A hadith (Arabic: حَدِيْث, pronounced: "ha-deeth") is the
narration of an event from the life of Muhammad, the prophet of Islam. In English, the word hadith is also
used as the plural word for a group of these narrations although the
plural in Arabic is a-HAA-deeth.
In the first two centuries
of Islam, during the period of territorial
expansion, there arose a need to accommodate a great diversity of cultures in the Muslim community. The hadiths then multiplied in number
and were often fabricated in order to create a normative past that could
accommodate contemporary situations. Thus many early opinions on the religious
law and dogma of Islam, as well as sectarian
prophecies and other expectations, were cast in the form of hadiths. Once the
Prophet’s personal example, as recorded in hadiths, became established as the
universal Muslim norm (Sunnah), however, Muslim scholars attempted to
determine forgeries or doubtful reports among the existing body of hadiths.
They were bound in principle to accept any textually reliable hadith and had to
restrict themselves principally to the scrutiny of a sanad (plural, isnād)—i.e.,
a chain of oral or written transmission by which the reliability of a hadith
was determined (see isnād).
All acceptable hadiths
therefore fall into three general categories: ṣaḥīḥ (sound),
those with a reliable and uninterrupted chain of transmission and a matn (text)
that does not contradict orthodox belief; ḥasan (good), those
with an incomplete sanad or with transmitters of questionable
authority; ḍaʿīf (weak), those whose matn or
transmitters are subject to serious criticism.
The isnād are
further evaluated according to the completeness of their chains: they may be
unbroken and reliable all the way back to Muhammad (musnad) yet very
short (ʿālī), implying less likelihood of
error; they may lack one authority in the chain of transmitters or may be
missing two or more transmitters (muʿḍal) or may have an obscure
authority, referred to simply as “a man” (mubham).
The transmitters themselves,
once established in the historical record as reliable men, determine further
categories; the same tradition may have been handed down concurrently through
several different isnād (mutawātir), indicating a long
and sound history, or a hadith may have been quoted by three different
trustworthy authorities (mashhūr) or by only one (āḥad).
Many scholars produced collections of hadiths, the
earliest compilation being the great Musnad of Aḥmad ibn Ḥanbal, arranged by isnād.
But only six collections, known as al-kutub al-sittah (“the
six books”), arranged by matn—those of al-Bukhārī (died
870), Muslim ibn al-Ḥajjāj (died
875), Abū Dāʾūd (died
888), al-Tirmidhī (died 892), Ibn
Mājāh (died 886), and al-Nasāʾī (died 915)—came to be recognized as canonical in orthodox Islam, though the
books of al-Bukhārī and Muslim enjoy a prestige that virtually eclipses the other
four.
Comments
Post a Comment