Tuesday, 17 December 2013

Seerah of the Prophet s.a.w. - What a da'i can learn from him.

In the Name of Allah, the Most Gracious, the Dispenser of Grace.

The last few days I have been battling an essay for my Seerah course.  While not the best work I have done, I thought I'd share it here as it falls nicely with the series on Seerah that I have been doing on and off.  I hope it will benefit someone.

Wassalam,
Sid

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The role of a da’i in today’s world is very challenging in the light of the mistrust by non-Muslims and the association of Islam with terrorism, whether justified or otherwise.  In this paper, we will explore the role of a da’i in this challenging environment and how we can learn from the example of Prophet Muhammad s.a.w. in this respect.  We will first define the role of the da’i and the challenges he/she faces.  The second part is focused on Prophet Muhammad in his role as a da’i.  The third and penultimate part is focused on how we can learn from the Prophet by applying his examples in the current challenges before we conclude.
Da’wah literally means a call (Oxford Islamic Studies Online, 2013), an invitation back to God, and a da’i is the person calling.  In the context of Islam, a da’i is one who extends the invitation to Islam by conveying its message of Oneness of God to others.  In the scholars’ opinion, da’wah is a responsibility of every Muslim and therefore every Muslim is a da’i.  But more than just extending the invitation to Islam, a da’i is also a leader in the sense that he is responsible for influencing the person he is doing da’wah to and impacting his life through the message.  The first da’i in the Islamic history was the Prophet Muhammad s.a.w. when Islam was unknown and faced a lot of challenges and hostility.  Today, the situation of hostility and challenges are similar.  Given God’s exhortation in the Qur’an (Asad, 1980, p 642) that in him is a good example, we should try to learn from his experience and example in applying it to our current situation.
At the advent of Islam, the Makkan society was affluent, deriving their wealth mainly from foreign trade and local bazaars and markets.  This affluence led them to indulging in vices such as gambling and drinking (Salahi, 1995, pp 48-49).  Makkah was also in the grips of idol worship even though they had interactions with the Jews in Yathrib and the Christians in other part of Arabia.  There were also a few of the hanifs in Makkah itself such as Waraqah, the cousin of Khadijah r.a. (Lings, 1983, pp 16-17, Salahi, 1995, pp 54-57) but overall, the Quraish were no longer following the faith of Abraham and changed a lot of the rituals of pilgrimage.  Besides the worship aspects, they were also very superstitious, such as using arrows for fortune telling and wearing charms for protection against the jinn.  In terms of social and moral values, they treated those who have no clan protection and especially women poorly, going to the extremes of burying alive their baby daughters (Salahi, 1995, p 51-53).
It was in this clime that the Prophet Muhammad s.a.w. was sent to call the Quraish and the rest of the world back to God through Islam.  Though born to a noble Quraish family, he grew up as an orphan and never enjoyed an affluent lifestyle.  He also had a reputation for honesty, integrity and good moral character and held the respect of the Quraish, especially after the episode of the rebuilding of the Kaabah (Lings, 1999, p 42, Salahi, 1995, pp 40-46).  This reputation is actually key to his success as a da’i.  John Adair (2010, p 65), in his assessment of the vital importance of the Prophet’s trustworthiness as a leader, mentioned “there can be no confidence without truth” and “trust, like the soul, once gone is gone forever.”  Trust is important in any relationship and the relationship between the caller (da’i) and the called hinges on that trust.  The trust the Quraish had in him was to play an important part in his da’wah work.  In his personal life, his marriage to Khadijah r.a. was a happy one, lasting till her death.  Through this marriage, he gained a firm supporter in Khadijah r.a. in his da’wah work.  His strategy as a da’i, whether it was divinely inspired or otherwise, was to focus on those closest to him first, then propagating it in private and individual basis (Al-Ghazali, 1999, p 113) until the command came to do it openly in Surah Ash-Shu’ara:214 (Asad, 1980, p574) where it was stated
“And warn [whomever thou canst reach, beginning with] thy kinsfolk.”
As a da’i, he faced many different challenges in calling to Islam and in his responses to these challenges, we can learn quite a bit.  One of the first challenges he faced was in terms the da’wah to his extended family, risking his relationship with them (al-Ghazali, 1999, p 115).  While his immediate family embraced Islam, it was not so with his extended family.  His beloved uncle, Abu Talib, gave his protection and support but would not accept the call till his death.  His uncle, Abu Lahab, turned very hostile[1]: he ridiculed the Prophet, made his sons divorce the Prophet’s daughters and abused him (Salahi, 1995, p 89, al-Ghazali, 1999, pp 116-117).  Because they were his uncles, the Prophet was put in a dilemma.  His approach in this challenge was to persevere in the da’wah efforts and to maintain the relationship even if it was rebuffed as was in the case of Abu Lahab.  His patience in enduring his uncle’s hostility without retaliation was not only proof of his gentle nature but also of his awareness of the rights of kinship. 
