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The Substantiation of the People
of Belief that The Reliance for Fasting Is On Sighting the Crescent
of Ramadan or Completing Thirty Days of Sha^ban
Praise be to Allah, the Lord
of the Worlds, Who ordered us to implement what the Messenger
brought and to leave out what he forbade.
May Allah raise the rank of our Master, Muhammad, who put us on
a clear, truthful path. May Allah raise the rank of the Al of
the Prophet and his Companions. May Allah protect the Muslim nation
from what the Prophet fears for them.
Fasting the month of Ramadan
is a great worship. The following Qudsiyy hadith narrated by al-Bukhariyy
is sufficient to show the merit of Ramadan:
which means: <<All
the deeds of the son of Adam are his except fasting--it is for
Me and I reward for it.>> Fasting Ramadan is among the best
acts of obedience, among the greatest deeds, and one of the most
important matters of Islam. This is ascertained by the hadiths
al-Bukhariyy and Muslim reported that Islam is based on five important
matters; the Prophet counted fasting Ramadan among them.
Allah, ta^ala, revealed in the Qur’an a method and a set
of rules clear of falsehood for determining the beginning and
ending of the month of Ramadan. Moreover, Allah revealed this
method and set of rules on the tongue of His Prophet, who did
not speak out of his own. Jibril descended to Prophet Muhammad
with the Sunnah as well as with the Qur’an. The Muslims
took these rules from the Prophet and implemented them from the
time of the Prophet until our days. This method is based on sighting
the crescent with the naked eye in towns, villages, locales, and
countries. All those who lived in Muslim countries and became
familiar with their customs know this fact. The Muslims’
custom comprises going out to sight the crescent, gathering in
spots where sighting is clear, and firing guns or igniting fires
on the tops of mountains when the sighting of the crescent is
confirmed. Such sighting announces the beginning of the honorable
month of Ramadan or the advent of the blessed ^Id. These are nice
habits--their roots go back to the time of the Companions. People
of Knowledge observed these practices during different times and
respected pious Muslims were keen to participate in them. These
practices were established among Muslims around the world.
We were surprised by the sudden emergence of an innovation from
a faction wanting us to quit following this dignified route and
methodology of the Prophet. Instead, they want us to follow the
calculations of astronomers for determining the beginning of the
month--for both fasting and for the day of ^Id--and not to rely
on the testimony of the trustworthy ones and the pious and God-fearing
Muslims.
A group of people gathered in North America, voted, and decided
by the relative majority to rely on calculation for determining
the beginning and ending of the month of Ramadan for 1413 AH and
1414 AH. They made it incumbent upon the Muslims to follow their
scheme as if the rules of Allah’s Religion are known by
the vote of the relative majority or are deduced by mere opinion!
Verily we belong to Allah and to Him we shall return.
Deducing judgments is the role of the mujtahid mutlaq, like ash-Shafi^iyy,
Malik, AbuHanifah, or Ahmad. It may also be done by the mujtahids
who are restricted to a school of thought (madhhab), like al-Juwayniyy,
the Imam of the Haramayn; al-Khattabiyy; Ibn Daqiq al-^Id; al-Halimiyy,
and those who attained their rank.
Who among those who met and voted in North America have attained
a rank equal to the aforementioned, or even to one-tenth of one-tenth
of their rank in knowledge and piety? Not one of them has even
memorized one book of fiqh usually given to beginners. We are
certain they will not succeed in convincing the masses of the
Muslim nation of their words. They will not be able to make them
follow their innovated school of thought. Instead, they will be
like those who butt the rock...they only hurt their heads.
However, since this group announced the aforementioned matters,
we could not remain silent. It is not sufficient for us to only
deny their saying in our hearts because it is obligatory to advise
the Muslims. Moreover, ordering the lawful is the method of the
pious. We opted to imitate the successful Muslims by declaring
the truth and uprooting the falsehood while hoping to gain reward
and be saved on the Day of Judgment. We named this rushed treatise.
The Substantiation Of the People of Belief that
The Reliance for Fasting Is
On Sighting the Crescent of Ramadan or
Completing Thirty Days of Sha^ban
The Statements
of the Scholars About the Case
No two Muslims disagree it
is the duty of the knowledgeable and the role of the scholars
to determine the beginning and ending of the month of Ramadan
and they are the authority in such determination. The scholars
of the four schools of Islamic Law agreed that the basis for determining
the beginning of Ramadan is as follows: The crescent is visually
observed after the sunset of the twenty-ninth (29th) day of Sha^ban.
