muslims. The deepest part of the Fire is reserved for the munafiqun
munafiqun: the plural of munafiq.
mushrik: one who commits shirk.
mushrikeen: the plural of mushrik.
muslim: someone who follows the way of Islam, doing what is obligatory,
avoiding what is forbidden, keeping within the limits prescribed by Allah, and
following the sunnah of the Prophet Muhammad, may Allah bless him and grant
him peace, in what he or she is able. A Muslim is, by definition, one who is safe
and sound, at peace in this world, and promised the Garden in the next world.
nifaq: hypocrisy.
qadi: a judge.
qiblah: the direction faced in prayer, which, for the Muslims, is towards
the Kaʹaba in Makka. Everyone has a direction in life, but only the Muslims have
this qibla
Qurʹan: the ʹRecitationʹ, the last Revelation from Allah to mankind and the
jinn before the end of the world, revealed to the Prophet Muhammad, may Allah
bless him and grant him peace, through the angel Jibril, over a period of twenty‐
three years, the first thirteen of which were spent in Makka and the last ten of
which were spent in Madina. The Qurʹan amends, encompasses, expands,
surpasses and abrogates all the earlier revelations revealed to the earlier
messengers, peace be on all of them. The Qurʹan is the greatest miracle given to
the Prophet Muhammad by Allah, for he was illiterate and could neither read
nor write. The Qurʹan is the uncreated word of Allah. The Qurʹan still exists
today exactly as it was originally revealed, without any alteration or change or
addition or deletion. Whoever recites the Qurʹan with courtesy and sincerity
receives knowledge and wisdom, for it is the well of wisdom in this age.
rakʹa: a unit of the prayer, a complete series of standing, bowing,
prostrations and sitting
rakʹat: the plural of rakʹa.
Ramadan: the month of fasting, the ninth month in the Muslim lunar
calendar, during which all adult Muslims who are in good health fast from the
first light of dawn until sunset each day. The Qurʹan was first revealed in the
month of Ramadan. The fast of Ramadan is one of the indispensable pillars of
Islam.
sahaba: companions, particularly the com‐panions of the Prophet
Muhammad, may the blessings and peace of Allah be on him and on his family
and on his companion
sahih: healthy and sound with no defects; often used to describe a fully
authenticated hadith. The two most reliable collections of hadith by Imam Al‐
Bukhari and Imam Muslim are both described as saheeh
salafi: adjective from as‐salaf, ʹthe early yearsʹ, and used generally to
describe the early generations of the Muslims, particularly the sahaba, the
companions of the Messenger of Allah, may the blessings and peace of Allah be
on him and on his family and on his companions. In the present age the term is
sometimes used to describe those Muslims who closely follow the sunnah of the
Prophet Muhammad.
salat: the prayer, particularly the five daily obligatory ritual prayers of the
Muslims which are called maghrib, ʹisha, fajr, dhur and ʹasr. They consist of fixed
numbers of rakʹat in worship to Allah. Salat is one of the indispensable pillars
sawm: fasting, particularly the fast of Ramadan, from food and drink and
making love if you are married during daylight, from the first light of dawn until
sunset.
shahada: to witness, to bear witness that: There is no god but Allah and
that Muhammad is the Messenger of Allah, may Allah bless him and grant him
peace. The shahada is the gateway to Islam and the gateway to the Garden in the
next world. It is easy to say, but to act on it is a vast undertaking which has far‐
reaching consequences, both in inward awareness and in outward action, both in
this world and in the next world. Continual affirmation of the shahada is one of
the indispensable pillars of Islam.
shariʹah: a road, the legal and social modality of a people based on the
revelation of their prophet. The last shariʹah in history is that of Islam. It
abrogates all previous shariʹahs. It is, being the last, therefore the easiest to
follow, for it is applicable to the whole human race wherever they are.
shaytan: a devil, particularly Iblis (Satan), an evil jinn who prompts
mankind and the jinn to rebel against Allah. Shaytan is part of the creation of
Allah, and we seek refuge in Allah from the evil that He has created
shirk: the unforgivable wrong action of worshipping something or
someone other than Allah or associating something or someone as a partner with
Him; the opposite of Tawheed which is affirmation of Divine Unity. Shirk is idol‐
worship, which is attributing form to Allah by attempting to confine Him within
an object, a concept, a ritual or a myth whereas Allah is not like anything and has
no form. He cannot be conceived of or perceived.
sirah: the historical study of the Prophet Muhammadʹs life, may the
blessings and peace of Allah be on
sunnah: a form, the customary practice of a person or group of people. It
has come to refer almost exclusively to the practice of the Messenger of Allah,
Muhammad, may Allah bless him and grant him peace, but also comprises the
customs of the first generation of Muslims in Madina, who acted in accordance
with what they had learned from him and who transmitted what they had
learned to the next generation. The sunnah is a complete behavioral science that
has been systematically kept outside the learning framework of this society, but
which nevertheless has been preserved by those to whom it has been transmitted
and who continue to embody it as their way of life. The Messenger of Allah, may
Allah bless him and grant him peace, said: T have left two matters with you. As
long as you hold to them, you will not go the wrong way. They are the Book of
Allah and the Sunnah of His Prophet.ʹ (Al‐Muwatta of Imam Malik, 46.1.3)
tafsir: commentary on the Qurʹan.
taqwa: being careful, knowing your place in the cosmos. Its proof is the
experience of awe of Allah, which inspires a person to be on guard against
wrong action and eager for actions which are pleasing to Him.
tawaf: circling the Kaʹaba; tawaf is done in sets of seven circuits followed
by two rakʹat of prayer
tawba: returning to correct action after error, turning away from wrong
action to Allah and asking His Forgiveness, turning to face the Real whereas
before one turned oneʹs back
Tawheed: the Divine Unity, Unity in its most profound sense. Allah is
One in His Essence and His Attributes and His Acts. The whole of the creation
and what it contains is one unified event which in itself has no lasting reality.
Allah is the Real: Surely we come from Allah and surely to Him we return. (2.156
ʹulama: the plural of ʹalim.
Ummah: the body of the Muslims as one distinct and integrated
community or nation.
walaʹ: loyalty, holding fast to all that is pleasing to Allah and His
Messenger, may Allah bless him and grant him peace. Whoever possesses al‐
walaʹ waʹl‐baraʹ loves with the love of Allah and hates with the hate of All
zakat: the wealth tax obligatory on Muslims each year, usually payable in
the form of one fortieth of surplus wealth which is more than a certain fixed
minimum amount, which is called the nisab. Zakat is payable on accumulated
wealth, especially gold and silver, merchandise, certain crops, certain livestock,
and on subterranean and mineral wealth. As soon as it is collected it is
redistributed to those in need, as defined in the Qurʹan and the hadith. Zakat is
one of the indispensable pillars of Islam.
zakat al‐fitr: a small obligatory head‐tax imposed on every responsible
Muslim who has the means for himself and his dependants. It is paid once yearly
at the end of Ramadan just before the ʹId al‐Fitr, the festival that marks the end of
Ramadan.