ḥiyal
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''Ḥiyal'' (حيل, singular ''ḥīla'' حيلة "contortion, contrivance; device, subterfuge") is "legalistic trickery" in
Islamic jurisprudence ''Fiqh'' (; ar, فقه ) is Islamic jurisprudence. Muhammad-> Companions-> Followers-> Fiqh. The commands and prohibitions chosen by God were revealed through the agency of the Prophet in both the Quran and the Sunnah (words, deeds, and e ...
. The main purpose of ''ḥiyal'' is to avoid straightforward observance of Islamic law in difficult situations while still obeying the letter of the law. An example of ''hiyal'' is the practice of "dual purchase" (''baiʿatān fī baiʿa'') to avoid the prohibition of usury by making two contracts of purchase and re-purchase (at a higher price), similar to the modern
futures contract In finance, a futures contract (sometimes called a futures) is a standardized legal contract to buy or sell something at a predetermined price for delivery at a specified time in the future, between parties not yet known to each other. The asset ...
. A special sub-field of ''ḥiyal'' is "oath-trickery" (''maʿārīḍ'') dedicated to the formulation of ambiguous statements designed to be interpreted as an oath or promise while leaving open loopholes to avoid perjury. Views on its admissibility in Islam have varied by schools of Islamic jurisprudence (''
Madhhab A ( ar, مذهب ', , "way to act". pl. مَذَاهِب , ) is a school of thought within ''fiqh'' (Islamic jurisprudence). The major Sunni Mathhab are Hanafi, Maliki, Shafi'i and Hanbali. They emerged in the ninth and tenth centuries CE an ...
''), by time period, and by type of ''ḥiyal''. A substantial literature on such tricks has developed in the
Hanafi The Hanafi school ( ar, حَنَفِية, translit=Ḥanafiyah; also called Hanafite in English), Hanafism, or the Hanafi fiqh, is the oldest and one of the four traditional major Sunni schools ( maddhab) of Islamic Law (Fiqh). It is named aft ...
school of jurisprudence in particular.


