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Monday, August 31, 2009

Vatican offered Islamic finance principles to Western banks

ROME, ITALY, EUROPEAN UNION -- The Vatican offered Islamic finance principles to Western banks as a solution for worldwide economic crisis.

Daily Vatican newspaper, L'Osservatore Romano, reported that Islamic banking system may help to overcome global crisis, Turkish media reported.

The Vatican said banks should look at the ethical rules of Islamic finance to restore confidence amongst their clients at a time of global economic crisis.

"The ethical principles on which Islamic finance is based may bring banks closer to their clients and to the true spirit which should mark every financial service," the Vatican's official newspaper Osservatore Romano said in an article in its latest issue late yesterday.

Author Loretta Napoleoni and Abaxbank Spa fixed income strategist, Claudia Segre, say in the article that "Western banks could use tools such as the Islamic bonds, known as sukuk, as collateral". Sukuk may be used to fund the "'car industry or the next Olympic Games in London," they said.

They also said that profit share, gained from sukuk, may be an alternative to the interest. They underlined that sukuk system could help automotive sector and support investments in infrastructure area.

Islamic sukuk system is similar to bonos of capitalist system. But in sukuk, money is invested concrete projects and profit share is distributed to clients instead of interest earned.

Pope Benedict XVI in an Oct. 7, 2008 speech reflected on crashing financial markets saying that "money vanishes, it is nothing" and concluded that "the only solid reality is the word of God."

The Vatican has been paying attention to the global financial meltdown and ran articles in its official newspaper that criticize the free-market model for having "grown too much and badly in the past two decades."

The Osservatore's editor, Giovanni Maria Vian, said that "the great religions have always had a common attention to the human dimension of the economy," Corriere della Sera reported today.
 

Sunday, August 30, 2009

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தகவல் பாதுகாப்பிற்கு Folder Lock

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Editor's review of Folder Lock

·         4.0 stars

·         "Lock down your secret documents"

Snoopers can't find or access the files you hide using Folder Lock, even in DOS or under other operating systems. This application provides two levels of protection: you can merely lock files and folders, or you can encrypt them using the 256-bit Blowfish algorithm. When you boot up the program, it'll ask you for a master password. Hitting the Browse link locates and lock folders anywhere on your computer, or you can simply secure them via the context menu. Encryption is limited in the free version to 25 MB.

Although the too-cute-for-words interface doesn't make them easy to find, Folder Lock does have a treasure trove of Advanced features, accessible after you hit the Options button. You can set files to be shredded, force the computer to shut down after failed entry attempts, erase document history, the clipboard and more, and enter into Stealth mode, which hides the app's presence on your computer.

The interface, which includes simple animations for no reason other than to "entertain" you, would be better served by a more standard layout that makes options readily and easily available. No doubt to excite your inner lock-breaking child, the octagonal purplish blue layout is supplemented with three more skins when you purchase the full version.

In our tests, the program demonstrated good speed, even when securing large folders. If you share a PC and need to keep certain files to yourself, you should definitely give Folder Lock a try.

 

 



Sunday, August 23, 2009

The virtues of Soorat al-Ikhlaas, etc.

The virtues of Soorat al-Ikhlaas, etc.

I have been practicing Islam for some time now and I am still in the process of learning. A Muslim friend of mine gave me a book on Duas and in this book the author tells you exactly which surahs and duas to say after each salaat. The problem I have is that some of the surahs which he mentions, I never heard of before and I think that maybe they have other names. There are also verses from the Quran that has to be said but are in Arabic. I hope that you will be able to help me as I am anxious to know exactly what surahs and duas they are:
1. Surah ALHAMDU
2. Surah INNAFATAHNA
3. Dalailul Khrirat (one part)
4. ALLAHUS SAMAD (Is this one of Allah's 99 names that has to be recited 500 times or is it a name of a dua?)
5. Surah AMMA YATASA ALOON
6. Ayat Karimah, i.e. "Lailaha illa anta Subhanaka inna Kunto minazzalimeen" 100 times (Please give it to me in English and tell me which surah it's from?)

Praise be to Allaah.

Firstly, the better-known names and numbers of the soorahs about which you ask are as follows:

Soorah al-hamdu is Soorat al-Faatihah (the Opening), soorah #1

Soorah Innaa fatahnaa is Soorat al-Fath (the Victory), soorah #48

Allaahu's-Samad is Soorat al-Ikhlaas (the Purity), soorah #112

'Amma yatasaa'aloon is Soorat al-Naba' (the Great News), soorah #78

The aayah "La ilaaha illa anta subhaanaka innee kuntu min al-zaalimeen (None has the right to be worshipped except You [O Allaah]. Glorified (and Exalted) are You. Truly, I have been of the wrong-doers)" is from Soorat al-Anbiyaa', Soorah 21, aayah 87.

A word of warning: The book Dalaa'il al-Khayraat contains da'eef (weak) and fabricated ahaadeeth, and prescribes things that are contrary to the truth, so it is not right for anyone to rely on this book.

Secondly, a translation of the Qur'aan in English or any other language is not counted as Qur'aan itself, and the rulings that apply to Qur'aan do not apply to it. The Qur'aan is the Word of Allaah which was revealed in the Arabic tongue.

Thirdly, al-Ahad (the One) and al-Samad (the Self-Sufficient) are two of the great Names of Allaah.

Fourthly, stating that Soorat al-Ikhlaas should be recited 500 times, and that the aayah (interpretation of the meaning) "La ilaaha illa anta subhaanaka innee kuntu min al-zaalimeen (None has the right to be worshipped except You [O Allaah]. Glorified (and Exalted) are You. Truly, I have been of the wrong-doers)" [al-Anbiyaa' 21:87] should be recited 100 times is a practice that has no basis whatsoever in the Qur'aan or the Sunnah of the Prophet (peace and blessings of Allaah be upon him), so it is not right to adhere to these numbers. You should act upon the sound ahaadeeth that describe the virtues of this soorah and this aayah. These reports include the following:

From Qutaadah ibn al-Nu'maan (may Allaah be pleased with him) who said that a man stayed up to worship Allaah at the time of the Prophet (peace and blessings of Allaah be upon him) just before dawn and recited "Qul huwa Allaahu ahad," but did not recite anything else. In the morning, the man came to the Prophet (peace and blessings of Allaah be upon him) and told him about this, thinking that perhaps he was not doing enough. The Messenger of Allaah (peace and blessings of Allaah be upon him) said: "By the One in Whose hand is my soul, it is equivalent to one-third of the Qur'aan." (al-Bukhaari, 4627).

Ahmad reported from Abu Sa'eed al-Khudri that a man said, "O Messenger of Allaah, I have a neighbour who prays at night and he only ever recites 'Qul huwa Allaahu ahad'" – as if he did not think much of this. The Prophet (peace and blessings of Allaah be upon him) said: "By the One in Whose hand is my soul, it is equivalent to one-third of the Qur'aan." (al-Musnad, 10965)

Abu Sa'eed al-Khudri (may Allaah be pleased with him) said: "The Prophet (peace and blessings of Allaah be upon him) said to his Companions: 'Could any one of you not recite one third of the Qur'aan in one night?' They found the idea too difficult, and said, 'Who among us could do that, O Messenger of Allaah?' He said, 'Allaahu'l-ahad, al- samad [i.e., Soorat al-Ikhlaas] is one third of the Qur'aan.'" (Reported by al-Bukhaari, 4628)

'Aa'ishah reported that when the Prophet (peace and blessings of Allaah be upon him) went to bed, he would cup his hands together, blow into them and recite into them Qul huwa Allaahu ahad [Soorat al-Ikhlaas], Qul a'oodhu bi Rabbi'l-falaq [Soorat al-Falaq] and Qul a'oodhu bi Rabbi'l-naas [Soorat al-Naas] (these are the last 3 soorahs of the Qur'aan – Translator). Then he would wipe as much of his body as he could with his hands, starting with his head and face, and the front of his body. He would do this three times. (Reported by al-Bukhaari, 4630)

'Aa'ishah also reported that the Prophet (peace and blessings of Allaah be upon him) sent a man in charge of a small military campaign, and when he recited Qur'aan whilst leading his companions in prayer, he would always end with Qul huwa Allaahu ahad. When they came back, (his companions) mentioned that to the Prophet (peace and blessings of Allaah be upon him), who told them to ask him why he did that. So they asked him, and he said, "Because it is a description of the Most Merciful, and I love to recite it." The Prophet (peace and blessings of Allaah be upon him) said: "Tell him that Allaah loves him." (Reported by al-Bukhaari, 6827)

'Abd al-Rahmaan ibn Abzaa reported that the Messenger of Allaah (peace and blessings of Allaah be upon him) used to recite Sabbih isma Rabbik al-A'laa (Soorat al-A'laa, #87), Qul yaa ayyuhaa'l-kaafiroon (Soorat al-Kaafiroon, #109) and Qul huwa Allaahu ahad (Soorat al-Ikhlaas, #112) in his witr prayer, and when he had finished, he would repeat Subhaan al-Malik al-Quddoos (Glory be to the King, the Holy) three times, making the last vowel long on the third recitation. (Reported by al-Nisaa'i, 1721)