The next set of challenges was with the leaders of the Quraish.  Besides torturing and persecuting the small Muslim community, one of their first actions with respect to the Prophet himself was to pressure Abu Talib to make the Prophet stop his da’wah efforts or give him up to them.  These actions distressed the Prophet who thought his uncle was going to lift his protection but he still stood firm, not swayed from his cause (al-Ghazali, 1999, pp 128-129, Lings, 1983, p 52).  Next, they tried negotiating directly with him.  For example Utbah ibn Rabee’ah went to him with offers from the Quraish chiefs.  The Prophet’s actions in this instance were telling of his wisdom.  He listened attentively to the offers instead of brushing them aside.  When Utbah finished, the Prophet answered with the first 38 verses of Al-Fussilat which clearly stated the message he wanted to convey, inviting Utbah to ponder upon the signs and accept the call.  The beauty of the verses left Utbah bemused where he then counseled the Quraish chiefs to adopt a wait-and see policy even though they rejected it (al-Ghazali, 1999, pp 126-128, Salahi, 1995, pp 106-107).  Other negotiations which embodied the spirit of compromise and ‘live-and-let-live’ also failed due to the firmness and steadfastness of the Prophet in delivering his message (Salahi, 1995, pp 140-143).  They also started a smear campaign against him with the pilgrims and other visitors.  Calling him a magician and a person who sows discord between fathers and sons[2], they impressed upon the pilgrims not to listen to the Prophet and to avoid him.  The Prophet’s response was to persevere and continued to reach out to those who were willing to listen (Lings, 1983, pp 53-55, Salahi, 1995, pp 111-114).  These challenges were just some of what he and the early Muslim community faced in the da’wah effort.
From the Prophet’s example, we can identify several key characteristics that a da’i needs to develop in facing the challenges of today.  The first characteristic is that of noble character which includes trustworthiness and integrity.  It was to the point that even while they persecuted him, the Quraish still respected him and entrusted him with their belongings to the point that when the Prophet migrated, Ali r.a. was given the task to return people their belongings (Salahi, 1995, p 201).  As mentioned earlier, integrity and trustworthiness are key in engendering the trust in the da’i and by implication trust in the message.  The second and third characteristics are patience and perseverance respectively which were evident in all the challenges that the Prophet faced.  These characteristics are the key to success in any challenge in life what more in da’wah.  In the Qur’an, God says (2:153)
“O You who have attained to faith!  Seek aid in steadfast patience and prayer: for, behold, God is with those who are patient in adversity.” (Asad, 1980, p 32)
The Prophet embodied this advice from God for he was steadfastly patient and was constant in prayer which should be the model for any da’i today.  The next characteristic is wisdom and intelligence.  Wisdom in knowing your audience, knowing when to engage or otherwise and what best to say allows a da’i to be effective in his da’wah effort.  Intelligence helps the da’i in creating his da’wah strategy just like the way the Prophet strategized by focusing on those closest to him first.  This led him to build a core circle of followers who were not only his support but also in helping to propagate the message like Abu Bakr r.a.  
With these characteristics developed and armed with the knowledge and appreciation of the message, the da’i is now ready to face the challenges of today.  Like during the time of the Prophet, Islam is once again a ‘stranger’ in the global scene.  While there are countries with majority Muslims, these countries are few when compared with the rest of the world and quite a lot of Muslims live in non-Muslim countries.  As such, we see similar challenges to those faced by the Prophet and early Muslims.  For example, the challenges of doing da’wah to their non-Muslim family are being faced by many new converts to Islam.  By studying the actions of the Prophet in his relationship with and his efforts to spread the message to his immediate and extended family, the da’i is able to learn the wisdom and strategy that the Prophet applied in such situations. 
There are also a lot negative press about Islam and Muslims in the current times, similar to the smear campaign that the Quraish carried out against the Prophet and the early Muslim community.  Lessons can also be learned from the strategy the Prophet adopted to counter the smear campaign instead of acting hastily and emotionally as happened during the incident of the cartoons mocking the Prophet not so long ago.  The hostility which quite a number of Muslims faced living in a majority non-Muslim countries like in France and some parts of Australia and U.S. are again similar to the hostility confronted by the Prophet and the early Muslim community.  The Prophet’s merciful and gracious actions together with his integrity won the hearts of many of his enemies, some becoming Muslims and others became less hostile.  Today’s da’i should also set an example by his good actions which should embody the message and help soften the hearts of those around him.
It therefore behoove today’s da’i to emulate the Prophet in his characters which Aisha r.a. once described as the walking Qur’an and learn from his da’wah efforts.  There are many parallels in the challenges faced today with those faced by the Prophet that it is a shame not to use the guidance given to us by the Prophet. 
Reference:
Adair, J., 2010.  The Leadership of Muhammad.  U.K.:  Kogan Page Limited.
Al-Ghazali, M., 1999. Fiqh-Us-Seerah: Understanding the Life of Prophet Muhammad. 2nd ed. Saudi Arabia: International Islamic Publishing House.
Asad, M., 1980. The Message of the Qur’an. Gibraltar: Dar al-Andalus Limited.
Lings, M., 1983.  Muhammad: His Life Based on the Earliest Sources. U.K.: Islamic Texts Society.
Oxford Islamic Studies Online, 2013.  Da’wah. [online] Available at http://www.oxfordislamicstudies.com/article/opr/t125/e511
Salahi, M. A., 1995.  Muhammad: Man and Prophet.  U.K.:  Element Books Limited.




