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Trustworthiness

Honesty implies a lack of deceit while trustworthiness entails honouring and fulfilling commitments, promises, trusts and covenants.
“Those who are faithfully true to their amanah (all the duties which God has ordained, honesty, moral responsibility and trusts, etc.) and to their covenants…these indeed are the inheritors.  Who shall inherit Paradise.  And dwell therein forever” (Quran 23:8, 23:10-11)

Prophet Muhammad explained the seriousness of upholding the rights due to others when he said, “God says, ‘There are three people whom I shall be their opponent on the Day of Judgment: A man who was given something in My Name and then betrays; A man who sells-off a free man (as a slave) and consumes the price; and A man who hires a labourer, makes use of his service then does not give him his wages.’” (Saheeh Al-Bukhari).  God says in the Quran,

“Verily, God does command you to render back your Trusts to whom they are due.” (Quran 4:58)

The people of Midian had developed unfair and corrupt business practices and Prophet Shuaib was instructed to warn them of God’s displeasure.

“He said, “O my people!  Worship God, you have no other god but Him, and give not short measure or weight, I see you in prosperity; and verily I fear for you the torment of a Day encompassing.  And O my people!  Give full measure and weight in justice and reduce not the things that are due to the people, and do not commit mischief in the land, causing corruption.  That which is left by God for you (after giving the rights of the people) is better for you, if you are believers.” (Quran 11:85-86)

After Prophet Shuaib issued his warning and the people chose to belittle and ignore him the promise of God was shown to be true.  God is the most Just, the Most Wise and He is the Ultimate Trustee, the One who can be relied upon to fulfil His promises.

“And when Our Commandment came, We saved Shuaib and those who believed with him by a Mercy from Us.  And a torment (or awful cry) seized the wrongdoers, and they lay (dead) prostrate in their homes.” (Quran 11:94)

Prophet Muhammad informed us that “A hypocrite is known by three traits: When he speaks, he lies; when he promises, he reneges; when he is entrusted, he cheats (or embezzles).” (Saheeh Al-Bukhari, Saheeh Muslim)

In one Hadith, Prophet Muhammad (pbuh) informed us to fulfill Amanah even if the other party is not trustworthy. “Discharge the settlement to those who entrusted you, and don’t betray even the one who broke his promise.”  Ahmad and Abu Dawood

In one Hadith, he said: “There is no faith for the one who has no trust, and there is no religion for the one that does not fulfill his promises.”   Ahmad

Another Hadith reports that Prophet Muhammad (pbuh) said: “When someone hears a discussion from a person who does not want his name to be released, it is considered to be a private conversation. It is a trust, even if he did not ask to be kept private.”   Ahmad

Say: “Nothing will happen to us except what Allah has decreed for us: He is our protector. In Allah let the Believers put their trust.” (Noble Qur’an,9:51)

“Every one of you is a guardian and everyone will be asked about his subjects. Imam is a guardian. He will be asked about his subjects. A man is the guardian of the persons in his household. He is answerable about them. A woman is the guardian of her husband’s house. She will be asked about her responsibility. The servant is the guardian of the articles of his master. He is answerable about this responsibility of his. ” (Bukhari)
“I pray to Allah for your religion, your trust and for the happy ending of your work,” (Tirmizi)
Since the zenith of achievement and the highest limit of success is to be protected against the hardships of this world and the bad consequences in the Hereafter, the Prophet prays for safety from both the conditions. He has said:
O Allah! I seek your shelter from the pangs of hunger, because it is a very bad companion, and I seek your shelter from dishonesty because it is the worst friend.” (Abu Daud)

