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The Fardiyyah (obligation) of working
for Khilafah
The revival of an obligation
The obligation we are about to discuss is something the Muslims took for
granted, for well over a thousand years, much like the obligation of Salah
(prayer)
and fasting today which, al-hamdu lillah, are not open to discussion and
debate. However the Prophet (Sallalahu Alaihi Wasallam) did warn us there
would come a time when the Deen will become strange and unrecognizable to
the people and those carrying its Call will be seen as strange due to the
Message that they carry.
He (Sallalahu Alaihi Wasallam) said:
''Islam began strange and it shall return strange. So glad tiding to the
Strangers.'' [Reported by Muslim]
This hadith holds a meaning that is especially reflective of our times, for
in the last hundred years this noble Ummah has witnessed the destruction of
her State and with that, due to the colonization of her lands by the
colonialists, the crushing tidal wave of the western culture. The western
culture completely engulfed her to the point of suffocation. It turned black
into white and white into black. Never did the Ummah encounter such cultural
strangulation, which left her bewildered and confused about the most basic
and rudimentary tenets of her Deen. To cause maximum damage the colonialists
chose their targets carefully when they unleashed their degenerate culture
upon us: they attacked the notion of one Ummah by disseminating the idea of
nationalism and nationhood. The Sharee'ah was depicted as barbaric, harking
back to a medieval age but not suited to an age of reason and modernity.
Whilst the ruling system of Islam, the Islamic Khilafah, was nothing short
of despotism justified under the name of religion.
So what impact did this western polemic have upon the sons of this Ummah?
First of all the effect was mostly noticeable amongst the scholars, authors
and men of letters. Some answered back but with an apologetic tone – so the
Khilafah was deemed to be a democratic system all along– whilst a handful
who had succumbed to the western culture even denied it as having any
Sharee'ah legitimacy, such as the likes of 'Ali Abd ar-Raaziq who, which
will come as no surprise, was influenced by none other than the Kaafir
orientalist Sir Thomas Arnold! For example in his book: 'al-Islam wa Usul
al-Hukm' after attempting to prove that there is no daleel (evidence) for
Khilafah in the Ayah:
''O you who believe! Obey Allah and obey the
Messenger and those in authority from amongst you'' [4:59]
he says on page 11: 'If you want to find out more on this discussion then
please refer to the book 'The Caliphate' by the scholar Sir Thomas Arnold.
The explanation in chapter two and three of that book is excellent and
convincing' This book, quite opportunely it seems, was published a year
after the Khilafah was destroyed in 1925. In it he went to great pains to
argue that the above and other such hadith and ayat which command the
obedience to a Khaleefah do not establish the obligation to appoint a
Khaleefah because they apply only when an imam exists and if he does not
exist then there is no obligation to appoint one. To prove this he adduced
the following breathtaking argument: 'Are we not ordered by the Sharee'ah to
be generous to beggars, respect the poor and treat them well and show
kindness to them? So can anyone who has any intelligence say that this means
the Sharee'ah has obliged us to bring about paupers and orphans?' [al-Islam wa Usul al-Hukm' pp.125-126, in edition published by al-Mu`assasa
al-'Arabiyyah
lid dirasaat wan nashr.]
In time a sense of apathy towards the issue of Khilafah reigned over the
Ummah and in cases even embarrassment. Many saw the Khilafah as a relic of
the past and which should remain in the past or simply impossible to
implement in this day and age; hence there was no alternative but to make
recourse to secularism. This was a time of great turmoil and change for the
Ummah. This is the time when we witnessed the hadith of the Messenger (Sallalahu
Alaihi Wasallam) unfolding before our eyes when he (Sallalahu Alaihi
Wasallam) said:
''Verily, the knots of Islam will be undone one by
one. Whenever one knot is lost then the people grabbed onto the one which
came after it. The first of these knots will be the Ruling and the last will
be the Salah.'' [Reported by At-Tabaraani]
And in another version:
''Verily, the knots of Islam will be undone and
there shall be misguided rulers.'' [Authenticated by al-Hakim in
his Mustadrak]
After losing the Khilafah, like people clutching at whatever they can on a
sinking ship, the Ummah grabbed onto whatever remained of the Deen as
poignantly depicted in the hadith above. However, the good is, and always
will be, in this Ummah and it was not long before she started embarking on
the path of awakening due to the work of the sincere Da'wah carriers. One by
one she began to reclaim the knots she had lost and now she is poised to
reclaim that final knot; the knot of Ruling by Islam.
