Should we celebrate Mawlid
(The Prophet's (s) birthday)?
Yes we should celebrate it every year
And every month and every week
And every hour and every moment.
Dr. `Isa al-Mani` al-Humayri, Department of Awqaaf, Dubai
Office of Religious Endowments and
Islamic Affairs, Dubai
Administration of Ifta' and Research
We find nowadays publications filled with lies and deception
which mislead many Muslims into thinking negatively about the
honorable Mawlid of the Prophet. These publications claim that to
celebrate the Mawlid is an act of innovation that goes against
Islam. This is far from the truth, and it is therefore necessary
for those who can speak clearly to help clarify and reverse the
doubts surrounding this most blessed day. It is with this humble
intention that I present the following proofs in support of
celebrating our beloved Prophet's birthday.
The Prophet said, "He who innovates something in this matter
of ours that is not of it will have it rejected." He also said,
"Beware of innovations, for every innovation (kul bida`)
is misguidance."
Those opposed to Mawlid cite this saying and hold that the
word every (kul) is a term of generalization,
including all types of innovations, with no exception, and that
therefore, celebrating Mawlid is misguidance. By daring to say
that, they accuse the scholars of Islam of innovation. At the top
of the list of those they have accused, then, is our Master `Umar
(r). Those in opposition to Mawlid quickly reply to this, "But we
did not mean the Companions of the Prophet Muhammad."
It follows, then, that the meaning of every (kul)
cannot be taken in its general sense. Therefore, although the
Prophet may not have said to celebrate his blessed birthday, it
is nonetheless not innovation to do so. For, as the following
examples show, there were many actions and practices instituted
by his close followers after his time that are not deemed
innovation.
Compiling the Qu'ran.
(From a Prophetic saying related by Zaid Ibn Thabit.(r)) "The
Prophet died and the Qu'ran had not been compiled anywhere. `Umar
(r) suggested to Abu Bakr (r) to compile the Qu'ran in one
book. When a large number of Companions were killed in the
battle of Yamama, Abu Bakr wondered, "How could we do something
that the Prophet did not do?' `Umar said, "By Allah, it is
good.' `Umar persisted in asking Abu Bakr until Allah expanded
his chest for it (Allah made him agree and accept these
suggestions) and he sent for Zaid Ibn Thabit and assigned him
to compile the Qu'ran." Zaid said, "By Allah if they had asked
me to move a mountain, it would not have been more difficult
than to compile the Qur'an." He also said, "How could you do
something that the Prophet did not do?" Abu Bakr said, "It is
good, and `Umar kept coming back to me until Allah expanded my
chest for the matter." The saying is narrated in Sahih Al
Bukhari.
The Maqam of Ibrahim (as) in relation to the Ka'ba.
(Al Bayhaqi narrated with a strong chain of narrators from
Aisha.) "The Maqam during the time of the Prophet and Abu Bakr
was attached to the House, then `Umar moved it back." Al Hafiz
Ibn Hajar said in Al Fath, "The Companions did not
oppose `Umar, neither did those who came after them, thus it
became unanimous agreement." He was the first to build the
enclosure (maqsura) on it, which still exists today.
Adding the first call to prayer on Friday.
(From Sahih Al Bukhari, from Al Sa'ib bin Yazid.) "During the
time of the Prophet (s), Abu Bakr (r) and `Umar (r), the call
to Friday prayer used to occur when the Imam sat on the pulpit.
When it was Othman's (r) time, he added the third call
(considered third in relation to the first adhan and the
iqama. But it is named first because it proceeds the
call to the Friday prayer.)"
Salutations on the Prophet composed and taught by our Master
`Ali (r).
The salutations have been mentioned by Sa'id bin Mansoor and
Ibn Jareer in Tahzeeb al Aathar, and by Ibn Abi Assim
and Ya'qoob bin Shaiba in Akhbar `Ali and by Al Tabarani
and others from Salamah Al Kindi.
The addition to the tashahhud by Ibn Mas'ud.
After "wa rahmatullahi wa barakatu," and the Mercy of
Allah and Blessings, he used to say, "assalamu `alayna
min Rabbina," peace upon us from our Lord. Narrated
by Al Tabarani in Al Kabir, and the narrators are those
of the sound transmitters, as it has been mentioned in Majma'
Al Zawa'id.
The addition to the tashahhud by Abdullah Ibn `Umar.
He added the basmalah at the beginning of the
tashahhud. He also added to the talbia, "labbaika wa
sa'daika wal khayru bi yadayka wal raghba'u ilayika wal `amalu"
This is mentioned in Bukhari, Muslim, et al.