Appointment to High Offices and Posts is a Trust

There is also another sense of trust, and that is: everything should be placed at its proper and deserving place. An office or a post should be offered only to the deserving person; and responsibility should be given only to that person who is able to shoulder it and who has the capability to do justice to the trust placed in him.
Governorship, responsibilities of the party, nation or country, which are granted placing confidence in the persons concerned, are trusts, about which they are answerable. A number of proofs can be advanced in support of this statement.
Hazrat Abu Zar reports that he asked the Prophet whether he would not make him a governor somewhere. Hearing this the Prophet tapped his shoulder and said:
“O Abu Zar ! you are weak, and this responsibility is a trust. On the Day of Judgment it will be a cause of loss of honour and ignominy. However, those people will be spared who will have accepted it with all its responsibilities and would have fulfilled whatever responsibilities they had in this connection.”
(Muslim)
It is a fact that mere excellence of education or experience does not make a person most suitable for some office. It is also possible that a man may have good moral character and a righteous person, but he may not have the capabilities to fulfil the responsibilities of a certain office.
Hazrat Yusuf (Joseph) was a Prophet. He was the living example of righteousness and virtuousness, but he had not offered his services to shoulder the responsibilities of the country on the basis of his righteousness and prophet-hood. He had taken the reins of office in his hand on account of his learning and memory.
“(Yusuf) Said.. ‘Entrust to me the treasures of the country. Verily, I am protector and learned.”
(Yusuf.. 55)
Trust demands that we should entrust such responsibilities and posts to such individuals as would be able to run them properly. If through bribery, nepotism and for some other reason we deviate from this principle and we select an unfit person for some office, then since we have ignored a fit person and have appointed an unfit and undeserving person, we have committed open misappropriation.
Allah’s Messenger has said that whoever has appointed an administrator through nepotism although there was among the people an individual who was more desirable before Allah than that person, then he has committed misappropriation against Allah, His Messenger and all the Muslims.”
(Hakim) Yazid bin Abi Sufyan reports that when Hazrat Abu Bakr sent him to Syria, he advised him thus: “O Yazid ! You have many relationships. It is likely that you may be influenced by them in making important appointments. I am very much afraid about you since the time the Prophet has said: ‘Anyone who has been made responsible for some affair of the Muslims and he has entrusted some responsible job to some ones influenced by his relatives, then Allah’s curse on him. No virtue or justice from him will be accepted before Allah, so much so that he will be thrown in the Hell.
(Hakim)
The community from which the quality of keeping trust is vanished, can be recognised thus: the distribution of posts and offices in that community become a game and play of favours. The value of able men goes down and in their place unfit and undeserving men are appointed. The tradition has it that this forms part of those manifestations of corruption which will appear in the last period.
A man came to the Prophet and asked when the Doomsday would occur. The Prophet answered: “When deposits in trust would start being lost, then wait for the Doomsday.” He was again asked: “What is the meaning of loss of trusts ?” He replied: “When responsibilities are entrusted to unfit persons, then wait for the Doomsday.’s
(Bukhari)

Performance of Duty is also a Trust

This sense is also included in the meaning of trust that the man to whom the responsibility has been entrusted should have the sincere inclination of satisfactorily fulfilling those responsibilities and that he should devote all his energies for doing justice to fulfil it. Undoubtedly it is a trust. Islam considers it worthy of honour that a man should be sincere in his work, should be keen on doing his job in a better way, and should be alive to safeguard the right of the people that are in his charge, for however ordinary that responsibility may be, a slight negligence is likely to cause undue harm to the whole community and society; and the germs of corruption and mischief enter the entire body politic. Dishonesty in performing official duties causes various moral disease in the society. It causes great harm to the religion, to the Muslim public and to the country. This sin, its punishment and its evil appear in different forms.
The Messenger of Allah has said:
“On the Day of Judgment when Allah will gather all the people, past and present, a flag will be fixed for every
deceiver, by which he will be recognised. So it will be said that this is the group of such and such deceivers.”
(Bukhari)
In another tradition it is stated:
“There will be a flag near the head of every deceiver which he will raise in proportion to his deceit. Listen, there is none worse deceiver than the Amir who deceives the public.”
(Muslim)
In other words there will be none more deceitful and deserving of bad consequences than the person who is made responsible for the affairs of men and he sleeps peacefully while the public is undergoing hardships and facing destruction.

