Home
/
Isiam
/
Introduction
/
The Concept of Tawatur
The Concept of Tawatur
Dec 22, 2024 12:40 AM

  The first thing to be considered when a report reaches us is how did it reach us, is it by way of Tawatur, or by way of Ahad?

  Tawatur in the Arabic language comes from the tri-literal root wa • to • ra, represented in English by the letters ‘w’ • ‘t’ • ‘r’. Some words derived from this root have "consecutiveness," "rapid succession," or copiousness woven into their meaning in one way or another.

  For example, Allah Says (what means): {Then We sent Our messengers in succession.} [Quran 23:44] The word used in Arabic is tatra, which means one after the other, in succession. Besides, in a great poem, Labeed Ibn Rabee'ah describes the raindrops descending in "rapid succession," drenching the fur coat of a doe, using the word Mutawatir.

  Phonetically (and even visually when the sounds are written in English letters), this word sounds is like its meaning: watara watara watara....You can imagine that sound of raindrops pattering against a window-pane, one drop after another.

  Tawatur in the terminology of the scholars of hadeeth means transmitting a narration or religious text by a group of narrators from a group of narrators, generation after generation and so forth, and they are all trustworthy people and it is absolutely impossible for them to agree on a lie. The relationship between the terminological meaning and the linguistic one is that what is Mutawatir is reported by one person after the other after the other and so on, as if the people were coming like raindrops in a downpour.

  For example, take the great Indian Ocean tsunami that hit Asia and Africa on 26 December 2004. The vast majority of readers of this article were not eyewitnesses to its actual occurrence. Nor can one depend on what was seen on television to prove that it did happen because we all know that film technology is eminently capable of producing imagery, whether accurate or fake.

  Even if we exclude the possibility of tampering with images, the report we received was that the tsunami hit the entire coastline of the Indian Ocean, Asia, and Africa, while the images we saw only covered a minute portion of this. What would you say if I told you that the tsunami never happened and that the news was a conspiracy? You would reject what I said without investigation, and you would be right in doing so because it would be irrational to think that millions of people who were, indeed, witnesses to the tsunami would conspire to invent such a lie. Even though you were likely not an eyewitness to the tsunami, you can be 100 percent certain that it did happen. This is an example of a Mutawatir report.

  There are three conditions that must be fulfilled for a report to be Mutawatir:

  1. A large unexceptionable number of people convey the report. There is no specific number that constitutes a "large number." Rather, this is defined by the impossibility of conspiracy or collective mistake.

  2. That there are a large number of people in every link of the chain of narrators.

  3. That the conveyed report itself be about something that is tangible or perceptible, such as: "We saw," or, "We heard," or, "We felt," and so on. So saying, for example, that the universe began with a big bang cannot be Mutawatir, since it is something conceptual, something that none of us were capable of perceiving. However, that does not mean that the big bang is false. It just means that it is not a Mutawatir report.

  There are two categories of Mutawatir reports:

  The first category is those reports that are conveyed word for word, such as the statement of the Prophet : "He who lies about me intentionally, then let him await his place in Hell-Fire." More than 70 Companions who actually had heard the Prophet saying these words had reported it. Then the number increased in every successive link of the chain through the generations.

  The second category of Mutawatir reports are those Ahadeeth whose meanings are conveyed by Tawatur but not a verbatim, word-for-word statement, such as the fact that the Prophet used to raise his hands while supplicating. This has been reported in about 100 Ahadeeth, all of which have some variations, but make the common, perceptible observation that the Prophet used to raise his hands when supplicating.

  There are a significant number of Mutawatir reports, but the vast majority of Hadeeth literature is comprised of Ahad reports, meaning anything that does not fall under the category of Tawatur.

  The scholar, Jamal Al-Deen Al-Sayooti, and others have compiled these Mutawatir reports into books of their own for easy reference.

  This is the general idea of the concept of Tawatur.

Comments
Welcome to mreligion comments! Please keep conversations courteous and on-topic. To fosterproductive and respectful conversations, you may see comments from our Community Managers.
Sign up to post
Sort by
Show More Comments
Introduction
The Sunnah of the Prophet: Definitions
  “Nor does he speak from [his own] inclination. It is not but a revelation revealed.”[Quran 53:3-4]   Lexically, the word Sunnah has several, different yet close meanings. Sunnah may mean a way of life, or a path or behavior that is followed whether praiseworthy, or otherwise. Mostly, however, it refers to...
The Concept of Tawatur
  The first thing to be considered when a report reaches us is how did it reach us, is it by way of Tawatur, or by way of Ahad?   Tawatur in the Arabic language comes from the tri-literal root wa • to • ra, represented in English by the letters ‘w’...
History of the Sunnah – III: The era of the Companions and their followers
  As a part of our discussion of the Companions’ methodology in preserving the Sunnah of the Prophet we mentioned thus far two of its aspects; namely, prudence in narrating the Hadeeth, and verification and substantiation of the Hadeeth before accepting it. Three more aspects are presented here.   3. Study, critique,...
Loving and glorifying the Sunnah – III
  ‘Abdullah ibn Mas`ood reported that the Messenger of Allah said: "Never has a Prophet been sent before me by Allah to his people except that he had, among his people, disciples and companions who followed his way and obeyed his command. Then there came after them their successors who proclaimed...
Loving and glorifying the Sunnah – II
  The worst disaster to ever strike this nation was the death of the Prophet who instructed us to remember the affliction of his death whenever we are trialled by any hardship, so that we may thereby condole ourselves and ease the impact of that hardship, which would be insignificant in...
Loving and glorifying the Sunnah – I
  Do you truly love the Messenger of Allah ? A fundamental of our religion, and a tenet of our faith, is to love him.   Allah Says what means: “Say [O Muhammad]: ‘If your fathers, your sons, your brothers, your wives, your relatives, wealth which you have obtained, commerce wherein you...
History of the Sunnah – IV: The era of the Companions and their Followers
  6 - Writing of the Hadeeth   Earlier in this series we discussed in some detail the writing of the Sunnah in the era of the Prophet and also showed that the Companions were encouraged by him to learn writing and that many of them learned and mastered it. Thus, not...
History of the Sunnah -II: The era of the Companions and their followers
  Most scholars group the main aspects of the methodology of the Companions in preserving the Sunnah into the following seven categories: prudence in narrating the hadeeths, verification and substantiation of the hadeeths before accepting them, critique, discussions and assessment of the narration, traveling for search and confirmation of the hadeeths,...
The effects of using weak Hadeeth
  The term “weak Hadeeth” refers to any narration which does not fulfill the conditions of authenticity. The scholars of Hadeeth agree that a “weak Hadeeth” must not be attributed to the Prophet by saying: “The Prophet said …”.   Applying weak Hadeeth in excellent deeds.   Very often when you point to...
Importance of Knowing the Narrators of Hadeeth
  The narrators of Hadeeth are the most honourable and respectable Muslims, as they are keepers and preservers of Sunnah. Most of them are the companions of the Prophet who witnessed the acts and learnt the sayings of the Prophet . Others are the successors of the companions. Who were blessed...
Related Classification
Copyright 2023-2024 - www.mreligion.com All Rights Reserved