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Category Archives: Dawa’ah [Organizational & Individual]

Dawa’ah or Destruction?

“Allah sent us to take servants from servitude to (other) servants to servitude of the Lord of servants, and from the narrowness of this world to the vastness of the hereafter, and from the tyranny of (all) religions to the justice of Islam.”

Rab`ee bin `Aamir to Rustom of Persia

Dear Brothers & Sisters I just wanna share an experience which I encountered a few days ago (Jan/Feb 2011), one of our palliative care patients whose carer used to always visit our pharmacy in order to collect medication  for the last several months passed away from a malignant lung tumour, what didnt upset me was his death but the possibility that he died upon disbelief and his fate in the hereafter subhan’Allah (may Allah SWT make us amongst those who die with the shahadah and grant us a place in the highest level of jannah, ameen).

There is a famous hadith in which Allah SWT asks the angels to destroy a town which was corrupted in sin & transgression, and the angels reply back saying that amongst the population is a righteous servant, to which Allah Jallah Wa’ala replies back that to start the punishment with that servant because he refused to enjoin the good and prevent the evil. Brothers & Sisters, How many calamities have befallen mankind, one after the other in rapid succession, and all of these disasters have causes that are based in being far from our religion and from being immersed in disobedience, sin and neglect of our duties. Among the matters which Allah The Most High warned us of abandoning is the obligation of enjoining what is good and forbidding what is evil and calling to Allah. Indeed when we abandon this duty calamities will strike us and although we will beg and plead to Allah, He will not respond to our cries due to our leaving this duty as the Prophet Muhammad (Peace be upon him) said:

“You must enjoin what is right and forbid what is wrong or else Allah will send up you a calamity and you will make dua and your dua will not be accepted.”

And what greater evil is there in the sight of Allah that people should make shirk with Him and disbelieve in Him and reject the message that He sent for their benefit and guidance?

This is not only a matter solely for scholars and imams, but for everyone and the blessed Prophet saws said:

“Convey from me even if it one ayah.” So even if a person knows surah al-fatihah (the opening) then that makes them 7 times more over-qualified in calling to the way of Allah SWT.

Hasan al Basree once said: “This person is the beloved to Allah, the walee of Allah and is the most beloved to Him from amongst the people of the earth. He answered the call of Allah and invites the people to the very same call he responded to. He works righteous deeds within his response and declares, ‘Indeed I am from the Muslims.”

Always remember brothers & sisters that this life is short and the next eternal, and that is your deeds that Allah will weigh up for you in scales. So whoever’s deeds are heavy with good, they will have a happy end. So think about what will maximise you scale of good deeds, and make it heavy and hopefully gain the highest station in paradise insh’Allah.

Brothers & sisters let us not be so cocky that we think to ourselves “We are saved! we are saved! Eternal damnation for the fujjar!” because how can we possibly guarantee our safety from jahannam when we dont work to safeguard ourselves from it: subhna’Allah if the fruit of the cursed trees of hellfire were to be enter this world, it would cause the entire planet to be destroyed! And on the other hand the luxury of jannah is so much so that it contains things which no eye has seen, no ear has heard and no mind can comprehend.

This is ultimately the purpose of Discover Islam/Islamic Awareness Month (IAW/DIW) and any dawaah initiatives which is to direct people to the path to paradise and warn them of the pitfalls of jahannam. It is an oppurtunity to engage in the profession of the Prophets of Allah SWT (Peace be upon them all), Allah SWT didnt emphasise about the fasting or charity or seeking halal food or qiyam ul layl of Prophet Nuh (Peace be upon him) but He Jallah Waala spoke about the merits of the dawaah of Prophet Nuh (Peace be upon him).

Wallahi you never know who might be inspired to enter the deen subhan’Allah, imagine if some you who you spoke to and he/she embraced Islam either then or at a later stage and they were to become the next Yusuf Estes, Bilal Philips or Maryam Jameelah. Then everything they do, every sajdah they make, every time they pray, every duaa they supplicate and every person they call will be amongst your rightoeus deeds insh’Allah.

So bear in mind that when you read what the Prophet said “That whoever encourages someone to do a righteous deed then they will get the reward for that person doing that righteous deed without that persons reward being reduced in the least.”

So if you are the means for someone entering Islam, then no wonder it is better than all the best of the wealth of this world, since every time that person prays, fasts, reads Quran, gives charity, remembers Allah, then you get a share of the reward for that. So not fail dear reader to part of this call, and do not fail to contribute as much as you can to this blessed invitation, for according to the degree of you contribution so is the extent of your reward.

“Let there arise from amongst you a band that invites to all that is good, enjoining what is good and forbidding what is evil, they are the ones to achieve success.”Al Imran 3:104

Lets remember the uncreated words of Allah SWT when He The Most High says: “Ye are the best of peoples raised up for mankind enjoining what is right forbidding what is wrong and believing in Allah.” [Al-Imran 03:110]

I pray and hope that Allah guides us to be from those who are callers to this noble deen of Islam. Ameen.

Bitawfiq Wannajah Insh’Allah,

Jazakallahaire

 

[The Great Debates] A 7th Century War on Terror

This is an outstanding academic piece compiled by Brother Adnan Rashid (HafidUllah) with respect to the colloquial question in connatation to the amplification of the Islamic sovereignty after the bereavement of the Prophet Muhammad (Peace be upon him) and prememinently under the tutelege of the meritoriously guided Chaliphs and the Ummayad Dynasty. Very articulate with a strong historical evidence base. Taken from The Great Debates (iERA) website which can be found by clicking here!

A 7th Century War on Terror

By Adnan Rashid

‘What is there now, I ask of delight in this world? Everywhere we observe strife; fields are depopulated, the land has returned to solitude…And yet the blows of Divine justice have no end, because among the blows those guilty of evil acts are not corrected…’ [1]

These are the words of Pope Gregory the Great (c. 594) who was a contemporary of the Prophet Mohammad (peace be upon him). He was clearly wishing for divine justice to emerge in order to correct the evildoers i.e. the Lombard tyrants in this case. The Divine intervention was at hand:

And We have sent you (O Muhammad [SA]) not but as a mercy to mankind”[2]

And mercy he was. The Messenger of Allah received the above revelation not long after the disturbing plea of the Pope and this revelation was a signal for the Prophet to initiate a war against terror and tyranny. Islam emerged as a power and in a very short period of time took over large portions of land from the surrounding establishments. Prophet Muhammad died in 632 CE and exactly a century later in 732 CE the Muslims had reached as far as Southern France and Northern China. This was the largest and the fastest expansion the world had ever known and it was made possible only by the justice and mercy the Muslims had to offer, as will be amply demonstrated in the following paragraphs.

It may be puzzling to some who may question how the Muslims were able to conquer such a large portion of land so rapidly without much difficulty? A Muslim believer would give an easy and simple answer to this question by quoting the Qur’an:

Allah has promised those among you who believe and do righteous good deeds, that he will certainly grant them succession (to the present rulers) in the land, as He granted it to those before them, and that He will grant them authority to practise their religion which he has chosen for them(Islam).”[3]

History testifies that this is precisely what occurred and here one must note that the Arabs, at the time, were the least able people to achieve this, primarily, due to the lack of military equipment and resources. Carole Hillenbrand, a leading Arabist/historian from the University of Edinburgh, confirms this:

Much ink has been spilt on the phenomenon of the Islamic conquest, but few firm conclusions can be drawn…It seems unlikely that the Arabs possessed military superiority over their opponents. Certainly, they had no secret weapon, no new techniques. Indeed, in some military spheres they were inexperienced; they allegedly learned siege warfare, for example, from the Persians. They were also unfamiliar with how to fight naval engagements.’[4]

Even the contemporary Christian writers could not offer a reasonable explanation and attributed this rapid expansion of the Islamic governance to Divine intervention. John Bar Penkaye (690 CE), a contemporary of the early Islamic conquest, had this to say:

We should not think of the advent (of the children of Hagar) as something ordinary, but as due to divine working. Before calling them, (God) had prepared them beforehand to hold Christians in honour; thus they also had a special commandment from God concerning our monastic station, that they should hold it in honour. Now when these people came, at God’s command, and took over as it were both kingdoms, not with any war or battle, but in a menial fashion, such as when a brand is rescued out of the fire, not using weapons of war or human means, God put victory into their hands in such a way that the words written them might be fulfilled, namely, “One man chased a thousand and two routed ten thousand.” How otherwise, could naked men, riding without armour or shield, have been able to win, apart from divine aid, God having called them from the ends of the earth so as to destroy, by them “a sinful kingdom” and to bring low, through them, the proud spirit of the Persians.’[5]

Byzantines and the Persians were utterly uprooted by these ill-equipped nomads. European scholarship is still perplexed about the causes that led to the early Islamic conquest. To a sceptical historian or a conditioned rationalist, Divine intervention could never be entertained as a logical or even a scientific hypothesis. Such people require a historical justification, which is based upon political and socio-economic factors.

Tolerance or Terror

In light of this there is a very reasonable explanation: The Muslims, when expanding, treated the non-Muslim inhabitants of vanquished nations with a previously uncharted level of tolerance, which in consequence encouraged the non-Muslim societies to embrace the approaching armies with open arms. Professor Thomas Walker Arnold gives an interesting account of such an occurrence. He states:

When the Muslim army reached the valley of the Jordan and Abu Ubaydah pitched his camp at Fihl, the Christian inhabitants of the country wrote to the Arabs, saying: “O Muslims, we prefer you to the Byzantines, though they are of our own faith, because you keep better faith with us and are more merciful to us and refrain from doing us injustice and your rule over us is better than theirs, for they have robbed us of our goods and our homes.” The people of Emessa closed the gates of their city against the army of Heraclius and told the Muslims that they preferred their government and justice to the injustice and oppression of the Greeks…The fear of religious compulsion on the part of the heretical emperor made the promise of Muslim toleration appear more attractive than the connection with the Roman Empire and a Christian government…’[6]

Perhaps, it was these facts, which persuaded Thomas Arnold to conclude:

Of forced conversion or anything like persecution in the early days of the Arab conquest, we hear nothing. Indeed, it was probably in a great measure their tolerant attitude towards the Christian religion that facilitated their rapid acquisition of the country.’[7]

So the Muslims were in fact seen as liberators from the Roman/Byzantine tyranny. As far as the Syrian Christians were concerned, the Muslims were carrying out a noble war on terror.

