Introduction
to Translation of Sahih Bukhari
Translator:
M. Muhsin Khan
Sahih Bukhari is a
collection of sayings and deeds of Prophet Muhammad (pbuh),
also known as the sunnah. The reports
of the Prophet's sayings and deeds are called ahadith.
Bukhari lived a couple of centuries after the Prophet's
death and worked extremely hard to collect his ahadith. Each
report in his collection was checked for compatibility with
the Qur'an, and the veracity of the chain of reporters had
to be painstakingly established. Bukhari's collection is
recognized by the overwhelming majority of the Muslim world
to be one of the most authentic collections of the Sunnah of
the Prophet (pbuh). Bukhari (full name Abu
Abdullah Muhammad bin Ismail bin Ibrahim bin al-Mughira al-Ja'fai)
was born in 194 A.H. and died in 256 A.H. His collection of
hadith is considered second to none. He spent sixteen years
compiling it, and ended up with 2,602 hadith (9,082 with
repetition). His criteria for acceptance into the collection
were amongst the most stringent of all the scholars of
ahadith. It is important to realize,
however, that Bukhari's collection is not complete: there
are other scholars who worked as Bukhari did and collected
other authentic reports.
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