By: Dr. Ahmad Shafaat: A Study of Ahadith About The Determination of Islamic Dates
By: Dr. Ahmad Shafaat: A Study of Ahadith About The Determination of Islamic Dates
By: Dr. Ahmad Shafaat: A Study of Ahadith About The Determination of Islamic Dates
the one applied by earlier muhaddithun. It simply consists of a more consistent and
comprehensive application of common-sense principles often cited and applied by
those muhaddithun.
4. Further development of the Science of Hadith to recover more reliably the words of
the Prophet is not just a curiosity. It is an important part of the reforms that we need
for the Muslim Ummah to come closer to what God and his Messenger have taught
us and thus move forward to assume our role as leaders and guide of humanity,
assigned to us by God Most High.
[A NOTE ON TRANSLITERATION OF ARABIC WORDS: Long vowels are indicated in
italics or bold, e.g. hadith or ahruf. If a word itself is in italics or bold -- (Arabic words
except the most well-known ones will be written in italics) -- the long vowels are
indicated by the ordinary font, e.g. hadith or ahruf. Also, note that underlining
instead of dotting is used to distinguish between related letters (d and d, h and h, s
and s, z and z), sahih, riad, zuhr. When s and h or t and h occur together and
represent different letters, they will be sometimes separated by in order to avoid
confusion with the letters represented by th and sh; e.g. as-hal (easier). However, if
any one of the two letters has underlining, then no separation will be required, as,
e.g., Ishaq or mushaf, athar, Buthan. Finally, once a word has been transliterated
with proper diacritical indicators, such indicators may be omitted subsequently.
Diacritical indicators may also be omitted from well-known words like Allah,
Muhammad, Qur`an, or Hadith.
The above system of transliteration was devised to cause minimum disruption when
computer files are converted for various purposes.]
(I)
A HADITH ABOUT STARTING/ENDING RAMADAN WITH HILAL SIGHTING
The basic guidance about the period of fasting is already provided by the Qur`an.
Thus it states that there are twelve months in a year (9:36), that obligatory fasting is
to be done for the month of Ramadan (2:185), that the movements of the sun and
the moon are according to a mathematical pattern (bi husban, 55:5; see also 10:5,
36:39-40) and that months are counted by new moons (2:189, 10:5). If any
authentic hadith provided some further clarification or elaboration of this Qur`anic
picture, then we should expect it to be widely known and be found in almost every
Hadith collection, since when to start and when to end the obligatory Ramadan fast is
a question of great practical importance for Muslims.
Well, there is indeed one such hadith. But it has many narrations and since not all of
them can be authentic, it is necessary to determine, if possible, the authentic
narration.
Muwatta gives three narrations, two on the authority of Ibn Umar and one on that of
Ibn Abbas. The two narrations from Ibn Umar are also found in Bukhari and Muslim.
They are the only ahadith relevant to the determination of Islamic dates and common
to all three of our best[1] collections. Since the two ahadith are really two narrations of
the same hadith, we see that there is only one hadith that is found in all the three
collections.
We now examine the various narrations to see what they are saying, why they differ
and what authentic words of the Holy Prophet lie behind them.
gives three different lines of transmission reaching Ubayd Allah from Nafi from Ibn
Umar:
Abu Bakr bin Abi Shaybah related to us: Abu Usamah related to us: Ubayd Allah
related to us from Nafi from Ibn Umar that the Messenger of God once mentioned
Ramadan, made a gesture by his hands and said: "A month is like this and this and
this, folding his thumb the third time. Then he said: Start fasting when you see it
and end fasting when you see it. If it is obscured from you (ughmiya alaykum), fa
aqduru la hu thalathin (count for it 30 (days)). (Muslim)
Ibn Numayr related to us: My father related to us: Ubayd Allah related to us from
Nafi from Ibn Umar: similar to the above hadith of Abu Usamah except that ghumma
was used instead of ughmiya.(Muslim)
Ubayd Allah bin Said related to us: Yahya bin Said related to us from Ubayd Allah
from Nafi from Ibn Umar that the Messenger of God once mentioned Ramadan and
said: "A month is like this and this and this. Then he said: fa aqduru la hu but he
did not say thalathin, thirty. (Muslim)
Muslim gives two more narrations from Nafi from Ibn Umar, which makes it still more
certain that the hadith was transmitted by Nafi:
Zuhayr bin Harb related to us: Ismail related to us from Ayyub from Nafi from Ibn
Umar that the Messenger of God said: "A month rather (innama) is 29 days. Do not
begin the fast until you see it and do not break the fast until you see it. If it is
obscured from you, fa aqduru la hu. (Muslim)
Humayd ibn Masadah al-Bahili related to us: Bishr bin al-Mufaddal related to us:
Salamah (who is Ibn Alqamah) related to us from Nafi from Ibn Umar that the
Messenger of God once mentioned Ramadan, made a gesture with his hands and said:
"A month is 29 (days). When you see the new moon, start fasting and when you see it
end fasting. If it is obscured from you, fa aqduru la hu.(Muslim)
But while we can be certain that Nafi transmitted the hadith, it is not clear what
exactly did he transmit, since there are obvious and significant differences in the
above narrations, a fact that demands that we try to explain those differences and to
find first the original words of the successors, then of the companions and then of the
Prophet himself.
One difference among the narrations quoted above is that two of the narrations from
Ubayd Allah add the word thalathin after fa aqduru la hu. Since one transmitter from
Ubayd Allah is saying that he did not say thirty and since all the remaining
narrations from Nafi do not mention thirty we conclude that the word was no part of
the hadith as Nafi transmitted it.
Another difference is that while some narrations use a positive language -- fast when
you see -- others use a negative language -- Do not fast till you see . This is
not a big difference except that the second form makes the command firmer. Malik
and Ayyub give negative form while Ubayd Allah and Salamah give positive form. So
the evidence is fairly equally divided, but in view of the fact that Muwatta is much
earlier than Muslim, we can accept Maliks negative form.
A third difference is that the words A month is 29 days are not found in Muwatta
while they are present in all the narrations from Nafi in Muslim except the one that
Muslim quotes from Malik. The fact that an overwhelming majority of narrations
contain the words, strongly suggests that they are a part of the original transmission
from Nafi. But it should be noted that the words are found as a separate hadith in
several narrations from Ibn Umar (see below) and the hadith about starting and
ending Ramadan by moon sighting is also found separately, not only in Muwatta but
also in narrations in Bukhari and Muslim with an independent line of transmission
Ibn Shihab from Salim from Ibn Umar (quoted below). This raises the possibility that
the two ahadith were originally separate and later combined. If Ibn Umar had a
written collection of ahadith, as is suggested by some reports[2], this possibility
becomes much more plausible: in the written source the two ahadith were recorded
one after the other because of their obvious relevance to determination of the
beginning/end of a month and for the same reason they were often related together.
