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Muhammad ibn Ismail al-Bukhari (810–870)

Auteur de Sahih al-Bukhari: The Translation of the Meanings 9 Vol. Set

176 oeuvres 390 utilisateurs 2 critiques 1 Favoris

A propos de l'auteur

Crédit image: By Bakkouz - Own work, CC BY-SA 4.0, https://commons.wikimedia.org/w/index.php?curid=39059791

Séries

Œuvres de Muhammad ibn Ismail al-Bukhari

Die Sammlung der Hadithe (2010) 3 exemplaires
The Hadith Volume 1 (2016) 2 exemplaires
Sahih Bukhari Book 38 1 exemplaire
Sahih Bukhari Book 40 1 exemplaire
Sahih Bukhari Book 66 1 exemplaire
Sahih Bukhari Book 42 1 exemplaire
Sahih Bukhari Book 41 1 exemplaire
Sahih Bukhari Book 67 1 exemplaire
Sahih Bukhari Book 43 1 exemplaire
Sahih Bukhari Book 44 1 exemplaire
Sahih Bukhari Book 45 1 exemplaire
Sahih Bukhari Book 46 1 exemplaire
Sahih Bukhari Book 56 1 exemplaire
Sahih Bukhari Book 47 1 exemplaire
Sahih Bukhari Book 48 1 exemplaire
Sahih Bukhari Book 60 1 exemplaire
Sahih Bukhari Book 55 1 exemplaire
Sahih Bukhari Book 39 1 exemplaire
Sahih Bukhari Book 53 1 exemplaire
Sahih Bukhari Book 52 1 exemplaire
Sahih Bukhari Book 59 1 exemplaire
Sahih Bukhari Book 58 1 exemplaire
Sahih Bukhari Book 61 1 exemplaire
Sahih Bukhari Book 57 1 exemplaire
Sahih Bukhari Book 62 1 exemplaire
Sahih Bukhari Book 63 1 exemplaire
Sahih Bukhari Book 64 1 exemplaire
Sahih Bukhari Book 51 1 exemplaire
Sahih Bukhari Book 50 1 exemplaire
Sahih Bukhari Book 65 1 exemplaire
Sahih Bukhari Book 49 1 exemplaire
Sahih Bukhari Book 54 1 exemplaire
Sahih Bukhari Book 26 1 exemplaire
Sahih Bukhari Book 37 1 exemplaire
Sahih Bukhari Book 19 1 exemplaire
Sahih Bukhari Book 06 1 exemplaire
Sahih Bukhari Book 05 1 exemplaire
Sahih Bukhari Book 07 1 exemplaire
Sahih Bukhari Book 08 1 exemplaire
Sahih Bukhari Book 09 1 exemplaire
Sahih Bukhari Book 10 1 exemplaire
Sahih Bukhari Book 11 1 exemplaire
Sahih Bukhari Book 13 1 exemplaire
Sahih Bukhari Book 12 1 exemplaire
Sahih Bukhari Book 14 1 exemplaire
Sahih Bukhari Book 15 1 exemplaire
Sahih Bukhari Book 16 1 exemplaire
Sahih Bukhari Book 17 1 exemplaire
Sahih Bukhari Book 18 1 exemplaire
Sahih Bukhari Book 20 1 exemplaire
Sahih Bukhari Book 36 1 exemplaire
Sahih Bukhari Book 29 1 exemplaire
Sahih Bukhari Book 35 1 exemplaire
Sahih Bukhari Book 34 1 exemplaire
Sahih Bukhari Book 32 1 exemplaire
Sahih Bukhari Book 33 1 exemplaire
Sahih Bukhari Book 31 1 exemplaire
Sahih Bukhari Book 30 1 exemplaire
Sahih Bukhari Book 27 1 exemplaire
Sahih Bukhari Book 21 1 exemplaire
Sahih Bukhari Book 28 1 exemplaire
Sahih Bukhari Book 69 1 exemplaire
Sahih Bukhari Book 25 1 exemplaire
Sahih Bukhari Book 24 1 exemplaire
Sahih Bukhari Book 23 1 exemplaire
Sahih Bukhari Book 22 1 exemplaire
Sahih Bukhari Book 68 1 exemplaire
Sahih Bukhari Book 91 1 exemplaire
Sahih Bukhari Book 70 1 exemplaire
Hadith, The 1 exemplaire
Sahih Al'Bukhari 1 exemplaire
Al-Bukhari: Hadith-samling (2007) 1 exemplaire
Al-Lu'lu Wal-Marjan 1 exemplaire
Sahih Bukhari Book 71 1 exemplaire
Sahih Bukhari Book 86 1 exemplaire
Sahih Bukhari Book 72 1 exemplaire
Sahih Bukhari Book 73 1 exemplaire
Sahih Bukhari Book 74 1 exemplaire
Sahih Bukhari Book 75 1 exemplaire
Sahih Bukhari Book 76 1 exemplaire
Sahih Bukhari Book 77 1 exemplaire
Sahih Bukhari Book 78 1 exemplaire
Sahih Bukhari Book 79 1 exemplaire
Sahih Bukhari Book 80 1 exemplaire
Sahih Bukhari Book 83 1 exemplaire
Sahih Bukhari Book 81 1 exemplaire
Sahih Bukhari Book 82 1 exemplaire
Sahih Bukhari Book 84 1 exemplaire
Sahih Bukhari Book 85 1 exemplaire
Sahih Bukhari Book 87 1 exemplaire
Sahih Bukhari Book 89 1 exemplaire
Sahih Bukhari Book 88 1 exemplaire
Sahih Bukhari Book 90 1 exemplaire
Sahih Bukhari Book 92 1 exemplaire
Sahih Bukhari Book 93 1 exemplaire
Sahih Bukhari Book 03 1 exemplaire
Sahih Bukhari Book 02 1 exemplaire
Sahih Bukhari Book 01 1 exemplaire
The Hadith (2015) 1 exemplaire
Sahih Bukhari Book 04 1 exemplaire