In history and Madhhab

The earliest development of this field is the ''Kitāb al-maḫārij fī l-ḥiyal'' ("book of evasion and trickery") by
Muhammad al-Shaybani Abū ʿAbd Allāh Muḥammad ibn al-Ḥasan ibn Farqad ash-Shaybānī ( ar, أبو عبد الله محمد بن الحسن بن فرقد الشيباني; 749/50 – 805), the father of Muslim international law, was an Arab jurist and a dis ...
(d. 805). A more comprehensive treatment is the ''Kitāb al-ḥiyal wa-l-maḫārij'' by
Al-Ḫaṣṣāf Al-Ḫaṣṣāf () (died 874, full name ''Abū-Bakr Aḥmad Ibn-ʿUmar Ibn-Muhair aš-Šaibānī al-Ḫaṣṣāf'') was a Hanafite law scholar at the court of the 14th Abbasid Caliph al-Muhtadi. He is the author of a seminal work on ''Qādī'' ...
(d. 870). The study of ''ḥiyal'' was not uncontroversial in Islamic jurisprudence. It was at first classed as
haram ''Haram'' (; ar, حَرَام, , ) is an Arabic term meaning 'Forbidden'. This may refer to either something sacred to which access is not allowed to the people who are not in a state of purity or who are not initiated into the sacred knowle ...
by the Shafiite school, although its great popularity eventually led to aspects of ''ḥiyal'' being recognized even in Shafiite treatises. By the 10th century, Shafiite authors wrote a number of ''ḥiyal'' treatises of their own, of which the work by al-Qazwini (died 1048) has survived, while others continued to denounce ''ḥiyal'', among them
al-Ghazali Al-Ghazali ( – 19 December 1111; ), full name (), and known in Persian-speaking countries as Imam Muhammad-i Ghazali (Persian: امام محمد غزالی) or in Medieval Europe by the Latinized as Algazelus or Algazel, was a Persian polymat ...
. Since the 15th century, Shafiite opposition to ''ḥiyal'' had mostly disappeared, due to the
fatwa A fatwā ( ; ar, فتوى; plural ''fatāwā'' ) is a legal ruling on a point of Islamic law (''sharia'') given by a qualified '' Faqih'' (Islamic jurist) in response to a question posed by a private individual, judge or government. A jurist i ...
s by
Ibn Hajar al-Asqalani Ibn Ḥajar al-ʿAsqalānī or ''Ibn Ḥajar'' ( ar, ابن حجر العسقلاني, full name: ''Shihābud-Dīn Abul-Faḍl Aḥmad ibn Nūrud-Dīn ʿAlī ibn Muḥammad ibn Ḥajar al-ʿAsqalānī al-Kināni'') (18 February 1372 – 2 Febru ...
outlawing its criticism. Meanwhile, ''ḥiyal'' was more vigorously opposed by the
Hanbali The Hanbali school ( ar, ٱلْمَذْهَب ٱلْحَنۢبَلِي, al-maḏhab al-ḥanbalī) is one of the four major traditional Sunni schools (''madhahib'') of Islamic jurisprudence. It is named after the Arab scholar Ahmad ibn Hanbal ...
school. Al-Bukhari dedicated an entire book in his '' Sahīh'' to the refutation of ''ḥiyal'' and Abū Yaʿlā, a Hanbali judge of the 11th-century Abbasid caliph Al-Qāʾim wrote a ''Kitāb Ibṭāl al-ḥiyal'' ("book of invalidation of ''ḥiyal''"). Like the Shafiites, the Hanbali school eventually came to a more moderate view of the practice. 14th-century Hanbali scholar
Ibn Qayyim Al-Jawziyya Shams al-Dīn Abū ʿAbd Allāh Muḥammad ibn Abī Bakr ibn Ayyūb al-Zurʿī l-Dimashqī l-Ḥanbalī (29 January 1292–15 September 1350 CE / 691 AH–751 AH), commonly known as Ibn Qayyim al-Jawziyya ("The son of the principal of he school ...
distinguished three types of ''ḥiyal'', (1) clearly inadmissible, (2) clearly admissible and (3) of doubtful admissibility, i.e. recognized by Abū Hanīfa but not by other authorities. 14th century Malaki scholar Al-Shatibi stated that al-hiyal are "generally illegal". Debate on ''ḥiyal'' within the establishment of Islamic jurisprudence continues into the modern period. In 1974, a publication by Muhammad ʿAbd-al-Wahhāb Buhairī,
Al-Azhar University , image = جامعة_الأزهر_بالقاهرة.jpg , image_size = 250 , caption = Al-Azhar University portal , motto = , established = *970/972 first foundat ...
professor for hadith and fiqh, published a monograph on the question ''Al-Ḥiyal fi š-šarīʿa al-islāmīya'' ("trickery in Islamic law"), according to which only a limited number of ''ḥiyal'' are permissible. Among the ''ḥiyal'' permitted by Buhairī is ''taʿrīḍ'' (deception by ambiguity) if it is employed to prevent a Muslim from coming to harm. Since the 1980s, there has been a trend of increased debate on the "purposes of sharia" (''Maqāṣid aš-šarīʿa'') in the context of which a number of scholars have argued for a revival of ''ḥiyal'' as a legitimate tool to improve the flexibility of sharia interpretation in view of the problem of
Islam and modernity Islam and modernity is a topic of discussion in contemporary sociology of religion. The history of Islam chronicles different interpretations and approaches. Modernity is a complex and multidimensional phenomenon rather than a unified and cohe ...
. The nascent Islamic finance industry has also made invoked ''ḥiyal'' to defend its practices. Ismail, Muhammed Imran, ''Legal stratagems (hiyal) and usury in Islamic commercial law'', Ph.D. thesis, University of Birmingham (2010). T. Al-Mubarak, ''Hiyal And Their Applications in Contemporary Islamic Financial Contracts: Towards Setting Acceptable Norms''. Master's Thesis, Qatar Faculty of Islamic Studies, Hamad Bin Khalifa University (2012). Muhammad Akram Kha
"A trajectory of legal tricks (hiyal)"
''What is Wrong with Islamic Economics? Analysing the Present State and Future Agenda'', Studies in Islamic Finance, Accounting and Governance series (2013).


