Who was al-Ghazzaali?
- Categories: Misguided & Deviant Sects -
Q: Could you shed
some light on who Imam al Ghazzali was?
A:
Praise be to Allaah.
Al-Ghazzaali was Muhammad ibn Muhammad ibn Muhammad ibn Ahmad
al-Toosi, who was known as al-Ghazzaali. He was born in Toos in 450
AH. His father used to spin wool and sell it in his shop in
Toos.
The life of al-Ghazzaali needs to be discussed at length because he
went through a number of stages. He indulged in philosophy, then he
recanted and rejected that. After that he indulged in what is known
as 'ilm al-kalaam (Islamic philosophy) and gained a sound grasp of
its basic principles; then he rejected that after it became clear
to him that it was corrupt and filled with contradictions. He was
focusing on 'ilm al-kalaam during the period when he refuted
philosophy, and at that time he was given the title of Hujjat
al-Islam, after he had refuted the arguments of the philosophers.
Then he recanted 'ilm al-kalaam and turned away from it. He
followed the path of the Baatiniyyah (esotericists) and learned
their knowledge, but then he rejected that and showed the beliefs
of the Baatiniyyah to be false, and exposed the manner in which
they tamper with the texts and rulings. Then he followed the path
of Sufism. These are the four stages that al-Ghazzaali went
through. Shaykh Abu 'Umar ibn
al-Salaah (may Allaah have mercy on him) spoke well of him when he
said: "A lot has been said about Abu Haamid and a lot has
been narrated from him. As for these books - meaning al-Ghazzaali's
books which contradict the truth - no attention should be paid to
them. As for the man himself, we should keep quiet about him, and
refer his case to Allaah." See (Abu
Haamid al-Ghazzaali wa'l-Tasawwuf) by 'Abd al-Rahmaan
Dimashqiyyah.
No fair-minded person would deny the rare level of intelligence,
ingenuity and cleverness that Abu Haamid al-Ghazzaali attained.
Al-Dhahabi said of him:
"Al-Ghazzaali, the imaam and shaykh, the prominent scholar, Hujjat
al-Islam, the wonder of his time, Zayn al-Deem Abu Haamid Muhammad
ibn Muhammad ibn Muhammad ibn Ahmad al-Toosi al-Shaafa'i
al-Ghazzaali, the author of many books and one possessed of utter
intelligence. He studied fiqh in his own town, then he moved to
Nisapur in the company of a group of students. He stayed with the
Imaam al-Haramayn and gained a deep knowledge of fiqh within a
short period. He became well-versed in 'ilm al-kalaam and debate,
until he became the best of debaters…" (Siyar A'laam al-Nubala', part 9, p.
323).
You will find that even though Abu Haamid al-Ghazzaali had such a
deep knowledge of fiqh, Sufism, 'ilm al-kalaam, usool al-fiqh,
etc., and even though he was such an ascetic and devoted
worshipper, and had such a good intention and vast knowledge of
Islamic sciences, he still had an inclination towards philosophy.
But his philosophy emerged in the form of Sufism and was expressed
through Islamic ideas. Hence the Muslim scholars, including his
closest companion Abu Bakr ibn al-'Arabi, refuted his ideas. Abu Bakr ibn al-'Arabi said: "Our
shaykh Abu Haamid went deep into philosophy, then he wanted to come
out of it but he was unable to". There were narrated from him
opinions which sound like the Baatini way of speaking, and that may
be verified by looking in al-Ghazzaali's books. See (Majmoo' al-Fataawa, part 4, p.
66).
Even though al-Ghazzaali was very advanced in knowledge, he had
little knowledge of hadeeth and its sciences, and he could not
distinguish between sound ahaadeeth and weak ones. Shaykh al-Islam Ibn Taymiyah (may Allaah
have mercy on him) said: "If we assume that someone narrated
the view of the salaf but what he narrated is far removed from what
the view of the salaf actually is, then he has little knowledge of
the view of the salaf, such as Abu'l-Ma'aali, Abu Haamid
al-Ghazzaali, Ibn al-Khateeb and the like, who did not have enough
knowledge of hadeeth to qualify them as ordinary scholars of
hadeeth, let alone as prominent scholars in that field. For none of
these people had any knowledge of al-Bukhaari and Muslim and their
ahaadeeth, apart from what they heard, which is similar to the
situation of the ordinary Muslim, who cannot distinguish between a
hadeeth which is regarded as saheeh and mutawaatir according to the
scholars of hadeeth, and a hadeeth which is fabricated and false.
Their books bear witness to that, for they contain strange things
and most of these scholars of 'ilm al-kalaam and Sufis who have
drifted away from the path of the salaf admit that, either at the
time of death or before death. There are many such well-known
stories. This Abu Haamid al-Ghazzaali, despite his brilliance, his
devotion to Allaah, his knowledge of kalaam and philosophy, his
asceticism and spiritual practices and his Sufism, ended up in a
state of confusion and resorted to the path of those who claim to
find out things through dreams and spiritual methods. (Majmoo' al-Fataawa, part 4, p.
