Praise be to Allaah.
It is not permitted for the Muslim who believes in Allaah as his Lord,
Islam as his religion, Muhammad
(peace and blessings of Allaah be upon him) as a Prophet
and Messenger, and in the divine decree, both good and bad, to think that any being,
entity or quality can have a specific effect in bringing good or warding off harm, as
there is no evidence in shareeah to that effect. This is part of the legacy of
jaahiliyyah (ignorance) which has been cancelled out by Islam and is regarded as being
shirk which negates perfect Tawheed, because it is insinuating thoughts (waswaas) and
scare tactics from the Shaytaan.
It is like the attitude of the people of Pharaoh, about whom Allaah
said (interpretation of the meaning): But whenever good came to them, they said,
Ours is this. And if evil afflicted them, they ascribed it to evil omens connected
with Moosa and those with him
[al-Araaf 7:131]. If some disaster or
drought befell them, they blamed it on evil omens which they associated with Moosa and the
believers with him, but Allaah refuted this and said (interpretation of the meaning):
Verily, their evil omens are with Allaah
[al-Araaf 7:131].
Ibn Abbaas (may Allaah be pleased with them both) said:
Their evil omens means what He decreed for them; they were the cause of
what happened to them because of their kufr and rejection of the signs and messengers of
Allaah.
Many ahaadeeth were reported from the Prophet
(peace and blessings of
Allaah be upon him) in which he forbade pessimism and superstitious belief in evil omens.
The word tatayyur (pessimism) is derived from teer (birds), because some
birds were viewed as evil omens, then the word came to be applied to everything that is
taken as a bad sign. Abu Hurayrah reported that the Prophet
(peace and blessings of
Allaah be upon him) said, No adwaa [transmission of infectious diease
without the permission of Allaah], no tiyarah [superstitious belief
in bird omens], no haamah [refers to a Jaahili Arab tradition
described variously as: a worm that infests the grave of a murder victim until he is
avenged; an owl; or the bones of a dead person turned into a bird that could fly], and no Safar [the month of Safar was regarded as unlucky in
the Jaahiliyyah]. [Translators notes in square
brackets]. (Reported by al-Bukhaari, 5757, and Muslim, 2220.] Muslim added
in one of his reports: And no naw (star promising rain) and no ghool (evil
demon living in the desert).
The Prophet
(peace and blessings of Allaah be upon him) denounced
adwaa, the Jaahili belief that attributed sickness to something other than Allaah
and said that the sickness could transmit itself without the decree of Allaah. He
explained that all of that happens by the decree of Allaah, and that people are instructed
to avoid the causes of disaster if they are in good health.
The words no Safar, according to one of the interpretations
given by the scholars, refer to the month of Safar, which the people of the Jaahiliyyah
viewed with pessimism as being unlucky, as was reported in Sunan Abi Dawood (3914)
from Muhammad ibn Raashid from someone who heard him say: The people of the
Jaahiliyyah used to regard Safar as inauspicious, and said that it was an unlucky month.
The Prophet
(peace and blessings of Allaah be upon him) refuted that.
Imaam Ibn Rajab (may Allaah have mercy on him) said: Regarding
Safar as inauspicious is a kind of superstition that is forbidden. Also forbidden is
regarding particular days, such as Wednesdays, as inauspicious, or following the Jaahili
custom of regarding Shawwaal as inauspicious for weddings.
No doubt this also includes the superstitions about the number 13
mentioned in the question. There is no indication in the Quraan or Sunnah that this
number should be regarded as inauspicious in any way. The thirteenth is just an ordinary
day, like any other day, and anything that happens on such a day happens by divine decree;
Allaah decreed that it should happen on that day in that way. If a person tried to spend
his time counting the numbers of days or dates on which calamities befell the Muslim
ummah, he might find some patterns in some instances, but this has nothing to do with
bad luck because of certain numbers or dates on which those events happened.
The remedy for this kind of waswaas is for a person to strengthen his
heart, have certain faith (yaqeen) in Allaah and put his trust in Him. He should
know that no disaster happens except by the decree of Allaah, and he should beware of
getting carried away with this waswaas from the Shaytaan or these ideas that may cross his
mind. He may be punished with the very thing that he is fearing, because he is turning
away from having faith in Allaah and the belief that all good is in His hands, and that He
Alone is the one who wards off harm by His power and grace.