If the crescent is sighted, then the following day will be the
first day of Ramadan. However, if the crescent is not sighted,
then the next day will be the thirtieth (30th) of Sha^ban and
the following day will be the beginning of Ramadan.
Muslims throughout the countries implemented this practice and
the highly knowledgeable ruled accordingly. Moreover, they stated
the reliance is on this rule and no attention is due to the sayings
of mathematicians and astronomers, nor are their sayings relied
upon in determining the beginning and ending of fasting. Some
of the sayings of renowned scholars are as follows:
1. Al-Maziriyy from the Shafi^iyy school said: "... they
said it is not permissible that what is meant is the calculation
of the astronomers, because if this was made incumbent upon the
people, it would be a burden on them--because it is only known
to certain individuals. However, the laws of the Religion introduce
people to what is known by their masses."
2. An-Nawawiyy, may Allah have mercy on him, documented that ruling
and confirmed it. He said in Rawdat at-Talibin: "The results
of the calculations of the astronomers do not make it obligatory
to fast, neither for them nor others."
3. Al-Hafidh Waliyuddin al-^Iraqiyy said: "The mass (jumhur)
of the Companions of ash-Shafi^iyy are on that and the rule is
based on sighting and not on any other way." He proceeded
to say, "Likewise said Malik, AbuHanifah, ash-Shafi^iyy,
and the mass of the scholars among the Salaf and the Khalaf."
The hafidh, the Hannafiyy faqih, the great linguist, Murtada az-Zabidiyy,
in Sharh Ihya’ ^Ulum id-Din copied that and confirmed it
and said: "What also indicates not to take by their sayings
is the hadith of Abu Hurayrah, related by al-Hakim and in As-Sunan
on Ad-Durr: "Moreover, it is said in Al-Mi^raj: ‘Their
saying is not considered by consensus’ and it is not permitted
for the astronomer to go by his own calculation." In the
same book, Ibn ^Abidin also said: "The Imams of the four
schools explicitly declared sighting the crescent during the day
is not considered, rather what is correct is to consider sighting
it at night and there is no consideration for the saying of the
astronomer."
4. When talking about how to determine the beginning of the month
of fasting, Shihab ud-Din ar-Ramliyy ash-Shafi^iyy, in his famous
fatawa, said: "Rather than accepting calculations, the Prophet,
who followed Allah's Revelation, completely omitted them by saying:
<<We are a nation which does not rely on writing or calculation
to know the beginning or the end of the month. The month is either
twenty-nine (29) or thirty (30) days.>>" He said in
Sharh al-Minhaj: "Our companions (i.e., the Shafi^iyys) said
according to what is authentic, the beginning of Ramadan is not
confirmed by the calculations of those who calculate--even if
they were trustworthy. The companions of AbuHanifah unanimously
agree on that."
5. The author of Ad-Durr al-Mukhtar, which is one of the Hanafiyybooks,
said: "For determining the time for fasting, there is no
consideration for the saying of those who calculate."
6. The author of Al-Fatawa al-Hindiyyah said: "Is the saying
of the experts among those knowledgeable in astronomy acceptable?
The correct answer is that it is not acceptable, and likewise
is reported in As-Siraj ul-Wahhaj."
7. Ibn ^Abidin copied the aforementioned saying of Ad-Durr (#5
above), confirmed it, and said in his book titled Al-Hashiyah
on Ad-Durr: "Moreover, it is said in Al-Mi^raj: ‘Their
saying is not considered by consensus’ and it is not permitted
for the astronomer to go by his own calculation." In the
same book, Ibn ^Abidin also said: "The Imams of the four
schools explicitly declared sighting the crescent during the day
is not considered, rather what is correct is to consider sighting
it at night and there is no consideration for the saying of the
astronomer."
8. In Ash-Sharh al-Kabir, from the school of Imam Malik, it is
stated that the beginning of Ramadan is not confirmed by the saying
of an astronomer. In the Hashiyah of Shams ud-Din ash-Shaykh Muhammad
Ibn ^Arafah, it is stated: "...his saying ‘not by an
astronomer’ who is the one who calculates whether or not
the crescent will appear that night..."