In view of the above discussion, the original narration of Nafi can be stated thus:
Nafi reported from Ibn Umar that the Messenger of God said:
"A month is 29 (days).
Do not begin the fast until you see the hilal and do not break the fast until you see it.
If it is obscured for you, fa aqduru la hu.
Yahya bin Yahya and Yahya bin Ayyub and Qutaybah bin Said and Ibn Hujr said
(Yahya bin Yahya using the word akhbara na, while others using haddatha na[3]):
Ismail who is Ibn Jafar related to us from Abd Allah bin Dinar that he heard Ibn
Umar say: The Messenger of God said: "A month has twenty-nine nights. Do not
begin the fast until you see the hilal and do not break the fast until you see it except
when it is obscured for you. If it is obscured from you, fa aqduru la hu." (Muslim)
Here four transmitters Yahya bin Yahya, Yahya bin Ayyub, Qutaybah bin Said, and
Ibn Hujr are reporting to Muslim from Ismail ibn Jafar a narration from Ibn Dinar. To
the extent we can accept the written word of Muslim, we can be sure that Ismail
related the hadith from Ibn Dinar and in substantially the same form as reported in
Muwatta. So we have now the following facts in which we can have high degree of
confidence:
At least two transmitters Malik and Ubayd Allah narrated the hadith from Nafi.
At least two transmitters Malik and Ismail bin Jafar narrated the hadith from Ibn
Dinar.
The report transmitted by Nafi that we arrive at by comparing its different narrations
is substantially the same as the report transmitted by Ibn Dinar.
We can therefore with the utmost confidence say that the hadith was transmitted by
Ibn Umar. The agreement among Muslims four transmitters and between Nafi and
Ibn Dinar suggests very strongly that transmission was backed by a written collection
coming from Ibn Umar.
We earlier saw that the interpretation of fa aqduru la hu as complete thirty days also
entered some narrations from Nafi by the addition of the word thalathin and we could
see clearly by comparing various narrations that the addition was a tahrif, probably
done innocently[4] by a transmitter to clarify the hadith in the light of his own
interpretation. The same is true in the case of this narration from Ibn Dinar, as we can
easily see from the following considerations:
From the isnad we notice that Bukharis immediate source Abd Allah bin Maslamah
is quoting Malik from Ibn Dinar from Abd Allah bin Umar, but the hadith is
considerably different from what we read in Maliks own Muwatta when he quotes Ibn
Dinar from Ibn Umar. What is going on here? Has the Muwatta misquoted it or is it
Bukhari or his immediate source? We saw earlier that Muslim also has a narration
coming from Ibn Dinar that is independent of Malik and that agrees with Maliks
narration in Muwatta. This shows that Muwatta is recording the more original form of
Ibn Dinars narration and the form in Bukhari is the result of later changes.
Those Muslims who endlessly argue about minor fiqhi details on the basis of ahadith
should pay attention to this fact: ahadith can change considerably even as they pass
from one great Hadith scholar such as Malik to another giant of the science of Hadith
such as Bukhari. It is difficult to tell what caused the change in the narration.
Bukharis immediate source Abd Allah bin Maslamah has also narrated from Malik
the narration of Nafi and in that narration he is very faithful to his source. So we
cannot automatically ascribe the change to him and the same is true about Bukhari.
What we can say with near certainty is that in this particular case the change did take
place and that for this reason we have to be careful in attributing to the Prophet what
we read in Bukhari or Muslim or Muwatta.
month is 29 days, supporting our conclusion that this statement was originally a
separate hadith. Also missing from this narration is any mention of completing 30
days in case of obscurity. Yet, Muhsin Khan translates fa aqdiru la hu as then regard
the month of Ramadan as of 30 days. This shows how our interpretation can be
reflected in the way we translate. In ancient times the interpretations were reflected
in the narration itself.
Abu Kamil al-Jahdari related to us: Abd al-Wahid ibn Ziyad related to us: al-Hasan ibn
Ubayd Allah related to us from Sa d bin Ubaydah who said: Ibn Umar heard a
person saying: This night is the middle night (of the month). He said to him: How do
you know that it is the middle night? I heard the Messenger of God as saying: A
month is thus and thus (he pointed with his ten fingers twice) and thus (the third time
he pointed with all his fingers but withdrew (habasa) or folded (khanasa) his
thumb)?[5]
All the above ahadith are traced back to Ibn Umar but the following are narrated on
the authority of another companion Sad bin Abi Waqqas:
Abu Bakr bin Abi Shaybah related to us: Muhammad bin Bishr related to us: Isma'il
bin Abi Khalid related to us: Muhammad bin Sad related to me from [his father] Sad
bin Abi Waqqas that he said: the Messenger of God struck his hand against the other
and said: A month is thus and thus. The third time he withdrew a finger.
Al-Qasim bin Zakariyya` related to me: Husayn ibn Ali related to us from Za`idah
from Ismail from Muhammad bin Sad from his father from the Prophet that he said:
A month is thus and thus, and thus, i.e. ten, ten and nine. Marratan.
Marratan means once. Here it is probably meant to negate that the Prophet a
second time made three gestures with his ten fingers to show the number 30.
Muhammad bin Abd Allah bin Quhzad related (also) related this (hadith) to me
(saying):Ali bin al-Hasan ibn Shaqiq and Salamah bin Sulayman related to us saying:
Abd Allah (ibn Mubarak) informed us: Ismail bin Abi Khalid informed us the rest of
the isnad is the same and the hadith is with the same meaning as the above hadith.
In all of the above traditions it is only said that a month has 29 days. But in some
traditions 30 days are also mentioned.
Muhammad bin al-Muthanna related to us: Muhammad bin Jafar related to us:
Shubah related to us from Uqbah (who is Ibn Hurayb) who said: I heard Ibn Umar
say: Gods Messenger said: A month is twenty-nine (days), and Shubah brought his
hands together (tabbaqa) three times, folding his thumb the third time. Uqbah said: I
think that he said that a month is thirty days and brought his palms together three
times (without folding his thumb). (Muslim 13/14).
