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of the umma composed of
Abu Bakr, Umar, and Abu Ubaida Jarra. Each proposed the name of
the other, and then two of them acknowledged the third. That was
all. Is it obligatory for all Muslims to follow them? "Minority,"
"majority," and "ijma" mean quite different
things. If a consultative meeting is held for the consideration
of some particular problem, and a smaller number of people gives
one opinion, while the larger number gives another opinion, then
it is said that one is the opinion of the minority. The opinion
of the larger number is called the opinion of the majority, and
if all of them (without a single exception) give a unanimous opinion,
it is called ijma.
Was an ijma reached in the Saqifa or later in the mosque, or after
that in the city of Medina? If, however, in deference to your
wishes, we take away the rights of the general umma and say that
the opinion of the intelligentsia and the Prophet's companions
was sufficient for ijma, I ask whether there was an ijma in which
all intelligentsia and the Prophet's distinguished companions
participated? Did the small group at the Saqifa unanimously agree
in its opinion? The reply must be in the negative. The author
of Mawaqif has himself admitted that there was no ijma during
the caliphate of Abu Bakr, and there was certainly no unanimity
of opinion among the learned people in Medina, either. Sa'd Bin
Ubaida Ansari, his descendants, distinguished companions of the
Prophet, all the Bani Hashim, their friends, and Ali Bin Abu Talib,
- all opposed Abu Bakr for six months. These people never did
take the oath of fealty to him. In Medina, the seat of prophethood,
no ijma was reached in which the intellectuals and the companions
supported Abu Bakr as Caliph. Your own great historians, like
Imam Fakhru'd-Din Razi, Jalalu'd-Din Suyuti, Ibn Abi'l-Hadid Mu'tazali,
Tabari, Bukhari, and Muslim, recorded that ijma never occurred
in Medina.
The Bani Hashim, the Bani Umayya, and the companions in general
- except the three people mentioned above - were not present in
the Saqifa to cast their vote. Moreover, many strongly opposed
the decision. In fact, some prominent companions, who rejected
the allegiance at the Saqifa, went to the mosque and protested
to Abu Bakr. Of the Muhajirs were Salman Farsi, Abu Dharr Ghifari,
Miqdad Bin Aswad Kindi, Ammar-e-Yasir, Buraida Aslami, and Khalid
Bin Sa'id Bin As Amawi. Of the Ansars were Abu'l-Hathama bin Tihan,
Khuzaima Bin Thabit Dhu'sh-Shahadatain, Abu Ayyub Ansari, Ubai
Bin Ka'b, Sahl Bin Hunaif, Uthman Bin Hunaif, who remonstrated
with Abu Bakr inside the mosque. I have given only this brief
outline of events. No ijma of any kind was reached. The ijma of
the intellectuals and the prominent companions of Medina is a
flagrant lie.
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