[1] It was to the point that Surah Al-Lahab was revealed
[2] There were other descriptions proposed such as madman and poet but was rejected by al-Walid ibn al-Mughirah because he (and the Quraish chiefs) knew that the Prophet was right and his message was beautiful  (Salahi, 1995, p 112).

Sunday, 3 November 2013

When the Devil Speaks by Khaled Abou El Fadl

In the Name Of God, The Most Gracious, The Dispenser of Grace.

This entry is a copy of part of a chapter in the book 'The Search for Beauty in Islam' by Professor Khaled Abou El Fadl.  The chapter, Chapter 56 (pp190-192), is entitled 'When the Devil Speaks'.

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When the Devil Speaks
(Khaled Abou El Fadl, The Search for Beauty in Islam, 2006)

God praises the nation that speaks without fear.  The only chosen people are those who command the good and condemn the evil (3:110).  Such is the true covenant of God, that the chosen are a people of principle, not the by-product of lineage or the inheritors of some past glory.  The covenant is a covenant of words - discharged through words.  To paraphrase the Prophet, whoever is silent before an injustice becomes as if a demon.  The beauty of God is pure goodness, and the abyss of ugliness is fear, for what other than fear can silence the soul and give the word to Satan?  God commands that we speak the truth even against those we hold most dear.  Lineage, blood, or love is not supreme - supremacy is to the word that must be spoken truthfully.