Misuse of Office is Betrayal of Trust

Trust demands that if a man is appointed to a certain high office he should not use it for self-aggrandisement or for the benefit of his relatives, for the use of public funds for personal purposes is a crime.
It is a common thing that the governments and the firms give fixed salaries to their employees. Then to find out extra sources of income is disrespectful, ignominious and mean. Allah’s Messenger has said:
“Whomsoever we will entrust with service, the provision of his needs is also our responsibility, If he takes more than this then he is committing misappropriation,”
(Abu Daud)
It is misappropriation because he has used that property of the organisation for himself, which was to be given to the weak and the needy, and it was to be spent for a greater cause and purpose:
“If any person is so false, he shall on the Day of Judgment, restore what he misappropriated; then shall every soul receive its due, whatever it earned, and none shall be dealt with unjustly.”
(Ale Imran ..161)
But a man who takes care of the commands of Allah in fulfilling his responsibility and he is averse to indulge in dishonest practices in performing his duties, then he is considered by Allah one among the fighters for the supremacy of the religion The Prophet bas laid :
“When the Administrator is given a job, he should receive his due and should pay the dues of others, then he is like a fighter in the cause of Allah till he returns home.”
(Tibrani)
Islam has forbidden the exploitation of one’s office and taking undue advantage from it. It has been very severe in closing all the avenues of earning illegal wealth.
Adi bin Umaira narrates that he has heard the Prophet as saying:
“Whomsoever we have given some post and he has concealed a needle or a thing smaller than that, then it will be a misappropriated thing with which he will have to appear on the Day of Judgement.”
Thereupon a dark-skinned Ansari got up and said: “O Messenger of Allah ! take away my governorship.”
The Prophet inquired what was the matter. He replied: “I have heard all your talk just now.” The Prophet said:
“I still say that whomsoever we may make a governor, he should place everything before us. He should take whatever is given to him, and should keep away from whatever he is asked to desist.”
(Muslim)
It is said that a man from the tribe of Uzd, called Ibn Labith, was sent as an administrator by the Prophet to collect charity and donations. When he returned with the collection he said: “These are your things and these have been lifted to me.” The narrator of the hadith says that hearing this the Prophet stood up and after the praise of God said:
“I appoint, from amongst you, an administrator for these affairs for which Allah has made me responsible. When that man comes back, he says this is for us and this has been gifted to him. If he tells the truth, then why does he not sit in his parents’ house, Let us then see from where the gifts come to him? By God, if anyone of you receives even an ordinary thing without it being due, he will have to appear before Allah carrying that thing. I do not want to see anyone of you meeting Allah in this condition that he is carrying a camel on his; head or a cow which is bellowing or a goat that is bleating .” Then he raised his two hands till the whiteness of the armpits was visible and said: “O Allah! I have conveyed your message.”
(Muslim)

Wealth and Ability given by Allah are also a Trust

Trust also means that you should take a survey of your powers of perception with which God has blessed you. You should have a look at those special ability which God has given you. If you look at your property and your children, who are very dear to you, you will feel that all these are God’s trust which has been deposited with you.
Therefore it is necessary that they should be sacrificed in His cause, and they should be utilised for seeking His pleasure. If you suffer a loss in them, you should not start crying and wailing and you should not consider that it was your personal property that has been taken away from you, because compared to you Allah is the more rightful owner and He has the right to use it in any way He likes. If you are tested by an increase in them, then you should not hesitate to undertake jihad when called upon to do so, and you should not turn away from obedience to Allah on account of them, Or you should not feel conceited on their strength.
“O you who believe ! betray not the trust of Allah and the Messenger, nor misappropriate knowingly things entrusted to you. And know that your possessions and your progeny are but a trial, and that it is Allah with whom lies your highest reward.”
( Anfal.. 27-28)