71).
He also said: "Hence, even
though Abu Haamid refuted the philosophers and classed them as
kaafirs, and expressed veneration of Prophethood [as opposed to
philosophy], etc., and even though some of what he says is true and
good, and indeed of great benefit, nevertheless some of his
writings contain philosophical material and matters where he
followed the corrupt principles of philosophy that contradict
Prophethood and even contradict sound common sense. Hence a group
of scholars from Khurasaan, Iraq and the Maghreb criticized him,
such as his friend Abu Ishaaq al-Margheenaani, Abu'l-Wafa' ibn
'Aqeel, al-Qushayri, al-Tartooshi, Ibn Rushd, al-Maaziri and a
group of earlier scholars. This was even mentioned by Shaykh Abu
'Amr ibn al-Salaah in his book Tabaqaat Ashaab al-Shaafa'i, and was
confirmed by Shaykh Abu Zakariya
al-Nawawi, who said in his book: "Chapter explaining some
important things for which Imaam al-Ghazzaali was denounced in his
books which were unacceptable to the scholars of his madhhab and
others, namely his odd statements such as what he said in (Muqaddimat al-Mantiq) at the
beginning of al-Mustasfa: 'This is the introduction to all
knowledge, and whoever does not learn this, his knowledge cannot be
trusted at all.'"
Shaykh Abu 'Amr said: "I heard
Shaykh al-'Imaad ibn Yoonus narrating from Yoosuf al-Dimashqi, the
teacher of al-Nizaamiyyah in Baghdad, who was one of the famous
deans of the school, that he used to denounce these words and say,
"Abu Bakr and 'Umar and So-and-so and So-and-so…" meaning that
these great leaders had a great deal of certainty and faith even
though they had no knowledge of this Muqaddimah and of any of the
ideas contained in it." (al-'Aqeedah
al-Isfahaaniyyah, part 1, p. 169).
Al-Dhahabi narrated in his book (Siyar
A'laam al-Nubala') that Muhammad ibn al-Waleed al-Tartooshi
said in a letter which he sent to Ibn Muzaffar: As for what you
mentioned about Abu Haamid, I have seen him and spoken to him, and
I think that he is a man of great knowledge, he is intelligent and
capable, and has been studying all of his life, spending most of
his time in study, but then he drifted away from the path of the
scholars and entered the crowd of worshippers. Then he became a
Sufi and forsook knowledge and its people, then he got involved
with "inspiration", those who claim to have spiritual knowledge,
and the insinuating whispers of the Shaytaan. Then he mixed that
with the views of the philosophers and the symbolic phrases of
al-Hallaaj, and he started to criticize the fuqaha' and the
scholars of 'ilm al-kalaam. He almost went astray from the religion
altogether. When he wrote al-Ihya' [i.e., Ihya' 'Uloom al-Deen], he
started to speak of the inspiration and symbolic words of the
Sufis, although he was not qualified to do that and had no deep
knowledge of such matters. Hence he failed, and filled his book
with fabricated reports.
I (al-Dhahabi) say: as for al-Ihya', it contains many false
ahaadeeth, and it contains much that is good. I wish that it did
not contain etiquette, rituals and asceticism that are in
accordance with the ways of the philosophers and deviant Sufis. We
ask Allaah for beneficial knowledge. Do you know what is beneficial
knowledge? It is that which Allaah revealed in the Qur'aan, which
was explained by the Messenger (peace and blessings of Allaah be
upon him) in word and deed, and the type of knowledge which we are
not forbidden to acquire. The Prophet (peace and blessings of
Allaah be upon him) said: «Whoever
turns away from my Sunnah does not belong to me». So, my
brother, you must ponder the words of Allaah and persist in
studying al-Saheehayn, Sunan al-Nasaa'i, Riyaadh al-Nawawi and
al-Adhkaar by al-Nawawi, then you will succeed and prosper.
Beware of the opinions of the philosophers, the practice of
spiritual exercises, the starvation of monks, and the nonsense talk
of those who stay alone for long periods in their monasteries. All
goodness is to be found in following the pure and tolerant way of
the haneefs. And seek the help of Allaah. O Allaah, guide us to
Your straight path.
Al-Maaziri praised Abu Haamid with regard to fiqh, and said that he
had more knowledge of fiqh than of usool al-fiqh (the basic
principles of fiqh). With regard to 'ilm al-kalaam which is usool
al-deen, he wrote books in this field, but he did not have deep
knowledge of it. I realized that he was lacking in experience in
this field, because he studied the branches of philosophy before he
studied usool al-fiqh, so philosophy made him audacious in
criticizing ideas and attacking facts, because philosophy goes
along with one's train of thought, without any shar'i
guidelines.
