hadd in the
mosque and
hudud are not carried out in mosques; he flogged her while standing and women are flogged
sitting; he imposed one
hadd for the father and another for the mother but if a man were to slander a group, he
would receive only one
hadd ; he combined two
hadds and two
hadds are not combined; a madwoman is not
subject to a
hadd ; and the
hadd was for the parents who were absent and failed to attend and claim.”
After hearing about this, Ibn Abi Layla went to the amir and complained to him. The amir put Abu Hanifa
under an interdiction, saying, “Do not give
fatwa .” He did not give
fatwa for some days and then a messenger
came from the authorities who had been instructed to present some questions to Abu Hanifa so that he could
give
fatwa on them. Abu Hanifa refused, saying, “I am barred.” The messenger went to the amir who said, “I
have given him permission.” So he sat to give
fatwa .
In his criticism, Abu Hanifa did not differentiate between a judgement of the
qadi which was binding on
the public, right or wrong, and the
fatwa that a
faqih made which did was not binding on anyone. Sometimes
he criticised a
fatwa that he thought was wrong more severely than an actual judgement because injustice
might develop from it. Injustice pained him greatly and an incorrect
fatwa could result in injustice to people in
their lives and property.
Whatever the position of Abu Hanifa about the judgements of the
qadi , Ibn Abi Layla did not accept the
criticism of Abu Hanifa cheerfully. He was hostile to him because of that criticism and perhaps enmity led
him to try to harm Abu Hanifa. Thus it is reported that Abu Hanifa said about him, “Ibn Abi Layla seeks to
make lawful in regard to me what I would not make lawful for any living creature.” If we blame Abu Hanifa
for the severity of his criticism of the judgements of Ibn Abi Layla and his lack of restraint in making it
public, we also blame the
qadi of Kufa for allowing that criticism to provoke enmity between them.
Al-Mansur was annoyed by Abu Hanifa. Indeed, he became fed up with him when he learned of his
leaning towards the ‘Alawites which was confirmed by various experiences he had had with him. But he could
find no way of dealing with him because he did not go beyond his teaching circle and he was not suspect in
his
deen or his outward actions. He was a firm, reliable, generous scholar to whom people travelled because of
his knowledge, excellence, guidance and fear of Allah. There was no way to act against him as long as he took
no action or rebelled. An opportunity eventually presented itself when he offered him the position of
qadi and
he refused to accept it.
He asked him to be
Qadi of Baghdad which would have made him the Chief
Qadi of the state. If he
accepted, that would indicate his sincerity or his absolute obedience to al-Mansur. If he refused, that would
provide al-Mansur with a means to get at him publicly without damaging his religious reputation because
people thought Abu Hanifa righteous and in this case his refusal was a refusal to accept a necessary duty and
he could be impelled to do that by force. Any harm inflicted was to force him to accept something which
would benefit the general public, not to trick him or wrong him.
He had sometimes criticised the decisions of the
qadis and so it was appropriate for him to sit in the
highest seat of judgement in order to guide the judges to what was obligatory and impel them to what was
correct. He was the