Question: Can you please enlighten
me on the question of Chehlum ceremony meant for Isal-i-thawab
(transfer of reward to a deceased). The ceremony is commonly held on
the fortieth day of one’s death. How far such a thing is allowed in Shari‘ah?
I am told that this is an innovation in Islam.
Answer: The concept of Chehlum
and recitation of the Holy Qur’an to transfer its reward to
a dear departed is an activity not supported by the Holy Qur’an and
the Sunnah of the Holy Prophet (sws). People had been dying during
the Holy Prophet’s (sws) time and never did he organize such a gathering
to get others to read the Holy Qur’an for the purpose. The reason
of the absence of this activity is that the Holy Qur’an makes it
clear that every body will be held accountable only for the deeds he himself
does during his life. It says:
… that no one shall bear the burden of another,
that man shall have only that which he strived for, and that his striving
shall soon be examined [and] then he shall be rewarded with a complete
reward. (53:38-41)
The verse fully negates the transfer of
burden of bad deeds and that of good deeds on another person. The Holy
Prophet (sws) has been reported to have said:
When a person dies, the reward of his deeds ceases
except in the case of three things: in the case of something the benefit
of which is reaped [even after his death] for a long time; in the case
of some knowledge that he leaves behind, which benefits the world [even
after his death] for a long time; and in the case of a righteous child
who prays for his forgiveness. (Muslim, No: Kitabu’l-Wasiyyah)
In the light of the above verse of the
Qur’an and the saying of the Holy Prophet (sws) it is not possible
to transfer reward of good deeds to another person. The only way one can
get benefit from after his death is through the invocation (dua‘)
of the survivors and his own acts which continue benefiting the world.
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