Étiqueté

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Membres

Critiques

Bukhari wrote at a time when the Shi'ites and Sunnis joined in rejecting the Abbasid leadership and abandoned the Gospel and the Torah (see The Great Leap-Fraud - Social Economics of Religious Terrorismfor details). It must be read in that light. As had the Christians before them, the Muslims now rejected everything that the Jews and Christians had done previously. For everything they did, an alternative ritual and behavior had to be found in order to make sure that the Muslims could build their own distinct identity—their Jewish past was buried.

From the Sunni point of view, Bukhari's traditions would be the most authentic of the thousands of sayings fathered upon Muhammad. For the modern reader, they are an impenetrable and repetitive maze of useless gibberish containing only the occasional hint of the intention and meaning of the sayings. Yet, when one views the writings as being under the impression of the ninth century, the Bukhari script turns into an invaluable fountain of information.

The Islamic scholar Malik ibn Anas had provided the foundation for the writings of Bukhari, who completed his collection of Mohammad’s traditions between the year 864 and 870. He seems to have taken the extensive Shi’ite collections and pretended to confirm their authenticity. This must have been a difficult task, if not impossible. Bukhari attempted to ask great grandsons of direct witnesses about what may have happened two hundred years earlier. To be sure, we are not talking about historical events that changed the world, but nitty-gritty details very close to the daily struggle of ordinary people. Thus, the value of those traditions in their historicity is limited. Because no federal or provincial code of law had been established in either Damascus or Baghdad and no edicts had been issued by the caliphs, it seems that local authorities were referred to for case-by-case decisions within a moral framework, which must have been any combination of the Torah, the Zabur, the Gospel, and the Koran.

As for the gibberish, the text regulates everything from how to pray to how to spit.

One of the interesting aspects in the study of Bukhari is his technique of suggestion. He leaves out details, emphasizes arguments differently, and buries critical passages in repetitious sayings and lengthy excurses to nowhere. He frequently withholds information about time and places, not disclosing whether the recounted occurred in a dream or reality, keeping important details close to the chest, misplacing quote marks, putting sayings in deliberate chronological disorder, and breaking sayings into pieces that make little sense in their fragments. It makes for such an extraordinarily hard read that it could not amount to a commoner’s bedtime lecture.

Bukhari’s school of thought was that the Shi’ite recordings were inventions of the time and that Bukhari’s uniquely Ghassanid Sunni collection was the only correct one. The parts that stood the test of “authenticity” more than two hundred years after Muhammad’s death were, conveniently, those that fit Bukhari’s ideals. They were authenticated because he wanted them authenticated. The text is exhaustive and overwhelming—overwhelmingly ridiculous, that is.

Unfortunately, for the student of Sunni Islam, no path can evade Bukhari.

A.J. Deus, author of The Great Leap-Fraud - Social Economics of Religious Terrorism
… (plus d'informations)
 
Signalé
ajdeus | May 11, 2011 |
Good for what it is: a translation of the initial Chapters of Saheeh Bukhari. It does include the original arabic text, fully vocalized, which is a big plus. His discussion of certain controversial aspects of the early history of Islam is very enlightening. It makes it all the more tragic that the subsequent volumes of translation were destroyed by a fanatic mob during Partition of India.
 
Signalé
luqmaninbmore | Jun 16, 2008 |

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Statistiques

Œuvres
176
Membres
390
Popularité
#62,076
Évaluation
½ 3.5
Critiques
2
ISBN
37
Langues
9
Favoris
1

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