Maslaha or maslahah or maslahat (, ) or maslaha a (, ), comes from the term "Salihat" (good deeds, also linked to Islah and Istislah), is a concept in Sharia (Islamic divine law) regarded as a basis of law. It forms a part of extended methodological principles of Islamic jurisprudence (uá¹£à «l al-fiqh) and denotes prohibition or permission of something, according to necessity and particular circumstances, on the basis of whether it serves the public interest of the Muslim community (ummah). In principle, maslaha is invoked particularly for issues that are not regulated by the Qur'an, the sunnah (the teachings and practices of the Islamic prophet Muhammad), or qiyas (analogy). The concept is acknowledged and employed to varying degrees depending on the jurists and schools of Islamic jurisprudence (madhhab). The application of the concept has become more important in modern times because of its increasing relevance to contemporary legal issues. The opposite term of maslaha is mafsada (àÃÂóïé, harm). Islamic politics is itself predicated on maslaha, and is such changeable, as it must respond to the exigencies of time. The term is different from bidah.
According to Mehmet Gormez, in a speech in 5th General Assembly organized in Istanbul by the International Union of Muslim Scholars, the verbal roots of words maslaha and mafsada both are mentioned together in Quran in chapter al-Baqarah's verse no 11, and also in verse 11:117 and 2:205 differently, where all refers towards equal meaining of maslaha and mafsada.
ÃÂ===In Hadith=== A hadith is also used to be referred in case of maslaha and mafsada where Islamic prophet Muhammad said about neither doing harm nor being harmed.
Another hadith is used to determine the co-ordination between maslaha and mafsada is:
Muhammad forbade disobedience to prohibitions unless absolutely necessary, but he conditioned compliance to mandates on capacity. This shows that when obligations conflict, avoiding prohibitions takes precedence over performing them. When a substantial harm exceeds a gain, this adage is applicable. However, seeking the advantage is given priority if the harm is insignificant in comparison to the significant benefit that results from an activity.
There are several other equivalent or analogous concepts in Uá¹£à «l al-fiqh, some of each associated with respective maddhabs. The concept of maqasid (aim or purpose) is comparable in a sense that connotes both the ultimate objective and the goal of the application of the Sharia. The concept of istislah is a related subject, which is employed by Imam Ahmad ibn Hanbal. The meaning of maslaha is "public interest", and the meaning of istislah is "to seek the best public interest", the Sharia's object and purpose. The concept of istihsan means equitable preference for finding solutions to the legal issues. The term is used by the Hanafi school of law, and according to the understanding, the results of qiyas can be overridden when it is considered harmful or undesirable. The term was also used by the Hanbali scholar Ibn Qudamah and by the Maliki jurist Averroes. The Shafi'i school does not recognize the application of maslaha, as it may open the door to the unrestricted use based on fallible human opinions, but it has a corresponding concept, istidlal, which is induced when necessary to avoid the strict application of qiyas.
The concept was first clearly articulated by al-Ghazali (died 1111), who argued that maslaha was Allah's general purpose in revealing the divine law, and that its specific aims was preservation of five essentials of human well-being: religion, life, intellect, offspring, and property. Ghazali said in his book Al-Mustasfa that,
Although most classical-era jurists recognized maslaha as an important legal principle, they held different views regarding the role that it should play in Islamic law. Some jurists viewed it as auxiliary rationale constrained by scriptural sources and analogical reasoning. Others regarded the concept as an independent source of law, whose general principles could override specific inferences based on the letter of scripture. The latter view was held by a minority of classical jurists, but in modern times, it came to be championed in different forms by prominent scholars who sought to adapt Islamic law to changing social conditions by drawing on the intellectual heritage of traditional jurisprudence. Along with the analogous concept of maqasid, it has come to play an increasingly prominent role in modern time because of the need to confront legal issues that were unknown in the past. According to Ibn al-Qayyim, the measures taken to bring people closer to goodness (salaah) and keep them away from corruption (fasad), "Even if these matters are not permitted in the Quran or the Sunnah of the Prophet Muhammad, policy and politics of Shariah is formed by the combination of all of these."
Maslaha was used in one sense by the Andalusian lawyer al-Shatibi (died 1388), who focused on the motivations behind the Islamic law. Regarding questions related to God, ibadat, humans should look to the Qur'an or the Sunnah for answers, but regarding the relationship between humans, mu'amalat, humans should look for the best public solution. Since societies change, al-Shatibi thought that the mu'amalat part of the Islamic law also needed to change.
Maslaha has also been used by several Muslim reformers in recent centuries. Ibn Abd al-Wahhab (died 1792) used maslaha in a few cases. The concept is more known to Islamic modernists. Among them, Muhammad Abduh is especially recognized for using the concept of maslaha as the basis for reconciling modern cultural values with the traditional moral code of Islamic law in the late 19th century. The Muslim Brotherhood, an Islamic modernist group, also invokes maslaha to explain their commitment to public welfare.
