Also published in Daily Trust
When I saw yesterday’s
rejoinder by the very Sheikh who had presented the lecture that inspired Hajiya
Bilkisu’s piece, I thought he, being presumably a scholar, would address the
specific arguments I had raised in the first part of my rejoinder or address
the excerpts I quoted from the Shiites’ major reference books on their actual
belief about their Mahdi.
Unfortunately
however, he instead ended up making some empty allegations against my person
including what he called my ignorance to spell my own name correctly. Anyway, I
believe the issue at hand is much more important than I am, let alone the way I
spell or misspell my name, so I will only focus on the relevant issues. Yet, I
may, in due course, address his unwarranted worry over my name spelling issue,
subject to space availability of course.
Meanwhile, before I move
on to the second part of Hajiya Bilkisu’s piece, it is important to note that,
her reference to the Shiites’ assertions in the first part of her piece that
Al-Mahdi was born in the year 255 after Hijra and that he is still alive though
hidden, which means he is now 1,180 years old, are unsubstantiated. Her
reference to Allah’s ability and prerogative to decree and execute what He
wants in this context contradicts the standard methodology of intellectual
reasoning and arguing. Claims like these have to be proved with unambiguous
proofs from the Holy Qur’an or the authentic collections of the prophetic
Hadiths.
Therefore, in the
absence of any proof from the above mentioned sources, Hajiya ended up citing a
purported and vague reference from the so-called Zabura, which is simply an
unfounded book falsely attributed to the noble prophet and messenger of Allah;
Dawood (AS) who lived thousands of years ago. It is circulated by the gullible
and the other so-called Malams who can’t prove its authenticity or even explain
how it emerged in the first place. As a matter of fact, nobody can prove its
authenticity either.
By the way, ironically,
in worldly matters e.g. politics, business etc., people, especially the
educated, always insist on verifying the authenticity of any information they
learn before believing it, disseminating it or acting accordingly, but when it
comes to religious issues only a few bother to check the authenticity of what
they read or listen to.
Anyway, in the second
part of her piece and in her apparent but futile attempt to corroborate the
Shiites’ narrative about the subject matter and their unfounded belief that
Al-Mahdi was born and is still alive, Hajiya recounted how she referred to the
well-known Qur’anic narrative of the prophet Musa and Al-Khidr, during a lesson
session, where she highlighted some unconfirmed Sufi narratives about Al-khidr,
some of which claim that he is still alive and that some people can even meet
with him.
In any case, the reality
is that, Al-khidr is not alive. The fact that the Qur’an did not refer to his
death does not mean that he is alive, because it (i.e. the Qur’an) did not
refer to the death of many other historical figures among the prophets and
messengers of Allah and even many non-Muslims, either.
Besides, the Prophet
(pbuh) was authentically reported to have said, just a month before his death
and shortly after performing Isha prayer, that “At the end of the next one
hundred years from this night there will remain nobody on earth, among the
living today, who will be alive then” (Bukhari, hadith # 533) This
therefore means that even if Al-Khidr had survived up to the era of the prophet
Mohammad (pbuh), which certainly never happened, he must have died before the
end of the subsequent one hundred years from the death of the prophet (pbuh).
Moreover, any exception
from this prophetic generalization has to be supported by a clear Qur’anic
verse, as in the case of the Satan (Qur’an, Suratul Al-araaf, verses # 14-15),
or an authentic prophetic hadith, as in the case Al-Dajjal (Sahihu-Muslim,
hadith # 2942)
In the same vein, as
Hajiya continued to scout for any pretext in her effort to support the Shiites’
version of Al-Mahdi narrative, she hinted that a book she read, which was
written by Sheikh Othman bin Fodio about Al-Mahdi presented the narrative of
Al-Mahdi in the same Shiites’ perspective she was promoting, which was simply
wrong, to say the least. Obviously, whatever Sheikh Othman wrote or said about
Al-Mahdi was to the best of his knowledge what the Sunni Muslims believe about
him.
Interestingly enough,
for the avoidance of doubt, Sheikh Othman bin Fodio was a Sunni Muslim scholar
and revivalist, so also were all the Muslim scholars under his Caliphate e.g.
Sheikh Abdullahi Gwandu and Sultan Mohammad Bello. Their books attest to that
beyond any doubt. Nigerian Shiites’ purported glorification of the Sheikh by
their frequent references to his struggle for Islamic revival, or by naming
their worship or study centres after him, is part of misleading tactics to
mislead the general public into believing that he also believed in their (i.e.
Shiites’) religious doctrine.
Anyway, as Muslim
scholars have always maintained over the centuries, the Shiites’ narrative of
Al-Mahdi and indeed the entire doctrine and religious rituals peculiar to them
are unfounded hence heretical, because they can’t prove them with any clear and
unambiguous Qur’anic verse or authentic prophetic hadith. It may sound shocking
to the largely gullible Shi’a adherents that, even in their own flawed criteria
of hadith narration, and in all their voluminous major books of reference,
there is no single hadith with an unbroken chain of narration (i.e. Sanad-muttasil)
of identified, recognized, credible and trustworthy narrators narrating from
one another up to the Prophet Mohammad (pbuh). They have always been challenged
to produce one, yet they have not and indeed they can’t.
God willing, next Friday
in the third part of this rejoinder, I will elaborate more on this point with
the confessions of some of the Shiites’ most recognized clerics and theorisers
over the centuries, as I will expose the actual aims for fabricating the whole
Shiites’ narrative about Al-Mahdi and those probably behind it.
2 comments:
Jazakallah. Besides, I never thought this Hajiya could succumb to Shi'ite's falsification or be an apologist of that. We really, really need to always pray to Allah to guide us to the right path, ameen.
BTW, I think you wanted to write "piece" not "peace" in the third paragraph, first line.
Thank you Muhammad Muhsin, your observation is also noted with thanks, and I corrected the mistake.
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