Preface
In the Name of Allah, the
Merciful, the Compassionate
Imam Tahawi's al-'Aqidah,
representative of the viewpoint of Ahlul Sunnah Wal Jamah
has long been the most widely acclaimed, and indeed
indispensable, reference work on Muslim beliefs, of which
this is an edited English translation.
Imam Abu Ja'far Ahmad bin
Muhammad bin Salamah bin Salmah bin `Abd al Malik bin Salmah
bin Sulaim bin Sulaiman bin Jawab Azdi, popularly known as
Imam Tahawi, after his birth-place in Egypt, is among the
most outstanding authorities of the Islamic world on Hadith
and fiqh (jurisprudence). He lived 239-321 A.H., an epoch
when both the direct and indirect disciples of the four
Imams: Imam Abu Hanifah, Imam Malik, Imam Shafi'i and Imam
Ahmad bin Hanbal - were teaching and practicing. This period
was the zenith of Hadith and fiqh studies, and Imam Tahawi
studied with all the living authorities of the day. He began
as a student of his maternal uncle, Isma'il bin Yahya Muzni.
a leading disciple of Imam Shafi'i. Instinctively, however,
Imam Tahawi felt drawn to the corpus of Imam Abu Hanifah's
works. Indeed, he had seen his uncle and teacher turning to
the works of Hanafi scholars to resolve thorny issues of
Fiqh, drawing heavily on the writings of Imam Muhammad Ibn
al-Hasan al-Shaybani and Imam Abu Yusuf, who had codified
Hanafi fiqh. This led Imam Tahawi to devote his whole
attention to studying the Hanafi works and he eventually
joined the Hanafi school.
Imam Tahawi stands out not
only as a prominent follower of the Hanafi school but, in
view or his vast erudition and remarkable powers of
assimilation, as one of its leading scholars. His monumental
scholarly works, such as Sharh Ma'ani al-Athar and
Mushkil al-Athar, are encyclopaedic in scope and have
long been regarded as indispensable for training students of
fiqh.
Al-'Aqidah though
small in size, is a basic text for all times, listing what a
Muslim must know and believe and inwardly comprehend.
There is consensus among the
Companions, Successors and all the leading Islamic
authorities such as Imam Abu Hanifah, Imam Abu Yusuf, Imam
Muhammad, Imam Malik, Imam Shafi'i and Imam Ahmad ibn Hanbal
on the doctrines enumerated in this work. For these
doctrines shared by ahl al-sunnah wa-al-Jama'ah owe
their origin to the Holy Quran and consistent and confirmed
Ahadith - the undisputed primary sources of Islam.
Being a text on the Islamic
doctrines, this work draws heavily on the arguments set
forth in the Holy Qur'an and Sunnah. Likewise, the arguments
advanced in refuting the views of sects that have deviated
from the Sunnah, are also taken from the Holy Qur'an and
Sunnah.
As regards the sects
mentioned in this work, a study of Islamic history up to the
time of Imam Tahawi would be quite helpful. References to
sects such as Mu'tazilah, Jahmiyyah, Qadriyah, and Jabriyah
are found in the work. Moreover, it contains allusions to
the unorthodox and deviant views of the Shi'ah, Khawarij and
such mystics as had departed from the right path. There is
an explicit reference in the work to the nonsensical
controversy on khalq-al -Qu'ran in the times of
Ma'mun and some other `Abbasid Caliphs.
While the permanent relevance
of the statements of belief in al-'Aqidah is obvious, the
historical weight and point of certain of these statements
can be properly appreciated only if the work is used as a
text for study under the guidance of some learned person
able to elucidate its arguments fully, with reference to the
intellectual and historical background of the sects refuted
in the work. Such study helps one to better understand the
Islamic doctrines and avoid the deviations of the past or
the present.
May Allah grant us a true
undersanding of faith and include us with those to whom
Allah refers as `those who believe, fear Allah and do good
deeds'; and `he who fears Allah, endures affliction, then
Allah will not waste the reward of well-doers.'
Iqbal Ahmad
A'zami
In the Name
of Allah, the Merciful, the Compassionate
Praise be to Allah, Lord of
all the Worlds.
