Advanced | Help | Encyclopedia
Directory


Maliki

This article forms part of the series
Islam
Vocabulary of Islam
Five Pillars
Profession of faith
Prayer · Alms · Fasting
Pilgrimage to Mecca
Jihad (See Sixth pillar of Islam)
Major Figures
Muhammad
Prophets of Islam
Caliph · Shia Imam · The Mahdi
Companions of Muhammad
Holy CitiesEvents
Mecca · Medina
Jerusalem
Najaf · Karbala
Kufa · Kazimain
Mashhad · Samarra
Hijra
Islamic calendar
Eid ul-Fitr
Eid ul-Adha
Aashurah
Arba'een
Buildings Religious Roles
Mosque · Minaret
Mihrab · Kaaba
Islamic architecture
Muezzin · Mufti
Mullah · Imam
Ayatollah · Marja
Texts & Law
Qur'an · Hadith · Sunnah
Fiqh · Fatwa · Sharia
Sharia Schools Kalam Schools
Hanafi
Hanbali
Jafari
Maliki
Shafi'i
Asharite
Jabriyya
Maturidi
Murjite
Mu'tazili
Qadariyya
Shi'a sects Kharijite sects
Ithna Asharia
Ismailiyah
Zaiddiyah
Alawi* · Alevi*
Sufri
Azraqi
Ibadi
Messianic Sects Movements
Ahmadiyyah
Zikri
Sufism
Wahhabism
Salafism
Liberals
Other Sects Related Faiths
Nation of Islam
Five Percenters
Druze*
Babism
Bahá'í Faith
Yazidi
Sikhism
* = self-identification unclear

Maliki is one of the four schools of Fiqh or religious law within Sunni Islam. Maliki is practiced in North Africa and all of Muslim of West Africa. It is the second-largest of the four schools, followed by approximately 25% of Muslims. Madhabs are not sects, but rather schools of jurisprudence. There is, technically, no rivalry or competition between members of varying madhabs, and indeed it would not be uncommon for followers of all four to be found in a randomly selected American or European mosque.


Table of contents

Less reliance on hadith

The Maliki school derives from the work of Imam Malik. It differs from the three other schools of law most notably in the sources it uses for derivation of rulings. All four schools use the Qur'an as primary source, followed by the sunnah of the prophet Muhammad transmitted as hadith (sayings), ijma (consensus of the scholars or Muslims) and Qiyas (analogy); the Maliki school, in addition, uses the practice of the people of Medina (amal ahl al-medina) as a source.

This source, according to Malik, sometimes supersedes hadith, because the practice of the people of Medina was considered "living sunnah," inasmuch as the Prophet migrated there, lived there and died there, and most of his companions lived there during his life and after his death. The result is a much more limited reliance upon hadith than is found in other schools.

Malik was particularly scrupulous about authenticating his sources when he did appeal to them, however, and his comparatively small collection of ahadith, known as Al-Muwatta ("The Approved"), is highly regarded. Malik is said to have explained the title as follows: "I showed my book to seventy jurists of Madina, and every single one of them approved me for it (kulluhum wâta’ani `alayh), so I named it ‘The Approved’."

Malik was once sentenced to a lashing by the caliph Abu Ja`far al-Mansur for narrating a hadith to the effect that a divorce obtained under coercion was invalid. Later, he was paraded through the streets in disgrace and ordered to insult himself publicly. He is reported to have said: "Whoever knows me, knows me; whoever does not know me, my name is Malik ibn Anas, and I say: The divorce of the coerced is null and void!" When the incident was reported to the governor of Medina (who was also the cousin of al-Mansur), Malik was ordered released.

Differences in emphasis from other madhabs

There are slight differences in the preferred methods of salat, or prayer, in the Maliki madhab. A summary of the Maliki traditions in salat may be consulted [here]. In the obligatory salaat, the hands should be placed at the sides according to the majority of scholars in the school of Imam Malik; however, the more common practice of joining the hands beneath the chest, right hand over left, does not invalidate the prayer.

An overview of Maliki rulings on everyday practice may be found [here].


Notable Maliki jurists

External links








Links: Addme | Keyword Research | Paid Inclusion | Femail | Software | Completive Intelligence

Add URL | About Slider | FREE Slider Toolbar - Simply Amazing
Copyright © 2000-2008 Slider.com. All rights reserved.
Content is distributed under the GNU Free Documentation License.