Author
Al-Saktani, Issa bin Abdul Rahman
Author Original
السكتاني، عيسى بن عبد الرحمان
Type
belge
Language
Arabic
Digital
Yes
Manuscript
No
Pages Count
216
Library
King Abdul-Aziz Al Saoud Foundation for Islamic Studies and Human Sciences
Record ID
affichage_numerics1079
Notes
The beginning of the manuscript: A book containing the questions of Sheikh Al-Allamah Abu Mahdi Sidi Issa bin Abdul Rahman, the judge and mufti of the community in Marrakesh, may God Almighty have mercy on him and be pleased with him. It was collected on his behalf and arranged by his student, the respected jurist Sidi Ahmed bin Al-Hasan Al-Susi Al-Rodani. Praise be to God, and prayers and peace be upon our Master Muhammad, the Seal of the Prophets and the Imam of the Messengers (...) As for what follows, this is a collection of the answers of our Sheikh the Imam (...) Abi Mahdi Sidi Isa bin Abd al-Rahman al-Ragraki in the original (...) I recorded it from his handwriting after consulting him, by the mercy of God Almighty, regarding the restriction of his life on all of it, so he gave me permission to do so and commanded me to do so, and I continued to ask for it in the hands of people by copying and restricting it, and I used my effort to request it and search for it to the utmost of my ability. When he, may God have mercy on him, saw the seriousness in my request and interest in it, he began to prepare me for the fatwas he would respond to and dictate the answer, so I would write it with my own hand and he would print it, and we would take copies from that under his hand. He continued to guide me to the benefits and excerpts of directing the sayings and their structure, out of his keenness, may God have mercy on him, to spread knowledge and benefit from it, until I managed to record a large number of that.
End of the manuscript: And he, may God be pleased with him, was asked about someone who sold his garden for his water, trees, and land, and water was included in the sale. Is the sale invalid because it means water increases or decreases (...) and he, may God be pleased with him, was asked about someone who bought pearls or other things from a woman with him in one place (...) and he replied, “Her claim will not be heard after this period of time and peace.” What I found of the questions of the late Sidi Issa bin Abdul Rahman ended with what was collected by his student, the noble jurist Sidi Ahmed bin Al-Hasan Al-Susi Al-Rodani (...) at the hands of (...) Ahmed bin Al-Hasan Al-Saktani (...) the last inanimate object (...) sixty-four thousand.
Font type: fine Moroccan