The fact that Uqbah says I think he said a month is 30 days shows that he is not at
all sure of this. But in the following hadith the introduction of 30 days is done without
expression of any uncertainty:
Adam related to us: Shubah related to us: al-Aswad ibn Qays related to us: Said ibn
Amr related to us that he heard Ibn Umar report from the Prophet who said: "We are
an unlettered people. We neither write, nor calculate. A month is like this and this,
that is (yani) , sometimes of 29 days and sometimes of 30 days." (Bukhari 3/137)
Here the word yani shows that the subsequent words sometimes of 29 days and
sometimes of 30 days are not a part of what the Prophet said but an interpretation.
Prophets words end with a month is like this and this which, as we have seen, is
reported in many other ahadith. In all those ahadith the words like this and this
(hakadha wa hakadha) refer to the ten fingers shown twice, but in Bukharis
narration the words are understood to mean this or that (29 or 30). This different
interpretation is not only in conflict with most of the narrations but also has some
other weaknesses. Thus it is not clear what is the relationship between the statement
that we are an unlettered people and the statement that a month has 29 or 30
days. Regardless of whether a people are an unlettered a lunar month is 29 or 30
days. To say that we are an unlettered and a month is 29 or 30 days is like saying
we are an unlettered people and the sun sets in the west, that is, it makes no sense.
The relationship between the two statements begins to be understandable if we take
the second statement to be only that a month has 29 days. The meaning then would
be: Since we do not write or do not make calculations, therefore we do not have
written calendars so that when we do not know the actual length of a month we
should take the month to be 29 days.
Muslim also has a version of the above hadith:
Abu Bakr bin Abi Shaybah related to us: Ghundar related to us from Shubah: (Also,
related to us Muhammad bin al-Muthanna and Ibn Bashshar; Ibn al-Muthanna said:
Muhammad bin al-Jafar related to us Shubah related to us) from al-Aswad ibn Qays
who said: I heard Said ibn Amr bin Said (say) that he heard Ibn Umar report from
the Prophet who said: We are an unlettered people. We neither write nor calculate. A
month is thus and thus and thus, folding his thumb the third time and a month is thus
and thus and thus (not folding his thumb the third time), that is, (yani) 30 (days).
Unlike in Bukhari, here in Muslim, the words hakadha wa hakadha are used with the
same meaning as in other ahadith, each time referring to ten or nine fingers. But in
this hadith the Prophet shows by his hand gestures two numbers (29 and 30) instead
of one (29), as is the case in all other ahadith. In this way the interpretation found in
Bukhari has become part of the hadith itself. But Muslim gives another version raising
doubt about any reference by the Prophet to 30 days:
This hadith is related to me by Muhammad bin Hatim (thus): Ibn Mahdi related to us
from Sufyan from al-Aswad bin Qays with the rest of the isnad same as above, but in
that narration no mention has been made for the other month: thirty (days). (Muslim
13/15)
From the above discussion it seems almost certain that the Prophet only said that a
month is 29 days without mentioning 30 days. The evidence for this may be
summarized thus:
1. In almost all the ahadith the Prophet mentions only the number 29 and not 30.
2. Uqbah raises the possibility that the Prophet also mentioned 30 days. But he is not
sure about it.
3. Bukhari and Muslim have a narration in which 30 is mentioned. But in Bukhari the
mention of 30 days only appears in an interpretation and not in the words of the
Prophet. In Muslim the mention of 30 is part of the hadith, but Muslim also gives a
version that clearly says that 30 days were not mentioned by the Prophet. Moreover,
the statement that a month may be either 29 or 30 days seems to bear no relation
with the statement that the Arabs were an unlettered people.
4. To state that a month has 29 or 30 days is to state such a well known fact that it is
not of any interest by itself and yet several ahadith make the statement by itself as if
it is significant in its own right.
In view of the above considerations we conclude that in its original form the hadith
only said that a month has 29 days. This clearly has some significance since the
month is not always 29 days. What is this significance?
We can answer the question by remembering that people had many dealings that
required counting the number of days in a month. For example, a person who bought
an item on a Thursday may promise to make the payment after a month. How will the
duration of a month be determined? One way would be to note the date on the day of
purchase, say the 10th, and then make the payment on the 10th of the next month,
which may be either after 29 days or 30 days. Another way would be to fix a
particular number of days 29 or 30 as the number of days in a month. This is
something that is also done in case of the solar calendar. The solar month is 28, 29,
30 or 31 days but generally it is taken to be 30 days for many purposes. Giving the
month a default duration of 29 days was particularly useful for the mostly unlettered
people of Arabia who did not have written calendars and did not always keep track of
the days. This is why one of the above ahadith begins by saying we neither write nor
calculate (that is, keep count).
The idea that a month is 29 days is actually applied by the Prophet in the following
hadith relating a well known story:
Abu Asim related to us from Ibn Jurayj from Yahya bin Abd Allah bin Sayfi from
Ikramah bin Abd al-Rahman from Umm Salamah that the Prophet vowed to keep
aloof from his wives for one month, and after the completion of 29 days he went
either in the morning or in the afternoon to his wives. It was said to him: "You vowed
that you would not enter for one month." He said: "A month is of 29 days" (Bukhari
3/134)[6].
Here the month was not determined by keeping track of the new moons and of the
dates but simply by counting the number of days.
other narrations, not only from Abu Hurayrah but also from Ibn Umar and Ibn Abbas.
Consequently, Bukharis version is the result of some alteration during the process of
transmission.
Let us now consider the question: do any of the above narrations go back to Abu
Hurayrah? There is some probability that Abu Hurayrah narrated the hadith but this
probability is not as high as in the case of Ibn Umar. For, in case of Ibn Umar,
proceeding from the written testimony of Muwatta, Bukhari, and Muslim, we were able
to successively take the hadith back from one generation of transmitters to the
previous generation with multiple witnesses. Thus we saw that at least two thirdgeneration transmitters Malik and Ubayd Allah narrated the hadith from Nafi and
at least two Malik and Ismail bin Jafar narrated it from Ibn Dinar. Then the
testimony of these two second-generation transmitters gives us confidence that the
hadith was transmitted by Ibn Umar. Such is far from being the case with Abu
Hurayrahs narration. Only to the third generation transmitter Shubah (d. 160) can
we take the narration by two independent chains (see the asanid in the last two
narrations quoted above). As we try to go further back, we have only Shubahs word
that he heard the narration form Ibn Ziyad and if we accept his word we have only
Ibn Ziyads word, which may or may not be true, that he heard the narration from
Abu Hurayrah.