'Uqbah ibn 'Aamir said: "I met the Messenger of Allaah (peace and blessings of Allaah be upon him)… and he said to me, 'O 'Uqbah ibn 'Aamir, shall I not teach you some Soorahs the like of which have not been revealed in the Tawraat (Torah) or the Zaaboor (Psalms) or the Injeel (Gospel) or in the Qur'aan? There is no night comes but you should not recite (i.e., every night you should recite) Qul huwa Allaahu ahad [Soorat al-Ikhlaas], Qul a'oodhu bi Rabbi'l-falaq [Soorat al-Falaq] and Qul a'oodhu bi Rabbi'l-naas [Soorat al-Naas].'" 'Uqbah said: "So every night I would recite them. It became my duty to recite them, because the Messenger of Allaah (peace and blessings of Allaah be upon him) had commanded me to do so…" (Musnad Ahmad, 16810)

Abu Hurayrah reported that the Prophet (peace and blessings of Allaah be upon him) heard a man reciting Qul huwa Allaahu ahad, and said, "It is his right.' They asked, 'O Messenger of Allaah, what is his right?' He said, 'Paradise is his right.' (Reported by Imaam Ahmad, 7669)

The Prophet (peace and blessings of Allaah be upon him) said: "Whoever recites Qul huwa Allaahu ahad ten times, Allaah will build for him a house in Paradise." (Saheeh al-Jaami' al-Sagheer, 6472).

So recite it as many times as you wish, without sticking to a certain number or time or way that is not prescribed by sharee'ah.

With regard to the aayah "La ilaaha illa anta subhaanaka innee kuntu min al-zaalimeen", the following report has been narrated concerning its virtues:

Sa'd said: "The Messenger of Allaah (peace and blessings of Allaah be upon him) said: 'The call of Dhoo'l-Noon [Yoonus/Jonah], which he recited when he was in the belly of the fish, 'La ilaaha illa anta subhaanaka innee kuntu min al-zaalimeen. There is no Muslim who recites this in any situation, but Allaah will respond to him." (Reported by al-Tirmidhi, 3427, and classed as saheeh in Saheeh al-Jaami', 3383).

The Prophet (peace and blessings of Allaah be upon him) said: "Shall I not tell you of something which, if some of the misery and distress of this world befalls a man and he recites it, he will be relieved of his stress. It is the du'aa' of Dhoo'l-Noon: 'La ilaaha illa anta subhaanaka innee kuntu min al-zaalimeen.'" (Reported by al-Haakim; Saheeh al-Jaami', 2605).

We ask Allaah to help us, you and all our Muslim brothers to gain beneficial knowledge and to do righteous deeds. May Allaah bless our Prophet Muhammad,

Sheikh Muhammed Salih Al-Munajjid
 

Monday, August 17, 2009

"Abi, when will we ever relax?"


In the Name of Allâh, the Most Beneficent, the Most Merciful

 

A moving story that I've heard once and that I always remember and cherish for its meanings. It's the story of one of the great imams of this Ummah, Imam Ahmad bin Hanbal.

His son, Abdullah, once asked his father one day, "Abi when will we ever relax?" His father, one of the greatest revivers of the Sunnah, a role model for all Muslims, looked him in the eye and said, "With the first step we take into Jannah."

Ya Allah, what a beautiful response!

There are days that come to you and you are tired, and you just want to sleep and relax and "shut off" as they say. Those are the days that you need to ask yourself, a critical question: Where am I going with life? If it's towards Allah and for Allah, then regain your strength and continue your work, for Jannah is precious and must be sought. But if you look into your life and realise that it's not towards Allah, but it is towards Dunya, then here tiredness becomes a blessing, for it is a reminder that you need to change direction.

I love the story on many levels. For one, it shows you that when someone's focus is Jannah, their priorties change, and their outlook on life is different. What we perceive as difficulty, they perceive as ease. What we perceive as calamity, they perceive as reward. What we perceive as obstacles, they perceive as opportunities for sincere dua. Moreover, when your focus is Jannah. This dunya and its constant demand becomes small and the least of our concern. 

Also, I love the way the son phrased his question, "Abi" sweet way of calling your father, and "when will we ever relax?" he didn't say, "when will I relax dad?". He wasn't selfish, he wanted to relax, but also cared for his father's condition. This also shows you how the father and son were working hard together. Again, when your focus is Jannah it reflects in your family, children, and those around you and everyone gears up towards that goal.

Our problem today is not that we're tired, our problem today is that we relax too much. We do everything so that we relax. We cheat, break promises, not fulfill vows, lie, take and give bribery..so we can relax. We don't stay up for tahajjud or wake up for fajr, we don't fast, or go for Hajj and Umrah...so we can relax. We don't walk towards the Masjid, open the book of Allah so we can understand it, all in the name "I need to relax!"

Brothers/sisters, there's plenty of relaxation where we're going, but this is not the time for it. Let's all work for Jannah and be productive in the path of Allah, and work so hard that one day our children would come to us and ask us "Abi"..or "Ummi".."when will we ever relax?" and you can smile and look them into the eyes and say "When we enter Jannah inshaAllah".

(Source - ProductiveMuslim.com)

 


Monday, August 03, 2009

தகவல் உரிமை சட்டத்தின் கீழ் தகவல் பெற பணம் எதுவும் செலுத்த தேவையில்லை




தகவல் உரிமை சட்டத்தின் கீழ் தகவல் பெற பணம் எதுவும் செலுத்த தேவையில்லை

சென்னை:தகவல் பெறும் உரிமை சட்டத்தின் கீழ், அரசு துறைகளில் இருந்து பதில் மற்றும் விளக்கங்களை பெற, பணம் எதுவும் செலுத்த வேண்டியதில்லை' என, மத்திய தகவல் ஆணையம் தெரிவித்துள்ளது. மத்திய, மாநில அரசு துறை திட்டங்கள் குறித்து விளக்கங்கள், சந்தேகங்களுக்கான பதில்களை பெற, தகவல் உரிமை சட்டம் உருவாக்கப்பட்டது.
 

இச்சட்டத்தின் மூலம் தகவல்களை இலவசமாகப் பெற முடியும். ஆனால், சமீபகாலமாக, சில துறைகளில் இருந்து தகவல்களை பெற கட்டணம் செலுத்த வேண்டும் என, அத்துறை சார்பில், எழுத்து பூர்வமாகவே தெரிவிக்கப்படுகிறது. தமிழ்நாடு முற்போக்கு நுகர்வோர் மைய துணை தலைவர் சடகோபன், தனக்கு நேர்ந்த அனுபவம் குறித்து கூறியதாவது:
 

சென்னை-அரக்கோணம் இடையே, புறநகர் மின்சார ரயில்களின் கால அட்டவணை மற்றும் கால தாமதம் குறித்து, சில சந்தேகங்கள் எழுப்பி, தெற்கு ரயில்வே தகவல் பெறும் பிரிவின் துணை பொது மேலாளருக்கு, சென்ற ஆண்டு மே 29ம் தேதி, கடிதம் அனுப்பினேன். அதற்கு வந்த பதில் கடிதத்தில், "நீங்கள் குறிப்பிடும் தகவல்களை திரட்டுவதற்கான சம்பளம் மற்றும் அலவன்ஸ் தொகையாக, 379 ரூபாய் மற்றும் ஒரு பக்க காகிதத்திற்கு இரண்டு ரூபாய் என, மொத்தம் 381ரூபாயை செலுத்தவேண்டும்' என, குறிப்பிடப்பட்டு இருந்தது. இக்கடிதம், ஆவடி முதன்மை கோட்ட மின் பொறியாளர் அலுவலகத்தில் இருந்து மூத்த கோட்ட மின் பொறியாளர் அதிகாரி சாலிக்ராம் என்பவர் பெயரில் அனுப்பப்பட்டிருந்தது. 

அதிர்ச்சி அடைந்த நான், தெற்கு ரயில்வே மற்றும் புதுடில்லியில் உள்ள மத்திய தகவல் ஆணையத்திற்கு தெரிவித்து, தகவல் பெற கட்டணம் தேவையா என கேள்வி எழுப்பி கடிதம் அனுப்பினேன். என் கடிதத்தை பரிசீலித்த ஆணையம் அளித்த பதில் கடிதத்தில், "கட்டணம் எதுவும் செலுத்தத் தேவை யில்லை; இதுபோல், பல நிறுவனங்கள் பணம் கேட்பதை தடுத்து நிறுத்தும் வகையில், நடவடிக்கை எடுக்கப்படும்' என தெரிவித்தது. இவ்வாறு சடகோபன் கூறினார். 

