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Translation of
Malik's Muwatta:
Vows and Oaths
Section: Fulfilling Vows to Walk
Book 22, Number 22.1.1:
Yahya related to me from Malik from Ibn Shihab from
Ubaydullah ibn Abdullah ibn Utba ibn Masud from Abdullah
ibn Abbas that Sad ibn Ubada questioned the Messenger of
Allah, may Allah bless him and grant him peace, and
said,"My mother died while she still had a vow which she
had not fulfilled." The Messenger of Allah, may Allah
bless him and grant him peace, said, "Fulfill it for
her."
Book 22, Number 22.1.2:
Yahya related to me from Malik from
Abdullah ibn Abi Bakr that his paternal aunt related
that her grandmother made a vow to walk to the Quba
mosque. She died, and did not fulfill it, so Abdullah
ibn Abbas asked her daughter to walk for her.
Yahya said that he had heard Malik say, "No one walks
for anyone else."
Book 22, Number 22.1.3:
Yahya related to me from Malik that Abdullah ibn Abi
Habiba said, "I said to a man, when I was young, 'A man
who only says that he must walk to the House of Allah
and does not say that he has vowed to walk, does not
have to walk.' A man said, 'Shall I give you this small
cucumber?' and he had a small cucumber in his hand and
you will say, 'I must walk to the house of Allah?' I
said, 'Yes' and I said it, for at that time I was still
immature. Then, when I came of age, some one said to me
that I had to fulfill my vow. I went and asked Said ibn
al-Musayyab about it, and he said to me, 'You must
walk.' So I walked."
Malik said, "That is the custom among us."
Section: Making Vows to Walk to the House and Not
Succeeding
Book 22, Number 22.2.4:
Yahya related to me from Malik that Urwa ibn Udhayna
al-Laythi said, "I went out with my grandmother who had
vowed to walk to the House of Allah. When we had gone
part of the way, she could not go on. I sent one of her
mawlas to question Abdullah ibn Umar and I went with
him. He asked Abdullah ibn Umar, and Abdullah ibn Umar
said to him, 'Take her and let her ride, and when she
has the strength let her ride back, and start to walk
from the place from which she was unable to go on.'~
Yahya said that he had heard Malik say, "I think that
she must sacrifice an animal."
Yahya related to me from Malik that he had heard that
Said ibn al-Musayyab and Abu Salama ibn Abd ar-Rahman
said the same as Abdullah ibn Umar.
Book 22, Number 22.2.5:
Yahya related to me from Malik that Yahya ibn Said
said, "I vowed to walk, but I was struck by a pain in
the kidney, so I rode until I came to Makka. I
questioned Ata ibn Abi Rabah and others, and they said,
'You must sacrifice an animal.' When I came to Madina I
questioned the ulama there, and they ordered me to walk
again from the place from which I was unable to go on.
So I walked."
Yahya said that he had heard Malik say, "What is done
among us regarding someone who makes a vow to walk to
the House of Allah, and then cannot do it and so rides,
is that he must return and walk from the place from
which he was unable to go on. If he cannot walk, he
should walk what he can and then ride, and he must
sacrifice a camel, a cow, or a sheep if that is all that
he can find."
Malik, when asked about a man who said to another, "I
will carry you to the House of Allah", answered, "If he
intended to carry him on his shoulder, by that he meant
hardship and exhaustion to himself, and he does not have
to do that. Let him walk by foot and make sacrifice. If
he did not intend anything, let him do hajj and ride,
and take the man on hajj with him. That is because he
said, 'I will carry you to the house of Allah.' If the
man refuses to do hajj with him, then there is nothing
against him, and what is demanded of him is cancelled."
Yahya said that Malik was asked whether it was enough
for a man who had made a vow that he would walk to the
House of Allah a certain (large) number of times, or who
had forbidden himself from talking to his father and
brother, if he did not fulfil a certain vow, and he had
taken upon himself, by the oath, something which he was
incapable of fulfilling in his lifetime, even though he
were to try every year, to fulfil only one or a
(smaller) number of vows by Allah? Malik said, "The only
satisfaction for that that I know is fulfilling what he
has obliged himself to do. Let him walk for as long as
he is able and draw near Allah the Exalted by what he
can of good."
Section: How to Fulfill the Oath of Walking to the Kaba
Book 22, Number 22.3.5a:
Yahya related to me from Malik that what he preferred
of what he had heard from the people of knowledge about
a man or woman who vowed to walk to the House of Allah,
was that they fulfilled the oath when performing umra,
by walking until they had done say between Safa and
Marwa. When they had done say it was finished. If they
vowed to walk in the hajj, they walked until they came
to Makka, then they walked until they had finished all
the rites.