These are some of the developments instituted by the Prophet's
Companions, the scholars, and the honorable members of his
nation, which did not exist during the time of the Prophet, and
which they deemed good. Are they, then, misguided and guilty of
bad innovation?
As for the claim that there is no such thing in religion as
good innovation, here are some sayings of the brilliant scholars
of Islam belying this claim.
Imam Nawawi said in Sahih Muslim (6-21)
"The Prophet's saying every
innovation is a general-particular and it is a reference to
most innovations. The linguists say, "Innovation is any act
done without a previous pattern, and it is of five different
kinds.'" Imam Nawawi also said in Tahzeeb al Asma' wal
Sifaat, "Innovation in religious law is to originate
anything which did not exist during the time of the Prophet,
and it is divided into good and bad." He also said, "Al-muhdathat
(pl. for muhdatha) is to originate something that has no
roots in religious law. In the tradition of religious law it is
called innovation, and if it has an origin within the religious
law, then it is not innovation. Innovation in religious law is
disagreeable, unlike in the language where everything that has
been originated without a previous pattern is called innovation
regardless of whether it is good or bad."
Shaykh Ibn Hajar Al Asqalani, the commentator on Al Bukhari,
said,
"Anything that did not exist during the
Prophet's time is called innovation, but some are good while
others are not."
Abu Na'eem, narrated from Ibrahim Al Junaid, said, "I heard
Ash-Shafi'i saying,
"Innovation is of two types; praiseworthy innovation and
blameworthy innovation, and anything that disagrees with the
Sunnah is blameworthy.'"
Imam Albayhaqi narrated in Manaqib Ash-Shafi'i that
Ash-Shafi'i said,
"Innovations are of two types: that which contradicts the
Qu'ran, the Sunnah, or unanimous agreement of the Muslims is a
innovation of deception, while a good innovation does not
contradict any of these things."
Al `Izz bin Abdussalam said, at the end of his book, Al
Qawa'id,
"Innovation is divided into obligatory, forbidden, recommended,
disagreeable and permissible, and the way to know which is
which is to match it against the religious law."
Clearly we see from the opinions of these righteous scholars,
that to define innovations in worship as wholly negative without
exception is ignorant. For these pious knowers, among them Imam
Nawawi and Ash-Shafi'i, declared that innovations could be
divided into good and bad, based on their compliance or deviance
with religious law.
Moreover, the following Prophetic saying is known even to
common Muslims, let alone scholars: "He who inaugurates a good
practice (sunnatun hasana) in Islam earns the reward of
it, and of all who perform it after him, without diminishing
their own rewards in the least." Therefore it is permissible for
a Muslim to originate a good practice, even if the Prophet didn't
do it, for the sake of doing good and cultivating the reward. The
meaning of inaugurate a good practice (sanna sunnatun hasana)
is to establish a practice through personal reasoning (ijtihad)
and derivation (istinbat) from the rules of religious law
or its general texts. The actions of the Prophet's Companions and
the generation following them which we have stated above is the
strongest evidence.
The ones prejudiced against celebrating the Prophet's birthday
have paved the way for their falsehood by deceiving the
less-learned among the Muslims. The prejudiced ones claim that
Ibn Kathir writes in his Al Bidaya wal Nihaya (11-172)
that the Fatimide-Obaidite state, which descends from the Jew,
Obaidillah Bin Maimoon Al Kaddah, ruler of Egypt from 357-567
A.H., innovated the celebration of a number of days, among them,
the celebration of the Prophet's birthday. This treacherous lie
is a grave insult to the scholarship of Ibn Kathir and the
scholarship of all Islam. For in truth, Ibn Kathir writes about
the Prophet's birthday in Al bidaya wal nihaya [13-136]
"The victorious king Abu Sa'id Kawkaburi, was one of the
generous, distinguished masters, and the glorious kings; he left
good impressions and used to observe the honorable Mawlid by
having a great celebration. Moreover, he was chivalrous, brave,
wise, a scholar, and just." Ibn Kathir continues, "And he used to
spend three hundred thousand Dinars on the Mawlid." In support,
Imam Al Dhahabi writes of Abu Sa'id Kawkaburi, in Siyar A'laam
al nubala' [22-336] "He was humble, righteous, and loved
religious learned men and scholars of Prophetic saying."
Following are some sayings of the rightly guided Imams
regarding the Mawlid.