Still we can use the narrations from Abu Hurayrah for additional support for
conclusions that have been otherwise reached on some sound basis. Thus for example
we earlier concluded on the basis of narrations from Ibn Umar that the hadith is
authentic. This conclusion is strengthened further by the fact that there is some
probability that the hadith was transmitted not only by Ibn Umar but also by Abu
Hurayrah, thus providing two witnesses in the first generation. We also concluded
earlier that the statement a month has 29 days was originally a separate hadith.
This conclusion is supported by the narrations from Abu Hurayrah since none of those
narrations contain the statement.
There is an important difference in the narrations from Ibn Umar and those from Abu
Hurayrah: the former generally use the phrase fa aqduru la hu while the latter use a
phrase saying that in case of obscurity 30 days should be completed. We need to give
priority to the phrase fa aqduru la hu found in Ibn Umars narrations because of the
greater reliability of the narrations from Ibn Umar. Another reason to regard this
phrase more original is that in the narrations from Abu Hurayrah we have four
different phrases in place of fa aqduru la hu:
fa sumu thalathin yawman (fast for 30 days)
fa uddu thalathin (count 30)
The difference between this narration and that of the two narrations from Ibn Umar is
that here we have the words fa akmilu al-adada (al-iddah) thalathin instead of fa
aqdiru la hu. This is the same change that is found in Bukharis narration of Ibn
Dinars narration and in one of the narrations from Abu Hurayrah. We cannot give too
much weight to this narration from Ibn Abbas, since it suffers from a fatal weakness.
A note in the Muwatta informs us that this narration is munqati, meaning that a link
is missing in the middle of the isnad. That is, al-Dayli either did not meet Malik or did
not meet Ibn Abbas. Not surprisingly, the hadith is not accepted by Bukhari and
Muslim.
If there is obscurity on the 29th of Shaban, take that month to be 30 days and the
same is true of Ramadan.
In this case, you would never fast more than 30 days but sometimes you will fast only
28 days. For, suppose that both Shaban and Ramadan are 29 days but it is cloudy on
29th of Shaban and clear on 29th of Ramadan. You will count Shaban as 30 days and
in this way miss one day of Ramadan. But if the sky is clear on the 29th of Ramadan
you will be able to see the hilal of Ramadan and therefore end fasting, even though
you fasted only for 28 days. In places like Caribbean Islands, Trinidad, and Guyana
where it is cloudy very often this process could lead even to less than 28 days of
fasting.
b)
If there is obscurity on the 29th of Shaban, take that month to be 29 days and the
same is true of Ramadan.
In this case, you would never fast for less than 29 days but sometimes you would fast
31 or more days or have Id al-Fitr in Ramadan. For suppose that both Shaban and
Ramadan are 30 days and it is cloudy on 29th of Shaban and clear on the 29th of
Ramadan. By the rule of restricting the month to 29 days in case of obscurity, you will
count Shaban as 29 days and thus fast on the last day of Shaban, but since the sky
is clear on the 29th of Ramadan you will know that Ramadan has not ended. So you
will fast 30 days of Ramadan and one day of Shaban, a total of 31 days. In case it is
cloudy for several months leading to Ramadan you will need to fast even more than
31 days.
c)
If there is obscurity on the 29th of Shaban, take that month to be 30 days but if
there is obscurity on the 29th of Ramadan take it to be 29 days.
In this case you will never fast for more than 30 days but sometimes you will fast 28
days.
d)
If there is obscurity on the 29th of Shaban, take that month to be 29 days but if
there is obscurity on the 29th of Ramadan take it to be 30 days.
In this case you will never fast for less than 29 days but sometimes you will fast 31
days.
Today we all assume (a), that is, in case of obscurity we should take the month as of
30 days whether it is Shaban or Ramadan. It would therefore surprise some readers
to hear that all of the above views have been held by Muslims. Indeed, the differences
in the various narrations of the hadith about starting/ending Ramadan can be
explained as attempts to reflect these interpretations.
Both months given 30 days
Thus, we have already seen that while the earliest narrations of the hadith had simply
the phrase fa aqduru la hu some narrations introduce the idea of completing the
month to 30 days. This is done variously. Sometimes the word thalathin (30) is added
to the phrase fa aqduru la hu. More often it is completely replaced by its interpretation
by saying complete the period or number to 30 or count 30 or fast for 30 days.
But these modified narrations still left the possibility that Shaban may be taken to
consist of 29 days in case of obscurity. This possibility was closed by attributing the
following words to the Holy Prophet:
Aishah said: The Messenger of God used to count the days in Shaban in a manner he
did not count any other month. Then he fasted when he sighted the hilal of Ramadan,
but if the weather was cloudy he counted thirty days and then fasted. (Abu Da`ud)
Hudhayfah reported the Messenger of God as saying: Do not fast before the coming of
the month until you see the new moon or complete the number (30 days); then fast
until you see the new moon or complete the number (30 days). (Abu Da`ud who said:
This tradition has been transmitted by Sufyan and others from Mansur from Ribi on
the authority of a person from the Companions of the Prophet, but he did not mention
the name of Hudhayfah.)
It is possible that this view was held by Abu Hurayrah, since all narrations from him
replace fa aqduru la hu by a phrase stating that the month should be completed to 30
days.
Both months given 29 days
We earlier noticed that many narrations from Ibn Umar have the additional words: A
month has 29 days. Originally this was probably a separate hadith but it was
combined with the hadith about starting/ending Ramadan, as if they are to be read
and interpreted together:
A month has twenty-nine (days). So (fa) do not begin the fast until you see the hilal
and do not break the fast until you see it. If it is obscured from you, fa aqduru la hu.
Usually the statement that a month has 29 days is understood to mean that a
month has sometimes 29 days (and sometimes 30 days). The hadith is then
interpreted as follows: Since a month is sometimes 29 days and sometimes 30 days,
you have to determine the month by sighting the moon. In case of obscurity, fa
aqduru la hu, this is understood to mean complete 30 days. But to interpret the
words a month has 29 days to mean that a month is sometimes 29 days seems
unjustified. Moreover, in one version there is an emphasis on 29 days:
"A month rather (innama) is 29 days. Do not begin the fast until you see it and do not
break the fast until you see it. If it is obscured from you, fa aqduru la hu. (Muslim)
Here the use of innama puts an emphasis on 29 days and at least in this version our
interpretation should take the statement in its obvious sense: A month has 29 days by
default. The narration can then be interpreted as: Determine the exact duration of
Ramadan by observing the new moons for Shaban and Ramadan. If due to any
circumstances you cannot, then use the default value of 29 days. In this interpretation
fa aqduru la hu is used in the sense of limiting something to a low value, in this case
29.