Abu Muhammad al-Maqdisi âÂÂâÂÂsaid, "The greatest maslaha is Tawheed and the greatest mafsada is Shirk."
Khalid bin Fathi, in his book Baghiyat al-Qasid fi Bayan QawaâÂÂid al-Maslih wal-Mafsid (èúÃÂé çÃÂÃÂçõï ÃÂàèÃÂçàÃÂÃÂçùï çÃÂàõçÃÂàÃÂçÃÂàÃÂçóï, The SeekerâÂÂs Purpose in Explaining the Rules of Maslahah or Good and Mafsada or Evil), while classifying the Maslahah and Mafsada, said, âÂÂIf Ibn Taymiyyah and other Imams, instead of pursuing the Maslahah of Tawheed, were to engage in something that is only a branch of it and without which it has no value, how much trouble would have befallen the land of Muslims. And the way to prevent the greatest evil, such as shirk and disbelief in Allah, is to prevent the lesser evils or those that are derived from it. The attainment of the greatest Maslahah, i.e., the Maslahah of Tawheed, depends on achieving it, and avoiding Mafsada is to avoid the Mafsada of associating partners with Allah Almighty.â Dependent onâÂÂthis does not mean that there is any conflict between the benefits of Tawheed and other benefits or good, or between avoiding the harm of associating partners with Almighty Allah and avoiding disbelief in Him and other harms, because the Sharia is complete. It is necessary to give priority to Tawheed over Shirk and to promote it by ensuring all the basic and ancillary benefits and avoiding all the harms as much as possible. Because these are the foundation and pillars of Islam, on which Islam is founded, and they are the basis of human happiness in this world and the Hereafter. Whoever clings to them is successful and liberated, and whoever neglects them goes astray and is led by the misguided. Therefore, it is obligatory to give priority to and promote these two principles above all else. The reason for this is that if a person realizes these two principlesâÂÂi.e., avoiding kufr and shirk and worshipping Allah alone without any partnerâÂÂit will benefit him in this world and the Hereafter. "It will inevitably lead to all the desired benefits in the Hereafter.
Fahad ibn Salih al-Ajlan said, An example of taking maslahah into account in Sharia is: Sharia rulings vary according to the degree of maslahah. Maslahah is more in wajib than mustahab. Mafsada is more in haram than makruh. Similarly, there is a hierarchy of minor and major in haram.
Al-Shatibi said, 'In the case of asking for or abandoning something, not all commands and prohibitions are of the same level. There is a difference in the consideration of the maslahah of accepting the command and prohibition and the mashadada of not accepting it.
Izz ibn Abdus Salam said, 'There is a distinction in the degree of maslahah-mafsada. According to the level of Maslaha, there will be a difference in status in the worldly view or in terms of virtue. And according to the level of Mafsada, the level of major and minor sins and the level of punishment in this world and the Hereafter will be determined. Among the types of Mafsada, the biggest one is the most harmful. And the smaller one is the less harmful. The level of major Mafsada gradually decreases and reaches a level of Mafsada, from which if it decreases a little, it will reach the highest level of Mafsada. And this is the second level. Again, the minor Mafsada gradually decreases and reaches a level from which if it decreases a little, it will reach the highest level of Makruh. And this is the second type of Mafsada levels. The harm of makruh gradually decreases to a point where it becomes permissible if it is lowered a little.
said, 'The command of the Shariah seeks the 'dominant benefit'. And the prohibition of the Shariah seeks the 'dominant harm'. By following the lowest level of benefit, virtue is achieved. Then, as the benefit rises, it reaches such a high level that it reaches the highest level of mustahab. The level above it is the lowest level of wajib. And the lowest level of harm is the level of dislike or makruh. Then, as the corruption rises, it reaches the highest level of dislike, above which is the lowest level of haram.
said, 'The difference between praise, blame, goodness and punishment will depend on how much the good and bad deeds lead to benefit and corruption.
said, 'All these texts demand that everyone abstain from the dominant mafsada, the non-dominant maslahah, the area where maslahah-mafsada is equal, and the area where maslahah-mafsada is not there (these four). Because these four types are not the best. Rather, the demand of leadership is to ensure pure and complete maslahah and to prevent complete and fundamental mafsada.
Istikharah is also prescribed for making Islamic political decisions that are not clearly resolved or beneficial in the Quran and Hadith. Abdullah al-Ghudayyan said, "If the benefit or harm, or the good or the bad, is not clear in a necessary or very important matter, then one should make istikhara." Tahir ibn Husayn advised his son Abdullah ibn Tahir after he became governor of Diyar Rabi'a:
Some of the instances of maslahah in the Maliki doctrine:
There is also: