📖 The Book of Al-Manar Al-Munif fi Al-Sahih wa Al-Da'if by Ibn Qayyim Al-Jawziyya 📖
The book is also known as Naqd Al-Manqul wa Al-Mukhtasar Al-Tamiz Bayn Al-Mardu wa Al-Maqbul
By Muhammad ibn Abi Bakr ibn Ayyub ibn Sa'd Al-Zar'i Al-Dimashqi, Shams Al-Din, Abu Abdullah, known as Ibn Qayyim Al-Jawziyya
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The author begins the first chapter by presenting four questions directed to the author, which he answers in the following three chapters.
In Chapter Five, the author is asked about the possibility of identifying a fabricated hadith by a standard criterion without examining its chain of transmission. The answer opens Chapter Six, where the author points out general matters and indicators by which a fabricated hadith can be identified. He then presents these indicators in a presentation that takes up most of the book, with examples of each indicator using a number of fabricated hadiths, completing Chapter Forty-Nine.
The final chapter: On the awaited Mahdi, the hadiths mentioned therein, and who the Mahdi is meant to be.
The book presents a number of fabricated hadiths, adding criteria and rules to distinguish fabricated hadiths from authentic hadiths. This is beneficial for those specializing in hadith, and helps beginners develop the ability to distinguish between authentic hadiths, weak hadiths, and fabricated hadiths.
Questions were presented to the author, and he responded with lengthy answers, in keeping with the custom of well-versed and comprehensive scholars. This imam, may God have mercy on him, was among them, and he endeavored to establish criteria for regulating fabricated hadiths. This makes it easy for both students of knowledge and scholars alike to memorize this criterion, which includes hadiths that are rarely memorized in the field of fabricated hadiths except by those who are knowledgeable in hadith. The author, Ibn al-Qayyim, may God have mercy on him, relies on the Book of God Almighty and the Sunnah of His Prophet (peace and blessings be upon him), avoiding abstract opinions that are supported only by taste and whims, rejecting analogies, and false interpretations. We find him discussing questions in a scholarly, objective manner.
Author:
Muhammad ibn Abi Bakr ibn Ayyub ibn Sa'd al-Zar'i al-Dimashqi, Shams al-Din, Abu Abdullah, known as Ibn Qayyim al-Jawziyya. He was a prominent figure in Islamic religious reform in the eighth century AH. He was born in Damascus to Kurdish parents and studied under and was influenced by Ibn Taymiyya al-Dimashqi, who was also of Kurdish parents. His profession was as an imam at al-Jawziyya, teaching at al-Sadriya and elsewhere, and issuing fatwas and writing. His connection with Ibn Taymiyya: Historians agree that the date of their meeting was in 712 AH, the year Ibn Taymiyya returned from his travels to Damascus, where he settled until his death in 751 AH.
❇️ Some reviews of the book "Al-Manar Al-Munif fi Al-Sahih wa Al-Da'if" by Ibn Qayyim Al-Jawziyya ❇️
▪️ Source of reviews: www.goodreads.com/book/show/6673240▪️
- A book in which Imam Ibn Al-Qayyim discusses fabricated hadiths, which are well-known and discussed by people, but are actually fabricated and have been discussed by scholars a lot and included in their books on fabricated hadiths, such as Ibn Al-Jawzi's book "Al-Mawdoo'at" and his book "Tanzih Al-Shari'ah" and others, and many others.
Sondos Ammar
- Ibn al-Qayyim's method for identifying weak hadiths without looking at the text, and providing an example of each rule with an explanation, is no less impressive than the book's investigation by Yahya ibn Abdullah al-Thamali, may God have mercy on them both.
Ahmad Alaraby
- A wonderful book in which Ibn al-Qayyim outlines the rules that help distinguish authentic hadiths from weak ones, citing a group of hadiths as examples of each rule. What caught my attention most was his discussion of hadiths about the awaited Mahdi and the divergence of the differences in identifying his identity, and the subsequent support for the doctrine of Ahl al-Sunnah wal-Jama'ah regarding him.
Aziz al-Ayashi
- A light book explaining how to identify a hadith as fabricated by yourself.
Rasha Alhomaidhi
- A pleasant book that I enjoyed reading. The sheer number of fabricated hadiths and their subject matter is laughable. What's even more astonishing is that I discovered that they were transmitted to us by our grandmothers, and we pass them on without realizing it. Like saying prayers upon the Prophet, may God bless him and grant him peace, when you hear a ringing in your ear. I didn't know it was a hadith, but I kept hearing about it. It turned out to be a hadith and a fabrication as well. May God keep us all safe, and praise be to God, Lord of the Worlds. Reham.Mrk
❇️ Some of the controls mentioned in the book "Al-Manar Al-Munif fi Al-Sahih wa Al-Da'if" by Ibn Qayyim Al-Jawziyya ❇️
- The sensory perception of them, such as "eggplant, because it was eaten for its sake"
- Hadiths that mention Al-Khidr and his life
- Hadiths that contradict the explicit text of the Qur'an
- Hadiths about the daily and nightly prayers, such as the prayer on Sunday, and any hadith that mentions the virtue of fasting Rajab and praying during some of its nights, are fabricated lies.
- Hadiths about the prayer on the night of the middle of Sha'ban
- If the hadith is accompanied by evidence that indicates its invalidity.
- Hadiths that criticize children are all lies.
- Hadiths about future dates.
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