Praise be to Allâh, the
Ever-Living, Who does not die, although mankind and jinn die, and peace and
blessings be upon the Messenger of Allâh, concerning whom Allâh said
(interpretation of the meaning):
"Verily, you [O Muhammad] will die, and verily, they (too) will die."
[al-Zumar 39:30]
Praise be to Allâh, Who
is the only One Whom we praise, even when adversity strikes. He determines the
length of people's lifetimes, and has decreed all things. Everything with Him
is in due proportion, All-Knower of the unseen and the seen, the Most Great,
the Most High. Whatsoever is on earth will perish, and the Face of our Lord,
full of Majesty and Honour, will abide forever.
The honour of the
scholars is great indeed. Their Lord has made them witnesses to the greatest
of truths and has mentioned their testimony alongside His own and that of His
angels. Allâh says (interpretation of the meaning):
"Allâh bears witness that Laa ilaaha illa huwa (none has the right to be
worshipped but He), and the angels, and those having knowledge (also give
this witness); (He is always) maintaining His creation in Justice. Laa
ilaaha illa huwa (none has the right to be worshipped but He), the
All-Mighty, the All-Wise." [Aal 'Imraan 3:18]
Allâh has raised their
status in this world and the next, as He says (interpretation of the meaning):
"Allâh wll exalt in status those of you who believe and those who have
been granted knowledge." [al-Mujaadilah 58:11]
They are the heirs of
the Prophets, who have assumed their role in conveying the Message and calling
people to Islâm. They are the people of abundant good fortune, as the Prophet
(peace and blessings of Allâh be upon him) said: "The
scholars are the heirs of the Prophets, for the Prophets do not leave behind
any dinars or dirhams (i.e., wealth), but they leave behind knowledge. Whoever
receives this knowledge receives abundant good fortune." (Reported
by al-Tirmidhi, 2606). Allâh wills good for the scholars, as the Prophet
(peace and blessings of Allâh be upon him) said:
"Whoever Allâh wishes good for, He enables him to understand the religion
properly." (Reported by al-Bukhaari, 69).
They are the people who
understand the words of Allâh, may He be glorified and exalted, as He says
(interpretation of the meaning):
"And these similitudes We put forward for mankind, but none will
understand them except those who have knowledge." [al-'Ankaboot
29:43]
They are the people who
truly fear Allâh, as He tells us (interpretation of the meaning):
"It is only those who have knowledge among His slaves that fear Allâh."
[Faatir 35:28]
They are the most
knowledgeable of people about evil and what leads to it, so they warn people
of it. Allâh says (interpretation of the meaning):
"Those who have been given the knowledge (about the Torment of Allâh for
the disbelievers) will say: 'Verily! Disgrace this Day and misery are upon
the disbelievers.'" [al-Nahl 16:27]
"But those who had been given (religious) knowledge said: 'Woe to you!
The Reward of Allâh (in the Hereafter) is better for those who believe and
do righteous good deeds, and this none shall attain except those who are
patient (in following the truth)." [al-Qasas 28:80]
The salvation of people
is connected to the presence of scholars; if the scholars are taken away then
the people are doomed. 'Abd-Allâh ibn 'Amr ibn al-'Aas said: "I heard the
Messenger of Allâh (peace and blessings of Allâh be upon him) say,
'Allâh does not take knowledge away by taking it away
from people's (hearts); He takes knowledge away by taking away the scholars
(i.e., when scholars die), and when there is not one scholar left, the people
will turn to ignorant leaders who, when they are consulted, will give fatwas
without knowledge. They are misguided and they misguide others.'"
(Reported by al-Bukhaari, 98).
The phrase
"...by taking it [knowledge] away from people's
(hearts)" implies wiping it from their hearts. During his Farewell
Pilgrimage, the Prophet (peace and blessings of Allâh be upon him) said:
"Learn before knowledge is taken away or lifted up."
