Sahih Bukhari’s Original Copy?
Sharif Muhammad Jabir
Translated by Waqar Akbar Cheema
Translator’s Note: While I had considered translating this write-up ever since I read it on Al-Jazeera Blogthe immediate impetus has been a disastrous article by one Atabek Shukurov whose work “Hanafi Principles of Testing Hadith” I reviewed back in 2015. Although I plan to make a dedicated response to his present article this piece by Sharif Muhammad Jabir, I believe, serves as a principle response to his basic argument. Irony is that Mr. Shukurov himself cites works written hundreds of years ago using editions thereof published within last few decades. How bad he did not give us images from the first copies of the works of al-Bazdawi (d. 482/1089), al-Ghazali (d. 505/1111), al-‘Asqalani (d. 852/1448) et al. which could be considered authentic according to the criteria laid down by him.
1. Introduction
Some of the ‘researchers’ and those
known with the honorifics indicating their educational qualifications
have framed an ‘important’ question regarding the absence of original
manuscript copy of (Muhammad b. Isma’il) al-Bukhari’s (hereinafter Bukhari)
Sahih that he penned down with his own hands. They ask, “If Bukhari did
author this book why do we not find its original manuscript in his own
handwriting?” They say; “The oldest extant copy of Sahih Bukhari goes
back to the fourth century after Hijrah i.e. decades after the death of
Bukhari (d. 256/870); it is the copy of Muhammad b. Ahmad al-Marwazi who
was born in the year 301/913 and died in 371/982. He listened to the
Sahih from his teacher al-Firabri (d. 320/932) in 318/930 who in turn
listened to it from Bukhari in 252/866. How then can we trust a book
attributed to its author without there being a manuscript written by him
available to us?”
2. Naivety of the Question
It is regrettable that we live in an age
in which such naïve and absurd questions prop up [in the guise of
academics and research]. Who seeks the original manuscript copies of
books in our day? Beginning with the Qur’an; we have absolute confidence
in the preservation of Allah’s Book though we neither have with us a
copy of Qur’an written in the presence of Allah’s Messenger (ﷺ) nor even
an original copy of ‘Uthman’s (d. 35/656) mushaf. In fact a very old
copy of Qur’an discovered by the scholars in Germany went back only to
the time of Harun al-Rashid (d. 193/809). Though they concluded that it
confirmed to the Qur’an we have with us today, it did not add to our
trust and conviction regarding the Book of Allah [in terms of
preservation.] Even as we turn our attention to books of humans we find
that it is the only the naïve who seek an original copy in the
handwriting of the author as evidence for rightful attribution to him.
How many a book of our day and those of days gone by have you read for
which you did not find a copy of it in the handwriting of its author? In
fact the availability of author’s handwritten manuscript of a book is
no guarantee or reference point to establish the attribution of the book
to its author. This has been the human practice for centuries. It has
been so because the methods of attribution of the book to its author are
related to continuous transmission of the book through multiple
channels and not in the existence of the original handwritten copy of
the author.
3. How has Sahih Bukhari been transmitted to us?
There is no doubt that Imam Bukhari did
pen his work al-Sahih with his own hand, however, he [also] recited it
to a large number of his students who listened to it from him and copied
it in its entirety. Thereafter, they checked it against Bukhari’s
personal copy. This way their copies were in accordance with the
original one of Bukhari. Afterwards, came another generation who
listened to the book from the students of Bukhari and compared their
copies to those of Bukhari’s students, and likewise [it happened through
subsequent generations] until the book became widely known.[1]
If, therefore, the original one written by Bukhari was lost it had no
implications, because it had been transmitted among the generations of
students of Bukhari and its copies had become widely published each with
a chain of transmission back to Bukhari. Commentaries to it were
written, and all the copies are, by the grace of Allah, in congruence.
As to the minor differences in the wording, they are in a sense similar
to the difference of recitals (qira’at) in Qur’an and are, in
fact, a factor confirming the attribution for they establish numerous
transmitted links that go back to Imam Bukhari.
