There is a verse attributed to Imām Muḥammad ibn Idrīs al-Shāfiʿī رحمه الله that cuts through fourteen centuries of sectarian noise with the clean edge of a single fearless declaration. It was written at a time when expressing love for the Prophet’s family could expose a Sunni scholar to the accusation of Shia sympathies — a political charge that could damage a scholar’s reputation and career. Imām al-Shāfiʿī’s رحمه الله response was not to pull back. It was to lean forward.
The Verse
Imām al-Shāfiʿī رحمه الله wrote: “If love of the family of Muḥammad is Rāfiḍī belief, then let jinn and mankind bear witness that I am a Rāfiḍī.” The word Rāfiḍī was used in his era as a polemical label for those suspected of Shia sympathies, particularly on account of their love for the Prophet’s family. It was a charge used to silence and discredit. Imām al-Shāfiʿī’s رحمه الله verse is a refusal to be silenced. It says: if this love makes me a Rāfiḍī in your eyes, I accept the name — because I will not surrender the love.
Who Was Imām al-Shāfiʿī?
Imām al-Shāfiʿī رحمه الله (150–204 AH) is one of the four Imāms of Sunni jurisprudence — the founder of the Shāfiʿī school followed by hundreds of millions of Muslims across Egypt, East Africa, Southeast Asia, and the Arab world. He was a descendant of the Banū Muṭṭalib — the same clan as the Prophet ﷺ — which gave his love for the family a personal as well as scholarly dimension. When he wrote about loving the Prophet’s family, he was expressing what he lived.
The Full Extent of His Position
Beyond the famous verse, Imām al-Shāfiʿī رحمه الله held that ṣalawāt on the Prophet’s family in the final tashahhud is a required pillar of prayer — not merely recommended. He wrote: “O family of the Prophet — love for you is an obligation from Allāh, revealed in the Qurʼān. It is sufficient honour for you that whoever does not send ṣalawāt upon you, his prayer is void.” For Imām al-Shāfiʿī رحمه الله, love for the family was not a devotional add-on. It was embedded in the very structure of Islamic worship.
The Message for Every Sunni Muslim Today
Every Sunni Muslim who has ever felt that expressing love for the Ahl al-Bayt might make them appear “too Shia” should read this verse — and remember that the founder of one of the four Sunni legal schools faced the same accusation and made his love louder, not quieter. The love is not sectarian. The love is the obligation. Imām al-Shāfiʿī رحمه الله said so — and he said it in verse, permanently, for all generations to read.
What did Imām al-Shāfiʿī declare about love for the Ahl al-Bayt?
He wrote: “If love of the family of Muḥammad is Rāfiḍī belief, then let jinn and mankind bear witness that I am a Rāfiḍī.” He also wrote that this love is a Qurʼānic obligation, and held ṣalawāt on the family to be a legal pillar of prayer. His position is one of the most powerful Sunni endorsements of love for the Ahl al-Bayt in the scholarly tradition.
Did Imām al-Shāfiʿī consider ṣalawāt on the Prophet’s family obligatory in prayer?
Yes. He held that the ṣalawāt in the final tashahhud — which includes “and upon the family of Muḥammad” — is a required pillar of prayer. A prayer that omitted this was legally incomplete in his school. This makes love for the family structurally embedded in the definition of valid Sunni worship.
Why is Imām al-Shāfiʿī’s declaration historically significant?
Because it came at a time of political pressure, when expressing love for the Ahl al-Bayt carried professional risk. Rather than moderate his position, Imām al-Shāfiʿī رحمه الله declared it publicly and permanently in verse — establishing for all future generations that this love is Sunni, orthodox, and non-negotiable, regardless of what any political climate demands.