A Bedouin said, "How will it be lifted up?" He said,
"Knowledge disappears when its bearers disappear" three times. The
Prophet (peace and blessings of Allâh be upon him) said,
"Allâh will not take away knowledge after it has been
given to you." According to another report, he said,
"Knowledge will not be taken from the people"
or "from the hearts of the people." A
Bedouin asked him, "O Prophet of Allâh, how will knowledge be taken up from
among us when we have Masaahif (copies of the Qur'aan) among us and we have
learned what is in the Qur'aan and have taught it to our children and
womenfolk and servants?" The Prophet (peace and blessings of Allâh be upon
him) looked up at him angrily and said, "These Jews
and Christians have the scripture among them and they don't adhere to a single
letter of what their Prophets brought them!" There are other
corroborating reports that verify these additions to the hadeeth. It was
reported that Abu al-Samah said: "There will come a time
when a man will fatten his mount in preparation for travel, and will travel
through different countries asking for someone to give him knowledge of the
Sunnah that he could follow, and he will not be able to find anyone to give
him a fatwa except with uncertainty, and this has indeed happened."
(Adapted and summarized from Fath al-Baari). 'Umar ibn 'Abd al-'Azeez wrote to
Abu Bakr ibn Hazm to find out what was there of the hadeeth of the Messenger
of Allâh (peace and blessings of Allâh be upon him). He wrote,
"Find out what there is and write it down, for I am
worried that knowledge will disappear when the scholars pass away. spread
knowledge and sit down to teach the one who does not know, for knowledge does
not disappear unless it is kept secret." (Saheeh al-Bukhaari, Kitaab
al-'Ilm, Baab Kayfa yuqbad al-'ilm).
Imaam Ahmad (may Allâh
have mercy on him) said: "People need knowledge more
than they need food and drink, because they need food and drink two or three
times a day, but they need knowledge all the time." Thus the loss of
scholars is a great calamity, "...because the death of
the entire tribe is less serious than the death of one scholar." (Majma'
al-Zawaa'id, 1/201).
Today, Thursday 27
Muharram 1420 (May 13, 1999), Islâm and its people have been grieved by the
death of the great scholar, father and capable teacher, Shaykh 'Abd al-'Azeez
ibn Baaz, and the end of a blessed life lasting eighty-nine years, one month
and fifteen days, a life filled with obedience to Allâh and service to Islâm
and the Muslims.
Shaykh Ibn Baaz, may
Allâh have mercy on him, was born in 1330 AH and grew up in a good family. He
memorized the entire Qur'aan before the age of puberty and studied with the
scholars in his homeland before travelling to seek knowledge in other
countries. He lost his eyesight completely at the age of 19, because of
illness. Allâh knows best, but I think that he is one of the people referred
to in the hadeeth of the Prophet (peace and blessings of Allâh be upon him):
"Allâh says, 'If I take away a person's two beloved (eyes), and he bears it
with patience and the hope of reward, he will have no less a reward than
Paradise.'" (Reported by al-Tirmidhi, 2325. He said, this is a saheeh hasan
hadeeth).
He was as strong as he
could be when it came to issues of Islâm. When one of the oppressive rulers
said that there were myths in the Qur'aan, such as the People of the Cave and
the staff of Moosa, Shaykh Ibn Baaz wrote to him explaining that this
statement was tantamount to apostasy and unbelief. When the ruler's secretary
wrote to tell him that this is not what was intended, and that the man
retracted what he had said, Shaykh Ibn Baaz wrote to him to tell him that if
he was sincere, he should announce his repentance publicly just as he had
announced his kufr openly. The Shaykh also denounced those who rejected the
Sunnah, and the followers of falsehood and bid'ah, by refuting all their
claims. He wrote warnings against observing innovated and unIslâmic
celebrations, such as celebrations of the Prophet's birthday, the anniversary
of the Isra', the middle of Sha'baan, and other innovations that were not
commemorated by the Prophet (peace and blessings of Allâh be upon him) or his
Companions.
He was a true leader,
the Imaam of Ahl al-Sunnah wa'l-Jamaa'ah and the Renewer (Mujaddid) of the
Religion in this age. How many Sunnahs did Allâh revive through him, and how
many bid'ahs were done away with! How many people were stirred up from their
state of negligence and guided away from error! He was one of the leaders of
the pious referred to in the aayah (interpretation of the meaning):
"'...make us leaders for al-muttaqoon (the pious).'" [al-Furqaan
25:74]
He used to strive
against evil, and how many evil things were done away with and how many
bid'ahs put a stop to because of his efforts. He was known for this from an
early age, may Allâh have mercy on him. His own Shaykh, Muhammad ibn Ibraaheem
(may Allâh have mercy on him) praised him for his critical approach and
exposing the falsehood of Arab nationalism (Fataawa Ibn Ibraaheem, 13/148),
and wrote in support of his denunciation of the bid'ah of collective takbeer
(ibid., 3/127). He himself wrote to his shaykh explaining the dangers of
magazines such as al-Musaawar, Rose el-Youssef and Aakhir Saa'ah, which were
widespread at that time (ibid., 13/119). The things that he denounced and
wrote against are innumerable, and one cannot count how many letters and
messages he wrote calling upon the followers of falsehood to discuss matters
and provide evidence. I think in this regard he was acting in accordance with
the words of Allâh (interpretation of the meaning):
"Why do not the rabbis and the religious learned men forbid them from
uttering sinful words and from eating illegal things. Evil indeed is that
which they have been performing." [al-Maa'idah 5:63]
He used to advise people
and warn them against taking haraam employment and evil earnings.
