Saturday 23 January 2010

The Account Book

The chief of police was a corrupt man who had made a fortune by receiving bribes. One day Timur asked him to bring his books in for examination. Nasreddin Hodja was present at this interview as well. When Timur saw the improbable amount of possessions listed in the chief's accounts, he got very upset. He ripped each page of the accounts and made the chief of police eat them. Nasreddin Hodja watched in horror.

Next, Timur asked the Hodja to collect the taxes of Aksehir and present them to him accompanied by a good list of how much is collected from whom. Nasreddin Hodja took this task very seriously, collected the taxes and kept accurate accounts. Then he asked his wife to bake a large pita bread. When the pita was ready, the Hodja wrote his numbers on it and presented it to Timur along with the collected money.

`Hodja, what is this?' asked Timur, `Why are your numbers on a pita bread?'

`Great Timur, I did so just in case you would make me eat my accounts too.'

The ill Omen

Padishah was returning from hunting. As he was coming out of the forest, he ran into Nasreddin Hodja. Padishah's horse was startled by the sudden appearance of the Hodja and his donkey, and halted unexpectedly. In the unfortunate mishap, the Padishah fell off from his horse. He was furious. He ordered the Hodja's head to be chopped off.

`My Padishah,' the Hodja dared to question, `why do you want your harmless slave's head off?'
`Because you appeared before me and you brought me bad luck.'

`O peerless Padishah, with all due respect, you appeared before me and you brought me even worse luck. You merely fell off from your horse, but I am the one who is going to lose his head. Who is an ill omen, you or me?'

Preparation for Returning to Allah

Preparation for Returning to Allah

by Ibn Hajar al-Asqalani

Translated by Shaykh Zaid Shakir

Ibn Abbas, radiyallahu anh - may Allah be well pleased with him, said that the Prophet, sallallahu alaihi wa sallam - peace and blessings upon his noble soul, said one day to Iblees from whom we seek refuge to Allah: "How many of your beloved are from my Ummah?"
He (Iblees) said: "Ten groups: The tyrannical leader; the arrogant; the wealthy one who is not concerned about how he earns his wealth, nor how he spends it; a religious scholar who supports the leader in his tyranny; the treacherous trader (in business); the one who monopolizes a commodity in order to drive up the price; the adulterer; the one who deals in interest; the miser who doesn't care from where he has accumulated his wealth; and the drunkard." Then he, peace and blessings upon his noble soul, said: "How many enemies do you have from my Ummah?"
He (Iblees) said: "Twenty groups: You Muhammad...I hate you*; the scholar who acts on his knowledge; the memorizer of Quran if he acts on what is in it; the one who calls for the five prayers and he loves the poor, downtrodden and the orphans; the one possessing a merciful heart; the one who humbles himself before the truth; a young person who grows up obeying Allah; the one who eats the halaal; two young people who love each other for the sake of Allah; the one who strives to make prayer in congregation; the one who prays at night while the people are asleep; the one who holds himself back from haraam; the one who gives sincere advise to the Muslim brothers with no ulterior motive; the one who remains in a constant state of wudu'u; the generous one; the one possessing good character; the one who confirms the truth of what Allah has guaranteed him; the one who does good to chaste widows; and the one who prepares for death."

Friday 22 January 2010

Your Beauty - Hamza Robertson



Your Beauty Lyrics - Hamza Robertson

Brighter than the sun
Fairer than the moon
Your beauty is so dazzling

Bigger than the sea
Higher than the clouds
Your soul is so enlightening

What Id give to see your face
Beaming with so much grace

Brighter than the sun
Fairer than the moon
Your beauty is so dazzling
Bigger than the sea
Higher than the clouds
Your soul is so enlightening (x2)


CHORUS:
Ya Mawlay, ya Mawlay Salli 'ala Taha (x2)
husnu Ahmadal Bashir
Akhjalal badral munir

Will I be from those
You welcome with a smile
As you call your nation
Come to my side

Or will I see you frown
And then turn away
I did let you down
I forgot this Day

What Id give to see your face
Beaming with so much grace

Brighter than the sun
Fairer than the moon
Your beauty is so dazzling

Bigger than the sea
Higher than the clouds
Your soul is so enlightening

CHORUS

Bridge:
Ya Habiba Allah
Ya Safiyya Allah
'Alayka Salatu Allah
Wa Salamu Allah


Your smile is so bright
It lits up the dark night
Brought mercy and light
To my waiting heart

I know that Im weak
Of my sins I can speak
Your mercy I seek
Though Im not worthy

What Id give to see your face
Beaming with so much grace

Brighter than the sun
Fairer than the moon
Your beauty is so dazzling

Bigger than the sea
Higher than the clouds
Your soul is so enlightening


CHORUS

Thursday 21 January 2010

The Whirling Dervishes and Orthodox Islam

The Whirling Dervishes and Orthodox Islam


Because their sama‘ or “spiritual recital” comprises a number of various elements, such as remembrance of Allah (dhikr), singing, dancing, and instrumental music, it seems best to mention some general considerations about the Islamic shari‘a before discussing each of these separately, in order to reach a more valid conclusion that is at the same time more general in scope.

First, the Islamic shari‘a furnishes a comprehensive criterion for all possible human actions, whether done before or never done before. It classifies actions into five categories, the obligatory (wajib), whose performance is rewarded by Allah in the next life and whose nonperformance is punished; the recommended (mandub), whose perfor­mance is rewarded but whose nonperformance is not pun­ished; the permissible (mubah), whose performance is not rewarded and whose nonperformance is not punished; the offensive (makruh), whose nonperformance is rewarded but whose performance is not punished; and the unlawful (haram) is that whose nonperformance is rewarded and whose performance is punished.

Now, Allah in His wisdom has made the vast majority of human actions permissible. He says in surat al-Baqara, “It is He who has created everything on earth for you” (Qur’an 2:29), which establishes the shari‘a principle that all things are mubah or permissible for us until Allah indicates to us that they are otherwise. Because of this, the fact that the Prophet (Allah bless him and give him peace) did not do this or that particular practice does not prove that it is offensive or unlawful, but only that it is not obligatory. 

