Al-Sha'rani Explained

Religion:Islam
Era:Early modern period
'Abd al-Wahhab al-Sha'rani
Arabic: عبد الوهاب ابن أحمد الشعرانى
Birth Date:1493
Birth Place:Cairo, Mamluk Sultanate
Death Place:Cairo, Egypt Eyalet, Ottoman Empire
Region:Egypt
Denomination:Sunni
Jurisprudence:Shafi'i
Creed:Ash'ari[1]
Main Interests:Islamic Jurisprudence, Hadith, History, Tasawwuf, Islamic theology
Works:Al-Mizan al-Kubra
Al-Tabaqat al-Kubra
Influences:Al-Shafi'i
Abu Hasan al-Ash'ari
Ibn Arabi
Zakariyya al-Ansari
Al-Suyuti
Al-Qastallani
Influenced:Al-Munawi
Ibrahim al-Bajuri

Abd al-Wahhab al-Sha'rani (1492/3 - 1565, AH 898 - 973, full name Arabic: عبد الوهاب ابن أحمد الشعرانى ) was a highly influential Egyptian scholar.[2] He was an eminent jurist, traditionist, historian, mystic and theologian.[3] [4] [5] [6] He was one of the Islamic revivalists and scholastic saints of the sixteenth century. He is credited for reviving Islam and is one of the most prolific writers of the early Egyptian-Ottoman period. His legal, spiritual, and theological writings are still widely read in the Muslim world today.[7] [8] He is regarded as "one of the last original thinkers in Islam."[9] He was the founder of an Egyptian order of Sufism, eponymously known as . The order gradually declined after Shaʿrani's death, although it remained active until the 19th century.[10]

Name and Origin

Al-Sha'rani claimed that Musa Abu 'Imran, the son of the Sultan of Tlemcen in North Africa, was his ancestor five generations ago. Sheikh Abu Madyan Shu'ayb, the Shadhili Sufi tradition's founder, sent Musa to Egypt as one of his disciples. The family finally made their home in the Monufia province's Sakiyat Abu Sha'ra village, hence the name "Sha'rani."[11]

Biography

Birth

In a village north of Cairo, Egypt, Abd al-Wahhab Ibn Ahmad al-Sha'rani was born in the years 898 or 899 A.H. (1492/1493 C.E.).

Education

Despite the fact that he lost his father when he was still a little child, he started his quest for knowledge at a young age. Under the guidance of his brother, he had memorised the Qur'an by the time he was seven years old. He relocated to Cairo with an aim of studying at Al-Azhar University, where he would flourish in his quest for knowledge. He had memorised countless scriptures from all the sacred disciplines in a short period of time. These manuscripts ranged in length from hundreds to thousands of pages and they include Al-Minhaj by Al-Nawawi, Alfiyyah Malik by Ibn Malik, Al-Tawhid by Ibn Hisham, and other valuable books. He also memorized the book “Al-Rawd Mukhtasar Al-Rawdah”, which is considered one of the most comprehensive books on the jurisprudence of the Shafi’i school. It was in this school where he gained his high fame.[12] Al-Sha'rani's impressive study of all four schools of Islamic jurisprudence places him among the elite and of the few Islamic scholars in history to master all four Sunni madhabs. He was in love with hadith sciences and exhaustively worked hard in mastering it and he took the path of Sufism and strived for himself after mastering the Arabic sciences.[13]

Teachers

Al-Sha'rani elaborated extensively in mentioning his sheikhs in his books, and showed the extent of his veneration for them, especially in his book “Al-Tabaqat al-Kubra”, and mentioned that they are about fifty of them. The most famous amongst them were intellectual giants in Islamic history:[14]

Spiritual Journey

Al-Sha'rani sought a Sufi shaykh after achieving the greatest levels of proficiency in the Islamic disciplines. He made the decision to proceed with Shaykh Ali al-Khawas, who, following a brief conversation, gave al-Sha'rani the order to sell all of his numerous books and give the earnings to the needy. Al-Sha'rani sold all of his books, but he hung onto one because it was special to him. Al-Sha'rani wondered aloud, "Is this book really worth risking my journey to Allah?" as he made his way to al-Khawas' home. He turned around right away and sold the book. Al-Sha'rani was ordered to withdraw into seclusion for a whole year with the stringent condition of avoiding all gatherings of Islamic knowledge after informing al-Khawas that he had completed this assignment. Only then did al-Khawas take him on as a close friend and personally direct his spiritual journey. Only a few days after he began his spiritual journey to Allah (God), his friendship with Shaykh Ali al-Khawas began to bear spiritual fruit, and al-Sha'rani would eventually take over his teacher's position of authority on the path.

Death

Al-Sha’rani died on 12 Jumada 973 AH/5 December 1565 AD). His final words on Earth were: “I am going to my Lord, the Merciful, the Munificent.”[15] He was buried in the Zawiya that had been created for him. As the leader of Zawiya and the tariqa, his son 'Abd al-Rahim succeeded him.

