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Ijtihād against Madhhab: Legal Hybridity and the Meanings of Modernity in Early Modern Daghestan
Published online by Cambridge University Press: 06 January 2015
Abstract
This article explores the interface of multiple legal systems in early modern Daghestan. By comparing colonial engagements with legal plurality with indigenous genres of Daghestani legal discourse, I aim to shed light on the plurality of legal systems that preceded as well as informed legal discourse under colonialism. The Daghestani turn to ijtihād (independent legal reasoning) in the early modern period parallels the turn away from cādāt (indigenous law) that shaped modern Islamic as well as colonial legal regimes, albeit with radically distinctive genealogies. In tracing these internal debates, I offer a preliminary genealogy of Daghestani ijtihād that is grounded in the robust debates concerning the sources of Islamic authority that originated in Yemen and were transmitted to Daghestan by traveling scholars. This essay is a contribution to the study of legal norms on colonial borderlands, as well as to the study of Islamic modernity before colonialism.
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References
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53 Ibid.
54 Kemper, Herrschaft, 354, for this citation and the details that follow.
55 al-Alqadārī, Ḥasan, Āthār-i Dāghistān (St. Petersburg: n.p., 1312/1894–5), 232Google Scholar. I thank Vladimir Bobrovnikov (Russian Academy of Sciences) for furnishing a scan of this edition.
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63 In addition to al-Durgilī, these details are recounted in Shucayb ibn Idrīs al-Bākinī (d. 1912), Ṭabaqāt al-Khwājagān al-Naqshbandiyah (Damascus: Dār al-Nucmān lil-cUlūm, 2003), 399Google Scholar.
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73 The consciousness of temporal rupture is amply on display in al-Alqadārī's account of al-Quduqī's introduction of ijtihād to Daghestan (see especially Āthār-i Dāghistān, 233). For a fuller discussion of relevant passages, see Gould, Rebecca, “Why Daghestan Is Good to Think,” in Gammer, Moshe, ed., Written Culture in Daghestan (Helsinki: Academia Scientiarum Fennica, 2014)Google Scholar.
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86 Al-Badr, 201–2.
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93 Kemper, Herrschaft, 218. Kemper's argument that ijtihād was less intensively debated in Daghestan than in nineteenth-century Tatarstan (Herrschaft, 360) might be taken as an assertion that it was less widespread in Daghestan than elsewhere in the Islamic regions of the Russian Empire. Further research should deepen the textual basis for the connection between al-Quduqī's turn to ijtihād and Ghāzī Muḥammad's imposition of sharī ca, and compare these shifts to developments in neighboring parts of the Islamic world.
94 For Islamic reformism as both traditionist and future-oriented, see Kerr, Malcolm, Islamic Reform: The Political and Legal Theories of Muḥammad cAbduh and Rashīd Riḍā (Berkeley: University of California Press, 1966)Google Scholar. Like Ghāzī Muḥammad, cAbduh was, in Kerr's word, a “conservative by language and manner and a radical by the implication of many of his teachings” (105).
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108 “Das islamische achtzehnte Jahrhundert: Versuch einer historiographischen Kritik,” Die Welt des Islams 30, 1 (1990): 140–59Google Scholar, 149. Also see his, “Was ist die islamische Aufklärung?” Die Welt des Islams 36, 3 (1996): 276–325CrossRefGoogle Scholar; and also the other contributions to this special issue of Die Welt des Islams, entitled “Islamic Enlightenment in the 18th Century?” Schulze's thesis has been subjected to numerous critiques, inter alia, Radtke, B., “Erleuchtung und Aufklärung: Islamische Mystik und europäische Rationalismus,” Die Welt des Islams 34, 1 (1994): 48–66Google Scholar.
109 Hallaq, Wael, The Impossible State: Islam, Politics, and Modernity's Moral Predicament (New York: Columbia University Press, 2013)Google Scholar, ix. Also see Abdullahi Ahmed An-Nacim, Islam and the Secular State: Negotiating the Future of Sharica (Cambridge: Harvard University Press, 2008)Google Scholar.
110 For discussion of early modern fuqahā' who advocated for tamadhhub, see Ibrahim, “Al-Shacrānī's Response,” 113. For a contemporary Yemeni critique of tamadhhub, see Zayd ibn cAlī Wazīr, cIndamā yasūdu al-jafāf: macsāt al-tamadhhub (Richmond, Surrey: Markaz al-Turāth wa-al-Buḥūth al-Yamanī, 1993)Google Scholar. It also indicates the lingering impact of the Yemeni critique of Islamic authority that a Muslim reformist such as Yūsuf Qaraḍāwī should also make tamadhhub an object of critique in his Kayfa natacāmulu maca al-turāth wa-al-tamadhhub wa-al-ikhtilāf? (Cairo: Wahbah, 2001)Google Scholar.
111 Ṣāli ibn Mahdī al-Maqbalī, Al- cālam al-shāmikh (manuscript copied in the Great Mosque of Ṣanaca in 1324 A.H.), at: http://makhtota.ksu.edu.sa/makhtota/2367/1#.UpsylmR_XKs], 125, 130, 136 (accessed 12 Oct. 2014).
