Abdullah al-Ghumari

Abdullah bin al-Siddiq al-Ghumari
Personal Details
Born 1910
Tangier
Died 1993
Nationality Moroccan
Ethnicity Moroccan
Occupation Hadith scholar
Religion Islam
Denomination Sunni
Jurisprudence Zahiri
Creed Athari
Movement Sufism
Sufi order Siddiqiyya

Abu al-Fadl Abdullah bin Muhammad bin al-Siddiq al-Ghumari (1910-1993) was a Muslim preacher, jurist and theologian from Morocco.[1]

Lineage

The Ghumari family are all descendants of Ahl al-Bayt, or the family of the Islamic prophet Muhammad. Ghumari's bloodline is traced through his father Muhammad, son of Muhammad, son of Ahmad, son of Muhammad, son of Qasim, son of Muhammad, son of Muhammad, son of Abd al-Mu`min, son of Muhammad, son of Abd al-Mu`min, son of Ali, son of al-Hasan, son of Muhammad, son of Abdullah, son of Ahmad, son of Abdullah, son of Isa, son of Mas'ud, son of al-Fudayl, son of Ali ibn Umar, son of Umar, son of al-Arabi Alal, son of Musa, son of Ahmad, son of Dawud, son of Idris II of Fes, son of Idris I of Morocco, son of Abdullah, son of al-Hasan al-Muthana, son of Hasan ibn Ali, son of Ali and Fatimah.

Life

Ghumari was born in the Moroccan city of Tangier in 1910, and died in the same city in 1993.[2] As a child, he was primarily educated by his father Muhammad bin al-Siddiq al-Ghumari, also an Islamic scholar. The younger Ghumari memorized the entirety of the Qur'an at an early age, in addition to the Hadith book Bulugh al-Maram along with Alfiya and Ajārūmīya in Arabic grammar.

Ghumari later travelled to Fas for his higher education, but then enrolled in the University of al-Karaouine. While there, he also studied Mosque of Uqba,[2] a UNESCO World Heritage Site and important seat of Muslim religious learning.[3] During his study, Ghumari's teachers covered a number of books considered canonical in Sunni Islam, Al-Qastallani's explanation of Sahih al-Bukhari and the works of Khalil ibn Ishaq al-Jundi being two examples.[2] Eventually, Ghumari switched from Karaouine to Al-Azhar University in 1930 and graduating the next year. During his education, Ghumari was a student of Al-Kawthari, of whom Ghumari would later hold extremely negative views.[4]

Due to fears in the wider Arab world regarding the influence of the Muslim Brotherhood in the mid-twentieth century, Ghumari was accused of having ties to a foreign group. In 1961, he was sentenced to ten years in prison, likely due to his time spent in Egypt where the Brotherhood had formed. His older brother, Ahmad al-Ghumari, fell extremely ill upon hearing of his younger brother's long sentence and died eight months later.

Career

Like most of the Ghumari family, Abdullah al-Ghumari was a prolific writer. One of his well-known works consisted of a series of refutations of the Salafi writer Muhammad Nasiruddin al-Albani, which started over the issue of the tombs of Muslim saints and ended over the grading of hadith.

Ghumari was famous not only for the number of teachers which he had, but also the number of students. Salâh Ud Dîn At Tijânî and Muhammad bin Yahya al-Ninowy is counted as one of Ghumari's more prominent students,[5][6][7] as is Hassan al-Kattani.[8]

Citations

  1. Mustafa Shah, The Hạdīth: Scholarship, perspectives, and criticism, Routledge, 2010, p. 210
  2. 1 2 3 The Biography of Abu al Fadl Abdullah bin as-Siddiq al-Ghumari who died in the year 1413AH, written and translated by Riad Nachef. Available at:
    *Ayouby.com
    *Riad Nachef, Islamic Affairs
  3. Great Mosque of Kairouan (discoverislamicart.org)
  4. Gibril Haddad, The Ghumari School. 6 December 2002: Living Islam. Last updated 2 June 2003.
  5. Shaykh Muhammad Bin Yahya An-Ninowy. 2009: Al Buruj Press.
  6. Shaykh Muhammad al-Ninowy: Senior Instructor. The Deen Institute.
  7. Shaykh Muhammad al-Ninowy. Gateway to Divine Mercy.
  8. Cordoba Academy Faculty, © 2012 Cordoba Academy. Accessed February 17, 2013.

External links

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