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Report on the Study: "The Danger of Equating Weak (Ḍaʿīf) Hadith with Fabricated (Mawḍūʿ) Hadith"
Author : Dr. Hamzah Mash-Shoqah
Date Added : 01-04-2026

Report on the Study: "The Danger of Equating Weak (Ḍaʿīf) Hadith with Fabricated (Mawḍūʿ) Hadith"

 

Research Profile:

• Author: Professor Dr. Khalīl ibn Ibrāhīm Mullā Khāṭir al-ʿAẓamī

• Title: The Danger of Equating Weak Hadith with Fabricated Hadith

• Details: A paper presented at the Second Scientific Conference titled “The Prophetic Sunnah and the Challenges of the Modern Age”, held at the College of Islamic and Arabic Studies in Dubai, 17–19 Ṣafar 1426 AH; 135 pages.

Introduction:

This study seeks to clarify certain concepts that have become confused among some researchers and students of knowledge regarding the weak hadith and its distinction from the fabricated hadith. The author argues that the attacks against weak hadith contradict the consensus (ijmāʿ) of the Ummah and disregard the statements of the early scholars (salaf).

Biography of the Author:

Dr. Khalīl ibn Ibrāhīm Mullā Khāṭir al-ʿAẓamī (1938–2023 CE) was a Syrian scholar from Dayr al-Zawr, specializing in the Prophetic hadith and its sciences. He graduated from al-Azhar University and later served as a university professor in several institutions in the Kingdom of Saudi Arabia.

He authored more than fifty works, including books, research papers, and critical editions of manuscripts, most of which focus on hadith and its sciences.

Main Topics of the Study:

The research is divided into chapters beginning with:

• The status of the Sunnah and the caution exercised by the Companions in narrating it

• The origins and causes of weakness in hadith

• Definitions and categories of weak hadith

• The ruling on narrating and acting upon weak hadith

• The reasons for its presence in hadith collections

• Narration from weak narrators

• A refutation of statements attributed to al-Qāḍī Ibn al-ʿArabī

• The distinction between weak and fabricated hadith, and the danger of equating them

Origins of Weakness in Hadith:

The author explains that weakness in hadith arose due to several factors, including:

1. In early times, chains of transmission (isnād) were not widely demanded, although people exercised caution in receiving reports. This led to the emergence of mursal (incompletely transmitted hadith) reports, particularly in sīrah narrations.

2. Human factors such as forgetfulness, error, illusion, and poor memory, leading to mistakes and inconsistencies.

3. Transmission without thorough verification, which occurred among some worshippers and ascetics.

Causes of Weakness:

The causes are classified into levels:

• The lightest: poor memory, non-deviant innovation, anonymity, contradicting reliable narrators, and error

• Followed by: munkar narrations (from those who err excessively or are negligent or sinful)

• Then: matrūk (abandoned)

• Then: mawḍūʿ (fabricated)

The matrūk and fabricated reports are not permissible to narrate except with clarification. Weak hadith may be used in corroborative contexts (mutābaʿāt and shawāhid), and weak reports may gain strength through multiple chains.

Ruling on Narrating Weak Hadith:

Scholars of hadith agree on the permissibility of narrating weak hadith and including it in compilations. The presence of weak reports in most hadith collections—except the two Ṣaḥīḥs—is evidence of this. Compilers such as Abū Dāwūd and al-Tirmidhī explicitly acknowledged the presence of weak narrations.

Reasons for Narrating from Weak Narrators:

The author lists 25 reasons, including:

1. The criticism of the narrator is not severe

2. Scholarly disagreement regarding the narrator

3. Use in supporting chains, not as primary evidence

4. Pairing weak narrators with reliable ones

5. Weakness occurring after transmission (e.g., memory loss)

6. Narration without intending to use as proof

7. Inclusion in virtues (faḍāʾil) and exhortation

He reports the agreement that a hadith should not be declared weak absolutely based on a single chain, as it may have other authentic routes.

Ruling on Acting upon Weak Hadith:

Scholars permitted acting upon weak hadith in areas other than creed and legal rulings—such as virtues, exhortation, history, and asceticism. This view is supported by statements from Imām Aḥmad, al-Thawrī, al-Nawawī, Ibn al-Ṣalāḥ, and others.