Syria rescued from the Byzantine terror

Dionysius of Tel-Mahre, a Jacobite (or a Syrian Orthodox Christian) patriarch from 818 to 845 CE, also gave some reasons of this preference of the Muslims over Romans by the people of Syria. He stated in his chronicle, which covers the period from 582 to 842 CE, that Heraclius mustered 300,000 troops from Armenia, Syria and the Roman heartlands to expel the Muslims out of Syria. Muslims decided to withdraw to reform their war strategy. However, whilst withdrawing, the Muslims decided, out of fairness, to refund the money, which they had taken as tribute from the Syrian Christians to protect them from any form of oppression:

Abu Ubaydah, whom Umar had put in command of the Arabs, ordered Habib b. Maslama to return to the Emesenes the tribute which he had exacted from them with this message: “We are both bound by our mutual oaths. Now we are going to do battle with the Romans. If we return, this tribute is ours; but if we 

are defeated and do not return, we are absolved of our oaths.” So they left Emessa for Damascus; and the emir Abu Ubaydah ordered Saeed b. Kulthum to return the tribute to the Damascenes likewise…To them he said: “ If we return victorious we shall take it back. But if we are defeated and prove powerless to save you from the Romans, here is your tribute, keep it. We for our part shall be absolved of the oaths which we have sworn to you.”’[8]

One must note that this was taking place in 7th century Syria where plunder, robbery and injustice were a common occurrence and what is mentioned above is quoted from a mid 9th century Christian source (which testifies that the Muslims did not abuse power and they did not betray the trust Christians bestowed upon them). Thomas Arnold adds, from an Islamic source (Abu Yusuf, Kitabul Khiraj [The Book of Taxes]), that

In accordance with this order, enormous sums were paid back out of the state treasury, and the Christians called down blessings on the heads of the Muslims, saying, “May God give you rule over us again and make you victorious over the Romans; had it been they, they would not have given us back anything, but would have taken all that remained with us”’[9]

It would be fair to assert here that those Muslims acted in accordance with the teachings of the Qur’an:

Verily, Allah commands that you should render back the trusts to those, to whom they are due; and that when you judge between men, you judge with justice. Verily, how excellent is the teaching, which He gives you! Truly, Allah is ever all- Hearer, all-Seer.’[10]

Dionysius of Tel-Mahre confirms the accuracy of Abu Yusuf:

So the Arabs left Damascus and pitched camp by the river Yarmuk. As the Romans marched towards the Arab camp every city and village on their way which had surrendered to the Arabs shouted threats at them. As for crimes the Romans committed on their passage, they are unspeakable, and 

their unseemliness ought not even to be brought to mind…The Arabs returned, elated with their great victory, to Damascus; and the Damascenes greeted them outside the city and welcomed them joyfully in, and all treaties and assurances were reaffirmed. ’[11]

It is very clear from Dionysius’ testimony that the Romans were extremely oppressive towards the non-Chalcedonian Christian population of Syria, which caused this population to prefer the Muslim tolerance over the Byzantine terror. Muslims, in most, cases treated the minor Christian sects of Syria with maximum justice and sympathy, which enabled all parties to live in peace for the first time for a long time. For most of the Jacobite and Nestorian Christians in Syria, Muslim arrival was a God sent retribution against the Byzantine terrorist establishment.

Egypt saved from the Chalcedonian persecution

The same seems to have taken place in Egypt where, according to Dionysius, the Coptic Patriarch submitted Egypt voluntarily to the Muslims:

We have found in the tales and stories of Egyptians that Benjamin, the Patriarch of the Orthodox in Egypt at the time, delivered the country to the Arab general Amr b. al-As out of antipathy, that is enmity, towards Cyrus, the Chalcedonian (Byzantine) Patriarch in Egypt.’[12]

This enmity, however, was due to the persecution of the Orthodox Church in Egypt at the hands of the Byzantine Church. John of Nikiou (690 CE), who was a Coptic bishop in Nikiu (Egypt), confirmed the testimony of Dionysius:

When Muslims saw the weakness of the Romans and the hostility of the people to the emperor Heraclius because of the persecution wherewith he had visited all the land of Egypt in regard to the orthodox faith at the instigation of Cyrus the Chalcedonian Patriarch [in office 631/2-41], they became bolder and stronger in the war…And people began to help the Muslims.’[13]

And in some cases the Egyptians refused to fight the Muslims at all [14]. One must keep in mind that these are contemporary Christian sources testifying that the Muslims were actually being helped by the Egyptian Orthodox Coptic Christians to put the Chalcedonian Byzantine Christian persecution to rest. Alfred J. Butler, a leading authority on the history of Egypt, believed that the Muslim arrival benefited both Christian factions by enabling them to live in peace together under the Islamic protection:

‘After all that the Copts had suffered at the hands of the Romans and the Patriarch Cyrus, it would not have been unnatural if they had desired to retaliate upon the Melkites [the Romans]. But any such design, if they cherished it, was sternly discountenanced by ‘Amr, [the Muslim conqueror of Egypt] whose government was wisely tolerant but perfectly impartial between the two forms of religion. Many facts might be cited in proof of this contention…So that the two forms of Christianity must be imagined as subsisting side by side under the equal protection of the conquerors.’[15]

It is evident from the testimonies cited above that the Muslims came as a mercy for the wider Egyptian population. The Coptic Christians in Egypt were also a target for the Byzantine terror and it was this terror which caused the Copts to join the Muslims against their co-religionists. ‘Amr bin al-‘Aas (may Allah be pleased with him) had established a peaceful abode for all parties and this he did by implementing the Shariah Law in Egypt. Thus the real operation “Enduring Freedom” was accomplished successfully in the land of Pharaohs.

Spain liberated from the Visigothic tyranny

Muslims landed in Spain in 711 CE and many sources testify that they were welcomed by the population, as their reputation preceded them. This was due to the severe persecution afflicted upon certain communities by the Visigothic Kings. Under these kings’ rule (following their conversion to Catholicism from Arianism), the Jewish community, in particular, was severely oppressed. The Catholic hierarchy in Spain held many ecumenical councils to solve political and religious disputes and in these councils (many held in Toledo), severe edicts were issued against the Jews of Spain. One of the clauses in the text of the proceedings of the 4th Council of Toledo (633 CE) states,

We decree that the sons and daughters of the Jews should be separated from the company of their parents in order that they should not become further entangled in their deviation, and entrusted either to monasteries or to Christian, God fearing men and women, in order that they should learn from their way of life to venerate the faith and, educated on better things, progress in their morals as well as their faith.’[16]

Zion Zohar, an American Jewish historian, confirms the Jewish appreciation of the Muslim arrival in this way:

Thus, when Muslims crossed the straits of Gibraltar from North Africa in 711 CE and invaded the Iberian Peninsula, Jews welcomed them as liberators from Christian Persecution’. [17]

And what did this liberty bring for the Jews in the subsequent centuries? Was this liberty similar to the one the U.S government has delivered to the Iraqis, resulting in mass murder and abuse of prisoners, or was it a freedom that was deeply ingrained in Islamic values such as justice and tolerance? Zion Zohar has an answer:

Born during this era of Islamic rule, the famous Golden Age of Spanish Jewry (circa 900-1200) produced such luminaries as: statesman and diplomat Hasdai ibn Shaprut, vizier and army commander Shmuel ha-Nagid, poet-philosophers Solomon Ibn Gabriol and Judah Halevi, and at the apex of them all, Moses Ben Maimon, also known among the Spaniards as Maimonides [who is Known as the second Moses among the Jews].’[18]

Thus the Jews were treated with fairness and Justice in Islamic Spain unlike the rest of Europe and it was this fair treatment which produced the famous Golden Age for the House of Jacob, which they appreciate to this day.

Heinrich Graetz, a 19th century Jewish historian expressed similar sentiments regarding Muslims in Spain:

It was in these favourable circumstances that the Spanish Jews came under the rule of Mahometans, as whose allies they esteemed themselves the equals of their co-religionists in Babylonia and Persia. They were kindly treated, obtained religious liberty, of which they had so long been deprived, were permitted to exercise jurisdiction over their co-religionists, and were only obliged, like the conquered Christians, to pay poll tax (Dsimma)’[19]…Jewish Spain became “the place of civilization and of spiritual activity- a garden of fragrant, joyous, and happy poetry, as well as the seat of earnest research and clear thought.” Like the Arabian Christians (the Christians who lived amongst the Mahometans) the Jews made themselves acquainted with the language and literature of their conquerors, and often got precedence over them. But whilst Arabian Christians gave up their own individuality, forgot their own language- Gothic Latin- and could not even read the creeds, and were ashamed of Christianity, the Jews of Spain were so little affected through this contact with Arabs, that it only served to increase their love and enthusiasm for their mother tongue, their holy law, and their religion. Through favourable circumstances Jewish Spain was in a position at first to rival Babylonia, then to supersede it, and finally to maintain its superiority for nearly five hundred years.’[20]

In Islamic Spain, even the Christians preferred Islamic government (based upon Shariah Law) over that of the Franks. This assertion appears to be quite reasonable when the views of Reinhart Dozy, an authority on the early Islamic Spain, are taken into consideration:

‘The unbounded tolerance of the Arabs must also be taken into account. In religious matters they put pressure on no man…Christians preferred their rule to that of the Franks.’[21]

Ulick R. Burke, a prominent historian specializing in the history of Spain, reached a similar conclusion:

Christians did not suffer in any way, on account of their religion, at the hands of Moors…not only perfect toleration but nominal equality was the rule of the Arabs in Spain.’[22]