Today, by Allah's Grace and Mercy, the notion of Khilafah is not strange to
the Ummah, except to those of course who have been inebriated by the western
culture. However, it is important to go beyond the recognition of this
obligation and to familiarize ourselves with its detailed evidences. Like
all other obligations it should be anchored deep within the hearts and minds
of the Ummah such that it can never be expunged from her memory again.
The hadith of our times
The evidences for Khilafah are many. But the evidence I wish to discuss
perfectly describes our reality today: which is that we live at a time when
no Khaleefah exists. And that evidence is the hadith reported by Imam Muslim
on the authority of Nafi' that the Messenger (Sallalahu Alaihi Wasallam)
said:
''The one who removes his hand from obedience he
will meet Allah without a proof for himself' and Whosoever dies without a bay'ah on his neck dies the death of Jahiliyyah.''
This hadith provides the Hukm Shar'i for a situation when Muslims die
without the presence of a Khaleefah to rule over them. Perhaps, this is what
explains the Fuqahaa`s (jurists) relative silence over this hadith
while the numerous other evidences which establish the obligation of
Khilafah have received greater attention and scrutiny. In short, they could
not imagine a situation when a Muslim would die without the presence of a
Khaleefah; that was simply unthinkable! Hence the discussion tended to
centre on the obligation of appointing a Khaleefah after the death of the
previous Khaleefah. Or that it is obligatory to obey the existing Khaleefah
and so having a Khaleefah must be obligatory.
However, one thing is for sure; the unthinkable has happened and the
Khilafah has been destroyed and Muslims are dying while they have no
Khaleefah over them. So what better evidence to start off with than the
hadith which directly addresses our reality?
The process of extraction
What is the Manaat (reality) of the text?
The hadith is describing not one but two types of people since it came in
two parts as indicated by the waw al-isti`naaf or ibtidaa` (in
English the word 'and' is used) (ie the disjunctive syntax where the waw
begins a new sentence) . In the first part it says 'The one who removes his
hand from obedience he will meet Allah without a proof for himself' This is
when the Khaleefah exists and someone withholds his obedience to the
Khaleefah. As for the second part it is not describing the same person since
the waw al- isti`naaf indicates it is beginning a new sentence to make a
different point. This time he (Sallalahu Alaihi Wasallam) says: And (waw al-
isti`naaf) the one who dies without a bay'ah on his neck he dies the death
of jahiliyyah' This is further confirmed by the fact that he repeats the
personal pronoun 'man' (the one who or whosoever). This also indicates the hadith discusses two types of people in two different situations.
To appreciate this point better let us look at another hadith where exactly
the same thing happens:
He (Sallalahu Alaihi Wasallam) said: man maata fee sabeelillah fahuwa
shaheed wa man maata bit-taa'oon fahuwa shaheed [sahih Muslim]
''The one who dies in the Path of Allah he is shaeed and (waw al-
isti`naaf) the one who dies in a plague he is a shaeed''
The death here occurs in two states separated by the waw al- isti`naaf.
So the first death is in the Path of Allah whilst the second death occurs in
a plague. It would be absurd if someone claimed here that the hadith is
talking about the same situation.
Thus the hadith in question is talking about two different situations. The
first situation as we said is when someone withholds his obedience to the
existing Khaleefah. But what about the second part? The second part begins
by saying: 'the one who dies without a bay'ah on his neck..' The waw al-Haal
(waw of condition) in wa laysa fi 'unuqihi bay'ah clarifies the
state in which the person dies, and in this case it is when he dies 'without
a bay'ah on his neck'.