This is the reason that when shari‘a scholars speak of bid‘a, they do not merely mean an “innovation” or something that was never done before, which is the lexical sense of the word, but rather a “blameworthy innovation” or something new that no legal evidence in Sacred Law attests to the validity of, which is the shari‘a sense of the word. The latter is the bid‘a of misguidance mentioned in the hadith “The worst of matters are those that are new, and every innovation (bid‘a) is misguidance” (Sahih Muslim. 5 vols. Cairo 1376/1956. Reprint. Beirut: Dar al-Fikr, 1403/1983, 2.592: 867), which, although general in wording, scholars say refers specifically to new matters that entail something offensive or unlawful. As Imam al-Shafi‘i explains:

New matters are of two kinds: something begun that contravenes the Qur’an, sunna, the position of early Muslims, or consensus of scholars (ijma‘): this innovation is misguidance. And something begun of the good in which there is no contravention of any of these, and is therefore something new (muhdatha) but not blameworthy. For when ‘Umar (Allah be well pleased with him) saw the [tarawih] prayer being performed [in a group by Muslims in the mosque] in Ramadan, he said, “What a good innovation (bid‘a) this is,” meaning something newly begun that not had been done before. And even though it had, this does not negate the foregoing (al-Dhahabi, Siyar a‘lam al-nubala’. 23 vols. Beirut: Mu’assassa al-Risala, 1401/1981, 10.70).
As for the practice of Muslims gathering together for group dhikr or the “invocation of Allah,” there is much evidence of its praiseworthiness in the sunna—aside from the many Qur’anic verses and the hadiths establishing the general merit of dhikr in every state—such as the hadith related by Bukhari:

Truly, Allah has angels going around the ways, looking for people of dhikr, and when they find a group of men invoking Allah, they call to one another, “Come here to what you looking for!” and they circle around them with their wings up to the sky of this world.

Then their Lord asks them, though He knows better than they, “What do My servants say?” And they reply, “They say, Subhan Allah (‘Allah is transcendently above all things’), Allahu Akbar (‘Allah is ever greatest’), and al-Hamdu li Llah (‘All praise is Allah’s’), and they exalt Your glory.”

He says, “Have they seen me?” And they answer, “No, by Allah, they have not seen You.” And He says, “How would it be, had they seen Me?” And they say, “If they had seen You, they would have worshipped You even more, glorified You more, and said Subhan Allah more” . . . .
The hadith continues to where Allah says to the angels:

“I charge all of you to bear witness that I forgive them.” Then one of the angels says, “So-and-so is among them although he is not one of them but only came for something he needed.” And Allah says, “They are companions through whom whoever keeps their company shall never meet perdition” (Sahih al-Bukhari. 9 vols. Cairo 1313/1895. Reprint (9 vols. in 3). Beirut: Dar al-Jil, n.d., 8.107–8: 6408).

The last line of the hadith shows the religion’s highest approval for gatherings of dhikr. Further, the explicit mention of the various forms of dhikr in the hadith suffice in reply to certain contemporary “re-formers” of Islam, who, in an attempt to reduce “sessions of dhikr” to education gatherings alone, quote the words of ‘Ata' (ibn Abi Rabah, Mufti of Mecca, d. 114/732), who reportedly said, Sessions of dhikr are the sessions of [teaching people] the lawful and unlawful, how you buy, sell, pray, fast, wed, divorce, make the pilgrimage, and the like (al-Nawawi, al-Majmu‘: Sharh al-Muhadhdhab. 20 vols. Cairo n.d. Reprint. Medina: al-Maktaba al-Salafiyya, n.d., 1.21).

Perhaps ‘Ata' intended to inform people that teaching and learning shari‘a are also a form of dhikr, but in any case it is clear from the Prophet’s explicit words (Allah bless him and give him peace) in the above hadith that “sessions of dhikr” cannot be limited to that alone, but primarily means gatherings of Muslims to invoke Allah in dhikr.

As for dancing, Imam Ahmad relates from Anas (Allah be well pleased with him), with a chain of transmission all of whose narrators are those of al-Bukhari except Hammad ibn Salama, who is one of the narrators of Muslim, that the Ethiopians danced in front of the Messenger of Allah (Allah bless him and give him peace); dancing and saying [in their language], “Muhammad is a righteous servant.” The Prophet (Allah bless him and give him peace) said, “What are they saying?” And they said, “‘Muhammad is a righteous servant’” (Musnad al-Imam Ahmad. 6 vols. Cairo 1313/1895. Reprint. Beirut: Dar Sadir, n.d., 3.152).

The fact that dancing was done before the Prophet (Allah bless him and give him peace) establishes that it is mubah or “permissible” in the shari‘a, for if it had been otherwise, he would have been obliged to condemn it. For this reason, Imam al-Nawawi, in his Minhaj al-talibin, the central legal work of the late Shafi‘i school, explicitly says:

Dancing is not unlawful, unless it is languid, like the movements of the effeminate. And it is permissible to speak and to sing poetry, unless it satirizes someone, is obscene, or alludes to a particular woman” (Minhaj al-talibin wa ‘umdat al-muttaqin. Cairo 1338/1920. Reprint. Cairo: Mustafa al-Babi al-Halabi, n.d., 152).
Islamic scholars point out that if something which is permissible, such as the singing of poetry or dancing, is conjoined with something which is recommended, such as dhikr or gatherings to make dhikr, the result of this conjoining will not be offensive (makruh) or unlawful (haram). Imam Jalal al-Din al-Suyuti was asked for a fatwa or formal legal opinion concerning “a group of Sufis who had gathered for a session of dhikr,” and said:
How can one condemn making dhikr while standing, or standing while making dhikr, when Allah Most High says, “. . . those who invoke Allah standing, sitting, and upon their sides” (Qur’an 3:191). And ‘A’isha (Allah be well pleased with her) said, “The Prophet (Allah bless him and give him peace) used to invoke Allah at all times” [Sahih Muslim, 1.282: 373]. And if dancing is added to this standing, it may not be condemned, as it is of the joy of spiritual vision and ecstasy, and the hadith exists [in many sources, such as Musnad al-Imam Ahmad, 1.108, with a sound (hasan) chain of transmission] that Ja‘far ibn Abi Talib danced in front of the Prophet (Allah bless him and give him peace) when the Prophet told him, “You resemble me in looks and in character,” dancing from the happiness he felt from being thus addressed, and the Prophet did not condemn him for doing so, this being a basis for the legal acceptability of the Sufis dancing from the joys of the ecstasies they experience (al-Hawi li al-fatawi. 2 vols. Cairo 1352/1933–34. Reprint. Beirut: Dar al-Kutub al-‘Ilmiyya, 1403/1983, 2.234).

