Generations of the Sufis (
Al-Tabaqat al-sufiyya),
al-Sulami (d. 1091) links the sayings of prominent
mystics to the hadith of Muhammad.
Muslim scholars recognized very early on,
certainly by the middle of the eighth century, that
some of the hadith had been forged or transmit-
ted carelessly. Hadith transmitters and collectors
even attacked each other for doing so. Moreover,
because so much of law and doctrine was founded
on hadith, they needed to be assessed according to
their degree of authenticity or lack thereof. Such
concerns led to the development of a science of
hadith criticism (ilm al-hadith). The focus of this
science was on the names of transmitters listed in
the isnad. Hadiths were basically judged accord-
ing to how continuous the line of transmitters
was. Hadith with the most continuous lines were
called sahih (correct, sound), as long as the con-
tent did not contradict the Quran. If an isnad was
discontinuous or had unreliable transmitters, then
the hadith was called hasan (good). If a hadith
had transmitters known to be unreliable or if the
content was not in conformity with the Quran
and had unacceptable content, then it was called
daif (weak). The need to know who the transmit-
ters were, where they lived, when they converted
to Islam, and so forth helped spark the writing
of biographical encyclopedias, which became a
major genre of Islamic and Arabic literature.
Since the late 19th century, Western scholars
of Islamic studies, especially those known as Ori-
entalists, have treated the hadith with even more
skepticism than medieval Muslim scholars. They
have argued that the hadith were either verbal-
ized survivals of pre-Islamic custom, legitimated
during the Islamic period by attributing them to
Muhammad and his companions, or they were
fabricated a century or more after Muhammad’s
death to legitimate practices and beliefs that
emerged after the seventh century. Scholarly con-
sensus in recent decades has moved closer to the
position accepted by most Muslims—that many, if
not most, of the hadith are authentic, but they still
demand critical assessment. Beyond the question
of authenticity, however, the most critical ques-
tion facing Muslims today is whether and how
the hadith can still inform Muslim life in the age
of globalization and profound social and cultural
change.
See also a
khbari
s
chool
;
aUthority
;
biogra
-
phy
;
fiqh
; o
rientalism
;
sharia
.
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