Accordingly, even if the reliance is
made on a copy much later than that of Bukhari it confirmed to the
manuscripts and editions prior to it except for minor marginal
differences. See, therefore, how the differences, rare and marginal,
increase the authenticity of copying rather than question it. Moreover,
whereas the transmission of al-Firabri – a student of Bukhari – became
popular, and copies of it were published, it was not because copying was
exclusively based on his transmission. Sahih Bukhari was copied through
other transmissions as well. This is al-Khattabi (319/931 – 388/998)
saying in his commentary to Sahih Bukhari titled ‘Alam al-Hadith that he
listened to major part of the book from Khalf b. Muhammad al-Khayyam on
the authority of Ibrahim b. Ma’qal al-Nasafi (d. 295/907), a student of
Bukhari who listened to the book from him.[2]
It is a link other than that of al-Firabri. This is how it was with the
early scholars. Among them the oral transmission and reporting of Sahih
Bukhari through various links, other than the one popular today, was
widespread. Their renderings of the Sahih are in line with the copy
common today.
The internal consistence of the
transmissions and copies of Sahih Bukhari despite remoteness of the
regions, difference of times, and the number of links back to Imam
Bukhari are best evidence for the mass narration of Sahih Bukhari and
the reliability of its copied transmission. Thereafter, if one or more
of the copies of it became popular among the scholars (as it happens
with most of the academic works) it was not because it was the most
authentic of the copies or because it included something that other
copies did not rather this is simply how it naturally happens. It is
similar to a situation wherein a contemporary author writes a book and
multiple editions of it come out, however, decades later only one of the
editions remains in print and the book becomes popular in that edition
because it is the best or, let us say, the most critical of the editions
whereas the other editions go out of print and are neglected. This does
not mean that the subject matter of the in-vogue edition is different
from other editions.
In short, Sahih Bukhari was relayed down
from his author through mass transmission. It was not possible for any
scribe to make any interpolation or alteration without it being known.
Scholars of different schools of thought possessed copies of Sahih
Bukhari and knew its content intimately. If any narration were
interpolated it would have been known to them immediately through its
variance with their own copies of it and their knowledge of narrators
and the chains of narrators. Reflect, therefore, on this peculiar and
crucial feature of our ummah’s intellectual tradition – the methodology
of narration, scrutiny, and comparison of a later copy with the earlier
one – the like of which is not found with other nations. This signifies
that loss of Bukhari’s own copy makes no difference rather it goes with
the natural order of things. It is indeed rare for a manuscript to
outlive environmental, historical, military, and political changes and
survive for over 1200 years!
4. Availability of the original copy is no greater proof of authenticity
If we assume that the multi-pronged
methodology of preservation and transmission as historically in vogue in
the intellectual tradition of the ummah had not existed and we had with
us a handwritten copy of Sahih Bukhari attributed to Imam Bukhari, it
would not have been a stronger proof of authenticity of Sahih Bukhari
compared to what we have today! In fact it would be far weaker in terms
of reliability. This is because then you would require proving the
reliability of the attribution of the copy to Imam Bukhari and there
would be no other way to do it. How doubtful then would have been the
attribution of the Sahih to Imam Bukhari compared to all the ways of
attestation that we now have with us? Therefore, the method of
transmission that the scholars of this ummah have relied upon is the
best possible way.
5. What if all the copies of Sahih Bukhari were lost?
If we were to gather all the thousands
of copies of Sahih Bukhari, whether manuscripts or printed ones, and put
them all to fire and likewise delete whatever of it is available on the
internet including what is quoted in the commentaries and books of fiqh
etc. If we were to delete them all leaving no trace of Bukhari’s work;
even if this were indeed to happen we would not lose anything we know of
the sunnah of the Prophet (ﷺ) today because whatever is narrated in
hadith reports of Sahih Bukhari is available and published in other
books of hadith and fiqh as well.
These are the facts that those who
indulge in the superficial and sentimental speech asking as to where all
these sayings of the Prophet (ﷺ) came up from are not aware of. Many
great hadith scholars preceded Imam Bukhari whose multivolume tomes were
sources of much of the Bukhari’s work. Some of these scholars were
Bukhari’s teachers and some were the teachers of his teachers. If you
were to carefully study the reports in Sahih Bukhari you would find them
attested and narrated through the very chain of narrators with which
they are found in books both prior and later to it. Among the books
prior to it is Musnad of Bukhari’s teacher al-Humaidi (d. 219/834) which
has reports that Bukhari included in his Sahih. Likewise there is
Muwatta of Imam Malik (d. 179/795) most of whose reports with connected
chains were narrated by Bukhari as well. And similarly there is Musannaf
of Imam ‘Abdul Razzaq al-San’ani (d. 211/827) and Musnad of Ahmad b.
