Why not ? We must not blindly follow any scholar . They are human being and can make mistake . So , why not check with Quran ?
That is true sister, you must not follow any scholar directly. What IslamicLife meant was that direct interpretation from the Quran and Hadith is misleading and you can make many mistakes about underlying rules, matters of abrogation, hidden exceptions, many things that scholars are aware of that you may not be, so it is important to always take from secondary sources, as in a scholar who analyzed, and you seek a scholar who is pious and well-known for his accuracy and effort in reaching the truth.
Is it allowed to recite Quran from memory ?
You may read from memory from your home, especially Surat Yaseen is very good for dead people, however it was not a sunnah to do that at the grave, so read it from home. If you choose to visit the grave based on permissibility, you still shouldn't read the Quran there.
islamiclife said:
@Sampharo
the issue of majority and minority are not much relevant to awam because there could be the case that minority opinion has stronger evidence but due to our lack of ilm we do not know. So saying that the majority opinion says this; therefore, we should accept it is not the right way to go about.
Barak Allahu Feek brother Islamiclife,
You are correct in a BIT of a sense that majority and minority are not much relevant. They are in general relevent when it is a LARGE majority, as you may be aware there is the rule of shozuz and tafarrud and shohra all referring to giving majority opinion a weight (as long as both have daleel of course).
In this specific case I mentioned that I am with the majority opinion as a way of description, not reasoning. As I explained I believe in this opinion because it has the stronger authenticated hadith where the prophet said women will be cursed if they do visit. The daleel of the opposite opinion is an authenticated hadith of Aisha's actions, which to scholars as you may know companion actions when in conflict with prophet's statements are to be given secondary status. The hadith mentioned by T.I.A. referred to the order of visiting graves after it was originally banned fully on everyone until the the relevation of its permissibility, it did not refer to women neither in word nor implication so it cannot be used to counter a specific hadith.
God of course knows best