Malik said, "Walking is only for hajj or umra."
Section: Vows Not Permitted in Disobedience to Allah
Book 22, Number 22.4.6:
Yahya related to me from Malik that Humayd ibn Qays
and Thawr ibn Zayd adDili both informed him that the
Messenger of Allah, may Allah bless him and grant him
peace, (and one of them gave more detail than the
other),saw a man standing in the sun. The Messenger
asked, "What's wrong with him?" The people said, "He has
vowed not to speak or to seek shade from the sun or to
sit and to fast." The Messenger of Allah, may Allah
bless him and grant him peace, said, "Go and tell him to
speak, seek shade, and sit, but let him complete his
fast."
Malik said, "I have not heard that the Messenger of
Allah, may Allah bless him and grant him peace, ordered
the man in question to do any kaffara. The Messenger of
Allah, may Allah bless him and grant him peace, only
ordered him to complete that in which there was
obedience to Allah and to abandon that in which there
was disobedience to Allah."
Book 22, Number 22.4.7:
Yahya related to me from Malik that Yahya ibn Said
heard al-Qasim ibn Muhammad say, "A woman came to
Abdullah ibn Abbas and said, 'I have vowed to sacrifice
my son.' Ibn Abbas said, 'Do not sacrifice your son. Do
kaffara for your oath.' An old man with Ibn Abbas said,
'What kaffara is there for this?' Ibn Abbas said, 'Allah
the Exalted said, "Those of you who say, regarding their
wives.'Be as my mother's back' (Sura58 ayat 2) and then
He went on to oblige the kaffara for it as you have
seen.' "
Book 22, Number 22.4.8:
Yahya related to me from Malik from Talha ibn Abi
al-Malik al-Ayli from al-Qasim ibn Muhammad ibn
as-Siddiq from A'isha that the Messenger of Allah, may
Allah bless him and grant him peace, said, "Whoever vows
to obey Allah, let him obey Him. Whoever vows to disobey
Allah, let him not disobey Him."
Yahya said that he had heard Malik say, "The meaning
of the statement of the Prophet, may Allah bless him and
grant him peace, 'Whoever vows to disobey Allah, let him
not disobey Him' is that for instance a man who vows
that, if he speaks to such-and-such a person, he will
walk to Syria, Egypt, or any other such things which are
not considered as ibada, is not under any obligation by
any of that, even if he did speak to the man or did
break whatever it was he swore, because Allah does not
demand obedience in such things. He should only fulfill
those things in which there is obedience to Allah."
22.5 Rashness in Oaths
Book 22, Number 22.4.9:
Yahya related to me from Malik from Hisham ibn Urwa
from his father that A'isha, umm al-muminin said,
"Rashness in oaths is that a man says, 'By Allah, No! by
Allah!' " i.e. out of habit.
Malik said, "The best of what I have heard on the
matter is that rashness in oaths is that a man take an
oath on something to show that he is certain that it is
like he said, only to find that it is other than what he
said. This is rashness."
Malik said, "The binding oath is for example, that a
man says that he will not sell his garment for ten
dinars, and then he sells it for that, or that he will
beat his young slave and then does not beat him, and so
on. One does kaffara for making such an oath, and there
is no kaffara in rashness."
Malik said, "As for the one who swears to a thing
which he knows is wicked, and he swears to a lie he
knows to be a lie, in order to please someone with it or
to excuse himself to someone by it or to gain money by
it, no kaffara that he does for it can cover it."
Section: Oaths for which Kaffara Not Obligatory
Book 22, Number 22.5.10:
Yahya related to me from Malik from Nafi that
Abdullah ibn Umar said, "Whoever swears by Allah and
then says, 'Allah willing' and then does not do what he
has sworn to, has not broken his oath."
Malik said, "The best I have heard on this
reservation is that it belongs to the statement made if
the speaker does not break the normal flow of speech
before he is silent. If he is silent and breaks the flow
of speech, he has no exception."
Yahya said, "Malik said that a man who said that he
had disbelieved or associated something with Allah and
then he broke his oath, had no kaffara, and he was not a
disbeliever or one who associated something with Allah
unless his heart concealed something of either of those.
He should ask forgiveness of Allah and not return to it
- for what he did was evil."