Now, al-Suyuti was a hadith master (hafiz, someone with over 100,000 hadiths by memory) and a recognized mujtahid Imam who authored some six-hundred works in the shari‘a sciences, and his formal opinion, together with the previously cited ruling of Imam al-Nawawi in the Minhaj al-talibin, constitutes an explicit legal text (nass) for the Shafi‘i school establishing that circles of dhikr which comprise the singing of spiritual poetry and dancing are neither offensive (makruh) nor unlawful (haram); rather, they are permissible.
But the Mevlevi or “Whirling Dervish” sama‘s have another aspect to them that must be discussed before reaching a complete conclusion; namely, the use of musical instruments. This is something of a difficulty, for the Prophet (Allah bless him and give him peace) said:

There shall be groups of people from my community who shall consider fornication, silk, wine, and musical instruments to be lawful: groups shall camp beside a high mountain, whom a shepherd returning to in the evening with one of their herds shall approach for something he needs, and they shall tell him, “Come back tomorrow.” Allah shall destroy them in the night, bringing down the mountain upon them, and transforming others into apes and swine until the Day of Judgement (Sahih al-Bukhari, 7.138: 5590).

Hadith commentaries mention that the transforming (maskh) may mean either “their forms, literally, as happened to some previous mations; or else figuratively, alluding to the metamorphosis of their character” (al-Qastalani, Irshad al-sari li sharh Sahih al-Bukhari. 10 vols. Bulaq 1306/1888. Reprint. Beirut: Dar al-Fikr, 1410/1989, 8.317–18), but in either case, the punishment named in the hadith is a clear proof of the unlawfulness of each of the things mentioned in it.

This hadith is not part of the main text of Sahih al-Bukhari, but is rather of those appended to the Sahih by al-Bukhari ta‘liqan or “in commentary,” meaning hadiths (generally given together with the chapter headings) that are not always at the same level as the rigorously authenticated (sahih) ones, but may include the hasan or “well authenticated” as well, and which al-Bukhari mentioned to clarify or expand on the hadiths of the main corpus. But this particularly hadith is fully authenticated. The hadith master (hafiz) Ibn al-Salah states:

Ibn Hazm claimed that its chain of transmission was dissevered between al-Bukhari and Hisham ibn Ammar [al-Sulami, d. 245/868, whom al-Bukhari quoted it from], and considered this a rebuttal of the hadith as evidence that musical instruments were unlawful. He was wrong about this, in a number of ways. The hadith is rigorously authenticated (sahih), and known to have a contiguous chain of transmission meeting the requirements of the rigorously authenticated (al-sahih) (al-‘Asqalani, Fath al-Bari bi sharh Sahih al-Bukhari. 14 vols. Cairo: al-Maktaba all-Salafiyya, 1390/1970, 10.52: 5590).

The hadith is thus a fully authenticated proof of the unlawfulness of instrumental music. This is also the recorded position of all four madhhabs of Sunni jurisprudence, the Hanafi school (Ibn ‘Abidin, Radd al-muhtar ‘ala al-durr al-mukhtar. 5 vols. Bulaq 1272/1855. Reprint. Beirut: Dar Ihya’ al-Turath al-‘Arabi, 1407/1987, 5.253), the Maliki school (al-Dardir, al-Sharh al-saghir ‘ala Aqrab al-masalik ila madhhab al-Imam Malik. 4 vols. Cairo: Dar al-Ma‘arif, 1394/1974, 2.502), the Shafi‘i school (al-Nawawi, Minhaj al-talibin, 152), and the Hanbali school (al-Bahuti, Kashshaf al-qina‘ ‘an matn al-Iqna‘. 6 vols. Beirut: Dar al-Fikr, 1402/1982, 5.170). Readers who know fiqh literature will observe that each of these works is the top fatwa resource in its school. While it is true that certain Ottoman muftis made exceptions from this general rule, it was only under special circumstances of necessity considered pressing enough to warrant making an exception, such as with military bands, which they argued should be excepted from the prohibition because of the need to rouse the army to fight harder in jihad.

Certain muftis also gave fatwas that the exceptionalness of the spiritual states of the Sufis in their sessions of dhikr made it lawful for them to listen to musical instruments. This, they said, was because the reason for Allah’s prohibiting musical instruments was that they distract the heart from Allah, while in sessions of dhikr, they remind the heart of Him. This argument fails in my opinion not only because the shari‘a should apply to all Muslims equally, but also (and most importantly) because we cannot establish beyond a reasonable doubt that distracting from Allah is the only reason for music’s prohibition, in order to negate the prohibition in situations where it does not. There may be other reasons for its prohibition, or no “reason” at all, except as a test of our obedience to Allah.

The whirling dervishes in Aleppo and Damascus, I am told by Syrians, did not use musical instruments, but only the tambourine (daff), which is permissible in the Shafi‘i school of jurisprudence and others. I have heard that some Turkish sheikhs say that the Mevlevis’ use of musical instruments was begun only after the death of Jalal al-Din al-Rumi, the founder of the whirling dervishes. The opening lines of his Mathnawi are:
Listen to the reed how it tells a tale, complaining of separations—

Saying, “Ever since I was parted from the reed-bed, my lament hath caused man and woman to moan.
I want a bosom torn by severance, that I may unfold (to such a one) the pain of love-desire.
Every one who is left far from his source wishes back the time when he was united with it.
(The Mathnawi of Jalal al-Din al-Rumi. Trans. R. A. Nicholson. 3 vols. London 1926. Reprint. London: Luzac and Company, 1977, 5)

—From these lines, they understand the “song of a reed-pipe” as a metaphor for the longing of the spirit for its original knowledge of the Divine.

