Question: What is the Islamic
stance on punishment in graves? Does not this belief negate the idea of
God being just?
Answer: The information regarding
punishment in graves mainly appears in some Ahadith ascribed to
the Holy Prophet (sws). It needs to be appreciated that these traditions
do not add to the beliefs. These only help explain the religious sources:
the Holy Qur’an and the Sunnah. We need to study these Ahadith
in the light of the Holy Qur’an, which is the real yardstick
in religious matters. I would like you to appreciate that in this context
‘grave’ does not stand for the ‘ditch’ in which we bury the dead rather
it connotes the life after death and before the Judgment Day namely Barzakh.
The Holy Qur’an refers to this life in various places (36:52, 40:45-6,
2:154, 9:101 for example).
The life of Barzakh is neither
identical to the life in this world, nor is it like life in the Hereafter.
This we cannot fully comprehend like most other matters regarding the life
after death and the Hereafter. We only know that some of the individuals
experience a different kind of life and are rewarded or punished by their
Lord in Barzakh but we do not know in what form this reward or torture
is executed. The Holy Qur’an itself has made it clear that we do
not and cannot comprehend this phenomenon and it has not provided extensive
information on the subject. It says:
And call not those who are slain in the way of
Allah ‘dead’. Nay, they are living, only on perceive not. (2:154)
It would, therefore, be wise to avoid
imagining details of the matter and to be content with the information
made available by the Almighty.
The Holy Qur’an informs us
that those who live a life of submission to God and sacrifice their lives,
necessarily merit success in the Hereafter and will be rewarded right after
their death. It says:
Think not of those, who are slain in the way
of Allah, as dead. Nay, they are living. With their Lord they have provision.
(3:169)
The Holy Qur’an has only provided
this brief information It says that they are not dead like others rather
they are being rewarded. This treatment is exclusive for the martyrs, the
Messengers, Prophets, and other pious people who lived lives of piety and
righteousness.
A similar but contrasting fate as
that of the Shuhada (witnesses to the truth) awaits those who were
not only clear rejecters of what they understood to be the truth but lived
a life which was evident of their hatred for it, as, for instance, the
rejecters and enemies of the Messengers of Allah. These people, contrary
to the Shuhada, are subjected to God’s punishments immediately after
their worldly deaths. The Qur’an says:
The Fire; they are exposed to it morning and
evening; and on the day when the Hour comes [it will be said]: Cause Pharaoh’s
folk to enter the most awful doom. (40:46)
The fate of those whose status is not
clear is left to be decided undecided till the Hereafter. It will be then
when their status will be ascertained and rewards and punishments will
be declared. Many verses of the Holy Qur’an indicate to this (36:52
for example).
Now remains the position of the Ahdith,
which refer to the punishment in grave. As stated earlier these Ahdith
must be analyzed in the light of the Holy Qur’an and should
only be accepted if found in conformity with the Qur’anic information
on the subject. A thorough analysis of these Ahdith shows that these
refer specifically to the addressees of the Messenger of Allah and we have
seen that the Holy Qur’an has justified their chastisement in the
grave. It would not be possible to generalize this punishment and reward
for it would be a clear contradiction to the Qur’anic assertion
that the fate of people will be ascertained after the process of accountability
in the Day of Judgment.
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