It was not until the nineteenth century that the works of Imam al-Shatibi became almost unknown in the modern world. In 1884, Tunis published the first edition of his masterpiece, Al-Muwafaqat. His background was little understood before then. The renowned writings of the Imam came to be acknowledged as modern Islamic legal systems' masterworks. Thus far, Imam al-Shatibi's biographies have documented the following treatises, which are primarily in the areas of Arabic grammar and fiqh: •
Al-Muwafaqat ("The Reconciliation of the fundamentals of Islamic Law"), this is regarded as his greatest work and his
magnum opus. He is greatly owed by contemporary writers on usul al-fiqh for this masterwork. The notions of maslahah (public interest/welfare) and maqasid al-Shari'ah (higher purposes of the Shari’ah), which are frequently mentioned in modern Islamic legal theories that primarily draw from al-Shatibi’s work, are particularly elaborated upon. Here, al-Shatibi adhered to the
Hanafi methodology of drawing rules and principles from the
Qur'an and
Sunnah (tariqah al-Hanafiyyin, or jurists' method). By applying this technique, he discovered that the fundamental idea of all
Sharia rulings was maslahah. Additionally, he was one of the few Maliki scholars who combined Hanafi School with Maliki School teachings. •
Kitab al-Itisam ("The Book of Adherence"): often known as The Book of Adherence, is one of Imam al-Shatibi's most well-known books. The subject of the two-volume work is
bid'ah, or poisonous innovation, which the Imam has strongly denounced. Additionally, he makes a distinction between maslahah mursalah (public interest), istihsan (jurisprudential choice), and bid'ah here. Al-Shatibi comes to the conclusion that two things typically contribute to such deviations in Islamic legal traditions: a lack of understanding of the Arabic language and its intrinsic meaning in religious literature, as well as a lack of awareness of the goals and purposes of the Shari’ah. Bid’ah has led to heresies and deviations in Islamic legal traditions.
Muhammad Rashid Rida introduced al-Shatibi and his writings in his al-Manar, frequently referring to al-Shatibi as a “''warrior against bid'ah''”. •
Sharh ‘Ala al-Khulasa fi al-Nahw ("Explanation on the Summary of Arabic Grammar"), this is a four volume commentary on
Ibn Malik’s
al Khulasa al-Alfiyya. Al-Timbukti holds this as “
an unprecedented work on Arabic grammar!” •
‘Unwan al-Ittifaq fi ‘Ilm al-Ishtiqaq ("Addressing the Agreement in Science of Derivation"), it's a book on
Arabic morphology. •
Kitab Usul al-Nahw ("Principles of Arabic Grammar"), both of the above mentioned books are on Arabic grammar, which Imam al-Shatibi also mentioned in his Sharh ‘Ala al-Khulasa fi al-Nahw. However al-Timbukti mentioned that al-Shatibi destroyed these works during his lifetime for reasons not described by his biographers. •
Kitab al-Majalis, this is a commentary on the chapter of sale (buyu’) of
Sahih al-Bukhari. •
Al-Ifadat wal-Inshadat (Testimonies and Recitations): a treatise on Arabic literature edited by Abul Ajfan and published in Beirut in 1983. •
Fatawa ("Legal Verdicts"), the several fatawa that al-Shatibi presented were eventually collected by Abul Ajfan, despite the fact that he did not compose or compile them into a single volume. It has sixty fatawa covering topics such as salat, ijtihad, zakah, vows, slaughter, punishments, inheritance, creativity, and so on. ==References==