To summarize, circles of invocation of Allah (dhikr) conjoined with singing of permissible poetry and even dancing are compatible with the shari‘a of orthodox Islam, as we have reported above from the works of Imams al-Suyuti and al-Nawawi in the Shafi‘i school of jurisprudence. Music produced by instruments, in view of the Prophet’s condemnation of them (Allah bless him and give him peace) in Sahih al-Bukhari, is not lawful in Islam. The Mevlevis or whirling dervishes seem to have used musical instruments in their sama‘s at some times and places, but not used them at others. The latter, according to the evidence we have examined, is permissible (mubah), but the former, sama‘ with musical instruments, is not permissible, as the reasoning behind the fatwas that permit it is not strong enough, in my view, to modify the unlawfulness established by the hadith, which is also the position of the four schools of jurisprudence. And Allah knows best.

[Note: Someone writing to the editor in a subsequent issue of Q-News objected to the article’s saying that “Islamic scholars point out that if something which is permissible, such as the singing of poetry or dancing, is conjoined with something which is recommended, such as dhikr or gatherings to make dhikr, the result of this conjoining will not be offensive (makruh) or unlawful (haram).” This, the reader said, was wrong because the prayer (salat), for example, is something that is either obligatory or sunna, while eating and drinking are mubah or “permissible,” despite the fact that doing either in prayer is unlawful, showing that my reasoning here (on which Imam Suyuti’s fatwa above also turns) is mistaken.

The argument fails because its analogy is delusive. Eating, drinking, extraneous movement, everyday speech, and so forth are unlawful in prayer because of specific interdictions of them that have reached us in hadith from the Prophet himself (Allah bless him and give him peace), which is why the opening Allahu Akbar of the prayer is known in books of fiqh as the takbirat al-ihram, or simply the tahrima: It makes a whole range of permissible things haram or “unlawful” until one finishes. The analogy between the prayer, on the one hand, regarding which there are hadiths forbidding such permissible things in it, and dhikr, on the other, for which no such hadiths exist, is a false analogy, insufficient to build any ruling upon. The sole exceptions in Sacred Law to the praiseworthiness of dhikr in every state are lovemaking and going to the bathroom, when one’s dhikr must be confined to the heart, and neither relates to our question here.]

MMII © N. Keller
[Note: Someone writing to the editor in a subsequent issue of Q-News objected to the article’s saying that “Islamic scholars point out that if something which is permissible, such as the singing of poetry or dancing, is conjoined with something which is recommended, such as dhikr or gatherings to make dhikr, the result of this conjoining will not be offensive (makruh) or unlawful (haram).” This, the reader said, was wrong because the prayer (salat), for example, is something that is either obligatory or sunna, while eating and drinking are mubah or “permissible,” despite the fact that doing either in prayer is unlawful, showing that my reasoning here (on which Imam Suyuti’s fatwa above also turns) is mistaken.

The argument fails because its analogy is delusive. Eating, drinking, extraneous movement, everyday speech, and so forth are unlawful in prayer because of specific interdictions of them that have reached us in hadith from the Prophet himself (Allah bless him and give him peace), which is why the opening Allahu Akbar of the prayer is known in books of fiqh as the takbirat al-ihram, or simply the tahrima: It makes a whole range of permissible things haram or “unlawful” until one finishes. The analogy between the prayer, on the one hand, regarding which there are hadiths forbidding such permissible things in it, and dhikr, on the other, for which no such hadiths exist, is a false analogy, insufficient to build any ruling upon. The sole exceptions in Sacred Law to the praiseworthiness of dhikr in every state are lovemaking and going to the bathroom, when one’s dhikr must be confined to the heart, and neither relates to our question here.]

The Hadra and the Sacred Law

The Hadra and the Sacred Law


A person coming to the Middle East to learn something about the tariqa is likely, at some point in his visit, to see the brethren in the hadra or “public dhikr” as it has been traditionally practiced by generations of Shadhilis in North Africa under such sheikhs as al-‘Arabi al-Darqawi, Muhammad al-Buzidi, and Ahmad al-‘Alawi before being brought to Damascus from Algeria by Muhammad ibn Yallis and Muhammad al-Hashimi at the beginning of this century.

Upon entering the mosque, one will see circles of men making dhikr (women participants are screened from view upstairs) standing and holding hands, now slightly bowing in unison, now moving up and down with their knees in unison, the rows rising and falling, breathing in unison, while certain of them alternate at pacing around their midst, conducting the tempo of the group’s motion and breathing with their arms and step. Singers near the sheikh, in solo or chorus, deliver mystical odes to the rhythm of the group; high, spiritual poetry from masters like Ibn al-Farid, Sheikh Ahmad al-‘Alawi, ‘Abd al-Qadir al-Himsi, and our own sheikh.

Though a very stirring experience, it is meticulously timed and controlled, and as with all group dhikrs, the main adab or “proper behaviour” is harmony. No one should stand out in any way, but rather all subordinate their movement, breathing, and dhikr to that of the group. The purpose is to forget one’s individuality in the collective sea of spirits making dhikr in unison. Individual motives, thoughts, and preoccupations are momentarily put aside by means of the Sacred Dance, of moving together as one, sublimating and transcending the limitary and personal through the timelessness of rhythm, conjoined with the melody of voices singing spiritual meanings.

It is an experience that joins those travelling towards Allah spiritually, socially, and emotionally. Few forget it, and visitors from the West to whom it is unfamiliar sometimes wonder if it is a bid‘a or “reprehensible innovation,” as it was not done in the time of the earliest Muslims, or whether it is unlawful (haram) or offensive (makruh); and why they see the ulama and righteous attending it in Damascus, Jerusalem, Aden, Cairo, Tripoli, Tunis, Fez, and wherever there are people of the path.

I was one of those who asked our sheikh about the relation of the hadra to the shari‘a or “Sacred Law” which is the guiding light of our tariqa. As Muslims, our submission to the law is total, and there are no thoughts or opinions after legally answering the question “Does the hadra agree with orthodox Islam?”
Because it comprises a number of various elements, such as gathering together for the remembrance of Allah (dhikr), singing, and dancing, we should reflect for a moment on some general considerations about the Islamic shari‘a before discussing each of these separately.

First, the Islamic shari‘a furnishes a comprehensive criterion for all possible human actions, whether done before or never done before. It classifies actions into five categories, the obligatory (wajib), whose performance is rewarded by Allah in the next life and whose nonperformance is punished; the recommended (mandub), whose perfor­mance is rewarded but whose nonperformance is not pun­ished; the permissible (mubah), whose performance is not rewarded and whose nonperformance is not punished; the offensive (makruh), whose nonperformance is rewarded but whose performance is not punished; and the unlawful (haram), whose nonperformance is rewarded and whose performance is punished.

