Answered by Shaykh Gibril F Haddad
Imām Abu Hanīfa nowhere objected to tawassul but only –as narrated from Abu Yosuf in Kitāb al-Āthār–to the use of a specific wording in supplication, namely, “by the right You owe to So-and-so” (bi-haqqi fulāni ‘alayk), or “by the joints of power and glory in Your Throne” (bima ‘āqidal-‘izzmin‘arshik).[1] The reason for this is that, on the one hand, Allāh owes no-one any right whatsoever except what He Himself condescends to state on His part as in the verse [To help believers is incumbent upon Us (haqqun ‘alaynā)](30:47). On the other hand, “by the right owed so-and-so” is an oath and is therefore a formula restricted to Allāh Himself on pains of shirk. Imām Abu Hanīfa said: “Let one not swear any oath except by Allāh alone, with a pure affirmation of tawhīd and sincerity.”[2] A third reason is that the expression “the joints of power and glory in Your Throne” is a lone-narrator (āhād) report and is therefore not retained nor put into practice, in accordance with the rule for any such reports that might suggest anthropomorphism.
Those that claim[3] that the Imām objected to tawassul altogether are unable to adduce anything to support such a claim other than the above caveat, which is not against tawassul but against a specific, prohibitive wording in tawassul. A proof of this is that it is permissible in the Hanafī School to say “by the sanctity/honor of so-and-so in Your presence” (bi-hurmati/bi-jāhi fulān). This is stated in the Fatāwā Bazzāziyya (6:351 in the margin of the Fatāwā Hindiyya) and is also the position of Abū al-Layth al-Samarqandī among the major Hanafī Jurists, not to mention that of Imām Ibn ‘Ābidīn among the later ones.
Even so there is authentic evidence in[1]the hadīth of Fātima bint Asad, [2] the hadīth of “the right of those who ask You,”[3] the hadīth: “O Allāh, I ask you by the joints of power in the Throne,” and [4] the hadīth: “Do you know the right owed to Allāh by His slaves and the right owed by Allāh to his slaves?”[4] to support the permissibility of such a wording. If the above objection is authentically reported from Abu Hanīfa then either he did not deem these hadīths authentic by his standards, or they did not reach him. An illustration of this is that Abu Yusuf permitted the formula “By the joints of power…”. [5] Further, the opposite is also reported from him, namely, that he permitted tawassul using those very expressions. Ibn ‘Ābidīn said: “In the Tatārkhāniyya: The Āthār also report what shows permissibility.” Then he cites–from al-Qārī’s Sharh al-Niqāya, al-Munāwī quoting Ibn ‘Abd al-Salām (cf. the very first of his Fatāwā in the printed Risāla edition), and al-Subkī –further explanations that it is permitted, then he cites the fatwa by Ibn Amīr al-Hajj in the thirteenth chapter of Sharh al-Munya that such permissibility is not limited to tawassul through the Prophet e. i.e. it extends to the Sālihīn.
[1] Cf. al-Zabīdī, It hāf (2:285) and Ibn Abī al-‘Izz, Sharhal-‘Aqīda al-Tahāwiyya (1988 9th ed. p. 237).
[2]Cf. al-Kasānī, Badā’i‘ al-Sanā’i‘ (3:8).
[3]Cf. Ibn Taymiyya, Majmū‘ al-Fatāwā (1:202-203) and his imitators.
[4]The first hadīth is narrated from Anas by al-Tabarānī in al-Kabīr (24:351) and al-Awsat. (1:152) and Abu Nu‘aym in his Hilya (1985 ed. 3:121) with a chain containing Rawh ibn Salāh concerning whom there is difference of opinion among the authorities. He is unknown according to Ibn al-Jawzī in al-‘Ilal al-Mutanāhiya (1:260-270), Ibn ‘Adī in al-Kāmil (3:146 #667), and al-Dāraqutnī in al-Mu’talif wal-Mukhtalif (3:1377); Ibn Mākūlā in al-Ikmāl (5:15) declared him weak while al-Hākim asserted was trustworthy and highly dependable (thiqa ma’mun) –as mentioned by Ibn Hajar in Lisān al-Mīzān (2:465 #1876), Ibn Hibbān included him in al-Thiqāt (8:244), and al-Fasawī considered him trustworthy (cf. Mamdoh, Raf‘ [p. 148]). Al-Haythamī (9:257) said: “Al-Tabarānī narrated it in al-Kabīr and al-Awsat and its chain contains Rawh ibn Salāh whom Ibn Hibbān and al-Hākim declared trustworthy although there is some weakness in him, and the rest of its sub-narrators are the men of sound hadīth.” I was unable to find Abu Hātim’s declaration of Rawh as trustworthy reported by Shaykh Muhammad ibn ‘Alawī in his Mafāhīm (10th ed. p. 145 n. 1). Nor does Shaykh Mahmod Mamdohin his discussion of this hadīth in Raf‘ al-Mināra (p. 147-155) mention such a grading on the part of Abu Hātim although he considers Rawh “truthful” (sadaq) and not “weak” (da‘īf), according to the rules of hadīth science when no reason is given with regard to a narrator’s purported discreditation (jarhmubham ghayr mufassar). Mamdoh(p. 149-150) noted that although Albānī in his Silsila Da‘īfa (1:32-33) claims it is a case of explicated discreditation (jarh mufassar) yet he himself declares identically-formulated discreditation cases as unexplicated and therefore unacceptable in two different contexts! Ibn ‘Alawī adds that the hadīth is also narrated from Ibn ‘Abbās by Ibn ‘Abd al-Barr –without specifying where –and from Jābir by Ibn Abī Shayba, but without the du‘ā. Imām al-Kawtharī said of this hadīth in his Maqālāt (p. 410): “It provides textual evidence whereby there is no difference between the living and the dead in the context of using a means (tawassul), and this is explicit tawassul through the Prophets, while the hadīth of the Prophet from Abu Sa‘īd al-Khudrī ‘O Allāh, I ask You by the right of [the promise made to] those who ask You (bihaqqi al-sā’ilīna ‘alayk)’* constitutes tawassul through the generality of Muslims, both the living and the dead.”