நன்றி: தினமலர்



A Flash Back to Abbasids


Abbasids

General Information

{ah-bas'-ids}

The Abbasids were the dynasty of caliphs who ruled the Islamic Empire from 750 until the Mongol conquest of the Middle East in 1258. The dynasty takes its name from its ancestor al-Abbas, the uncle of the Prophet Muhammad. In 750 the Abbasids defeated the Umayyads and transferred the capital of the Caliphate from Damascus to Baghdâd, thereby shifting the empire's center from Syria to Iraq.

BELIEVE
Our List of 700 Religious Subjects
The regime reasserted the theocratic concept of the caliphate and continuity with orthodox Islam as the basis of unity and authority in the empire. The Abbasid "revolution" also made Islam and the fruits of power accessible to non-Arabs. A strong Persian influence persisted in the government and culture of the Abbasid period, and Hellenistic ideas led to the rapid growth of intellectual life.

The Abbasid period may be divided into two parts. In the period from 750 to 945 the authority of the caliphs gradually declined, while the Turkish military leaders gained increasing influence. The dynasty's power peaked in the reign (786-809) of Harun Al-Rashid. In the later period, from 945 to 1258, the caliphs generally held no more than nominal suzerainty; real power, even in Baghdâd, passed to dynasties of secular sovereigns.

Michael W. Dols

Bibliography:
Ahsan, M. M., Social Life under the Abbasids (1979); Goldschmidt, A., Jr., A Concise History of the Middle East, 3d rev. ed. (1988); Hitti, Philip K., History of the Arabs, 10th ed. (1970); Lassner, J., The Shaping of Abbasid Rule (1980); Mansfield, Peter, The Arab World: A Comprehensive History (1976); Shaban, M. A., The Abbasid Revolution (1970; repr. 1979).


Abbasids

General Information

Abbasids, dynasty of caliphs who ruled the caliphate of Islam from 750 until 1258. All of these caliphs were descended from Abbas, a member of the tribe of Quraysh of Mecca who was an uncle of the prophet Muhammad. The Abbasids seized the caliphate following the overthrow of the Umayyad dynasty of caliphs, and held it until the Mongols sacked Baghdâd and killed the last caliph of the line. For most of this time their court was in Baghdâd, a town founded at the command of the second Abbasid caliph, al-Mansur (754-775) in 762.

For the first century or so of their caliphate, the Abbasids acted as the leaders of Islam both religiously and politically, despite the fact that during this period their authority was rejected by some. The peak of their power probably occurred in the reign of Harun ar-Rashid, who relied heavily on the Barmakid family of administrators. Following Harun's death there was a period of civil war between his two sons, al-Amin and al-Mamun. Al-Mamun finally triumphed but the prestige of the family was damaged.

By the end of the 9th century the Abbasids were unable to exercise real religious or political authority. Their religious authority had been taken over by the religious scholars of Sunni Islam following the failure of the caliphs' attempt to impose their will over them in the trial of strength known as the Mihna (833-847). As a result of this episode the caliphs were restricted to a largely symbolic role as merely nominal leaders of Sunni Islam. Followers of Shiism rejected the Abbasids completely.

Politically the caliphs had become puppets in the hands of their Turkish soldiers, who were able to remove and install caliphs as they wished. In 908 one caliph held office for one day only. The process culminated with the institution in 935 of the title Amir al-Umara (Commander of the Commanders), which was taken by the real political power, the chief of the Turkish soldiers.

At the same time, territories that the Abbasids controlled fell apart as independent states arose in regions previously under Abbasid rule. Some of the rulers of these states recognized the suzerainty of the Abbasids, but this was merely a token. In 945 the Shiite Buwayhid family conquered Baghdâd itself, and for the next century the Abbasid caliphate survived mainly because the Buwayhids found it useful in various ways.

Although the 9th and 10th centuries saw a decline in the power of the caliphs, the period was one of great religious and cultural importance. The trial of strength between the caliphs and the Sunni religious scholars sealed the rise of the Sunni form of Islam. It prepared the way for the appearance of the great books of Sunni law and the collections of hadiths (reports about Muhammad). Only slightly later, the Shiite form of Islam achieved its definitive form when the line of the 12 Imams came to an end in 873, an event followed by the appearance of books of Shiite law and distinctive collections of hadiths.

Philosophy, medicine, mathematics, and other sciences flourished as the Islamic world appropriated and developed the knowledge and wisdom of earlier and surrounding cultures. Particularly important was the science and philosophy of the Hellenistic Near East, and the 9th and 10th centuries saw the translation into Arabic of several works by (or attributed to) figures like Aristotle, Plato, Euclid, Galen, and others. The work of translation was encouraged by the Abbasid al-Mamun who founded the so-called House of Wisdom (Dar al-Hikma) in Baghdâd as a center for it. Arabic-speaking Christians were especially active in the production of translations. The system of so-called Arabic numerals originated in India, but was adopted at this time by Islamic civilization, then later transmitted to the West.

The political fragmentation of the caliphate led to the emergence of many local courts and centers of power, which also encouraged the development of science and philosophy as well as poetry and prose, art, and architecture. Some of the local courts that emerged in the eastern regions of the caliphate are especially associated with the rise of an Islamic Persian literature and Iranian national sentiment.

In 1055 the Seljuk Turks, who were Sunnis, captured Baghdâd, but this made no significant difference to the position of the caliphs. Although once again honored as symbols of the unity of Sunni Islam, their freedom of action was severely limited. Only in times of Seljuk weakness were individual caliphs occasionally able to exercise some power and influence. By the time the Mongol Empire ended the line of caliphs in 1258, Sunni Islam no longer needed even the symbolic role of the caliphate. It is true that the Mameluke sultans of Egypt established a puppet caliphate in Cairo, installing various members of the Abbasid family who had escaped the fall of Baghdâd. Since the end of the Abbasid caliphate in Baghdâd, however, no claimant to the office has achieved anything like general recognition among the Muslims.

After their first century or so the Abbasids cannot be said to have had much control over events. They nevertheless provided a focus of loyalty for Sunni Islam during an often turbulent period, and their caliphate may be seen in retrospect as the golden age of Islamic civilization.


The Abbasid Dynasty

General Information

Islamic culture started to evolve under the Umayyads, but it grew to maturity in the first century of the Abbasid dynasty. The Abbasids came to power in AD 750 when armies originating from Khorâsân, in eastern Iran, finally defeated the Umayyad armies. The Islamic capital shifted to Iraq under the Abbasids. After trying several other cities, the Abbasid rulers chose a site on the Tigris River on which the City of Peace, Baghdâd, was built in 762. Baghdâd remained the political and cultural capital of the Islamic world from that time until the Mongol invasion in 1258, and for a good part of this time it was the center of one of the great flowerings of human knowledge. The Abbasids were Arabs descended from the Prophet's uncle, but the movement they led involved Arabs and non-Arabs, including many Persians, who had converted to Islam and who demanded the equality to which they were entitled in Islam.

The Abbasids distributed power more evenly among the different ethnicities and regions than the Umayyads had, and they demonstrated the universal inclusiveness of Islamic civilization. They achieved this by incorporating the fruits of other civilizations into Islamic political and intellectual culture and by marking these external influences with a distinctly Islamic imprint.

As time passed, the central control of the Abbasids was reduced and independent local leaders and groups took over in the remote provinces. Eventually the rival Shia Fatimid caliphate was established in Egypt, and the Baghdâd caliphate came under the control of expanding provincial dynasties. The office of the caliph was nonetheless maintained as a symbol of the unity of Islam, and several later Abbasid caliphs tried to revive the power of the office.

In 1258, however, a grandson of Mongol ruler Genghis Khan named Hulagu, encouraged by the kings of Europe, led his armies across the Zagros Mountains of Iran and destroyed Baghdâd. According to some estimates, about 1 million Muslims were murdered in this massacre. In 1259 and 1260 Hulagu's forces marched into Syria, but they were finally defeated by the Mamluks of Egypt, who had taken over the Nile Valley. For the next two centuries, centers of Islamic power shifted to Egypt and Syria and to a number of local dynasties. Iraq became an impoverished, depopulated province where the people took up a transitory nomadic lifestyle. Iraq did not finally experience a major cultural and political revival until the 20th century.

Ahmad S. Dallal


Abbasids

General Information

(descendants of Prophet's uncle Abbas)

  • Abu al-Abbas (750-754)
  • al-Mansur (754-775)
  • al-Mahdi (775-785)
  • al-Hadi (785-786)
  • Harun ar-Rashid (786-809)
  • al-Amin (brief) (son)
  • Abdullah al-Mamun (son 813-833)
  • al-Mutasim (brother of previous, 833-)
  • al-Wahtik (son of previous)
  • al-Mutawakkil (847-861)
  • (908, one day)
  • (by about 950, very little power)
  • al-Mustasim ( -1258)

(conquered by Mongols in 1258)

The Abbasids had the Mihna in effect during their reign (beginning in 827 AD). This was a movement of extreme intolerance, and it is sometimes referred to as the Muslim Inquisition.