Imam Al Suyuti, from Alhawi lil fatawi, wrote a
special chapter entitled "The Good Intention in Commemorating
the Mawlid," at the beginning of which he said,
"There is a question being asked about commemorating the Mawlid
of the Prophet in the month of Rabi' Al Awal: what is the
religious legal ruling in this regard, is it good or bad? Does
the one who celebrates get rewarded or not?" The answer
according to me is as follows: To commemorate the Mawlid, which
is basically gathering people together, reciting parts of the
Qu'ran, narrating stories about the Prophet's birth and the
signs that accompanied it, then serving food, and afterwards,
departing, is one of the good innovations; and the one who
practices it gets rewarded, because it involves venerating the
status of the Prophet and expressing joy for his honorable
birth.
Ibn Taymiyya said in his book Iqtida' Al Sirat Al
Mustaqeem (pg. 266)
"Likewise, what some people have innovated, in competition with
the Christians in celebrating the birth of Jesus, or out of
love and veneration of the Prophet⦣128;榱uot; and he
continues "⦣128;洨at the predecessors didn't do, even though
there is a reason for it, and there is nothing against it."
This is a saying of someone who set fanaticism aside and sought
to please Allah and his Prophet. As far as we are concerned, we
commemorate the Mawlid for no other reason but what Ibn Taymiya
said, "Out of love and veneration of the Prophet." May Allah
reward us according to this love and effort, and may Allah
bless the one who said, "Let alone what the Christians claim
about their Prophet, and you may praise Muhammad in any way you
want and attribute to his essence all honors and to his status
all greatness, for his merit has no limits that any expression
by any speaker might reach."
In the same source previously mentioned, Al Suyuti said,
"Someone asked Ibn Hajar about commemorating the Mawlid. Ibn
Hajar answered, "Basically, commemorating the Mawlid is an
innovation that has not been transmitted by the righteous
Muslims of the first three centuries. However, it involves good
things and their opposites, therefore, whoever looks for the
good and avoids the opposites then it is a good innovation.' It
occurred to me (Al Suyuti) to trace it to its established
origin, which has been confirmed in the two authentic books:
Al Sahihain. When the Prophet arrived in Medina he found
that the Jews fast the day of Aashura; when he inquired about
it they said, "This is the day when Allah drowned the Pharaoh
and saved Moses, therefore we fast it to show our gratitude to
Allah.' From this we can conclude that thanks are being given
to Allah on a specific day for sending bounty or preventing
indignity or harm." Al Suyuti then commented, "What bounty is
greater than the bounty of the coming of this Prophet, the
Prophet of Mercy, on that day?"
"This is regarding the basis of Mawlid. As for the
activities, there should be only the things that express
thankfulness to Allah, such as what has been previously
mentioned: reciting Qu'ran, eating food, giving charity,
reciting poetry praising the Prophet or on piety which moves
hearts and drives them to do good and work for the Hereafter."
These are the derivations that those opposed to Mawlid call false
conclusions and invalid analogies.
Imam Mohammed bin Abu Bakr Abdullah Al Qaisi Al Dimashqi.
Jami' Al Athar fi Mawlid, Al Nabiy Al Mukhtar,
Al lafz al ra'iq fi Mawlid khayr al khala'iq, and Mawlid
al sadi fi Mawlid Al Hadi,
Imam Al `Iraqi.
Al Mawlid al heni fi al Mawlid al sani.
Mulla `Ali Al Qari.
Al Mawlid Al rawi fil Mawlid al Nabawi.
Imam Ibn Dahiya.
Al Tanweer fi Mawlid Al basheer Al Nadheer.
Imam Shamsu Din bin Nasir Al Dimashqi.
Mawlid al Sadi fi Mawlid Al Hadi. He is the one who said
about the Prophet's estranged uncle, Abu Lahab, "This
unbeliever who has been dispraised, "perish his hands"
[111: 1], will stay in Hell forever. Yet,
every Monday his torment is being reduced because of his joy at
the birth of the Prophet." How much mercy can a servant expect
who spends all his life joyous about the Prophet and dies
believing in the Oneness of Allah?
Imam Shamsu Din Ibn Al Jazri.
Al Nashr fil Qira'at Al `Ashr, `Urf Al Ta'reef bil
Mawlid al shareef.
Imam Ibn Al Jawzi
Imam Ibn Al Jawzi said about the honorable Mawlid, "It is
security throughout the year, and glad tidings that all wishes
and desires will be fulfilled."
