Thursday 31 December 2009

Naive Students

Mullah Nasruddin had students from out of town.
During the day he instructed them at the Madrasa and at night he and his wife accommodated them in their own home.
One evening, Mullah and his young students were returning back from a long day's study at the Madrasa.
On their way home, they saw a couple of thieves in front of a shop. One of the men was filing the lock on the door with a rasp and the other one was watching him. The students, not realizing that the two men were intending to rob the store, asked Mullah Nasruddin what they were doing. Mullah Nasruddin was in no mood to get involved with two burly robbers, but at the same time, he didn't want his students to think that he was witnessing a crime without doing anything about it. So, he decided to lie about what was going on.
`One of them is playing the guitar and the other is listening to the music.' he explained evasively.
`But Mullah, what kind of music is this?' the boys protested, `There is no sound.'
`Oh, there will be sound,' Mullah Nasruddin reassured them, `this is a special guitar, its music will be heard tomorrow morning when the shop owner returns.'

Dealing with Extreme Evangelicals - Sh Abdal-Hakim Murad








La ilaha illallah - Hadra


A Compendium of Knowledge - Sh Muhammad Al- Yaqoubi







Ya Habibi Sayyidi - Talib al-Habib



Ya Habibi Sayyidi Lyrics by Talib al-Habib


chorus
s-salamu alayka ya habibi sayyidi,
As-salamu alayka ya nabi al-`arabi


As-salamu alayka ya habibi sayyidi
As-salamu alayka ya nabi al-`arabi
As-salamu alayka ya shafi` al-muznibin
As-salamu alayka rahamtallah lil `alamin


With every breath I take, every beating of my heart
In word and silence let there be peace upon you.
Oh fountain of perfection, oh ocean of peace
Oh healer of broken hearts, how much longer shall we be apart?


With every step I take towards your resting place
Heart filled with restlessness, my eyes full of tears
If my soul could take flight, carry me through this night
I would travel to Madina to stand, eyes downcast, before you


Like the sun you rose over us, bringing light to our darkened world
Purified by your wisdom, sanctified by your love
And we follow in your way, along the path that you have made
Let us reach our goal at last – take our hands, lead our hearts


Allah’s peace on you Ya Nabi, in every eye-blink and every tear
From the dawn of creation till the last day shall come
When the faithful remember you, when the heedless forget
May you rest in the mercy and the peace of the Almighty.


Oh beloved of the Lord, hear my greeting, hear my call
Bless this seeker of your love with the vision of you.


(Sallallahu Alayhi Wa Sallam)

Wednesday 30 December 2009

The Ox and the Pot

An ox was trying to drink the water left at the bottom of a pot.

He pushed his head a little too far in and he got stuck.

The poor thing started to struggle desperately to free himself off the pot but he was not able to pull his head out.

The owner of the ox was panicked and all the neighbours came to help.

Some pulled the pot, some pulled the ox. No use.

Mullah Nasruddin happened to be passing by.

When he saw all the people unsuccessfully trying to get the head of the ox out of a pot, he offered his help.

`Bring me an axe!' he said, confidently. When the axe arrived, he chopped the head off the unfortunate animal.

After this, he realized that the head was still in the crock. He swung the axe once more and broke the pot. This freed the severed head.

`You see,' he addressed the crowd watching in shock, 'it was this simple.'

Ya Nabi Salamun Alaika - Raihan



Lyrics

Ya Nabi salamualaika,
Ya Rasul sallam alaika,
Yaa Habib salam alaika,
Solawatullah alaika.


Ya Rasul kau bawa cahaya,
Menyinari alam buana,
Bumi tandus subur kembali,
Rasa gembira di hati.


Ya Nabi salamualaika,

Ya Rasul sallam alaika,
Yaa Habib salam alaika,
Solawatullah alaika.


Lahirmu membawa rahmat,
Memimpin kejalan selamat,
Akhlak mu yang sungguh memikat,
Contoh buat seluruh umat.


Ya Nabi salamualaika,

Ya Rasul sallam alaika,
Yaa Habib salam alaika,
Solawatullah alaika.


Mulianya pengorbanan mu,
Kebaikan yang kau seru,
Mulyanya pengorbananmu
Kebaikan yang kau seru


Ya Nabi salamualaika,

Ya Rasul sallam alaika,
Yaa Habib salam alaika,
Solawatullah alaika.


Biarpun halangan menimpa,
Namun dirimu tetap tabah,
Biarpun halangan menimpa,
Namun dirimu tetap tabah.


Ya Nabi salamualaika,

Ya Rasul sallam alaika,
Yaa Habib salam alaika,
Solawatullah alaika.


Ya Muhammad yang berjasa
Quran dan sunnah lah pusaka
Menjadi panduan manusia
Untuk hidup aman dan sentosa


Ya Nabi salamualaika,

Ya Rasul sallam alaika,
Yaa Habib salam alaika,
Solawatullah alaika.

Tuesday 29 December 2009

Laundry Day

Every time the Mullah Nasruddin's wife started to tackle the laundry, the weather took a turn for the worse.

The rain made the trips to the stream impossible, or if it started later on in the day, ruined the newly washed clothes hung out to dry in the yard.

Mullah Nasruddin and his wife could never catch a nice sunny day to carry the water, do the washing in the garden and lay the clothes out to dry.

Finally Mullah Nasruddin had an idea.

'We should not let Allah know about our intentions to do the laundry.' he said to his wife.

'How are we going to that?' asked the wife, doubtful.

'Well, when the weather is nice, you inform me that you plan to do a wash by sign language. Then I inconspicuously go to the grocer and buy the soap and the clay. We do not talk about doing the laundry at all.'

Some time later, on a sunny day, the Mullah's wife informed him by gestures that she needed to do the laundry.

Mullah Nasruddin went and purchased the necessary materials without saying a word to the grocer about the laundry.

But as soon as he left the store, he heard a loud thunder.

'No need to make a row,' he said heavenwards, 'it's not like we are going to do the laundry or anything.'

Walking On Water: The Three Faces Of Jesus

Lectures have been removed by user from youtube.

Following a Madhhab - Imam Zaid Shakir









Arrogance and Taqwa - Lecture by Sh Hamza Yusuf






Allahu - Talib Al Habib



Allahu

Allahu Allahu
Allahu Allahu

Oh Allah! Who can know of Your glory and might?
You turn night into day, You turn day into night
Every motion and rest, every silence and word
Is encompassed by You, is through Your power alone.

Oh my Lord who exists beyond beginnings or ends
On Your Will and Your Power all existence depends.
Space and time You transcend, You are true Unity
You are greater than all mortal minds can conceive.

Ya Allah, Ya Rahman, Ya Allah, Ya Rahim,
Ya Allah, Ya Karim, Ya Allah

Every atom and seed, every mountain and tree
All that dwells in the sky, and the earth and the sea
Every star in the heavens, the sun and the moon
Without rest, without pause, we all glorify You

Oh Lord of the Worlds full of mercy and grace
Make me one of those who will see Your Blessed Face
Purify me and guide me, make me pleasing to You
Let me live, let me die in remembrance of You.

There follows a recitation of selected verses from the Jawhara
at-Tauhid (lines: 22, 24, 26, 28, 30, 31 & 8) which detail
the 20 logically necessary attributes of Allah: existence,
begininglessness, endlessness, self-subsistence, unity, ,
transcendence, power, will, knowledge, life, sight, audition,
speech; and His being in actuality powerful, willing,
knowing, living, seeing, hearing and speaking.

Monday 28 December 2009

Malcolm X - Letter from Hajj

Letter from Mecca
Malcolm X

April, 1964


The Ka'ba, in Mecca -- the ancient House of Worship built by Abraham and Ishmael.
Never have I witnessed such sincere hospitality and overwhelming spirit of true brotherhood as is practiced by people of all colors and races here in this Ancient Holy Land, the home of Abraham, Muhammad and all the other Prophets of the Holy Scriptures. For the past week, I have been utterly speechless and spellbound by the graciousness I see displayed all around me by people of all colors.
I have been blessed to visit the Holy City of Mecca. I have made my seven circuits around the Ka'ba, led by a young Mutawaf named Muhammad. I drank water from the well of the Zam Zam. I ran seven times back and forth between the hills of Mt. Al-Safa and Al-Marwah. I have prayed in the ancient city of Mina, and I have prayed on Mt. Arafat.
There were tens of thousands of pilgrims, from all over the world. They were of all colors, from blue-eyed blonds to black-skinned Africans. But we were all participating in the same ritual, displaying a spirit of unity and brotherhood that my experiences in America had led me to believe never could exist between the white and non-white.
America needs to understand Islam, because this is the one religion that erases from its society the race problem. Throughout my travels in the Muslim world, I have met, talked to, and even eaten with people who in America would have been considered 'white'--but the 'white' attitude was removed from their minds by the religion of Islam. I have never before seen sincere and true brotherhood practiced by all colors together, irrespective of their color.
You may be shocked by these words coming from me. But on this pilgrimage, what I have seen, and experienced, has forced me to re-arrange much of my thought-patterns previously held, and to toss aside some of my previous conclusions. This was not too difficult for me. Despite my firm convictions, I have always been a man who tries to face facts, and to accept the reality of life as new experience and new knowledge unfolds it. I have always kept an open mind, which is necessary to the flexibility that must go hand in hand with every form of intelligent search for truth.
During the past eleven days here in the Muslim world, I have eaten from the same plate, drunk from the same glass, and slept in the same bed (or on the same rug)--while praying to the same God--with fellow Muslims, whose eyes were the bluest of blue, whose hair was the blondest of blond, and whose skin was the whitest of white. And in the words and in the actions in the deeds of the 'white' Muslims, I felt the same sincerity that I felt among the black African Muslims of Nigeria, Sudan, and Ghana.
We were truly all the same (brothers)--because their belief in one God had removed the white from their minds, the white from their behavior, and the white from their attitude.
I could see from this, that perhaps if white Americans could accept the Oneness of God, then perhaps, too, they could accept in reality the Oneness of Man--and cease to measure, and hinder, and harm others in terms of their 'differences' in color.
With racism plaguing America like an incurable cancer, the so-called 'Christian' white American heart should be more receptive to a proven solution to such a destructive problem. Perhaps it could be in time to save America from imminent disaster--the same destruction brought upon Germany by racism that eventually destroyed the Germans themselves.
Each hour here in the Holy Land enables me to have greater spiritual insights into what is happening in America between black and white. The American Negro never can be blamed for his racial animosities--he is only reacting to four hundred years of the conscious racism of the American whites. But as racism leads America up the suicide path, I do believe, from the experiences that I have had with them, that the whites of the younger generation, in the colleges and universities, will see the handwriting on the walls and many of them will turn to the spiritual path of truth--the only way left to America to ward off the disaster that racism inevitably must lead to.
Never have I been so highly honored. Never have I been made to feel more humble and unworthy. Who would believe the blessings that have been heaped upon an American Negro? A few nights ago, a man who would be called in America a 'white' man, a United Nations diplomat, an ambassador, a companion of kings, gave me his hotel suite, his bed. ... Never would I have even thought of dreaming that I would ever be a recipient of such honors--honors that in America would be bestowed upon a King--not a Negro.
All praise is due to Allah, the Lord of all the Worlds.


















Blessings of the day of Ashura - Imam Zaid Shakir

Imam Zaid shakir (teacher at the zaytuna college) talks briefly about the importance of Ashura, the 10th of the first month of the islamic calender, Muharram. He highlights the benefits of fasting on this day, as well as some of the lessons we are to learn from the heroism displayed in the battlefield of karbala, by the prince of the Ahle Bayt, Imam Hussein (may Allah be pleased with him and his noble family).