In view of the above, we conclude that some Muslims in very early times interpreted
the hadith to mean that in case of obscurity every month should be taken to consist of
29 days and they reflected this view in their narrations. In this case, they were not
changing the words of the Holy Prophet but simply combining two originally separate
statements, interpreting one in the light of the other. It is possible that this view was
held by Ibn Umar.
Shaban given 30 days and Ramadan given 29 days
This view explains the following narration:
Silbah stated from Ammar: Whoever fasts on a doubtful day has disobeyed Abu alQasim [that is, the Prophet]. (Bukhari)
Abu Ishaq reported on the authority of Silbah: We were with Ammar on a day when
the appearance of the moon was doubtful. (The meat of) goat was brought to him.
Some people kept aloof from it (because they were fasting). Ammar said: He who
keeps fast on this day disobeys Abu al-Qasim (i.e. the Prophet). (Abu Da`ud, also
found in Tirmidhi, Nasa`i, Darimi, Ibn Majah)
In order to harmonize this tradition with other traditions stating that in case of
obscurity count 30 days, it is often restricted to Shaban. But the prohibition of fasting
on a doubtful day is general and should be applied to both Shaban and Ramadan. In
case of Shaban, if the view is obscured on the 29th the following day becomes
doubtful and so one should not fast and hence take Shaban as 30 days. In case of
obscurity on 29th Ramadan, the following day will again be doubtful and so one should
not fast, thus taking Ramadan as 29 days.
The view also explains some of the strange changes that take place in some
narrations in Bukhari. Thus recall the following hadith:
Adam related to us: Shubah related to us: Muhammad bin Ziyad related to us saying:
I heard Abu Hurayrah say: The Prophet said or, (I heard him say) Abu al-Qasim said:
Start fasting on seeing it, and end fasting on seeing it, and if it is obscured for you,
complete thirty days of Shaban (fa akmilu idda Shaban thalathin). (Bukhari 3/133)
Muslim also records a narration from Shubah from Ibn Ziyad from Abu Hurayrah, but
that narration simply says count 30 days, which can apply to both Shaban and
Ramadan. But in the above narration in Bukhari only Shaban is mentioned. This
singling of Shaban is clearly done to reflect a point of view, which seems to be that in
case of obscurity, Shaban should be counted for 30 days but Ramadan need not be.
The same point of view is also present in the following narration in Bukhari:
Abd Allah bin Maslamah related to us: Malik related to us from Abd Allah bin
Ramadan from Abd Allah bin Umar that Gods Messenger said:
The month is
twenty-nine nights. So do not fast till you see the moon, and if it is obscured for you,
then complete thirty. (Bukhari 3/131)
Malik recorded in his Muwatta a narration with the same isnad but the narration in
Bukhari differs from that of Muwatta in that it talks only of starting Ramadan, so that
the command, complete thirty becomes applicable only to Shaban.
Shaban given 29 days and Ramadan given 30 days
According to the following tradition in Abu Da`ud this view was held by Ibn Umar:
Ibn Umar reported the Messenger of God as saying: The month consists of twentynine days, but do not fast till you sight it and do not break your fast till you sight it. If
it is obscured for you, calculate it thirty days. When the twenty-ninth of Shaban came,
Ibn Umar would send someone to see the moon for him. If it was sighted, then well
and good; in case it was not sighted, and there was no cloud or dust before him, he
would not keep fast the next day. If there appeared before him cloud or dust, he
would fast the following day. Ibn Umar would end his fasting along with the people,
and did not follow this calculation. (Abu Da`ud 2/2313).
The underlined words clearly mean that Ibn Umar took Shaban to consist of 29 days
in case of obscurity while he did not follow this calculation for Ramadan, that is, took
Ramadan as 30 days in case of obscurity.
Ahmad Hasan in his translation of Abu Da`ud comments on the above hadith by
referring to Ibn al-Jawzi: About fasting on the 29th day of Shaban when the moon is
not sighted due to cloud or dust, according to Ahmad, there are three viewpoints:
First, fasting is necessary as if it was Ramadan (that is, assume 29 days in Shaban).
Secondly, keeping the obligatory and supererogatory fast on the day when the vision
of the moon is doubtful is not lawful (assume 30 days in Shaban). But one can keep
fast as atonement, or expiation, or vow, or supererogatory fast, provided one was
habituated to it. This view is held by Shafii. Abu Hanifah and Malik maintain that it is
not lawful to fast with the intention of the fast of Ramadan on the day when the
appearance of the moon is doubtful. To keep other kinds of fast is lawful. Thirdly, it
depends on the decision of the ruler of a country. If he keeps fast, the people too
must do. If he does not fast, the people also should follow him.
There is a good logic behind the view that Shaban should be taken of 29 days in case
of obscurity, for otherwise, as we noted earlier, sometimes we would fast only for 28
days, which means that we would not fast for a month in any reasonable sense of
month. This may be one of the reasons why Ibn Umar stressed that a month is 29
days.
force that proved useful during many past centuries but which is no longer useful in
this age of enemies armed to the teeth by nuclear weapons, cluster bombs etc. Also,
dawn to dusk cannot be taken as a requirement but a means to determine a period of
fasting that proves to be satisfactory for an overwhelming majority of Muslims but not
for the tiny minority that lives near the poles of the earth. Similarly, when the Prophet
told us to start/end a month by seeing the new moon, seeing was not a requirement
but a specific method to determine the start/end of a month, a method that was the
best method for all the past centuries but may not be best now and therefore may be
replaced by a better method.
Some Muslims also argue from the following hadith that calculations can completely
replace hilal sighting:
"We are an unlettered people. We neither write, nor calculate. A month is like this and
this, that is (yani), sometimes of 29 days and sometimes of 30 days. (Bukhari 3/137)
We are an unlettered people. We neither write nor calculate. A month is thus and
thus and thus, folding his thumb the third time and a month is thus and thus and
thus (not folding his thumb the third time), that is, (yani) 30 (days). This hadith is
related to me by Muhammad bin Hatim but in that narration no mention has been
made for the other month: thirty (days). (Muslim 13/15)
Those who propose using only astronomical calculations argue that the way to
establish the duration of a lunar month adopted by the Prophet reflected the level of
knowledge that people had at the time and place of the Prophets appearance and that
this method can change with the increase in that level of knowledge.
