📚 The Reality Behind the Claimed Shūrā Council of Ḥanafī Jurisprudence

Adapted from the book: Toḥfah Ḥanafiyyah by Mawlānā Abū Ṣuhayb Dāwūd Arshad حفظه الله
In response to: Toḥfat Ahl-e-Ḥadīth by Abū Bilāl Jhangvī
Topic: Evaluation of the Historical Claim that Imām Abū Ḥanīfah’s Fiqh Was Developed by a Shūrā Council

❖ Introduction​

In Toḥfat Ahl-e-Ḥadīth, Abū Bilāl Jhangvī asserts that one of the key reasons for preferring the Ḥanafī madhhab is that it was established through a consultative body (Majlis-e-Shūrā) formed by Imām Abū Ḥanīfah. According to him, all issues were collectively discussed and agreed upon in this council, setting it apart from other Imāms who, he claims, formulated their jurisprudence independently.

This article, extracted from Toḥfah Ḥanafiyyah, critically analyzes this claim by presenting a detailed study of the supposed members of this council and their credibility.

✦ Major Points of Refutation​

① Lack of Historical Evidence​

Jhangvī fails to mention:
  • The number of members in the council.
  • Their names and scholarly credentials.
  • When and where the council was established.
He also does not provide any authenticated historical source, making his claim a baseless narrative.

② Review of Alleged Council Members​

A comprehensive list of 40+ individuals claimed to be part of this council is evaluated. The findings reveal:
  • Many of them were born after the council was supposedly established (e.g., 120 AH).
  • Several individuals were declared weak, fabricators, or deviants by leading ḥadīth scholars like Imām Bukhārī, Ibn Ḥibbān, Dhahabī, and others.
  • Some of the names were staunch critics of Abū Ḥanīfah, such as Imām ʿAbdullāh ibn al-Mubārak, Imām Wakīʿ, Imām Shurayk, and Imām Dawūd al-Ṭāʾī.
This raises the question: How could people with opposing theological and jurisprudential beliefs be part of the same shūrā?

Factual Contradictions and Fabrications

  • Some names (like Yūsuf ibn Khālid al-Samtī) are proven to be fabricators of ḥadīth.
  • Individuals such as Abū Yūsuf and Imām Muḥammad were born after the supposed formation of this council, and their student-teacher relationship with Imām Abū Ḥanīfah developed only later in their lives.
  • Some personalities, e.g., Imām Zaydah, are well-known Ahl al-Ḥadīth scholars, and their inclusion in a council promoting qiyās over ḥadīth is implausible.

✿ Noteworthy Observations​

  • No trace of this council’s discussions or decisions is found in the preserved works of Abū Yūsuf, Imām Muḥammad, or even later Ḥanafī compilers.
  • No mention in early or later Ḥanafī sources regarding the “official compiled fiqh” agreed upon by this council.
  • The supposed members never referenced this council or its decisions in their writings or transmitted rulings.

❖ Conclusion​

The claim of a shūrā-based formation of Ḥanafī fiqh is a fabricated myth that lacks any credible historical basis. It seems to be a rhetorical tool to elevate the madhhab over others rather than a substantiated scholarly reality.

The findings show:
  • Many alleged members were either unqualified, born too late, or opposed to Imām Abū Ḥanīfah’s methodology.
  • The entire notion of a “fiqh council” compiling legal rulings collectively is unsupported in Islamic history and contradicts known academic traditions.
Thus, attributing the structured formation of Ḥanafī jurisprudence to a grand council is not just misleading but also historically untrue. The Ḥanafī fiqh, like other madhāhib, evolved over time through the scholarly efforts of individuals, not collective legislative councils.
 
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