الشيخ محمد ناصر الدين الألباني
Sheikh Muhammad Nasir al-Din al-Albani (1914-1999) was the most prominent hadith scholar of the 20th century, known for his monumental work in authenticating and grading thousands of hadiths. Born in Albania and raised in Damascus, he authored over 100 works including the Silsilah al-Ahadith as-Sahihah and حج al-Nabi (نبی کریم's حج), which remains the definitive guide to performing حج according to authenticated Sunnah.
Sheikh Muhammad Nasir al-Din al-Albani was born in 1332 AH (1914 CE) in Shkoder, the former capital of Albania, into a family of modest means. His father, Nuh Najati, was an Islamic scholar and watchmaker who had studied at the Dar al-Khilafah Islamic institution in Istanbul. When Albania came under the secular rule of Ahmet Zogu and religious freedoms were curtailed, the family emigrated to Damascus, Syria, in 1923, seeking a more conducive environment for Islamic learning and practice. This migration would prove providential — Damascus, with its rich scholarly tradition and vast manuscript libraries, would provide the young al-Albani with the resources to develop into the foremost hadith scholar of his century.
In Damascus, al-Albani initially learned the trade of watchmaking from his father, a skill that would support him financially throughout his scholarly career and give him the disciplined, meticulous temperament that characterized his academic work. His formal Islamic education began at local schools, but it was his independent study that set him apart. Drawn to the science of hadith from his teenage years, he began spending long hours in the Zahiriyyah Library, one of the oldest and most important manuscript collections in the Arab world, systematically studying and cataloging hadith manuscripts. His self-directed scholarship was extraordinarily rigorous: he mastered the principles of hadith criticism (mustalah al-hadith), the science of narrator evaluation (ilm al-rijal), and the methodology of hadith grading that had been developed by classical scholars such as Ibn Hajar al-Asqalani and al-Dhahabi.
Over the next six decades, al-Albani produced a body of work that revolutionized hadith studies in the modern era. He graded thousands of hadiths in the major collections as sahih (authentic), hasan (good), da'if (weak), or mawdu' (fabricated), providing detailed chains of reasoning for each grading. His work often challenged the inherited assumptions of all four madhahib, leading to both admiration and controversy. His insistence on returning directly to authenticated hadith evidence rather than relying solely on the established positions of any single legal school earned him both devoted followers and fierce critics. He taught at the Islamic University of مدینہ منورہ from 1961 to 1963 but spent most of his career as an independent scholar in Damascus and later Amman, Jordan, where he settled in 1980. He passed away on October 2, 1999 (22 Jumada al-Thani 1420 AH) in Amman. King Abdullah II of Jordan described him as 'one of the great Muslim scholars of the 20th century,' and his legacy in hadith authentication continues to shape Islamic scholarship worldwide.
Silsilah al-Ahadith as-Sahihah (Series of Authentic Hadiths) — a multi-volume collection of authenticated hadiths with detailed chain analysis and commentary
Silsilah al-Ahadith ad-Da'ifah wal-Mawdu'ah (Series of Weak and Fabricated Hadiths) — a companion series identifying unreliable hadiths that had entered popular practice
Hajjat al-Nabi Kama Rawaha Anhu Jabir (نبی کریم's حج as Narrated by Jabir) — a detailed reconstruction of the farewell حج from authenticated sources
Irwa' al-Ghalil fi Takhrij Ahadith Manar al-Sabil (Quenching the Thirst: Verification of Hadiths in Manar al-Sabil) — authentication of hadiths cited in a major Hanbali fiqh text
Sahih wa Da'if al-Jami' as-Saghir (Authentic and Weak Hadiths of al-Jami' as-Saghir) — his grading of all hadiths in al-Suyuti's famous hadith compilation