The Prophet
(peace and blessings of Allaah be upon him) taught us the
kafaarah (expiation) to be offered by the one who indulges in any kind of superstitious
pessimism. Abd-Allaah ibn Amr reported that the Prophet
(peace and blessings
of Allaah be upon him) said: Whoever lets tiyarah (superstition) stop him from doing
something is guilty of shirk. They said, What is the kafaarah (expiation) for
that? He said, To say: Allaahumma la khayra illaa khayruka wa laa tayra
illaa tayruka wa laa ilaaha ghayruka (O Allaah, there is no good except Your good, no
birds except Yours, and there is no god beside You). And Allaah knows best.
As this issue is widespread among people nowadays, there is no harm in
going into further detail, as follows:
In the Name of Allaah, Most Gracious, Most Merciful
Tiyarah and Fal (Bad omens and good omens)
[1] Tiyarah (seeing bad omens) comes from the word tayr (birds)
[because the ancient Arabs used to see omens in the movements of birds and other creatures
Translator], and is the opposite of fal (good omens). The Arabs all used to
have the same ideas about fal and tiyarah. The Prophet
(peace and blessings of
Allaah be upon him) approved of and encouraged the idea of seeing good omens, but he
disapproved and forbade the idea of seeing bad omens.
[2] Al-Izz ibn Abd al-Salaam said: The difference
between al-tiyarah and al-tatayyur is that tatayyur means feeling in one's heart that
something bad is going to happen, whilst tiyarah means acting on the basis of those
pessimistic feelings.
[3] Tiyarah existed long before Islam. Allaah says (interpretation of
the meaning): But whenever good came to them, they said, Ours is
this. And if evil afflicted them, they ascribed it to evil omens connected
with Moosa and those with him
[al-Araaf 7:131].
[4] Types of superstitious belief in bad omens, ancient and modern:
Certain days or months, such as Safar and Shawwaal.
Certain birds, such as crows and owls.
Certain animals, such as snakes, black cats and monkeys, or their
movements, such as the passing of gazelles.
Certain types of people, such as a one-eyed man or a hunchback.
Certain numbers, such as 13 among the Christians, 7 among the Bedouin
and 10 among the Raafidis; in the latter case because they dislike the asharah
mubashsharah (the ten Sahaabah who were given the certain promise of Paradise)
with the exception of Ali (may Allaah be pleased with him). Hence they will say
Nine plus one instead of ten.
Certain sounds, such as the voice of a crow or the sound of an ambulance
or fire truck.
Frightening or disturbing dreams.
Colours, such as the colour of blood, or yellow.
When the eyelashes of the left eye tremble involuntarily, they say,
Something bad is going to happen to us.
Calling a child by the name of a living person, such as the father or
mother and so on.
Witnessing an accident or a fire in the morning.
Seeing ones wifes mother in the morning.
When the right hand or right foot itches.
[5] The virtue of tawakkul (putting ones trust in Allaah) and not
indulging in tiyarah. The Prophet
( peace and blessings of Allaah be upon him) said:
Seventy thousand people will enter Paradise without being called to account and
without being punished. Among the virtues of these people, he described them as not
believing in tiyarah and as putting their trust in Allaah. (Reported by Muslim).
[6] Condemnation of tiyarah and explanation that it is a kind of shirk.
Ibn Masood (may Allaah be pleased with him) said: The Messenger of Allaah
(peace and blessings of Allaah be upon him) said: Al-tiyarah is shirk, and he
said it three times. (Reported by Abu Dawood and others, and classed as saheeh by
al-Albaani).
Imraan ibn Husayn (may Allaah be pleased with him) said:
The Messenger of Allaah
(peace and blessings of Allaah be upon him) said: He
is not one of us who does tiyarah or has it done for himself
Al-Albaani
said: Its isnaad is hasan. Ibn al-Qayyim said: Tiyarah is a kind of
shirk and a way in which the Shaytaan influences and scares a person. It is very serious
for the one who takes it to heart and pays too much attention to it, but it is
insignificant for the one who pays no attention to it and is not concerned about it.