So what is that state when someone does without a bay'ah on his neck.
It can't mean giving the bay'ah because the hadith did not say 'wa lam yu'til bay'ah' (and he did not give the bay'ah) let alone the fact that
giving the bay'ah (pledge) is a kifayah duty (sufficiency) and not an
individual obligation in the first place as indicated by the Ijma' as-sahabah
(consensus of the Sahabah).
What explains the meaning of bay'ah on the neck is the fact that the
contractual bay'ah does not require every single person to physically give
it, rather it is enough for the Ahlul Halli wal 'Aqd (those who represent
the Muslims) to give the bay'ah on behalf of the people. This means that a
person living even outside the Islamic authority has a bay'ah on his neck if
a Khaleefah has been contracted to his post by the representatives of the
Muslims. In fact this was the basic format in which all the Khulafaa' ar-Rashidoon were appointed. None of them were appointed by a bay'ah which
was given by the whole of the population of the Islamic state, rather it was
always the representatives of the Muslims who appointed them. For example
when 'Umar b. al-Khattab was elected as Khaleefah by the ahlul halli wal
a'qd in Madinah the people of ash-Sham and Egypt did not have to give
the bay'ah because the bay'ah was on their neck by virtue of the fact that
the contractual bay'ah had taken place through their representatives the
ahlul halli wal aqd. Those who died in ash-Sham and Egypt during the
Khilafah of 'Umar b. al-Khattab did not die the death of jahiliyyah because
they had the bay'ah on their necks even though they did not come to Madinah
and physically give the bay'ah themselves. This is the difference between
giving the bay'ah and having the bay'ah on one's neck. If however the
representatives of the Muslims in Madinah after 'Umar's death did not
appoint a Khaleefah then the Muslims of ash-Sham and Egypt would not have
the bay'ah on their necks because the contractual bay'ah had not taken place
i.e. a Khaleefah had not been appointed.
Thus, the hadith is very accurate in its description; it is not talking
about giving bay'ah to a Khaleefah but rather having a: 'Bay'ah on the neck
for a Khaleefah' which describes a situation when someone dies without the
presence of a Khaleefah. Hence it is wrong to argue that one cannot use this
hadith to prove the obligation of Khilafah by claiming that it is talking
about situation when the Khaleefah exists. Such an assertion is not
established by the internal indications of the text which show that the
Haal (condition) described is the death which occurs when a Khaleefah is
not present.
As for Ali Abd ar-Raaziq's argument that Sharee'ah has obliged us to look
after beggars and orphans so does that mean if they don't exist we have to
bring them about to fulfill this command or the argument that we are obliged
to obey parents so does that mean we are obliged to bring them back if they
die?! Such arguments to say the least are highly fatuous and cannot be
considered as scholarly opinions for they disregard the fact that the
ahkaam (rules) come with their asbaab (causes). The sabab
(cause) of obedience to parents is their existence and hence upon their
death the sabab (cause) ceases which means the hukm of
obedience also ceases. Also the same applies to beggars and orphans in
respect to the ahkaams (rules) which came pertaining to them. But
this is different when it comes to appointing a Khaleefah because the
sabab (cause) of the presence of a Khaleefah is the presence of the
Jama'ah i.e. Ummah or community which has to look after its affairs by
Islam. So if the community exists then Khaleefah must exist to look after
their affairs.
The Prophet (Sallalahu Alaihi Wasallam) said in a hadith that has been
narrated by Imam Ahmed in his Musnad;
''It is not allowed for three people to be in a
fulaatin (journey) without appointing one of them as an Ameer.''