This tolerance had an immense impact on the Christian population of Spain, many of them converted to Islam and those who did not adopted the Islamic culture in regards to literature and lifestyle. This is emphatically substantiated by the 9th century Spanish Christian writer, Paul Alvarus (who was writing in the 850’s at Cordova):

The Christians love to read the poems and romances of the Arabs; they study the Arab theologians and philosophers, not to refute them but to form a correct and elegant Arabic. Where is the layman who now reads the Latin commentaries on the Holy Scriptures, or who studies the Gospels, prophets or apostles? Alas! All talented young Christians read and study with enthusiasm the Arab books; they gather immense libraries at great expense; they despise the Christian literature as unworthy of attention. They have forgotten their own language. For every one who can write a letter in Latin to a friend, there are a thousand who can express themselves in Arabic with elegance, and write better poems in his language then the Arabs themselves.’[23]

Most of the aforementioned opinions indicate that the Muslim arrival in Spain liberated the masses from a deep slumber of ignorance and oppression. Prior to the Islamic emergence, the Catholic Spanish establishment was known for persecuting the Jews and minor Christian sects. The Muslims changed all of that and what followed was the appearance of a true renaissance that enabled Jews, Muslims and Christians to live in peace for centuries. Maria Rosa Menocal, one of the authorities on medieval European literature, decided to title her work (which describes how the Abrahamic faiths co-existed peacefully during the Islamic era) the “Ornament of the world”[24]; the phrase was used by Hroswitha (a 10th century German nun) to describe Islamic Spain[25]. Thus, Islam came as a mercy for the people of Iberian Peninsula, who welcomed the new rulers as liberators for the tyranny of the Visigoths.

A 7th century War on Terror

One may question as to why was it that the Muslims were invading these lands and removing the already existing governments from power? It must be recognized that most of the 7th/8th century powers were guilty of oppression against their own subjects. The Qur’an provides one of the reasons, which caused the early Muslims to intervene:

And what is wrong with you that you fight not in the cause of Allah, and for those weak, ill-treated and oppressed among men, women and children, whose cry is: “Our Lord! Rescue us from this town whose people are oppressors; and raise for us from You one who will help”’[26]

The Muslims were thus charged to carry out a war on terror in order to liberate the weak and oppressed and they duly fulfilled the Qur’anic injunction (it has been substantiated above that the populations of some of the countries Muslims took were severely oppressed by their rulers and it was due to this reason that they welcomed the Muslims as liberators). However, in this 7th century war against terror there was no oil or re-construction/destruction contracts involved. An objective approach to the subject will lead to similar findings. Perhaps the views of the Nestorian Patriarch of Khurasan in the 7th century, Ishoyabh III, will help elucidate upon this more. He addressed a letter to Simeon, the Primate of Persia, where he wrote:

and the Arabs, to whom God at this time has given the empire of the world, behold, they are among you, as ye know well: and yet they attack not the Christian faith, but, on the contrary, they favour our religion, do honour to our priests and the saints of the Lord, and confer benefits on churches and monasteries.’[27]

Usually exploitation and plunder of resources follows an invasion, as can clearly be seen in the case of the colonial period and modern day Iraq (Iraq’s most precious Baghdad museum was plundered following the US invasion (2003) and the 7000 years history of Mesopotamian civilisation was lost). Did Muslims follow the same precedence? Adam Smith, the 18th century founding father of modern capitalism (whose portrait is illustrated on the back of the current £20 note), did not think so:

The ruin of the empire of the Romans, and, along with it the subversion of all law and order, which happened a few centuries afterwards, produced the entire neglect of that study of the connecting principles of nature, to which leisure and security can alone give occasion. After the fall of those great conquerors and the civilisers of mankind, the empire of the Caliphs seems to have been the first state under which the world enjoyed that degree of tranquillity, which the cultivation of the sciences requires. It was under the protection of those generous and magnificent princes, that the ancient philosophy and astronomy of the Greeks were restored and established in the East; that tranquillity, which their mild, just and religious government diffused over their vast empire, revived the curiosity of mankind, to inquire into the connecting principles of nature.’[28]

Adam Smith (1723-1790) was one of the most outstandingly intelligent economists of his time. His works such as “The Theory of Moral Sentiments” and “An Inquiry into the Nature and Causes of the Wealth of Nations” are thought to be among the cornerstones of Western literature. The latter work (which is the most popular work in the field of economics to this day) seems to be very much concerned with an inquiry into how certain nations acquire prosperity. Some of the ways of acquiring prosperity and scientific advancement, which he expressed in the aforementioned quote, are security, the sense of tranquillity and justice; and Adam Smith believed that the mild, just and religious government of the Muslim Caliphs (who governed with Shariah Law) revived the curiosity of mankind to attain all kind of benefits from nature. The critics and the so called modern reformers of Islam need to pay heed to Adam Smith’s words and see whether he was reasonable in his conclusion in this regard. If Islam enabled mankind to achieve a high level of prosperity in those days, it still contains the potential to repeat the same today. One has to observe, in the light of history and contemporary reports, whether the present war on terror really is a war on terror or the 7th century Islamic war on terror better qualifies to be called “a war on terror”. If one was to examine objectively, one will find the 7th century war on terror to be a better choice, as today we do not see any positive outcome of the so called “21st century war on terror” but in the 7th century Muslims weakened the Byzantine, Persian and Visigothic terror to replace it by what, in the case of Spain, Adam Smith describes as scientific enlightenment for Europe:

“The victorious arms of the Saracens [Latin synonym for a Muslim] carried into Spain the learning as well as the gallantry, of the East; and along with it, the tables of Almamon, and the Arabian translations of Ptolemy and Aristotle; and thus Europe received a second time, from Babylon, the rudiments of the sciences of the heavens. The writings of Ptolemy were translated from Arabic into Latin; and the Peripatetic philosophy was studied  in Averroes [Ibn Rushd] and Avicenna [Ibn Sina] with as much eagerness and as much submission to its doctrines in the West, as it had been in the East.”[29]

[1] Pope Gregory I quoted by Mohammad Farooq Kemal, The Crescent vs The Cross, Lahore, 1997, P. 7.
[2] The Quran, Surah AL-Anbiya 21, verse 107.
[3] The Quran, Surah an-Noor 24, verse 55.
[4] Carole Hillenbrand, Muhammad and the rise of Islam, The New Cambridge Medieval History, 2005, vol 1, p. 340.
[5] John Bar Penkaye, quoted by Walter E. Kaegi, Byzantium and the Early Islamic Conquest, Cambirdge, 2000, p. 216.
[6] T. W. Arnold, Preaching of Islam, London, 1913, p. 55.
[7] Ibid, p. 132-4.
[8] Dionysius of Tel-Mahre, The Seventh Century in the West-Syrian Chronicles, tr by Palmer, Liverpool, 1993, p. 156-7.
[9] T. W. Arnold, Preaching of Islam, London, 1913, p. 61.
[10] The Quran, Surah 4 An-Nisa, Verse 58.
[11] Dionysius of Tel-Mahre, The Seventh Century in the West-Syrian Chronicles, tr by Palmer, Liverpool, 1993, p. 157.
[12] Ibid, p. 158
[13] John of Nikiou, quoted by Petra M. Sijpesteijn, Egypt in the Byzantine World, Cambridge, 2007, p. 442.
[14] Ibid, see footnote 28.
[15] Alfred J. Butler, The Arab Conquest of Egypt and the Last Thirty Years of the Roman Dominion, 1902, Oxford, p. 447-8.
[16] The Jews in the Legal Sources of the Early Middle Ages, edited by Amnon Linder, New York, 1997, p.488.
[17] Zion Zohar, Sephardic & Mizrahi Jewry, New York, 2005, p. 8-9.
[18]  Ibid, p. 9.
[19] H. Graetz, History of the Jews, London, 1892, Vol 3, p. 112.
[20] Ibid, p. 220.
[21] Reinhart Dozy, A History of Muslims in Spain, 1861 (reprinted 1913, 2002), Delhi, p.235.
[22] Ulick R. Burke, A History of Spain, London, 1900, vol I, p. 129.
[23] Paul Alvarus quoted by Maria Rosa Menocal, Ornament of the world, New York, 2003, p.66.
[24] Maria Rosa Menocal, Ornament of the world, New York, 2003.
[25] Stanley Lane-Poole, The Moors in Spain, London, 1920, p. 144.
[26] The Quran, Surah An-Nisa 4, verse 75.
[27] Ishoyabh III quoted by T. W. Arnold, Preaching of Islam, London, 1913, p. 81-82.
[28] The Essays of Adam Smith, London, 1869, p. 353.
[29] Ibid, p. 354.

 

[One Reason] Do We Have Good Reasons to Believe (in God)?

This is an excellent leaflet by iERA media production One Reason which can be visited here, Kudos to Br Hamza Andreas Tzortzis (May Allah SWT bless & protect him) who is a legend mash’Allah!

Do We Have Good Reasons to Believe?

Why is the universe the way it is?

One of the most important questions that almost all thinkers, philosophers and people like you and I have asked is “Why does the universe exist at all? And why is it the way it is?” In response to this question there are those who say that the universe is uncaused, in other words it is eternal, meaning it has no beginning and no end. If this is true, there should be an infinite history of past events.  However, the infinite in the real world is not possible as it implies a quantity that is limitless. Let’s take the following examples into consideration: if there were an infinite number of books in a room and two were taken away, how many would be left? The response may be “infinity” or for those who are logically inclined “infinity minus two”. In any case, the responses don’t make sense because although two have been taken away from infinity there still remains infinity! Consequently, we’re not able to count the remaining books left in the room. Therefore the infinite leads to contradictions and simply doesn’t exist in the real world (although it exists in mathematical discourse; however it is based upon certain axioms and conventions). Therefore, it logically follows that the universe must have a finite history of past events, which indicates that it must have begun to exist at some point in time.