Others’ Secrets with you are a Trust

Trust also means that you should protect the rights of the gatherings which you attend. You should not disclose their information and their secrets to others.
A number of relationships are severed, rifts are created in friendships and interests are endangered when the information about or the secrets of the gatherings are disclosed by someone by correctly or incorrectly quoting the source, thus jeopardising all the plans.
Allah’s Messenger has said: “When a man says something to someone and then turns to you, then it is a trust,”
The confidential talk of the meetings should be guarded, provided it conform to the moral laws and the principles of religion, otherwise its sanctity vanishes, If a Muslim is present in such a meeting where criminals, are conspiring among themselves, so that they may indict some loss on others, then it is his responsibility that he should try to prevent this evil to the best of his ability.
Allah’s Messenger has said:
“The secrets of the gatherings are a trust, but three kinds of gatherings are exceptions: one in which haram (illegal) blood is being shed, one in which haram (illegal) sex is being indulged into, or in which property is being illegally usurped. “
(Abu Daud)
The conjugal relations are sacred in the eyes of Islam. The domestic relationship between a husband and wife and their mutual affairs should be fully protected. The closest man should also not be informed about them.
But foolish people relate their private matters and domestic affairs here and there to outsiders. This is a very bad habit and Allah has declared it haram.
Asma binte Yazid reports that she was with the Prophet and a husband and a wife were sitting there. The Prophet said:
“Is there a man who narrates the acts performed with the wife? And is there a wife who relates her relation with her husband to others?’ People did not say anything from fear. I said: ‘O Messenger of Allah! By God, husbands also do this and wives also do likewise, He said: “Do not say like this, Its example is like a devil-man meeting a devil-woman, and he covers her and performs the sexual act and people are watching. “
(Ahmed)
The Prophet said : “On the Day of Judgment before Allah the greatest act of misappropriation will be that a man may love his wife and the wife may also be inclined towards her husband and then he may disclose his wife’s secrets to others. “
(Muslim)
The deposits which are given to us in trust are for being protected for a fixed period, and then to be returned on demand. We are answerable for these trusts.
While migrating to Medina, the Prophet left behind his cousin so that he may return to the polytheists the deposits kept with him in trust, although these polytheists were the members of the same community which was driving him out of his native place, He was being compelled to leave his home in the cause of his belief, but how can a decent man behave indecently even with indecent and infamous people?
Maimoon bin Mehran says that three kinds of treatment be always meted out to good and bad man alike: keeping trust, fulfilling promise and kindness,
To consider trust as personal property is a wicked act, theft.
Abdullah Ibn Masood says that fighting in the cause of Allah vanishes all the sins except the misappropriation in trust. He says that on the Day of Judgment a person will be brought who had fought in the cause of Allah, would reply: “O Our Lord! how is it possible when the world has ended” Then it would be said: “Take him to Hell.” And in his presence the amounts of trust will be presented in the same form in which they were handed over to him in the world. He would see them and recognise them. He would go after them and seize them and carry them on his shoulders, till he would be under the impression that he has come out, when the trusts would slip from his shoulders, He would again run after them. This act would continue with him forever. Then he said that Salat (prayer) is a trust, Wuzu (ablutions) is a trust, to weigh a thing is a trust, to measure a thing is a trusts and he listed many things and said the greatest trust is that wealth or articles which are deposited or handed over,
The narrator of the hadith says that he went to Bara bin A ‘azib and asked him what he thought about What Ibn Masood said, Bara bin A ‘azib replied: “He spoke the truth, Did you not hear this command of Allah:
“Allah commands you to render back your trusts to those to whom they are due; and when you judge between man and man that you judge with justice.”
( An-Nissa.. 58)
Keeping trust protects the rights of Allah and those of His slaves. It keeps away men from lowliness and meanness. It reaches the desired heights only when this quality is absorbed by men in their natures and consciousness when it reaches the depths of their hearts and when it is guarded against the influences of close and distant relationships.
This is the meaning of the hadilh narrated by Huzaifa bin Yaman :
“Keeping trust has been naturally ingrained in the depths of men’s hearts, Then Quran came and people learned it from Quran and Sunnah.”
(Muslim)
The knowledge of Shariah cannot be indifferent to the righteous conduct, and keeping trust signifies the correct knowledge of Quran and Sunnah as well as a wakeful conscience. If the conscience dies, then the quality of keeping trust is taken away. At such a time the recitation of the Quranic verses and the study of hadith cannot be profitable, but the claimants of Islam think about others and also about themselves that they are the bearers of this quality, but one may ask how can the heart that rejects the truth be expected to keep trust?
For this reason Hazrat Huzaifa has stated that the heart that has no belief loses the quality of keeping trusts. Accordingly he reports: “Then we started talking about vanishing the quality of keeping trusts and the Prophet said: ‘When a man goes to one kind of sleep, the trust is squeezed from his heart till its effect remains equal to a point. Then he goes to another kind of sleep, then the trust shrinks from his heart in such a way as if it were merely a scar,’ Then the Prophet said: ‘Then people indulge in buying and selling, but no one can give a thing in trust, so much so that it is said that in a certain family there is a trustworthy man, and about him it is said how tolerant, well-behaved and wise he is! although there is not an iota of faith in his heart,”
This hadith draws a horrible picture of vanishing the quality of keeping trust from the hearts of dishonest people, It is like finding sparks of goodness in the nature of some mischievous people sometimes, although they have no influence on their lives. And sometimes the good acts overshadow their evil deeds, but it is clear that these acts cannot revive the dead heart. This conscience-less person appraises men on the basis of his desires and preferences. He does not distinguish between faith and infidelity in them.
Keeping trust is a very important quality, Men with weak faith cannot bear it, Allah has given an example of how its burden bears down man’s whole existence, Therefore, it should not be considered an ordinary thing and no laxity should be shown in fulfilling its demands:
“We did indeed offer the Trust to the Heavens and the Earth and the mountains; but they refused to undertake it, being afraid thereof, but man undertook it. he was indeed unjust and foolish.”
(Ahzab.. 72)
Injustice and ignorance are two evils which beset man’s nature, and man has to face the problem of fighting a jihad against them. His faith cannot be complete Without cleaning and purifying it from injustice.
“If is those who believe and confuse not their beliefs with wrong-that are (truly) in security, for they are on (right) guidance,”
(Ana’am.. 82)
Verily, from among the slaves of Allah those who are learned fear Allah.”
( Fatir ..28)
This is the reason why after mentioning man’s bearing trust in the foregoing verses of Surah Ahzab, it is said that those who are unjust and ignorant indulge in misappropriation, they are hypocrites and are the deserving recipients of Allah’s punishment; and security s granted to men of faith and keepers of trust:
“(With the result) that Allah has to punish the hypocrites, men and women, and the unbelievers, men and women, and Allah turns in mercy to believers, men and women, for Allah is Oft-Forgiving, Most merciful,”
(Ahzab.. 73)
 

