Jamal al-Din Qasimi

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Jamal al-Din Qasimi
جمال الدين القاسمي الشامي
Born10 October 1866
Damascus.
Died10 April 1914 (47 years)
Damascus
NationalityOttoman Empire
Parent(s)
  • Muhammad Saeed Al-Qasimi (father)

Jamal al-Din bin Muhammad Saeed bin Qasim al-Hallaq al-Qasimi (1283 AH / 1866 CE - 1332 AH / 1914 CE) (Arabic: جمال الدين القاسمي), was the organizer of the story of Kalila and Dimna.[1] He was one of the pioneers of the modern scientific and religious renaissance in the Levant in the modern era, and one of the great Muslim scholars in the first half of the 14th century AH, and the author of many valuable books that have benefited the scholars and students of knowledge from the Muslims.

Lineage[]

He is Abu al-Faraj Muhammad Jamal al-Din bin Muhammad Saeed bin Qasim bin Salih bin Ismail bin Abi Bakr al-Qasimi al-Kilani al-Hasani al-Dimashqi. He collected the honor of lineage from both sides, as he was a descendant of Sheikh Abdul Qadir al-Jilani from the Hasan Sibt dynasty, and the tribe of the Husseini Dasuqiya. His father, Sheikh Muhammad Saeed Al-Qasimi, was one of the sheikhs of science in Damascus.

Education and career[]

The Syrian state assigned him to travel between Syrian towns and villages to give public lessons, and he remained in this work for four years from 1308 AH (1890 CE) to 1312 AH (1894 CE), after which he visited Al-Aqsa Mosque in Jerusalem and Egypt twice, other Syrian cities, and Arab countries. Upon his return, he and a number of his friends were accused of establishing a new doctrine in religion, which they called Jamali school of thought, which was detained in 1313 AH (1895 CE) in a major incident called the Hard-Working Incident. Then he proved his innocence.

Al-Qasimi devoted himself to composing and reading lessons, so he committed himself in his house to classify and give private lessons and went to his mosque, Al-Senaniya Mosque in Old Damascus, where he held his public lessons in interpretation, Islamic law sciences, and literature. It is the mosque that was led by his father and grandfather before him.

His books[]

The scholar Jamal al-Din al-Qasimi published many researches in magazines and newspapers; he wrote any compilations in which he dealt with all aspects of religion, including belief, hadith, exegesis, jurisprudence, history, difference, and ethics.

The advantages of interpretation:

(Twelve volumes in the interpretation of the Holy Qur’an, as Professor Nqula Ziadeh said he spent fifteen years writing it, taking it in its solution and moving until it ended it - upon him be mercy - and he did not complete two studies in it. This is what Professor Muhammad Fuad Abd al-Baqi said - on them the mercy - and in the sentence this book did not. He writes something like it on the ground in his goodness, and Professor Mustafa Al-Zarqa used to say: Reading the beauties of interpretation needs an entire lifetime, so how about who composed it and had not reached the age of forty?)

  • Evidence of Monotheism
  • Divan of speeches
  • Fatwa in Islam
  • ‘Iirshad alkhalq 'iilaa aleamal bialbarq
  • Sharah liqutat aleijlan
  • Kalila and Dimna (organized by Jamal al-Din Qasimi)
  • Criticism of adequate advice
  • Doctrines of al'Aerab and philosophers of Islam in the jinn
  • The sermon of the faithful summarized by the revival of the science of religion to Al-Ghazali
  • Sharaf al'asbat
  • Alert the student to knowing the imosition and duty
  • Jawamie aladab fi 'akhlaq al'anjab
  • 'Iislah almasajid min albade waleawayid
  • Taetir almashami fi mathir dimashq alshshami (four volumes)
  • Qawaeid altahdith min funun mustalih alhadith
  • A Message in tea, coffee and smoke
  • Credit shown to hold the precious substance (Explanation of Arbaeen Ajlouni)

Methodology of authorship[]

His classification method was predominantly collecting and conveying, but with an elegant style, proper language and thumbnail, so that the notes that he gathered together appear as if they were a coherent array of knots emerging from a single source. His methodology in his compilations was expansion and encyclopedic, not specialization, which is a feature of his time, dealing with all the chapters of religion and its sciences, as was evident in all his books, especially his book on the term Hadith: The Rules of Modernization.

His reform call[]

Al-Qasimi was influenced in his call by the invitation of Muhammad Abdo and his friend Rashid Rida. He called for a renewal of the understanding of religion, for the reform of worshipers and mosques, for Islam to be a beacon of unity for all Muslims, so that they would not be divided by a contract or doctrinal dispute.

Al-Qasimi retained his Arab Eastern Muslim personality and was not influenced by Western civilization or by the revelers. He was also distinguished by the amplitude of his chest and the integrity of his pen from the accusations with which he was confronted by some of his enemies. And he kept himself from getting down to that level.

His Doctrine and Faith[]

He was raised on the Shafi’i doctrine,[2] and he declared his doctrine in many places, especially in times of his ordeal. He often asked about his doctrine and replied that he is familiar with Shafi'i[3] and is worshipped by God,[4] who, with his tendency to strive and his blind tradition at the end of his life.

Sheikh Muhammed bin Sami Minyawi said in his letter: “The efforts and methodology of Sheikh Jamal al-Din al-Qasimi, may God have mercy on him, in calling upon God Almighty” that his jurisprudential views were inclined to the Shafi’i doctrine, and that he would win the Shafi’i saying if the evidence agreed with him. And they attributed it to Al-Shafi’i as usual. Sheikh Minyawi also said that at the end of his life he prevailed over diligence in matters of jurisprudence, looking at the evidence, and that he used to base his statements on what he preferred of them.[5]

Al-Athar was his faith; it is the doctrine of the people of the traitor, as is clear in his writings. It is the whole doctrine of ancestors as conveyed by the Golden Imam in the book Alau. Abu Alwaleed ibn Rashid said in the Methods of Evidence: "The people of Sharia law did not, at first, prove to God what they had done. The laws are all based on the fact that God is in heaven, that it is from him that the angels descend in revelation to the Prophets, that from heaven the books came down and to her the Prophet was the captors of God's prayer and peace." [prophets, and from the heavens came the books, and to them was the night journey of the Prophet, may God bless him and grant him peace].[6]

His death[]

Al-Qasimi died and was buried in Damascus in the year one thousand three hundred and thirty two Hijra (1332 AH). He had three sons and four daughters. Many of his students and brothers inherited it: including Rashid Rida, Mahmoud Al-Alousi, his brother Salah Al-Din Al-Qasimi, Khair Al-Din Al-Zarkali, Jarji Al-Haddad, and others.

References[]

  1. ^ Al Qasimi, Jamal Al-Din (16 July 2017). "القاسمي، جمال الدين".
  2. ^ مجلة البيان نسخة محفوظة 06 أكتوبر 2017 على موقع .
  3. ^ Al-Istanbouli, Mahmoud Mahdi (1985). Sheikh al-Sham Jamal al-Din al-Qasimi. The Islamic Office. p. 39.
  4. ^ Al Qasimi, Zafer Jamal Al-Din (1965). Jamal al-Din al-Qasimi and his time. Damascus. p. 131.
  5. ^ Minyawi, Muhammad bin Sami (1433–1434). The efforts and methodology of Sheikh Jamal al-Din Al-Qasimi, may God have mercy on him, in calling to God Almighty (an analytical study) (in the Arabic language). p. 86.
  6. ^ تفسير القاسمي 2/324
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