Constructive Approaches to Building a Moral Society - Sh Hamza Yusuf






True Islam and Fundamentalism - Sh Hamza Yusuf









 








Shaikh Hamza Yusuf @ Royal York Hotel




Madinah Tun Nabi (The Sultan of Madina) - Aashiq Al Rasul

 

Madina Tun Nabi Lyrics

Madinah Madinah
Madinah Madinah
Madinah Madinah
Madinah Madinah

The city of the Prophet where we all like to be


Madinah-tun-Nabi

Madinah Madinah
Madinah Madinah
Madinah Madinah
Madinah Madinah

The city that’s bright
Where you’ll become light
Of all worries and burdens
When you set sight your heart will delight
At the wonders of Madinah


Madinah-tun-Nabi


The city so sweet, Madinah-tun-Nabi
My heart is at ease, Madinah-tun-Nabi

Madinah Madinah
Madinah Madinah
Madinah Madinah
Madinah Madinah

The city, the people, the street, the markets, the dwellings, everything
Dawn and dusk, morning and night, sunset, every moment
Everything is peace
In Madinah-tun-Nabi
My heart is at ease
In Madinah-tun-Nabi

Madinah Madinah
Madinah Madinah
Madinah Madinah
Madinah Madinah

The city of love: Madinah-tun-Nabi
The city from above: Madinah-tun-Nabi
Rejoice every one: Madinah-tun-Nabi

Madinah Madinah
Madinah Madinah
Madinah Madinah
Madinah Madinah

Yeh Ghazi - Khalid Bin Walid - 1 - Zaid Hamid








The Messenger of Allah - Lecture by Sh Hamza Yusuf








Sunday 27 December 2009

Seeking Intercession - Sh Hussain Abdus Sattar







The Real Quaid-e-Azam - Zaid Hamid

In this special episode of Brasstacks Mr. Zaid Hamid pays tribute to the father of the nation Quaid-e-Azam Mohammad Ali Jinnah and puts an end to the baseless propaganda that Jinnah wanted a secular Pakistan.
















Rebuttal of Indian Dossier Against Pakistan - Zaid Hamid


Noor-e-Muhammad (saw) - Turkish Nasheed



If anyone can provide details regarding this nasheed it would be gratefully appreciated (proper title, artist, lyrics in turkish and translation etc)

Tasbih - Seedlings of Paradise - Talib Al Habib


Tasbih - Seedlings of Paradise

Subhan Allah, wa'l hamdu lillah
Wa la ilaha illa Allah
Allahu akbar wa la hawla
Wa la quwwata illa billah

All Allah's creation glorifies Him
Infinitely perfect, beyond understanding
And though we cannot praise Him
As much as He deserves,
We say 'glory to Allah, subhanallah!'

All praise is for Allah, exalted be He
He is worthy of all praise anyone could ever speak
In thankfulness for all the blessings He bestows
We say, 'praise to Allah, al-hamdu lillah!'

There is none we worship except for Allah
There is none we yearn for except for Allah
It is the best remembrance -- no god but Allah
Every moment in our hearts, we remember Allah

Allah is more exalted than heaven and earth
His pleasure more important than the greatest of rewards
Allah is greater than any praise we make of Him
So in word and deed and prayer we say, 'Allahu akbar.'

Kalimatan - Talib Al Habib



Kalimatan - The Seal of al-Bukhari Lyrics

Kalimatan habibatan ila ar-Rahman
Khafifatan `ala al-lisan, thaqilatan fi al-mizan
Subhanallahi wa bi hamdih, subhanallahi al-azim

Talib Al Habib - Light of the Dawn



Talib Al Habib - Light of the Dawn Lyrics

 I wake with the light of the dawn whispering
With joy in my heart and with praise on my lips
In stillness and twilight I stand before you
Bowing, prostrating I call Allahu


My eyes see your beauty in the dawn’s golden hues
My ears hear the thunder as it glorifies you
The rhythm of my heart beats the sound of your name
My breaths rise and fall with the tide of your praise


My soul knew and loved you before I was born
And without your mercy is lost and forlorn
Wherever I may wander down the pathways of life
My cry to you, oh my Lord, is ‘guide me to light’


Through all fear and helplessness, to you do I turn
For your breath of healing and peace do I yearn
For all that I have, my Lord, all that I am
Is from You, is for You and to You will return