Views

Sufism

Al-Sha'rani stands for the traditional, moderately ascetic, non-political, and orthodox strain of Egyptian Sufism. Although Shadhili ethics and literature had an impact on him, he did not identify with that tariqa because he found it to be too aristocratic. Socially, he belonged to the Badawiyya, the tariqa of Ahmad al-Badawi, whom he admired, but he also vehemently opposed the Badawiyya and other such Sufi orders for their excesses, their disdain for Sharia law, and their lack of respect for the ulama. Al-Sha'rani also disparages the Khalwati order, which was once prominent among Turkish soldiers, claiming that it encourages hallucinations rather than genuine religious experience. He never expresses his own tariqa affiliation and generally aligns with the tariq al-Kawn, or Al-Junayd's alternative approach. His introduction into 26 tariqas appears to have been merely ceremonial or done to earn barakah.

Al-Sha'rani exposed frauds and impostors posing as Sufis in his work al-Tabaqat. He was very critical and harsh towards charlatans who engage in innovation that go against the Book and Sunnah.

Fiqh

His seminal work Al-Mīzan al-Kubra (The Supreme Scale), al-Sha'rani present a theory based on Sufi presumptions that strives to unite or at least equalise the four madhabs and emphasises the need to reduce the gaps between them. In contrast to the opinions held by their narrow-minded imitators (Muqallid), he thought there were no fundamental differences between the founders of the madhab. As saints, the founders had access to the Source of the Law. There is only one Sharia, he claims, and it has two standards: one that is harsh for those who are steadfast in their faith and one that is lenient for those who are not. Al-Sha'rani often condemned the fuqaha (jurists) for burdening the common people with intricate legal issues that had little bearing on the core principles of Islam.[16]

Ibn Arabi

In his capacity as a historian of Sufism and as a defender of it, Al-Sha'rani assembled collections of Tabakat that contained the lives and sayings of Sufis. He maintains that genuine Sufis have never violated the Shar'ia in word or deed, and that any appearance to the contrary is the result of misunderstanding, erroneous interpretation, a lack of comprehension of Sufi terminology, or interpolation by adversaries. Al-Sha'rani made this decision to uphold the orthodoxy of the great mystic Shaykh al-Akhbar Muhyi al-Din Ibn al-Arabi, whose principles he epitomises in his Al-Yawakit wa 'I-djawahir by simplifying the mystic's complex doctrines. Al-Sha'rani, like Al-Suyuti before him, maintained that one should regard Ibn Arabi as a great saint but refrain from reading his problematic books.[17]

Works

See also

Sources

Notes and References

  1. Book: Spevack, Aaron. The Archetypal Sunni Scholar: Law, Theology, and Mysticism in the Synthesis of Al-Bajuri. 89. State University of New York Press. 2014. 978-1-4384-5370-5.
  2. Book: Amy Singer, Michael Bonner, Mine Ener. Poverty and Charity in Middle Eastern Contexts. State University of New York Press. 17 July 2003. 9780791457375. 230.
  3. Book: Choueiri . Youssef M. . A Companion to the History of the Middle East. Wiley. 2 September 2008. 9781405183796. 120.
  4. Book: Carl F. Petry, M. Daly . The Cambridge History of Egypt. Cambridge University Press. 10 December 1998. 2. 26.
  5. Book: Katz . Marion H. . Prayer in Islamic Thought and Practice. Cambridge University Press. 6 May 2013. 9780521887885. 151.
  6. Book: Martin . B. G. . Muslim Brotherhoods in Nineteenth-Century Africa. Cambridge University Press. 13 February 2003. 9780521534512. 32.
  7. Web site: Abdul Aziz Suraqah. Our Pledge with the Prophet: The Muhammadan Covenants By Imam al-Sha'rani. English. almadina.org. https://archive.today/O5s64/. 29 April 2024.
  8. Book: Michael Winter. Historians of the Ottoman Empire: al-Sharani (Abdulwahhab b. Ahmad). University of Chicago. October 2005.
  9. Book: Willis . John R. . In the Path of Allah 'Umar, An Essay Into the Nature of Charisma in Islam'. Taylor & Francis. 3 April 2013. 9781136283505. 164.
  10. Book: The Ottoman World. Christine. Woodhead. 15 December 2011. Routledge. 9781136498947. Google Books.
  11. Book: Hanif . N. . Biographical Encyclopaedia of Sufis Africa and Europe. Sarup & Sons. 2002. 9788176252676. 171-2.
  12. Web site: Who is Imam Abd al-Wahhab al-Sha'rani?. mufakeroon.com.
  13. Al-Shaarani, Flags of Islam, authored by: Tawfiq Al-Taweel.
  14. Web site: Wassim Hassan. Abd al-Wahhab al-Sha'rani and his Al-Minan al-Kubra. English. traversingtradition.com. https://archive.today/20240721044459/https://traversingtradition.com/2022/11/07/abd-al-wahhab-al-sharani-and-his-al-minan-al-kubra/. 21 July 2024.
  15. Web site: Sayyidina Abdul Wahhab Al-Sha’rani. mazaratmisr.org.
  16. This issue is partially discussed by Ahmed Fekry Ibrahim, "Al-Sha`rani's Response to Legal Purism: A Theory of Legal Pluralism", in Islamic Law and Society, vol. 20 (2013, pp. 110-140.
  17. Book: Spevack, Aaron. The Archetypal Sunni Scholar: Law, Theology, and Mysticism in the Synthesis of Al-Bajuri. 90. State University of New York Press. 2014. 978-1-4384-5370-5.