Building up strong Muslim Ummah (part- 1 & 2)

 



BUILDING UP STRONG MUSLIM UMMAH (Part-1&2)


-By Shah Abdul Hannan (Chairman, Islami Bank Bangladesh Limited, Former Secretary Govt. of Bangladesh)

[This talk was delivered by shah Abdul Hannan, former Finance Secretary of Bangladesh. The title of the talk was "Building up Strong Muslim Ummah" Which was addressed on Tuesday, the 22nd September-1998 at Sheffield Islamic Centre and addressed to the Sheffield local community and International Students.]



First of all, I submit that the state of Ummah, the state of Muslim Ummah, the state of Islamic Ummah is not very healthy. And I would not discuss a lot because you know very much in this respect. But still I would say ideologically, there is much ignorance in the Muslim community about Islam. Ideologically speaking, Islamically speaking, form the Ummah stand point, there is much ignorance about Islam, there is considerable Bida (innovation unacceptable in Shariah /Low) in the Muslim Community, innovations which are not acceptable, which has been judge innovations (in the technical terms of Fiqh) and also much shirk in the entire Muslim world or many parts of Muslim World. I cannot say what is the real state in the UK, but I would say that the Muslim Ummah as a whole is in much ignorance, much Bidah and Much Shirk. Materially speaking, materially there is much illiteracy, much poverty, serious poverty and backwardness in most of the places. Our economy is in bad shape by in large
except a few, we have bad defense.


What should we do to build a strong Muslim Ummah? By the way I would mention after the conclusion of my speech. I will be ready to answer in all humility any question that you may give me. I do not say I have all the answers but I will give whatever I know and the rest Allah is our helper.

So coming to the question what should we do to build a strong Ummah. Again, I need not mention that, of course, we have to build our education, we have to build our economy and we have to build our defense. These are the priority areas before I look into the ideological issues, I am mentioning the material aspect and I have to do this. Our education, as you all know, in most of the countries, not in all countries,  are not fulfilling the needs of Islamic education. Let me say my case, from my school to my university post-graduation in Dhaka University, I was not taught 20 ayshs of the Quran, in fact, I would say I was not taught 10 ayahs of the Quran. I was taught the life of the Prophet (sm) who is a model for us. So does this education system or education fulfill our needs? It does not. The objective should be to build ultimately in the independent Muslim countries strong Islamic education system. I know it will take time and there is "sunnat Allah"-Allah's ways and many things are
there where time is needed but the objective should be clear that we have to achieve an education system which will meet all our material needs, all our needs to live as good human being. At the same time it must meet our Islamic needs, the education must meet and presently in most of the countries the education system is not patterned in this line. But the objective should be clear to the Ummah that the education is very important, most important for our material progress and for our Dini (religious) Progress, for our religious Progress, for ideological progress, the most important thing is education. And as long as the education system is not fulfilling our needs, there is our duty to privately study and know Islam thoroughly and fully, there is no other way but private study.

I would not take much time about economy. I mean, you can realize you have to do a lot. I will not discuss today this issue only indicating that all Muslim governments, all Muslim Politicians, all Muslim intellectuals must work. All Muslim economists must work for strong Muslim Economy. I will come back to this issue later.

We have to build our defense also. Allah has said to guard our borders. If you look into the last ayats of Suratul Imran you will find Allah has asked us to guard our borders and Allah has taught us to keep horses ready. By that Allah (swt) means we should keep our defense ready, we cannot be careless about the defense of the Muslim Ummah, about the defense of the Muslim states and defense of the Islamic states. De-nuclearisation, very good, but it must be for all. I mean we cannot be asked to disarm ourselves, others keeping arms. It will not be fair, it is not just.

Now, I was talking about the building of Ummah and about the material aspect I was indicating a little. But, today my thrust is not on the material aspect, we must take into account the fact that the Ummah itself is under attack, under threat. You know that there are major scholars talking about the conflict of civilization, an American major scholar Huntington has spoken on the conflict of civilization and it says that Islam is the next threat to the western civilization, as if the western civilization must be maintained, as if any threat against that must be eliminated, as if it is the pinnacle of civilization, as if it is the last word. We do not accept western civilization is the last word; I will come back to that. "The end of history" Says that history has reached its final stage, he means really that secular democracy and capitalism are the two things which are the final version of things that human being achieved, so nothing new will come, nothing better will come. This is
the end of history, but we cannot accept that the secularism is the last word.

The greatest problem of human civilization is that they have forgotten the guidance of Allah (swt). And this is the reason of all the immoralities you see in the world. And most of the fighting is on the basis of nation, I agree there are fighting on the basis of religion also but a time has come that we can contain that if we like. We cannot forsake morality and surrender to immorality in the name of secularism that is forgetting the guidance of Allah (swt). Many of the evils of the world are due to really the forgetting the guidance of Allah (swt).I will come to that in course of my lecture.

The challenge of the west: The challenge of the west to the Muslim Ummah is political, is cultural, is economical and mostly, and most fundamentally intellectual. i need not to discuss much about political challenge to the Ummah. What does the west want? The West wants the Muslim countries should obey the dictates of the west. It is not acceptable to us. When a Muslim country was about to blast a bomb it gets a few telephone calls several times form the head of the state of most important power of the world that " You do not do that" so much interference in the affairs of the Muslim states. They want us to obey their dictates and if you obey their dictate they will never dictate us for the good of the Islam. I do not say that we will not listen to others on right maters, we should listen to on right matters to others, but we cannot accept the political dictates of the west. They want us to surrender to their culture which is mostly indecent, lot of indecencies, lot of exposure of
human body, exploiting the women for money and lust of men. I do not know in human history any worse social system like this. Their marriage has been eliminated more or less, their parents are neglected, and their children are neglected. Neither children have security, nor in the real sense, the parents have security. In old days they have lots of problems. Their children are not getting care of both father and mother, probably they are getting care of only one in most cases but Allah has made it like that the children should get care of both father and mother. Allah has not made it like this that the children would get care of only the mother. They destroyed family for no purpose at all, for worthless purpose. The marriage is a historically sound institution. It has not harmed any body, the family has not harmed anybody, that, they have come to a situation where they, in fact are ruining their families. They are leading us to a chaos and condition. Coming to economic aspect, the
goal is really economic imperialism. They want us to be second graders, 3rd graders, 4th graders. They want us to be their marker ultimately. Their institutions are all geared to the interest of the major powers of the west. I know thoroughly, I have dealt with them. They serve mostly the purpose of the west and not the purpose of the humanity as a whole. But I must say, the basic challenge is really intellectual. All the other challenges are there but the basic and most fundamental challenge that is coming from the west is really intellectual. They are charging, they are telling us that the concept of Islamic state is not possible. It is not good to have Islamic state. They are telling that Islam does not give human rights; they are telling that Islam does not give women rights and I must say with great sorrow that some Muslims act in a manner it appears that as if Islam does not give human rights or women rights. There are some manifestations in some countries, some parts which
also give this impression. Unfortunately, we must not do that. We must not give the backward, unnecessary backward image of Islam.

Coming to the points of human rights and women rights, I would explain that these are very much accepted in Islam. I will quote three basic documents in support of human rights and women rights in Islam. The constitution of Islamic Republic of Iran was drafted by Ulema , the constitution of Islamic Republic of Pakistan was, though not drafted but accepted by Ulema of all groups. These two documents plus the writings of the political scientists of the Islam. I would not name them all, I can name only a few, like Muhammad Asad, Like Abul ala Mududi, Like Hasan turabi and so on, a political thinker in Bangladesh, late Moulana Abdur Rahim in their writings. So I would say these documents which are drafted by the Ulema or accepted by the Ulema indicated clearly that Islam has given basic human rights. The Islamic constitution of Pakistan, has chapter on Fundamental Rights. As I am a teacher in a University of comparative political thought, I give my students Iranian constitution; I give
my students the Pakistan constitution. I give my students Bangladesh constitution. I give my students American constitution. I explain them the difference between the western democratic model and Islamic democratic model. So I would say that the writings of political scientists, not politicians, not ordinary Alims, but major Alims and major Islamic politicians and political scholars and the other two basic documents, which are drafted by Ulema or accepted by Ulema, clearly indicate that human rights are respected and women rights are guaranteed in Islam. So, we should not hear some voices from here and there. We cannot lose the consensus, we cannot ignore the consensus on the basis of some voices form here and there.(you can also look into OIC declaration o human rights which was approved by OIC Fiqh Acadamy).