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As reported by Abdullah Ibn Umar (May Allah be pleased with them), the Prophet (pbuh) said: “If you have these four qualities, you should not worry about what you missed in life: To take care of the trust, to take care of the truth, to have good manners, and to have modest and pure food.”

When Abu Ubayda was the commander of the Muslim armies in Syria, the Emperor of Byzantium set out with a large army to recapture Hims.  Abu ‘Ubaida decided to evacuate the city because he had only a handful of soldiers.  He gathered the people of Hims in the middle of the city and announced, “We collected the protection tax from you because we planned to defend you.  Now we are too weak.  In this case, we return the tax we collected.”  All the taxes collected were returned to the non-Muslim people of Hims.  Such was the depth of feeling and understanding displayed by the early Muslims.  They were constantly aware of their obligations towards  God, their brothers and sisters and those who were under the protection of the Muslim armies.

 
Hazrat Anas narrates that whenever Allah’s Messenger addressed a sermon to us, he invariably repeated this sentence: “The man has no faith who cannot keep trust and the man who does not respect his promises has no religion.”
========================
 

Islamic Manners: Fulfilling the Trusts

Shaikh Abu Rumaysah Refi Shafi
Allāh, Exalted is He says,
“Allāh commands you to return the things you hold on trust to their owners”;
“If you leave things on trust with one another the one who is trusted must deliver up his trust.”
“You who have faith! Do not betray Allāh and His Messenger and do not knowingly betray your trusts.”
“It is the believers who are successful, …., those who honour their trusts and their contracts… such people are the inheritors, who will inherit Firdaws, remaining in it timelessly, forever.”
“We offered the Trust to the heavens, the earth, and the mountains but they refused to take it on and shrank from it. But man took it on, he is indeed wrongdoing and ignorant.”

