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Biography of Imaam al-Bukhaaree
Saheeh al-Bukhaaree (al-Jaami' as-Saheeh)
The most important of all hadeeth collections, is of course al-Jaami' as-Saheeh
of Imaam al-Bukhaaree. Al-Bukhaaree is said to have questioned more than a
thousand scholars of hadeeth, who lived in places as far apart as Balkh, Merv,
Neesaaboor, the Hijaaz, Egypt and Iraq. Al-Bukhaaree used to seek aid in prayer
before recording any hadeeth, and weighed every word he wrote with scrupulous
exactitude. He devoted more than a quarter of his life to the compilation of his
Saheeh, which is generally considered by the Muslims as an authority second only
to the Qur'aan.
Abu 'Abdullah Muhammad Ibn Ismaa'eel al-Bukhaaree, who was born at Bukhara in
the year 194 A.H. / 810C.E. was of Persian origin. His ancestor, Bardizbah, was
a farmer in the vicinity of Bukhara, who was taken captive during the Muslim
conquest of the region. Bardizbah's son, who took the name al-Mugheerah,
accepted Islaam at the hand of al-Yamaan al-Ju'fee, the Muslim governor of
Bukhaaraa and gained from him the ascription al-Ju'fee, aI-Mugheerah's son
Ibraaheem, the grandfather of our author, had a son called Ismaa'eel, who became
a scholar of hadeeth of great piety and sound reputation. Scrupulous in his
habits, he is said to have mentioned on his deathbed that in all he possessed
there was not a penny which had not been earned by his own honest labour.
Ismaa'eel died leaving a considerable fortune to his widow and two sons, Ahmad
and Muhammad, the latter being only an infant at the time. The child who was
destined to play such a central role in the development of hadeeth literature
was endowed by nature with great intellectual powers, although he was physically
frail. He possessed a sharp and photographic memory, and a great tenacity of
purpose, which served him well in his academic life.
Like many scholars of his time, al-Bukhaaree began his educational career under
the guidance of his mother in his native city. Finishing his elementary studies
at the young age of eleven, he immersed himself in the study of hadeeth. Within
six years he had mastered the knowledge of all the scholars of hadeeth of
Bukhaaraa, as well as everything contained in the books which were available to
him. He thus travelled to Makkah with his mother and brother in order to perform
Hajj. From the Makkah, he started a series of journeys in quest of hadeeth,
passing through all the important centres of Islamic learning, staying in each
place as long as he needed, meeting the scholars of hadeeth, learning all the
hadeeth they knew, and communicating his own knowledge to them. It is recorded
that he stayed at Basrah for four or five years, and in the Hijaaz for six;
while he travelled to Egypt twice and to Koofah and Baghdad many times.
Imaam al-Bukhari's travels continued for some four decades. In the year 250A.H.
/ 864C.E., he came to the great Central Asian city of Neesaaboor, where he was
given a grand reception suitable to a scholar of hadeeth of his rank. Here he
devoted himself to the teaching of hadeeth, and wished to settle down. But he
was obliged to leave the town when he declined to accept a request to deliver
lectures on hadeeth at the palace of Khaalid Ibn Ahmad ad-Dhuhalee. From
Neesaaboor he travelled on to Khartank, a village near Bukhaaraa, at the request
of its inhabitants. Here he settled down, and died in the year 256 A.H. / 870
C.E.
Throughout his life, al-Bukhaaree displayed the character of a devout and pious
Muslim scholar. He was rigorous in the observance of his religious duties,
ensuring that rather than relying on charity he always lived by means of trade,
in which he was scrupulously honest. Once he lost ten thousand dirhams on
account of a minute scruple. A good deal of his income, in fact, was spent on
helping the students and the poor. It is said that he never showed an ill-temper
to anyone, even when there was more than sufficient cause; nor did he bear
ill-will against anybody. Even towards those who had caused his exile from
Neesaaboor, he harbored no grudge.
