Recent from talks
Contribute something
Nothing was collected or created yet.
Umar Sulaiman Al-Ashqar
View on WikipediaUmar Sulaiman Al-Ashqar (Arabic: عمر بن سليمان الاشقر; 1940 – 10 August 2012)[1] was a Neo-Salafi[2][3] scholar associated with the Muslim Brotherhood.[4] He authored several books about matters on Islamic creed.
Key Information
Biography
[edit]Sulaiman Al-Ashqar was born 1940 in Palestine.[5] He was a descendant from a family known for Islamic scholars and authors in Kuwait and later Jordan.[5] He was one of the most influential writers in Jordan, where he also served as a professor in the Faculty of Islamic Law at the University of Jordan and the Dean of the Faculty of Islamic Law at Zarqa University.[5] Before his expulsion from Saudi Arabia in the sixties, he was a disciple of Ibn Baz.[5] After his expulsion from Saudi Arabia, he worked in Kuwait and earned a doctorate at the Al-Azhar University.[5]
Creed and theology
[edit]Publications
[edit]He authored a number of books on Islam. Among them eight monographs on Islamic creed, including 'in the Light of Quran and Sunnah' (Silsilat al-'aqida fi daw' al-kitab wa-l-sunna).[6] In 1998, the Saudi publisher al-Dar 'Alamiyya li-l kitab wa-l-sunna' agreed to translate eight volumes of the series into twenty-five languages, including 'Endtime', a work about Islamic Eschatology, first published in English in 1999.[6]
Eschatology
[edit]In his writings 'The Last Day' (al-Yawm al-akhir), he outlines the doctrines of Islamic Eschatology as it has become mostly accepted in Salafi circles. Diverging from previous authors, al-Ashqar does not apply hadith-criticism and does not considered different degrees of soundness of narrations.[7]
In contrast to some proto-Salafis, such as Ibn Qayyim, who served as an inspiration for his methodology, he rejects the doctrine of "annihilation of hell" (fanāʾ al-nār).[8]: 284 In his interpretation of related hadiths, he asserts that only those who stick close to the Quran and the Sunnah go to paradise, while those considered deviant, such as Mu'tazilites and Kharijites go to hell temporarily, while groups he considered wholly outside the fold of Islam such as Isma'ilis, Alevites, and Druze, go to hell forever.[8]: 285
In regard to a famous hadith stating that the "majority of inhabitants of hell are women", he defends the piety of women.[8]: 285 Rather than blaming women's piety, he states that women are subject to uncontrollable passions and suffer from intellectual deficiencies.[8]: 285
On angels, jinn, and devils
[edit]Al-Ashqar's 'Alam al-jinn wa'l-shayatin became a major source on for many Salafi authorities, on matters of jinn and devils, including many scholars of the Egyptian authorities of the Ansar al-Sunnah.[9] Here, al-Ashqar disagrees with the majority of Classical Sunni authorities in that the devils were originally angels, and sides with an originally minority view held by Hasan al-Basri i.e. that the jinn are of the genus of Iblis.[10]
Similarly, al-Ashqar disregards many other hadiths around angels traditionally accepted.[11] He furthermore neglects past scholars who held such views.
For al-Ashqar, humans, angels, and jinn belong to the three beings designated as mukallaf, i.e. beings holding legal responsibilities.[12]
References
[edit]- ^ Umar Sulaiman Al-Ashqar's obituary (in Arabic)
- ^ Richard Gauvain Salafi Ritual Purity: In the Presence of God Routledge 2013 ISBN 978-0-710-31356-0 page 302
- ^ Lange, Christian, editor. Locating Hell in Islamic Traditions. Brill, 2016. JSTOR, www.jstor.org/stable/10.1163/j.ctt1w8h1w3. p. 129
- ^ Ovamir Anjum1 Salafis and Democracy: Doctrine and Context p. 21
- ^ a b c d e Kendall, E. (Ed.). (2018). Reclaiming Islamic Tradition: Modern Interpretations of the Classical Heritage. Edinburgh University Press. p. 250
- ^ a b Kendall, E. (Ed.). (2018). Reclaiming Islamic Tradition: Modern Interpretations of the Classical Heritage. Edinburgh University Press. p. 251
- ^ Kendall, E. (Ed.). (2018). Reclaiming Islamic Tradition: Modern Interpretations of the Classical Heritage. Edinburgh University Press. p. 254
- ^ a b c d Lange, Christian (2016). Paradise and Hell in Islamic Traditions. Cambridge United Kingdom: Cambridge University Press. ISBN 978-0-521-50637-3.
- ^ Richard Gauvain Salafi Ritual Purity: In the Presence of God Routledge 2013 ISBN 978-0-710-31356-0 page 302
- ^ Richard Gauvain Salafi Ritual Purity: In the Presence of God Routledge 2013 ISBN 978-0-710-31356-0 page 73
- ^ Stephen Burge Angels in Islam: Jalal al-Din al-Suyuti's al-Haba'ik fi Akhbar al-malik Routledge 2015 ISBN 978-1-136-50473-0 p. 13-14
- ^ Powers, P. R. (2006). Intent in Islamic Law: Motive and Meaning in Medieval Sunnī Fiqh (Vol. 25). Brill. p. 12
Umar Sulaiman Al-Ashqar
View on GrokipediaUmar Sulaymān al-Ashqar (1940 – 10 August 2012) was a Palestinian-born Islamic scholar who became a prominent figure in Jordanian academia, specializing in the exposition of orthodox Sunni creed (aqīdah).[1][2] He earned a bachelor's degree from the Islamic University of Madinah, followed by advanced degrees from al-Azhar University in Cairo, and studied under influential traditionalist scholars such as Ibn Bāz and al-Albānī.[1] Al-Ashqar served as dean of the Faculty of Islamic Law at al-Zarqa University and as a professor in the Faculty of Islamic Law at the University of Jordan, where he contributed to the teaching of Sharia sciences.[1][2] His most notable achievement was authoring the Islamic Creed Series, an eight-volume work systematically detailing beliefs in Allah, angels, divine books, prophets, predestination, the unseen, paradise and hell, and jinn and devils, drawing directly from Quranic verses and authentic hadiths to affirm traditional doctrines against heterodox interpretations.[3][1]