The trust (amānah) referred to in this last verse, the verse of Sūrah al-Aĥzāb, refers to the fulfilment of the laws that Allāh has revealed. These laws have been referred to as a trust to stress the fact that the undertaking of obeying Allāh was something freely taken on by man, without any coercion, and that he now has a duty of discharging that trust.[1] Ibn `Abbās said that ‘the Trust’ referred to the obligations.[2] As such the meaning of fulfilling trusts is general to discharging our duties to Allāh, the Muslims, and His creation.[3]
al-Kafawī said, ‘Everything that Allāh has obligated upon His servants is an amānah, such as: ŝalāh, zakāt, ŝiyām, and repaying debts. The most stressed for of amānah is those things another entrusts one with, and the most stressed form of these is another’s secrets.’[4]
Amānah is the mannerism of the Prophets and Messengers. In Sūrah ash-Shu`arā´ Allāh, Exalted is He, informs us that Nūĥ, Hūd, Ŝaliĥ, Lūţ and Shu`ayb all said, “I am to you a trustworthy Messenger.” The Messenger of Allāh (peace be upon him) was known amongst his people, both before and after his being entrusted with the Message, as al-Amīn (the Trustworthy One). al-Miswarah bin Makhramah said, ‘I asked Abū Jahl, my uncle, “Uncle, did you ever accuse Muĥammad of lying before he came with his message?” her replied, “Son of my sister, by Allāh, while he was yet young, Muĥammad would be called al-Amīn (the Trustworthy One) by us. Even when his hair started turning white, he would still not lie.” I asked, “Uncle of mine, so why don’t you follow him?” He replied, “Son of my sister, we and Banū Hāshim were always competing with each other for nobility, they fed people and so we did too, they gave others drink and so we did too, they granted protection and so we did too. We’ve kept pace with each other like two race-horses, then they said, ‘A Prophet has arisen from us’, how could we possibly compete in this?” ‘[5]
There are numerous aĥādīth stressing the importance of amānah, amongst which are:

  1. Bukhārī and Muslim record on the authority of Abū Hurayrah that the Messenger of Allāh (peace be upon him) said, “The signs of the hypocrite are three: when he speaks he lies; when he makes an oath he breaks it; and when he is entrusted with something he betrays that trust.” The version of Muslim has the additional wording, “Even if he fasts, prays and thinks that he is a Muslim.”
  2. Aĥmad [#12384] records that Anas that the Messenger of Allāh (peace be upon him) said, “There is no faith for the one who has no amānah and no religion for the one who does not keep his promises.”

A similar wording is recorded by al-Bayhaqī [#5256] on the authority of Thawbān that the Messenger of Allāh (peace be upon him) said, “There is no faith for the one who has no amānah and there is no prayer for the one who is not in wudū´.”
al-Munāwī, may Allāh have mercy upon him said, ‘Amānah is the core of faith and its position is that of the heart to the body. Amānah is to be found in seven limbs: the eyes, ears, tongue, hand, foot, stomach, and the private parts. Whoever leaves off fulfilling the amānah of any of these limbs, his faith will be sullied, and whoever leaves off the amānah of all of them, he will leave the circle of faith.’[6]
It is in this light that `Umar would say, ‘The one who has no amānah is devoid of religion.’[7]
The Salaf would look to a person’s amānah and truthfulness as a indication of his religiosity rather than his prayer and fasting. Ibn `Umar would say, ‘Do not look to the prayer of anyone, nor his fasting, but look to the truthfulness of his speech when he talks, his fulfilment of trusts when he is entrusted, and his scrupulousness when he is given a position of responsibility. ‘[8]

  1. al-Ĥakīm at-Tirmidhī records on the authority of Zayd bin Thābit that the Messenger of Allāh (peace be upon him) said, “The first thing to be lifted from this nation will be trust (amānah), and the last thing to remain of their religion will be the prayer, and it is possible that one praying have no lot with Allāh, Exalted is He.”

at-Ţabarānī records on the authority of Anas that the Messenger of Allāh (peace be upon him) said, “The first thing you will lose of your religion is amānah. There is no religion for the one who has no amānah and no amānah for the one who does not keep his promises, and keeping promises well is from faith.”

  1. Bayhaqi, Shu`ab al-Īmān [#5252] records on the authority of Abū Hurayrah (RA) that the Messenger of Allāh (peace be upon him) said, “Discharge the trust to those who entrust you and do not act treacherously to those who act so with you.”
  2. Ibn Ĥibbān records on the authority of `Ubādah bin as-Ŝāmit that the Messenger of Allāh (peace be upon him) said, “Guarantee me six and I will guarantee you Paradise: be truthful when you speak; fulfil your promises; carry out what you are entrusted with; safeguard your private parts; lower your gaze; and restrain your hands.”

