it after the standing, which is the opinion of Ibn ‘Abbas.” From this it is clear that Abu Hanifa completely
abandoned Ibrahim’s opinion and accepted that of Ibn ‘Abbas which was related by ‘Ata’. This is part of the
fiqh
of Makka, not Kufa. So he left Ibrahim and Kufa. How can this be blind imitation of Ibrahim or the
people of Kufa? Such exceptions are often seen in the traditions of Abu Yusuf.
The truth is that Abu Hanifa came onto the scene when Iraqi
fiqh
was mature but he did not confine
himself to what he found there. He followed a path which another had begun and went to the end of the road.
We are not partisan here and take a middle course in this matter. There is no doubt that the opinions of
Ibrahim an-Nakha’i had a tremendous effect on the formation of the legal reasoning of Abu Hanifa and that
this was his starting point in
fiqh
, but that does not mean that Abu Hanifa did not take from anyone else or
pursue any other paths. It seems that Abu Hanifa began his legal studies with what his shaykh Hammad
reported of Ibrahim’s
fiqh
. Then he completed his studies with others and deduced using analogy and
evidence from the moment he took Hammad’s place in his circle until his death, a period of about thirty years.
Whatever the position of Abu Hanifa in relation to Ibrahim, there is no doubt that Abu Hanifa and Ibrahim
were the two eminent personalities in the formation of Iraqi
fiqh
and that their legal reasoning was so close
that it led scholars to make that claim and make the personality of the latter vanish into the former. It is a false
assertion because unity in thinking is not like unity in opinion. Abu Hanifa was not an imitator. He clearly
stated that he used
ijtihad
as Ibrahim had done.
Ibrahim, as the
faqih
of Iraq, had an initial influence on Abu Hanifa who then formulated his own
fiqh
.
Common factors in their manner of legal reasoning can be discerned. Both of them turned to analysis of
hadith
to extract the meaning as will become clear when we examine Abu Hanifa’s reliance on
hadith
. Both
interpreted
hadiths
in a legal manner to deduce the reasons for the rulings in them in order to then extend them
through analogy to other matters. Ibrahim used
mursal hadiths
and Abu Hanifa also accepted
mursal hadiths
and used them as evidence.
But in spite of this agreement in legal reasoning we find that they differ in two important matters. One is
that Abu Hanifa used a lot of the
fiqh
of Makka and Madina as the
musnad
of his
hadiths
indicate. The second
is that Abu Hanifa used a lot of ramification and hypothetical cases and did not confine himself only to what
he was asked about. He used to hypothesise problems and clarify their ruling and evidence. We will deal with
Abu Hanifa’s position in respect of this.
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