Jamiatul Ulama (Council of Muslim Theologians), Johannesburg

Jamiatul Ulama
Online Newsletter
Vol.: 4 No.: 39

18 Shawwal 1430 / 07 October 2009

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Weekly Comment

Special Needs: They need More than Sympathy
A Special Needs Awareness Jalsa that was held at the Wits University Auditorium last Sunday turned out to be a moving affair. Not even an eye could remain dry for what it saw.

Children with different kinds of challenges performed, sung in sign language and demonstrated in amazing ways how in spite of adversity, they are learning how to pray, recite the Qur’an and be just that: truly special.

When dealing with the affairs of the handicapped, emphasis should not be on their disAbility. Rather, it should be on the wonders of the Almighty who endows an enduring spirit to the disAbled to overcome their visual-impairment, mental-challenge, hearing or speech impediment, and any other forms of challenges.

It should be appreciated that the disAbled are special people who have been endowed with challenges. Yet, the physically-challenged excel in many ways with distinction as the Jalsa showed to many in the audience.

The history of Islam presents many cases of people who had different forms of bodily challenges. Their place in society was not judged by the nature of their challenge. Rather, by the content of their character.

Despite his visual challenge, Abdullah Ibn Umme Maktûm Radhi-Allahu anhu, the blind sahabi became a hafiz of the Qur’an and went to occupy the honourable position of the muezzin of Nabi Sallallahu ‘alayhi wassallam.

Incidents related to him prompted the revelation of 16 verses of the Qur’an the most famous being the beginning of the 80th Surah of the Qur’an known as Abasa (He frowned). After this occasion, Nabi Sallallahu ‘alayhi wassallam would greet him by saying: “Welcome unto him on whose account I was reminded by Allah.”

On not less than ten instances while the Prophet Sallallahu ‘alayhi wasallam led expeditions out of the city of Madina, Abdullah Ibn Umme Maktûm was left in-charge of the community.

Later Muslim generations emulated this fair treatment of the physically-challenged.

Ata ibn Abi Rabah became one of the greatest muftis of Makkah in his time regardless of his being paraplegic. He was highly honoured by Abdul Malik ibn Marwan, the Muslim Caliph of that time. His vast knowledge earned him recognition and prestige.

Caring for the physically-challenged is an individual’s religious duty for those responsible for them for whom Allah has promised tremendous rewards.

At a wider level, it is a collective responsibility of the entire Muslim community to show care, compassion, and understanding and to set up accessible infrastructure in our masâjid and educational institutes to cater for the specific needs of the physically-challenged.

Resources for special needs education tend to be cost intensive. It was eye-popping to learn at the Jalsa that it costs R5000.00 per day for an English-sign language interpreter! Are we going to ignore the lament of those children and teachers who are helpless at not accessing the beauty the Qur’an due to lack of Arabic learning aids for the hard of hearing?

It is deplorable that the religion which has been termed by the Almighty as a mercy for the entire universe must be lacking in terms of care and compassion to the physically-challenged, to an extent that people of other faiths must be seen as trendsetters in this matter.

The Jamiatul Ulama commends the role of all those who strive for the betterment of the physically-challenged and we pray that the Almighty accepts their noble endeavours.

C O N T E N T S

Summarised Jumuah Bayaan
Question and Answer
Update
Message from the Ameer

I N F O R M A T I O N

Min. Mahr

R 147.91

Mahr Faatimi

7,395.30
Zakaat Nisaab R 2,958.12

Words of Wisdom

Hadith of the Week

Lasting Company

Anas ibn Malik Radhi-Allahu anhu reported Allah's Messenger Sallallahu ‘alayhi wasallam as saying: “Three things follow the bier of a dead man. two of them come back and one is left with him: the members of his family. wealth and his-good deeds. The members of his family and wealth come back and the deeds alone are left with him.” (Muslim)

Quotation of the Week

For the Future


"Remember Allah when you are comfortable, He will remember you when you are in difficulty, and when you set your eyes upon something in this world, think about how it will end!
(Abu-d-Dardaa Radhiallaahu `anhu)

Point of Reflection

It Starts with Fajr...


