Ghadir
Khumm
in the Qur'an, Hadith, History
Introduction
Event
of Ghadir Khumm
Location
of Ghadir Khumm
Ghadir Khumm Remembered on Other
Occasions
Books that mention the Event
Transmitters
and their Credibility
Meaning
and Implication
Blessedness
of the day of Ghadir Khumm
Ghadir
Khumm Portal
How
YOU can help ! |
Transmitters
and their Credibility
Key to symbols
Transmitters of
the Ghadir Khumm narration
(as listed by 'Allamah al-'Amini in Al-Ghadir)
-
from the first generation - 110 Companions
(sahabah) of the Prophet [s]
-
from the second generation - 84 Successors
(tabi'un) who came after the Companions
-
from the third generation onwards - 360 Scholars
('ulama) of the Islamic world, from the first to the fourteenth
century AH (seventh to twentieth century CE)
(those not explicitly listed by 'Allamah al-'Amini in Al-Ghadir)
-
from over 200 Other
Scholars of the Islamic world, from the first to the fourteenth century
AH (seventh to twentieth century CE)
Please note that these statistics only include transmitters appearing
in narrations recorded by Sunni scholars!
Strength of
the Ghadir Khumm narration
The Ghadir Khumm narration is certainly mutawatir based on the
statistics and definitions given below. In addition, several of its
individual chains of narration are of the highest category of sahih
and many more have been considered hasan. Click on the icon
below to see some of these statements by notable scholars.
Definition of mutawatir
traditions
(Source: Muhammad Zubayr Siddiqi, 'Ulum al-Hadith, Hadith
and Sunnah - Ideals and Realities, pp. 89-90)
The Mutawatir are the traditions which have been transmitted
throughout the first three generations of the Muslims by such a large number
of transmitters as cannot be reasonably expected to agree on a falsehood.
There is a difference of opinion about the number of the transmitters necessary
for it during each of the first three generations of the Muslims.
Some authorities fix it at seven, some at forty, some at seventy, and some
at a much higher number. Very few of the traditions received by us
belong to the category of the Mutawatir.
(Source: Muhammad 'Ali, Collection and Preservation of Hadith,
Hadith and Sunnah - Ideals and Realities, pp. 50-51)
Ibn Hajar [al-'Asqalani] has dealt with different classes of
Hadith in the Sharh Nukhbat al-Fikr at great length. The most
important division of Hadith is into mutawatir (continuous) and
ahad
(isolated). A Hadith is said to be mutawatir (lit.
repeated
successively or by one after another) when it is reported by such a
large number that it is impossible that they should have agreed upon falsehood,
so that the very fact that it is commonly accepted makes its authority
unquestionable. To this category belong Hadith that have been accepted
by every Muslim generation down from the time of the Holy Prophet.[52]
The mutawatir Hadith are accepted without criticizing their narrators.
(Source: Dr. Suhaib Hasan, An Introduction to the Science of
Hadith, Darussalam Publishers, Riyadh, Saudi Arabia, p. 30)
A mutawatir hadith is one which is reported by such
a large number of people that they cannot be expected to agree upon a lie,
all of them together.
Al-Ghazali (d. 505) stipulates that a mutawatir narration be
known by the sizeable number of its reporters equally in the beginning,
in the middle and at the end. He is correct in this stipulation because
some narrations or ideas, although known as mutawatir among some
people, whether Muslims or non-Muslims, originally have no tawatur.
There is no precise definition for a "large number of reporters"; although
the numbers four, five, seven, ten, twelve, forty and seventy, among others,
have all been variously suggested as a minimum, the exact number is irrelevant...
[from Ibn Hajar al-'Asqalani, Sharh Nukhbah al-Fikr (ed. M 'Aud
& M.G. Sabbagh, Damascus, 1410/1990, pp. 8-9]
Presented by the Ahlul
Bayt Digital Islamic Library Project team
|