He watched the signs of
evil and issued warnings about them with no delay, such as satellite dishes
and journeys abroad, and the harmful effects of music and movies on the youth
of Islâm. He wrote about the dangers of wanton display, unveiling and free
mixing, out of a sense of jealousy and honour for the sake of Allâh and
concern for the honour of the believing women. This and other writings showed
his awareness of the ummah's issues and his concern for the people's
wellbeing.
He was an imaam and
mujtahid who, with the knowledge, understanding and insight that Allâh
bestowed on him, gave fatwas on matters of major import and difficult, thorny
issues. He was also the head of the Islâmic Fiqh Council (Majma' al-Fiqh al-Islâmi)
which issues fatwas concerning serious contemporary matters. His fataawa on
divorce are indicative of his depth of understanding and ability in making
ijtihaad. His fatwas were based on compassion and understanding, and this was
a great blessing to many people, male and female alike.
He was a mujaddid who
combined knowledge of fiqh with knowledge of hadeeth. He knew about hadeeth
and their degrees of soundness. He had memorized many volumes of ahaadeeth; he
knew all about their narrators and the correct pronunciation of their names.
Texts would be proofread and corrected with his help, even though he was
blind. He was an ocean of knowledge, conversant with the opinions of different
scholars and never at odds with any of them. One could hardly find any odd or
strange fatwa from him. He took the middle path between two sides, those who
focus on hadeeth and do not pay due attention to fiqh or the opinions of the
scholars, and those who focus on fiqh and the opinions of the fuqaha', and do
not pay due attention to the hadeeth. He used to combine the advantages of
both fields of knowledge, fiqh and hadeeth.
He was the leader whose
opinion was decisive; all disputing parties would accept his opinion. Scholars
might engage in a discussion in his presence, but when he spoke, that would be
the end of the dispute - they would accept and follow his opinion. They gave
him two votes where other members of the Fatwa Committee (Lajnat al-Fatwa) had
only one.
With regard to the
ordinary people, many of them would accept only Shaykh Ibn Baaz's fatwa. If
there were varying scholarly opinions on an issue. An ordinary man might say,
"That is enough, give me a break! What does Ibn Baaz say?" One of the greatest
blessings brought about through him is that the scholars and common people
alike would accept him as a leader. This is a distinction which may not apply
to anyone else in our time.
We are not claiming that
the Shaykh was more knowledgeable than al-Shaafa'i or Ahmad or Ibn Taymiyah.
Far from it! But his importance in our own time is no less than their
importance in their own times; indeed, it may be greater, for the people's
need for him was greater, because of the paucity of scholars in this time as
compared to earlier times.
He used to come down to
the level of ordinary people to help them understand things; he did not
address them in a highbrow manner. Very often he would speak to them in the
colloquial so that they would understand him. He was like a mujaddid in the
sphere of fatwas. His fatwas were based on making links between his ruling and
the Qur'aan and Sunnah, and he might mention in his fatwas the opinions of
some scholars. Many of the fatwas of scholars who came before him were
distinguished by the fact that they were merely narrating comments from books
of fiqh produced by the various madhhabs, but the fatwas of Ibn Baaz were
based directly on the Qur'aan and Sunnah.
He loved to benefit
people all the time, and he used to use every opportunity that arose to do
this. For example, he would sit in the mosque and wait for the prayer, and
sometimes he would listen to the person next to him reading Qur'aan. If he
came to a difficult word, he would say to the reader, "Do you know what this
word means?" then he would explain the meaning to him. I sat beside him a
number of times in his house, and if he received a telephone call, when the
conversation ended he would turn to me and say, "This person asked us such and
such a question, and such and such was our answer." If a question was
particularly entertaining, he would tell us about it to put us at ease and be
friendly.
