Praise be to
Allah.
The basic
principle is that the One who is to be described as wali an-ni‘mah (benefactor
or source of blessings) is Allah, may He be exalted, Who bestows His abundant
blessings, both visible and invisible, upon His slave.
Ibn al-Qayyim
(may Allah have mercy on him) said:
All goodness is
to be attributed to Allah; it is in His hands, by His leave and from Him. He is
the benefactor and source of the individual’s blessings, as He is the One
Who initiated them without anyone being entitled to them; He bestows them upon
him, even though the individual may be displeasing Him by his turning away from
Him and his negligence and sin. So Allah deserves all praise and thanks, and
the slave deserves blame, criticism and shame.
End quote from al-Fawaa’id,
p. 113.
But that does
not prevent any of His slaves whom He has blessed from being a benefactor or
source of blessings to another of His slaves. Yet it must be noted that there
is a huge difference between the true blessings of Allah to all of His slaves,
as He is the Creator of those blessings and the One Who divides provision among
them and causes provision to come down from His stores, and the blessings that
some of His slaves bestow upon others, from what Allah has given to them and
caused them to possess and put under their control. They are no more than a
means of directing the blessings of Allah to other slaves of Allah. The
blessings bestowed by the Creator are unlimited, whereas the blessings bestowed
by people are limited to what Allah has given to them.
Giving the name
“benefactor” or“source of blessings” (wali
an-ni‘mah) to the one who does a favour is something that is known in
Arabic language and in Islam. The closest thing to that and the most well-known
example is the use of this name for a master who has manumitted a slave.
Al-Bayhaqi
(21966) narrated that Huzayl ibn Shurahbeel said: A man came to ‘Abdullah
ibn Mas‘ood and said: I manumitted a slave of mine and made him a
saa’ibah (a freed slave with no wala’ connection to anyone), then
he died and left behind some wealth. ‘Abdullah said: The people of Islam
did not free slaves as saa’ibah; rather the people of the Jaahiliyyah
used to do that. You are his heir and his benefactor or the source of his
blessings (wali ni‘matihi). If you are not comfortable with that, then
show it to us and we will put it in the bayt al-maal (the treasury of the
Muslims).”
This report was
originally narrated by al-Bukhaari, 6753
Al-Qaadi
‘Iyaad (may Allah have mercy on him) said in al-Mashaariq (2/18):
The
“benefactor” or “source of blessing” (wali
an-ni‘mah) is the one who manumits a slave. End quote.
Al-Jassaas (may
Allah have mercy on him) said in Ahkaam al-Qur’aan (2/231):
(It refers to) the master who has
manumitted a slave, because he is the source of the favour of manumission.
Hence he is called “source of blessing” or “benefactor”
(wali an-ni‘mah). End quote.
He also (may
Allah have mercy on him) said:
He (the Prophet
(blessings and peace of Allah be upon him)) made the rights of the
“benefactor” or “source of blessing” (wali an-ni mah,
i.e., the master who manumits a slave) like the rights of the father. The
evidence for that is the hadeeth: “No son can repay his father unless he
finds him enslaved and buys him and manumits him.” (Narrated by Muslim,
1510). So he described the ransom
of the father as equivalent to his rights (over his son), and equal to his
favours to his son.
End quote from Ahkaam
al-Qur’aan, 1/169
See also: Sharh
Muntaha al-Iraadaat, 2/500; Kashshaaf al-Qinaa‘, 4/405; Ikhtilaaf
al-A’immah al-‘Ulama’, 2/85; Anees al-Fuqaha’,
p. 98; al-Fawaakih ad-Dawaani, 2/250
In linguistic
terms:
Ibn Manzoor (may
Allah have mercy on him) said:
The master who
is the “benefactor” or “source of blessings” is the one
who manumits the slave i.e., he blesses his slave by manumitting him. End quote
from Lisaan al-‘Arab, 15/405
See also: Tahdheeb
al-Lughah, 5/205; al-Misbaah al-Muneer, 2/614; Taaj
al-‘Uroos, 40/243.
Based on that,
there seems to be no reason not to use this phrase to refer to some people,
bearing in mind the difference mentioned above. However there is the fear that
this matter may involve some going to extremes and exaggerating about people.
In that case it should not be used for that reason, not because a person cannot
be a source of blessing to another.
And Allah knows best.