Now, Allah in His wisdom has made the vast majority of human actions permissible. He says in surat al-Baqara, “It is He who has created everything on earth for you” (Koran 2:29), which establishes the shari‘a principle that all things are mubah or permissible for us until Allah indicates to us that they are otherwise. Because of this, the fact that the Prophet (Allah bless him and give him peace) did not do this or that particular practice does not prove that it is offensive or unlawful, but only that it is not obligatory. 

This is the reason that when shari‘a scholars speak of bid‘a, they do not merely mean an “innovation” or something that was never done before, which is the lexical sense of the word, but rather a “blameworthy innovation” or something new that no legal evidence in Sacred Law attests to the validity of, which is the shari‘a sense of the word. The latter is the bid‘a of misguidance mentioned in the hadith “The worst of matters are those that are new, and every innovation (bid‘a) is misguidance” (Sahih Muslim. 5 vols. Cairo 1376/1956. Reprint. Beirut: Dar al-Fikr, 1403/1983, 2.592: 867), which, although general in wording, scholars say refers specifically to new matters that entail something offensive or unlawful. Imam Shafi‘i explains:

New matters are of two kinds: something newly begun that contravenes the Koran, sunna, the position of early Muslims, or consensus of scholars (ijma‘): this innovation is misguidance. And something newly inaugurated of the good in which there is no contravention of any of these, and is therefore something which although new (muhdatha), is not blameworthy. For when ‘Umar (Allah be well pleased with him) saw the [tarawih] prayer being performed [in a group by Muslims at the mosque] in Ramadan, he said, “What a good innovation (bid‘a) this is,” meaning something newly begun that had not been done before. And although in fact it had, this does not negate the legal considerations just advanced [n: i.e. that it furnishes an example of something that ‘Umar, who was a scholar of the Sahaba, praised as a “good innovation” despite his belief that it had not been done before, because it did not contravene the broad principles of the Koran or sunna] (Dhahabi: Siyar a‘lam al-nubala’. 23 vols. Beirut: Mu’assassa al-Risala, 1401/1981, 10.70).

As for the practice of Muslims gathering together for group dhikr or the “invocation of Allah,” there is much evidence of its praiseworthiness in the sunna—aside from the many Koranic verses and the hadiths establishing the general merit of dhikr in every state—such as the hadith related by Bukhari:
Truly, Allah has angels going about the ways, looking for people of dhikr, and when they find a group of men invoking Allah, they call to one another, “Come to what you have been looking for!” and they circle around them with their wings up to the sky of this world.

Then their Lord asks them, though He knows better than they, “What do My servants say?” And they reply, “They say, Subhan Allah (“I glorify Allah’s absolute perfection”), Allahu Akbar (“Allah is ever greatest”), and al-Hamdu li Llah (“All praise be to Allah”), and they extoll Your glory.” 
He says, “Have they seen Me?” And they answer, “No, by Allah, they have not seen You.” And He says, “How would it be, had they seen Me?” And they say, “If they had seen You, they would have worshipped You even more, glorified You more, and said Subhan Allah the more.”
He asks them, “What do they ask of Me?” And one answers, “They ask You paradise.” He says, “Have they seen it?” And they say, “No, by Allah, My Lord, they have not seen it.” And He says, “How would it be, had they seen it?” And they say, “If they had seen it, they would have been more avid for it, sought it more, and been more desirous of it.”

Then He asks them, “From what do they seek refuge?” And they answer, “From hell.” He says, “Have they seen it?” And they say, “No, by Allah, they have not seen it.” And He says, “How would it be, had they seen it?” And they say, “If they had seen it, they would have fled from it even more, and been more fearful of it.”
He says, “I charge all of you to bear witness that I have forgiven them.” Then one of the angels says, “So-and-so is among them, though he is not one of them but only came for something he needed.” And Allah says, “They are companions through whom no one who keeps their company shall meet perdition” (Sahih al-Bukhari. 9 vols. Cairo 1313/1895. Reprint (9 vols. in 3). Beirut: Dar al-Jil, n.d., 8.107–8: 6408).
The last line of the hadith shows the highest approval for gatherings of dhikr in the religion of Allah. Some other accounts transmit the condemnation of Ibn Mas‘ud (Allah be well please with him) for gathering together to say Subhan Allah (perhaps out of fear of ostentation), but even if we were to grant their authenticity, the above hadith of Bukhari, containing the explicit approval of such gatherings by Allah and His messenger (Allah bless him and give him peace) suffices us from needing the permission of Ibn Mas‘ud or any other human being. Further, the explicit mention of the various forms of dhikr in the hadith suffice in reply to certain contemporary “re-formers” of Islam, who attempt to reduce “sessions of dhikr” to educational gatherings alone by quoting the words of ‘Ata' (ibn Abi Rabah, Mufti of Mecca, d. 114/732), who reportedly said,
Sessions of dhikr are the sessions of [teaching people] the lawful and unlawful, how you buy, sell, pray, fast, wed, divorce, make the pilgrimage, and the like (Nawawi: al-Majmu‘: Sharh al-Muhadhdhab. 20 vols. Cairo n.d. Reprint. Medina: al-Maktaba al-Salafiyya, n.d., 1.21).


Perhaps ‘Ata' intended to inform people that teaching and learning shari‘a are also a form of dhikr, but in any case it is clear from the Prophet’s explicit words (Allah bless him and give him peace) in the above hadith that “sessions of dhikr” cannot be limited to teaching and learning Sacred Law alone, but primarily mean gatherings of Muslims to invoke Allah in dhikr.

As for dancing, Imam Ahmad relates from Anas (Allah be well pleased with him), with a chain of transmission all of whose narrators are those of Bukhari except Hammad ibn Salama, who is one of the narrators of Muslim, that the Ethiopians danced in front of the Messenger of Allah (Allah bless him and give him peace); dancing and saying [in their language], “Muhammad is a righteous servant.” The Prophet (Allah bless him and give him peace) said, “What are they saying?” And they said, “‘Muhammad is a righteous servant’” (Musnad al-Imam Ahmad. 6 vols. Cairo 1313/1895. Reprint. Beirut: Dar Sadir, n.d., 3.152).

