Muhammad Mustafa Al-A’zami

Muhammad Mustafa Al-A’zami (Urdu: محمد مصطفٰی اعظمی‎, Arabic: محمد مصطفى الأعظمي) was a contemporary Indian Scholar of Hadith, best known for his critical investigation and scrutiny of some of the Western writings on Islam and Islamic civilization, such as: Ignác GoldziherDavid Margoliouth, and Joseph Schacht.

Contents

Life and education

He was born in MauIndia to Brahman Hindu parents in 1930. Al-A’zami received his Islamic Education successively from Darul Uloom Deoband (1952), then he joined Al-Azhar University, Egypt in 1952 and did his Masters in the Faculty of the Arabic Language, and obtained a Certification to teach Arabic language.[citation needed]

Career

Azmi was a Professor Emeritus at King Saud University where he also chaired the department of Islamic Studies. He served as curator of the National Public Library of Qatar, Associate Professor at Umm al-Qura University, Visiting Scholar at the University of Michigan (Ann Arbor), Visiting Fellow at St Cross College, Oxford, King Faisal Visiting Professor for Islamic Studies at Princeton University, and Visiting Scholar at the University of Colorado at Boulder.[1] He was also an Honorary Fellow in Islamic Studies at the University of Wales, Trinity Saint David.[2]

Awards and Recognition

In 1980, he was the recipient of the King Faisal International Award for Islamic Studies.[3] Much of A’zami’s work focused on challenging Western scholarship on hadith literature, especially on highlighting the fact that there was already intense literary activity on hadiths during the lifetime of the Muslim prophet Muhammad, at his encouragement.[4]

Literary works

  • Studies in Early Hadith Literature, His doctoral thesis at the University of Cambridge
  • Hadith Methodology and Literature, a general introduction to the subject
  • The History of the Qur’anic Text from Revelation to Compilation: A Comparative Study with the Old and New Testaments
  • On Schacht’s Origins of Muhammadan Jurisprudence
  • Dirasat fi al-Hadith an-Nabawi
  • Kuttab an-Nabi
  • Manhaj an-Naqd ‘ind al-Muhaddithin
  • al-Muhaddithun min al-Yamamah

His forthcoming works include The Qurʾānic Challenge: A Promise Fulfilled and The ʾIsnād System: Its Origins and Authenticity.

Edited works

Death

Muhammad Mustafa Azmi died on 20 December 2017, aged 87.

Leave a comment