Hadeeth was almost an obsession with al-Bukhaaree. He spared no pains for it,
sacrificing almost everything for its sake. On one of his voyages he was so
short of money that he lived on wild herbs for three days. But he enjoyed one
form of public recreation: archery, in which he had acquired great skill. His
amanuensis, who lived with him for a considerable time, writes that Bukhaaree
often went out to practice his aim, and only twice during his sojourn with him
did he see him miss the mark.
Since the very outset of his career, al-Bukhaaree showed the signs of greatness.
It is said that at the age of eleven he pointed out a mistake of one of his
teachers. The teacher laughed at the audacity of the young student; but
al-Bukhaaree persisted in his correction, and challenged his teacher to refer to
his book, which justified the pupil's contention. When still a boy, too, he was
entreated by a large group of hadeeth students to give a lecture on the subject.
He accepted their request, and a large crowd of students duly gathered at a
Masjid, and accepted the ahaadeeth which he related. Once, when he visited
Basrah, the authorities were notified of his arrival and a day was fixed for him
to lecture. At the lecture, he was able to confine himself only to such
ahaadeeth as he had received on the authority of the early hadeeth scholars of
Basrah, and had none the less been unknown to the audience.
On many occasions al-Bukhari's learning was put to severe tests, of a kind often
favoured by rigorous scholars of the time, and he seems always to have emerged
with credit. At Baghdad, ten hadeeth scholars changed the asaaneed and contents
of a hundred ahaadeeth, recited them to al-Bukhaaree at a public meeting, and
asked him questions about them. Al-Bukhaaree confessed his ignorance of the
ahaadeeth that they had recited. But then he recited the correct versions of all
the ahaadeeth concerned, and said that probably his questioners had
inadvertently recited them wrongly.
At Samarqand, four hundred students tested al-Bukhari's knowledge in the same
way, and al-Bukhaaree succeeded in exposing their interpolations. At Neesaaboor,
Muslim, the author of another Saheeh, together with others, asked al-Bukhaaree
questions about certain ahaadeeth, and found his answers completely
satisfactory. In many scholarly gatherings he successfully identified some of
the obscurer early hadeeth narrators in a way which had eluded the other
scholars present. These repeated trials and triumphs of al-Bukhaaree won him
recognition as the greatest hadeeth scholar of his time by all the major
authorities with whom he came in contact, including Ahmad Ibn Hanbal, 'Alee Ibn
al-Madeenee, Abu Bakar Ibn Abee Shaybah, Ishaaq Ibn Raahawayh, and others.
Al-Bukhari's writings began during his stay in Madeenah at the age of 18, when
he compiled his two earliest books. One of these contained the decrees and
judgements of the Companions and their Followers, while the other was made up of
short biographies of the important narrators of hadeeth during his own lifetime.
A large number of other collections followed.
The Saheeh, known commonly as Saheeh al-Bukhaaree, is the most important of his
books. It is said to have been heard by 90,000 of the author's students, and is
considered by almost all hadeeth scholars to be the most reliable collection of
hadeeth.
The Saheeh may be seen as al-Bukhari's life-work: his earlier treatises served
him as a preparation for this magnum opus, while his later books were little
more than offshoots of it. It was to the Saheeh that he devoted his most intense
care and attention, expending about a quarter of his life on it.
Al-Bukhari's notion to compile the Saheeh owed its origin to a casual remark
from Ishaaq Ibn Raahawayh (166-238A.H. / 782-852C.E.), who said that he wished
that a hadeeth scholar would compile a short but comprehensive book containing
the genuine ahaadeeth only. These words seem to have fired al-Bukhari's
imagination, and he set to work with indefatigable energy and care. He sifted
through all the ahaadeeth known to him, tested their genuineness according to
canons of criticism he himself developed, selected 7,275 out of some 600,000
ahaadeeth, and arranged them according to their subject matter under separate
headings, most of which are taken from the Qur'aan, and in some cases from
the ahaadeeth themselves.
Because al-Bukhaaree nowhere mentions what canons of criticism he applied to the
traditions to test their genuineness, or tells us why he compiled the book, many
later scholars have tried to infer these things from the text itself.