Let us look back at the causes of Muslim decline, as you all know we have been at the fore front of expansion of knowledge. It is the Muslims who have been the principal actor in the field of knowledge in the 7th, 8th ,9th and 10th century. In the 11th ,12th ,13th century Muslim gave up the pursuit of knowledge. What happened? Why?. I have not the full answer but it appears to me that we neglected knowledge. It is clear form history that we neglected knowledge which led to our decline and among other things is Taqlid, the blind following. The Muslims started blindly following the old scholars and forgot their duties of pursuit of knowledge and Ijtihad by the senior scholars of Islam.if you want to know the level of Taqlid, I can refer to a book which I went through, there is book called Fatwah –e-Alimgairi, which was prepared by 300 Alims at the time of the Mughal Emperor, Aurangjeb. They have discussed about 5000 issues and you will be surprised that after each issue nowhere they
quoted any ayah of the Quran, no where they quoted the Hadith of the prophet (sm). They quote some old books. They refer Tatarkhania, refer Shami, refer Baharurraik and refer Muhit, never to the book of Allah and never to the Hadith of prophet(sm). After going through 12 volumes of Fatwai Alamgiri, I was dismayed, I was surprised, and I got shock. I want to mention that this taqlid was responsible for our decline. In such situation, the challenge of the west, political, cultural, economical, and intellectual, how do we meet them? And also that we know the basic reasons of our decline, what should we do? As I have said earlier we have to build economy and education etc. no doubt but above all we have to face the intellectual challenge of the west, if we want to build up an Islamic state, Islamic Ummah, Islamic societies, if we want to build up Islam based economy and economy based on Islamic values and politics based on Islamic values, there is no other way but face the western
challenge. Explain the reasons behind Islamic injunction. As once upon a time Ilmul Kalam was developed that explained the roots of our faith, our Akaid (belief).

Similarly, we have to build up new subjects, new responses to the challenge of the west, the intellectual challenge of the west. I think the most important thing is to build up individuals. If we have to build up strong Islamic Ummah we have to build up individuals. Why I say so, ultimately who runs the state individuals, who runs the societies, individuals, who runs the economy, individuals, who runs banks, individuals, who runs the government, individuals, So my submission is that if we want to build strong Islamic Ummah, and face the challenge of the west we must build Islamically oriented individuals and great number of scholars and intellectuals in each field. For this I would suggest, if I can say that the prescription before us I would say is to build Islamic intellectuals. To build Islamic individuals, apart from Iman, apart form Akhlak (character), apart form practice, what is needed is I would say read, read, read. The prescription is read, read, read. I would say read,
read, and read. Any person can not be a Islamic scholar unless he has read about 1000 Islamic books in addition to another 500/600 books of general interest. A first class Islamic worker cannot be prepared unless he has studied 500 Islamic books in addition to another 200-300-400-500 books of general matters. I suggest that the building up Ummah ultimately would depend on the one hand on to building strong economy, strong defense, good education, and good infrastructure and so on for all of us. Facing the challenge of the west, threat of the west we have to build individuals. Because, ultimately, the individuals run the society.

What should we read? I think we should read as many Tafsir of Quran as possible, we should read as many commentary of Hadith as possible, and we should have a firm grounding of Usul al Fiqh. Who do not know a firm grounding on Usul al Fiqh, they do not understand how to classify Hadith. They do not know how to infer, derive laws from the Quran and sunnah. They have not heard about Ibartunnas, they have not heard about Isratunnas, they have not heard about Dalatunas. They have not heard about Iktedaannas. These are the methods of derivation of the rules from the Quran and Sunnah. They have not heard it. A firm foundation of Usul al Fiqh is needed for anybody who wants to be a scholar of Islam and fight for Islam and word for Islam seriously. If you want to be a general worker, no problem but if you want to be serious worker. I can recommend a book to all of you in this regard a good book which is basically based on Arabic work of Usul al fiqh, is a book by Dr Hashim Kamali, Islamic
Jurisprudence published by Islamic Texts Society, Cambridge. The book is based on all earlier works in Arabic by the Ulema of Usul.

I am coming to the close of my speech, so that you can ask some question. I will make two three points. One is, apart form studies, we should take prophetic character, and we should adopt the prophetic character. People say it is not possible to follow the prophet fully. I do not agree. If it was not possible to follow the prophet(sm), the Allah would not have said" the life of the prophet is a model for you". Or prophet (sm) would not have said his conduct is a Sunnah for all of us, he is a model for all of us, is a guidance for all of us. I believe personally that the need of the Muslim is to Emulate Prophet(sm) fully. We should behave with our wives as prophet (sm) behaved with Ayesha (ra). It is possible. It is possible to behave with our assistants as prophet(sm) behaved with Zaid (ra). It is not true that prophet (sm) cannot be followed fully. So, I mean this is not properly understood and lastly, I would submit if we want to build strong Ummah, we must not ignore our women, we
must not forget our women. They have the same potential for Islam, they have the same potential for Dawah, as man, Because an ayah in the Quran which was revelated in the 9th or Hijri in the last part of the prophet's career says so. It is Surattut Tawba. The Ayah is like this
And (as for) the believing men and the believing women, they are guardians (friends) of each other; they enjoin good and forbid evil and keep up prayer and pay the poor-rate, and obey Allah and His Messenger; (as for) these, Allah will show mercy to them; surely Allah is Mighty, Wise. " (9:71). this indicates that man and women are friend to each other, protector to each other, helper to each other. What do they do? The Mumin man and women what do they do? The common duties are to enjoin good and forbid evil, establish salah, establish Zakat, follow Allah and His Prophet. These six duties are the common duties of the Muslim man and Muslim women. This ayah clearly proves that the potentials of Muslim man and women are alike. We must not forget that the soul of Muslim men and women are alike, same. I mean in the basic level man and women are alike. There are differences of course. The structure of men and women are not same. The responsibilities and duties sometimes are little
different. The basic levels are all the same, one. The souls are of same type. Allah (swt) has not said anywhere that the souls of man and women are different .So, at the soul level, which is the most basic level, ultimately what is a human being, nothing but the soul, and about it Allah (swt) says we are of the same type, number two, despite all physical differences, Allah says, the physical level of men and women are really most excellent. Allah says in the Quran in Suratu Tin "Lakad Khalaknal Insana fi ahsani Takwim" that is , men women have the most excellent structure. Any solitary Hadith cannot be quoted against this teaching of the Quran. No majaji (allegorical) interpretation is possible here and thirdly we belong to the same family the family of Adam and Hawa as has been stated in suratun Nisa . As we are all Muslims we must give the opportunity to Muslim women to use and utilize their full Potential.

So in conclusion I would say that we face major challenges in political field, in economic field, in social field, in cultural field and mostly in intellectual field. We have to prepare individuals, these individuals will creat Muslim society and Muslim state and Muslim economy and politics and society and schools and education and Madrasha and Masjid. So I conclude my speech here. Thank you. Assalamualaikum.

What is the Khilafah?


What is the Khilafah?

 


 


 


 

The Caliphate as is termed in English is central to islam and an absolute basic necessity.

1. What is Dar al-Islam?

Dar al-Islam is the land where Islamic Law is implemented in all matters of life and ruling and whose security is maintained in the name of Islam even if its citizens are non-Muslims.

2. What is Dar al-Kufr?

Dar al-Kufr is the land where Kufr laws are implemented in matters of life and whose security is maintained in the name of Kufr even if all its citizens are Muslims. This is because the criterion of a region being Dar al-Islam or Dar al-Kufr are the laws that are implemented there, and the security by which it is protected, the criterion is not the religion of its citizens.

3. Which Muslim Countries today are Dar al-Islam?

Out of the Muslim countries of today, there is not a single country or state where Islamic laws are exclusively implemented in ruling and life's affairs; therefore all of them are considered Dar al-Kufr although their citizens are Muslims.

4. What is The Muslims Duty towards His Country?

Islam makes it a duty upon all Muslims to work to change their countries from Dar al-Kufr to Dar al-Islam, and this can be achieved by establishing the Islamic State i.e. the Khilafah, and by electing a Khaleefah and taking a bay'ah on him that he will rule by the Word of Allah (Subhaanahu Wa Ta'Ala) i.e. he will implement Islamic laws in the country where the Khilafah has been established. Then the Muslims should work with the Khilafah to combine the rest of the Islamic countries with it, hence the countries will become Dar al-Islam and they will then carry Islam to the world through invitation and jihad.

5. What is the Khilafah

The Khilafah is the global leadership for all the Muslims in the world. Its role is to establish the laws of the Islamic Shari`ah and to carry the da`wah of Islam to the world.

6. Is the Khilafah known as anything else?

The Khilafah is also known as the Imamah, both terms have the same meaning. Several sound ahadith mention them with the same meaning, neither of the two terms has ever differed in meaning in any Shari`ah text i.e. the Qur'an or the Sunnah of the Prophet (Salallahu Alaihi Wasalaam), these being the only Shari`ah sources. It is not compulsory to hold to the term of Khilafah or Imamah, but rather it is compulsory to hold to the meaning of the term.

7. Is the establishment of a Khaleefah an obligation upon all Muslims in the world?

The establishment of a Khaleefah is an obligation upon all Muslims in the world. Performing this duty, like any of the duties prescribed by Allah (Subhaanahu Wa Ta'Ala) upon the Muslims, is an urgent obligation in which there can be no choice or complacency. Negligence in performing this duty is one of the greatest sins, for which Allah (Subhaanahu Wa Ta'Ala) punishes severely.

