HANAFI


The 'Hanafi' (Arabic' 'حنفي) school is the oldest of the four schools of thought ''(Madhhabs)'' or jurisprudence (Fiqh) within Sunni Islam. The Hanafi madhhab is named after its founder, Abu Hanifa an-Nu‘man ibn Thābit (Arabic: النعمان بن ثابت‎) (699 - 767).

Contents
Overview
Some distinctive opinions of Abu Hanifa and the Hanafi School
Notable Hanafis
Hanafi Groups and Movements
External links
References

Overview


Among the four established Sunni schools of legal thought in Islam, the Hanafi school is the oldest, but it is generally regarded as the most liberal and as the one which puts the most emphasis on human reason. The Hanafi school also has the most followers among the four major Sunni schools. (Both the Ottoman Empire and the Mughal Empire were Hanafi so the Hanafi school is still widespread in their former lands). The other three schools of thought are Shafi, Maliki, and Hanbali. Today, the Hanafi school is predominant among the Sunnis of Central Asia, Afghanistan, Pakistan and the most of the Indian Subcontinent, China, Southeast Asia, as well as in Iraq, Turkey, Albania, the Balkans and the Caucasus.
According to Abdalhaqq Bewley:

"The madhhab of Imam Abu Hanifa, may Allah cover him with mercy, was formulated in Iraq, a very different environment to that of Madina al-Munawwara where the deen had been laid down, and the number of Companions who had settled there had been too few to allow a complete picture of the Sunna to emerge. For this reason Hanafi methodology involved the logical process of examining the Book and all available knowledge of the Sunna and then finding an example in them analogous to the particular case under review so that Allah's deen could be properly applied in the new situation. It thus entails the use of reason in the examination of the Book and Sunna so as to extrapolate the judgements necessary for the implementation of Islam in a new environment. It represents in essence, therefore, within the strict compass of rigorous legal and inductive precepts, the adaptation of the living and powerful deen to a new situation in order to enable it take root and flourish in fresh soil. This made it an ideal legal tool for the central governance of widely varied populations which is why we find it in Turkey as the legacy of the Uthmaniyya Khilafa and in the sub-continent where it is inherited from the Moghul empire."

Some distinctive opinions of Abu Hanifa and the Hanafi School



★ Abu Hanifah held that "wine" (the fermented juice of dates or grapes) was absolutely prohibited. But he thought it was permissible to drink small non-intoxicating amounts of other alcoholic beverages (e.g. made from honey or grains). Later Hanafi scholars tend to rule that all alcoholic beverages are prohibited regardless of source.

★ It is prohibited or disliked to eat some forms of non-fish seafood based on the hadith of the Prophet Muhammad (Allah bless him and give him peace): "Two types of dead meat and two types of blood have been made lawful for your consumption: fish and locust, liver and spleen". (Reported by Ahmad and Ibn Majah,)

★ Except during Hajj every salah needs to be made in its regular time. It is not valid to combine prayers, even when travelling.

★ A sixth daily Witr prayer is ''wajib'' or "required".

★ Abu Hanifah held that "the Quran" consists of the meaning of the text and so in the daily prayers it was permissible to recite "the Quran" in any language unconditionally. Later Hanafis only held that this was permissible if the person praying was unable to recite the Quran in Arabic.

★ Bleeding can break one's wudu.
Despite these differences, there is little or no animosity between the four schools of religious law within Sunni Islam. Instead there is a cross-pollination of ideas and debate that serves to refine each school's understanding of Islam.

Notable Hanafis



Abu Hanifah

Abu Yusuf

Abu Ja'far al-Tahawi

Abu Mansur Al Maturidi

Al-Kawthari

Ibn Abidin

Ahmad Sirhindi

Baha-ud-Din Naqshband Bukhari

Jalal ad-Din Muhammad Rumi

Shah Waliullah

Fethullah Gülen

Ahmed Rida Khan

Muhammad al-Yaqoubi

Muhammad Ilyas

Muhammad Zakariya al-Kandahlawi

Shaykh Nazim al-Qubrusi

Rashid Ahmed Gangohi

Ilyas Attar Qadri

Ashraf Ali Thanwi

Muhammad Taqi Usmani

Muhammad Rafi Usmani

Shibli Nomani

Ibn Abi al-Izz

Faraz Rabbani

Syed Abdullah Shah Naqshbandi

Mufti Ghulam Rasool Jamaati

Ahmad ibn Muhammad al-Tahawi

Farid al-Din Attar

Zameer Ikraam Sattaur

Abd al-Ghani al-Nabulsi

Tahir-ul-Qadri

Abdul Razzaq al-Halabi

Hanafi Groups and Movements



Deobandi

Barelwi

Maturidi

Sunni Bohra

External links



Salaah Evidences for the Hanafi Madhab

SunniPath.com Hanafi ruling website

NoorOnline.com

sunniport.com

Shariah Board (Hanafi) Audio Fatawa in many languages (free online)

Sahih al Islam Over 2,000 Collection of Islamic Information

Online Urdu Audio on Various Subjects

Kitab Ghar Urdu Translation of Hanafi Fiqh and Hadith Books

Hizmet Books Hanafi books in English (free online)

White Thread Press Books on Hanafi Fiqh and Hadith

Al-Rashad Books and Audio Books and Audio on Hanafi Fiqh

The Al-Imam al-A'zam Abu Hanifah web site!

References



The Recovery of True Islamic Fiqh

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