Al-Haazimee, in his Shuroot al-Aimmah, al-Iraqi in his Alfiyyah, al-'Aynee and
al-Qastalaanee in their introductions to their commentaries on the Saheeh, and
many other writers on the hadeeth sciences, including Ibn as-Salaah, have tried
to deduce al-Bukhari's principles from the material he presents.
As we have seen, al-Bukhari's main object was to collect together the sound
ahaadeeth only. By these, he meant such ahaadeeth as were handed down to him
from the Prophet on the authority of a well-known Companion, via a continuous
chain of narrators who, according to his records, research and knowledge, had
been unanimously accepted by honest and trustworthy hadeeth scholars as men and
women of integrity, possessed of a retentive memory and firm faith, accepted on
condition that their narrations were not contrary to what was related by the
other reliable authorities, and were free from defects. Al-Bukhaaree includes in
his work the narrations of these narrators when they explicitly state that they
had received the ahaadeeth from their own authorities. If their statement in
this regard was ambiguous, he took care that they had demonstrably met their
teachers, and were not given to careless statements.
From the above principles, which Imaam al-Bukhaaree took as his guide in
choosing his materials, his caution is evident. It
is important to note, however, that he used less exacting criteria for the
ahaadeeth that he used as headings for some of his chapters, and as
corroboratives for the principal ones. In such cases, he often omits all or part
of the isnaad, and in certain cases relies on weak authorities. The number of
'suspended' (mu'allaq) and corroborative traditions in the book amounts to about
1,725.
From this it is clear that al-Bukhari's purpose was not only to
collect what he considered to be sound ahaadeeth, but also to impress their
contents on the minds of his readers, and to show them what doctrinal and legal
inferences could be drawn from them. He therefore divided the whole work into
more than a hundred books, which he subdivided in 3,450 chapters. Every chapter
has a heading that serves as a key to the contents of the various traditions,
which it includes.
It has been aptly remarked that the headings of the various chapters of the
Saheeh constitute the fiqh of Imaam al-Bukhaaree. These headings consist of
verses from the Qur'aan or passages from ahaadeeth. In some cases they are in
full agreement with the ahaadeeth listed underneath them, while in some others,
they are of a wider or narrower significance than the ahaadeeth that follow; in
which case they serve as an additional object of interpretation and explanation
of the ahaadeeth. In some cases, they are in the interrogative form, which
denotes that the Imaam regarded the problem as still undecided. In other cases,
he wanted to warn against something that might outwardly appear to be wrong and
impermissible. But in every chapter heading, al-Bukhaaree kept a certain object
in view. There are even cases where the headings are not followed by any
ahaadeeth at all; here al-Bukhaaree is intending to show that no genuine,
tradition on the subject was known to him.
Al-Bukhaaree is also being original when he repeats the various versions of a
single hadeeth in different chapters. By doing this rather than putting them
together in one place, he wanted to bring to light further evidence of the
authenticity of the ahaadeeth in question, and at the same time to draw more
than one practical conclusion from them. Similarly, in including one part of a
hadeeth in one chapter and inserting another part in another chapter, and in
introducing the 'suspended' ahaadeeth as marfoo' and mawqoof, al-Bukhaaree has
certain specific academic purposes in view, which are explained by the
commentators of his Saheeh.
It was thus that the Saheeh, the work of a great hadeeth scholar who combined a
vast knowledge of ahaadeeth and allied subjects with scrupulous piety, strict
exactitude, the painstaking accuracy of an expert editor, and the legal acumen
of an astute jurist, rapidly attracted the attention of the whole Muslim
community, and became accepted as an authority next only to the Qur'aan. Many
Muslim doctors wrote enormous commentaries on it, in which they thoroughly
discuss every aspect of the book, and every word of its contents, from the
legal, linguistic, contextual and historical aspects. Twelve such commentaries
have been printed, while at least another fifty nine remain in manuscript form.
Source: http://www.fatwa-online.com/classicalbooks/hadeeth/0000101.htm
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