Imam Abu Shama
Imam Abu Shama (Imam Nawawi's shaykh) in his book Al ba'ith
ala Inkar Al bida` wal hawadith (pg.23) said, "One of the
best innovations in our time is what is being done every year
on the Prophet's birthday, such as giving charity, doing good
deeds, displaying ornaments, and expressing joy, for that
expresses the feelings of love and veneration for him in the
hearts of those who are celebrating, and also, shows
thankfulness to Allah for His bounty by sending His Messenger,
the one who has been sent as a Mercy to the worlds."
Imam Al Shihab Al Qastalani
Imam Al Shihab Al Qastalani (Al Bukhari's commentator) in his
book Al mawahib Al Ladunniya (1-148) said, "May Allah
have mercy on the one who turns the nights of the month of the
Prophet's birth into festivities in order to decrease the
suffering of those whose hearts are filled with disease and
sickness."
There are others who wrote and spoke about Mawlid, such as
Imam Al Sakhawi, Imam Wajihu Din bin `Ali bin al Dayba' al
Shaybani al Zubaidi, and many more, which we will not mention due
to the limited space available. From these many evidences, it
should be clear by now that celebrating the Mawlid is highly
commendable and allowed. Surely we cannot simply shrug off as
heretics the scholars and dignitaries of this nation who approved
the commemoration of the Mawlid and wrote countless books on the
subject. Are all these scholars, to whom the whole world is
indebted for the beneficial books they have written on Prophetic
sayings, jurisprudence, commentaries, and other sorts of
knowledge, among the indecent who commit sins and evil? Are they,
as those opposed to Mawlid claim, imitating the Christians in
celebrating the birth of Jesus? Are they claiming that the
Prophet did not convey to the nation what they should do? We
leave answers to these questions up to you.
And yet we must continue to examine the errors which those
opposed to Mawlid utter. They say "If celebrating the Mawlid is
from the religion, then the Prophet would have made it clear to
the nation, or would have done it in his lifetime, or it would
have been done by the Companions." No one can say that the
Prophet did not do it out of his humbleness, for this is speaking
evil of him, so they cannot use this argument.
Furthermore, that the Prophet and his Companions did not do a
certain thing does not mean they made that thing prohibited. The
proof is in the Prophet's saying, "Whoever establishes, in Islam,
a good practice..." cited earlier. This is the strongest evidence
that gives encouragement to innovate whatever practices have
foundations in religious law, even if the Prophet and his
Companions did not do them. Al Shafi'i said, "Anything that has a
foundation in religious law is not an innovation even if the
Companions did not do it, because their refraining from doing it
might have been for a certain excuse they had at the time, or
they left it for something better, or perhaps not all of them
knew about it." Therefore, whoever prohibits anything based on
the concept that the Prophet did not do it, his claim has no
proof and must be rejected.
Thus we say to the rejecters of Mawlid: based on the rule you
have attempted to found, that is, that whoever does anything that
the Prophet or his Companions did not do is committing
innovation, it would follow that the Prophet did not complete the
religion for his nation, and that the Prophet did not convey to
the nation what they should do. No one says this or believes this
except a heretic defecting from the religion of Allah. To the
doubters of Mawlid we declare, "Based on what you say, we convict
you." For you have innovated in the basics of worship a large
number of things that the Prophet did not do⦣128;⦣128;nor
did his Companions, the Generation after the Companions, or the
Generation after them. For instance:
- Congregating people behind one Imam
to pray Salat al Tahajjud after Salat Al Tarawih, in the two
Holy Mosques and other mosques.
- Reciting the Prayer of Completion
of the Qu'ran in Salat al Tarawih and also in Salat al
Tahajjud.
- Designating the 27th night of
Ramadan to complete reading the entire Qu'ran in the two Holy
Mosques.
- A caller saying, after Salat al
Tarawih, in the Qiyam prayer, "May Allah reward you."
- Founding organizations which did
not exist in the time of the Prophet, such as Islamic
universities, societies for committing the Qu'ran to memory,
and offices for missionary work, and committees for enjoining
good and forbidding evil. We are not objecting to these
things, since they are forms of good innovation. We merely
list these innovations to point out that those who oppose
Mawlid clearly contradict their own rule stating that
anything that neither the Prophet nor his Companions did is
innovation. And since they claim that all innovation is bad,
they themselves are guilty.
Yet another claim they make is to say that those who
commemorate the Mawlid are mostly indecent and immoral. This is a
vulgar statement and it only reflects the character of the one
saying it. Are all the distinguished scholars that we have
mentioned, from the point of view of those opposed to Mawlid,
indecent and immoral? We won't be surprised if this is what they
believe. This is a most serious slander. We say, as the poet
said, "When Allah wants to spread a virtue that has been hidden,
He would let a tongue of an envious person know about it."