Ya Allah, Ya Rahman, Ya Rahim, Ya Hayyu, Ya Qayyum

Saturday 26 December 2009

Trials and Tribulations of the Ummah by Iman Zaid Shakir

Reflections on Surah Al Balad








Ten Lessons Ibn al-Mubarak Taught Us

‘Abdullah bin al-Mubarak was a scholar known for simultaneously combining numerous traits of virtue. In fact, his friends would sit and count all of the good things that were part of his character and personality. adh-Dhahabi related that they said: “Let’s sit and count the good traits that Ibn al-Mubarak has.” So, they ended up listing: “Knowledge, Fiqh, literature, grammar, language, zuhd, eloquence, poetry, praying at night, worship, Hajj, Jihad, bravery, instinct, strength, speaking little in what doesn’t concern him, fairness, and lack of conflict with his companions.”

Reading through his life story, one sees exactly this and cannot help but to derive brief yet heavy lessons from how this man lived:

1- No matter how bad you think you are, you can always become better.

In ‘Tartib al-Madarik’ (1/159), al-Qadi ‘Iyad mentioned that Ibn al-Mubarak was asked about the circumstances in which he began studying. He replied: “I was a youth who drank wine and loved music and singing while engaging in these filthy acts. So, I gathered some friends to one of my gardens where there were sweet apples, and we ate and drank until we passed out while drunk. At the end of the night, I woke up and picked up the stringed oud and began singing:

Isn’t it time that you had mercy on me * And we rebel against those who criticize us?

And I was unable to pronounce the words as I intended. When I tried again, the oud began speaking to me as if it were a person, saying the verse: {“Isn’t it time for the hearts of those who believe to be affected by Allah’s reminder?”} [al-Hadid; 16] So, I said: “Yes, O Lord!” And I smashed the oud, spilled the wine, and my repentance with all its realities came by the grace of Allah, and I turned towards knowledge and worship.”
2 – You should associate with honorable people.

In ‘Sifat as-Safwah’ (2/323), Ibn al-Jawzi mentioned: “Ibn al-Mubarak’s home in Marw was vast. It measured fifty square yards. There was no person known for knowledge, worship, manhood, or high status in Marw except that you saw him in this house.”

3 – You should be a helpful guest.

In ‘Sifat as-Safwah’ (2/324), it is narrated that when an-Nadr bin Muhammad’s son got married, he invited Ibn al-Mubarak, “and when he arrived, Ibn al-Mubarak got up to serve the guests. an-Nadr did not leave him and swore that he would tell him to leave until he finally sat down.”

4 – You should give money to the poor.

In ‘Sifat as-Safwah’ (2/327), Ibn al-Jawzi mentions that Ibn al-Mubarak “would spend a hundred thousand dirhams a year on the poor.”

5 – You should always return borrowed items to their owners.

In ‘Sifat as-Safwah’ (2/329), al-Hasan bin ‘Arafah said that ‘Abdullah bin al-Mubarak told him: “I borrowed a pen from someone in Sham, and I intended to return it to its owner. When I arrived in Marw (in Turkmenistan!), I saw that I still had it with me. Abu ‘Ali (al-Hasan’s nickname), I went all the way back to Sham to return the pen to its owner!”

6 – You should be brave, and hide your good deeds:

In ‘Sifat as-Safwah’ (2/329), ‘Abdah bin Sulayman said: “We were on an expedition in the lands of the Romans with ‘Abdullah bin al-Mubarak. We met the enemy, and when the two armies met, a man came out from their side calling for a duel. One of our men went out to him and dueled with him for an hour, injuring him and killing him. Another came out, and he killed him. He called for another duel, and another man came out. They dueled for an hour, and he injured and killed him as well. The people gathered around this man, and I was with them, and saw that he was covering his face with his sleeve. I took the edge of his sleeve and pulled it away to find that it was ‘Abdullah bin al-Mubarak,” and in the version reported by adh-Dhahabi, he made him swear not to reveal his identity until the day he died.

7 – You should have a tender heart.

