WHO IS A
FAQIH:
As it is not in our capacity to
discover laws concerning physics and logics
unless we are well acquainted with
- the same idea can be said concerning Ijtihad and formulating Islamic laws.
In order to be Faqih, one should be
able to discover secondary legal laws from
their original sources including
the Holy Qur'an and the pure Prophetic
tradition and other sources. In
other words the Faqih is a person who
has the greatest expertise in
deriving the rulings of the Shari'ah
from the sources. He should be
familiar with Arabic language to an
extant that he understands the
Qur'an and the sunnah both
linguistically and legally and
which fits the spirit of revelation and
the Message.
He should be absolutely
well-acquainted with the Holy Qur'an and its
sciences to an extent which enables
him to understand and discover
legal laws and judgements.
He should be well-versed with the Prophetic tradition to the extent
he should distinguish true and satisfactory
hadiths trough studying
them and their chain of
transmitters in addition to his understanding
of the sunnah and its circumstances
and having the ability to discover laws
which go with the Qur'anic
concepts.
Among the qualities necessary for a
Faqih is his being
acquainted with what other scholars
discover in the studies and
sciences which help in organizing
and comprehending the
jurisprudential thought and
deepening the procedure of Ijtihad
(exercising of independent
judgements) like the science of principles
of jurisprudence, dogmatic
theology, logics, philosophy,
jurisprudence...etc.
Thus, the experts (fuqaha') of Shari'ah today upon whom Muslims
depend for laws as did those before
them are the most excellent
example in science, comprehension,
and legislation.
Another important qualification
which should be found in the Faqih
(mujtahid) is faithfulness,
loyalty, honesty, integrity, objectivity
because he is the seeker of the
truth and the one who is
responsible before the Almighty
Allah concerning his judgements, and
legal rulings.
He should also be well known
(distinguished) for intelligence,
literary taste, an accurate
comprehension manners and ability of
discovering and extraction in order
to practise his responsibility
(post) successfully and precisely.
Consequently, Ijtihad and its
distinguished experts and scholars are
those who spend all their efforts
and abilities sincerely in order
to supply instinctive knowledge of
Ijtihad and the skill of
discovering the laws.
In addition to this, Islamic law
lays down that a mujtahid should be
a free man and of legitimate birth
who is past the age of puberty, and
is sane, and just besides
possessing other moral and legal qualities,
such as piety and abstention from
all that the Shari'ah forbids and
fulfillment of all its obligation.
However, it is sometimes difficult
to distinguish whom among all the
mujtahids is the most learned and
as a result more than one mujtahid may
be followed in taqlid at one time
(though not, of course, by the same
person), as is the case at present,
but any such multiplicity does not
result in any practical
disagreement on legal matters among the
followers of the school of
Ahlul-Bait.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
WHAT IS
TAQLID:
Taqlid literally means `to follow
and to imitate'. In
Islamic legal terminology it means
to follow a mujtahid or faqih
in religious laws and commandments.
In our everyday life we follow and
imitate others in many things. We
like to feel that we are taking the
advice of experts in matters
outside our own knowledge. Someone
who wishes to build a house
explains the basic idea of what he
wants to his builder and then
submits to his advice as to how he
should go about the actual
construction; the invalid follows
the treatment advised by his doctor;
a litigant consults a lawyer, when drawing up his case for
presentation
in court. The examples are
abundant; in most cases the advice is taken
voluntarily, but sometimes the
citizen in a country may be required by
law to seek expert advice and act
upon it. For example, he is
allowed to take some particularly
dangerous drug. The clearest
example is obviously in case of a
legal dispute between two parties,
where they are required to take
their grievance to a judge and
abide by his decision if they
cannot settle their dispute amicably.
The practice of taqlid is an
example of the same kind: the person who
is not an expert in jurisprudence
is legally required to follow the
instructions of the expert, i.e.
the mujtahid.
The Holy Qur'an instructs Muslims
to seek guidance from the people
of learning in matters about which
they lack knowledge: "Question the
people of remembrance
if you do not know."(21:7). It is an obligation
in Islamic law to study
everything which is necessary for
the
spiritual and material development
and well-being of an Islamic
community, but it is an obligation
which is known as a Wajib Kifa'i. In
the present instances, for example,
the Islamic society has need of
experts in the medical science, in
physics, chemistry,
engineering, education, and so
forth, and as long as there is a lack
of knowledge in these areas it is
an obligation for the community as a
whole to acquire it, which means
that a group of Muslims should devote
themselves to research so as to benefit
the Islamic people as a whole.
Similarly, an Islamic society
without experts in the field of Shari'ah
cannot properly consider itself
Islamic, and so it is an obligation for a
group of persons from this society
to devote themselves to the study
of the religious sciences, so as to
provide divine guidance for all
Muslims. This is the meaning
contained in the Qur'anic verse which
says:
"But why should
not a party from every section of them (the
believers) go forth to
become learned in the religion, and to warn
their people when they
return to them, that they may
beware?"
Holy Qur'an ((:124)
Through the research, it became
obvious for us that every act (deed)
a man does or a situation in which he stands or anything
with which he deals with should be
according to a legal law of Islam.
It is also obligatory for every
Muslim to be familiar with Islamic laws and
decrees which organize man's
activity and movements including performance of
rituals and business dealings...etc.
So it is obligatory for every
Muslim either to be a mujtahid or
to follow a particular mujtahid who
is well-qualified in giving
verdicts and acts according to his
rulings and thus performs his duty;
organizes his activity and affairs
related to him. This process of
depending upon the mujtahid's religious rulings in performing one's
religious duties.
So taqlid is the relation of
Islamic sciences between a mujtahid and
the followers of his legal rulings.
And it is a necessity
(an obligation) which must be
practised by the one who is not
qualified as faqih or who has not
reached the degree of Ijtihad.
As long as this practice needs an expert (a mujtahid) in
jurisprudence and Shari'ah, it
becomes necessary to
rely on him (the mujtahid) and ask
of him whatever difficulty we face
in Islamic jurisprudence in the
same manner as we depend on a doctor,
pharmacist, an expert in other
sciences when there is such need to
consult them because of their
knowledge in this domain concerning what
should be done and what should be
abstained from.
Therefore, it is obligatory for
every mukalaf, to follow a mujtahid who
is well-qualified in delivering
verdicts in order to be able to act
and practise according to the
Creator's will and Guidance.
Praise be to Allah, Lord of the
worlds.