References

primary sources (Ḥiyal literature in Islamic jurisprudence) *
Joseph Schacht Joseph Franz Schacht (, 15 March 1902 – 1 August 1969) was a British-German professor of Arabic and Islam at Columbia University in New York. He was the leading Western scholar on Islamic law, whose ''Origins of Muhammadan Jurisprudence'' (195 ...
(ed., trans.), ''Maḥmūd Ibn-al-Ḥasan al-Qazwīnī, Das kitab al hiial fi l-fiq (Buch der Rechtskniffe)'', 2nd ed. 1924, reprinted 2004. *Joseph Schacht (ed.), Muḥammad Ibn-al-Ḥasan aš-Šaibānī: ''Kitāb al-maḫāriǧ fi 'l-ḥiyal'', 1930, reprinted 1968. *Joseph Schacht (ed.), Abū Bakr Aḥmad Ibn-ʿAmr Ibn-Muhair al-Ḫaṣṣāf aš-Šaibānī: ''Kitāb al-ḥiyal wa-l-maḫāriǧ'', 1923, reprinted 1968. *Muḥammad ʿAbd-al-Wahhāb Buḥairī: ''Al-Ḥiyal fi š-šarīʿa al-islāmīya wa-šarḥ mā warada fī-hā min al-āyāt wa-l-aḥādīṯ au Kašf an-niqāb ʿan mauqiʿ al-ḥiyal min as-sunna wa'l-kitāb''. Cairo: Maṭbaʿat as-Saʿāda, 1974. secondary literature *
Joseph Schacht Joseph Franz Schacht (, 15 March 1902 – 1 August 1969) was a British-German professor of Arabic and Islam at Columbia University in New York. He was the leading Western scholar on Islamic law, whose ''Origins of Muhammadan Jurisprudence'' (195 ...
, "Ḥiyal" in
The Encyclopaedia of Islam The ''Encyclopaedia of Islam'' (''EI'') is an encyclopaedia of the academic discipline of Islamic studies published by Brill. It is considered to be the standard reference work in the field of Islamic studies. The first edition was published in ...
vol. III, 510b-513a. * Joseph Schacht: ''Die arabische Ḥiyal-Literatur. Ein Beitrag zur Erforschung der islamischen Rechtspraxis.'' In: ''Der Islam'' 15 (1926), 211–232. * Satoe Horii: ''Die gesetzlichen Umgehungen im islamischen Recht (ḥiyal): unter besonderer Berücksichtigung der Ǧannat al-aḥkām wa-ǧunnat al-ẖuṣṣām des Ḥanafīten Saʿīd b. ʿAlī as-Samarqandī (gest. 12. Jhdt.).'' Berlin: Schwarz 2001. *Satoe Horii, "Reconsideration of Legal Devices (Ḥiyal) in Islamic Jurisprudence: The Ḥanafīs and Their "Exits" (Makhārij)", ''Islamic Law and Society'' Vol. 9, No. 3 (2002), pp. 312–357.


See also

*
Kitman In Shi'ism, ''Taqiya'' or ''Taqiyya'' ( ar, تقیة ', literally "prudence, fear")R. STROTHMANN, MOKTAR DJEBLI. Encyclopedia of Islam, 2nd ed, Brill. "TAKIYYA", vol. 10, p. 134. Quote: "TAKIYYA "prudence, fear" ..denotes dispensing with th ...
*
Taqiyya In Shi'ism, ''Taqiya'' or ''Taqiyya'' ( ar, تقیة ', literally "prudence, fear")R. STROTHMANN, MOKTAR DJEBLI. Encyclopedia of Islam, 2nd ed, Brill. "TAKIYYA", vol. 10, p. 134. Quote: "TAKIYYA "prudence, fear" ..denotes dispensing with th ...
*
Reservatio mentalis Mental reservation (or mental equivocation) is an ethical theory and a doctrine in moral theology that recognizes the "lie of necessity", and holds that when there is a conflict between justice and veracity, it is justice that should prevail. Th ...
{{DEFAULTSORT:Hiyal Islamic terminology Arabic words and phrases in Sharia Sharia legal terminology Deception Circumvention Ethically disputed judicial practices