He was extremely humble.
One sign of his humility was that he would not often add comments of his own
in his lessons; the words of the authors of the books were usually enough. It
was as if this were a lesson for him, or a revision or reminder for his own
benefit. His commentary on Fath al-Baari is very light - he only commented
where he felt that it was absolutely necessary. He often used to mention his
shaykhs and pray for mercy for them.
He used to write on his
books, "By the one who is in need of the Mercy of his Lord, 'Abd al-'Azeez ibn
Baaz, may Allâh forgive him."
Another sign of his
humility was that he would get up and walk over to the women standing by his
door, to try and help them by giving them money or answering their questions,
etc. On one occasion, he interrupted a debate with some great scholars to
answer a woman who was on the phone. When some of them passed a comment, he
said, "She needs help."
If he received an
invitation from a janitor or guard in the Islâmic University, at the time when
he was the Dean of the University, he would accept. Even though he was so
busy, he would be very keen to accept invitations to wedding parties, because
the Sunnah urges us to accept such invitations.
A further sign of his
humility was that he would sit on the floor to eat, and would dress simply. He
wore a loose, colourless thobe that came down no further than mid-calf, and an
inexpensive cloak (abayah). His clothes, shoes and cane indicated that he was
an ascetic with no interest in the luxuries of this world.
He would spend his
salary and even borrow money to help people in need. Once a letter came from
the Philippines to His Eminence the Shaykh, may Allâh have mercy on him. It
was a letter from a woman who said, "My husband was a Muslim. The Christians
took him away and threw him into a well, and I have become a widow and my
children orphans. I have no one apart from Allâh, may He be glorified and
exalted. I said to myself, who can I write to in this world, who can help me
after Allâh? There is no one but Shaykh 'Abd al-'Azeez ibn Baaz, so I hope
that you will help me." The Shaykh, may Allâh have mercy on him, wrote to the
relevant authorities asking them to help her, and they replied that there was
no clause that allowed for aid to a woman whose husband had been thrown into a
well, and the financial resources were limited. So the Shaykh said to his
scribe, "Write a letter for me to the trustee of the fund: 'With greetings,
deduct ten thousand riyals from my salary and send it to this woman.'"
He was very pious and
trustworthy. He could be trusted with millions given in charity and zakaah by
Muslims, which he would strive to dispense of in the appropriate ways. It is
no exaggeration to say that what was spent through him was more than a
thousand million.
He used to take care of
his students. When he taught in al-Kharj, he asked for accommodation and
stipends for them. He would hold classes and halaqahs for them after Fajr,
after Zuhr, after 'Asr and between Maghrib and 'Isha'. Some of his students
who used to read Tafseer Ibn Katheer to him between Maghrib and 'Isha'
mentioned that often he would be so moved by what was read that he would weep,
and sometimes he would weep for so long that the lesson was prolonged, without
him realizing it. As soon as he realized, he would end the lesson and they
would pray 'Isha'. He would engage in discussion with his students, especially
in matters of inheritance. He would check on their circumstances and try to
help them, and he would go with them on trips outside the city. He never
forgot to pay attention to their need for physical exercise, such as running
and having races, as was related in the Sunnah, in the hadeeth of 'Aa'ishah
and Salamah ibn al-Akwa'.
When the town of al-Dalam
was overwhelmed by floods in 1360 AH, he went out to encourage its people to
build barriers. He brought dates and coffee from his own house to serve to the
people at the places where they were working. When a swarm of locusts hit the
town, the Shaykh went out with the people to kill the insects with palm
leaves. He was keen on managing Awqaaf (endowment funds) and establishing
schools. When he was appointed to the administration of the Islâmic University
of Madeenah in 1381 AH and thereafter, he used to check on the classrooms and
students. He took care of those who had come from other countries, providing
them with books and teaching them Arabic. He used to borrow from the
University's funds - to be deducted from his salary - to help poor students.
One day he found himself in debt to the University, owing 400 riyals from his
next month's salary, so he borrowed from some of the shaykhs to give money to
poor people. When he was appointed as the head of the Bureau for Academic
Research and Fatwas (Idarat al-Buhooth al-'Ilmiyyah wa'l-Ifta) in 1395 AH, and
left Madeenah for Riyaadh, he delivered a speech which moved his colleagues
and students to tears.