This hadith makes it clear that whenever a collection of Muslims exist i.e.
jamaa'ah it is prohibited for them to exist except with an ameer i.e.
therefore it is an obligation to appoint an Ameer WHEN there is any jama'ah
i.e. the existence of jama'ah is the sabab (cause) of the obligation
of appointing a Khaleefah.
In fact the term jama'ah in the Islamic text means State, authority,
and Khaleefah. Let us look at the following hadith: Ibn 'Abbas narrated that
Messenger (Sallalahu Alaihi Wasallam) said:
''The one who sees in his Ameer something which
displeases him, let remain patient, for he who separates himself from the
community (Jama'ah) by even so much as a hand span and dies (in this state),
he will die the death of Jahiliyyah,'' (reported by Bukhari and
Muslim.)
Here disobedience and rebellion against the Khaleefah is synonymous with
separation from the Jama'ah. This is because it is obligatory on the Jama'ah
to look after their affairs by Islam. Having a Khaleefah present means this
duty is being fulfilled. But if he is disobeyed this means the obligation of
looking after their affairs by Islam is being neglected since he is the one
who undertakes this task. So the Jama'ah has to obey a Khaleefah so that
their affairs can be looked after. The reason why a Khaleefah needs to exist
is because the affairs cannot be looked after except by him. Thus, the sabab
(cause) of the presence of a Khaleefah is the presence of Jamaa'ah which is
obliged to look after its affairs by Islam. Hence, when the Messenger of
Allah (Sallalahu Alaihi Wasallam) orders us to obey the Khaleefah this means
by Ishaarah (alluded meaning) it is obligatory to appoint a Khaleefah for
how can the Fard (obligation) of ruling by Islam be accomplished if
he did not exist. So it is wrong to say a Khaleefah does not exist so we are
not sinful for not appointing and obeying the Khaleefah. This is because the
sabab (cause) is not his existence, rather the sabab (cause) of his presence
is the presence of a Jamaa'ah which is obliged to look after its affairs by
Islam.
We can see the same point much more clearly in another narration by Ibn 'Abbas which uses the word Sultan instead of Jamaa'ah:
''If anybody sees in his Ameer something which
displeases him, he should remain patient, for he who separates himself from
the authority (Sultan) by even so much as a hand span and dies thereupon, he
would die the death of the days of ignorance,''[Reported by
Muslim]
Here we can see that separation from Jamaa'ah and authority (sultan) are
used synonymously. Authority (sultan) means the body which looks after the
affairs. Jamaa'ah refers to the community whose affairs are looked after by
the Khaleefah. The key thing in both is the obligation of looking after of
the affairs which occasions the presence of a Khaleefah.
Also it is reported that 'Umar b. al-Khattab said:
''There is no Islam without Jamaa'ah and there is
not Jamaa'ah without Imaarah (leadership). And there is no Imaarah
(leadership) without obedience.'' (Reported by ad-Darimi in his
Sunan)
i.e. there is no looking after of the affairs of the Jamaa'ah or authority
(sultan) without an ameer (Imaarah) and naturally there can be no Ameer when
there is no obedience to him. So the Jamaa'ah in order to exist ie for its
affairs to be looked after must appoint an Ameer. And consequently obedience
to this Ameer is obligatory because the obligation of looking after the
affairs is not possible without an Ameer. Thus, when the Prophet (Sallalahu
Alaihi Wasallam) ordered us to give allegiance (bay'ah) or obey the
Khaleefah it has a greater meaning than when he orders us to feed the poor
or look after our parents. We feed the poor because they are poor and we
obey parents because they are parents. Thus when they cease to exist the
hukm ceases. But our obedience to the Khaleefah is because he looks after
the affairs of the Jamaa'ah which itself is an obligation. Thus when the
Khaleefah dies the obligation of obedience to him does not cease because the
sabab (cause) of the obedience still exists which is the looking after of
the affairs. Hence, so as long as the cause of appointing a Khaleefah exists
which is the presence of a Jamaa'ah whose affairs have to be looked after by
Islam then the obligation of appointing him and obeying him remains even if
he did not exist. This is the reason why the order to obey the Khaleefah by
Ishaarah (alluded meaning) means the order to appoint him.