No one who can rise before dawn 360 days a year fails to make his family rich.”
(Chinese Saying)

Q and A

Question:
Kindly provide some insight into the matter of Talaaq-e-Raj’i.

Answer:
Talaaq-e-Raj’i is when the husband pronounces one explicit divorce, for example, ‘I divorce you’ or ‘I give you Talaaq’. The sunnah method of issuing this divorce is that only one such divorce be given and that too, in a clean period of the wife wherein no sexual activity was engaged in between the spouses.

In this divorce the husband can revoke the divorce before the expiry of the iddat, verbally, by saying, for example, “I take you back as my wife” or physically, by being intimate with the wife. By intimacy is meant kissing, hugging in an intimate manner, touching the wife in an intimate manner, etc. The word intimate here does not imply sexual intercourse only.

If the divorce is not revoked within the iddat period then by the passing of the iddat the wife will be considered to be completely out of the nikah of the husband and is free to remarry. If the divorce was not revoked by the husband within the iddat period and the couple thereafter decides to reconcile, then a new nikah has to be performed. In this way the wife does not have to marry another man before being able to get back with the husband. One must however understand that if the couple does get together during or after the iddat then the one divorce still stands. In future the husband only has two divorces left to reach the maximum three. In other words the divorce is not cancelled by reconciliation.

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U P D A T E


Jâmi‘ah al-‘Ulûm al-Islâmiyyah
The Jâmi‘ah al-‘Ulûm al-Islâmiyyah was established by the Jamiatul Ulama with the aim of providing quality Islamic education within such a social context which challenges the notion of practicing Islam in its unadulterated form. The formation of the Jaami`ah is driven by the desire to rekindle scholarship within the Ummah and provide sound leadership so as to elevate the Ummah to its deserved glory.

The institute currently offers the ‘Aalim Fâdhil programme which is a six-year direct-contact and full-time course and will be taught primarily through the medium of English and Arabic together with a limited amount of Urdu.

Some of the subjects that are taught include:
Arabic and the various branches of Arabic grammar and literature,
Qur'anic sciences and exegesis,
Hadith and Hadith sciences,
Fiqh and Usul al-Fiqh,
History.
Other subjects include a focused programme on functional Arabic and Urdu as well as English for Effective Communication.
Skills development is also given importance,
Computer Studies is a compulsory subject with the intention to register all future students for the ICDL.
A programme on Islamic economics,
Research methodology and writing forms and skills are covered as is speech and elocution,
Students are exposed to guest speakers who address them on a range of issues, on a fortnightly basis.

Learners will be awarded a certificate upon completion of the course.

The institute also motivates students to further their knowledge in other fields and facilitates their registration and study at tertiary institutes in accordance with their academic aptitudes.

No boarding and lodging is provided to students.

Admission Requirements:
Aspiring learners must be mature persons, of upright character, have a basic Islamic education, be in possession of a matriculation certificate, versatile in English and any other official language of the country and be dedicated to self-study.

Learners will be accepted only after an interview. Applications for 2010 close on the 9th October 2009. The academic year begins in January and ends in December.

For more information, contact:
Ml. Abdullah Jeena
Jâmi‘ah al-‘Ulûm al-Islâmiyyah
Tel: 011 373 8040, Fax: 011 373 8022

Summarised Jumu’ah Bayaan:

Week Three: Reward for Good Deeds - Seeking knowledge
“From among His servants, it is those who have knowledge that fear Allah.” (35:28)
“Allah will raise the ranks of those who believe among you and those who have been given knowledge.”(58:11)

• Mu‘awiyah radhiyallahu anhu narrates that Rasulullah sallallahu alayhi wasallam said, ‘When Allah desires good for a person, He gives him the understanding of Deen. I (Rasulullah sallallahu alayhi wasallam) am merely a distributor (of knowledge) and Allah is the One who bestows. The affair of this Ummah will remain upright until the final hour and the order of Allah comes to pass.’ (Bukhari & Muslim)