*A hasan hadīth of the Prophet according to Shaykh Mahmod Mamdoh who showed in his monograph Mubāhathat al-Sā’irīn bi Hadīth Allāhumma Innī As’aluka bi-Haqqi al-Sā’ilīn, narrated from Abu Sa‘īd al-Khudrī by Ahmad in his Musnad with a fair chain according to Hamza al-Zayn (10:68 #11099) –a weak chain according to al-Arna’ūt(17:247-248 #11156) who considers it, like Abu Hātim in al-‘Ilal (2:184), more likely a mawquf saying of Abu Sa‘īd himself; Ibn Mājah with a chain he declared weak, Ibn al-Sunni in ‘Amal al-Yawm wa al-Layla (p. 40 #83-84), al-Bayhaqī in al-Da‘awāt al-Kabīr (p. 47= 1:47 #65), Ibn Khuzayma in al-Tawhīd (p. 17-18) [and his Sahīh (2:458?) as indicated by al-Busīrī in his Zawā’id (1:98-99)], al-Tabarānī in al-Du‘a (p. 149=2:990), Ibn Ja‘d in his Musnad (p. 299), al-Baghawī in al-Ja‘diyyat (#2118-2119) and –mawquf –by Ibn Abī Shayba (6:25=10:211-212) and Ibn Abī Hātim in ‘Ilal al-Hadīth (2:184). Al-‘Irāqī in Takhrīj Ahādīth al- Ihyā’ (1:291) graded it hasan as a marfu‘ Prophetic hadīth, as did the hadīth Masters al-Dimyātī in al-Muttajir al-Rābihfī Thawāb al-‘Amal al-Sālih (p. 471-472), Ibn Hajar in Amālī al-Adhkār (1:272) and al-Mundhirī’s shaykh the hadīth Master Abu al-Hasan al-Maqdisī in al-Targhīb (1994 ed. 2:367 #2422=1997 ed. 2:304-305) and as indicated by Ibn Qudāma in al-Mughnī (1985 Dār al-Fikr ed. 1:271). Shaykh Mamdohin his monograph refuted the reasoning of Nāsir Albānī and Hammād al-Ansārī in declaring this hadīth weak. The third hadīth is narrated from [1] the Companion Qayla bint Makhrama by al-Tabarānī in al-Kabīr (25:12) with a fair chain according to al-Haythamī (10:124-125); [2] Ibn Mas‘ud by al-Bayhaqī in al-Da‘awāt al-Kabīr (2:157 #392) –Ibn al-Jawzī in al-Mawdu‘āt (2:142) claimed that it was forged as cited by al-Zayla‘ī in Nasb al-Rāya (4:272-273) but this ruling was rejected by al-Suyutī in al-La’āli’ (2:68); [3] maqtū‘ from Wuhayb by Abu Nu‘aym in the Hilya (1985 ed. 8:158-159); [4] Abū Hurayra by Ibn ‘Asākir with a very weak chain cf. Ibn ‘Arrāq, Tanzīh al-Sharī‘a (1:228); and [5] Abū Bakr in al-Tadwīn and al-Firdaws. The fourth is narrated from Mu‘ādh in the Six Books and Ahmad except for al-Nasā’ī.
[5]Cf. al-Kāsānī, Badā’i‘ al-Sanā’i‘ (5:126).
[6]Ibn ‘Ābidīn, Hāshiya (6:396-397).
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