Other versions of the hadith clarify that this took place in the mosque in Medina, though in any case, the fact that dancing was done before the Prophet (Allah bless him and give him peace) establishes that it is mubah or “permissible” in the shari‘a, for if it had been otherwise, he would have been obliged to condemn it. For this reason, Imam Nawawi says:

Dancing is not unlawful, unless it is languid, like the movements of the effeminate. And it is permissible to speak and to sing poetry, unless it satirizes someone, is obscene, or alludes to a particular woman” (Minhaj al-talibin wa ‘umdat al-muttaqin. Cairo 1338/1920. Reprint. Cairo: Mustafa al-Babi al-Halabi, n.d., 152).
This is a legal text for the permissibility of both dancing and singing poetry from the Minhaj al-talibin, the central legal work of the entire late Shafi‘i school. Islamic scholars point out that if something which is permissible, such as singing poetry or dancing, is conjoined with something that is recommended, such as dhikr or gatherings to make dhikr, the result of this conjoining will not be offensive (makruh) or unlawful (haram). Imam Jalal al-Din Suyuti was asked for a fatwa or formal legal opinion concerning “a group of Sufis who had gathered for a session of dhikr,” and he replied:

How can one condemn making dhikr while standing, or standing while making dhikr, when Allah Most High says, “. . . those who invoke Allah standing, sitting, and upon their sides” (Koran 3:191). And ‘A'isha (Allah be well pleased with her) said, “The Prophet (Allah bless him and give him peace) used to invoke Allah at all of his times” [Sahih Muslim, 1.282: 373]. And if dancing is added to this standing, it may not be condemned, as it is of the joy of spiritual vision and ecstasy, and the hadith exists [in many sources, such as Musnad al-Imam Ahmad, 1.108, with a sound (hasan) chain of transmission] that Ja‘far ibn Abi Talib danced in front of the Prophet (Allah bless him and give him peace) when the Prophet told him, “You resemble me in looks and in character,” dancing from the happiness he felt from being thus addressed, and the Prophet did not condemn him for doing so, this being a basis for the legal acceptability of the Sufis dancing from the joys of the ecstasies they experience (al-Hawi li al-fatawi. 2 vols. Cairo 1352/1933–34. Reprint. Beirut: Dar al-Kutub al-‘Ilmiyya, 1403/1983, 2.234).

Now, Suyuti was a hadith master (hafiz, someone with over 100,000 hadiths by memory) and a recognized mujtahid Imam who authored hundreds of works in the shari‘a sciences, and his formal opinion, together with the previously cited ruling of Imam Nawawi in the Minhaj al-talibin, constitutes an authoritative legal text (nass) in the Shafi‘i school establishing that circles of dhikr which comprise the singing of spiritual poetry and dancing are neither offensive (makruh) nor unlawful (haram)—unless associated with other unlawful factors such as listening to musical instruments or the mixing of men and women—but rather are permissible.
To summarize, the hadra of our tariqa, consisting of circles of invocation of Allah (dhikr) conjoined with the singing of permissible poetry and dancing, is compatible with the Sacred Law of orthodox Islam; and when the latter elements facilitate presence of heart with Allah (as they do with most people who possess hearts), they deserve a reward from Allah by those who intend them as such. And this is the aim and importance of the hadra in the tariqa.
MCMXCVI © N. Keller

Guidance - Noor



Guidance Lyrics - Noor



Guidance from Allah, shone upon the Earth
As a beacon of light, for all the universe


Adam, Noah and Ibrahim
Mousa (Moses), Isaa (Jesus) and Muhammad
Noble prophets sent as mercy
Guidance from Allah Almighty


Followers of the prophets, share the bonds of brotherhood
Leading lives of humility, models for humanity


Through their faith they spread the light
Throughout their lives they taught what's right
Respect for all of God's creations
Peace for all the many nations


We turn to Allah, every night every day
Allahu Allah, to you we pray


Grant us knowledge, hope and wisdom
Grant our voices strength in freedom
Fill our lives with love and mercy
Guidance from Allah Almighty


Anwarul Islam lama'at fid-dunya
Fa ada't afham lima'alima 'ulya

Wednesday 20 January 2010

Sh Hamza Yusuf with Syed Muhammad Naquib Al-Attas

Shaykh Hamza Yusuf interviews Professor Sayyid Muhammad Naquib Al-Attas. From the MBC program: Rihla with Hamza Yusuf.

Syed Muhammad al Naquib bin Ali bin Abdullah bin Muhsin al Attas (born September 5, 1931) is a prominent contemporary Muslim philosopher and thinker from Malaysia. He is one of the few contemporary scholars who is thoroughly rooted in the traditional Islamic sciences and who is equally competent in theology, philosophy, metaphysics, history, and literature. He is considered to be the pioneer in proposing the idea of Islamization of knowledge.






Sh Hamza Yusuf On the Haiti Disaster



Tuesday 19 January 2010

Our call (La illaha ila Allah) - Noor



 Our call (La illaha ila Allah) Lyrics

Allahu Akbar Ya Allah
La illaha ila Allah

This is our faith, brother, this is our call
Let's raise our heads and stand up tall
Raising our hands lets call and say

Raise your banner above them all
Raise La illaha ila Allah (there is no God but God)
Raising our hands lets call and say

Monday 18 January 2010

El retorno de Islam a Al-Andalus

Sinopsis de una serie documental de 40 capítulos sobre la historia pasada y el presente del Islam en España.

Qasida Burdah - Junaid Jamshed


Sunday 17 January 2010

Aiy Allah - Junaid Jamshed


Iqbal Ka Pakistan - Zaid Hamid Episode 10






Maher Zain - Hold My Hand



From album: Thank You Allah
Lyrics: Hold My Hand

I hear the flowers gonna crying loud
The breeze is sounding sad
Oh no!
Tell me when the breeze would calm
So cold and and empty side
Lost the way long time ago
Did we really turn that blind
We dont see that we keep hurting each other
No, all we do we just fight

Now we share the same bright sun
The same round moon
Why dont we share the same love?
Tell me why not?
Life is shorter than most they thought

Hold my hand,
There are many ways to do it right
Hold my hand,
Turn around and see what you left behind
Hold my hand my friend
We can save the good spirit in me and you
Form another chance
And lets pray for the beautiful world
The beautiful world I share with you

Children seem like theyve lost their smile
On their new bloody playgrounds
Oh no!
How could we ignore?
Heart breaking crying sounds
And we still going on
Like nobody really cares
And we just stop feeling all the pain
Because like its a daily basic affair

Now we share the same bright sun
The same round moon
Why dont we share the same love?
Tell me why not?
Life is shorter than most they thought

Hold my hand,
There are many ways to do it right
Hold my hand,
Turn around and see what you left behind
Hold my hand my friend
We can save the good spirit in me and you
Form another chance
And lets pray for the beautiful world
The beautiful world I share with you

No matter how far Ill might be
Im always gonna be your neighbour
Its only one small planet were to be
So Im always gonna be your neighbour
We cannot hide, we cant deny
That we always gonna be neighbours
Your neighbour
My neighbour
Were neighbours

So hold my hand,
There are many ways to do it right
Hold my hand,
Turn around and see what you left behind..