Our Exalted and Merciful God has set the unwavering word for all those who believe.  The Lord has commanded that we stand firmly for justice as witnesses for God.  If others will testify on behalf of blood or tribe, the chosen will testify only on behalf of God.  "Bear witness for God, even as against yourselves, or your parents or your kin, and whether it be against rich or poor for [whomever it may be] God has a greater entitlement over you.  Follow not the whims of your hearts, lest you swerve.  If you distort justice or fail to testify, beware that God knows all that you do." (4:135)

How can we testify if the walls of dungeons are all we can see?  How can we testify if we are not free?  How can the believers testify if they live in fear?  Are they supposed to sacrifice themselves on the alters of freedom when the altars are now in the control of demons?  What truly breaks the heart and chokes the throat is that today, the demons are humans who call themselves Muslim believers.  Yet, it does not matter what they call themselves, a name never discharged a covenant or commended anyone to the Lord.  What matters is the truth of the word, and that when the pious fall silent only the devil speaks.

I sit in the Conference, testifying to the truth of the word.  In my hand is Risalat Iblis ila Ikhwanihi al-Manahis (Satan's Epistle to His Miserable Brothers) by al-Hakim al-Jishumiyya al-Bayhaqi (d. 494/1100-1)/  The author was a Hanafi Mu'tazili jurist most of his life, and then the burdens of testimony called upon him to become a Zaydi.  He was killed and silenced in Mecca because of his book, and now he joined the Conference, and now he speaks freely.  His book, Satan's Epistle, was buried among the millions of manuscripts suppressed by the persecutors of the word until my mentor and teacher Hossein Modarresi published and liberated the work.  Al-Bayhaqi asked in his book, if Satan on the Final Day would speak, what and whom would he praise?  Satan ends up praising and thanking every Muslim who adopted a creed that attributed to God things that are irrational, unjust, or ugly.  All those who make Islam the religion of the ugly and stupid lead themselves and others astray, and Satan feels nothing but gratitude and elation for this miserable company.

I start to wonder if Satan would speak about us today, what would he say?  Which of our numerous vanities would he choose to praise?  I think Satan would have to express his profuse gratitude for our emotions, whims and fears that induce us to submit to ourselves rather than to our Lord.  Satan would be jubilant that our Lord told us to "read," and instead, we excelled in the hysteria of activism and irrationality.  In the eyes of the devil, is there a better nation than that which celebrates stupidity, and declares the use of reason to be sophistry and heresy?  Is there a better gift to depravity than a nation that treats knowledge as if it is an ornament or decoration, and not the gateway to the truth of our being?  Isn't Satan ecstatic when he finds a nation that refuses to learn from its past and constantly tries to reinvent wisdom's wheel?  Is there a greater evil than a people who testify against a knowledge they don't know, and excel at testifying on the basis of hearsay?  Isn't speaking and testifying without knowledge an act of lying and an act of deceit and perjury?  What would the devil say about a people who stuff their pulpits with despots and nominate the most ignorant to lead?  How would the devil praise a people who treat their religion as an extra-curricular activity and a "feel-good" hobby?  Isn't the devil simply elated with our esteemed sages, puerile kids who think Islam is a fashion show, and whose egos are their reference points?  They have no need for books or knowledge - they simply act the role of the wise and pious as soon as they grow the sprucely beard and find the dapper wardrobe?



Tuesday, 29 October 2013

My Hajj Diary - Day 11 (end of entry)

Day 11 (18/10/2013)

Waiting for Fajr.  Alhamdulillah, Alhamdulillah, Alhamdulillah!  We have finally completed our hajj with a very smooth and beatuiful tawaf wada'.  Woken up at quarter past 12 am in the darkness by Maha.  Rini wanted to go to the Haram as soon as possible.  There were already others waiting there when we came down.

Alhamdulillah, we got a taxi almost immediately.  Got there and did the tawaf on the first floor.  Even though it was larger but we did it peacefully and tranquilly and for the first time this hajj, I actually enjoyed the tawaf.  The view of the Kaabah was still impeded but without pushing and shoving, we could really concentrate.  We then waited at Marwa for Rini while she finished her Sa'i.  Again, that went smoothly and we didn't lose each other.  We easily got a taxi back, alhamdulillah, thanks to Maha's Arabic.  So all in all, we had a smooth farewell tawaf without adventure.  A good note to end on, alhamdulillah.