9. Ash-Shaykh Muhammad ^Ulaysh al-Malikiyy mentioned in his Fatawa
that one cannot count on calculation for knowing the beginning
of the month of Ramadan.
10. Al-Bajiyy, who is one of the most famous faqihs of the school
of Malik, mentioned the same thing. Moreover, he said: "The
Salaf established the consensus on that." Al-Hafidh Ibn Hajar
copied that saying from al-Bajiyy in Fath al-Bariand confirmed
it.
11. The judge, Ibn Rushd al-Malikiyy, also copied this scholarly
consensus regarding that matter in his introduction. This was
Abul Walid Ibn Rushd, the grandfather. The grandson was a misguided
philosopher like Ibn Sina.
12. Ibn Buzayzah said: "Had the matter depended on it, i.e.,
knowing the calculation for the positions of the moon to start
fasting, it would have resulted in a hardship--since it is not
known except by a few."
13. In Fath al-Bari, al-^Asqalaniyy copied and confirmed the saying
of Ibn Buzayzah.
14. Al-Buhutiyy al-Hanbaliyy, who is among the famous Hanbaliyy
scholars, said in his book, al-Kashshaf: "If one intended
fasting the thirtieth (30th) of Sha^ban without a lawful evidence
based on sighting the crescent or completing Sha^ban, or the horizon
was blocked by clouds, like if he fasted based on calculation
and stars, even if it oftenly coincided or after a night of clear
sky he later knew it was the last day to fast, his fasting is
still invalid for not relying on what is considered religiously."
Based on the examples mentioned, it is clear the faqihs of the
four schools are in agreement upon not considering the sayings
of the astrologers, astronomers, and/or mathematicians for determining
the beginning and ending of the month of Ramadan. Moreover, some
of the faqihs conveyed the scholarly consensus on that ruling.
The reliance is on sighting the crescent or completing thirty
days of Sha^ban as mentioned by a countless number of faqihs among
these schools. The one who looks through the summaries of the
books of fiqh, not to mention the lengthy ones, ascertains this
result. The one who follows the mass of the nation succeeds and
the one who strays, strays to Hellfire.
Refuting a Misconception
Those who advocate calculation said the Prophet, sallallahu ^alayhi
wa sallam, instructed to consider sighting and not calculations
because the majority of the Arabs at his time did not know how
to write or calculate the positions of the moon, and had they
known how to calculate, the Prophet would have instructed them
to follow calculations.
The refutation of this misconception is multi-faceted. Firstly,
had the matter been as they mentioned and had the Prophet wanted
to make the judgment on this issue contingent on calculation he
would have told the Muslims to refer to those people familiar
with calculations. Though not numerous, people familiar with calculations
did exist at the time of the Prophet. Moreover, the Prophet would
not have told them to start fasting and stop fasting when the
moon was sighted.
Secondly, had this ruling been based on what they said, then it
would not have been unknown to all the Muslim scholars who preceded
us. Astronomy was known and commonplace during the times of previous
Muslim scholars. As a matter of fact, although previous Muslim
scholars had both vast experience and wide exposure in this science,
they still abided by the ruling based on sighting the moon or
completing thirty days of Sha^ban. This is so because those scholars
knew that the Prophet, sallallahu ^alayhi wa sallam, did not want
to tie the ruling for fasting to the claims of the astronomers
or the calculations of the astronomers or mathematicians.
If those who deviated claim all Muslim scholars were wrong, then
they have ascribed misguidance to the Muslim nation, and that
is enough disgrace on them. If they say that the Muslim scholars
were truthful in their ruling, then let them abide by it, and
quit disagreeing with the previous scholars.
Thirdly, most of the Muslims today do not know and do not master
the calculations of astronomers or mathematicians, just as the
situation was during the time of the Prophet, sallallahu ^alayhi
wa sallam--therefore nothing has changed. If they say this unfamiliarity
with calculations was the reason behind making the ruling contingent
on sighting, then this same reason still exists today! If they
say this is not the reason behind the ruling for sighting, then
they have rejected their previous saying and thereby abandoned
it.
Fourthly, al-Bayhaqiyy narrated from the route of Sufyan ibn Salamah:
"While we were at Khaniqin, we received a letter sent by
^Umar Ibn al-Khattab, may Allah raise his rank. He told us some
crescents were bigger than others, so if we sighted the crescent
in the daytime, not to break our fast until two trustworthy Muslims
testify they sighted it the night before."
Our Master ^Umar not only did not rely on calculations but also
ordered the one who sighted the crescent during the day with his
naked eyes to not count on it. This is so because such a doing
is not the sighting which the Prophet, sallallahu ^alayhi wa sallam,
instructed to abide by nor ordered to follow.
On the other hand, the saying of ^Umar: "Some of the crescents
are bigger than others," is explicit in opposing them and
in invalidating their reliance on calculations--that is unless
they want to claim they possess more knowledge about the Religion
of Allah and the meaning of the instructions of the Prophet than
our Master ^Umar--and how far from the truth this is.
Section: Their Disagreement with the Hadiths of the Prophet
of Allah, sallallahu ^alayhi wa sallam
Let it be known that the issuers of this strayed opinion have
opposed many sayings of the Prophet of Allah. If the Muslim just
reads in the section on fasting in any of the famous books of
hadith, one will find those people’s opposition to the Prophet--clear
and blunt. Also, one will be astonished and will question how
those people will face the Prophet on the Day of Judgment when
they claim to have followed him, and yet they contradict his hadith
and reject it.
For you, the one who seeks the truth, following are some of these
explicit sayings of the Prophet, sallallahu ^alayhi wa sallam:
1. Al-Bukhariyy, Muslim, and others narrated from the route of
^Abdullah Ibn ^Umar, may Allah raise his rank, that the Prophet,
sallallahu ^alayhi wa sallam, said:
which means: <<The lunar month is twenty-nine (29) nights
so do not fast until you sight the crescent. However, if it was
cloudy then complete the count to thirty (30) days.>> The
Prophet made this clear statement, but those who oppose said:
"We are going to fast whether or not we sight the crescent,
whether or not it was cloudy--as long as the astronomer has instructed
with that!!
2. Malik, Abu Dawud, at-Tirmidhiyy and an-Nasa’iyynarrated
from the route of Ibn ^Abbas, that the Prophet, sallallahu ^alayhi
wa sallam, said:

which means: <<Do not fast unless you sight the crescent
and do not break your fast unless you sight it. If it is cloudy,
then complete the count to thirty (days).>> Those who oppose
said: "Overlooking sighting is not detrimental"--even
though mentioned by the Prophet"!! "Rather what is detrimental
is overlooking the saying of the mathematician"--even though
not mentioned by the Prophet!!
3. Al-Bukhariyy, Muslim, and others narrated that the Prophet,
sallallahu ^alayhi wa sallam, said:

which means: <<We do not rely on writing or calculations
to know the beginning or the end of the month. The month is either
twenty-nine (29) or thirty (30) days.>> In a narration by
Ahmad, the Prophet said:

which means: << We do not rely on writing or calculations
to know the beginning or the end of the month. The month is either
twenty-nine (29) or thirty (30) days. Fast when the crescent is
sighted and break your fast when it is sighted. If it is cloudy,
complete thirty (30) days of Sha^ban.>>
Al-Qadi ^Iyad said: (...by attributing them with ‘ummiyyah
the Prophet did not mean that they are ignorant of which day was
the twenty-ninth and which was the thirtieth. The Prophet did
not deny them the knowledge of such calculation, rather he gave
them a rule about observing the moon to begin fasting and to end
fasting. In giving the rule, the Prophet did not allow them to
adopt the methodology of calculating relied upon by the non-Muslims.
In Al-Ihkam. the great faqih, Ibn Daqiq al-^Id, said: "To
confirm the obligation of fasting by calculation is contrary to
the text. How would one rely on the saying of the one who calculates
when the wise Rule-setter said: <<If it is cloudy complete
thirty (30) days of Sha^ban>>? Had calculation and the one
who calculates been part of religious criterion for fasting and
breaking fast, the Rule-setter would not have ignored this. However,
the Rule-setter guided us to something contrary to that when he
said: <<We do not rely on writing or calculations to know
the beginning or the end of the month. The month is either twenty-nine
(29) or thirty (30) days.>>"
In explaining this hadith, al-Hafidh Ibn Hajar al-^Asqalaniyy
said: "The ruling for fasting and other related actions is
contingent upon sighting. This is so to relieve the Muslims from
the burden of calculations pertaining to the positions of the
moon. The ruling for fasting continued as such even though some
who knew about calculations appeared after this. Emphatically,
the meaning fundamentally negates making the ruling contingent
upon calculation. This is clarified by the saying of the Prophet,
sallallahu ^alayhi wa sallam, stated in the previous hadith: <<If
it is cloudy complete thirty days of Sha^ban>>. The Prophet
did not say, ‘Ask those involved in calculation.’"
Al-Qastalaniyy explained this hadith in his Irshad as-Sari. He
said: "We were not obligated in determining the timing of
our worship to be in need of knowing calculation or writing. Instead,
our worship was linked to clear signs and apparent matters which
can be equally known to those who calculate and to others."
Look attentively at how those fabricators have neglected the hadith
of the Prophet and how they follow one way and the Muslim scholars
and hafidhs follow another. May Allah guide us always to the righteous
path.
4. Al-Bukhariyy and others narrated that the Prophet, sallallahu
^alayhi wa sallam, said:
which means: <<Do not fast Ramadan one or two days before
its time. Fast when the crescent is sighted and break your fast
when the crescent is sighted. If it was cloudy, complete thirty
days of Sha^ban.>>
May Allah endow His mercy on you, observe how the Prophet, sallallahu
^alayhi wa sallam, forbade fasting (like to fast relying on calculations)
without sighting or completing thirty days of Sha^ban when sighting
cannot be achieved. Also, observe the Prophet considered the fasting
without sighting or completing thirty days of Sha^ban as fasting
before the time of Ramadan and prohibited it. Alas, would one
who knows that the Prophet forbade a matter, yet dares to consider
it lawful, have a touch of piety or knowledge?
Al-Hafidh Ibn Hajar in explaining this same hadith said: "Fasting
is linked to sighting, hence there is no need for undertaking
a hardship (meaning calculations)." Al-Qastalaniyy copied
his saying and confirmed it.
5. The Prophet stressed the issue of sighting. When some of the
followers of the companions said the moon was two nights old and
others said it was three, Ibn ^Abbas, asked them: "Which
night did you see it?" They replied: "On such and such
a night." Then Ibn ^Abbas said: "The Messenger of Allah,
sallallahu ^alayhi wa sallam, said:

which means: <<Allah prolonged its time in order for it
to be sighted. The crescent was born the night you saw it.>>"
This was related by Muslim.
If those people know, this saying of the Prophet, sallallahu ^alayhi
wa sallam, is enough to demolish all what they have said regarding
relying on calculations. No saying which goes against the saying
of the Prophet has any consideration. The saying of the Best of
the Creation is not abandoned for the sake of following the saying
of any person per se. It is not permissible for one who claims
to follow Islam to deviate from following the text of the Prophet
to follow his own personal inclinations and the whisperings of
his devil.
How can one practice that when the Prophet, as narrated by at-Tabaraniyy,
said:

which means: <<Among the sayings of everyone is what is
acceptable and what is unacceptable, save the Messenger of Allah.>>
Malik, may Allah raise his rank, said: "The sayings of all
of us are subject to rejection and correction except the occupant
of this grave, sallallahu ^alayhi wa sallam. "Every one of
us rejects statements and his statements are rejected except the
occupant of this grave, i.e., the Prophet, sallallahu ^alayhi
wa sallam.
This is why ash-Shafi^iyy did not rely on the statements of the
astronomers and those who watch the positions of the moon to determine
religious judgments and did not consider their sayings as proofs
in such cases. In Al-Fath, al-Hafidh Ibn Hajar, when talking about
why and when the moon eclipses and the prayer related to it, said:
".... it includes refuting those who observe the positions
of the moon because they claim it does not fall except in the
mentioned times. Ash-Shafi^iyy established that the eclipse and
the feast may occur together. Some of those who adopt the saying
of those who observe the positions of the moon objected to ash-Shafi^iyy.
The followers of ash-Shafi^iyy refuted the person who objected
and they discredited him." Also in Al-Fath he said: "...His
saying in the hadith (to frighten) refutes the claim of those
who observe the position of the moon that eclipse is a standard
matter and does not delay or come after. For had the case been
as they claimed, it would be a frightening matter--rather it would
be similar to the case of the ebb and rising tide at sea. Ibn
al-^Arabiyy and more then one among the scholars refuted them
by the following hadith of Abu Musa when he said: "He stood
up frightened fearing it was the Day of Judgment. They said had
the occurrence of the eclipse been by calculation, there would
not have been fear... etc."
It is clear ash-Shafi^iyy did not rely on the sayings of astronomers
(and the like) to deduce such religious judgments because the
Prophet did not consider their statements as proofs in deducing
these judgments (as is clear from the aforementioned hadith).
Hence, the one who follows the People of Knowledge and Merit drinks
fresh water, pure from all inert materials--free from harm. Let
the one who sips from the turbid water blame only himself.
Section: Refuting Another Misconception
Among the arguments those
people follow to justify their actions and convince the weak-minded
ones is their talk about unity. They said: "Abiding by calculations
of astronomers in the matter of fasting and determining the beginning
and ending of the month unites the Muslims, strengthens them,
and prevents their disunity."
Such a saying deceives the ignorant but not the intelligent, experienced
Muslims. It is known beyond the slightest doubt that at the time
of the Prophet, sallallahu ^alayhi wa sallam, the Muslims of the
different countries of the Arabian peninsula did not begin fasting
on the same day. Also, this was the case at the time of the righteous
caliphs when the Muslim state expanded widely. Likewise was the
case at the time of the Umayyad,^Abbasad, and Ottoman dynasties
when Islam spread eastward, westward, northward and southward.
Moreover, in his sahih hadith, the Prophet, sallallahu ^alayhi
wa sallam, praised the one who would open Constantinople. He said:

which means: <<Constantinople shall be opened and what a
good army that would be and what a good leader that would be!!>>
Constantinople (today’s Istanbul) was opened during the
time of the Ottoman Sultan Muhammad al-Fatih. Would one then dare
to say they were dissipated, weakened, and their unity was crippled
since they did not fast on the same day?
Had the Prophet and those after him wanted, they would have ignited
fires on the top of mountains or followed other methods to inform
the Muslims on the same night throughout the different cities
about the beginning of the month. They could have made it incumbent
on all to fast on the same day. However, neither the Prophet nor
the Muslim caliphs did so even though they had the ability to
do so. They did not restrict the Muslims to such practices, and
such policy did not weaken the Muslims or drive them backward.
The Muslims became disunited and fragmented when ignorance about
the laws of the Religion prevailed among them. This took place
when the scholars became rare and the Muslims’ adherence
to practicing the rules of the Religion weakened. As related by
at-Tirmidhiyy the Prophet, sallallahu ^alayhi wa sallam, said:
which means: <<Allah does not take the knowledge away by
ordering it pulled away from the people. But Allah takes the knowledge
away by making the scholars die. When no scholar remains, people
take ignorant leaders for themselves from whom they seek religious
answers. Those leaders will answer them out of ignorance, thus
straying themselves and others.>>
O you who are concerned about the good endings, note that Muslims
used to pray to one direction in North America and that was to
the Southeast (Muslims’ old graves are proofs for that.)
Then, some of those who did not have knowledge about the Religion
(although they may be knowledgeable about geometry and the like)
claimed that the right direction as due Northeast based on innovated
rules and principles. They did not follow the sayings of the Imams
nor their schools. Those who did not have knowledge among the
party known as Hizb al-’Ikhwan and those who reject at-tawassul
took their false saying and followed it. They spread this opinion
among the people and consequently the became divided into two
groups: One is deceived by this innovated opinion and another
adheres to the old truth. As a result, Muslims became divided
and in disagreement.
As if those people were not satisfied by that sedition, today
they are trying to pervert the Islamic laws on the issue of determining
the beginning and ending of the month of Ramadan. They are planting
new seeds for disagreement and encourage abandoning adherence
to the Qur’an the Sunnah, the Ijma^,the Athar, and the Ijtihad
of the Muslim scholars. Instead, they encourage following mere
opinion in an effort to pull out the strongholds of Islam one
after the other in a systematic attempt to destroy the Religion.
