By ABU TARIQ HIJAZI ARABNEWS
Malik bin Anas, known as Imam Malik, is a prominent name in Islamic history. He was not only a great scholar of Hadith, but also a jurist after whom was founded one of the four Islamic schools of Islamic jurisprudence: the Maliki school.
He was 13 years younger to Imam Abu Hanifa and 103 years elder to Imam Bukhari. He compiled the first compendium of Hadith named Al-Muwatta. He was the most leading personality of his time in Madinah and was called Imam Darul Hijrah due to his remaining in Madinah the majority of his life.
He was born in Madinah to Anas ibn Malik and Aaliyah bint Shurayk Al-Azdiyya in 93 AH. His family was originally from the Al-Asbahi tribe of Yemen, but his great grandfather Abu ‘Amir came to Madinah in 2 AH, embraced Islam and settled down there.
Born into a well-to-do family, Malik did not need to work for a living. He was highly attracted to the study of Islam, and ended up devoting his entire life to the study of Hadith and Fiqh.
Living in Madinah gave him access to some of the most learned minds of early Islam. He memorized the Holy Qur’an in his youth. He studied under various famous scholars like Hisham ibn Urwah, Ibn Shihab Al-Zuhri, Imam Abu Hanifa and Imam Jafar Al-Sadiq — one of the descendants of the Prophet (peace be upon him).
Malik lived with the immediate descendants and the followers of the Companions of the Prophet (pbuh). Imaam Zahabi said: “There remains no scholar in Madinah after the Tabi’een comparable to Imam Malik’s knowledge, jurisprudence, eminence, and memorization.” Thus, Imam Malik became the Imam of Madinah, and one of the most renowned scholars of Islam.
He learned Hadith from Abdur Rahman ibn Harmuz, Nafi ibn Zakwan and Yahya ibn Saeed.
Imam Malik said: “I did not start to give lecture in Fiqh and Hadith until I was declared eligible to do so by 70 teachers of Hadith and Fiqh.”
Imam Malik believed that fatwa is a sensitive, precise and important action that can have far-reaching results, and was extremely careful about giving it to the extent that if he was not sure about a matter, he would not speak about it.
While narrating Hadith, he used to wear elegant and expensive clothing, usually wearing white and frequently changing them.
Imam Malik had great love and respect for Madinah. He remained in Hijaz throughout his life and never traveled outside. He went for Haj only once while fearing that he might die outside Madinah and be deprived of its blessings. Even when he attained old age and became very weak, he never rode on any mount in Madinah. He felt that it was against respect to ride on the very land where the Prophet (pbuh) is buried.
Imam Malik compiled Al-Muwatta in forty years. It is the first legal work to incorporate and join Hadith and Fiqh together and was received with wide praise. Imam Bukhari said that the soundest of all chains called the ‘Golden Chain of Narrators’ of Hadith transmission was “Malik, from Nafi, from Ibn Umar.”
Imam Malik’s teachings were not essentially different from those of Imam Abu Hanifa. His main sources were primarily the Holy Qur’an, and then the Hadith of the Prophet (pbuh) of which he preferred those which had been collected and narrated by the scholars of Hadith of Madinah. Next, he would refer to Ijma’ (consensus), and then Ta’amul i.e. customs of the people of Madinah such as practices of the Sahabah that represent the true spirit of Islam. Lastly, he relied on ‘Qiyas’ (analogy) and ‘Istislah’ (public interest).
It is reported that Imam Malik wrote 100,000 Hadiths by his hand. Imam Malik said: “I showed my book to 70 scholars of Madinah and every single one of them approved it, so I named it ‘Muwatta’ (The Approved One).”
It is the first Hadith work arranged into juristic sections and organized accordingly.
According to some of the great scholars of the past, Imam Malik was widely regarded as the scholar of Madinah. The Prophet (pbuh) had said: “Soon people will beat the flanks of camels seeking knowledge, and they shall not find a single person more knowledgeable than the erudite scholar of Madinah
Categories: Asia, Islam, Saudi Arabia, Sharia, Sharia Law