The above may sound too philosophical, but it is also supported by scientific evidence, for instance, Stephen Hawking, in his lecture The Beginning of Time states, “The conclusion of this lecture is that the universe has not existed forever. Rather, the universe, and time itself, had a beginning in the Big Bang, about 15 billion years ago.”i According to contemporary cosmologists, the universe began at time zero with the event commonly called the “Big Bang”. The theory postulates that the universe began as a “singularity”, an extremely hot and dense entity that expanded and subsequently cooled, going from something incredibly small and hot to the current size and temperature of our universe. In light of these facts, it is interesting to note that there is no scientific explanation as to what happened before time zero. In addition to this, the Big Bang theory can only postulate what happened 1 x 10-34 seconds after the Big Bang but not anytime before it. What happened before this particular point in time is unknown.

In the context of the above discussion, it can be concluded that generally physicists agree that as a result of the Big Bang, physical time and space were created as were energy and matter. So two premises can be drawn from all the above: 1. Whatever begins to exist has a cause 2. The universe began to exist – Therefore the universe has a cause. How do we get to this conclusion? Well, if everything we know and see that begins to exist has a cause, for example a noise in the room or the pyramids at Giza, then the universe – which also began to exist - must also have a cause.

The Cause for the Universe = God?

Our discussion so far has provided good reasons to believe that there must have been a cause for the universe. However, this doesn’t tell us much about what the cause is, but if we think deeply about the nature of the cause - also known as conceptual analysis – we can conclude that it must be very powerful as it brought into existence the entire universe, and it must be:

One…

The cause for the universe must be a single cause for several reasons. An attractive argument to substantiate this claim includes the use of the rational principle called Occam’s razor. This principle is commonly summarised as “the simplest explanation is the best explanation”. In philosophical terms the principle enjoins that we should not multiply entities beyond necessity. What this basically means is that we should stick to explanations that do not create more questions than it answers. In the case of the cause for the universe we have no evidence to claim multiplicity, in other words more than one, and if we did it would create more questions than it answers.

Uncaused & Eternal…

This cause must also be uncaused due to the absurdity of an infinite regress, in other words an indefinite chain of causes. To illustrate this better, if the cause of the universe had a cause and that cause had a cause ad infinitum, then there wouldn’t be a universe to talk about in the first place. For example, imagine if a Stock Trader on a trading floor at the Stock Exchange was not able to buy or sell his stocks or bonds before asking permission from the investor, and then this investor had to check with his, and this went on forever, would the Stock Trader ever buy or sell his stocks or bonds? The answer is no. In similar light, if we apply this to the universe we would have to posit an uncaused cause due to this rational necessity.

However, some philosophers and scientists claim that “why doesn’t the cause be the universe itself?” and “why can’t the cause stop at the universe?” Well, the problem with these claims is that they would imply the universe created itself, which is absurd because how can anything exist and not exist at the same time? Finally, it would be irrational to claim that whatever begins to exist causes itself!

Immaterial…

The cause has to be immaterial since it created everything. If you were to take any state of physical existence, you would come to the conclusion that, that state of physical existence owes itself to another state of physical existence. And that state of physical existence, owes itself to another state of physical existence. But you can’t go back states of physical existences ad infinitum. There has to be a beginning to the entire state of physical existences. Therefore, the logical conclusion is that the origin of all creation has to be a non- physical state.

After thinking about the nature of the cause for the universe we come to the remarkable realisation that it has all the basic attributes of the traditional monotheistic God, namely that He is one, eternal and immaterial. But what reasons do we have to start claiming that a particular religion is true? This leads us to discuss the Qur’an, the book of the Muslims.

The Qur’an

The Qur’an is no ordinary book. It has been described by many, who engage with the book, as an imposing text, but the way it imposes itself on the reader is not negative, rather it is positive. This is because it seeks to positively engage with your mind and your emotions, and it achieves this by asking profound questions, such as “So where are you people going? This is a message for all people; for those who wish to take the straight path.”ii and “Have they not thought about their own selves?”iii

However, the Qur’an doesn’t stop there, it actually challenges the whole of mankind with regards to its divine authorship, it boldly states “If you have doubts about the revelation we have sent down to Our servant, then produce a single chapter like it – enlist whatever supporters you have other than God – if you truly think you can.

If you cannot do this – and you never will – then beware of the fire prepared for the disbelievers, whose fuel is men and stones.”iv This challenge refers to the various wonders in the Qur’an, even within its smallest chapter, that give us good reasons to believe it is from God. Some of these reasons are historical and scientific.

Historical…

There are many historical statements in the Qur’an that show us good reasons that it is from God. One of them is that the Qur’an is the only religious text to use different titles for the rulers of Egypt at different times. For instance while addressing the Egyptian ruler, at the time of Prophet Yusuf (Joseph), the word “Al-Malik” is used which refers to a king (note: that during the middle old kingdom Hyksos Asiatic families were governing Egypt and they did not use the title Pharaoh, as the Qur’an mentions “The King said, ‘Bring him to me straight away!’”).v

In contrast, the ruler of Egypt at the time of the Prophet Musa (Moses) is referred to as Pharaoh, in Arabic “Firaown”. This particular title began to be employed in the 14th century B.C., during the reign of Amenhotep IV. This is confirmed by the Encyclopaedia Britannica which states that the word Pharaoh was a title of respect used from the New Kingdom (beginning with the 18th dynasty; B.C. 1539-1292) until the 22nd dynasty (B.C. 945-730).

So the Qur’an is historically accurate as the Prophet Yusuf lived at least 200 years before that time, and the word “King” was used for the Hyksos kings, not Pharaoh. In light of this, how could have the Prophet Muhammad known such a minute historical detail? Especially when all the other religious texts, such as the Bible, just mention Pharaoh as a title for all times? Also, since people at the time of the revelation did not know this information and hieroglyphs were a dead language, what does this say about the authorship of the Qur’an? There is no naturalistic explanation.

Scientific…

The Qur’an always mentions nature as a sign for God’s existence, power and majesty. Every time these are mentioned, they are expressed with a great accuracy, and they also give us information that could have never been known at the time of the Prophet Muhammad. One of these signs includes the function and structure of mountains. The Qur’an mentions that mountains have “peg” like structures and that they have been embedded into earth to stabilise it, a concept known in Geology as isostasy. The Qur’an mentions: “We placed firmly embedded mountains on the earth, so it would not move under them…”vi and “Have We not made the earth as a bed and the mountains its pegs?”vii

The Qur’an’s eloquent renderings of the facts mentioned above are confirmed by modern science which only came to be understood by the end of the 20th Century. In the book Earth, by Dr. Frank Press, former president of the U.S. National Academy of Sciences, states that mountains are like stakes, and are buried deep under the surface of Earth.viii

With regards to the vital role of mountains, it was formerly understood that mountains were merely protrusions rising above the surface of Earth. However, scientists realised that this was not actually the case, and that the parts known as the mountain roots extended down as far as 10 to 15 times their own height. With these features, mountains play a similar role to a nail or peg firmly holding down a tent, which has been discovered by modern geological and seismic research, a concept known as isostasy.ix

In conclusion, how can we explain this in the light of the fact that this is relatively recent science (with no one at the time of the revelation knowing this information)? What does this tell you about the author? Again, there is no naturalistic explanation.

Is Life Absurd without God?

The writer Loren Eiseley said that man is a cosmic orphan. This is quite profound, as man is the only creature in the universe who asks: why? Other animals have instincts to guide them, but man has learned to ask questions. If many of these questions raised by man exclude God then the conclusion is simple: we are the accidental by- products of nature, a result of matter plus time plus chance. There is no reason for your existence and all we face is death. Modern man thought that when he had got rid of God, he had freed himself from all that repressed and stifled him. Instead, he discovered that in killing God, he had also killed himself.

If there is no God, then man and the universe are doomed. Like prisoners condemned to death we await our unavoidable execution. What is the consequence of this? It means that life itself is absurd. It means that the life we have is without ultimate significance, value, or purpose. For example, according to the atheist worldview this life is purposeless, or at best, just assembled to propagate our DNA. The way some atheists get out of this is by saying we can create purpose for ourselves, however this is a self-delusion as we try and find some purpose by attributing purpose to the things we do in life, but remove purpose from our very own lives. Also, without God our lives do not have any ultimate meaning. If our ends are the same, in that we just pass out of existence, what meaning does that give our lives? Does it even matter if we existed at all?  If the universe was never in existence what difference would it make?

Existentialists such as Jean-Paul Sartre and Albert Camus understood the meaningless reality of life in absence of acknowledging the purpose of our existence.  This is why Sartre wrote of the “nausea” of existence and Camus saw life as absurd, indicating that the universe has no meaning at all. The German Philosopher Friedrich Nietzsche argued in clear concise pronouncements that the world and human history do not have any meaning, any rational order or aim. Nietzsche argued that there is only a mindless chaos, a directionless world tending towards no end. It is not wonder the philosopher Arthur Schopenhauer said he would have wished the world never existed. All of these views on the world are absurd conclusions carved by the atheist world view.

i  http://www.hawking.org.uk/index.php/lectures/publiclectures/62

ii  Qur’an Chapter 81 Verses 26 – 28

iii Qur’an Chapter 30 Verse 8

iv  Qur’an Chapter 2 Verse 23

v  Qur’an Chapter 12 Verse 50

vi  Qur’an Chapter 21 Verse 31

vii Qur’an Chapter78 Verses 6-7

viii  Frank Press, and Raymond Siever, Earth, 3rd ed. (San Francisco: W. H. Freeman & Company: 1982

ix  M. J. Selby, Earth’s Changing Surface (Oxford: Clarendon Press: 1985), 32.

