TARAVEEH
"A
Bida "
By:
Syed-Mohsin Naquvi
AS-Salam
alaykum brothers in Islam,
The following article was published in the community News & Views of
January 1996. It has since been circulated almost every year in the month
of Ramadhan.
I ask you all to have the following perspective in view when reading
this article.
(1) In the US university and college campuses MSA's are very active.
Every MSA becomes even more active during the holy month of Rmadhan. All Muslim
students come together at Iftar time and break their fast together as a group.
It gives a great sense of solidarity to the Muslim students in the AMerican and
European campuses. However, soon after the Isha prayers, the group separates.
The Sunni students regroup for the TRAWEEH prayers while the Shia students go
back to their dorms. It is natural for those Sunnis who have never come in
contact with the Shi'a Muslims to ask the Shi'a as to why don't they participate
in the TRAWEEH prayers. This article gives a very brief but comprehensive answer
to that basic question.
(2) I ask my Sunni brothers not to take this article trying to
demean their FIQH. Not at all. This is just an effort to explain
a basic difference between the group. It is a FIQHI difference not a
difference in basic faith. I believe that not all Sunnis will one day become
Shi'a neither will all Shi'a become Sunnis. The differences are their and they
will last. However, let us try to understand each other and work and live with
each other by being a little more tolerant towards each other by accepting what
we are
without labelling any one as KAFIR or FASIQ.
(3) Having said all that, let me add this post-script. Lately some Sunni
institutions have tried to show (falsely) that mention has been made about
TARAWEEH in the Hadeeth literature. However noble that effort may be towards
legitimizing something which is a bid'a (whether you call it bid'at-e-HASAN or
not), it is baseless. There is a Hadeeth in Bukhari (and in other books too)
that the Prophet of Islam did special NAFL prayers in the middle of the
night. The Arabic term used here in the HADEETH is FI JAWF-IL-LAYL. The exact
translation of this term in the English language is IN THE MIDDLE OF THE NIGHT.
Some Sunni writers have tried to prove that this hadeeth is actually about
TRAWEEH. Nothing could be further from the truth. This hadeeth is about
NAMAZ-E-SHAB also known as TAHAJJUD. It is this prayer which is eleven raka't
that is done in the middle of the night. It is not specific to Ramadhan.
It is done or can be done all the year round. And TARAWEEH is not done in the
Middle of the Nigfht, it is done after Isha before the midnight sets in.
ALL ABOUT TARAWEEH
A
great majority of our Sunni brothers perform the Taraweeh salat every evening
after cisha during Ramadhan. We, the Shi'a Muslims don't. Many of the S unni
brothers do not know that (according to their own ulema) taraweeh is mustahab,
but the great majority of them perform it as if it was as wajib as the fasting
itself.
In 1983 when I was in Saudi Arabia, a Saudi scholar,
answering a question in the local English newspaper, gave the following details
of how this special prayer was introduced in Islam. Soon after the
death of Abu Bakr in the 13th year of hijra, Umar took control of the Islamic
State as the second Khaleefa. In the Ramadhan of 14 hijra, while he was going
round the streets of Madinah, he noticed people performing superero-gatory
prayers(nafl) here and there, a few of them in various places. A bright idea
dawned upon him. He decided to bring all the Muslims together in a congregation
and commanded them to recite one thirtieth of the Qur'an every night. This way,
the entire Qur'an was recited by each and every Muslim man at least once in the
month of Ramadhan. A few days later, as he was going round again, he saw the
various congregations and was very pleased. He is reported to have said at the
sight:'O! What a beautiful bida (innovation) I have established.'
The Saudi scholar writing this did not mention his source references. But we
have confirmed that the establisment of taraweeh salat was done by Umar ibn
Khattab in the 14th year of Hijra as stated in:Tareekh-ul-Khulafa by
Jalal-uddeen Suyooti (d. 911 hijra) and Murooj-uz Zahab by Mascoodi (d.346
hijra). Of course, there are some slight differences between various Sunni
sects
in how this special prayer is performed. The Hanafi do twenty rakcat every
night, and after the recital of sura Al-Hamd, nearly one-twentieth of each juz
is recited. The others perform eight rakcat of prayer every night and in each
one nearly one eighth of a juz is recited. The end result is that one full juz
of the Qur'an is recited every night.
Although I have not seen this anywhere in writing, but I have a feeling that it
was because of taraweeh that the Qur'an, which was compiled by our Prophet into
verses (ayat) and chapters (suras), was divided into 30 equal parts and each
section named a juz (para in Farsi).
As I said earlier, we the Shi'a do not do this prayer although we are supposed
to perform an extra 1000 rakcat of supererogatory salat during the month of
Ramadhan (as prescribed in Mafateeh-ul-Jinan and other books) and we also recite
Qur'an at least once over. Our rejection of taraweeh is not out of spite.
We do not do it for two reasons, one is purely jurisprudential (fiqhee) and the
other logical (caqlee).
(1)
All our religious teaching is either taken from the holy Qur'an or from the
Ahlul-Bayt(peace be unto them all). Umar's (or anybody else's for that matter)
statements and acts have no value for us in matters of worship or law. Taraweeh
is not mentioned in the Qur'an. It was not done by the Prophet in his lifetime
and it was never done by any of our Imams neither did they ever speak
about it.
(2) When
the Prophet of Islam compiled the Qur'an as we see it today, he also made
statements giving the attributes of each chapter(sura). In this, he gave details
about which verses and suras should be recited as part of salat. Some are
recited in pairs like al-feel (ch. 105) and quraysh (ch. 106). Only those suras
are supposed to be recited in salat which express Allah's Power
and Majesty etc. It is quite obvious that some verses are not meant to be
recited in salat, like those describing the laws of divorce and menstruation.
Although we do not understand Arabic, those who do will agree that every verse
cannot be recited in salat. So, we do recite the entire Qur'an in Ramadhan and
we do perform supererogatory prayers but not as taraweeh.