Section: Oaths for Which Kaffara is Obligatory
Book 22, Number 22.6.11:
Yahya related to me from Malik from Suhayl ibn Abi
Salih from his father from Abu Hurayra that the
Messenger of Allah, may Allah bless him and grant him
peace, said, "Whoever makes an oath and then sees that
something else would be better than it, should do
kaffara for his oath and do what is better."
Yahya said that he heard Malik say, "Anyone who says
that he has a vow but does not mention the name of
Allah, is still obliged to make the kaffara for an oath
(if he breaks it)".
Malik said, "Emphasis is when a man swears one thing
several times, repeating the oath in his speech time
after time. For instance, the statement, 'By Allah, I
will not decrease it from such-and-such,' sworn three
times or more. The kaffara of that is like the kaffara
of one oath. If a man swears, 'I will not eat this food
or wear these clothes or enter this house,' that is all
in one oath, and he is only obliged to do one kaffara.
It is the same for a man who says to his wife, 'You are
divorced if I clothe you in this garment or let you go
to the mosque,' and it is one entire statement in the
normal pattern of speech. If he breaks any of that oath,
divorce is necessary, and there is no breaking of oath
after that in whatever he does. There is only one oath
to be broken in that."
Malik said, "What we do about a woman who makes a vow
without her husband's permission is that she is allowed
to do so and she must fulfill it, if it only concerns
her own person and will not harm her husband. If,
however, it will harm her husband, he may forbid her to
fulfill it, but it remains an obligation against her
until she has the opportunity to complete it."
Section: Behaviour in the Kaffara of the Broken Oath
Book 22, Number 22.7.12:
Yahya related to me from Malik from Nafi that
Abdullah ibn Umar said, "If someone breaks an oath which
he has stressed, he has to free a slave, or clothe ten
poor people. If someone breaks an oath, but has not
stressed it, he only has to feed ten poor people and
each poor person is fed a mudd of wheat. Some one who
does not have the means for that, should fast for three
days."
Book 22, Number 22.7.13:
Yahya related to me from Malik from Nafi that
Abdullah ibn Umar used to do kaffara for a broken oath
by feeding ten poor people. Each person got a mudd of
wheat. He sometimes freed a slave if he had repeated the
oath.
Yahya related to me from Malik from Yahya ibn Said
that Sulayman ibn Yasar said, "I understood from people
that when they made the kaffara for a broken oath, they
gave a mudd of wheat according to the smaller mudd. They
thought that that would compensate for them."
Malik said, "The best of what I have heard about the
one who does kaffara for breaking his oath by clothing
people is that if he clothes men he clothes them each in
one garment. If he clothes women, he clothes them each
in two garments, a long shift and a long scarf, because
that is what is satisfactory for each of them in the
prayer."
Section: Oaths in General
Book 22, Number 22.8.14:
Yahya related to me from Malik from Nafi from
Abdullah ibn Umar that one time the Messenger of Allah,
may Allah bless him and grant him peace, was speaking to
Umar ibn al-Khattab while he was travelling with a troop
and Umar swore by his father and he (the Messenger)
said, "Allah forbids you to swear by your fathers. If
anyone swears, let him swear by Allah or keep silent."
Book 22, Number 22.8.15:
Yahya related to me from Malik that he had heard that
the Messenger of Allah, may Allah bless him and grant
him peace, used tosay, "No, by the Overturner of
hearts."
Book 22, Number 22.8.16:
Yahya related to me from Malik from Uthman ibn Hafs
ibn Umar ibn Khalda that Ibn Shihab had heard that Abu
Lubaba ibn Abd al-Mundhir, when Allah turned to him
said, "Messenger of Allah, should I leave my people's
house in which I committed wrong action and keep your
company, and give away all my property as sadaqa for
Allah and His Messenger? "The Messenger of Allah, may
Allah bless him and grant him peace, said, "Giving away
a third of it is enough for you."
Book 22, Number 22.8.17:
Yahya related to me from Malik from Ayyub ibn Musa
from Mansur ibn Abd ar-Rahman al-Hajabi from his mother
that A'isha, umm al-muminin, may Allah be pleased with
her, was asked about a man who devoted his property to
the door of Kaba. She said, "Let him do kaffara for it
with the kaffara of the oath."
Malik said, that someone who devoted all his property
in the way of Allah, and then broke his oath, should put
a third of his property in the way of Allah, as that was
what the Messenger of Allah, may Allah bless him and
grant him peace, did in the case of Abu Lubaba.
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