Hold my hand,
There are many ways to do it right
Hold my hand,
Turn around and see what you left behind
Hold my hand my friend
We can save the good spirit in me and you
Form another chance
And lets pray for the beautiful world
The beautiful world I share with you

Maher Zain - Awaken



Awaken Lyrics:

We were given so many prizes
We changed the deserts into oasis
We built buildings of different lands and sizes
And we felt so very satisfied
We bought and bought include stuff buying
We gave charity to the beggars
We couldn't stand the crying
We thought we pay they lose
But in fact to ourselves we're just lying

Oh! I'm walking with my head low
It's shame for my place
I'm walking with my head low from my race
Yes! It's easy to blame
Everything on the west
When in fact all focus should be on ourselves

I'm walking with my head low
It's shame for my place
I'm walking with my head low from my race
Yes! It's easy to blame
Everything on the west
When in the fact all focus should be on ourselves

We went home what to buy and we bought
We went to London, Paris, and Costadelso
We made a show we were seeing in the most exclusive shots
Yes. We felt very satisfied
We felt that money gave us infinite power
We forgot to teach out children about history
N' honor
We didn't have any time to lose
When we were WERE so busy
Feeling so satisfied

I'm walking with my head x2
It's shame from my place x2
I'm walking with my head low from my race x2
Yes! It's easy to blame x2
Everything on the west x2
When in fact all focus should be on ourselves x2

We're looking individuals without a soul
Despite the heat
Our homes felt so empty and cold
To fill the emptiness we bought and bought
May be all the fancy cars and blink
Will make us feel satisfied
My dear brother and sister
It's time to change inside
Open your eyes don't flow away
What's right aside
Before the big comes
When there is no way to run or hide
Now ask yourself
Is Allah watching you?
Is 'E satisfied?
Is Allah satisfied? X3

I'm walking with my head low x2
It's shame from my place x2
I'm walking with my head low from my race x2
Yes! It's easy to blame x2
Everything on the west x2
When in the fact all of this should be on ourselves x2



Maher Zain - The Chosen One


Lyrics: The Chosen One

In a time of darkness and green
It is your light that we need
You came to teach us how to live

Mohammed ya rasool Allah
Choras

You were so caring and kind
You're so wise full of light
You are the best of mankind

Mohammed khairo khalq illah
Salu ala rasool ellah
Habibi el mostafa
Peace be upon the messenger the chosen one
Choras

From love you returned away
In all nigh you would pray
Truthful in every word you say

Mohammed ya rasool Allah
Choras

Your face was brighter than the sun
Your beauty equaled by no one
You are Allah chosen one

Mohammed khairo khalq illah
Salu ala rasool ellah
Habibi el mostafa
Peace be upon the messenger the chosen one
Choras

I'll try to follow your way
And do my best to live my life
As you taught me
I pray to be close to you
On that day and see you smile
When you see me

Salu ala rasool ellah x3
Habibi el mostafa x2
Peace be upon the messenger the chosen one x3
Choras

Open your eyes - Maher Zain



Open your eyes Lyrics


Look around yourself
Can't you see this wonder spreadin' in front of you?
The clouds r' floating by
The skies r' clear and blue
Planets in the orbits n' moon n' the sun
Such perfect harmony
Let's start questioning ourselves
Isn't this proof enough for us?
Or is it lyin' to push it all aside?


No! We just have to open our eyes, our hearts n' minds
If we just look right to see the signs
We can't keep hiding from the truth
And let it take us by surprise
Take us in the best way
Allah
Guide us every single day
Allah
Keep us close to you
Until the end of time


Look inside yourself such perfect
All that hiding in your cells, running in your veins
What about anger, love and pain
And other things you're free to make
And you touch them with your hand
So are they really there?!
Let's start questionin' ourselves
Isn't this proof enough for us?
Or is it lyin' to push it all aside


No! We just have to open our eyes, our hearts n' minds
If we just look right to see the signs
We can't keep hiding from the truth
And let it take us by surprise
Take us in the best way
Allah
Guide us every single day
Allah
Keep us close to you
Until the end of time


When our baby is born full, healthless n' weak
N' you're watching it growing
Why deny what's in front of your eyes
The biggest miracle of life


We just have to open our eyes, our hearts n' minds
If we just look right to see the signs
We can't keep hiding from the truth
And let it take us by surprise
Take us in the best way
Allah
Guide us every single day
Allah
Keep us close to you
Until the end of time


Open your eyes, your hearts n' minds
If we just look right to see the signs
We can't keep hiding from the truth
And let it take us by surprise
Take us in the best way
Allah
Guide us every single day
Allah
Keep us close to you
Until the end of time


You created everything we belong to you
Ya Rabi raise our heads forever
We thank you
Alhamdulelah

Maher Zain - Ya Nabi - Arabic Version



Lyrics: ماهر زين - يا نبي سلام عليك , Ya Nabi

يانبي سلام عليك... يارسول سلام عليك
ياحبيبي يامحمد... صلوات الله عليك
أشرق البدر علينا... فإختفت منه البدور
مثل حسنك مارأينا ... قط ياوجه السرور