Imām Aḥmad said: “When we narrate regarding ḥalāl and ḥarām, we are strict; but when we narrate regarding virtues, we are lenient.”

Conditions for acting upon weak hadith include:

1. The weakness is not severe

2. It falls under a general established principle

3. One does not believe it definitively established from the Prophet ﷺ

Using Weak Hadith in Legal Rulings:

Many jurists—including Abū Ḥanīfah, Mālik, and Aḥmad—held that weak hadith (if not severely weak) may be used when no stronger evidence exists, even preferring it over analogy (qiyās).

Examples include:

• Abū Ḥanīfah preferring certain weak reports over analogy

• Mālik relying on mursal reports and statements of Companions

• al-Shāfiʿī and Aḥmad applying weak reports in specific cases

Weak Hadith Accepted by the Ummah:

Scholars agreed that weak hadith accepted and acted upon by the Ummah gains consideration. Imām al-Tirmidhī cited examples where practice aligned with weak narrations.

Attributions to Scholars Rejecting Weak Hadith:

The author examines claims that scholars like al-Bukhārī, Muslim, Ibn Maʿīn, Ibn al-ʿArabī, and Ibn Ḥazm rejected weak hadith absolutely, showing that they accepted it under certain conditions, especially when the weakness is slight.

Imām Aḥmad’s Position:

Imām Aḥmad preferred weak hadith over analogy when no stronger evidence existed and included weak reports in his Musnad. Scholars of the Ḥanbalī school affirmed this principle.

Reasons for Accepting Weak Hadith:

Weak hadith may be strengthened through multiple chains or supporting evidence. As Ibn ʿAbd al-Barr stated:

“Many a hadith with a weak chain has a sound meaning.”

Difference Between Weak and Fabricated Hadith:

Key distinctions include:

1. Weak hadith may be acted upon (with conditions); fabricated may not

2. Weak hadith is originally attributed to the Prophet ﷺ; fabricated is falsely invented

3. Weakness arises from human limitations; fabrication arises from deliberate falsehood

4. Weak hadith may be narrated; fabricated only for warning

5. Weak hadith may be strengthened; fabricated never is

6. Weak hadith may align with general evidence; fabricated contradicts it

Conclusion:

The researcher concludes that:

• Acting upon weak hadith in virtues and exhortation is permissible by consensus

• It may also be used in legal rulings when no stronger evidence exists, according to the majority

• However, it is not permissible to rely on weak hadith in matters of creed, which require certainty and definitive proof

And Allah the Almighty knows best.

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All praise is due to Allah, and peace and blessings be upon our master the Messenger of Allah ﷺ.
It is recommended for both the imam and those praying behind him to recite, immediately after the final salām, the specific remembrance reported in the sunnah to be said before turning away from one's place of prayer. The imam then leaves his praying spot, and the act of "turning" is fulfilled when the imam faces the congregation — even without physically leaving his spot — by positioning his right side toward them and his left side toward the qiblah, and this applies even while he is engaged in supplication.
Al-ʿAllāmah Ibn Qāsim al-ʿAbbādī states in his Ḥāshiyah ʿalā al-Tuḥfah (Vol.2/P.105): "It is most virtuous for the imam, once he has given the salām, to rise from his place of prayer immediately afterward." He adds that an exception must be made for the remembrances that are specifically required to be recited before he turns away. He then notes, citing Sharḥ al-ʿUbāb: "Yes, an exception to this rising immediately after the salām applies to the Fajr prayer, due to the authentic report that the Prophet ﷺ, when he prayed Fajr, would remain seated until the sun rose." He further cites, from al-Khādim, the ḥadīth concerning one who recites, at the conclusion of the Fajr prayer while still in the position of crossing his leg to rise: "Lā ilāha illā Allāh, waḥdahu lā sharīka lah..." and the rest of the well-known ḥadīth. He comments that this makes explicit that this particular remembrance is to be recited before the worshipper turns his legs to leave, and the same applies to Maghrib and ʿAṣr, as reported in those contexts as well.
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