Answered by Shaykh Hamza Karamali, SunniPath Academy Teacher
I pray tarawih behind a Hanafi Imam. If he prostrates after reciting the verse in Sura Saad (wa zanna dawudu annama fatannahu ...), what should I do?
In the Name of Allah, Most Merciful and Compassionate
The ‘Problem’
According
to the Shafi‘i school, the prostration of verse 24 of Surah Sad
(chapter 38 of the Qur’an) is not a prostration of Qur’an-recital
(sajdatu’l-tilawa) but rather a prostration of thankfulness
(sajdatu’l-shukr). Performing a prostration of
thankfulness during the prayer invalidates one’s prayer, so if one
recites this verse while praying, one may not prostrate.
In
the Hanafi school, however, the prostration of this verse is a
prostration of Qur’an-recital and it is necessary (wajib) to prostrate
during the prayer if one recites it during the prayer. This can result in a seemingly problematic situation if a Shafi‘i prays behind a Hanafi who recites this verse.
The Solution
Imam
Ibn Hajar al-Haytami (Allah have mercy on him) mentions in his Tuhfa
that if one is praying behind a Hanafi Imam who prostrates for this
verse, one has one of two options: (1) one can either stop following
him and complete one’s prayer on one’s own, or (2) one can wait for him
to stand back up from the prostration and then continue praying behind
him, without this affecting the validity of one’s prayer. Imam
Muhammad al-Ramli (Allah have mercy on him) mentioned in his Nihaya
that to wait for him to stand back up is the superior of the two
options.
Outside the Prayer
If
one recites this verse outside the prayer, it is sunna to prostrate
after reciting it, not because it is a verse that calls for the
Qur’an-recital prostration, but out of gratitude to Allah for accepting
the repentance of our master, the Prophet Dawud (upon him be blessings
and peace).
An ‘Aqida Point
Imam
Ibn Hajar—a staunch follower of the Ash‘ari school in his ‘aqida, just
like all the major fuqaha of the Shafi‘i school—clarifies at
this point in his Tuhfa that the repentance of our master, the Prophet
Dawud (upon him be blessings and peace) was not out of committing a sin
(since the soundest position in the Ash‘ari school is that prophets are
divinely protected from committing major or minor sins before or after
prophethood), but rather because he did something that was ‘better not
to do’ (khilaf al-awla). He said:
“[We
prostrate] out of thankfulness that He accepted the repentance of His
prophet Dawud (Allah bless our prophet and him and give them both
peace) from the khilaf al-awla that he committed that was not becoming
of the exaltedness of his perfection. This is because
he—like all prophets (Allah bless them all and give them peace)—was
divinely protected from the blemish of all sins (AH: meaning major or
minor, before prophethood or after it, on purpose or out of
forgetfulness), in stark contrast to what is present in many tafsirs
(AH: that he sent his minister to battle and placed him at the front of
the army so that he might be killed), all of which is obligatory to
shun because it has not been authenticated. Even if it
were authenticated, it would be obligatory to interpret it figuratively
because their being divinely protected from sins has been established
and because it is obligatory to believe that they are above such base
matters that aren’t even committed by the lowest of the righteous of
this nation. [This being the case,] how should it be with
those that Allah has chosen for His prophethood, made fitting for His
messengerhood, and made intermediaries (wasita) between Him and between
His creation.” (Tuhfat al-Muhtaj + Hashiya of Shaykh ‘Abd al-Hamid,
2.206)
Imam
Ibn Hajar (Allah have mercy on him) later mentions that the khilaf
al-awla that our master Dawud (upon him be blessings and peace) did was
that he thought to himself that if his minister (wazir) were to die, he
would marry his wife. This is not a sin, but because of the exaltedness of their rank, Allah takes His prophets to task for such actions.
(Tuhfat al-Muhtaj + Hashiya of Shaykh ‘Abd al-Hamid, 2.205-208)
And Allah knows best.
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