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The 20 Most Effective Characteristics of a True Leader

 

[Taken from Shaykh Riad Ourzazi's (HafidUllah) blog called Serene Coaching]

1. Careful Planning:

  • The beginning is the most important part of the work
  • Leaders spend 80% of their time planning and 20% executing
  • Leaders plan carefully to ensure the success of their desired outcome
  • Some of the methodologies used are: SDLC, Lean Six Sigma, DMAIC…

2. Organization:

  • A leader is organized
  • He keeps only what he needs in his drawers and on top of his desk
  • Every day he prepares a list of everything he wants to do
  • A leader knows how to prioritize his action items

3. Goal Setting:

  • There is no success without goals. A leader plans time for his family, reading, relaxation, business, personal development…
  • A leader balances goals to have a better life

4. Decision Maker:

  • A leader is trained on how to make decisions easily
  • A leader doesn’t wait for things to happen
  • A leader takes decisions to make things happen

5. Risk Taker:

  • A leader is not afraid of taking risks, he knows in order to improve his performance, survive the competition, he needs to take some risks
  • A leader knows how to mitigate the risks

6. Communication Skills:

  • A leader knows when to talk and how to deliver his message
  • A leader is an excellent listener who never interrupts people when they talk
  • A leader creates rapport with everyone

7. Manage Change:

  • A leader welcomes change versus resisting it
  • A leader doesn’t like routine
  • A leader anticipates market changes and acts accordingly

8. Managing Stress:

  • A leader understands the danger of stress
  • A leader educates himself on how to master it
  • Some leaders choose to join health clubs, community centers…

9. Delegation:

  • A leader believes in others and value his time
  • A leader trusts his team and knows when and whom to delegate to get the job done

10. Vision and Creativity:

  • A leader has an excellent business vision
  • A leader can see things that others can’t
  • A leader is very creative and is renowned for his great ideas

11. Trainer, Coach and Team Builder:

  • A true leader enjoys sharing knowledge
  • A leader needs to ensure business continuity. A recovery plan has to be in place in case of a disaster or a swift resource change

12. Motivation:

  • A leader is a self-motivated person
  • A leader recognizes the efforts of each individual in his team and praises them in private and public

13. Skills:

  • A leader is well educated and knowledgeable
  • A leader knows what he’s talking about
  • A leader is always looking for ways to improve himself
  • A leader strives to “climb the mountain towards excellence”

14. Confidence:

  • A leader has a strong personality
  • A leader knows how to control a situation and learn from it. His confidence makes his team respect him

15. Action:

  • A leader is action-oriented
  • He knows the difference between talking and doing.
  • After careful planning, a leader moves immediately by taking the necessary actions

16. Commitment:

  • A leader is committed to his plans and he knows that success takes time
  • A leader is committed to achieving his goals; he’s committed to success!

17. Energy:

  • A leader is energetic
  • A leader watches his eating habits and respects his body.
  • A leader works out regularly

18. Passion:

  • A leader is a very passionate person
  • A leader loves what he does and does it with passion. When you love what you do, you get to produce more

19. Flexible:

  • A leader is persistent. If his plans are not getting the results he desires, he looks for another way to reach his goals
  • A leader adjusts his plans, adopts himself, and keep readjusting until he reaches the desired outcome
  • A leader takes mitigated risk. He’s not afraid of getting out of the comfort zone

 

20. Honesty:

  • A leader is fair and just
  • A leader is very loyal to his organization, his team, his job and his family
  • A leader is very transparent
  • A leader works SMART but also HARD.
 

Ijma (Consensus) in Islam

Assalamulaykum warahmatullahi wabarakatuhu,

Received this email from a brother some time back MashÁllah.

Alhamdulliah he sent an excellent email with points.

As one Shaykh (HafidUllah) once said ”In Islam there are 3 hujjas (evidenses): Qur’an, Sunnah (Way of Prophet Muhammad [Peace be upon him]) & Ijma (Consensus).

JazakAllahaire

Omar

Wa’aleikom asalaam wa rahmatullaahi wa barakaatuh

Insha’Allah this finds you all well.

This is a reminder to myself that though I am often harsh etc I should not become arrogant and remember that I should want the best of the dunya and akhira for XXXXX and everyone who is part of it- and that naseeha isn’t a stick to beat someone over the head with, but because you have genuine concern for them as your brother in Islam

Also to myself the purpose of this discussion is to get closer to the truth- not to prove the other person wrong and exult over them. Even if your opinion is correct, if that’s how it is being argued then it’s for ego and not for the sake of Allah

I am certain there is the justified opinion that I will charge in and condemn everything as ‘haraam’ etc- but bear me out insha’Allah. This is an opportunity to go beyond single issues and discuss principles insha’Allah- something much more useful bi’ithnillah.

Lastly, I like being challenged as it’s only then you can clarify your points and make sure you and everyone else has understood the topic properly. So questions insha’Allah- otherwise I’m going to assume everyone agrees

What is our methodology for understanding Islam? We are talking about differences of opinion, valid or invalid- what is our criteria to differentiate the two? As you know some people- may Allah guide them and us- have used ‘difference of opinion’ to justify things which we would all agree are not open to discussion, e.g. The obligation of hijab, cutting the hand off the thief- does that make sense?

There are many ways in which halal/haraam is established in Islam- the four main sources of Islamic Law- Qur’an, Sunnah, Consensus/Ijma and Analogy/Qiyas. Everyone agrees on this

We keep mentioning ijtihad- what is it? Ijtihad means to take the ‘limited’ textual sources of sharee’ah and use principles in Islam to apply them to new issues. I say limited because Islam doesn’t directly address for example drugs. So scholars extract the reason (the ‘illa) why alcohol is prohibited (intoxication) and from that can say that drugs are not allowed. In this way Islam is truly a religion for all times and places as it has an established system to deal with new situations. Does that make sense?

So therefore in Islam there are 2 types of fiqhi issues:

¤Ones that have happened in the past so the ruling has been established- e.g. rulings on distribution of inheritance. This is because Islam is following not innovating. There is no room for ijtihad in these matters as the ruling is clear and ijtihad is only for issues in which there is no established ruling

¤nawazil- new issues, e.g. Organ transplant- that the sharee’ah is silent on. Because there is nothing available, this is when ijtihad is required- a qualified scholar will take the principles/fiqhi maxims already put down by Islam (e.g. No harm or reciprocating of harm; neccessity lifts prohibition, etc) and try apply it to the new situation. If he is qualified to make the ijtihad according to the conditions set down by Islam, then he will get 2 rewards if he is right and one if he is wrong, as the Prophet sallAllahu aleyhi wasallam told us. Obviously if he’s not qualified in the first place to make that ijtihad he’s sinful anyway and won’t get any reward. Nowadays we have fiqh councils where whole groups of scholars sit down and discuss new issues- which is much safer alhamdulilaah and avoids the pitfull of lone scholars with shad (dodgy) opinions. Does that make sense?

When scholars of the past- whose standard was amazing masha’Allah- whose fear of Allah and knowledge has been witnessed and agreed upon by the whole Ummah- then obviously we give preference to them. Does that mean a great scholar of the past is infallable and will always trump a scholar of this age in every single issue? Not neccessarily- but the scholar of this age will have scholars of the past behind him too- so it’s not his opinion Vs Imam Ahmad’s, but rather Imam Ahmad’s Vs Imam Malik. So nobody is innovating, but basing their difference on a difference that has been established already (as it is not a new issue). Does that make sense?

So now we talk about consensus. To be short, basically if the ummah agrees on a particular ruling then it cannot be changed. I.E. The sahaba all or vast majority agree that the ruling on so-and-so is haraam. Nobody can come after them and reverse that and bring another opinion on that same issue. That would be innovation. Make sense? There is no point discussing the proof or weight of consensus as an evidence in Islam in the same way there’s no point discussing the evidence behind the ruling on homosexuality- excuse the example- i.e. It’s already established and agreed upon, done and dusted. We just need to study insha’Allah

Consensus not only defines the agreed upon rulings, but also sets out the limits for differences of opinion. For example, the generation of Imam Ahmad have 2 opinions on an issue- e.g. permissible and preferred. Someone cannot come afterwards on that same issue and invent a third opinion- haraam. So for the opinion on an established issue to be valid it must remain within the opinions already mentioned and it cannot innovate a new category. For example, the scholars of the salaf and for hundreds of years afterwards agreed Niqab was either obligatory or recommended (check all the books of fiqh). Therefore someone cannot come 1400 years later and say it is a bid’ah- as the issue existed previously, was already discussed and the ruling arrived on. Saying it is a bid’ah has no precent with them and is therfore not a valid opinion. Does that make sense?

If scholars have taken a different stance, but when the overwhelming majority of the previous scholars- including ones of even higer status- agreed on the ruling, their opinion is considered shadh/odd. And we ask Allah to accept their efforts and forgive their mistakes. But just because we acknowledge their greatness it doesn’t mean we follow their mistakes. Every shaykh has mistakes, and the well-known saying more or less goes that one who gathers the weak opinions of all the scholars together is a zindeeq/heretic.

Imagine- some mathaahibs official position don’t put a condition of marriage for their to be a wali (it’s a little more complicated than that), others a mahr, others witnesses, and so on. Take it all together and you have a marriage with no mahr, witnesses, wali, etc- basically not much different to zina!

So considering something that has a consensus and to say that a scholar who comes later and says otherwise is not a valid difference of opinion. But don’t take my word for it- take the consensus quoted by so many scholars of the past

And in general, even the greatest scholars have errors, Are we going to say ‘yes, it’s allowed’? No, that would be wrong- but at the same time our own opinion is worthless- some scholars who allow riba-based morgages are wrong not because XXXX has said they are, but because they’re going against every other scholar in existence. The way we do that is to say that they are a great scholar and may Allah forgive them for their mistakes- and accept their efforts. We must show respect for the people of knowledge, but there’s a way to highlight their weird opinions whilst giving them credit for their efforts. Unfortunately I’m lacking in that- but it’s a charateristic of a true scholar to be soft/harsh at the right times

But let’s ignore even consensus for this case- what about the hadith of the Prophet sallAllahu aleyhi wasallam- in bukhari (therfore undisputed authenticity) saying that at the end of time a people will come who allow zina, silk (for men), musical instruments and so on. But in Islam we don’t read ayat and ahadeeth and invent rulings on our own- take it not from me, but from the Sahaba, An-Nawawee, Ibn Hajr, and so on. Does that make sense?

And even after that- the Prophet sallAllahu aleyhi wasallam told us to leave that which makes us doubt for that which makes us not doubt (tirmidhi, hasan saheeh). So- say we don’t know the ruling on an issue for certain. The attitude we fall short in is that we should leave doubtful issues and stay on the safe side. That way we protect our akhira, as the Prophet sallAllahu aleyhi wasallam told us (no internet so if someone could post the hadeeth in 40nawawee about ‘the halal is clear and the haraam is clear’ would be useful insha’Allah). The problem is, it takes a lot of taqwa and we’re lacking

So, sorry for my lack of clarity but insha’Allah that helps. I felt it was important to put across some important principles so we don’t keep covering the same ground insha’Allah

May Allah make it of benefit

 

15 Ways to increase your earnings & wealth

1. The Taqwa of Allah

And whosoever fears Allâh and keeps his duty to Him, He will make a way for him to get out (from every difficulty). (2) And He will provide him from (sources) he never could imagine. And whosoever puts his trust in Allâh, then He will suffice him. Verily, Allâh will accomplish his purpose. Indeed Allâh has set a measure for all things. [Surah Al-Talaaq, Verse 2-3]

And if the people of the towns had believed and had the Taqwâ (piety), certainly, We should have opened for them blessings from the heaven and the earth, but they belied (the Messengers). So We took them (with punishment) for what they used to earn (polytheism and crimes). [ Surah Al-Araf, Verse 96]


2. Seeking forgiveness and repentance

“I said (to them): ‘Ask forgiveness from your Lord; Verily, He is Oft-Forgiving; (10) ‘He will send rain to you in abundance; (11) ‘And give you increase in wealth and children, and bestow on you gardens and bestow on you rivers.’[Surah Nooh, Verses 10-12]

“And O my people! Ask forgiveness of your Lord and then repent to Him, He will send you (from the sky) abundant rain, and add strength to your strength, so do not turn away as Mujrimûn (criminals, disbelievers in the Oneness of Allâh).”[Surah Hood, Verse 52]

And (commanding you): “Seek the forgiveness of your Lord, and turn to Him in repentance, that He may grant you good enjoyment, for a term appointed, and bestow His abounding Grace to every owner of grace (i.e. the one who helps and serves needy and deserving, physically and with his wealth, and even with good words). But if you turn away, then I fear for you the torment of a Great Day (i.e. the Day of Resurrection). [Surah Hood, Verse 3]


3. Tawakkul

Umar Ibn Al-Khattab Radhiyallahu Anhu reported that Prophet (Peace be upon him) said,“If you were to put trust in Allah (Tawakkul) the way that Allah deserves, then you would be provided for as birds are; they leave (in search of food) at the beginning of the day famished, and return at the end of the day full” [Shaykah Al-Abani’s Silsilat Al-Sahihah, # 310]

And He will provide him from (sources) he never could imagine. And whosoever puts his trust in Allâh, then He will suffice him. Verily, Allâh will accomplish his purpose. Indeed Allâh has set a measure for all things.[Surah Al-Talaaq, Verse 2-3]

Would that they were contented with what Allâh and His Messenger (peace be upon him) gave them and had said: “Allâh is Sufficient for us. Allâh will give us of His Bounty, and so will His Messenger (from alms, etc.). We implore Allâh (to enrich us).” [Surah Al-Tawba, Verse 59]

4. Constantly worshiping Allah Ta’ala

Abu Hurayrah Radhiyallahu Anhu stated that the Prophet (peace be upon him) said,Allah says, ‘O son of Adam! Take time out to constantly worship me, I will fill your chest with richness , and remove your poverty. And if you do not do so. I will make your hands filled with occupation, and will not remove your poverty” [Shaykh Al-Albani declared it to authentic in his Sunan Al-Tirmidhi]

Ma’qal Ibn Yasaar Radhiyallahu Anhu reported that Prophet (peace be upon him) said:Your Lord, all glory and honor be to Him says, ‘O Son of Adam! Take the time out to constantly worship Me, I will fill your chest with richness! O Son of Adam! Do not distance yourself from Me, or I will fill your chest with poverty, and fill your hands with work [Shaykah Al-Albani’s Silsilat Al-Sahihah, # 1359]

5. Thanking Allah Ta’ala

And (remember) when your Lord proclaimed: “If you give thanks (by accepting Faith and worshiping none but Allâh), I will give you more (of My Blessings), but if you are thankless (i.e. disbelievers), verily! My Punishment is indeed severe.” [Surah Ibrahim, Verse 7]


6.  Frequently performing Hajj and ‘Umrah

It has been reported by Abdullah Ibn Mas’ud Radhiyallahu Anhu that the Prophet of Allah (Peace be upon him) said:“Follow up between Hajj and ‘Umrah (i.e. continuously repeat the performance of Hajj and ‘Umrah) because they both eliminate poverty and sins just like a furnace eliminates the dirty impurities of iron, gold and silver. And an accepted Hajj has no reward less than paradise” [Shaykh Al-Albani in Sahih Sunan Al-Tirmidhi (1/245)]

7. Establishing the ties of kinship

Abu Hurayrah Radhiyallahu Anhu reported that the Prophet (peace be upon him) said:Whoever is pleased with the fact that his Rizq be increased, and his life-span be extended, then let him establish the ties of kinship”[Al-Bukhari, # 5985]

Anas Ibn Malik reported that the Prophet (peace be upon him) said:Whoever wishes to have his Rizq increased, and his life-span be extended, then let him establish the ties of kinship” [Al-Bukari, # 5986]

Abu Hurayrah Radhiyallahu Anhu reported that the Prophet (peace be upon him) said:Learn enough of your lineage, so that you can establish the ties of kinship, for establish the ties of kinship increases the love amongst families and multiplies wealth and extends age” [Shaykh Al-Albani in Sahih Sunan Al-Tirmidhi (2/190)]

8. Spending in the Way of Allah Ta’ala

Say: “Truly, my Lord enlarges the provision for whom He wills of His slaves, and (also) restricts (it) for him, and whatsoever you spend of anything (in Allâh’s Cause), He will replace it. And He is the Best of providers.”[Surah Saba, Verse 39]

Abu Hurayrah Radhiyallahu Anhu said that the Prophet (Peace be upon him) said:Allah has said: ‘O Son of Adam! Spend I will spend on you!”[Sahih Muslim (2/690)]

The Prophet (Peace be upon him) said:There is not a single day in which a servant wakes that two angels come down (from the Heavens). One of them says, O’ Allah! Give to the one that spends a substitute (for what he has spent). And the other one says, ‘O Allah! Give to the one that withhold some (his money) destruction!”[Al-Bukhari #1442]

The Prophet (Peace be upon him) said,While a person was in an open area of land, he heard voice in a cloud above him say. “water the garden of so-and-so!” So the cloud immediately departed, and started pouring its rain out on a rocky plain. A large crevice in the rocks collected all of this water. So the man followed the water (in its course), and he found a man standing in his garden, using an instrument to direct this water in different directions *(to irrigate his garden). He said to him, ‘O servant of Allah! What is your name?’ The man said ‘So-an-so,’ the same name that he had heard in the clouds! Then the man asked him, ‘O servant of Allah! Why are you asking me my name?’ So he responded. ‘I heard a voice in the clouds- the same clouds that this water came from- saying, “water the garden of so-and-so” with your name. What do you interpret this as (i.e. why do you think this happened )?’ So he said, ‘If you say this (i.e. if what you say occurred), then (the reason for this is that) I see what (crops) come out of it (this garden), and I give one third in charity, and I eat with my family one third of it, and I return one third of it (to cultivate more crops)”” and in another narration, it is reported that he said, …and I give one third of it to the poor, and the beggars, and the wayfarers.’ [Muslim (4/2288)]

9. Hijrah, Emigrating for the sake of Allah Ta’ala

He who emigrates (from his home) in the Cause of Allâh, will find on earth many dwelling places and plenty to live by. And whosoever leaves his home as an emigrant unto Allâh and His Messenger, and death overtakes him, his reward is then surely incumbent upon Allâh. And Allâh is Ever Oft¬Forgiving, Most Merciful. [Surah Al-Nisa, Verse 100]

10. Marriage

And marry those among you who are single (i.e. a man who has no wife and the woman who has no husband) and (also marry) the Sâlihûn (pious, fit and capable ones) of your (male) slaves and maid-servants (female slaves). If they be poor, Allâh will enrich them out of His Bounty. And Allâh is All-Sufficent for His creatures’ needs, All-Knowing (about the state of the people). [Surah Al-Nur, Verse 32]

11.Supporting students of Islamic knowledge

Anas Ibn Malik Radhiyallahu Anhu said,“There were two brothers (that lived) at the time of the Prophet (Peace be upon him). One of them would come to Prophet (Peace be upon him), whereas the other one would seek his sustenance (by working). So the the one who used to seek his sustenance complained to the Prophet (peace be upon him) about his brother. The Prophet (Peace be upon him) replied,It is possible that you are provided your rizq because of him’[Shaykh Al-Albani agreed it to be authentic, Saheeh Sunan Al-Tirmidhi(2/274)]

12. Showing kindness to the Poor

The Prophet (Peace be upon him) said,“The only reason that you are aided in victory (against your enemies) and provided with sustainance due to your weak?” [Al-Bukahri (14/179)]

13. Being honest in ones dealings

The Prophet (Peace be upon him) said:“The two parties of a transaction have the right (to annul the contract) as long as they don’t separate (from each other). So, if they were truthful (to one another), and honest in explaining (the defects of an item), then they will be blessed in their transaction. But, if they lied, and hid (the defects of an item) then the blessings of their transaction are destroyed” [Muslim, # 3836]

14.Making the Hereafter One’s main Concern

Once Zayd Bin Thabit was with Marwan, the leader of the City, when he went to visit ‘Abd Al-Rahman Ibn ‘Uthman Bin ‘Affan, Abd Al-Rahman said, “Nothing caused him to come here, at this hour except a question that he wants to ask.” So he asked him (what the matter was). He replied, “He (meaning Marwan) asked us about matters that we heard the Prophet (Peace be upon Him) say”. I heard the Prophet (peace be upon him) say “Whoever puts this world as his only (and primary) goal, then Allah will divide his affairs for him, and He will place poverty before his eyes, and nothing will come to him of this world except that which was already written (i.e. pre-destined) for him. But whoever made the Hereafter his goal, the Allah will gather his affairs for him, and he will place richness in his heart, and the world will come to him conquered and submissive” [Al-Albani Silsila As-Saheehah, #950 ]

15. Striving to achieve the goal (for sustainance)

He knows that there will be some among you sick, others traveling through the land, seeking of Allâh’s Bounty; yet others fighting in Allâh’s Cause. So recite as much of the Qur’ân as may be easy (for you), and perform As-Salât (Iqâmat-as-Salât) and give Zakât, and lend to Allâh a goodly loan, And whatever good you send before you for yourselves, (i.e. Nawâfil non-obligatory acts of worship: prayers, charity, fasting, Hajj and ‘Umrah), you will certainly find it with Allâh, better and greater in reward. And seek Forgiveness of Allâh. Verily, Allâh is Oft-Forgiving, Most-Merciful [Surah Al-Muzammil, Verse 20]

And We have appointed the night and the day as two Ayât (signs etc.). Then, We have obliterated the sign of the night (with darkness) while We have made the sign of the day illuminating, that you may seek bounty from your Lord, and that you may know the number of the years and the reckoning. And We have explained everything (in detail) with full explanation. [Surah Al-Isra, Verse 20]

15 Ways to increase earnings

 

Guiding to Allah by the Book: Fiqh ad-Da’wah

Guiding to Allah by the Book: Fiqh ad-Da’wah

by Shaykh Muhammad Alshareef [Al-Maghrib Institute & Discover U Life]

1st Pillar: To What Are We Guiding? The Brand Called Islam

…Number 2: The birth of a brand is achieved with publicity, not advertising. So you have examples of first companies such as Band-Aid. Band-Aid is the name of a company, so anybody who tries copying them has to call themselves Band-Aid. They just have to. For example, the name adhesive bandages is not that strong so they have to call themselves something like Adhesive Band-Aid. That’s how strong the name Band-Aid is; the name is so strong that people generically call all related products by the company’s name.

You want to do your da’wah project so it is just as strong, unique, and so distinct that people will try copying you in your project. When CNN first launched, it was just like you see in some da’wah projects where certain people can’t be paid their salaries. Ted Turner said there were times when he’d give out the checks – the big checks to the workers – and tell them not to cash it until two weeks because they didn’t have money in the bank. They were just like that; they were your basic fundraising da’wah- project-type place, until they went forward because they were so unique in their project as a 24-hour news channel. And now you see all these other channels that copy them in their uniqueness.

One major obstacle in the way of uniqueness is that the society is over-communicated. And you’ll know this especially if you ever tried announcing your da’wah project through a flyer; flyers are everywhere. We focus a lot on fliers and email lists, but that’s not necessarily the way to launch off something in a strong way. If I brought you a list of all the activities that are happening in D.C, Virginia, and Maryland, and put it all together, you would have a list of maybe 150-200 different activities that are going on. Which one do you go to? You go to the one that is special; that your friends are talking about. And so if you know that people choose where they want to go based on what everyone’s talking about, you can make your da’wah project special like that; so special that the people will talk about it before it happens. And that’s what’s meant by publicity, not advertising.

Advertising is actually the second part of the law. When do you start advertising? Once born, a brand needs advertising to stay healthy. So let’s say, for example, AlMaghrib Institute launches accredited seminars; it hasn’t been done before; it starts getting news: “Oh you’re actually accrediting your classes.” “All these halaqas that we’ve been doing have never been accredited.” “This is coming on campus.” “This is different from what’s happened out there.”

But as time progresses, people will forget about AlMaghrib Institute; it won’t be as unique. Why? Because people will copy it. You might not have heard about them, but I have heard of and seen smaller different accredited projects here and there. So, as time goes by, the novelty will go away, the publicity will go away. That’s when advertising should kick in.

Take Islamic schools for example and try to think of the first Islamic school in your area. When it was launched, it was something unique so everyone wanted to donate and help out. But now everybody has an Islamic school; there are a whole bunch of new and exciting learning centers for Muslims opening up and the regular, mainstream Islamic school gets boring. This loss of uniqueness will affect fundraising because you’ll notice that people won’t be giving much. As a result, the school will have to kick up it’s advertising. And advertising – here’s the critical point – is different than announcements. We often mistake our flyers for advertisements, but they’re not; our flyers are usually announcements and that’s not advertising because announcements are not very exciting.

Take MacDonald’s and AOL as an example. If all of them did their marketing like we do, you’d have AOL saying: “Our company is located on Broad Avenue. At 5:00 our workers will be there to accept your applications. Thank you.” That’s what their fliers would look like if they copied our style. But they don’t.

What do they do? They bring these teenagers out; they bring models out and show everybody on their computer saying, “Wow, I’m having so much fun! AOL: choice of the future.” – or whatever their slogan is. And then they show their website. That’ s it; that is an advertisement. They just showed their product and then the people move forward to the website for more information.

So if you’re doing a camp, or a club, or any other da’wah project, set it up as an advertisement, not an announcement. You can put the announcement somewhere else to the side, or on a website where people can follow up later. But your project has to be introduced as an ad, not an announcement.

Now let’s connect this with Islam as something we want to get out to the people. Let’s say that our focus in getting Islam to the people is There is no God but Allah. Another Muslim might focus on brotherly love and someone else may focus on charity. Even though you know Islam has both of these things, you cannot convince the person that Islam is the one with the love and charity. They’re like, “What’re you talking about? That’s Christianity.” So you have to change directions and you have to do like Ibrahim did and you focus on something different – pure tawheed – There is no God but Allah. That’s your advertisement.

If There is no God but Allah doesn’t work with a person, step aside and come from yet a different angle; come from an angle that the person isn’t even imagining and say, “In Islam we worship God with nothing added, and nothing subtracted.” I often say – and I know a lot of people don’t like my statement – but I say kind of like one God, without the fat of the sheep. So I say, One God, no fat. And I know a lot of people don’t like that slogan, but I just give it as an example.

One God, no fat. And the person replies, “What’re you saying? That our idols are fat?” And so you’ve put them on the defensive because you came from an angle of pure tawheed. And as you focus more and more, the other person will get defensive, and so instead of you being on the defensive, the other person is on the defensive. And the person will try to prove to you the trinity is in fact monotheistic; that it is tawheed. And you’re like, “Hmmm, that seems kind of illogical to me.” And then the person’s shoulders slump, but you’re standing confident because of your focus on the tawheed.

Don’t try going down the alleys that they’re taking you down. Step aside, use your intelligence, and come from a different angle, and you’ll take their weakness and exploit it…

To learn more about this seminar and where it’s offered near you, visit www.almaghrib.org
To purchase the Fiqh Ad-Dawah: Guiding to Allah by the book CD set, visit www.emanrush.com

 

Have Mercy on your Leaders

Transcribed by Reehab Ramadan

Amazing advice taken directly from a talk at the 2010 RIS (Reviving the Islamic Spirit) Convention.

“Please brothers and sisters, have some mercy on your scholars, your imams, your activists. Brothers and sisters, you have no idea of some of the pressures they are under. You have no idea how thinly they are spread. You have no idea of what they have to confront on a daily basis. They have to confront you as the Muslims and they have to confront the non-Muslims. They’re away from their families. They have families too—they have children too—they have pressures too, and they need your support. If you can’t agree with them, fine, at least make du`a’ for them. Makedu`a’ for their families.

[…]

Keep them in your prayers. Pray that Allah protects their families in their absence. Pray that Allah does not allow the pressures of trying to contribute to this ummah be enough to rip their families apart. Please brothers and sisters, pray for your leaders, pray for your imams, pray for your scholars—don’t forget them in your du`a’.”

 

‘…With difficulty comes ease..’ A story of Trial & Triumph

In an interesting book, Wadaa’ ar-Rasul li ‘Ummatihi, Shaykh Al-Qahtaani recalls the final words that RasulAllah sal Allaahu alayhi wa sallam said on his deathbed.

After living a life of jihaad, da’wah, and ibaadah, RasulAllah sal Allaahu alayhi wa sallam gathered the people around him on his deathbed and said, “I have left two things and you shall not go astray after them so long as you stick to them: the Book of Allah and my Sunnah.”

After RasulAllah sal Allaahu alayhi wa sallam moved onto Ar-Rafeeq al-`Alaa, the ummah was tested with humans that tried to corrupt, discredit, or amputate the Sunnah from Islam. And from the depths of the ummah’s men and women, Allah subhaanahu wa ta ‘aala – from His mercy to the ummah of Muhammad – raised up warriors that would stand in the face of the most vicious of the enemies of the Sunnah.

From those people that Allah subhaanahu wa ta ‘aala raised was a young boy in Baghdad over a thousand years ago. On those cold winter nights, his mother, the blessed mu’minah that she was, would awake long before Fajr to warm the water for her son. Then, again long before Fajr, she would wake him to make wudu. Then she would wrap him in shawls and off through the molten dark alleys of Baghdad they would carefully make their way to the masjid.

There was no male to escort him (he was an orphan), so the young boy’s mother would take him that early all by herself so that he could get a good seat in the hadith halaqa after Fajr. Then she would wait for him long after the sun rose to safely escort him back home. Her son grew up to be one of these warrior defenders of the Sunnah, one of the four Imams of this deen, Imam Ahmad ibn Hanbal.

In his collection, Al-Musnad alone, he narrated from over 280 teachers. He grew up under the shade of the Sunnah and he lived the Sunnah. It was reported that he said, “I’ve never written a hadith that I did not try to implement.”

And he raised his children like this too. When you see other fathers watching Al-Jazeera or GEO TV and neglecting for hours on end whilst their young Muslim children that Allah entrusted them with and giving the excuse that ‘I have no time’, remember this example: Abdullaah, Imam Ahmad’s son, taught his students that when he was young, his father would play with him by saying, “Take any chapter you wish from the Musannaf of Wakee’. Ask me any hadith and I’ll tell you the chain of narrators, or tell me any chain of narrators and I’ll tell you the hadith!”

He was challenged in his deen like few other humans have been challenged. His name remains engraved in our admiration till today – across hundreds of years, across thousands of miles, across thousands of nations – because of his love for the Sunnah and his stand against those that would seek to corrupt it.

Reading through his life, I came across an event that brought back sad memories. How would you feel if your father was swore at in public? Imam Ahmad once prayed ‘Asr and he sat with his son in the masjid alone with another man by the name of Muhammad ibn Sa’eed Al-Khuttalee. Al-Khuttalee then remarked, “Did you (O Ahmad) tell the people to boycott Zayd ibn Khalaf?”

Imam Ahmad replied, “I received a letter from his people asking about his affair, so I replied explaining his madhhab and what he has innovated (in the Sunnah) and commanded that they not sit with him…”

Al-Khuttalee exploded in Imam Ahmad’s face, red with anger, “I’m going to make sure you go back to prison. I’m going to have them crush your ribs…”

The vulgarity grew louder and louder. Imam Ahmad turned to his son, “Don’t reply to what he says and don’t speak to him.”

Imam Ahmad took his sandals – al-Khuttalee swearing from behind his back – and told his son, “Tell the neighbors to not speak to him nor to reply to him.” Imam Ahmad stepped away as Al-Khuttalee continued in the background cursing and shouting profanity.

When the Khalifah al-Mu’tasim heard that Imam Ahmad had not agreed with him and his court muftis on a specific issue, they brought him and questioned him in the courtyard of the Khalifah. They would debate with him and like a gladiator with a spear he would hit back with bigger and stronger arguments. The muftis would shout, “O Khalifah, he has done kufr!” until the Al-Mu’tasim was convinced and in came the executioners.

They stripped Imam Ahmad and each of the strongest guards would take turns lashing Imam Ahmad until he fell unconscious. Regardless of his state, they continued the lashing. The sun went down that day and Imam Ahmad had not relented in his faith. That day he became an icon for all followers of Sunnah.

Qutaybah said, “If you ever see someone that loves Imam Ahmad, know that they are a follower of the Sunnah.”

Al Hasan ibn Arafah narrated that he visited Imam Ahmad ibn Hanbal after he was whipped and tortured and said to him, “O Abu Abdullah, you have reached the station of the Prophets!’”

Imam Ahmad said, “Keep quiet. Verily, I saw nothing more than people selling their deen and I saw scholars that were with me sell their faith. So I said to myself, ‘Who am I? What am I? What am I going to say to Allah tomorrow when I stand in front of Him and He asks me, if I sold my deen like the other did?’ So I looked at the whip and the sword and chose them.”

Imam Ahmad went on and said, “If I die I shall return to Allah and say, ‘I was told to say that one of Your Characteristics was something created but I did not.’ After that, it will be up to Him – either to punish me or forgive me.”

Al-Hasan ibn Arafah then asked, “Did you feel pain when they whipped you?”

He replied, “Yes, I felt the pain up to 20 lashes then I lost all feeling (they whipped him over eighty times). After it was over I felt no pain and that day I prayed Dhur standing.”

And in fact, he prayed as the blood soiled his clothes. In fact some of the goverment scholars laughed and joked about his ordeal by stating that how can he pray when he is drenched in blood to which he replied, that his analogy is that of the great Chaliph Umar ibn Al-Khattab who prayed fajr when he was stabbed by the Persian polytheist.

Al-Hasan ibn Arafah started weeping when he heard what had happened. Imam Ahmad questioned him, “Why are you crying? I did not lose my eman. After that why should I care if I lose my life.”

Before – when Imam Ahmad was being led off to the Khalifah – people had tried to dissuade him from a most certain execution. His student, Al-Marrudhee, had told him, “O teacher, Allah says, ‘Do not kill yourselves.’”

Imam Ahmad replied, “O Marrudhee, go outside and tell me what you see.”

Al-Marrudhee went to the wall of the Khalifah’s court and saw an ocean of students with their pens and scrolls in their hands. He asked some of them, “What are you waiting here for?”

They said, “We are waiting to see what Ahmad will say and then transcribe it.”

Al-Marrudhee went back to Imam Ahmad and told him what he had seen. “O Marrudhee,” he said, “what shall I gain by misguiding all those people?”

Imam Ahmad lived a life of poverty. When others eat lavishly remember there were days – as Abdurrazzaq recalls – that Imam Ahmad would make a mistake in salah and when Abdurrazzaq inquired further, he learned that Imam Ahmad had not eaten in 3 days.

In this life of poverty, hardship and trials, Abdullah asked his father one day, “Abi, when will we ever relax?”

His father, one of the greatest revivers of the Sunnah, a role model for all Muslims and a great mujahid looked him in the eye and said, “With the first step we take into Jannah.”

Taken from a khutbah by Shaykh Muhammad Al-Shareef, edited with some extra point insh’Allah

 

“I Can’t, It’s Impossible” – Impossible is nothing!

One often hears these words repeated, and they are a major reason for the state of failure that the Ummah is enduring.

These words are rooted in a state of mental inability, even though this inability is illusory, not real. Indeed, disabled minds only produce failure.

There is no doubt that there are things in life that are impossible. This is why when the Prophet – blessings and peace be upon him – used to take the oath of allegiance from his companions, he would make them repeat, “[I will listen and obey] to the utmost of my ability”. Allah – Glorified is He – says “Allah does not burden any soul with more than it can bear” [2:286]

This shows that there are some things beyond our abilities. We are not talking about this fact here. For otherwise we may enter into a prolonged discussion, and end upholding the illusion “I can’t, it’s impossible”, and moreover giving this illusion an ‘Islamic’ justification!

These two phrases “I can’t, it’s impossible” – despite their difference in meaning – have become a law that is used to excuse every failure, negligence and backwardness. They are used to justify the current backwardness, to numb the senses, to destroy the resolve of the Ummah, and to kill every success in its infancy.

Many people, generation after generation, took these two phrases as a beacon guiding their lives, as a way of thinking that makes them accept the current bitter state of affairs, and at the same time feel satisfied that there is nothing they can do.

I stand perplexed before the incredible backwardness of the Ummah, despite its enormous potential for success, progress, and leadership. I have thought long and hard about this, and have decided that the most prominent reason for this backwardness – and there are many – is the illusion “I can’t, its impossible”. This illusion has turned into an unshakeable principle. From it we take off, and in its darkness we operate.

How many tribulations befell us, and are still falling, because of this illusion. The most dangerous of these is not realizing that this is just an illusion; that it disappears when we start investigating it. But you will find those who waste a part of their life defending the idol “I can’t, it’s impossible”. They waste a part of their life trying to prove that this idol is a solid fact; an unquestionable axiom.

This illusion did not form overnight. It is the result of an accumulation of many factors, over the course of many years. Instead of producing men who would lead the Ummah forward without surrendering to the difficulties and obstacles, we found those factors producing more hopelessness, failure and despair.

But I am also amazed at that idolatrous nation that took from difficulties a starting point for its progress, until it was able to compete vigorously with its former enemies, without surrendering to psychological defeat, nor emotional despair. Japan rose from the ashes of Hiroshima and Nagasaki to become an important economic power, and did not make those defeats a reason to cry and hope for the sympathies of others.

As for Germany, it came out from underneath the ruins of World War II to become a powerful nation, and its economy one of the strongest in the world. This despite the fact that Germany was destroyed not long ago – the period between its destruction and its rise as an economic leader is less than 30 years.

Let me just imagine. Had the revivers of the Ummah surrendered to the illusion “I can’t, it’s impossible”, how would the Ummah have been now?!!

Had Abu Bakr – may Allah be pleased with him – said, “I can’t fight the Arabs after their apostasy, and I will surrender to this bitter state of affairs”, what would the result have been? Simply thinking about that scares me.

Had Imam Ahmad bin Hanbal – may Allah have mercy on him – not took his solid stand in the face of the makers of fitnah, backed by rulers who did not realize the danger of what is being said…Had he surrendered and said, “I can’t, it’s impossible”, do you think that that great victory for Ahl-us-Sunnah (at the hands of one man!) would have taken place?

Had Salahu-ud-Din surrendered to the awful humiliation that the Ummah endured under the occupation of the crusaders, excusing himself that he cannot take on that great power that possesses the most powerful weapons, with the unqualified support of many countries… Had he accepted what many other rulers of his time had accepted, humiliation and subjugation, together with the guarantee of continued rule…Had he done this, and said the removal of the crusaders is impossible, would Jerusalem have been purified from the crusaders and their hatred? How today is like yesterday.

Had Shaikh-ul-Islam, Ibn Taymiyah – may Allah have mercy on him – not seriously raised the banner of knowledge, action and jihad, at a time of when callers to falsehood and innovation became outspoken, at a time of political and military defeats…Had he surrendered to the belief “I can’t, it’s impossible”, would history have recorded for us that huge heritage of heroism, knowledge and challenging of falsehood?

Had Muhammad bin Abdul-Wahhab – may Allah have mercy on him – when he found the Arabian Peninsula living in the darkness of ignorance, innovation and blind following, had he accepted for himself what other righteous people did, “I can’t, it’s impossible”, do you think the Peninsula would have awaken from its sleep and got rid of its idolatry and innovations?

Our long history is full of such pioneering leaders and revivers, who recorded for us the most admirable examples the Muslim’s ability to overcome the greatest of physical and mental obstacles, neither surrendering to psychological defeat, nor allowing the compound difficulties to numb their senses.

Many would say, “They were great men, and how few such men are!!”

I say that we did not know they were great until after they recorded those shinning pages of history with their admirable victories in different fields. Before that they were just ordinary men. However, for many reasons, they were able to climb the ladder of success that made them heroes and leaders. Foremost of these reasons is the destruction of the illusion “I can’t, it’s impossible”

From missionislam.com

 
 
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