[7] Negation of tiyarah and superstition. Abu Hurayrah (may Allaah be
pleased with him) said: The Messenger of Allaah
(peace and blessings of Allaah be
upon him) said: There is no adwaa (contagion) or tiyarah, but I like righteous
fal. (Muslim). And he said, No adwaa, no
tiyarah, no haamah, and no Safar. (Reported by al-Bukhaari and Muslim).
Muaawiyah ibn al-Hakam al-Salami reported that he
said to the Messenger of Allaah
(peace and blessings of Allaah be upon him): Some
of us believe in tiyarah. He said, That is something that any of you may feel
in himself, but it should not stop you from doing anything. (Muslim).
So the Prophet
(peace and blessings of Allaah be upon him) explained
that any anxiety suffered because of tiyarah is all in the mind and has nothing to do with
the object that caused the fear. It is the persons own illusion, fear and shirk that
is affecting him and stopping him from doing what he wants to do, not the thing that he
saw or heard. Whoever adheres firmly to the bonds of Tawheed and puts all his trust in
Allaah, thus nipping the ideas of tiyarah in the bud before they take hold, will be
successful and happy in this world and the next.
In a saheeh hadeeth, the Prophet
(peace and blessings of Allaah be
upon him) said: Leave any ideas of tiyarah as they are [i.e., do not take them any
further]. (Saheeh Abi Dawood). What this hadeeth means
is that the Prophet
(peace and blessings of Allaah be upon him) wanted them not to pay
attention to such ideas, but to leave them alone, as Allaah had made them, because they
can bring neither benefit nor harm.
Ibn Jareer said: What this means is to leave birds (tayr) alone
without shooing them away, and carry on with one's own business, because shooing them away
does not bring any benefit or ward off any harm.
Ikrimah (may Allaah have mercy on him) said: We were
sitting with Ibn Abbaas when a bird flew over us and screeched. A man who was there
said, Good! Ibn Abbaas said to him, It is neither good nor
bad. He hastened to rebuke him lest he think that it had any influence for
good or evil.
Taawoos set out on a journey with one of his friends, and a crow
screeched. The man said, Good! Taawoos said, What is the good in that?
Do not accompany me any further.
Ibn Abd al-Hakam said: Muzaahim said, When Umar
ibn Abd al-Azeez set out from Madeenah, I looked and saw that the moon was in
Hyades [a group of stars in Taurus], and I did not want to tell him that, so I just said
to him, Look how beautiful the moon looks tonight. Umar looked, and saw
that the moon was in Hyades, and said, It is as if you wanted to tell me that the
moon was in Hyades. O Muzaahim, we do not go out by the help of the sun or the moon; we go
out by the help of Allaah, al-Waahid, al-Qahhaar.
[8] The limits of tiyarah. The kind of tiyarah that makes a person go
ahead with his plans or stops him from going ahead is the kind of tiyarah that is
prohibited. As for the good omens (fal) that the Prophet
(peace and blessings of
Allaah be upon him) liked, this is a kind of optimism that a person does not feel
dependent upon, unlike things that may make a person either go ahead or change his plans,
in which a person is in a sense depending upon it. And Allah knows best.
[9] Kafaarah (expiation) for one who engages in tiyarah. Imaam Ahmad
reported in his Musnad and Ibn al-Sunni also reported with a saheeh isnaad from
Abd-Allaah ibn Amr that the Messenger of Allaah
(peace and blessings of
Allaah be upon him) said: Whoever lets tiyarah stop him from doing something is
guilty of shirk. They said, What is the kafaarah for that? He said,
To say: Allaahumma la khayra illaa khayruka wa laa tayra illaa tayruka wa laa
ilaaha ghayruka (O Allaah, there is no good except Your good, no birds except Yours,
and there is no god beside You).
no birds except Yours means: the birds are part of
Your creation, they can bring neither benefit nor harm, and the only One Who can bring
benefit or harm is You, may You be glorified.
[10] Remedies for tatayyur:
(a) tawakkul, which means delegating all ones affairs to Allaah
and relying on Him, whilst at the same time taking the necessary means and precautions.