There are very few
people who can be appointed to positions of high rank without altering and
becoming arrogant oppressors.
He was a skillful
administrator who was appointed to the administration of the Islâmic
University in Madeenah, the Bureau for Academic Research and Fatwas and the
Organization of Major Scholars (Hay'at Kibaar al-'Ulama'). He was a man who
was well organized with regard to his time, work, lessons, food and meetings.
He would pay due attention to all matters and all people.
He was behind many
charitable projects such as building mosques and institutions for the
memorization of Qur'aan, Islâmic centres and Sharee'ah institutes. One of his
greatest achievements was his effort to establish departments for religious
affairs in all government departments and offices, to organize lectures and
channel questions and requests for fatwas. Because of this, so much good was
done, the true extent of which is known only to Allâh. We ask Allâh to make
his good deeds weigh heavily in the Balance because of this.
He had a remarkable
ability to distinguish voices even when there were many people around. He
could recognize a speaker even if he had not heard his voice for years. He
would remember details about people and would ask them about their
circumstances and the state of affairs in their homelands and among their
relatives, even though they were so many.
He used to remember
Allâh very often, even when eating and between mouthfuls. He often used to say
"Laa hawla wa laa quwwata illa Billaah (there is no strength and no power
except with Allâh)," and he would send blessings on the Prophet (peace and
blessings of Allâh be upon him) very frequently. If someone spoke nonsense in
his presence, he would tell him, "Sabbih, sabbih! (Glorify Allâh i.e., say
Subhaan Allâh)". He would often remain silent, deep in thought, and when he
listened to someone, he would incline his head and listen intently. He had
remarkable powers of discernment and could distinguish those who were telling
the truth from those who were lying. He also made good choices when selecting
people to do various jobs.
He would be very
cautious when issuing fatwas. Often he would say things like, "We need to
think about it" or "It needs some thought. I will write to the Committee for
Issuing Fatwas so that we can discuss the matter with our brothers." He told
me this many times throughout twenty years when I asked him hundreds of
questions. When holding a lesson in the courtyard of the Masjid al-Haraam in
Makkah which was filled with people, he would never feel too shy to say, "The
matter is not clear in my mind."
He was filled with fear
of Allâh; he would weep readily and be strongly moved, so much so that he
would stop a lesson when he was overcome with emotion. Allâh says
(interpretation of the meaning):
"It is only those who have knowledge among His slaves that fear Allâh."
[Faatir 35:28]
He used to weep when
discussing the story of Ka'b ibn Maalik, and the slander against 'Aa'ishah
(al-ifk), and the bay'ah (oath of allegiance) of the Ansaar, and the Bedouin
whose riding-beast broke his neck, so although he had done little, he was
given a great reward.
He used to worship Allâh
continually and strive to obey his Lord. One of those who accompanied him from
al-Taa'if to Riyaadh overland said: when it was the middle of the night, about
2 a.m., the Shaykh said to his companions, "It seems that we are tired. Let us
break our journey and sleep." So we stopped, and barely had our feet touched
the ground but we fell asleep. The good ones amongst us prayed one rak'ah or
three rak'ahs before sleeping. The Shaykh also started to pray, and when the
people with him woke up before Fajr they saw him still praying.
I think - and Allâh
knows best - that he was one of the three on whom Allâh will smile, as the
Prophet (peace and blessings of Allâh be upon him) mentioned in his hadeeth:
"A man who meets the enemy on the battlefield and
faces them bravely until he is killed or he opens the way for his companions;
people who are on a journey and have travelled for a good part of the night,
until they long to touch the ground (i.e., stop and rest), so they stop, and
one of them moves a short distance away from them and starts praying until he
wakes them up at the time when they have to resume their journey; and a man
who has a neighbour who disturbs him but he bears it patiently until they are
separated either by death or by one of them moving away." (Reported
by Imaam Ahmad in al-Musnad, 20377; Saheeh al-Jaami', 3074)
Allah blessed him with
acceptance throughout the world. One of those who are involved in da'wah said
that he went on a trip to one of the nations in central Africa. "We met an
elderly woman who asked, 'Where are you from?' We told her through the
interpreter that we were from Saudi, and she said, 'Convey my salaams to
Shaykh Ibn Baaz.'" Some of the poor people from Nepal who came to look for
work in Saudi asked some contractors about Shaykh Ibn Baaz.
