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Seeking Blessings from Graves: A Critical Review of 19 Evidences

✍️ Adapted from the original article by Ghulam Mustafa Zaheer Ameenpuri حفظه الله

❖ Introduction​

Using the graves or relics associated with pious individuals as a source of blessings is not sanctioned in Islam. This act is considered a bid‘ah (innovation) and is not supported by the practices of the righteous predecessors (Salaf al-Salihīn). In this article, 19 commonly presented evidences are analyzed and refuted in light of authentic Islamic sources.

❖ Key Arguments and Their Refutations​

The Story of Imam Shafi‘i and Imam Ahmad's Garment
➤ Weak and unauthenticated chain of transmission with discredited narrators.

Sufyan al-Thawri Seeking Blessings from a Scholar
➤ Severely disconnected (munqati‘) chain—invalid as proof.

Sultan Mahmud of Ghazni and Victory through a Cloak
➤ Fabricated tale without basis in reliable Islamic sources.

Building Domes Over Graves (e.g., Hamzah رضي الله عنه)
➤ Innovation introduced by Rafidis; forbidden by scholarly consensus.

The Story of Imam Tabarani at the Prophet’s ﷺ Grave
➤ Baseless and undocumented; aims to falsely attribute shirk to scholars.

Ibn Hibban’s Visit to the Grave of Ali al-Ridha
➤ An isolated error of ijtihad—contradicts Qur’an, Sunnah, and practice of Salaf.

Rain Prayer through al-‘Abbas رضي الله عنه
➤ Umar رضي الله عنه sought prayers from a living person, not the Prophet’s ﷺ grave.

Attributed Quote from Imam Shafi‘i Regarding Abu Hanifah’s Grave
➤ Fabricated narration with unknown and unreliable narrators.

Rainfall at Imam Bukhari’s Grave
➤ Post-Salaf account lacking credibility and used to justify grave veneration.

Visiting the Grave of Musa ibn Ja‘far for Needs
➤ Reported through weak narrators; not valid proof.

Healing Properties of Ma‘ruf al-Karkhi’s Grave
➤ Narrated by a discredited and dishonest individual.

Dua at Ma‘ruf al-Karkhi’s Grave Accepted
➤ A practice not aligned with the Qur’an, Sunnah, or the Salaf.

Opening Abu Ayyub al-Ansari’s Grave During Drought
➤ Based on unreliable narrators like al-Waqidi.

Byzantines Seeking Rain at Abu Ayyub’s Grave
➤ Reported without authentication; Imam Malik did not endorse the practice.

Acceptance of Dua at Abu Ayyub’s Grave
➤ Based on conjecture, not verified tradition or consensus.

Hatim al-Asamm Praying at the Prophet’s ﷺ Grave
➤ No chain of transmission; not an acceptable source for rulings.

A Dream Advising Visit to a Grave for Relief
➤ Dreams cannot serve as proof in religious matters—except for prophets.

Seeking Blessings from Abu Fath Qawwas While Alive
➤ Involves a living person; different from grave-based tabarruk.

Praying at the Grave of Talhah ibn ‘Ubaydullah رضي الله عنه
➤ Based on anonymous practices—not traceable to the Prophet ﷺ or his companions.

❖ Summary and Key Takeaways​

No Precedent in Qur’an and Sunnah: There is no evidence that the Prophet ﷺ or his companions sought blessings from graves.

Weak and Fabricated Reports: Many of the cited stories and incidents are based on weak, disconnected, or fabricated narrations.

Dreams and Unauthenticated Practices: Personal dreams or experiences cannot form the basis for religious practice.

Grave Worship and Bid‘ah: Seeking blessings from graves is a path that can lead to shirk and is firmly categorized under bid‘ah.

Practice of the Companions: Had this act been permissible, the companions would have been the first to engage in it—yet there is no such precedent.

❖ Conclusion​

The belief and practice of seeking blessings through graves are neither supported by Qur’an and Sunnah, nor by the practice of the Prophet ﷺ, his companions, or the Salaf. Such practices originated centuries later and fall under innovation and deviation from pure Tawhid. Muslims are urged to adhere strictly to authentic Islamic teachings and avoid innovations that compromise the integrity of faith.
 
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