The great scholar Hujjat al-lslam
Abu Ja'far al-Warraq al-Tahawi al-Misri, may Allah have
mercy on him, said:
This is a presentation of
the beliefs of ahl-al-Sunnah wa al-Jama'ah, according to
the school of the jurists of this religion, Abu Hanifah
an-Nu'man ibn Thabit al-Kufi, Abu Yusuf Ya'qub ibn Ibrahim
al-Ansari and Abu `Abdullah Muhammad ibn al-Hasan al-Shaybani,
may Allah be pleased with them all, and what they believe
regarding the fundamentals of the religion and their faith
in the Lord of all the Worlds.
- We say about Allah's unity
believing by Allah's help - that Allah is One, without any
partners.
- There is nothing like
Him.
- There is nothing that can
overwhelm Him.
- There is no god other than
Him.
- He is the Eternal without
a beginning and enduring without end.
- He will never perish or
come to an end.
- Nothing happens except
what He wills.
- No imagination can
conceive of Him and no understanding can comprehend Him.
- He is different from any
created being.
- He is living and never
dies and is eternally active and never sleeps.
- He creates without His
being in need to do so and provides for His creation
without any effort.
- He causes death with no
fear and restores to life without difficulty.
- He has always existed
together with His attributes since before creation.
Bringing creation into existence did not add anything to
His attributes that was not already there. As He was,
together with His attributes, in pre-eternity, so He will
remain throughout endless time.
- It was not only after the
act of creation that He could be described as `the
Creator' nor was it only by the act of origination that He
could he described as `the Originator'.
- He was always the Lord
even when there was nothing to be Lord of, and always the
Creator even when there was no creation.
- In the same way that He is
the `Bringer to life of the dead', after He has brought
them to life a first time, and deserves this name before
bringing them to life, so too He deserves the name of
`Creator' before He has created them.
- This is because He has the
power to do everything, everything is dependent on Him,
everything is easy for Him, and He does not need anything.
`There is nothing like Him and He is the Hearer, the
Seer'. (al-Shura 42:11)
- He created creation with
His knowledge.
- He appointed destinies for
those He created.
- He allotted to them fixed
life spans.
- Nothing about them was
hidden from Him before He created them, and He knew
everything that they would do before He created them.
- He ordered them to obey
Him and forbade them to disobey Him.
- Everything happens
according to His decree and will, and His will is
accomplished. The only will that people have is what He
wills for them. What He wills for them occurs and what He
does not will, does not occur.
- He gives guidance to
whoever He wills, and protects them, and keeps them safe
from harm, out of His generosity; and He leads astray
whoever He wills, and abases them, and afflicts them, out
of His justice.
- All of them are subject to
His will between either His generosity or His justice.
- He is exalted beyond
having opposites or equals.
- No one can ward off His
decree or put back His command or overpower His affairs.
- We believe in all of this
and are certain that everything comes from Him.
- And we are certain that
Muhammad (may Allah bless him and grant him peace) is His
chosen servant and selected Prophet and His Messenger with
whom He is well pleased.
- And that he is the seal of
the prophets and the Imam of the godfearing and the most
honoured of all the messengers and the beloved of the Lord
of all the Worlds.
- Every claim to prophethood
after Him is falsehood and deceit.
- He is the one who has been
sent to all the jinn and all mankind with truth and
guidance and with light and illumination.
- The Qur'an is the word of
Allah. It came from Him as speech without it being
possible to say how. He sent it down on His Messenger as
revelation. The believers accept it, as absolute truth.
They are certain that it is, in truth, the word of Allah.
It is not created, as is the speech of human beings, and
anyone who hears it and claims that it is human speech has
become an unbeliever. Allah warns him and censures him and
threatens him with Fire when He says, Exalted is He:
`I will burn him in the
Fire.' (al-Muddaththir 74:26)
When Allah threatens with
the Fire those who say
`This is just human
speech' (al-Muddaththir 74:25)
we know for certain that it
is the speech of the Creator of mankind and that it is
totally unlike the speech of mankind.
- Anyone who describes Allah
as being in any way the same as a human being has become
an unbeliever. All those who grasp this will take heed and
refrain from saying things such as the unbelievers say,
and they will know that He, in His attributes, is not like
human beings.
