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FIQH

(Redirected from Islamic jurisprudence)

'Fiqh' (Arabic: فقه) is Islamic jurisprudence. It is an expansion of Islamic law, complemented by the rulings of Islamic jurists to direct the lives of Muslims.
The Historian Ibn Khaldun describes ''fiqh'' as "knowledge of the rules of God which concern the actions of persons who own themselves bound to obey the law respecting what is required (''wajib''), forbidden (''haram /mahzur''), recommended (''mandūb''), disapproved (''makruh'') or merely permitted (''mubah'')".[1]

Contents
Etymology
Introduction
Islamic Law
Muslim Jurist: Ulema
Fields of jurisprudence
Methodologies of jurisprudence ''usul al-fiqh'' (أصول الفقه)
The four schools of Sunni Islam
Ja'fari jurisprudence
Notes
References
See also
External links

Etymology


The word ''fiqh'' is an Arabic term meaning "deep understanding" or "full comprehension". Technically it refers to the science of Islamic law extracted from detailed Islamic sources (which are studied in the principles of Islamic jurisprudence). The process of gaining knowledge of Islam through jurisprudence, and the body of legal advisements so derived, is known as ''fiqh''.

Introduction


There are cases where the Qur'an gives a clearly defined and concrete answer on how do deal with different issues. This includes how to perform the ritual purification before the obligatory daily prayers .
On other issues, the Qur'an alone is not enough to make things clear. For example, the holy book states that one needs to engage in daily prayers and fast during the month of Ramadan, however, it does not define how to perform these duties. The details about these issues can be found in what is called the tradition of Muhammad . This is true for most detailed issues, thus the Qur'an and Sunnah are the basis for the Islamic Divine Law .
However, the Muslim jurists do not always agree on how to interpret the Qur'an and Sunnah to arrive at the ''sharia''. This division of interpretation in more detailed issues has resulted in different schools of thought .
And with regard to some topics, the Qur'an and Sunnah are simply silent. In those cases, the Muslim jurists try to arrive at conclusions using other tools. Sunni jurists use analogy and historical consensus of the community . The conclusions arrived at with the aid of these additional tools constitute a wider array of laws than the Sharia constitutes of, and is called 'fiqh'. Thus, in contrast to the ''sharia'', ''fiqh'' is not regarded as sacred, and the schools of thought have differing views on its details, without viewing other conclusions as sacrilegious.
This wider concept of 'Islamic jurisprudence' is the source of a range of laws in different topics that govern the lives of the Muslims in all facets of everyday life.

Islamic Law


Islamic law (''fiqh'') covers two main areas, rules in relation to actions and rules in relation to circumstances surrounding actions.
Rules in relation to actions (''amaliyya'') comprise:

★ Obligation (''fard'')

★ Recommendation (''mandoob'')

★ Permissibility (''mubah'')

★ Disrecommendation (''makrooh'')

★ Prohibition (''haram'')
Rules in relation to circumstances (''wadia') comprise:

★ Condition (''shart'')

★ Cause (''sabab'')

★ Preventor (''mani'')

★ Permit/Enforce (''rukhsah, azeemah'')

★ Valid/Corrupt/Invalid (''sahih, fasad, batil'')

Muslim Jurist: Ulema


The Muslim Jurists are called the ''ulema'', from the Arabic ilm (knowledge). They are also called the ''faqeeh'' (pl. ''fuqahaa'') from ''fiqh''.

Fields of jurisprudence



Islamic economical jurisprudence فقه المعاملات

Islamic political jurisprudence

Islamic marital jurisprudence

Islamic criminal jurisprudence فقه العقوبات

Islamic etiquettical jurisprudence الآداب

Islamic theological jurisprudence

Islamic hygienical jurisprudence

Islamic military jurisprudence فقه الجهاد

Methodologies of jurisprudence ''usul al-fiqh'' (أصول الفقه)


The Modus operandi of the Muslim jurist is known as ''usul al-fiqh'' (principles of jurisprudence).
There are different approaches to the methodology used in ''fiqh'' to derive ''sharia'' from the Islamic sources. The main methodologies are:

★ The four classical Sunni schools are, in chronological order: the Hanafi school, the Maliki school, the Shafi'i school and the Hanbali school. They represent the generally accepted Sunni authority for Islamic jurisprudence.
Other schools are the Thahiri, Sufian Al'thawree, Sufian bin O'yayna, Layth bin Sa'ad. The four most famous schools mentioned go back to the schools as Sufian Bin Oyayna.

