‘Abd Allāh ibn ‘Abbās ibn Ṣiddīq al-Ḥanafī al-Makkī (Arabic: عبد الله بن عباس بن صديق الحنفي المكي; 1853/1854 – 4 November 1907) was the penultimate HanafiMufti of Mecca.
Abd Allah ibn Abbas ibn Ja'far ibn Abbas ibn Muhammad ibn Siddiq was born in Mecca in 1270 AH (1853/1854). After memorizing the Qur'an he began seeking knowledge. He studied mostly under his father, whose lectures he attended in fiqh, hadith, and tafsir, and from whom he received ijazah.[1][2][3] He also learned from Sayyid Ahmad Dahlan and Shaykh Yusuf al-Kharbuti, and he read the musalsal bi'l-awwaliyah from Shaykh Abu al-Khudayr Muhammad ibn Ibrahim al-Misri.[2][4] He received permission to teach in the Masjid al-Haram.[4]
In 1311 (1893/1894)[1] or 1312 (1894/1895)[4] he was appointed Mufti of the Hanafis by Sharif Awn ar-Rafiq, on the condition that for assistance he consult with his father Shaykh Abbas and with Shaykh Ahmad Abu al-Khayr Mirdad, who had declined the Sharif's offer to take the post.[1]
In 1907, at the request of Sultan Abd al-Hamid, Sharif Ali sent a delegation of ulema to Yemen, including Abd Allah, Shaykh al-Ulama Muhammad Sa'id Babasil, Shaykh Salih Kamal, and Shaykh Muhammad Khayyat, with the aim of convincing Imam Yahya to end his jihad against the Ottoman state. Shaykh Abd Allah did not return; he died in Sana'a at 2 a.m. on Monday, 27 Ramadan 1325 (4 November 1907) while reciting Qur'an.[1][2][3]
He had two sons, Mahdi and Bakr, neither of whom followed him in becoming a student of religion.[1]
References
^ abcde‘Abd Allāh Mirdād Abū al-Khayr (1986). المختصر من كتاب نشر النور والزهر في تراجم أفاضل مكة / al-Mukhtaṣar min kitāb Nashr an-nūr wa'z-zahr fī tarājim afāḍil Makkah (in Arabic) (3rd ed.). Jiddah [Jeddah]: ‘Ālam al-Ma‘rifah. pp. 304–305.
^ abc‘Umar ‘Abd al-Jabbār (1982). "الشيخ عبد الله بن عباس بن صديق / ash-Shaykh 'Abd Allāh ibn 'Abbās ibn Ṣiddīq". سير وتراجم بعض علمائنا في القرن الرابع عشر للهجرة / Siyar wa tarājim ba'ḍ ulamā'inā fī al-qarn ar-rābi' 'ashr lil-hijrah (in Arabic) (3rd ed.). Jiddah [Jeddah]: Tihāmah [Tihama]. p. 143.