• Mu‘aadh bin Jabal radhiyallahu anhu narrates that Rasulullah sallallahu alayhi wasallam said, ‘Learn knowledge for learning it results in the fear of Allah, acquiring it is an act of worship, discussing it is glorification of Allah, delving in it is Jihad, teaching it to one who does not know is a charity, and giving it to those who deserve it is a means of proximity (to Allah). The reason for this is that it is a means of knowing the lawful and the prohibited. It is a companion in solitude, a friend in a strange land, one who converses with you in solitude, an indicator towards happiness and affliction, a weapon against the enemy and an adornment in the presence of friends. Allah raises the rank of nations through it and thereby makes them guides and leaders in goodness. Their footsteps are followed, their actions are emulated and their opinions are adopted. The angels desire to befriend them. They stroke them with their wings. Every animate and inanimate creature seeks forgiveness for them: the fish and other creatures of the sea, the animals of prey and cattle of the jungles. This is because knowledge is the life of the hearts from ignorance and the light of the eyes from darkness. It is through knowledge that a servant reaches the ranks of the righteous and lofty positions in this world and in the Hereafter. Pondering over knowledge is equivalent to fasting. Teaching it to each other is equivalent to spending the night in worship. It is through knowledge that ties of kinship are cemented. It is through knowledge that the lawful and the prohibited are learnt. Knowledge is the leader of action and action is its follower. It is the fortunate ones who are inspired by knowledge while the unfortunate ones are deprived of it.’ (Ibn Abdul Bar)

• Abu Musa radhiyallahu anhu narrates that Rasulullah sallallahu alayhi wasallam said, ‘The similitude of the guidance and knowledge Allah has sent me with is like that of rain which fell upon unproductive land. A piece of that ground was good. It absorbed the water and caused trees and plenty of vegetation to grow. Another piece of that ground was barren. It held the water (without absorbing it). Allah enabled people to benefit from it. They drank of it, irrigated their land and harvested (their crops). The rain fell on another portion of that land which was plain and level. It neither holds any water nor does it allow any vegetation to grow. So that is the similitude of he who has the understanding of the religion of Allah and benefits from what Allah has sent me with. He thus acquires knowledge and conveys it to others. And the other is the similitude of him who does not pay any heed to it and does not accept the guidance of Allah with which I have been sent.’ (Bukhari)

• Anas bin Malik radhiyallahu anhu narrates that Rasulullah sallallahu alayhi wasallam said, ‘The similitude of the Ulama on earth is like that of the stars by which people are guided in the darkness of the land and sea. If the stars are extinguished, people would soon go astray.’ (Musnad Ahmad)

• Abu Al-Aswad says, ‘There is nothing that is more honourable than knowledge. The kings are rulers over the masses while the Ulama are rulers over the kings.’

• Abu Hurairah radhiyallahu anhu narrates that Rasulullah sallallahu alayhi wasallam said, ‘The most superior form of charity is for a Muslim person to acquire knowledge and then to teach it to his Muslim brother.’ (Ibn Majah) Abu Ummamah radhiyallahu anhu narrates that Rasulullah sallallahu alayhi wasallam said, ‘The person who goes to the Masjid solely to learn something good or to teach it shall receive the reward of a person who performed a complete Hajj.’ (Tabarani)

• Abu Hurairah radhiyallahu anhu narrates that Rasulullah sallallahu alayhi wasallam said, ‘From among the actions and good deeds that would benefit a person after his death are the following: knowledge which he spread, a righteous child whom he left behind, a copy of the Qur’an which he left as inheritance, a Masjid which he built, a house which he built for travellers, a source of water which he caused to flow, and charity which he took out of his wealth while he was alive and healthy. (The reward of all this) will join him after death.’ (Ibn Majah)

• Abu Hurairah radhiyallahu anhu narrates that Rasulullah sallallahu alayhi wasallam said, ‘Whosoever calls towards guidance shall receive the reward equal to whoever follows him without their rewards being decreased in any way. Whosoever calls towards misguidance shall receive the sin equal to whoever follows him without their sins being decreased in any way.’ (Muslim)

• Abdullah, the son of Imam Ahmad bin Hambal rahimahullah, says: ‘I asked my father, ‘Should I offer Tahajjud Salaah at night or should I write down knowledge instead?’ He replied, ‘Write down knowledge.’ Ad-Dimayati explains: ‘The reason why he said this to his son is that the benefit of writing down knowledge extends to others as well. He will benefit form the reward and the reward of whoever benefits from it in his life and forever after his death. As for the Tahajjud Salaah, the reward of it is confined to himself alone. Allah knows best.’