In ‘Sifat as-Safwah’ (2/330), al-Qasim bin Muhammad said: “We were on a journey with Ibn al-Mubarak, and I was always asking myself: what is so special about this man that he is so famous? If he prays, so do we. If he fasts, so do we. If he fights, so do we. If he makes Hajj, so do we.

One night, we spent the night in a house travelling on the way to Sham. The lamp went out, and some of us woke up. So, he took the lamp outside to light it, and stayed outside for a while. When he came back in with the lamp, I caught a glimpse of Ibn al-Mubarak’s face, and saw that his beard was wet with his tears. I said to myself: “This fear of Allah is what has made this man better than us. When the lamp went out and we were in darkness, he remembered the Day of Resurrection.”"

8 – You should be generous to your friends.

In ‘Sifat as-Safwah’ (2/329), Isma’il bin ‘Ayyash said: “I don’t know of a single good trait except that Allah has placed it in ‘Abdullah bin al-Mubarak. My friends told me that they were travelling with him from Egypt to Makkah, and he was serving them khabis (a sweet flour dish) while he was fasting the entire trip.”

9 – You should not give in to Satan’s whispers.

In ‘Tartib al-Madarik’ (1/159), it is related that Ibn al-Mubarak was making ablution, and Satan came to him and said: “You did not wipe over this part of your body.” Ibn al-Mubarak said: “I did.” Satan said: “No, you didn’t.” So, Ibn al-Mubarak said: “You are the one making the claim, and you must therefore bring proof to back the claim up.”

10 – You should sincerely pray for people to accept Islam.

In ‘Tartib al-Madarik’ (1/162), it is related that al-Hasan bin ‘Isa bin Sirjis would walk by Ibn al-Mubarak, and he was a Christian. Ibn al-Mubarak asked who he was, and was told: “He is a Christian.” So, Ibn al-Mubarak said: “O Allah, grant him Islam.” So, Allah answered his supplication and al-Hasan became an excellent Muslim, and he travelled to seek knowledge and became one of the scholars of the Ummah.”

Friday 25 December 2009

Love Even Those Who Revile You

Love Even Those Who Revile You
By Hamza Yusuf


An Interview with Shaykh Hamza Yusuf by Nazim Baksh

Q: The convenient response to those who revile your religion is to return the favor. The more virtuous position however is to forgive. Forgiveness as you know, while less in virtue when compared to love, nevertheless, can result in love. Love, by definition, does not require forgiveness. What many Muslims today seem to forget is that ours is a religion of love and our Prophet, peace be upon him, was the Habib, the Beloved. How did love, the defining virtue of our community, come to be replaced by an urge to redress wrongs, to punish instead of to forgive?

A: It is the result of Muslims seeing themselves as victims. Victimization is a defeatist mentality. It’s the mentality of the powerless. The word victim is from the Latin “victima” which carries with it the idea of the one who suffers injury, loss, or death due to a voluntary undertaking. In other words, victims of one’s own actions.

Muslims never really had a mentality of victimization. From a metaphysical perspective, which is always the first and primary perspective of a Muslim, there can be no victims. We believe that all suffering has a redemptive value.

Q: If the tendency among Muslims is to view themselves as victims which appears to me as a fall from grace, what virtue must we then cultivate to dispense with this mental and physical state that we now find ourselves in?

A: The virtue of patience is missing. Patience is the first virtue after tawba or repentance. Early Muslim scholars considered patience as the first maqam or station in the realm of virtues that a person entered into.

Patience in Islam means patience in the midst of adversity. A person should be patient in what has harmed or afflicted him. Patience means that you don’t lose your comportment or your composure. If you look at the life of the Prophet Muhammad, peace be upon him, you will never ever find him losing his composure. Patience was a hallmark of his character. He was ‘the unperturbed one’ which is one of the meanings of halim: wa kaana ahlaman-naas. He was the most unperturbed of humanity. Nothing phased him either inwardly or outwardly because he was with Allah in all his states.

Q: Patience is a beautiful virtue … the cry of Prophet Yaqub …. “fa sabran jamil.” Patience, it appears, is not an isolated virtue but rather it is connected to a network of virtues. Should Muslims focus on this virtue at the expense of the other virtues?

A: The traditional virtues of a human being were four and Qadi Ibn Al-Arabi considered them to be the foundational virtues or the ummahatul fadaa’il of all of humanity. They are: prudence, courage, temperance, and justice.

Prudence, or rather practical wisdom, and courage, are defining qualities of the Prophet. He, peace be upon him, said that God loves courage even in the killing of a harmful snake.

Temperance is the ability to control oneself. Incontinence, the hallmark of intemperance, is said to occur when a person is unable to control himself. In modern medicine it is used for someone who can’t control his urine or feces. But not so long ago the word incontinence meant a person who was unable to control his temper, appetite or sexual desire. Temperance is the moral virtue that moderates one’s appetite in accordance with prudence. In early Muslim scholarship on Islamic ethics, justice was considered impossible without the virtues of prudence, courage and temperance.

Generosity as a virtue is derived from courage because a generous person is required to be courageous in the face of poverty. Similarly, humility is a derivative from temperance because the humble person will often restrain the urge to brag and be a show-off because he or she sees their talents and achievements as a gift from Allah and not from themselves. Patience as a virtue is attached to the virtue of courage because the patient person has the courage to endure difficulties. So “hilim” (from which you get “halim”), often translated as for-bearance or meekness if you wish, is frowned upon in our society. Yet it is the virtue we require to stem the powerful emotion of anger. Unrestrained anger often leads to rage and rage can lead to violence in its various shades.

Our predecessors were known for having an incredible degree of patience while an increasing number of us are marked with an extreme degree of anger, resentment, hate, rancor and rage. These are negative emotions which present themselves as roadblocks to living a virtuous life.

A patient human being will endure tribulations, trials, difficulties, hardships, if confronted with them. The patient person will not be depressed or distraught and whatever confronts him will certainly not lead to a loss of comportment.

Allah says in the Qur’an: “Isbiru.” “Have patience and enjoin each other to patience.”

The beauty of patience is that “innallaha ma’assabirin” Allah is with the patient ones. If God is on your side you will always be victorious. Allah says in the Qur’an “Ista”inu bi-sabiri was-salat.”” Isti”aana is a reflexive of the Arabic verb “aana” which is “to help oneself.” Allah is telling us to help ourselves with patience and prayer.

This is amazing because the Prophet, peace be upon him, said “if you take help, take help from God alone.” And so in the Qur’an, Allah says: “ista inu hi-sabiri was-salaat”. This means taking help from patience and prayer because that is the means by which Allah has given you to take help from Him alone.

How is it then that a person sees himself as a victim when all calamities, difficulties and trials, are ultimately tests from Allah. This does nor mean the world is free of aggression and that victims have suddenly vanished. What I”m talking about is a person”s psychology in dealing with hardships.

The sacred law has two perspectives when looking at acts of aggression that are committed by one party against another. When it is viewed by those in authority the imperative is to seek justice. However, from the perspective of the wronged, it is not to seek justice bur instead to forgive.

Forgiveness, “afwa”, pardon, is nor a quality of authority. A court is not set up to forgive. It’s the plaintiff that’s required to forgive if there is going to be any forgiveness at all. Forgiveness will not come from the Qadi or the judge. The court is set up to give justice but Islam cautions us not to go there in the first place because “by the standard which you judge so too shall you be judged.” That’s the point. If you want justice, if you want God, the Supreme Judge of all affairs, to be just to others on your behalf, then you should know that your Lord will use the same standard with you.

Nobody on the “Day of Arafat” will pray: “Oh God, be just with me.” Instead you will hear them crying: “O Allah, forgive me, have mercy on me, have compassion on me, overlook my wrongs.” Yet, these same people are not willing to forgive, have compassion and mercy on other creatures of God.

Q: Imam Al-Ghazali argued that for these virtues to be effective they had to be in harmony. Otherwise, they said, virtues would quickly degenerate into vices. Do you think that these virtues exist today among Muslims but that they are out of balance? For example, the Arabs in the time of the Prophet had courage, but without justice it was bravado. Prudence without justice is merely shrewdness. Do you think that Muslims are clamoring for justice but have subsumed the virtues of temperance and prudence?

A: Yes. Muslims want courage and justice but they don’t want temperance and prudence. The four virtues relate to the four humors in the body. Physical sickness is related to spiritual sickness and when these four are out of balance, spiritual and moral sickness occurs. So when courage is the sole virtue, you no longer have prudence. You are acting courageously but imprudently and it’s no longer courage but impetuousness. It appears as courage but it is not. A person who is morally incapable of controlling his appetite has incontinence and thus he cannot be prudent nor courageous because part of courage is to constrain oneself when it is appropriate. Imam A1-Ghazali says that courage is a mean between impetuousness and cowardice.

The interesting point to note about the four virtues is that you either take them all or you don’t take them at all. It’s a packaged deal. There is a strong argument among moral ethicists that justice is the result of the first three being in perfect balance.

Q: You have painted a very interesting landscape in terms of Muslim behavior in the contemporary period but we are seeing evidence of resentment among some Muslims today which is very strange indeed. I am wondering how this might be related to a sense of victimization?

A: Of course it is. Look for example at the word injury. It comes from injuria, a Latin word that means unjust. So if I perceive my condition as unjust it is contrary to the message of the Qur’an. Whatever circumstances we find ourselves in we hold ourselves as responsible. It gets tricky to navigate especially when it comes to the oppressor and the oppressed.

The Prophet, peace be upon him, along with the early Muslim community, spent 13 years purifying themselves in Makkah. These were years of oppression and thus serious self-purification accompanied by an ethic of non-violence, forbearance, meekness, and humility. They were then given permission to migrate and to defend themselves. At this point they were not a people out to get vengeance and they were certainly not filled with resentment because they saw everything as coming from God. I’m not talking about being pleased with injustice because that’s prohibited. At the same time we accept the world our Lord has put us into and we see everything as being here purposefully, not without purpose, whether we understand it or not.

The modern Christian fundamentalists always talk about Islam as a religion devoid of love. It’s a very common motif in these religious fundamentalist books that attack Islam. They say “our religion is the religion of love and Islam is the religion of hate, animosity, and resentment.” Unfortunately, many Muslims have adopted it as their religion, but that doesn’t mean resentment has anything to do with Islam.

Love (mahaba) is the highest religious virtue in Islam. Imam Ghazali said that it is the highest maqam or spiritual station. It is so because trust, zhud (doing without), fear, and hope are stations of this world and so long as you are in this world these stations are relevant, but once you die they can no longer serve you. Love is eternal because love is the reason you were created. You were created to adore God. That’s why in Latin the word adore which is used for worship in English is also a word for love, adoration. You were created to worship God, in other words, to love Him because you can’t truly adore something or worship something that you don’t love. If you are worshipping out of fear, like Imam A1-Ghazali says, it’s not the highest level of worship, but its lowest.

Q: A vast number of young Muslims today who have the energy to run Down the road of hate do so thinking that it is a display of their Iman. What do you say to help them understand that hating wrongs has to be balanced with the virtues of mercy, justice, forgiveness, generosity, etc.

A: The challenge is to get your object of hate right and hate it for the right reason. In other words, there are things that we should hate for the sake of God. Oppression is something that you should hate. It’s not haram to hate the oppressor, but don’t hate them to the degree that it prevents you from being just because that is closer to Taqwa (awe of Allah). The higher position is to forgive for the sake of God. God gives you two choices — the high road or the low road — both of them will get you to paradise.

We should strive for the highest. Anger is a useful emotion. God created anger in order that we could act and respond to circumstances that need to be changed. Indignation is a beautiful word. Righteous indignation is a good quality and even though it is misused in modern English it’s actually a good thing. It means to be angry for the right reasons and then it is to be angry to the right degree because Allah says, “Do not let the loathing of a people prevent you from being just.”

This article originally apeared in Q News Magazine (2004)
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