Let us consider the following ayah:
''O you who believe! Obey Allah and obey the
Messenger and those in authority from amongst you'' [4:59]
Here we are obliged to obey those in authority because they are the ones who
look after the affairs. So obedience is due as long the ruler looks after
the affairs by Islam. Since looking after affairs by Islam is Fard then the
obedience to them indicates by Ihsraah that they need to exist. In
another hadith this point is made even more clearer:
''Even if a slave was appointed over you who leads
you with the Book of Allah then hear and obey.''[reported by
Muslim]
Here to emphasis the obedience to the one who looks after the affairs we are
commanded in the style of mubaalagha (exaggeration) to obey even if
the ameer is a slave. I.e. obedience is due because he looks after the
affairs which is an obligation. Hence the order to obey indicates by
ishaarat an-nass (alluded meaning from the text) the obligation of his
presence.
Otherwise we are saying the hukm does not have be fulfilled because
something necessary for its fulfillment does not exist even the though the
sabab (cause) of the hukm still exists! For example if we apply this
type of erroneous thinking on other ahkams look what happens: Jihad
for instance is an obligation whose sabab (cause) is the presence of
Kuffar under the authority of Kufr. So if Kuffar exist under dar al-kufr
then Jihad exists. However to fulfill the Jihad one requires an Ameer by
Iqtidaa (required meaning). Without an Ameer jihad cannot be undertaken
and hence appointment of an Ameer becomes obligatory in order to fulfill
Jihad because that which is necessary to fulfill a wajib is itself a waajib.
So by Iqtidaa the presence of an Ameer becomes waajib. But if we
follow the silly logic mentioned above the conclusion would be Jihad is not
Fard because an Ameer does not exist! Such a conclusion is completely wrong
because the sabab (cause) which caused the obligation of Jihad to exist is
not the presence of an Ameer but the presence of Kuffar in Dar al-kufr. So
as long as kuffar exist the Fard of jihad exists regardless of an Ameer's
presence. Rather what we take from the existence of the Fard is that a Ameer
needs to be appointed in order to fulfill the obligation.
Finally, the use of the expression 'man maata' deserves a further
comment. The reference to the point of death indicates that the hukm (rule)
must exist throughout his life. There cannot be a point in his life when he
is in a state without a bay'ah on his neck i.e. without the presence
of a Khaleefah. So the hukm is continuous unlike the ahkam of obeying
parents where the hukm ends upon their death or the hukm of giving to the
poor which ends when poverty ceases. But the obligation of having a
Khaleefah over you never ceases because text says 'the one who dies'
indicating the continuity of the hukm throughout the life of a person for he
is not allowed to die in situation where the Khaleefah is not present.
What is the Hukm Shar'i?
The legislative value of the above discussion is that it allows us to
extract two hukms: that it is Fard 'ayni (individual
obligation) to have a Khaleefah present and also that it is Fard Kifayah
(obligation of sufficiency) to appoint a Khaleefah.
As for the first hukm it is deduced from the request (talab) in the
hadith that a Muslim should not die without a Khaleefah present. As we said
before 'bay'ah on the neck' is not possible to have without the presence of
the Khaleefah. So if it is not allowed to die without a bay'ah on the neck,
this means it is not allowed to die without the presence of a Khaleefah.
This type of indication (dalaalah) in Usul al-Fiqh is known as
dalaalat al-Iqtidaa (the required meaning of the text). I.e. this is
when the truthfulness or correctness of a statement (sidq al-mutakallim
wa sihhatul malfooz bihi) cannot be established unless one understands
the lafz (expression) in a certain way.