8. What is the evidence that the appointment of a Khaleefah is obligatory?

The evidence that the appointment of a Khaleefah is obligatory upon all Muslims is in the Sunnah and the Ijma`a (consensus) of the Sahabah.

9. What is the evidence from the Sunnah

As for the Sunnah, Nafi`a reported saying: "`Umar said to me that he heard the Prophet (Salallahu Alaihi Wasalaam) saying: Whoso takes off his hand from allegiance to Allah (Subhaanahu Wa Ta'Ala) will meet Him (Subhaanahu Wa Ta'Ala) on the Day of Resurrection without having any proof for him, and whoso dies whilst there was no bay`ah (allegiance or a pledge) on his neck (to a Khaleefah), he dies a death of jahilliyah." So the Prophet (Salallahu Alaihi Wasalaam) made it compulsory upon every Muslim to have a bay`ah on his neck, and described whoever dies without a bay`ah on his neck that he dies a death of jahilliyah. The bay`ah cannot be for anyone except the Khaleefah, and the Prophet (Salallahu Alaihi Wasalaam) made it obligatory upon every Muslim to have on his neck a bay`ah to a Khaleefah. Yet he did not make it an obligation upon every Muslim to give bay`ah to a Khaleefah. The duty is the existence of a bay`ah on the neck of every eligible Muslim, i.e. the existence of a Khaleefah who accordingly deserves a bay`ah upon the neck of every Muslim. So it is the presence of the Khaleefah which places a bay`ah on the neck of every Muslim, whether the Muslim gave a bay`ah to him in person or not.

Therefore, this hadith of the Prophet (Salallahu Alaihi Wasalaam) is an evidence that the appointment of the Khaleefah is an obligation and not a proof that giving the bay`ah is obligatory. This is so because the Prophet (Salallahu Alaihi Wasalaam) rebuked the Muslim who has not a bay`ah on his neck until he dies, not the one who did not give bay`ah. Hisham ibn `Urwa reported on the authority of Abu Saleh on the authority of Abu Hurairah that the Prophet (Salallahu Alaihi Wasalaam) said: "Leaders will take charge of you after me, where the pious (one) will lead you with his piety and the impious (one) with his impiety, so listen to them and obey them in everything which conforms with the truth. If they act rightly it is for your credit, and if they acted wrongly it is counted for you and against them." Muslim narrated on the authority of al-A'araj, on the authority of Abu Hurairah, that the Prophet (Salallahu Alaihi Wasalaam) said: "Behold, the Imam is but a shield from behind whom the people fight and by whom they protect themselves." Muslim reported on the authority of Abu Hazim, who said: "I accompanied Abu Hurairah for five years and heard him talking of the Prophet's saying: The Prophets ruled over the children of Israel, whenever a Prophet died another Prophet succeeded him, but there will be no Prophet after me. There will be Khulafa'a and they will number many. They asked: What then do you order us? He said: Fulfil the bay`ah to them one after the other and give them their due. Surely Allah will ask them about what He entrusted them with." Ibn `Abbas narrated that the Prophet (Salallahu Alaihi Wasalaam) said: "If anyone sees in his amir something that displeases him let him remain patient, for behold, he who separates himself from the sultan (authority of Islam) by even so much as a hand span and dies thereupon, has died a death of the days of jahilliyah".

In these ahadith, the Prophet (Salallahu Alaihi Wasalaam) informs us that leaders will run the affairs of Muslims, and the ahadith include the description of the Khaleefah as a shield, i.e. a protection. So the description of the Imam as a shield is informative of the benefits of the presence of the Imam, thus it is a command for action, because if the information conveyed by Allah (Subhaanahu Wa Ta'Ala) and the Prophet (Salallahu Alaihi Wasalaam) contained rebuke then it is a command of prohibition, and if it contained praise then it is a command for action. If the ordered action is necessary to implement a hukm shara'i (divine law), or by its negligence a hukm shara'i will be neglected, then this command is decisive.

In these ahadith there is information also that those who run the affairs of Muslims are Khulafa'a, which indicates an order to appoint them. They also include a prohibition for Muslims to separate from the authority, which indicates the obligation upon Muslims to appoint an authority for themselves, i.e. ruling.

Moreover, the Prophet (Salallahu Alaihi Wasalaam) ordered the Muslims to obey the Khaleefah and to fight those who dispute his authority as Khaleefah, which indicates an order to appoint a Khaleefah and to protect his Khilafah by fighting against whosoever disputes with him. Muslim reported that the Prophet (Salallahu Alaihi Wasalaam) said: "He who pledged allegiance to an Imam giving him the clasp of his hand and the fruit of his heart shall obey him as long as he can, and if another comes to dispute with him you have to strike the neck of that man." So the command to obey the Imam is an order to establish him, and the command to fight those who dispute with him is an evidence that this command is decisive in maintaining the presence of one Khaleefah.

10. What is the evidence from the Ijma`a of the Sahabah

In regard with the Ijma`a of the Sahabah they all agreed upon the necessity to establish a successor or Khaleefah to the Prophet (Salallahu Alaihi Wasalaam) after his death, and they all agreed to appoint a successor to Abu Bakr, then to `Umar, then to `Uthman, after the death of each one of them.

The Ijma`a of the Sahabah to establish a Khaleefah manifested itself emphatically when they delayed the burial of the Prophet (Salallahu Alaihi Wasalaam) after his death whilst engaged in appointing a successor to him, despite the fact that the burial of the dead person is fard, and that it is haram upon those who are supposed to prepare for his burial to engage themselves in anything else until they complete the burial. The Sahabah were obliged to engage themselves in preparing the burial of the Prophet (Salallahu Alaihi Wasalaam), instead some of them engaged themselves in appointing a Khaleefah rather than carrying out the burial, and some others kept silent on this engagement and participated in delaying the burial for two nights despite their ability to deny the delay and their ability to bury the Prophet (Salallahu Alaihi Wasalaam). So this was an Ijma`a to engage themselves in appointing a Khaleefah rather than to bury the dead. This could not be legitimate unless the appointment of a Khaleefah is more obligatory than the burial of the dead.

Also, all the Sahabah agreed throughout their lives upon the obligation of appointing a Khaleefah. Although they disagreed upon the person to elect as a Khaleefah, they never disagreed upon the appointment of a Khaleefah, neither when the Prophet (Salallahu Alaihi Wasalaam) died, nor when any of the Khulafa'a ar-Rashidun died. Therefore the Ijma`a of the Sahabah is a clear and strong evidence that the appointment of a Khaleefah is obligatory.

11. Is the establishment of Islam and the implementation of the Shari`ah rules in all walks of life compulsory?

The establishment of Islam and the implementation of the Shari`ah rules in all walks of life is compulsory on Muslims through definitely proven evidences. This duty cannot be achieved unless there is a ruler who has an authority. The divine principle states `what is necessary to accomplish a wajib (duty) is itself a wajib'. So the establishment of a Khaleefah is also compulsory according to this divine principle.

Moreover, Allah (Subhaanahu Wa Ta'Ala) has ordered the Prophet (Salallahu Alaihi Wasalaam) to rule between Muslims by that which He (Subhaanahu Wa Ta'Ala) revealed to him, and the order of Allah (Subhaanahu Wa Ta'Ala) to him was in a decisive manner. Allah (Subhaanahu Wa Ta'Ala) addressed the Prophet (Salallahu Alaihi Wasalaam):

"And rule between them by that which Allah revealed to you, and do not follow their vain desires away from the truth which came to you". [TMQ 5:48]

And:

"And rule between them by that which Allah revealed to you and do not follow their whims, and beware (be on the alert) that they may deviate you away from even some part of what Allah revealed to you". [TMQ 5:49]

The speech of Allah (Subhaanahu Wa Ta'Ala) to the Prophet (Salallahu Alaihi Wasalaam) is a speech to his Ummah unless there is evidence which limits the speech to him. In this case there is no such evidence, so the aforementioned verses order all Muslims to establish the rule. The establishment of the Khaleefah does not mean other than the establishment of the rule and the authority. On the other hand, Allah (Subhaanahu Wa Ta'Ala) made it obligatory upon Muslims to obey those in authority, i.e. the ruler, which indicates that the existence of the ruler is obligatory upon Muslims.

"O you who believe obey Allah and obey the Messenger and those in authority amongst you". [TMQ 4:59]

Allah (Subhaanahu Wa Ta'Ala) does not order obedience to those who do not exist. This indicates that the existence of the ruler is obligatory. When Allah (Subhaanahu Wa Ta'Ala) orders obedience to those in authority it is an order to establish them. The implementation of the Shari`ah depends upon the existence of the ruler, thus, the establishment of the ruler becomes obligatory as its absence will result in the sin of neglecting the Shari`ah.