Hanbal (d. 241/855) and others besides. The works of great hadith
scholars who preceded Imam Bukhari greatly overlap with Sahih Bukhari.
Moreover, if we take into account the works of the contemporaries of
Imam Bukhari such as Imam Muslim (d. 261/875) and Ibn Khuzaima (d.
311/923) and those who came after him we would find the reports in Sahih
Bukhari repeated and preserved in these works. Such works are not few
rather there are scores of them. Therefore, even if all the copies of
Sahih Bukhari – not just original one – were to disappear nothing from
the authentic hadith reports would be lost. Our religion is not based
only on the works of one individual or Sahih Bukhari alone though it
certainly has a great stature due to its academic value and accordingly
the scholars give it preference over other works. May Allah bless Imam
Bukhari with great reward for his services to the ummah.
These important facts expose to us the
weakness of this question raised concerning Sahih Bukhari as if it is
the sole foundational source of Islam that any doubt concerning it would
make most of the hadith reports appear dubious and render vain bulk of
the information about the Sunnah of the Prophet (ﷺ). In doing this they
refer to the saying, “The most correct book after the Book of Allah”
assuming that this statement makes Sahih Bukhari an essential source of
Islam to the effect that if it were lost with it would go a part of
Islam itself. This is a misconception on their part. In reality this
statement simply highlights an academic characteristic of the book for
Bukhari was the first and foremost to compile a book of only authentic
narrations. He ensured that all the hadith reports in his book were
authentic with chains of narrators fulfilling rigorous conditions more
stringent than those of other compilers of hadith. He kept it free from
weak reports having issues such as disconnection in chains of narrators.
He did not collect therein all the authentic reports nor is that there
are no authentic reports outside Sahih Bukhari that if we were to doubt
it we would lose information on a large number of sunnahs of the Prophet
(ﷺ). Neither Bukhari claimed this nor would a student in his maiden
hadith class say this. In fact any reasonable person who has skimmed
through hadith works for even quarter of an hour would not say this.
As a starter it would suffice for the reader to get know of Muhammad Fu’ad ‘Abdul Baqi’s (d. 1388/1968) book Al-Lu’lu’ wa al-Marjan, Fima Ittafaqa ‘alaihi Ash-Shaikhan
(wherein he collected hadith reported common between Sahih Bukhari and
Sahih Muslim) in order to find out that Imam Muslim also narrated 1906
of the reports of Sahih Bukhari. How about going through other hadith
works as well? Indeed the reader would find the authentic hadith reports
of Sahih Bukhari have been adequately published in other books as well.
In fact one would find that most of them have been reported through
different chains of reporters which only adds to their authenticity.
6. Summary
The gist of what we have mentioned above
is that the naivety laden doubt, “Where is the original copy of Sahih
Bukhari?” comes only from those who view things superficially, give in
to shallow trends, and are ignorant of the Islamic intellectual
heritage. I believe the spread of such doubts is a good proof of the
shallowness of the modern trends and materialistic approach that has hit
our Muslim community. Such superficial rationality cannot rescue us
from the backwardness that has overcome our people. It is ironic for
someone to clamor about with such a ridiculous questions and thinks of
him as an ‘enlightened rationalist’ researching the intellectual
tradition. Such an individual should first get over with his ignorance
of hadith, its major works and sciences; actually he should return to
basic lessons in principles of academic discourse and logical thinking
before going about with such non sense.
Notes/References:
[1]
Haji Khalifa (d. 1067/1657), for instance, tells us about “Al-Nijāḥ fī
Sharḥ Kitāb Akhbār al-Ṣiḥāḥ” by Najm al-Din Abu Hafs ‘Umar bin Muhammad
al-Nasafi al-Hanafi (d. 537/1143):
ذكر في أوله أسانيده عن خمسين طريقاً إلى المصنف
In the beginning Al-Nasafi mentioned fifty chains of narrators back to the author [Al-Bukhari].
See, Khalifa, Haji, Kashf al-Zanun, (Beirut: Dar Ihya’ al-Turath al-‘Arabi, n.d.) Vol.1, 553 and Vol.2, 1929
[2] Al-Khattabi, Abu Suleman, ‘Alam al-Hadith, Edited by Muhammad b. Sa’d b. ‘Abdul Rahman Aal Saud (Makkah: Jami’a Umm al-Qura’, 1998) Vol.1, 106
http://icraa.org/sahih-bukharis-original-copy/
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