{"title":"عید الاضحیٰ کی قربانی سے پہلے اور اُس کے بعد کے مراسمِ عبودیت ( جاوید احمد غامدی صاحب کے موقف کا ایک تنقیدی مطالعہ)","authors":"Muhammad Amir Gazdar","doi":"10.52541/fn.v59i1.1493","DOIUrl":null,"url":null,"abstract":"Jāvaid Aḥmad Ghāmidī, a contemporary Muslim modernist scholar, holds that the three established rituals of ḥajj and ‘umrah can be regarded as independent rituals in religion, which he categorises asnadhar (votive offering). The ritual is performed by fulfilling three conditions: 1) abstaining from removing body hair, 2) refraining from clipping nails, and 3) trimming or shaving the head. According to Ghāmidī, all believers can perform this rite, without any spatio-temporal restriction, as a supererogatory act. The Prophet (P.B.U.H.), he believes, encouraged Muslims to voluntarily observe it on the occasion of ‘īd al-aḍḥā. This is inferred by combining the information found in two Prophetic narrations, one reported by Umm Salamah and the other by ‘Abd Allah b. ‘āmr. In Ghāmidī’s view, all believers whether or not they are offering the animal sacrifice may offer such nadhar. For doing so, they would follow the two aforestated restrictions from the beginning of Dhū al-Ḥijjah (the twelfth month of the Islamic calendar) and trim or shave their heads on the ‘Īd day after the animal has been slaughtered (if they are to offer the sacrifice) orin anytime during the day (if they are not to offer the sacrifice). This last act is seen as a token of the completion of their votive offering to God. After a careful discussion of Ghāmidī’s view, this article concludes that the religious and rational arguments put forward by Ghāmidī are insufficient to relate the three rites (separately mentioned in the above Prophetic narrations) to the corresponding rites of ḥajj and ‘umrah and generalize them, out of the context, as one standalone ritual.","PeriodicalId":159571,"journal":{"name":"FIKR-O NAZAR فکر ونظر","volume":"12 1","pages":"0"},"PeriodicalIF":0.0000,"publicationDate":"2021-09-30","publicationTypes":"Journal Article","fieldsOfStudy":null,"isOpenAccess":false,"openAccessPdf":"","citationCount":"0","resultStr":null,"platform":"Semanticscholar","paperid":null,"PeriodicalName":"FIKR-O NAZAR فکر ونظر","FirstCategoryId":"1085","ListUrlMain":"https://doi.org/10.52541/fn.v59i1.1493","RegionNum":0,"RegionCategory":null,"ArticlePicture":[],"TitleCN":null,"AbstractTextCN":null,"PMCID":null,"EPubDate":"","PubModel":"","JCR":"","JCRName":"","Score":null,"Total":0}
引用次数: 0
摘要
一位当代穆斯林现代主义学者Jāvaid Aḥmad Ghāmidī认为,ḥajj和' umrah '这三个既定的仪式可以被视为宗教中独立的仪式,他将其归类为nadhar(献祭)。这个仪式要满足三个条件:1)不剃掉体毛,2)不剪指甲,3)修剪或剃掉头发。根据Ghāmidī的说法,所有信徒都可以进行这种仪式,不受任何时空限制,作为一种附加行为。他相信,先知(P.B.U.H.)鼓励穆斯林在' d ' al-aḍḥā的场合自愿遵守它。这是通过结合在两个先知叙述中发现的信息推断出来的,一个由Umm Salamah报告,另一个由' Abd Allah b. ' āmr报告。在Ghāmidī看来,所有的信徒,无论他们是否献上动物献祭,都可以献上这样的那达尔。为了做到这一点,他们将遵循上述两项限制,从dhal -Ḥijjah(伊斯兰历法的第12个月)开始,并在动物被屠宰后的Īd天(如果他们要献祭)或白天的任何时间(如果他们不献祭)修剪或剃光他们的头。这最后的举动被看作是他们完成对上帝的奉献的象征。在仔细讨论Ghāmidī的观点后,本文得出结论,Ghāmidī提出的宗教和理性的论点不足以将这三个仪式(在上述先知叙述中分别提到)与ḥajj和朝觐的相应仪式联系起来,并将它们概括为一个独立的仪式,脱离上下文。
عید الاضحیٰ کی قربانی سے پہلے اور اُس کے بعد کے مراسمِ عبودیت ( جاوید احمد غامدی صاحب کے موقف کا ایک تنقیدی مطالعہ)
Jāvaid Aḥmad Ghāmidī, a contemporary Muslim modernist scholar, holds that the three established rituals of ḥajj and ‘umrah can be regarded as independent rituals in religion, which he categorises asnadhar (votive offering). The ritual is performed by fulfilling three conditions: 1) abstaining from removing body hair, 2) refraining from clipping nails, and 3) trimming or shaving the head. According to Ghāmidī, all believers can perform this rite, without any spatio-temporal restriction, as a supererogatory act. The Prophet (P.B.U.H.), he believes, encouraged Muslims to voluntarily observe it on the occasion of ‘īd al-aḍḥā. This is inferred by combining the information found in two Prophetic narrations, one reported by Umm Salamah and the other by ‘Abd Allah b. ‘āmr. In Ghāmidī’s view, all believers whether or not they are offering the animal sacrifice may offer such nadhar. For doing so, they would follow the two aforestated restrictions from the beginning of Dhū al-Ḥijjah (the twelfth month of the Islamic calendar) and trim or shave their heads on the ‘Īd day after the animal has been slaughtered (if they are to offer the sacrifice) orin anytime during the day (if they are not to offer the sacrifice). This last act is seen as a token of the completion of their votive offering to God. After a careful discussion of Ghāmidī’s view, this article concludes that the religious and rational arguments put forward by Ghāmidī are insufficient to relate the three rites (separately mentioned in the above Prophetic narrations) to the corresponding rites of ḥajj and ‘umrah and generalize them, out of the context, as one standalone ritual.