❖ Question:
Maulana Sarfaraz Safdar Deobandi declared the tadlīs (concealment of the source) of al-Aʿmash as harmless, citing Ḥāfiẓ Ibn Ḥajar al-ʿAsqalānī’s classification in Ṭabaqāt al-Mudallisīn. Is this stance correct?✿ Answer by Shaykh Nadīm Ẓahīr (ḥafiẓahullāh):
This stance is not correct.The classification of Ṭabaqāt al-Mudallisīn by Ḥāfiẓ Ibn Ḥajar was never regarded as final or absolute by the scholars of ḥadīth, neither in his time nor afterward.
❖ Ibn Ḥajar’s Classification Is Not Definitive
The categorization of mudallithīn (those who committed tadlīs) into five levels by Ḥāfiẓ Ibn Ḥajar was a scholarly effort — not binding or undisputed.➤ Examples of disagreement:
- Ibn Ḥajar placed Sufyān al-Thawrī in the second category,
yet Imām al-Dārimī (d. 444 AH) earlier placed him in the third category.
Bayān al-Musnad wal-Mursal, pp. 95–96 - Ibn Ḥajar himself criticized the narrations of Yaḥyā ibn Abī Kathīr (a second-category mudallis), acknowledging the potential harm of his tadlīs.
- In Fatḥ al-Bārī, Ibn Ḥajar criticized a narration due to Yaḥyā ibn Abī Kathīr’s tadlīs, showing he did not consider second-category tadlīs always harmless.
Maqālāt Rāshidiyyah, vol. 9, p. 51 - In TALKHĪṢ al-Ḥabīr, while discussing ḥadīth al-ʿīnah, he said:
“This ḥadīth is defective, even though its narrators are trustworthy, because it contains al-Aʿmash, who is a mudallis and did not explicitly state he heard it from ʿAṭāʾ.” - Ibn Jurayj was classified by Ibn Ḥajar in the third category for being frequent in tadlīs,
but elsewhere in Fatḥ al-Bārī (5/8, p. 416), he described him as “occasionally committing tadlīs” (rubbamā dallasa).
❖ Disagreement Among Scholars Over the Classification
If Ibn Ḥajar’s classification were definitive, there would be no disagreement,yet many major scholars disagreed with his categorization.
➤ Examples:
- Al-Aʿmash:
Ibn Ḥajar placed him in the second tier.
But:- Ḥāfiẓ Muhammad Gondalwī said:
“Al-Aʿmash is a mudallis and narrates with ʿanʿanah (ambiguous chain), thus his narration is not acceptable.”
Dawām al-Ḥadīth, p. 517 - Shaykh Rashīd Aḥmad Gangohī and others pointed out similar concerns.
- Ḥāfiẓ Muhammad Gondalwī said:
- Sufyān al-Thawrī:
Again, Ibn Ḥajar put him in category two,
but Muḥammad Bashīr Sahsawānī said:
“Sufyān is a mudallis and narrates via ʿanʿanah.”
Ṣiyānat al-Insān, p. 3001 - Ibrāhīm al-Nakhaʿī:
Ibn Ḥajar placed him in the second category,
but Shaykh Badīʿ al-Dīn al-Rāshidī wrote:
“He is also a mudallis — as is not hidden from one skilled in ʿuṣūl.”
Maqālāt Rāshidiyyah, vol. 3, p. 81 - Ḥāfiẓ Zubair ʿAlī Zai documented dozens of examples where major scholars criticized narrations due to ʿanʿanah, even by second-category mudallithīn.
Maqālāt, vol. 4, p. 168
❖ Majority of Hadith Scholars Require Explicit Transmission (Taḥdīth)
The most cautious and widely accepted view is that of Imām al-Shāfiʿī رحمه الله:“If we know a narrator committed tadlīs even once, he has exposed a flaw in his transmission.”
“We do not accept any narration from a mudallis unless he explicitly says ‘I heard’ (ḥaddathanī or samiʿtu).”
This is also the opinion of the majority of ḥadīth scholars.
➤ Endorsements:
- Imām al-Nawawī said:
“There is consensus that the ʿanʿanah of a mudallis is not a valid proof (ḥujjah).”
Sharḥ al-Nawawī ʿala Muslim, vol. 5, p. 58 - Muḥaddith Irshād al-Ḥaqq al-Atharī:
“If a reliable narrator is a mudallis, then his narration is not accepted unless he states explicitly that he heard it.”
Ḍawābiṭ al-Jarḥ wa al-Taʿdīl, p. 84
❖ Summary:
✔ Ibn Ḥajar’s categories are scholarly opinions, not binding.✔ Many great muḥaddithūn disagreed with those classifications.
✔ The ʿanʿanah of a mudallis — even of the second tier — is not accepted without explicit words like "ḥaddathanī" or "samiʿtu."
وَاللّٰهُ أَعْلَمُ بِالصَّوَاب
And Allah knows best what is correct.