Are the above considerations enough for us to use astronomical calculations even
when the moon is visible? Regardless of how we interpret a command of God or his
Messenger, it is better to preserve its letter as long as the cost of doing so is not too
high. In the formulation of this principle cost can be opportunity cost, that is, the
foregoing of certain advantages that will ensue had a course of action been taken. In
limiting our armies to horses of wars or fasting from dawn to dusk near the poles the
result is individual or collective death, a very high cost; so we need not preserve the
letter of the corresponding laws[8]. Clearly, there is no such cost involved in giving
priority to actual sight of the hilal. The only question is whether the opportunity cost
of not using astronomical calculation even in case of the moons visibility is too high,
that is, the advantages for the ummah of entirely depending on astronomical
calculations are too much greater than the disadvantages. At the present time this is
a matter of judgment and so we should stick to the letter of the Prophets words.
Hence we should go by sight when the moon is visible and use the best available
astronomical calculations when the visibility is obstructed.
(II)
A HADITH ABOUT THE REGIONAL VALIDITY OF THE HILAL SIGHTING
Yahya bin Yahya and Yahya bin Ayyub and Qutaybah (bin Said) and Ibn Hujr said
(Yahya bin Yahya using the word akhbara na, while others using haddatha na[9]):
Ismail who is Ibn Jafar related to us from Muhammad who is Ibn Harmalah from
Kurayb that Umm al-Fadl, daughter of Harith, sent him to Muawiyah in Syria. He said:
I arrived in Syria, and did what she needed. While I was in Syria the month of
Ramadan commenced. I saw the hilal on Friday. I then came back to Madinah at the
end of the month. Abd Allah bin Abbas asked me, mentioning the new moon, and
said: When did you see it? I said: We saw it on the night of Friday. He said: You saw
it yourself? I said: Yes, and the people also saw it and they fasted and Muawiyah also
fasted. He responded: But we saw it on Saturday night and so we would continue to
fast till we complete thirty (days of fasting) or we sight it. I said: Is the sighting of
Muawiyah not sufficient for you (taktafi)? He said: No; this is how the Messenger of
God has commanded us. Yahya bin Yahya was undecided between naktafi (sufficient
for us) and taktafi (sufficient for you). (Muslim)
Here there is some ambiguity about the identity of the person who was sent to Syria
by Umm al-Fadl. The Arabic allows him to be identified as either her son al-Fadl or as
Kurayb. The first understanding is adopted in the English translation by Abdul Hamid
Siddiqui and the second in the Urdu translation by Wahid al-Zaman. The speaker in
the subsequent report in the first person, I arrived in Syria is clearly purported to
be the same person who was sent by the lady and so the same ambiguity arises in his
case.
This hadith is not found in Muwatta and Bukhari, which does not give us a great deal
of confidence about its reliability. For, the only argument for its authenticity is that
Muslim found its isnad trustworthy, but we have seen earlier that narrations with
sound isnad can quite significantly change the original report.
But even if we accept it as authentic, it does not give us any binding teaching. It does
not tell us what exactly the Prophet commanded. We are simply told in vague terms
that this is how the Messenger of God commanded us. Not surprisingly these vague
words can be and have been understood in different ways:
1. The Prophet commanded that Muslims should follow hilal sighting of their own
region whatever region may mean. Ibn Abbas therefore continued fasting in
Madinah despite Kuraybs testimony that he saw the hilal in Sham.
2. The Prophet instructed that if the news of hilal sighting reaches after a certain time,
one should continue his or her fast. Ibn Abbas continued fasting because Kurayb did
not deliver his news in time.
3. The Prophet instructed that two witnesses are needed to establish the appearance of
the new moon. Ibn Abbas continued fasting because he only had the single witness
of Kurayb.
The first of these three interpretations seems to be most natural. But no matter what
command we read into the vague words of Ibn Abbas, we encounter problems. Thus
for the first interpretation, the problem is that if the Prophet really commanded that a
hilal sighting is only valid locally, then why do we not find that command in any other
hadith? If we say that the command is implicit in some hadith say, for example, the
hadith about starting fast when hilal is sighted and ending fast when hilal is sighted
then this is an interpretation by Ibn Abbas that is not binding, especially because the
same hadith can be interpreted to draw the opposite conclusion: a hilal sighting is
valid globally. For we can argue as follows: When the hadith tells to start/end fast
when you see hilal it is addressing the whole ummah and not regional communities
of Muslims. Therefore, when some Muslims see the hilal somewhere on the globe it is
as if the whole ummah has seen it and so Muslims everywhere should start/end fast.
Al-Shawkani has elaborated these points as follows:
You should know that the acceptable evidence is in what Ibn Abbas reported explicitly
from the Messenger. It is not in his ijtihad that people tried to interpret, and to which
he pointed by saying, This is how Gods Messenger commanded us. His direct report
from the Prophet is what Al-Bukhari, Muslim, and others narrated as, Do not fast
until you see the new moon, and do not end your fast until you see it. This does not
apply to any particular location, but is a general address to all Muslims. Thus it is
obviously a piece of evidence that a sighting in one location is binding to people in
other locations. This is so because when people in a particular location see it, this
means that all Muslims have seen it. Thus what applies to them [those who saw it]
would apply to others [in other locations] Despite that al-Sham was not far enough
from al-Madinah to warrant different moon rising positions (matla) and for Ibn Abbas
to refuse to follow the sighting of its people. This shows that his behavior was based
on his ijtihad, and is not, therefore, an acceptable evidence". (Nayl al-Awtar, volume
4, page 268)
To hold that hilal sighting has only regional validity requires specifying the distance for
which a sighting remains valid. But no hadith provides any such specification[10].
Scholars had to use their opinions, which differ one from the other, to specify the
distance[11].
For the second interpretation, a similar problem arises: we do not have any hadith
saying that one should continue fasting if the news of the moon sighting arrives after
a certain period of time.
For the third interpretation, we do not have any hadith about the number of witnesses
needed to establish moon sighting in Muwatta, Bukhari or Muslim but in later
collections such ahadith are found[12]. However, even in these collections several
ahadith allow the acceptance of the witness of a single person, so once again choosing
two witnesses should be viewed as an interpretation and preference of Ibn Abbas
which is not binding.
The above discussion shows that the Prophet did not give any clear teaching as to
whether moon sighting is valid locally or globally. Muslims can agree on any position
that is reasonable and convenient. In my opinion the best position in our times is that
an Islamic month should begin/end as soon as hilal is visible to the naked eye in any
part of the globe.
