The Baabis and Baha'is are not Muslims
- Categories: Misguided & Deviant Sects -
Q: What is the ruling on the Baha'i
ideas and beliefs? What is the difference between them and other
Muslims?.
A: Praise be to Allaah.
Baabism and Baha'ism are a movement that originated from a Shi'ah
sect called the Shaykhiyyah in 1260 AH/ 1844 CE, under the
protection of Russian, Jewish and English colonialism, with the aim
of corrupting Islamic belief and dividing the Muslims and diverting
them from their basic aims.
Origins and leading
figures:
1 -Baabism was founded by al-Mirza 'Ali Muhammad Rida al-Shiraazi
who learned Shi'ah and Sufi knowledge from childhood. In 1260
AH/1844 CE al-Shiraazi announced that he was the door (al-baab)
which led to divine truth. He was encouraged in that by one of the
Russian spies.
Then after that he claimed to be a messenger like Moosa, 'Eesa and
Muhammad (blessings and peace be upon them all), and he even
claimed to be better than them.
In 1266 AH he claimed that the divine was incarnated in him, and he
was sentenced to death.
2 - Qurrat al-'Ayn. She was a very eloquent woman who joined
al-Shiraazi in learning the Shaykhi branch of Shi'i knowledge. She
was permissive and immoral, and her husband divorced her and her
children disowned her.
She held a conference with the Baabi leaders in Dasht, Iran, in
which she announced the annulment of Islamic sharee'ah. She was
executed in 1268 AH/1852 CE.
Baha'ism
Before al-Shiraazi was killed, he appointed al-Mirza Yahya 'Ali,
who was known as Sabh Azl, as his successor, but this was contested
by his brother Husayn al-Baha'. After conflicts between them in
which each of them tried to kill the other, Sabh Azl was expelled
to Cyprus, where he died in 1912 CE.
Husayn al-Baha' was expelled to 'Akka (Acre) in Palestine, where he
was killed by some of his brother's followers in 1892 CE and was
buried there.
Beliefs, ideas and rituals of the
Baha'is:
1 - Belief that Allaah is incarnated in some of His creation, and
that Allaah was incarnated in al-Baab and al-Baha'.
2 - Belief in the transmigration of souls, and that reward and
punishment happen to the soul only.
3 - Belief that all religions are valid, and that the Torah and
Gospel have not been altered. They believe that all religion must
be united in one, which is Baha'ism.
4 - The Baha'is believe that the book al-Aqdas which was written by
al-Baha' Husayn abrogates all the divinely revealed books,
including the Holy Qur'aan.
5 - They believe that Buddha, Confucius, Brahman, Zaradasht and
other sages of India, China and Persia were Prophets.
6 - They believe - like the Jews and the Christians - that the
Messiah was crucified.
7 - They do not believe in the miracles of the Prophets or in the
angels and jinn, and they do not believe in Paradise and
Hell.
8 - They forbid their women to wear hijab, and they regard mut'ah
(temporary marriage) as permissible, and they promote the sharing
of women and wealth. It is very clear that this is a religion that
strives to destroy moral values and spread permissiveness and
immorality.
9 - They say that the religion of the Baab abrogates the sharee'ah
of Muhammad (peace and blessings of Allaah be upon him).
10 - They interpret the Day of Resurrection as referring to the
appearance of al-Baha'. Their direction of prayer is the Bahjah in
'Akka in Palestine, where the grave of al-Baha' is located, instead
of al-Masjid al-Haraam.
11 - They pray three times a day, and each prayer has three
rak'ahs, morning, noon and evening. They do wudoo' with rose water,
and if there is none available they regard it as sufficient to say
the Basmalah (Bismillaah il-At-har il-At-har - in the name of
Allaah, the Most Pure, the Most Pure) five times.
12 - They do not regard it as permissible to pray in congregation
except when offering the funeral prayer for the deceased. This
makes clear the extent of their efforts to divide the Muslims, as
they forbid prayer in congregation.
13 - The Baha'is regard the number nineteen as sacred, and they
have nineteen months in their year, each month having nineteen
days.
14 - The Baha'is fast during one of the Baha'i months, which is
called al-'Ala, which lasts from 2-21 March. This is the last of
the Baha'i months. During this month they refrain from eating from
sunrise until sunset. Their fasting month is followed by the
festival of Nawrooz (Persian New Year).
15 - The Baha'is regard jihad and the carrying of weapons and
waging war against kaafir enemies as haraam, in service to the
interests of the colonialists, as we shall see below.
This confirms what is said about them, that they are a movement
that was created by the colonialists, and they are still supporting
it up till now.
16 - They do not believe that Muhammad (peace and blessings of
Allaah be upon him) was the final Prophet; they claim that the
Revelation continued after his death.
17 - They regard pilgrimage to Makkah as invalid, so they go on
pilgrimage to the place where al-Baha' is buried in Akka, in
Palestine.
18 - They do not believe in doing ghusl from janaabah or
purification from impure things, because they believe that whoever
believes in Baha'ism is pure.
19 - Instead of zakaah they have a kind of tax at a rate of 19% of
one's capital, to be paid once.