Fudayl bin `Ayād said, ‘The foundation of faith in our view, after the testification of Tawĥīd and after attesting that the Prophet (peace be upon him) conveyed the message and after the performance of the obligations, is: being truthful in speech; preserving the trusts; leaving off treachery; fulfilling promises; joining the ties of kinship; and giving sincere advice to all the Muslims.’[9]

  1. at-Tirmidhī records on the authority of Abū Hurayrah that the Messenger of Allāh (peace be upon him) said, “The Muslim is one from whose tongue and hand the Muslims are safe. The believer is one to whom the people would entrust their blood and property.”
  2. at-Tirmidhī records on the authority of Jābir bin `Abdullāh that the Messenger of Allāh (peace be upon him) said, “When a person speaks, then turns [left and right], that speech becomes an amānah.”

Meaning that his speech has the ruling of an amānah and as such it is not permissible to spread it and broadcast it. Ibn Raslān said, ‘This is because his looking around serves to alert the person he is speaking to that he fears that another may hear what he is saying and that these words are for the listener only.’ al-`Alqamī said, ‘Meaning that when someone says something to you and then goes away, his speech becomes an amānah and it is not permissible for you to spread it.’ Hence he understands the turning mentioned in the ĥadīth to mean going away but the first possibility is the obvious one.[10] The generality of this ĥadīth finds specificity in the ĥadīth of Jābir recorded by Abū Dāwūd that the Messenger of Allāh (peace be upon him) said, “Gatherings are an amānah except for three: those for the purpose of shedding blood unlawfully; or committing fornication; or acquiring property unjustly.”[11]
And we are taught that the lack of amānah would be the feature of later times,

  1. Bukhārī and Muslim record on the authority of Hudhayfah bin al-Yamān (RA) said, ‘The Messenger of Allāh (peace be upon him) narrated two ĥadīth to us, one of which I have seen and the other I am still awaiting: he narrated to us, “Trust (amānah) descended into the core of the hearts of men, then the Qur´ān was revealed and they learnt [it from] the Qur´ān and they learnt [it from] the Sunnah.” Then he narrated to us about the removal of trust, “A man will sleep for a time and trust would be taken from his heart, leaving behind it only a faint trace. Then he would sleep for a time and trust would be taken from his heart leaving behind it the impression of a small blister, as if one of you rolled a ember on his foot which then blisters leaving behind it a swelling that is empty.” Then he took a pebble and rolled it on his foot and said, “So people would awake and trade with each other and hardly any of them will discharge their trusts to the point that it will be said, ‘In such-a-such a tribe there is a trustworthy person’ and it will be said about a person, ‘How prudent he is! How perspicuous he is! How intelligent he is!’ and there is not in his heart even the weight of a mustard seed of faith.” A time has passed me wherein I cared not with whom I traded: if he was a Muslim, his religion would cause him to return the trust; and if he was a Christian or a Jew, his master would cause him to return the trust. As for now, I only trade with such-and-such a person from amongst you.’

 
 
Notes:
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[1] al-Ālūsī, Rūĥ al-Ma`ānī [22/370] [2] al-Qurţubī [14/162] [3] ibn `Uthaymīn, Sharĥ Riyād as-Ŝaliĥīn [1/732] [4] al-Kafawī, al-Kulliyāt [p. 176] [5] Reported by Yūnus bin Bukair, al-Maghāzī and quoted from him by adh-Dhahabī, as-Sīrah.
[6] al-Munāwī, Fayd al-Qadīr [6/495] [7] Bayhaqī [#5279] [8] Bayhaqī [#5278] [9] Bayhaqī [#5260] [10] al-`Azimabādī, `Awn al-Ma`būd [13/216] [11] `Ali al-Qārī, Mirqāt [8/500] DISCLAIMER: All material found on Islam21c.com is for free and is for information purposes only. All material may be freely copied & shared on condition that it is clearly attributed to Islam21c.com [hyperlinked] as the original source. The views expressed on this site or on any linked sites do not necessarily represent those of Islam21c.com
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SOME EXTRACTS & REFERENCES TAKEN FROM:

http://www.islambasics.com/view.php?bkID=38&chapter=8
http://www.islamreligion.com/articles/1703/trustworthiness/

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