In reality, their actions are indeed what fragment the Muslims
and dissipate their effort. In Lebanon in 1984, the people were
ordered to begin fasting on Thursday having relied on a Lebanese
astronomer. Another astronomer ruled the beginning of Ramadan
to be Wednesday according to his findings, and a third determined
Friday as the day to begin fasting. Is this considered uniting
the Muslims? Had they known the truth, they would have realized
that what they adopt is what really disunites the nation of Muhammad.
Those people do not know what they are talking about. To them
it is as if for fourteen (14) centuries the nation of Muhammad--both
scholars and laymen--did not know the true direction of Qiblah
or the true beginning of fasting Ramadan. This is enough disgrace
and misguidance on their part.
Had they been sincere, they would have let the Muslims remain
on the rightful track which is in accordance to the actions of
the Muslims all over the earth. Let the Muslims follow their Religion
without imposing hardships them like basing their fasting on calculations
that most do not understand.
Instead of doing that we wish those people would have turned their
efforts toward teaching the fundamentals of the correct belief,
the integrals of ablution, the conditions of prayers, and what
is similar to that among what every Muslim needs. Let them turn
their efforts toward ordering Muslims to quit drinking alcohol,
refrain from committing adultery and fornication, and to stop
selling pig meat and intoxicants. Let them warn the Muslims against
the sins of the eyes, the ears, the hands, and the feet. However,
the one who does not posses something cannot offer it to others.
The one who did not sit humbly before the scholars is not fit
to guide others--even if he wanted to.
Muslim related the Messenger of Allah, sallallahu ^alayhi wa sallam,
praised the issue of purification highly by saying:
Those people are short of knowing the purification as required
and also short of knowing most of the religious rules, because
their leader and example, Sayyid Qutb, made them turn away from
learning the Knowledge of the Religion when he said in his Tafsir:
"To work with al-fiqh at this time is wasting ones life."
They followed him in that and thus destroyed themselves.
Verily to Allah we belong and to Him we shall return.
It is clear to every mindful
person that worthless sayings are passed around by those who are
against the four Islamic schools. These sayings are only a group
of words with no content. It is a mirage that the thirsty may
think of as water, but upon reaching it finds nothing more than
an illusion.
Our advice to every Muslim is to abide by the sayings mentioned
by the faqihs of the four schools. The Muslim nation unanimously
agreed on the high rank and integrity of those scholars. Let the
Muslim learn the rules of fasting before the month of Ramadan
comes in by studying under someone who possesses both knowledge
and trustworthiness and is someone who himself has acquired the
knowledge from someone trustworthy and knowledgeable, and so on
with a continuous chain that reaches to the Prophet.
Our advice to Muslims in every city is to dispatch a group to
watch for the crescent after the sunset of the twenty-ninth (29th)
day of Sha^ban. If the crescent is sighted, then the next day
will be Ramadan. If the crescent is not sighted, and one did not
hear of a trustworthy man of a neighboring city who sighted it,
then let them complete thirty (30) days of Sha^ban and fast the
day after that.
Furthermore, if sighting the crescent was confirmed as per religious
laws in a country far away from another, (i.e., the sun’s
rising and setting times differ between these two countries,)
the scholars applied two methods. Some of them said the Muslims
of the country in question cannot fast and must complete thirty
days of Sha^ban because the people of each country must sight
on their own. This is the school of Imam ash-Shafi^iyy. Other
scholars said they fast with those who sighted the crescent and
this is the school of AbuHanifah and others. The Muslim is not
blamed if he followed the first method or the second.
On the other hand, the saying that relies on the opinion of the
astrologers, mathematicians, schedulers, astronomers, and the
like is not considered. The one who renders such a saying a basis
for judgment has committed a grievous mistake. Truthful is the
Prophet, who as narrated by al-Bukhariyy, said:

which means: <<Every condition not in accordance with the
Book of Allah is false, even if there were one hundred conditions.>>
Finally, blessed be those who abide by the Muslim Jama^ah, their
masses of scholars, and the sayings of the Prophet, sallallahu
^alayhi wa sallam. On the Day of Judgment regret shall be to those
who follow a way other than that of the believers and stray away
from the believers’ methodology.
Praise be to Allah who is clear of all non-befitting attributes.
And Allah knows best.
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