112 Iṣhāq b. Yūsuf's cUqūd al-tashkīk is given in full with responses by his contemporaries, in Ismācīl ibn cAlī al-Akwa', al-Zaydīyah: nash'atuhā wa-muʻtaqadātuhā (Beirut: n.p., 2000)Google Scholar. Iṣhāq b. Yūsuf's poem and biography are discussed in Haykel and Zysow, “What Makes a Madhab,” 350–52.
113 Al-Durgilī, Nuzhat, 17 (Arabic text).
114 See Al-Alqadārī's, Āthār-i Dāghistān, 233; and his Jirāb al-Mamnūn (Temir Khan Shura: Mavraev, 1912), 279Google Scholar. I anticipate that further review of unpublished Daghestani manuscripts will reveal still more engagements with Sheykh Ṣāliḥ's poem.
115 See Kohlberg, Etan, “Some Zaydī Views on the Companions of the Prophet,” Bulletin of the School of Oriental and African Studies 39, 1 (1976): 91–98CrossRefGoogle Scholar.
116 According to al-Alqadārī, Sheykh Ṣāliḥ belonged to the “people of the sunna [ahl-i sunneh]” (Āthār-i Dāghistān, 233). However his beliefs, as has been demonstrated, were radically heterodox and influenced by Zaydī theology.
117 van Ess, Josef, Les prémices de la théologie musulmane (Paris: Albin Michel, 2002), 24Google Scholar. On the infallibility of the prophets' companions, also see Arkoun, Mohammad, “The Concept of Authority in Islamic Thought: ‘La Hukma illa li-llah,’” in Ferdinand, Klaus and Mozaffari, Mehdi, eds., Islam: State And Society, (London: Routledge, 1988)Google Scholar.
118 For a contemporary Yemeni attempt to relate Sheykh Ṣāliḥ's poem to his exile, see “Al-zaidiyya fī suṭūr,” at: http://www.ye1.org/vb/showthread.php?t=293100 (accessed 12 Oct. 2014).
119 Krachkovskii, “Dagestan i Yemen,” 583.
120 See, for example, al-Alqadārī's ruling that a Ḥanafī who marries a Shāficī can regard his marriage as valid even if he switches to the Shāficī school, and, even more controversially, concerning the permissibility to Muslims of marrying Christian and Jewish women (Jirāb al-Mamnūn, 158 and 290, respectively).
121 Kemper, , “Daghestani Shaykhs and Scholars in Russian Exile,” in Gammer, Moshe and Wasserstein, David J., eds., Daghestan and the World of Islam (Helsinki: Annales Academiae Scientiarum Fennicae, 2006)Google Scholar, 103 (paraphrasing al-Alqadārī). Al-Alqadārī was the author of two unpublished treatises in defense of the Shīca. See Shikhsaidov, Amri, “Rukopisnoe Nasledie Alkadari,” in Istoriko-literaturnoe nasledie Gasana Alkadari (Makhachkala: Dagestanskii filial AN SSSR, 1988), 60Google Scholar.
122 Jirāb al-Mamnūn, 50.
123 Politics of Piety (Princeton: Princeton University Press, 2005), 81Google Scholar.
124 “Idzhtihad ili sledovanie traditsii?” at: http://gazavat.ru/history3.php?rub=14&art=433 (accessed 12 Oct. 2014). A fuller treatment of debates concerning ijtihād in these periodicals can be found in Navruzov's “Dzharidat Dagistan”—araboiazychnaia gazeta kavkazskikh dzhadidov (Moscow: Mardzhani, 2007), 174–80Google Scholar. For the impact of al-Manār in Tatarstan, see Dudoignon, Stéphane A, “Echoes of al-Manār among the Muslims of the Russian Empire,” in Dudoignon, Stéphane A., Hisao, Komastsu, and Yasushi, Kosogi, eds., Intellectuals in the Modern Islamic World (London: Routledge, 2006), 85–116Google Scholar.
125 “Al-ijtihād wa-al-taqlīd,” Al-Manār 6 (1315/1903): 236–40Google Scholar.
126 Medzhidov, I.U.V. and Abdullaev, M. A., Ali Kaiaev (Makhachkala: Dagestanskoe kn. izd-vo, 1993), 35–39Google Scholar.
127 “Authorized Lies: Colonial Agency and Legal Hybrids in Tashkent, c. 1881–1893,” Journal of the Economic and Social History of the Orient 55 (2012): 688–717CrossRefGoogle Scholar, 691, n. 7.
128 Ibid.,” 692.
129 Bobrovnikov, “Ittifāq Agreements,” 24.
130 Formations of the Secular: Christianity, Islam, Modernity (Stanford: Stanford University Press, 2003), 222Google Scholar.
131 Kemper, Herrschaft, 358; see note 82, above.
132 On the rejection of cādāt in later Daghestani history, see, in addition to Kemper's Herrschaft, 366–400, Gammer, Moshe, Muslim Resistance to the Tsar (London: Frank Cass, 1994), 43Google Scholar.
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