- `The Seeing of Allah by
the People of the Garden' is true, without their vision
being all-encompassing and without the manner of their
vision being known. As the Book of our Lord has expressed
it:
`Faces on that Day
radiant, looking at their Lord'. (al-Qiyamah 75:22-3)
The explanation of this is
as Allah knows and wills. Everything that has come down to
us about this from the Messenger, may Allah bless him and
grant him peace, in authentic traditions, is as he said
and means what he intended. We do not delve into that,
trying to interpret it according to our own opinions or
letting our imaginations have free rein. No one is safe in
his religion unless he surrenders himself completely to
Allah, the Exalted and Glorified and to His Messenger, may
Allah bless him and grant him peace, and leaves the
knowledge of things that are ambiguous to the one who
knows them.
- A man's Islam is not
secure unless it is based on submission and surrender.
Anyone who desires to know things which it is beyond his
capacity to know, and whose intellect is not content with
surrender, will find that his desire veils him from a pure
understanding of Allah's true Unity, clear knowledge and
correct belief, and that he veers between disbelief and
belief, confirmation and denial and acceptance and
rejection. He will be subject to whisperings and find
himself confused and full of doubt, being neither an
accepting believer nor a denying rejector.
- Belief of a man in the
`seeing of Allah by the people of the Garden is not
correct if he imagines what it is like, or interprets it
according to his own understanding since the
interpretation of this seeing' or indeed, the meaning of
any of the subtle phenomena which are in the realm of
Lordship, is by avoiding its interpretation and strictly
adhering to the submission. `This is the din of Muslims.
Anyone who does not guard himself against negating the
attributes of Allah, or likening Allah to something else,
has gone astray and has failed to understand Allah's
Glory, because our Lord, the Glorified and the Exalted,
can only possibly be described in terms of Oneness and
Absolute Singularity and no creation is in any way like
Him.
- He is beyond having limits
placed on Him, or being restricted, or having parts or
limbs. Nor is He contained by the six directions as all
created things are.
- Al-Mi'raj (the Ascent
through the heavens) is true. The Prophet, may Allah bless
him and grant him peace, was taken by night and ascended
in his bodily form, while awake, through the heavens, to
whatever heights Allah willed for him. Allah ennobled him
in the way that He ennobled him and revealed to him what
He revealed to him,
`and his heart was not
mistaken about what it saw' (al-Najm 53:11).
Allah blessed him and
granted him peace in this world and the next.
- Al-Hawd, (the Pool which
Allah will grant the Prophet as an honour to quench the
thirst of His Ummah on the Day Of Judgement), is true.
- Al-Shifa'ah, (the
intercession, which is stored up for Muslims), is true, as
related in the (consistent and confirmed) Ahadith.
- The covenant `which Allah
made with Adam and his offspring' is true.
- Allah knew, before the
existence of time, the exact number of those who would
enter the Garden and the exact number of those who would
enter the Fire. This number will neither be increaser nor
decreased.
- The same applies to all
actions done by people, which are done exactly as Allah
knew they would be done. Everyone is cased to what he was
created for and it is the action with which a man's life
is sealed which dictates his fate. Those who are fortunate
are fortunate by the decree of Allah, and those who are
wretched are wretched by the decree of Allah.
- The exact nature of the
decree is Allah's secret in His creation, and no angel
near the Throne, nor Prophet sent with a message, has been
given knowledge of it. Delving into it and reflecting too
much about it only leads to destruction and loss, and
results in rebelliousness. So be extremely careful about
thinking and reflecting on this matter or letting doubts
about it assail you, because Allah has kept knowledge of
the decree away from human beings, and forbidden them to
enquire about it, saying in His Book,
`He is not asked about
what He does but they are asked'. (al-Anbiya' 21:23)
So anyone who asks: `Why
did Allah do that?' has gone against a judgement of the
Book, and anyone who goes against a judgement of the Book
is an unbeliever.
- This in sum is what those
of Allah's friends with enlightened hearts need to know
and constitutes the degree of those firmly endowed with
knowledge. For there are two kinds of knowledge: knowledge
which is accessible to created beings, and knowledge which
is not accessible to created beings. Denying the knowledge
which is accessible is disbelief, and claiming the
knowledge which is inaccessible is disbelief. Belief can
only be firm when accessible knowledge is accepted and
inaccessible knowledge is not sought after.
- We believe in al-Lawh (the
Tablet) and al-Qalam (the Pen) and in everything written
on it. Even if all created beings were to gather together
to make something fail to exist, whose existence Allah had
written on the Tablet, they would not be able to do so.