(III)
A HADITH ABOUT THE DATE OF ID AL-ADHA
The following ahadith are sometimes used to argue that Id al-Adha is the 10th of Dhu
al-Hijjah and not necessarily the day after the day of Arafah in Makkah:
The Messenger stayed in Madinah for ten years offering his sacrifice. (Tirmidhi,
Sahih).
The Messenger sacrificed on the tenth day in Madinah. (Bayhaqi)
But the absence of the ahadith from most collections does not inspire confidence in
their reliability. And even if we accept them as authentic, they provide no guidance on
the question. Neither in these ahadith nor in any other the Prophet says that Id alAdha should be on the 10th of Dhu al-Hijjah according to hilal sighting in ones own
city or country or region. The stated fact that the Prophet celebrated the Id on the
10th of Dhu al-Hijjah does not lead to that conclusion, since it is possible that over the
ten years of the Prophets stay in Madinah the hilal of Dhu al-Hijjah appeared on the
same evening in Madinah as in Makkah, in which case the 10th of Dhu al-Hijjah in
Madinah is the same day as the day after Arafah in Makkah. Moreover, the very
distinction between the 10th of Dhu al-Hijjah and the day after Arafah assumes that
moon sighting is only valid locally, for which there is no strong basis in ahadith, as we
saw above.
Hence we conclude that there is no hadith, authentic or otherwise, that obliges us to
adopt any particular definition of Id al-Adha 10th of Dhu al-Hijjah or the day after
Arafah. We are free to agree on any definition that is reasonable and convenient. If
we adopt global validity of a sure hilal sighting, then the two definitions will coincide
and this is one good reason to adopt that convention.
(IV)
REACHING A CONSENSUS IS OF PRIMARY IMPORTANCE
In discussing the issues connected with the determination of Islamic dates we need to
remember a distinction between two types of instructions that God and his Messenger
have given to us: 1) those that deal with right and wrong, good and evil; 2) those
that provide conventions needed to organize collective religious life. Examples of the
first type are the commandments to pray, to give zakah, to stand for justice and the
prohibition of lying, stealing and zina`. Examples of the second type are some
detailed rules for prayer, fasting etc. relating to the form of these acts of worship. The
first type of instruction is unchanging and common to all true religions of God brought
by prophets from Adam to Muhammad (may peace be upon them all). But the second
type is subject to variation from people to people and from time to time. For example,
the command to pray is found in the teachings of all the prophets but the actual form
of prayer has varied from time to time and place to place. This is not only established
by the historical evidence but also can be affirmed on the basis of the Qur`an, which
states that earlier prophets enjoined prayer (4:102, 14:37-40, 19:31, 55, 21:73, 98:5)
but the actual form of acts of worship was different for different religious communities:
For every people (ummah) we have appointed (a different) system of rites (mansak)
for them to remember the name of God over the beast of cattle that he has given
them for food (22:34)
For every people (ummah) we have appointed (a different) system of rites (mansak)
for them to follow. So let them not dispute with you on the matter. Invite them to
your Lord. Surely, you (O Prophet) are on the straight path (22:67)
For every (people) among you (O humankind) we have appointed (a different) system
of rules (shirah) and way (minhaj) (5:48)
The idea that precise form of acts of worship are not questions of good and evil or
right and wrong is specifically stated in the Qur`an in reference to the Islamic rule
that we should face the qiblah while praying:
It is not righteousness (al-birr) that you turn your faces east or west, but
righteousness rather is (to be) one who believes in God .(2:177)
When it comes to questions of right and wrong, good and evil we should not
compromise in any way but for detailed rules of convention we should show a much
more flexible attitude. But it is a perversion of human nature that we can often be
very tolerable in matters related to good and evil, right and wrong but become
extremely rigid when it comes to rules regarding ritual acts. For example, the Qur`an
puts such emphasis on justice but we have been tolerating the unjust dictatorial
systems of governments in our societies for centuries even though this has led us to
extreme weakness, humiliation, subjugation to other nations, and other forms of
suffering. On the other hand, when it comes to rules pertaining to ritual acts we can
be fierce warriors for the perceived teachings of Islam[13].
The above comments do not mean that we should not try to follow the conventions
established by God and his Messenger. For example, the fact that turning our face
while praying towards any particular direction is not righteousness does not mean that
we can start praying to a different qiblah or no qiblah at all. What it does mean is that
we should be much more open to various interpretations and willing to give up our
own in order to reach a consensus if others interpretation has some merit. On
questions of right and wrong, good and evil we must follow what we believe to be the
correct interpretation of the teachings of Islam, even if the majority of the world
thinks otherwise. But in questions of conventions we should be willing to give up our
opinion in favor of others in order to form a consensus except in the most unlikely
event that the consensus develops in a direction clearly against the explicit injunctions
of the Qur`an or of the ahadith whose authenticity is beyond any reasonable doubt. In
case of the question of the determination of Islamic dates, this means that as long as
we go by lunar months consisting of 29 or 30 days, almost anything Muslims can
agree on will be alright in the sight of God and will even be preferable to differences
that cause disorganization and inconvenience. What would be unacceptable, for
example, is what the Bahais have done by introducing month of fasting as one of 19
months of 19 days or what the black-American sect of Nation of Islam has done by
making December the month of fasting. But it is next to impossible that Muslims can
reach a consensus on such positions.
The conventions the governing ritual acts are more a question of consensus than of
right and wrong is an idea found in some sayings attributed to the Prophet:
Fast when the people fast, break your fast when the people break their fast, and
offer your sacrifice when the people offer their sacrifice. (Abu Da`ud).
Abu Hurayrah reported that the Prophet said: Fasting is when you fast and
termination of fasting is when you terminate it and sacrifice is when you sacrifice."
Abu Isa (i.e. al-Tirmidhi) said: "This hadith is sound and rare and that some
authorities have explained it to mean that fasting and its termination should be with
the majority."
These are among those numerous ahadith whose authenticity is far from being
guaranteed but which contain a perfectly valid idea.
CONCLUSION
Matters such as the determination of dates are not matters of good and evil and right
and wrong but of conventions. In such matters it is more important to agree on a
position than the position itself, unless that position is against very clear injunction in
the Qur`an or in a hadith whose authenticity is established beyond any reasonable
doubt.