For example:
''And never will Allah grant to the disbelievers a
way over the believers.''[4:141]
Here the mantooq (pronounced meaning) is Allah will not allow the
kaafir to have authority over the believers. However, is this permission in
terms of the occurrence of authority or prohibition of authority? It cannot
be the fist because we know the kuffar in actuality have authority over the
believers in Palestine and Kashmir so the only meaning which will give
truthfulness to the statement is prohibition. So we say the mafhoom
(implicit meaning) of this ayah through dalalat al-iqtidaa (required
meaning) is that Allah prohibits that Kuffar have authority over the
believers.
In the same manner the mafhoom (implied meaning) of 'bayah on the
neck' is the presence of the Khaleefah by the required meaning (dalalaatul
iqtidaa). Thus for the expression 'bayah on the neck' to be truthful we
must understand it to mean presence of the Khaleefah.
Thus, the one who dies without the presence of the Khaleefah would be sinful
due to the qaraa'in which make the request decisive. For example the
preposition 'fee unuqihi' actually means 'ala unuqihi ie
obligation to have on one's neck much like when we say in English someone
has 'a debt on his neck' i.e. he has a debt he has to pay. We can also see the
use of the 'ala in the following hadith of Prophet (Sallalahu Alaihi
Wasallam) said:
wa 'alayka bis sam'I wat taa'ah fee 'usrika wa yusrika wa manshitika wa
makrahika wa atharatin 'alayk
''It is obligatory for you ('alayka) to hear and
obey the ruler in adversity and prosperity, in pleasure and displeasure, and
even when another person is given (rather undue) preference over you.''
[Reported by Muslim in his Sahih/num:1836]
In addition to this is the explicit qareenah (indication) 'dies the
death of Jahiliiayh'. The attribution of a death occurring in the days of
Ignorance establishes beyond any doubt the decisiveness of the request. This
means the command is a Fard which if neglected would entail sin and
punishment. Also, since the personal pronoun 'man' is general this means it
includes every single Muslim i.e. every individual faces death and therefore
the indefinite term 'maata' i.e. dies, coupled with the negation is clear
that every single individual is addressed and hence it is a Fard 'ayni
(individual obligation) to have a Khaleefah present.
As a further proof of the above understanding let us look at other
narrations of the same hadith. It has been narrated on the authority of
'Umar that the Messenger (Sallalahu Alaihi Wasallam) said:
''The One who dies without an Imam he dies the death
of Jahiliyyah''. [Reported on the authority of 'Umar by at-Tabarani
and Abu Nu'aym. The latter declared the hadith as authentic]
Yet in another hadith narrated on the authority of Ibn 'Umar by al-Hakim in
his Mustadrak we have the following version:
''He who abandons the Jamaa'ah by even so much as a hand span is as if he has
taken the knot of Islam off his neck, until he returns.' And he (Sallalahu
Alaihi Wasallam) said: 'whoever dies while there
was no Imaam of a Jamaa'ah ruling over him, his death would be that of the
days of Jahiliyyah.''
It well known the scholars of hadith permitted the narration of hadith by
meaning (riwayah bilma'na). So in the above hadiths the raawi
(transmitter) narrated the meaning of the saying of the Prophet (Sallalahu
Alaihi Wasallam). So whilst the extraction of the hukm from the man maata
hadith in Sahih Muslim is from the implicit meaning (mafhoom), the above two
hadiths however are even more explicit as they make the same point in the
uttered meaning (manTooq). Incidentally, the hadith in Sahih Muslim and the
one above from al-Hakim are both narrated by Ibn 'Umar. The first says 'bay'ah on the neck' while the second says
'while there was no Imaam of a
Jamaa'ah ruling over him'. The meaning is same but the difference is that
the former is understood from the implicit meaning (mafhoom) while the
latter is taken from the uttered or pronounced meaning (mantooq).
As for the second hukm which is that it is Fard to appoint a Khaleefah, this
is deduced from the dalalaatul Ishaarah (the alluded meaning of the text).
The ishaarah is a hukm derived from the text which was not intended directly
from the speech.
For example when Allah (Subhanahu wa ta'ala) says:
''He were are commanded to ask those who know if we
do not know.''