These are the Baha'is, and these are some of their beliefs, a
mixture of some monotheistic beliefs and idolatrous ideas which
al-Baha' mixed in a strange way and called it revelation and a holy
book. What is wrong with the minds of those who followed him?
The relationship of Baabism and
Baha'ism to the colonialists, Jews and Christians
1 - It was a Russian spy who encouraged al-Shiraazi to claim that
he was the Baab.
2 - al-Baha' took part in the attempt to assassinate King Naasir
al-Deen, the Shah of Iran, but the attempt failed and the plotters
were discovered. Al-Baha' fled to the Russian embassy which granted
him full protection, and did not hand him over to the Iranian
authorities until they had been given a promise that he would not
be executed.
3 - When al-Baha' fled to 'Akka in 1285 AH/1868 CE, he was warmly
welcomed by the Jews who took care of him. From that date, 'Akka
became a centre of Baha'ism and became a holy place for them.
4 - They were supported by some of the Christians. In one of the
Arab states where there is a Baha'i presence, there is the head of
the movement and his lawyer, who are both Christians.
5 - Reports indicate that the Israeli ambassador in one of the Arab
countries visited one of their strongholds and met their leaders,
and urged them to join in some political activities by forming a
group or party and putting up candidates for parliament and getting
involved in other political activities so as to affect the decision
making process. They also promised to make it easy for them to
visit Israel and perform pilgrimage to the grave of al-Baha'.
6 - This group has a number of representatives in the offices and
organizations belonging to the United Nations, where there are
nearly seven people.
After learning all this, you should not be surprised to find out
that the Baha'is regard jihad against the enemy as haraam, and they
say that the Muslims must submit to colonialism and occupation, and
that in his books al-Baha' supported the Zionist migration to
Palestine.
Spread and influence of
Baha'is,
The greatest number of Baha'is are found in Iran, and there are a
few in Iraq, Syria, Lebanon and Palestine. They also have a
presence in Egypt and a few followers in Ethiopia, Uganda, South
Africa and Pakistan. They also have a presence in some western
countries and cities, such as London, Vienna, Frankfurt and Sydney.
Their largest place of worship is in Chicago.
The ruling on them and the scholars'
fatwas concerning them
From the above, it is clear that Baabism and Baha'ism are among the
misguided sects that are beyond the pale of Islam.
A number of fatwas have been issued by Muslim scholars stating that
they are kaafirs and that they are beyond the pale of Islam, and
that we must beware of them.
Shaykh Saleem al-Bashri, the Shaykh of
al-Azhar, issued a fatwa in 1910 CE stating that the Baha'is
are kaafirs.
A ruling was issued on 30/6/1946 CE by
the Shar'i courts in Egypt stating that a woman whose
husband embraces Baha'ism is divorced and must be separated from
him because he is an apostate from Islam.
In 1947 CE the Fatwa Committee in
al-Azhar issued a fatwa stating that the one who embraces
Baha'ism is an apostate.
This was in addition to a fatwa issued
in 1939 CE by the Egyptian Daar al-Ifta' stating that the
Baha'i is an apostate.
There is another fatwa issued by the
Egyptian Daar al-Ifta' in 1968 CE, in which it says: Whoever
embraces the Baha'i religion is an apostate from the religion of
Islam, and the ruling on the apostate in Islam is that he should be
asked to repent and Islam should be presented to him, and his
doubts should be discussed if he has any. If he repents, all well
and good, otherwise he should be executed according to sharee'ah.
End quote from Fataawa Daar al-Ifta'
(6/2138).
In 2003 CE, the Islamic Research
Council in al-Azhar issued a fatwa in which it says: The
Baha'i school of thought and its ilk are a lethal intellectual
epidemic which the state must to its utmost to eradicate.
Shaykh Ibraaheem al-Fayyoomi, the head
of the Islamic Research Committee, confirmed that the
Baha'is are a sect that is beyond the pale of Islam and that has
rebelled against Islam, and it is one of the most dangerous forces
that are opposed to Islam. It developed under the care of the
Zionist colonialists and is still supported by the enemies of
Islam. The Baha'is have a project called "the political project
against the Muslim ummah." Their primary aim is to strike against
Islam and create political and spiritual instability in Muslim
societies. They also reject many verses of the Qur'aan because they
believe that the Muslims have distorted them. They also reject Hajj
and want to destroy the Ka'bah and distribute its rubble throughout
the world.
The former Shaykh of al-Azhar, Jaad
al-Haqq (may Allaah have mercy on him) issued a fatwa stating that
the Baha'is are kaafirs and apostates from Islam, which was
approved by the Islamic Research Committee. In it he said:
Baabism or Baha'ism is a system of thought mixed with philosophy
and various religions, and there is nothing new in it that the
Muslim ummah needs to set its affairs straight and unite it, rather
it is clear that it (Baha'ism) is working in the interests of the
Zionists and colonialists, and it is akin to ideas and ways that
have been inflicted on the Muslim ummah as an act of war against
Islam in the name of religion. End quote.
In the answer to question no. 88689 , we have quoted the fatwa of
Shaykh 'Abd al-'Azeez ibn Baaz (may Allaah have mercy on him),
stating that this is a sect of kufr and beyond the pale of Islam,
and it is not permissible for them to be buried in the Muslim
graveyards.
And Allaah knows best.
Islam Q&A