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On the Islamic Nature of Will (Wasiyat)

Sa’ad bin Waqqas had accompanied the holy Prophet on the Farewell Hajj, and, during it, he fell ill in Mecca and his condition became so grave that, according to some reports, he felt he had reached the edge of the grave. Since he was a Muhajir, he did not like the idea of dying, and being buried on the soil of Mecca which he had abandoned forever in the way of Allah. As the holy Prophet came to visit him and learnt of his anxiety, he comforted him and prayed for him, saying, “May Allah have mercy on Arfa’a’s son.” Hazrat Sa’ad bin Waqqas who was among the well-to-do Companions, thereupon, enquired from the Apostle of God about making his Will. (In some other accounts of the above Tradition it is stated that Sa’ad bin Waqqas said to the Apostle of God; “The Lord has bestowed much wealth upon me and I have only one daughter. I think that for the betterment of my prospects in After-life I bequeathed all of my property to sacred and charitable uses).” But the holy Prophet did not allow it. He did not allow him even to leave half of his possessions to such purposes. It was only one-third that the holy Prophet said he could declare for them, and added that even that was much.

The Prophet further explained to him that to spend on one’s relatives and leave behind one’s wealth to one’s heirs, too, was charily in the sight of God provided that it was with the intention of earning His countenance and the reward of the Hereafter, as is distinctly stated in some versions of the above narrative. To bring home the point, the Prophet remarked that even to put a morsel of food in the mouth of one’s wife with one’s hand, with that intention, was a virtuous act, meriting reward in the life to come.

The Prophet’s observation that “it is hoped God will raise you to a high position in future, and then, many people will be benefited by you, and many will be harmed” contained a prediction about Sa’ad bin Waqqas which no one could visualise at that time, What the Prophet meant was that the Lord had yet to take much work from Hazrat Sa’ad, He would, Insha Allah, get well and come to such power and eminence that the destinies of innumerable men would be made and unmade through him, The Prophet had said it at a time when Sa’ad was hovering on the brink of death, and so marvelously was the prophecy fulfilled that the latter lived for about half a century after it, and attained to such heights that most of the territories of Persia were conquered and brought under the sway of Islam under his generalship, and millions of men came to be blessed with the wealth of Faith. He, then, also served as the Governor of Iraq, and died in 55 A.H., and according to a report, in 58 A.H.

From this Tradition we, again, learn that it is not proper and lawful for anyone leaving behind heirs and successors to bequeath more than one-third of his property in the way of God and for pious uses. A consensus is found among the legists of the Ummat on this point. But in one’s own lifetime one can spend as much on such aims and purposes as one likes. The condition of one-third applies only to the Will a person makes about the division of his assets after his death.

 

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