And if all created beings were to gather together to make
something exist which Allah had not written on it, they
would not be able to do so. The Pen has dried having
written down all that will be in existence until the Day
of Judgement. Whatever a person has missed he would have
never got it, and whatever one gets, he would have never
missed it.
- It is necessary for the
servant to know that Allah already knows everything that
is going to happen in His creation and decreed it in a
detailed and decisive way. There is nothing that He has
created in either the heavens or the earth that can
contradict it, or add to it, or erase it, or change it, or
decrease it, or increase it in any way. This is a
fundamental aspect of belief and a necessary element of
all knowledge and recognition of Allah's Oneness and
Lordship. As Allah says in His Book:
`He created everything
and decreed it in a detailed way'. (al-Furqan 25:2)
And He also says:
`Allah's command is
always a decided decree'. (al-Ahzab 33:38)
So woe to anyone who argues
with Allah concerning the decree and who, with a sick
heart, starts delving into this matter. In his delusory
attempt to investigate the Unseen, he is seeking a secret
that can never be uncovered, and he ends up an evil-doer,
telling nothing but lies.
- Al-'Arsh (the Throne) and
al-Kursi (the Chair) are true.
- He is independent of the
Throne and what is beneath it.
- He encompasses everything
and is above it, and what He has created is incapable of
encompassing Him.
- We say with belief,
acceptance and submission that Allah took Ibrahim as an
intimate friend and that He spoke directly to Musa.
- We believe in the angels,
and the Prophets, and the books which were revealed to the
messengers, and we bear witness that they were all
following the manifest Truth.
- We call the people of our
qiblah Muslims and believers as long as they acknowledge
what the Prophet, may Allah bless him and grant him peace,
brought, and accept as true everything that he said and
told us about.
- We do not enter into vain
talk about Allah nor do we allow any dispute about the
religion Of Allah.
- We do not argue about the
Qur'an and we bear witness that it is the speech of the
Lord of all the Worlds which the Trustworthy Spirit came
down with and taught the most honoured Of all the
Messengers, Muhammad, may Allah bless him and grant him
peace. It is the speech of Allah and no speech of any
created being is comparable to it. We do not say that it
was created and we do not go against the Jama'ah of the
Muslims regarding it.
- We do not consider any of
the people of our qiblah to he unbelievers because of any
wrong action they have done, as long as they do not
consider that action to have been lawful.
- Nor do we say that the
wrong action of a man who has belief does not have a
harmful effect on him.
- We hope that Allah will
pardon the people of right action among the believers and
grant them entrance into the Garden through His mercy, but
we cannot be certain of this, and we cannot bear witness
that it will definitely happen and that they will be in
the Garden. We ask forgiveness for the people of wrong
action among the believers and, although we are afraid for
them, we are not in despair about them.
- Certainty and despair both
remove one from the religion, but the path of truth for
the people of the qiblah lies between the two (e.g. a
person must fear and be conscious of Allah's reckoning as
well as be hopeful of Allah's mercy).
- A person does not step out
or belief except by disavowing what brought him into it.
- Belief consists of
affirmation by the tongue and acceptance by the heart.
- And the whole of what is
proven from the Prophet, upon him be peace, regarding the
Shari'ah and the explanation (of the Qur'an and of Islam)
is true.
- Belief is, at base, the
same for everyone, but the superiority of some over others
in it is due to their fear and awareness of Allah, their
opposition to their desires, and their choosing what is
more pleasing to Allah.
- All the believers are
`friends' of Allah and the noblest of them in the sight of
Allah are those who are the most obedient and who most
closely follow the Qur'an.
- Belief consists of belief
in Allah. His angels, His books, His messengers, the Last
Day, and belief that the Decree - both the good of it and
the evil of it, the sweet of it and the bitter or it - is
all from Allah.
- We believe in all these
things. We do not make any distinction between any of the
messengers, we accept as true what all of them brought.
- Those of the Ummah of
Muhammad, may Allah bless him and grant him peace, who
have committed grave sins will be in the Fire, but not
forever, provided they die and meet Allah as believers
affirming His unity even if they have not repented. They
are subject to His will and judgement. If He wants, He
will forgive them and pardon them out of His generosity,
as is mentionied in the Qur'an when He says:
`And He forgives anything
less than that (shirk) to whoever He wills' (al-Nisa' 4:
116);
and if He wants, He will
punish them in the Fire out of His justice and then bring
them out of the Fire through His mercy, and for the
intercession of those who were obedient to Him, and send
them to the Garden. This is because Allah is the Protector
of those who recognize Him and will not treat them in the
Next World in the same way as He treats those who deny Him
and who are bereft of His guidance and have failed to
obtain His protection. O Allah, You are the Protector of
Islam and its people; make us firm in Islam until the day
we meet You.