يانبي سلام عليك... يارسول سلام عليك
ياحبيبي يامحمد .... صلوات الله عليك

ياحبيبي يامحمد ... يلعروس الخافقين
يامؤيد ياممجد... ياإمام القبلتين


يانبي سلام عليك ... يارسول سلام عليك
ياحبيبي يامحمد ... صلوات الله عليك


أنت شمسا أنت بدرا... أنت نور فوق نوري
أنت إكسير وغالي ...أنت مصباح الصدوري

يا نبي سلام عليك... يا رسول سلام عليك
يا حبيبي يا محمد...صلوات الله عليك

Ya Nabi Salaam Alaika - Maher Zain



Ya Nabi Salaam Alaika Lyrics

InshaAllah - Maher Zain



InshaAllah Lyrics - Maher Zain

Everytime you feel like you cannot go on
You feel so lost
That your so alone
All you is see is night
And darkness all around
You feel so helpless
You cant see which way to go
Dont despair and never loose hope
Cause Allah is always by your side

Insha Allah Insha Allah Insha Allah
Insha Allah youll find your way

Everytime you can make one more mistake
You feel you cant repent
And that its way too late
Yourre so confused, wrong decisions you have made
Haunt your mind and your heart is full of shame

Dont despair and never loose hope
Cause Allah is always by your side
Insha Allah Insha Allah Insha Allah
Insya Allah youll find your way
Insha Allah Insha Allah Insha Allah
Insha Allah youll find your way

Turn to Allah
Hes never far away
Put your trust in Him
Raise your hands and pray
oooh Ya Allah
Guide my steps dont let me go astray
Youre the only one that showed me the way,
Showed me the way Showed me the way
Insha Allah Insha Allah Insha Allah
Insha Allah well find the way

Baraka alahu lakuma - Maher Zain



Baraka alahu lakuma Lyrics

We're here on this special day
Our hearts 'r full of pleasure
The day that brings the two of you
Close together
We're gathered here to celebrate
A moment you'll always treasure
We ask Allah to make your love
Last forever

Let's raise our heads and make dua'a
Like the prophet taught us
And with one voice let's all say…say…say


Baraka-alahu-lakuma

Baraka-alahu-lakuma
Wa Baraka alakuma

Wa Baraka alakuma
Wa jama bainakuma fi khair

Wa jama bainakuma fi khair


From now you'll share all your joys
Parts of ya'll support each other
Together worshipping Allah
Seeking His pleasure
We pray that He will bring your life
With happiness and blessings
And grant you kids
And make your home filled with laughter

Let's raise our heads and make dua'a
Like the prophet taught us
And with one voice let's all say…say…say

Baraka-alahu-lakuma

Baraka-alahu-lakuma
Wa Baraka alakuma
Wa Baraka alakuma
Wa jama bainakuma fi khair
Wa jama bainakuma fi khair

Baraka allah
Baraka allah Baraka allah Baraka allah Baraka allah

 
Baraka allahu lakum wa lana
Baraka allahu lakum wa lana

Allah barik lahuma
Allah adm hobahuma
Allah 'sali wa salim ala rasool ellh
Allah tub alana
Allah erdha ana
Allah ehdi khutana
Ala sunat nabina

Let's raise our heads and make dua'a
Like the prophet taught us
And with one voice let's all say…say…say

Baraka-alahu-lakuma
Baraka-alahu-lakuma Baraka-alahu-lakuma
Wa Baraka alakuma Baraka-alahu-lakuma Baraka-alahu-lakuma
Wa jama bainakuma fi khair
Wa jama bainakuma fi khair
Wa jama bainakuma fi khair  

For the rest of my life - Maher Zain



For the rest of my life Lyrics

I praise Allah for sending me you my love
You're finally home and stay with me
And I'm here with you
Now let me let you know
You've opened my heart
I waz always thinkin' that love waz wrong
But everything waz changed when you came along oh
And there is a coulple of words I wana say

For the rest of my life
I'll be with you
I'll stay by your side
Honest and true to the end of my time
I'll be loving you…loving you

For the rest of my life
Through days and nights
I'll thank Allah
From openin' my eyes
Now n' forever I'll be there for you
I know deep in my heart

I feel so blessed when I think of you
And ask Allah to bless all we do
You're my wife n' my friend n' my strength
N' I pray we're together in gena
All I know I found myself
I feel so strong
Yes! Every thing was changed when you came along oh
And there is a couple of words I wana say

For the rest of my life
I'll be with you I'll stay by your side
Honest and true to the end of my time
I'll be lovin' you… lovin' you

For the rest of my life
Through days and nights
I'll thank Allah
From openin' my eyes
Now and forever I'll be there for you
I know deep in my heart

Neither to fear you're in front of me
I strongly feel in love
I strongly feel in love
And I know that
Nothing in doubt that I will love you eternally

For the rest of my life
I'll be with you I'll stay by your side
Honest and true to the end of my time
I'll be lovin' you… lovin' you
For the rest of my life
Through days and nights
I'll thank Allah
From openin' my eyes
Now and forever I'll be there for you
I know deep in my heart

Subhana Allah - Mayer Zain Ft Mesut



Subhana Allah Lyrics

سبحان الله, سبحان الله, سبحان الله
سبحانك ربي, سبحانك
سبحانك ما اعظم شأنك
سبحانك ربي, سبحانك
ندعوك ونرجو غفرانك ربي

As I travel through the earth
I can hear n' notice
The symphony I hear around from
The smallest green of sand to the far away planets
To the flower putting woods n' the ground,
Every bird in the sky, every rock
And every green drop
Says as the bosom of clouds
Every ant, every plant, every breeze
N' all the seas
They all r' sayin'

سبحانك ربي
سبحانك ما اعظم شانك
سبحانك ربي , سبحانك
سبحانك ما اعظم شانك
ندعوك ونرجو غفرانك
ندعوك ونرجو غفرانك, ربي

جل الله في كل كونٍ له
المحبوب الله
وذكرُ ربي في دقاتِ قلبي
يهتفُ بسم الله
خلقُ الله, صنعُ الله
ما ابهاه
والاكوان تسبحو بسم الله
جل الله في علاه
يا رباه يا رحمن, الله

سبحانك ربي
سبحانك ما اعظم شانك
سبحانك ربي, سبحانك
سبحانك مااعظم شانك
ندعوك وبرجو غفرانك
ندعوك وبرجو غفرانك ربي

سبحان الله, سبحان الله, سبحان الله , سبحان الله
سبحانك ربي , سبحانك ربي
سبحانك ما اعظم شانك
ندعوك ونرجو غفرانك ربي

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