Those opposed to Mawlid, may Allah guide them, have confused
some expressions, and claim that some religious scholars
associate partners with Allah. Take for example the plea of Imam
Al Busiery to Prophet Muhammad, "Oh, most generous of creation, I
have no one to resort to, save You, when the prevailing event
takes place." They must examine carefully the saying of Imam Al
Busiery: inda hulul il amim, when the prevailing event takes
place. What is al Amim? It means that which
prevails over the whole universe, and all of creation, in
referring to the Day of Judgment. Imam Al Busiery is asking
intercession from the Prophet on the Day of Judgment because on
that Day we will have no one to resort to, or appeal to. Imam Al
Busiery seeks his intercession to Allah through the Prophet, for
when all other Messengers and Prophets will be saying, "Myself,
myself," the Prophet will be saying, "I am the one for it, I am
for it [the Intercession]" It becomes even more clear now that
the doubts of those opposed to Mawlid are unfounded, just as
their charges of associating partners with Allah are unfounded.
This is due to their blindness, both physical and spiritual.
Another similar example can be found in the well-known saying
transmitted by the distinguished Imam Al Kamal bin Al Hammam Al
Hanafi, author of Fath il Qadeer fi manasik al Farisi, and
Sharh al Mukhtar min al sada al ahnaf. When Imam Abu
Hanifa visited Medina, he stood in front of the honorable grave
of the Prophet and said, "O, most honorable of the Two Weighty
Ones (humankind and jinn)! O, treasure of mankind, shower your
generosity upon me and please me with your pleasure. I am
aspiring for your generosity, and there is no one for Abu Hanifa
in the world but you." Again, we must not misinterpret this
entreaty, but realize its true meaning.
Yet another misconception those opposed to Mawlid hold can be
seen in their statements such as these: "What occurs during
Mawlid is mixing between men and women, singing and playing
musical instruments, and drinking alcohol." I myself know this to
be a lie, for I have attended many Mawlids and have not seen any
mixing, and never heard any musical instruments. And as for
drunkenness, yes, I have seen it, but not that of worldly people.
We found people intoxicated with the love of the Prophet, a state
surpassing even the agony of death, which we know overcame our
master Bilal at the time of his death. In the midst of this sweet
stupor he was saying, "Tomorrow I shall meet the loved ones,
Muhammad and his Companions."
To continue, those opposed to Mawlid say, "The day of the
Prophet's birth is the same day of the week as his death.
Therefore, joy on this day is no more appropriate than sorrow,
and if religion is according to one's opinion, then this day
should be a day of mourning and sorrow." This kind of lame
eloquence, is answered by the Imam Jalal al Din al Suyuti, in
Al hawi lil fatawi (pg.193), "The Prophet's birth is the
greatest bounty, and his death is the greatest calamity.
Religious law urges us to express thankfulness for bounties, and
be patient and remain calm during calamities. Religious law has
commanded us to sacrifice an animal on the birth of a child [and
distribute the meat to the needy], which is an expression of
gratitude and happiness with the newborn, while it did not
command us to sacrifice at the time of death. Also, it prohibited
wailing and showing grief. Therefore, the rules of Divine Law
indicate that it is recommended to show joy during the month of
the Prophet's birth, and not to show sorrow for his death."
Furthermore, Ibn Rajab, in his book Al lata'if,
dispraising the rejecters of Mawlid based on the above argument,
said, "Some designated the day of Aashura as a funeral ceremony
for the murder of Al Hussein. But neither Allah nor His Prophet
commanded that the days of the prophets' great trials or deaths
should be declared days of mourning, let alone those with lesser
rank."
We conclude this article with a saying of the Prophet, which
has been narrated by Abu Ya'la, from Hudhaifa and about which Ibn
Kathir said, "It's chain of transmission is good." Abu Ya'la
said, "The Prophet has said, "One of the things that concerns me
about my nation is a man who studied the Qu'ran, and when its
grace started to show on him and he had the appearance of a
Muslim, he detached himself from it, and threw it behind his
back, and went after his neighbor with a sword and accused him of
associating partners with Allah.' I then asked, "Oh, Prophet of
Allah, which one is more guilty of associating partners with
Allah, the accused or the accuser?' The Prophet said, "It is the
accuser.'"
Completed, with all Praises to Allah and salutations and peace
be upon our master Muhammad and the family of Muhammad and his
Companions.
Copyright The Muslim Magazine, 1998