Therefore, it is clear from these evidences that the establishment of the rule and the authority amongst Muslims is fard, and it is also clear that the appointment of a Khaleefah who takes the charge of the rule and the authority is compulsory upon Muslims in order to implement the Shari`ah laws; and not for the sake of rule and authority only. Reflect upon what the Prophet (Salallahu Alaihi Wasalaam) said: "The best of your Imams (leaders) are those whom you love and they love you, who pray for you and you pray for them; and the worst of your Imams are those whom you hate and they hate you and you curse them and they curse you." The Messenger of Allah (Salallahu Alaihi Wasalaam) was asked: "Would we not declare war on them (face them with the swords)?" He said: "No, as long as they establish salah (meaning Islam) among you." This hadith is clear in informing about the good and bad leaders, and clear in prohibiting the challenge of their authority as long as they establish the prayer, which in this context indicates upholding of Islam, and establishing its rule.

So the obligation upon Muslims to appoint the Khaleefah who establishes the laws of Islam and conveys its call is a matter which has no doubt with regard to its certainty in the sound texts of Shari`ah. Moreover, it is an obligatory duty due to the fact that Allah (Subhaanahu Wa Ta'Ala) made it fard upon Muslims to establish the authority of Islam and to protect the honour of Muslims. However, this duty is a collective one, so if some people of the Ummah accomplished it, the fard is fulfilled and thus responsibility drops from the rest of the Ummah. And if part of the Ummah was unable to achieve the fard, though they carried out the actions which establish it, then the responsibility remains upon all the Muslims, and the fard remains upon every Muslim as long as Muslims are without a Khaleefah.

12. What is the difference between the one who refrains from establishing a Khaleefah and the one who embarks on working to establish a Khaleefah?

To refrain from establishing a Khaleefah for the Muslims is a great sin because it is abstaining from carrying out a very important fard of Islam, upon which the implementation of the divine laws depends, even upon which the presence of Islam in the battlefield of life depends as well. So Muslims as a whole commit a great sin by refraining from establishing a Khaleefah for all Muslims. And if they agreed to remain without a Khaleefah the sin would befall all Muslims in the entire world. If some of the Muslims embarked on working to establish a Khaleefah and the others did not, the sin will drop from the shoulders of those who started to work to establish the Khaleefah, while the fard remains on them until the Khaleefah is appointed. This is so because the involvement in establishing the fard removes the sin for the delay of its fulfilment in its time, and for its non-fulfilment despite one's engagement in the work for establishing it, and despite his hatred of that which prevents him from accomplishing it.

As for those who were not engaged in the work for establishing the fard, the sin will remain on them as soon as the three days period has passed, from the departure of the Khaleefah until the appointment of a new Khaleefah, because Allah (Subhaanahu Wa Ta'Ala) has entrusted them with a fard, which they did not carry out nor engage themselves in the work which is required for its completion. Therefore, they are sinful and deserve the punishment and shame from Allah (Subhaanahu Wa Ta'Ala) in this life and the hereafter. They are sinful due to their refrain from establishing the Khaleefah or from the actions which (according to Shari`ah) establish the Khaleefah. It is clear and obvious that a Muslim deserves the punishment of Allah (Subhaanahu Wa Ta'Ala) when he ignores any of the duties enjoined upon him, particularly the duty by which the other duties are implemented and the Shari`ah rules are established and the matter of Islam is brought aloft and the word of Allah (Subhaanahu Wa Ta'Ala) is exalted in the Muslim and the rest of the world.

Accordingly, no Muslim on the face of this earth has an excuse to abandon the duty of establishing the deen which Allah (Subhaanahu Wa Ta'Ala) has ordered, that is, the establishment of a Khaleefah for Muslims, when there is no Khilafah on the earth, and no one to implement the hudood (limits) of Allah (Subhaanahu Wa Ta'Ala) to protect the sanctities of Allah (Subhaanahu Wa Ta'Ala), and no one to implement the laws of the deen and unify the Muslim community under the banner of La ilaha illa Allah, Muhammadun Rasul Allah. There is no permission in Islam to abandon the work for this duty until it is indeed completed.

13. Is the Khilafah the Only Structure of the Islamic System of Government?

Islam has determined the structure of Islamic government to be the system of Khilafah and it is the only system of ruling of the Islamic State. Muslim narrated about Abu Hazim, who said, "I accompanied Abu Hurayrah for five years and heard him talking of the Prophet's saying: The Prophets ruled over Bani Israel, whenever a Prophet died another Prophet succeeded him, but there will be no Prophet after me. There will be Khulafa'a and they will number many."

This hadith is a clear statement of the fact that the Islamic structure of government after the Messenger of Allah (Salallahu Alaihi Wasalaam) is the Khilafah. This fact is strengthened by evidence from numerous other ahadith that the Khilafah or Imamah is the only system of government in Islam, like the hadith, "After me there will be Imams" and the hadith, "If a bay'ah is taken for two Khaleefahs..." and other ahadith which all indicate that the system of government in Islam is the Khilafah only.

14. Are Muslims all over the world allowed to have more than one Islamic State, or more than one Khaleefah?

The system of government in Islam, which is the system of Khilafah, is a unitary system of one state and not a federal system. And Muslims all over the world are not allowed to have more than one Islamic State, nor to have more than one Khaleefah who rules them by the Book of Allah (Subhaanahu Wa Ta'Ala) and the Sunnah of the Messenger of Allah (Salallahu Alaihi Wasalaam) i.e. he implements the Islamic Law, because Shari'ah evidences have established this and prohibited the existence of more than one state, as is narrated by `Abdullah ibn `Amr ibn al-'As, who said that he heard the Messenger of Allah (Salallahu Alaihi Wasalaam) say, "He who gave the bay'ah to an Imam giving him the clasp of his hand and the fruit of his heart shall obey him as long as he can, and if another person comes to dispute with him (his authority) you have to strike the neck of that person." And as narrated by Abu Said al-Khudri, that the Messenger of Allah (Salallahu Alaihi Wasalaam) said, "If a bay'ah is taken for two Khaleefahs, kill the latter one", and as narrated by `Arfajah that he heard the Messenger of Allah (Salallahu Alaihi Wasalaam) say, "If someone comes to you when you are united over one man and wants to break your strength and divide your unity, kill him."

These ahadith are clear statements of the fact that Muslims cannot have more than one Khaleefah, and if another person tries to wrest his power it is necessary to kill that person. If bay'ah is taken for two persons, the first is considered the Khaleefah and the second is killed if he does not back out. If anyone disputed with the Khaleefah in order to break up the State or to put himself forward as Khaleefah, he should be killed.

These ahadith are also explicit that Muslims are not allowed to have more than one state and they are explicit in the necessity that the Islamic State is a state of unity, and not a state of union, made up of many units.

15. What Are the Principles of Government in Islam

The Islamic system of government is based on four principles:

i. Sovereignty is for Allah (Subhaanahu Wa Ta'Ala) and not for the People

What controls and runs the Muslims and the Ummah is not the Muslims themselves, nor the Ummah, rather the choice of the Muslims and the Ummah is controlled by Allah's orders and prohibitions only.

"Surely they will not believe until they make you the judge in what they disagree." [TMQ 4:65]

"It is not for the believer (male or female) that when Allah and His Messenger have decided a matter that they should have any choice in their matter." [TMQ 33:36]

"O you who believe! Obey Allah, obey the Messenger and the rulers from amongst you, and if you disagree on a matter then return it (for judgment) to Allah and the Messenger if you truly believe in Allah and the Last Day." [TMQ 4:59]

And the Messenger of Allah's (Salallahu Alaihi Wasalaam) saying, "None of you will be a (true) believer until his desire follows that which I have come with (i.e. Islam)."

These evidences are explicit in making the sovereignty for the Laws of Allah (Subhaanahu Wa Ta'Ala) and not for the Ummah.

ii. The Authority is for the Ummah

It is clear that the authority i.e. the government, is for the Ummah because it is apparent in the method, defined by the Law-Giver in appointing the Khaleefah by the Ummah through the bay'ah, and also from the fact that the Khaleefah takes the authority by the bay'ah and he governs the Ummah on her behalf. And the fact that the Khaleefah takes the bay'ah is a clear proof that the actual authority is from the Ummah, who gives it to whom she sees fit. There are also other explicit ahadith which state that the Ummah appoints the leader and gives a bay'ah to him. It is narrated by `Abdullah ibn `Amr that the Messenger of Allah (Salallahu Alaihi Wasalaam) said, "It is not allowed that three be in the open (during a journey) and that they do not make one of them their leader."

It is clear here that the appointer is the Ummah. And the ahadith of bay'ah, already mentioned, clearly make the point that the authority is from the Ummah.

iii. There is only one Khaleefah

To appoint one Khaleefah upon all Muslims to represent them in the government is a duty of the Muslims and we have gone through many ahadith about the appointment of the Khaleefah and the necessity that the Khaleefah is one, a matter which was also indicated by the Ijma'a of the Sahabah.

iv. The Khalifah alone has the right to adopt and enforce Islamic opinions in the State

The Khaleefah is the one who issues the constitution and the various canons. The Ijma'a of the Sahabah proves that only the Khaleefah can adopt divine laws and from this consensus is deduced these famous principles: "The Imam's order settles the differences" and "The Imam's order is implemented" and "The Imam can put forward as many solutions as the (number of) problems which arise."