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Message from the Ameer of the Jamiatul Ulama

Niqab

Yesterday, a website (www.IslamOnline.net) reported that a senior Sheikh from Egypt had made a statement to the extent that hijab has nothing to do with Islam. The sheikh instructed a school student, whose class he was visiting, insisting that she remove the niqab. The website quotes the Sheikh, as saying, “The niqab is a tradition and has nothing to do with Islam,” and adding “I tell you again that the niqab has nothing to do with Islam and it is only a mere custom. I understand the religion better than you and your parents.” The Sheikh is also quoted to have said, “ I intend to issue a regulation to ban the niqab in al Azhar schools ... no student or teacher will be allowed into the school wearing the niqab”. The Sheikh’s statements come close after the Ministry of Education in Egypt has reportedly ordered a ban on the niqab in school hostels and the Egyptian ministry of religious endowments recently distributed booklets in masaajid against the niqab.

I find it difficult to believe and am extremely saddened to learn that a senior scholar, such as the one mentioned, could have made a statement to this effect. In fact, I hope that there was some mistake or the sheikh was misunderstood.

The issue of hijab and niqab is a very simple one and needs to be put in perspective. There is unanimity among scholars on the obligatory nature of hijab (hijab – covering the entire body except the hands and face; niqab – the veil or the face covering). There is clearly a difference of opinion on whether the niqab is part of the hijab or not – in other words whether the niqab is obligatory, sunnah or preferable. Scholars have presented both opinions and proofs have been submitted by proponents of both views. Both sides have also respected the views of the other. There has however never been an authentic view that hijab is not a part of Islam or that it is not permissible.

The opinion that niqab has no basis in Islam and is an innovation in deen, or that it is based only on culture and tradition, is an opinion that is without doubt an incorrect opinion. It is an opinion that has no basis in the Qur’an, the sunnah, the way of the sahabah or the understanding of the pious scholars of Islam.

In recent times it is an opinion that has been proposed by enemies of Islam and has been the cause of the Muslim women in various countries around the world being forced to remove their hijab (The ban of the burqa in France, the examples of the Muslim women in Michigan, USA courts and the example of a woman in an Australian court are but a few examples).

Even contemporary scholars such as Sheikh Yusuf Qaradawi has slammed the view of the Egyptian Sheikh. Dr Qardawi states:
“No Muslim scholar, whether among the predecessors or contemporary scholars, has ever been reported to have regarded wearing niqab as forbidden except in the case of ihram for women. The scholarly difference regarding the issue of niqab is only over whether it is obligatory or recommendable... Thus it is untenable that a Muslim jurist would regard niqab as prohibited or even merely undesirable in Islam. Hence, I was really shocked to learn of an opinion attributed to some Al-Azhar scholars to the effect that they believe that veiling the woman's face falls under prohibiting what Almighty Allah has originally permitted. In fact, the advocates of this view cannot be said to be of firm knowledge about the Qur'an or the Sunnah or fiqh.”

The issue of the miscreant views on niqab is however one that expands beyond the issue of niqab and is indicative of a move towards a secular view and approach that compromises the pristine purity of our deen. It cloaks itself in the presentation of deen in a manner which is more acceptable to contemporary society – an approach that is teeming with concessions, compromises and apologetics.

It is important to note that the niqab issue is only a sampling of the shocking and contemptible views that could emerge or originate from the unnatural and illegal evolution of our deen by scholars who make grave errors as a result of their compromises, circumstances or need to submit to alien persuasions and pressures.

May Allah (subhanahu wa ta`aala) guide us in all that we do. Aameen.

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