A friend of his told me that he spent a lot of time studying (Rasaa'il Ikhwaan al-Safa), which
contains fifty-one essays. It was written by someone who has
studied sharee'ah and philosophy, then had mixed the two. He was a
man who was known as Ibn Seena, who filled the world with his
books. He had a good knowledge of philosophy, which led him to try
to refer all the basic principles of 'aqeedah to philosophy. He
strove hard and achieved what others had failed to do. I have seen
some of his books and I noticed that Abu Haamid quotes him a great
deal when he speaks of philosophy. With regard to Sufi views, I do
not know where he got them from, but I have seen that some of his
companions mention the books of Ibn Seena and their contents, and
he also mentioned the books of Abu Hayyaan al-Tawheedi. As far as I
am concerned, he picked up his Sufi ideas from him. I was told that
Abu Hayyaan wrote a huge book about these Sufi ideas, and al-Ihya'
contains a lot of baseless ideas… then he said: In al-Ihya' he
mentioned ideas that have no basis, such as starting with the index
finger when cutting the nails because it is superior to the other
fingers, as it is the finger used in tasbeeh; then moving on to the
middle finger because it is to the right of the index finger, and
ending with the thumb of the right hand. He narrated a report
concerning that.
I (al-Dhahabi) say: this is a fabricated report. Abu'l-Faraj
al-Jawzi said: Abu Haamid wrote al-Ihya' and filled it with
fabricated ahaadeeth which he did not know were fabricated. He
spoke of inspiration and deviated from the framework of fiqh. He
said that what is meant by the stars, moon and sun that Ibraaheem
saw was the barriers of light that keep a person from Allaah, not
the things that are well known. This is like the words of the
Baatiniyyah. (Siyar A'laam al-Nubala',
part 19, p. 340).
Then at the end of his life, al-Ghazzaali (may Allaah have mercy on
him) came back to the belief of Ahl al-Sunnah wa'l-Jamaa'ah. He
focused on the Qur'aan and Sunnah and condemned 'ilm al-kalaam and
its proponents. He advised the ummah to come back to the Book of
Allaah and the Sunnah of His Messenger (peace and blessings of
Allaah be upon him), and to act in accordance with them, as was the
way of the Sahaabah (may Allaah be pleased with them and those who
follow them in truth until the Day of Judgement). Shaykh al-Islam
(may Allaah have mercy on him) said: After that he came back to the
path of the scholars of hadeeth, and wrote Iljaam al-'Awwaam 'an
'Ilm al-Kalaam. (Majmoo Fataawa, part
4, p. 72)
A glance at Iljaam al-'Awwaam 'an 'Ilm al-Kalaam will prove to us
that he had indeed changed in many ways:
1 - In this book he advocated the belief of the salaf, and pointed
out that the way of the salaf was the truth, and that whoever went
against them was an innovator or follower of bid'ah.
2 - He emphatically denounced ta'weel (interpretation of the
attributes of Allaah in a manner that differs from their apparent
meaning). He advocated affirming the attributes of Allaah and not
misinterpreting them in a manner that would lead to denying the
attributes of Allaah.
3 - He emphatically denounced the scholars of 'ilm al-kalaam and
described all their principles and standards as "reprehensible
innovations" which had harmed a great number of people and created
trouble for the Muslims. He said: "The harm caused to a great
number of people is something that has been seen, witnessed and
experienced. The evil that has resulted since 'ilm al-kalaam began
has become widespread even though people at the time of the
Sahaabah forbade that. This is also indicated by the fact that the
Messenger (peace and blessings of Allaah be upon him) and the
Sahaabah, by consensus, did not follow the way of the scholars of
'ilm al-kalaam when they produced arguments and evidence and
analysis. That was not because they were incapable of doing so; if
they had thought that was something good, they would have done it
in the best manner, and they would have studied the matter hard,
more than they did with regard to the division of the estate among
the heirs (al-faraa'id)."
He also said: "The Sahaabah
(may Allaah be pleased with them) needed to prove the Prophethood
of Muhammad (peace and blessings of Allaah be upon him) to the Jews
and Christians, but they did not add anything to the evidence of
the Qur'aan; they did not resort to arguments or lay down
philosophical principles. That was because they knew that doing so
would provoke trouble and cause confusion. Whoever is not convinced
by the evidence of the Qur'aan will not be convinced by anything
other than the sword, for there is no proof after the proof of
Allaah." See (Abu Haamid al-Ghazzaali
wa'l-Tasawwuf).
These are a few of the comments that trustworthy scholars have made
about al-Ghazzaali (may Allaah have mercy on him). Perhaps this is
enough for those who wish to be guided. And Allaah is the Guide to
the straight path.
Islam Q&A
Sheikh Muhammed Salih Al-Munajjid