Question: Can you please send
me a breakdown on the Prophet’s (sws) mode of Wudu (ablution) and
Salah (the prayer). You see I studied under scholars who are of
the Malikite school of thought. I want to make sure I am worshipping
my Creator rightly.
Answer: I really appreciate
your concern and carefulness regarding as important a matter as worshipping
the Lord. I will definitely address your question and try to present before
you our point of view along with arguments thereon. As far as my knowledge
goes of the Malikite fiqh (jurisprudence) and other fiqh of Sunni
scholars, I do not find any difference of opinion on the method of
performing ablution. However, the adherents of Malikite fiqh contend
that one should not hold one’s hand when standing before the Almighty in
Qiyam (standing posture during the prayer). This is the only point
of difference where we need to ascertain the right standing of the Companions
(rta) of the Prophet (sws) and the Muslim generations of later ages.
Before we begin our debate on this
point, it needs to be clarified that any method of worshipping the Lord
of which a person is intellectually convinced under the light of his innate
as well as divine guidance will stand accepted with the Lord. This means
that you should not keep worrying whether your prayers will be accepted
by the Lord while you are intellectually convinced that the right way of
offering the prayers is yours. Allah of course does know what is in the
hearts; and your sincerity of heart will bring reward to you in the Hereafter.
As I pointed out earlier, the adherents
of the Malikite fiqh maintain that one should not hold one’s hands
while standing before the Almighty during the prayer. We however have problem
ascribing this standing to the pioneer of this fiqh, Imam Malik.
The statement which is quoted in this regard from Imam Malik becomes
questionable when it is read in the context of other reports and facts.
This statement is quoted in al-Mudawwanah al-Kubra:
And about placing one’s right hand over the left
during Prayers, Malik said: ‘I am not aware of this practice in
the obligatory prayers’. Malik detested this practice [in obligatory
prayers], but considered it acceptable in supererogatory prayers, to support
oneself, when the standing posture (Qiyam) can be quite prolonged.1
This is the statement from which is construed
Imam Malik’s point of view regarding leaving hands at ease when
being in the obligatory prayers; and in supererogatory prayers it is however
allowable to support oneself by holding hands in case of a prolonged Qiyam.
Although this statement is clear and it would have been decisive in ascertaining
the viewpoint of Imam Malik regarding leaving one’s hand at ease
when offering the prayer, yet we have some other information which presents
quite a different picture as regards Imam Malik’s views. We have
some reports recorded in the Hadith collection of the Imam,
which supports the opinion of the mainstream Muslims in this regard. I
quote:
‘Abd al-Karim al-Basari says that amongst
the sayings of the Prophet (sws) was: ‘If you do not have shame in your
heart, then you do whatever you may feel like doing and that he [ie., the
Prophet (sws)] put one hand over the other during the prayer, he would
put his right hand over his left. (Mu’atta: No. 377)
Sahal Ibn Sa‘ad says that people used
to prescribe upon others to put their right hands on their left elbows
during prayers. Abu Hazim [who reports from Sahal Ibn Sa‘ad] says:
I am sure that this was ascribed to the Prophet (sws). (Mu’atta:
No. 378)
The very existence of these reports in
the Hadith collection of the Imam without any objection note thereon
shows that he held them to be true in this regard. The least we can however
establish from these reports is that he had an idea of this practice. Keeping
the purport of these reports in mind, one can hardly understand why the
Imam said:
And about placing one’s right hand over the left
during Prayers, Malik said: ‘I am not aware of this practice in
the obligatory prayers’.
So much so that he is reported to have
shown great disapproval of this practice in the obligatory prayers.
Moiz Amjad, Editor, www.understanding-islam.com,
while answering a similar question, has pointed out another fact which
carries due consideration. He says:
Another important factor which renders Imam
Malik’s opinion cited in al-Mudawwanah al-Kubra quite questionable
is the fact that the people of Madinah, whose actions form one of
the primary basis of the juristic opinions of Imam Malik are generally
reported to have offered their prayers with their hands folded in front
of them while in the standing posture.
Finally, in his notes on al-Mudawwanah
al-Kubra, Ibn Rushd writes:
With reference to the statement ‘putting the
right hand over the left...’, Ashhab has said that there is no harm
in doing so whether in obligatory prayers or in supererogatory prayers
due to the Hadith cited in this regard and also due to the fact
that standing with one’s hands folded in front is the posture of servitude
and subservience in front of one’s Lord... In Matraf’s and Ibn
Majishun’s ‘Al-Wadihah’, there is a third saying ascribed to Imam Malik
in this regard according to which it is held that the Imam preferred to
fold one’s hands, over not doing so.2
I therefore believe that the right approach
in this regard is to follow the practice prevalent among the majority of
the Muslims. These Muslims of course have received this practice as an
established form of offering the prayer from the preceding generations—a
form which is not based on the statement of one scholar. This suggestion
is reinforced in the context where we are not able to even substantiate
the authenticity of what is described as Imam Malik’s view.
Nevertheless, I would again say that
it is actually a matter of personal judgment. If my explanation does not
convince you, there is nothing to worry about. Your prayers will be accepted
by the Lord as long as you worship him in accordance with what you have
derived from the practices of the Muslims and use your intellectual faculty
regarding points of differences among the Muslim jurists.
|