This cannot be done without the presence of Mujtahideen and hence the
presence of mujtahideen in every age obligation in order to find out the
sharee'ah rule on a matter. The ayah did not directly mention the obligation
of having mujtahideen but it is understood from the ishaarah when it
commanded us to ask those who know if we do not know. In the same manner the
'man maata' hadith establishes the obligation of having a Khaleefah present,
this means by ishaarah that it is an obligation to appoint a Khaleefah.
Therefore, when the text says it is Fard to have a Khaleefah present it also
alludes to the obligation of appointing a Khaleefah such that he is present
over us.
Thus, the above hadith clearly establishes the obligation of having a
Khaleefah over us and the obligation of working to appoint a Khaleefah.
On WHOM does the Hukm shar'i apply? Is it an individual (Fard 'ayni) or
collective obligation (Fard kifaa`i) and what does that mean for the Muslim
?
The obligation of having a Khaleefah present is an individual duty. This is
because the personal pronoun 'man' ( which means whoever) is from the
general expression (seeghatul 'umoom) and it encompasses all people.
Its nature is such that if the Khaleefah is present then he is present for
all and if he is absent then he is absent for all thus the obligation covers
all people. It is well known in Usul that the general remains general until
there is another evidence to specify it. Yes the insane, non-baligh are
excluded from this generality but that is not from the mind but there is a
text to say they are not legally responsible (ghayr mukallaf) and hence they
cannot be held responsible for duties they did not have capacity for.
He (Sallalahu Alaihi Wasallam) said:
''Three types of people are exempted from
accountability, the one who sleeps until he wakes up, a child until he
reaches the age of puberty and the insane until he is cured.''[Reported
by Abu Dawood]
Thus, the general remains in its generality unless another text comes to
specify it. And in this case the obligation of having a Khaleefah present is
on every legally responsible (mukallaf) Muslim whether man, woman, layman or
scholar.
As for the obligation of appointing a Khaleefah this is Fard kifaayah
(obligation of sufficiency). However this should not be taken as an excuse
for inaction. This is because in terms of obligation (wujoob) and removal of
the sin (isqaat) the Fard 'ayn and kifayah are the
same. This is because Fard means the Legislator has demanded in a decisive
form the performance of an action which if neglected will result in sin.
Thus the obligation to fulfill the command is on all. Only if the command
has been fulfilled by some then the sin is removed from the rest. This is
because the consideration is for the accomplishment of the Fard and not the
undertaking of the Fard. Until and unless the Fard is accomplished it
continues to be an obligation on all no matter how many people undertook it.
That is why the definition of Fard kifayah is: 'What some have accomplished
then the rest are absolved from sin' (maa aqaamuhul ba'd saqata 'anil
baaqeen) not 'what some have undertaken …' (maa qaama bihil ba'd). There is
a big difference between undertaking an action and accomplishing it. So
until the Fard is accomplished the obligation remains on all. That is why if
the kifayah obligation neglected everyone is sinful and not just a few
people.
For example it is Fard Kifayah for a group to respond when salam is
given to them. The obligation remains on all of them until the obligation is
fulfilled. If one responds with the salam and the Fard is accomplished then
all are saved from sin because the consideration is the accomplishment of
the Fard but if no one respond then all are sinful. Thus Fard kifayah and
'ayn are the same in obligation and removal of the sin.
So it is wrong for someone to say appointing a Khaleefah is Fard kifayah so
let some people do it and we will be saved. This will not save that person
on the Day of judgment because the Fard has not been accomplished and hence
the obligation remains on every single neck. The Ummah has only three days
and two nights to choose a Khaleefah, if they fail to do this after this
time the obligation continues on all and those who undertake the Fard are
saved from the sin. But those who neglect will be sinful for not fulfilling
their Lord's command and they will have to explain themselves to Him on the
Day when His Account (Hisab) is swift.
Kamal Abu Zahrah
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