Before discussing ma'lul (defective) ahadith, a
brief note on mudtarib (shaky) and maqlub
(reversed) ahadith would help in understanding
ma'lul.
Mudtarib
According to Ibn Kathir, if reporters disagree
about a particular shaikh, or about some other
points in the isnad or the text, in such a way
that none of the opinions can be preferred over
the others, and thus there is uncertainty about
the isnad or text, such a hadith is called
mudtarib (shaky).
For example with regard to idtirab in the isnad,
it is reported on the authority of Abu Bakr that
he said, "O Messenger of Allah! I see you
getting older?" He (may Allah bless him and
grant him peace) replied, "What made me old are
Surah Hud and its sister surahs." Al-Daraqutni
says,
"This is an example of a mudtarib hadith.
It is reported through Abu Ishaq, but as
many as ten different opinions are held
about this isnad: some report it as mursal,
others as muttasil; some take it as musnad
of Abu Bakr, others as musnad of Sa'd or
'A'ishah. Since all these reports are
comparable in weight, it is difficult to
prefer one above another. Hence, the
hadith is termed as mudtarib."
As an example of idtirab in the text, Rafi' b.
Khadij said that the Messenger of Allah (may
Allah bless him and grant him peace) forbade the
renting of land. The reporters narrating from
Rafi' give different statements, as follows:
- Hanzalah asked Rafi', "What about renting
for gold and silver?" He replied, "It does not
matter if it is rent for gold and silver."
- Rifa'ah --- Rafi' --- the Prophet (may
Allah bless him and grant him peace), who said,
"Whoever owns a piece of land should cultivate
it, give it to his brother to cultivate, or
abandon it."
- Salim --- Rafi' --- his two uncles ---
the Prophet (may Allah bless him and grant him
peace), who forbade the renting of farming land.
- The son of Rafi' --- Rafi' --- the Prophet
(may Allah bless him and grant him peace), who
forbade the renting of land.
- A different narration by Rafi' from the
Prophet (may Allah bless him and grant him
peace), who said, "Whoever owns a piece of land
should either cultivate it or give it to his
brother to cultivate. He must not rent it for a
third or a quarter of the produce, nor for a
given quantity of the produce."
- Zaid b. Thabit said, "May Allah forgive
Rafi'! I am more aware of the hadith than he;
what happened was that two of the Ansar
(Helpers) had a dispute, so they came to the
Prophet (may Allah bless him and grant him
peace), who said after listening to their cases,
'If this is your position, then do not rent the
farms.' Rafi' has only heard the last phrase,
i.e., 'Do not rent the farms'."
Because of these various versions, Ahmad b.
Hanbal said,
"The ahadith reported by Rafi' about the
renting of land are mudtarib. They are not
to be accepted, especially when they go
against the well-established hadith of Ibn
'Umar that the Messenger of Allah (may
Allah bless him and grant him peace) gave
the land of Khaibar to the Jews on
condition that they work on it and take
half of the produce."
Maqlub
A hadith is known as maqlub (changed, reversed)
when its isnad is grafted to a different text or
vice versa, or if a reporter happens to reverse
the order of a sentence in the text.
As an example relating to the text, in his
transmission of the famous hadith describing the
seven who will be under the shelter of Allah on
the Day of Judgment, Muslim reports one of the
categories as, "a man who conceals his act of
charity to such an extent that his right hand
does not know what his left hand gives in
charity." This sentence has clearly been
reversed by a reporter, because the correct
wording is recorded in other narrations of both
al-Bukhari and Muslim as follows: "... that his
left hand does not know what his right hand
gives ..."
The famous trial of al-Bukhari by the scholars
of Baghdad provides a good example of a maqlub
isnad. The traditionists, in order to test
their visitor, al-Bukhari, appointed ten men,
each with ten ahadith. Now, each hadith (text)
of these ten people was prefixed with the isnad
of another. Imam al-Bukhari listened to each of
the ten men as they narrated their ahadith and
denied the correctness of every hadith. When
they had finished narrating these ahadith, he
addressed each person in turn and recounted to
him each of his ahadith with its correct isnad.
This trial earned him great honour among the
scholars of Baghdad.
Other ways in which ahadith have been rendered
maqlub are by replacement of the name of a
reporter with another, e.g. quoting Abu Hurairah
as the reporter from the Prophet (may Allah
bless him and grant him peace) although the
actual reporter was someone else, or by reversal
of the name of the reporter, e.g. mentioning
Walid b. Muslim instead of Muslim b. Walid, or
Ka'b b. Murrah instead of Murrah b. Ka'b.
Ma'lul or Mu'allal
Ibn al-Salah says, "A ma'lul (defective) hadith
is one which appears to be sound, but thorough
research reveals a disparaging factor." Such
factors can be:
- declaring a hadith musnad when it is in fact
mursal, or marfu' when it is in fact mauquf;
- showing a reporter to narrate from his
shaikh when in fact he did not meet the latter;
or attributing a hadith to one Companion when it
in fact comes through another.
Ibn al-Madini (d. 324) says that such a defect
can only be revealed if all the isnads of a
particular hadith are collated. In his book al-
'Ilal, he gives thirty-four Successors and the
names of those Companions from whom each of them
heard ahadith directly. For example, he says
that al-Hasan al-Basri (d. 110, aged 88) did not
see 'Ali (d. 40), although he adds that there is
a slight possibility that he may have seen him
during his childhood in Madinah. Such
information is very important, since for
example, many Sufi traditions go back to al-
Hasan al-Basri, who is claimed to report
directly from 'Ali.
Being a very delicate branch of Mustalah al-
Hadith, only a few well-known traditionists such
as Ibn al-Madini (d. 234), Ibn Abi Hatim al-Razi
(d. 327), al-Khallal (d. 311) and al-Daraqutni
(d. 385), have compiled books about it. Ibn Abi
Hatim, in his Kitab al-'Ilal, has given 2840
examples of ma'lul ahadith about a range of
topics.
An example of a ma'lul hadith is one transmitted
by Muslim on the authority of Abu Hurairah, who
reports the Prophet (may Allah bless him and
grant him peace) as saying,
"Allah created the land on Saturday; He
created the mountains on Sunday; He created
the trees on Monday; He created the things
entailing labour on Tuesday; He created the
light (or fish) on Wednesday; He scattered
the beasts in it (the earth) on Thursday;
and He created Adam after the afternoon of
Friday, the last creation at the last hour
of the hours of Friday, between the
afternoon and night."
Regarding it, Ibn Taimiyyah says,
"Men more knowledgeable than Muslim, such
as al-Bukhari and Yahya b. Ma'in, have
criticised it. Al-Bukhari said, 'This
saying is not that of the Prophet (may
Allah bless him and grant him peace), but
one of Ka'b al-Ahbar'"
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