- We agree with doing the
prayer behind any of the people of the qiblah whether
right-acting or wrong-acting, and doing the funeral prayer
over any of them when they die.
- We do not say that any of
them will categorically go to either the Garden or the
Fire, and we do not accuse any of them of kufr
(disbelief), shirk (associating partners with Allah), or
nifaq (hypocrisy), as long as they have not openly
demonstrated any of those things. We leave their secrets
to Allah.
- We do not agree with
killing any of the Ummah of Muhammad, may Allah bless him
and grant him peace, unless it is obligatory by Shari'ah
to do so.
- We do not recognize
rebellion against our Imam or those in charge of our
affairs even if they are unjust, nor do we wish evil on
them, nor do we withdraw from following them. We hold that
obedience to them is part of obedience to Allah, The
Glorified, and therefore obligatory as long as they do not
order to commit sins. We pray for their right guidance and
pardon from their wrongs.
- We follow the Sunnah of
the Prophet and the Jama'ah of the Muslims, and avoid
deviation, differences and divisions.
- We love the people of
justice and trustworthiness, and hate the people of
injustice and treachery.
- When our knowledge about
something is unclear, we say: `Allah knows best'.
- We agree with wiping over
leather socks (in Wudu) whether on a journey or otherwise,
just as has come in the (consistent and confirmed) ahadith.
- Hajj and jihad under the
leadership of those in charge of the Muslims, whether they
are right or wrong-acting, are continuing obligations
until the Last Hour comes. Nothing can annul or controvert
them.
- We believe in Kiraman
Katibin (the noble angels) who write down our actions for
Allah has appointed them over us as two guardians.
- We believe in the Angel of
Death who is charged with taking the spirits of all the
worlds.
- We believe in the
punishment in the grave for those who deserve it, and in
the questioning in the grave by Munkar and Nakir about
one's Lord, one's religion and one's prophet, as has come
down in ahadith from the Messenger of Allah, may Allah
bless him and grant him peace, and in reports from the
Companions, may Allah be pleased with them all.
- The grave is either one of
the meadows of the Garden or one of the pits of the
Fire.
- We believe in being
brought back to life after death and in being recompensed
for our actions on the Day of Judgement, and al-'Ard,
having been shown them and al-Hisab, brought to account
for them. And Qira'at al-Kitab, reading the book, and the
reward or punishments and in al-Sirat (the Bridge) and al-Mizan
(the Balance).
- The Garden and the Fire
are created things that never come to an end and we
believe that Allah created them before the rest of
creation and then created people to inhabit each of them.
Whoever He wills goes to the Garden out of His Bounty and
whoever He wills goes to the Fire through His justice.
Everybody acts in accordance with what is destined for him
and goes towards what he has been created for.
- Good and evil have both
been decreed for people.
- The capability in terms of
Tawfiq (Divine Grace and Favour) which makes an action
certain to occur cannot be ascribed to a created being.
This capability is integral with action, whereas the
capability of an action in terms of having the necessary
health, and ability, being in a position to act and having
the necessary means, exists in a person before the action.
It is this type of capability which is the object of the
dictates of Shariah. Allah the Exalted says:
`Allah does not charge a
person except according to his ability'. (al-Baqarah 2:
286)
- People's actions are
created by Allah but earned by people.
- Allah, the Exalted, has
only charged people with what they are able to do and
people are only capable to do what Allah has favoured
them. This is the explanation of the phrase: `There is no
power and no strength except by Allah.' We add to this
that there is no stratagem or way by which anyone can
avoid or escape disobedience to Allah except with Allah's
help; nor does anyone have the strength to put obedience
to Allah into practice and remain firm in it, except if
Allah makes it possible for them to do so.
- Everything happens
according to Allah's will, knowledge, predestination and
decree. His will overpowers all other wills and His decree
overpowers all stratagems. He does whatever He wills and
He is never unjust. He is exalted in His purity above any
evil or perdition and He is perfect far beyond any fault
or flaw. `He will not be asked about what He does but they
will he asked.' (al-Anbiya' 21: 23)
- There is benefit for dead
people in the supplication and alms-giving of the
living.