16. What Does the Structure of the Islamic State Consist Of

The structure of the Islamic State consists of the following components:

1. The Khaleefah.
2. Delegated Assistants.
3. The Executive Assistants.
4. The Amir of Jihad (army).
5. The Walis (Governors).
6. The Judiciary.
7. The Administrative System.
8. The Council of the Ummah.

These components have been taken from the Sunnah of the Messenger of Allah (Salallahu Alaihi Wasalaam), because he (Salallahu Alaihi Wasalaam) built the structure of the State, and he (Salallahu Alaihi Wasalaam) was the head of the State, and he (Salallahu Alaihi Wasalaam) ordered the Muslims to put for themselves a Khaleefah (after him) and he (Salallahu Alaihi Wasalaam) appointed Abu Bakr and `Umar as his assistants (as narrated in Tirmidhi), "My two wazirs from the people of the earth are Abu Bakr and `Umar."

And wazir means the one who helps, and not the term Minister as used in the Western democracies. Similarly, the Messenger of Allah (Salallahu Alaihi Wasalaam) appointed commanders for war and jihad and appointed walis for the provinces. He appointed Mu'adh as a governor of Yemen and appointed A'ttab ibn Usayd as governor of Makkah after the conquest of Makkah. Similarly, he (Salallahu Alaihi Wasalaam) appointed judges to judge between people. He appointed `Ali ibn Abi Talib as a judge for Yemen and sent Rashid ibn `Abdullah as the amir of judiciary and Unjust Acts. As regards to the administration structure, he (Salallahu Alaihi Wasalaam) appointed secretaries for the public administrations, their rank being that of head of department. He appointed Mueqeeb ibn Abu Fatimah as secretary for the spoils of war and Hudhayfah ibn al-Yaman as secretary for collection of the zakat on the fruits of Hijaz.

As regards the Council of the Ummah, the Messenger of Allah (Salallahu Alaihi Wasalaam) did not always have a formal assembly, but he (Salallahu Alaihi Wasalaam) used to take advice from Muslims. He (Salallahu Alaihi Wasalaam) collected them on the day of Uhud and sought their advice. And sometimes he (Salallahu Alaihi Wasalaam) used to call specific persons on a continuous basis to seek their advice, and these were some of the leaders of their people (tribes), who included Hamzah, Abu Bakr, `Umar, Ja'far, `Ali, Ibn Mas'ud, Salman, `Ammar, Hudhayfah, Abu Dharr, al-Miqdad, Sa'd ibn `Ubadah and Sa'd ibn Mu'adh, and they were like an assembly whose advice was sought.

Similarly, the Messenger of Allah (Salallahu Alaihi Wasalaam) formed an army and he was its real commander and he (Salallahu Alaihi Wasalaam) also used to appoint commanders in some of his battles.

17. Is the Monarchical system an Islamic System?

The Monarchical system is not an Islamic system and Islam does not approve of it whether the king is a figurehead who does not rule, as is the case in Britain and Spain, because the Khaleefah is not a figurehead, rather he is the ruler and an executor of the laws of Allah (Subhaanahu Wa Ta'Ala) on behalf of the Ummah, or if the king is the head and the actual ruler, as is the case in Saudi Arabia and Jordan. This is because the Khaleefah does not acquire his position like the kings do; rather, Muslims select him and give him the bay'ah. The hereditary system is not allowed in Islam; the Khaleefah does not have more privileges than any other Muslim citizen and he is not above the Law like the kings who cannot be tried, rather he is subservient to the laws of Allah (Subhaanahu Wa Ta'Ala) and is liable to be accounted on every act he commits.

18. Is the Republican system an Islamic System?

The Republican system is not an Islamic system and Islam does not approve of it whether it is Presidential in nature as in the US or it is Parliamentary, as found in Germany, because the Republican system in both these forms is based on the democratic system which gives the sovereignty to the people, whilst the system of Khilafah is based on the system of Islam that gives sovereignty to the Shara'. Accordingly the Ummah does not have the right to remove the Khaleefah, though she has the right to choose him and to account him, and only the Islamic rule can remove the Khaleefah i.e. in case he works against the Shara' in such a way that it becomes necessary to remove him. The power to decide whether the Khaleefah has worked against the Law such that he must be removed rests with the Mahkamat ul-Mudhalim (Court of the Unjust Acts) which has the authority to remove him from the seat of Khaleefah, due to Allah (Subhaanahu Wa Ta'Ala) ruling,

"O you who believe! Obey Allah, obey the Messenger and the rulers from amongst you, and if you disagree on a matter then return it (for judgement) to Allah and the Messenger if you truly believe in Allah and the Last Day." [TMQ 4:59]

This means that they must turn over the matter to the Law of Allah (Subhaanahu Wa Ta'Ala) and His Messenger (Salallahu Alaihi Wasalaam), and the Court of the Unjust Acts represents the Law of Allah (Subhaanahu Wa Ta'Ala) and His Messenger (Salallahu Alaihi Wasalaam), whilst in the case of the President of the Republican system the people have the right to remove him, because the people have the sovereignty and the authority. The Khaleefah is not elected for a limited term; the only limitation to his rule is the implementation of Islam. If he does not implement Islam, he will be removed even if it is after only one month of his appointment. In contrast the President of the Republic is elected for a limited term. Moreover, in the Parliamentary system there is the Prime Minister beside the President, and the President is only a figurehead without power, the real power rests with the Prime Minister. The Khaleefah is the real ruler and he rules and implements his orders and he has no ministers who rule independent of him.

19. Is the Presidential system an Islamic System

Although the President in the Presidential system is himself the actual ruler, he does have with him ministers who have authority of ruling and he is their head and his rank is that of the President of the government. This is in contradiction to the system of Khilafah where the Khaleefah rules directly, and he has with him assistants. These assistants do not have the powers of ministers as in the democratic Republican system. When the Khaleefah becomes the ruler he is the ruler in the capacity of the head of the State and not the head of an executive committee. Therefore there exists a great difference between the Republican and the Khilafah systems, and therefore it is not allowed to name the Islamic State an Islamic Republic, nor is it allowed to say that the system of government in Islam is Republican nor that Islam is a Republican system because of the complete contradiction between the two.

20. Is the Islamic System an Imperial System?

The regions ruled by Islam - though they are of various races and linked to one central place - are not ruled by an imperial system but by a system contradictory to the imperial system. The Imperial system does not treat races equally in the various regions of the empire; rather it gives privileges in the ruling, finance and economy to the centre of the empire.

The Islamic way of ruling is to equate between the subjects in all the regions of the state. Islam grants non-Muslims who hold citizenship, the full rights and duties that Muslims have. They enjoy the same fairness as Muslims and are subject to the same accountability like them. Furthermore, every single citizen, regardless of his or her creed, enjoys rights that even a Muslim living abroad who holds no citizenship does not enjoy. With this equality, the Islamic system differs completely from the Imperial one. It does not make the regions under its ruling into colonies, areas of exploitation, nor a source of wealth funneled back into the central region for its own benefit, no matter how far apart they were, and no matter how different their races were. It considers every single region as a part of the state and its citizens enjoying the same rights as those in the central region. It also makes the ruling authority, its system and its legislation the same in all the regions.

21. Is the Federal System an Islamic System?

The ruling system in Islam is not federal, where its regions separate by autonomy, but unite in the general ruling. It is rather a system of unity, where Marrakesh in the West is considered to be the same as Khurasan in the East; and the province of Al-Fayoom would be the same as Cairo if it were the Islamic capital. The finance of all the regions will be the same, as will their budget. Funds are spent equally on the affairs of the subjects, regardless of their Wilayah. If for instance, the taxes collected in one Wilayah were double its expenditure, the funds spent will be to cover the Wilayah's needs but not according to how much tax raised. If another Wilayah's taxes fell short of its expenditure, this would not be taken into consideration, and funds will be spent to satisfy the Wilayah's needs from the general budget whether it raised enough taxes or not.

Therefore the ruling system is one unit not a federation. That is why the Islamic ruling system is distinguished from other known systems, in its origin and basis, even if some of its aspects were similar to some of their aspects. Furthermore, the Islamic system is central in its ruling, where the high authority is at head office, and where the authority and power engulfs every single part of the state, no matter how small or large it is; independence of any part of it is not allowed thus preventing disintegration. The high authority is the body which appoints the army commanders, the Walis, rulers and finance and economy officials. He appoints judges in all the regions and everyone whose duties is to rule. He is the one who deals with ruling all over the land.

Source: Khilafah.Com

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Six C's of Character - Yasir Fazaga