★ ''Jafari fiqh'', or the Shi'a ''fiqh''

Qur'an alone ''fiqh''
The four schools of Sunni Islam

The four schools of Sunni Islam are each named by students of the classical jurist who taught them. The Sunni schools (and where they are commonly found) are

Hanafi (Turkey, the Balkans, Central Asia, Indian subcontinent, China and Egypt)

Maliki (North Africa, West Africa and several of the Arab Gulf States)

Shafi'i (Indonesia, Malaysia, Egypt, East Africa, Yemen and southern parts of India)

Hanbali (Arabia).
These four schools share most of their rulings, but differ on the particular ''hadiths'' they accept as authentic and the weight they give to analogy or reason (''qiyas'') in deciding difficulties.
The Hanafi school was the earliest established under the jurist Imam Abu Hanifa, who was born and taught in Iraq. Imam Abu Hanifa (80A.H. - 150A.H.), whose real name was Nu'man ibn Thabit, was born in the city of Kufa (modern day Iraq) in the year 80 A.H (689 A.D). Born into a family of tradesmen, the Imam's family were of Persian origin. Under Imam Abu Hanifa, the witr prayer was considered to be compulsory and the Hanafis also differed with other sects in relation to methods of taking ablution, prayers and payment of tithe or ''zakat''. Imam Abu Hanifa also differed with the other three schools in many areas including the type of punishments meted out for various crimes in Islam. On the whole, the Hanafi school of jurisprudence could be said to have the most differences with other three schools.
Students of Imam Malik established the Maliki school of which a majority now can be found in North Africa and some Persian gulf states . Imam Malik, whose real name was Abu Abdullah, Malik bin Anas, was born in Medina in the year 715 AD. His ancestral home was in Yemen, but his grandfather settled in Medina after embracing Islam. He received his education in Medina, which was the most important seat of Islamic learning, and where the immediate descendants of the Muhammad's followers lived. Imam Malik was attracted to the study of law, and devoted himself to the study of ''fiqh''. His principal book, the ''Kitab al-Muwatta'', is one of the earliest surviving books on ''hadith'' and ''fiqh''. Differences under the Maliki school included the fact that those following the Maliki school could state their purpose (or ''niat'') once only for compulsory fasting which is valid for the whole month of Ramadhan whilst for the Shafi'ie school (see below), one would have to state his purpose every day of the month of Ramadhan for his fast to be valid the next day.
Ja'fari jurisprudence

The Jaferi school (Iran, Iraq, Azerbaijan, Lebanon, Bahrein, Pakistan, and parts of Afghanistan and Saudi Arabia) is associated with Shia Islam. The ''fatwas'', or time and space bound rulings of early jurists, are taken rather more seriously in this school, due to the more hierarchical structure of Shia Islam, which is ruled by the ''imams''. But they are also more flexible, in that every jurist has considerable power to alter a decision according to his opinion.
The Jafari school uses uses '''aql'' "intellect" instead of ''qiyas'' in the Sunni achools, when establishing Islamic laws.
Each school reflects a unique ''al-urf'' or culture, that the classical jurists themselves lived in, when rulings were made. Some suggest that the discipline of ''isnad'' which developed to validate ''hadith'' made it relatively easy to record and validate also the rulings of jurists, making them far easier to imitate (''taqlid'') than to challenge in new contexts. The effect is, the schools have been more or less frozen for centuries, and reflect a culture that simply no longer exists.
Early ''shariah'' had a much more flexible character, and many modern Muslim scholars believe that it should be renewed, and that the classical jurists should lose special status. This would require formulating a new fiqh suitable for the modern world, e.g. as proposed by advocates of the Islamization of knowledge, and would deal with the modern context. This modernization is opposed by most conservative ''ulema''.

Notes


1. Levy (1957). Page 150.

References



The Social Structure of Islam, , Reuben, Levy, Cambridge University Press, 1957, ISBN 978-0521091824

See also



Bahar-e-Shariat

Hadith

Abdallah al-Harari

Mizan - a comprehensive treatise on the contents of Islam written by Javed Ahmed Ghamidi

External links



The Development of Fiqh

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