He was a great teacher
who paid attention to priorities when teaching people, in accordance with the
saying that people should be taught about the minor issues before the major
issues.
He would stop answering
questions when it was time to respond to the muezzin. If he omitted or forget
something, he would put it right. He never omitted to make dhikr after salaah,
despite the fact that there were so many people around him asking questions
and making requests. He would interrupt his conversation to recite the dhikr
for leaving the mosque.
He was always fair to
his two wives, and would pray Sunnat al-Maghrib in the house of the wife in
whose house he was spending the night.
The number of times he
interceded on behalf of others is uncountable. He paid the "zakaah" for his
high standing, just as he paid the "zakaah" for his knowledge, in accordance
with the words of the Prophet (peace and blessings of Allâh be upon him),
"Intercede, and you will be rewarded." He interceded for old and young and
workers. How many students were accepted in universities, how many poor people
were given charity and how many workers were able to bring their wives to the
Kingdom because of his intercession.
He used to strive to
reconcile between husbands and wives, and between any people who were engaged
in a dispute.
He was very patient,
tolerant and easy-going. One day when he was a qaadi (judge) in al-Dalam, a
man came in swearing and insulted the Shaykh with obscene words, but the
Shaykh kept quiet and did not respond. Then Shaykh 'Abd al-'Azeez travelled to
go to Hajj, and that man died. When they brought him out for the funeral
prayer, the imaam of the mosque refused to pray for him. He knew about the
incident that had taken place, and said, "I will not pray for someone who
insulted a scholar. You go ahead and pray for him." When the Shaykh came back
from Hajj and was told that the man had died and about what had happened, he
prayed for mercy for him and rebuked the imaam. He asked them to take him to
the man\'s grave, where he offered the prayer for him and made du'aa' for him.
A few days before he died, I said to him, "O Shaykh, I want to ask you to
forgive me, because there must be some mistake I have made or shortcomings in
my behaviour towards you, or I must have misunderstood something you have
said, or conveyed something from you inaccurately." He said, "I forgive, I
forgive, may Allâh forgive you."
He was very generous in
giving. I have seen him give his abayah to someone who asked for it. He would
never eat alone. He always had lots of guests and he would not eat unless
there were others at his table with him. When he fell sick he said to us one
time when the food was ready, "Please go ahead and eat, and excuse me."
Allâh blessed him with a
sharp mind, and he was not afflicted with senility. Even the slight
forgetfulness that came to him with old age did not affect his ability to
issue fatwas or to call evidence to mind and focus on things and understand
them, even though he had entered his ninetieth year. A few days before he
died, I asked him about a woman who had died before fulfilling her obligation
to do sa'ee (running between al-Safa' and al-Marwah as part of Hajj or 'Umrah)
- should her son do this on her behalf? He said, "You cannot do anything about
death, it is inevitable. Her son can do sa'ee on her behalf, just as he can do
Hajj on her behalf." Then he added a qualifier: "But he has to be in a state
of ritual ihraam when he does sa'ee on her behalf." I said, "So he should
enter ihraam for 'umrah and do tawaaf and sa'ee, and before he cuts his hair
he should do sa'ee on behalf of his mother?" He said, "Or before he does his
own 'umrah after he has entered ihraam." This precision of thought stayed with
him until the very end of his life.
He worked until his last
breath, and his lessons continued until he fell sick. His lesson after Fajr on
Thursday lasted for more than three hours.
He worked for
fifty-eight years and never even took one holiday. He never slept for more
than four or five hours in a day. He was entitled to retire with a full salary
twenty years ago, but he continued to serve Islâm and to strive in support of
the religion.
After he fell sick,
whenever the pain got too much for him, once he recovered, he would say to the
scribes and assistants around him, "Carry on and read to me what you have." So
they would read the letters, messages, issues of divorce and objectionable
things, and pleas for intercession, etc., that would help the country and the
people.
Last night, Wednesday
night, he was sitting with his family and children until twelve o'clock, when
he went to bed. At 2 a.m. his pain got worse, and his soul departed to meet
its Maker at Fajr (dawn) on Thursday 27 Muharram 1420 AH, in the city of al-Taa'if,
in the Western area of the Kingdom of Saudi Arabia.