This is an obligation which must be done purely and sincerely for Allaah, because it is
one of the best forms of worship and highest levels of Tawheed. Allaah says
(interpretation of the meanings):
and put your trust in Allaah, if you are
believers indeed. [al-Maaidah 5:23] and And put yout trust in the
Ever-Living One Who dies not, and glorify His Praises, and Sufficient is He as the
All-Knower of the sins of His slaves. [al-Furqaan 25:58]. Putting ones
trust in Allaah is one of the greatest and most important ways of getting rid of pessimism
and superstition and other matters pertaining to shirk.
(b) Knowing that everything that happens, happens by the decree of
Allaah. Blessings and calamities alike are covered by the will and decree of Allaah, as He
says (interpretation of the meaning): No calamity befalls on the earth or in
yourselves but is inscribed in the Book of Decrees (al-lawh al-mahfooz), before We bring
it into existence. Verily, that is easy for Allaah. [al-Hadeed 57:22].
Thus a person may be reassured about these matters, and there is no need for tatayyur or
tiyarah, because good and bad alike are subject to the will and decree of Allaah.
(c) Istikhaarah. This is one of the greatest forms of
worship and is complete tawakkul or dependence on Allaah. It is the alternative to
tatayyur and tiyarah. The Prophet
(peace and blessings of Allaah be upon him) used to
teach his Companions to make istikhaarah for all their affairs just as he used to teach
them the soorahs of the Quraan.
(d) Moving away from places which one thinks are
unlucky. Here we are talking about doubt, not certainty. Anas ibn Maalik (may
Allaah be pleased with him) said: A man said, O Messenger of Allaah, we lived
in a house where our number was great and our wealth was abundant, then we moved to a
house where our numbers dwindled and our wealth decreased. The Messenger of Allaah
(peace and blessings of Allaah be upon him) said: Leave it, for it is
bad. (Reported by Maalik, Abu Dawood, al-Bukhaari in al-Adab al-Mufrad,
and classed as hasan by al-Albaani).
Leave it, for it is bad Ibn Abd al-Barr said:
I think that he said it lest they adhere to thoughts of tiyarah. Al-Baghawi
said: He told them to move away from it because they did not like it and did not
feel comfortable; if they moved, the things they were feeling would go away. He did not
tell them to move because the house was the cause of the problems.
But the Creator made that the time for His decree to be carried out.
suggested by Ibn al-Arabi al-Maaliki.
(e) Fal (good omen). This is the opposite of tiyarah,
for example when a man who is sick hears another addressing him as Ya saalim (O
healthy one)!. The Messenger of Allaah
(peace and blessings of Allaah be upon him)
said: There is no adwaa (contagion) and no tiyarah, but I like righteous
fal, a good word. (Reported by al-Bukhaari and Muslim).
The difference between fal and tiyarah is that fal involves
thinking in positive terms about Allaah, whereas tiyarah involves the opposite, so for
this reason it is disliked.
There is another issue here: if a person puts his trust in Allaah and
goes ahead with his plans, then disaster strikes and harm befalls him, how can this happen
when he thought of Allaah in positive terms? Our answer is that this is a test, not an
omen or tiyarah; the believer is tested in accordance with the level of his faith.
Haafiz al-Hakami said: One of the conditions of fal is that
it is not something that a person relies on or tries to figure out; it is just a
coincidence that happens to a person without him thinking about it. It is a particularly
loathsome form of bidah to try to find fal in the Quraan [by opening it
at random]. The one who takes the Verses of Allaah as a joke or idle entertainment is
surely doing wrong. If a person tries to figure out fal and use it to get good
luck, this is tiyarah, like using arrows to seek luck or a decision.
O Allaah, we seek refuge with You from associating anything knowingly
with You, and we seek Your forgiveness for that which we do unknowingly.
References:
Al-Qawl al-Mufeed ala Kitaab al-Tawheed. Ibn Uthaymeen.
Al-Tiyarah wal-Fal. Mahmoud al-Jaasim
Tayseer al-Azeez al-Hameed Sharh Kitaab al-Tawheed. Sulaymaan
ibn Abd-Allaah.
Fath al-Baari. Ibn Hajar.
Fath al-Majeed Sharh Kitaab al-Tawheed. Abd al-Rahmaan ibn
Hasan.
Maaarij al-Qubool. Al-Hakam.
Miftaah Daar al-Saaadah. Ibn al-Qayyim.