- Allah responds to people's
supplications and gives them what they ask for.
- Allah has absolute control
over everything and nothing has any control over Him.
Nothing can be independent of Allah even for the blinking
of an eye, and whoever considers himself independent of
Allah for the blinking of an eye is guilty of unbelief and
becomes one of the people of perdition.
- Allah is angered and can
be pleased but not in the same way as any creature.
- We love the Companions of
the Messenger of Allah but we do not go to excess in our
love for any one individual among them nor do we disown
any one of them. We hate anyone who hates them or does not
speak well of them and we only speak well of them. Love of
them is a part of Islam, part of belief and part of
excellent behaviour, while hatred of them is unbelief,
hypocrisy and rebelliousness.
- We confirm that, after the
death of the Messenger of Allah, may Allah bless him and
grant him peace, the caliphate went first to Abu Bakr al-Siddiq,
may Allah be pleased with him, thus proving his excellence
and superiority over the rest of the Muslims; then to `Umar
ibn alKhattab, may Allah be pleased with him; then to `Uthman,
may Allah be pleased with him; and then to `Ali ibn Abi
Talib, may Allah be pleased with him. These are the
Rightly-Guided Caliphs and upright leaders.
- We bear witness that the
ten who were named by the Messenger of Allah, may Allah
bless him and grant him peace, and who were promised the
Garden by him, will be in the Garden, as the Messenger of
Allah, may Allah bless him and grant him peace, whose word
is truth, bore witness that they would he. The ten are:
Abu Bakr, `Umar, `Uthman, `Ali, Talhah, Zubayr, Sa'd,
Sa'id, `Abdur-Rahman ibn `Awf and Abu `Ubaydah ibn al-Jarrah
whose title was the trustee of this Ummah, may Allah be
pleased with all of them.
- Anyone who speaks well of
the Companions of the Messenger of Allah, may Allah bless
him and grant him peace, and his wives and offspring, who
are all pure and untainted by any impurity, is free from
the accusation of hypocrisy.
- The learned men of the
first community and those who followed in their footsteps
- the people of virtue, the narrators of the Ahadith, the
jurists and analysts- they must only be spoken about in
the best way and anyone who says anything bad about them
is not on the right path.
- We do not prefer any of
the saintly men among the Ummah over any of the Prophets
but rather we say that any one of the Prophets is better
than all the awliya' put together.
- We believe in what we know
of Karamat, the marvels of the awliya' and in authentic
stories about them from trustworthy sources.
- We believe in the signs of
the Hour such as the appearance of the Dajjal and the
descent of `Isa ibn Maryam, peace be upon him, from heaven
and we believe in the rising of the sun from where it sets
and in the emergence of the Beast from the earth.
- We do not accept as true
what soothsayers and fortune-tellers say, nor do we accept
the claims of those who affirm anything which goes against
the Book, the Sunnah and the consensus of the Muslim Ummah.
- We agree that holding
together is the true and right path and that separation is
deviation and torment.
- There is only one religion
of Allah in the heavens and the earth and that is the
religion of Islam. Allah says:
`Surely religion in the
sight of Allah is Islam'. (Al `Imran 3:19)
And He also says:
`I am pleased with Islam
as a religion for you'. (al-Matidah 5:3)
- Islam lies between going
to excess and falling short, between Tashbih (likening of
Allah's attributes to anything else), and Tatil (denying
Allah's attributes), between fatalism and refusing decree
as proceeding from Allah and between certainty (without
being conscious of Allah's reckoning) and despair (of
Allah's mercy).
- This is our religion and
it is what we believe in, both inwardly and outwardly, and
we renounce any connection, before Allah, with anyone who
goes against what we have said and made clear.
We ask Allah to make us firm
in our belief and seal our lives with it and to protect us
from variant ideas, scattering opinions and evil schools of
view such as those of the Mushabbihah, the Mu'tazilah, the
Jahmiyyah the Jabriyah, the Qadriyah and others like them
who go against the Sunnah and Jama'ah and have allied
themselves with error. We renounce any connection with them
and in our opinion they are in error and on the path of
destruction.
We ask Allah to protect us
from all falsehood and we ask His Grace and Favour to do all
good. |