The Shaykh, may Allâh
have mercy on him, had started to suffer from pain and infection in the
oesophagus when fasting last Ramadaan. He had been to the hospital numerous
times, but he never moaned or complained. When the pain was very bad, it could
only be seen from a change in his face, and all he would do was put his hand
on his chest where it hurt. His death is a great calamity, and the people of
Tawheed have been stricken with the painful and grievous news, but all we can
do is to accept with patience the will and decree of Allâh, and say only that
which pleases our Lord: Innaa Lillaahi wa innaa ilayhi raaji'oon. Allaahumma
ajurnaa fi museebatinaa wakhluf lanaa khayran minhaa (To Allâh we belong and
unto Him is our return. O Allâh, recompense us for our affliction and replace
it for us with something better).
He will be missed by
elderly women, who will weep much for him. Many women fell ill when they heard
the news. He will be missed by his neighbours, who would be woken for Fajr
every day by the sound of his cane banging on their doors as he left to go and
pray, to let them know it was time for prayer. He will be missed in the
corners of the mosques, in the mihrabs and minbars. He will be missed by the
land over which he walked to and from his prayers and lessons, but it will
give testimony in his favour, in sha Allâh, when the earth will speak of all
things, good and evil, that were done on it. "That
Day it [the earth] will declare its information (about all that happened on it
of good or evil), because your Lord has inspired it." [al-Zalzalah
99:4-5 - interpretation of the meaning].
Two kinds of enemies of
Allâh will rejoice at the news of his death: the hypocrites who want to remove
Islâm from people's lives, and the confused followers of bid'ah and desires.
He was a thorn in the
sides of the munaafiqeen. His fatwas foiled their evil designs and by means of
him Allâh warded off many evils. They were very irrated with him and hoped for
his death, and some of them even used to say, "Women will be able to do such
and such when the Shaykh dies, and we will have a break from his strict fatwas."
The Shaykh has died and they are still without hope. May Allâh never make them
able to achieve what they want!
And now what?
Our loss is great and
our grief is overwhelming, but we may find consolation in the following:
Firstly: the death of
the Prophet (peace and blessings of Allâh be upon him). 'Aa'ishah said:
"The Messenger of Allâh (peace and blessings of
Allâh be upon him) opened a door of his house or pulled back a curtain, and
saw the people praying behind Abu Bakr. He gave thanks to Allâh because he saw
that they were fine, hoping that Allâh would compensate them for their loss of
him with something like what he could see. He said, 'O people, when any one of
the people or of the believers is stricken with a calamity, let him console
himself with the thought that this calamity [i.e., the death of the Prophet
(peace and blessings of Allâh be upon him)] is greater than whatever he is
going through. After my death, no member of my ummah will ever be stricken
with a calamity greater than the loss of me." (Reported by Ibn
Maajah, 1588; Saheeh al-Jaami', 7879).
Secondly: we know that
Islâm does not depend on any one person. Allâh is Merciful and He will provide
for this ummah someone who will guide it and lead it in the way of knowledge,
justice and the legacy of the Prophet (peace and blessings of Allâh be upon
him).
Thirdly: the students of
the Shaykh, the scholars and seekers of knowledge whom he has left behind.
Fourthly: his "immortal
children", i.e., his books, fatwas, theses and recorded lectures. The
knowledge left behind by the scholar is his "immortal child".
Fifthly: the dreams that
have been seen about him, which are a good sign about him and are one of the
parts of Prophethood, as the Prophet (peace and blessings of Allâh be upon
him) said. Just now I was told about a woman who dreamt, on the night that the
Shaykh died, that she saw a light being taken from earth and raised up to
heaven. When she woke on the morning ,she heard that the Shaykh had died.
We should not forget our
duties towards the Shaykh now, which are: to ask for Allaah's mercy for him,
to make du'aa' for him, to disseminate his works, to spread news of his
virtues and character, and to follow his methodology, which was derived from
the Qur'aan and Sunnah.
O Allâh, forgive 'Abd
al-'Azeez ibn Baaz, have mercy on him, make his grave wide and fill it with
light. Raise his status among the guided and above many of Your creation on
the Day of Judgement. Forgive us and him, O Lord of the Worlds. Admit him to a
place of honour on the Day of Resurrection. O Allâh, compensate the Muslims
with good, for You are the All-Hearing Who answers prayers and You are Ever
Near.
Written by his devoted
student, Muhammad Saalih al-Munajjid at noon on Thursday 27 Muharram 1420 AH.
RELATED (as at 10th
November 2000