One of the conventions on which Muslims can agree without violating any authentic
words of God or his Messenger is as follows:
A lunar month starts with a hilal sighting in any part of the globe. Calendars should be
constructed on the basis of astronomical calculations. It is highly probable that the
hilal will be sighted on the days predicted by such calendars. But if on some rare
occasions the hilal is not sighted anywhere on the globe on that day, then the hilal
sighting will have priority over the result of calculations in deference to the authentic
hadith discussed in this article. If this procedure is followed the distinction between
10th Dhu al-Hijjah and a day after Arafah ceases to exist.
[1]
We can include Muwatta among the best three books of Hadith because of its
relatively early date (written some years before 179, the date of Imam Maliks death).
And we can include Sahihayn of Bukhari (d. 256) and Muslim (d. 261) among the best
because they are the best-researched Hadith collections in existence.
[2]
Bukhari in his Tarikh Kabir says that Ibn Umar had books. Ibn Sallam in his
Amwal says that one kitab belonging to Umar and in his possession was read to him
several times by Nafi . See M.M.Azami, Studies in Early Hadith Literature, p.45.
[3]
(related to us) and akhbara na (informed us). The former means that the teacher
transmitted the hadith by reading from a book or by oral narration. The latter means
that the student read the hadith to the teacher and the teacher confirmed it in some
way.
[4]
No matter how innocently the words of the Prophet are changed or invented, the
The objection attributed here to Ibn Umar to speaking about the middle of a month
is not quite consistent with the following hadith, which talks of the middle of Shaban:
Abu Hurayrah said that the Messenger of God said: When Shaban reaches its middle
(intasafa), do not fast. (Mishkat al-Masabih, referring to Abu Da`ud, Tirmidhi, Ibn
Majah, Darimi)
[6]
This narration is also found in Muslim. There are many other narrations in Bukhari
and Muslim coming from Anas bin Malik via Humayd bin Abu Humayd al-Tawil, from
Ibn Abbas via Ubayd Allah bin Abd Allah bib Abi Thawr and Abu al-Daha, from
Aishah via Urwah bin Zubayr and from Jabir bin Abd Allah via Abu al-Zubayr.
[7]
Abu Hurayrah reported that the Messenger of God said: When Shaban reaches its
middle, do not fast. (Mishkat al-Masabih from Abu Da`ud, Tirmidhi, Ibn Majah, Darimi)
Umm Salamah said: I did not see the Holy Prophet fast for two consecutive months
except in Shaban and Ramadan.
[8]
It should be noted that it is only the letter of individual injunctions in the Qur`an
that may not at times be preserved. As far as the Qur`anic teachings as a whole are
concerned, they are always preserved, since departure from individual injunctions
takes place within the Qur`anic principle that God has not put any undue hardship
(haraj) for you in the religion (22:78) and God intends for you ease and does not
intend for you undue hardship (usr) (2:185).
[9]
Many Hadith scholars including Imam Muslim make a distinction between haddatha
na (related to us) and akhbara na (informed us). The former means that the teacher
transmitted the hadith by reading from a book or by oral narration. The latter means
that the student read the hadith to the teacher and the teacher confirmed it in some
way.
[10]
To the contrary in the many ahadith where the Prophet starts/ends fasting when
some Bedouin(s) come to the Prophet (see note 9 below) with news of moon sighing,
he never takes into account the distance between Madinah and the place of moon
sighting.
[11]
In a comment on this hadith, Ahmad Hasan says in his translation of Abu Da`ud:
Opinion is also divided as to the distance of the places. First, if the horizons change,
the appearance of the moon will also change. Second, the appearance may change at
a distance of shortening the prayer during the journey. Third, visibility may change
with the change of the countries. Fourth, the countries known to each other will
observe the fasting and Id on the appearance of the moon in any country. Fifth, the
appearance of the moon will be binding on the people of a place where the
appearance was established by witness, and not binding on others. In case the ruler
of a country or the caliph of the whole community announces the visibility of the
moon, then it will be binding on all Muslims.
[12]
Ribi bin Hirash reported on the authority of a man from the companions of the Holy
Prophet: People differed among themselves on the last day of Ramadan. The two
Bedouins came and witnessed before the Prophet, swearing by God, that they had
sighted the moon the previous evening. So the Messenger of God commanded the
people to break the fast. The narrator Khalaf has added in his narration: and that the
people should proceed to the place of prayer. (Abu Da`ud)
Abu Umayr reported on the authority of some of his paternal uncles who were
Companions of the Prophet: Some men came riding to the Holy Prophet and testified
that they had sighted the new moon the previous day. He thereupon commanded the
people to break the fast and to go out to their place of prayer in the morning. (Abu
Da`ud)
Ibn Abbas said: A Bedouin came to the Prophet and said: I have sighted the moon.
Al-Hasan added in his narration: of Ramadan. He asked: Do you testify that there is
no god but Allah? He replied: Yes. He again asked: Do you testify that Muhammad is
the Messenger of Allah? He replied, yes, and testified that he had sighted the moon.
He said: Bilal, announce to the people that they must fast tomorrow. (Abu Da`ud)
Ikrimah said: Once the people doubted the appearance of the moon of Ramadan, and
intended neither to offer the tarawih prayer nor to fast. A Bedouin came from alHarrah and testified that he had sighted the moon. He was brought to the Prophet. He
asked: Do you testify that there is no god but Allah, and that I am the Messenger of
God? He said, yes, and testified that he had sighted the moon. He commanded Bilal
who then announced to the people to offer the tarawih prayer and to fast. (Abu Da`ud
who commented: A group of narrators has narrated this from Simak on the authority
of Ikrimah in mursal form [i.e., without mentioning the name of the Companion]. No
one mentioned the offering of the tarawih prayer except Hammad bin Salamah.)
Ibn Umar said: The people sighted the moon, so I informed the Messenger of God
that I had sighted it. He fasted and commanded the people to fast.
The Prophet said: "If two just Muslim witnesses testify [that they saw it] then fast or
break your fast." (Ahmad, Nasa`i and al-Daraqutni)
The absence of these traditions from all three of our best collections, the existence of
some versions in mursal form, references to unnamed companions (a man from the
companions, paternal uncles who were Companions) shows that we cannot place a
great deal of confidence in their authenticity. They are designed to express some fiqhi
rules whether one or two witnesses are needed to establish the appearance of the
crescent, whether testimony should be in the form of a formal oath or a simple
communication of the information is sufficient.
[13]
It should be noted that this is not a Muslim problem but a universal one. Christians
and Jews can split into sects on very minor issues. If any thing, thanks to the
presence of the authentic word of God among us Muslims have shown less of this
tendency than other ummahs.