Having finished all the rights of Hajj, I am just waiting till tonight to start on the leg back to London.  There is a sense of sadness and joy that my hajj journey is finally over.

The anticipation of the hajj experience building in the months before were nothing like the rush of the actual experience itself.  I will need to analyse deeper its impact on me but have I learnt anything about myself in this journey that I didn't know before?

Also I realise I have never been more grateful for my ability to read a map and visualise it in reality in order to navigate.  Alhamdulillah, now I realise what a gift it is.  Alhamdulillah, this gift has been useful in navigating my way back to Mina twice and in and around the Haram as well as in Madinah.  Ya Allah, let me always be grateful for this gift and let me use it wisely.

A weakness that was an asset for hajj is my inability to do small talks.  This allows me to block most of the chatters and concentrate on what matters.  The few discussions were on interesting matters or important matters.  What it didn't help for me is the making of friends.  But since I am not here on this journey to make friends, that is fine.  Still, alhamdulillah, to get to know a few of the sisters is a blessing.  Insha Allah, will try to stay in touch with them.


My Hajj Diary - Day 10

Day 10 (17/10/2013)

2 am - Ya Allah, please help us in this test you have given us.  I am not sure why You moved me to do the jamrat before the rest, but it made me come back in time for the return of the sister from the hospital.

11 am - We are now in the apartment again in the Aziziyah.  The challenge now is to arrange for the Tawaf Wada'.  I am disappointed that Elsawy has not arranged for the tawaf for us.  Today is, I realise, the last day of Eid.  As I said, it has been an eventful journey but the actual impact will have to be assessed later when things have sunk in.

The fact that I am not well also does not help.  The tent in Mina didn't help...it is a germ breeding ground.  I wish I had some of the ginger Sis Yusria brought.

Was talking to Mehmoona just now and she had the same disconnection to the Haram that I have been feeling.  The construction around the Kaabah is like a monstrosity.  You can't see the Kaabah anymore from the mosque.  Last year, we had an unimpeded view of the Kaabah and there was that connection, a sense of peace, yet still energetic/magnetic pull.  Now, there is nothing.  And the mostrosity of a building they are building as an extension to the mosque.  And more hotels and shopping centres are opening new the Haram.  All blitz and glitter but no substance.  Are they trying to get the people coming to Hajj and Umrah to divert their focus to shopping rather than worship?  We seem to have gone back to the Jahiliyah days when the Quraish of Mecca were using the Kaabah for commercial and status purposes. 

Thursday, 24 October 2013

My Hajj Diary - Day 9

Day 9 (16/10/2013)  

Am sitting in the hot tent.  Alhamdulillah, I finished the second jamrat this morning just after fajr.  Poor Shahidah, her blisters have burst and the doctor told her that she needs to stay off her feet.  So, insha Allah, I will be doing her last jamrat for her.  Allah has been very merciful to me this hajj.  Other than a brief migraine and some sore hip, I have been relatively healthy enough to perform all the rites.  I am trying to keep up my health because there are two more acts to perform.

That was my du'a other than Shahidah's well being during the jamrat. Had been worried about her feet. Anyway, if she can't do the jamrat, I will do it for her.  And if she can't do the tawaf wada' (the farewell tawaf), she is free to go.

This morning, around breakfast time, had an interesting discussion with Sis Fyza and Yusria regarding the Qur'an, sunnah and hadith.  I am glad to hear that Fyza is thinking along similar lines.  May Allah give her strength to do what she wishes to do.  We need people who can speak up and not be afraid.

Ya Allah, today has been the strangest day.  Help the sister, Ya Allah.  She truly is needing your help.  Her condition had gotten worse since I met her several days ago at the Aziziyah. At first, she just seems enthusiastic and a bit over the top but today, she turned violent.  The sisters did well to try and keep her calm but it didn't help.  She needed professional help.

Something Shahidah said today made a lot of sense.  It links to what I said to her in the Haram yesterday.  I said this is the first time I felt like a musafir (a traveller).  Today, she said that hajj is preparing us or reminding us that we are on a journey where we tend to carry too many baggage.  It taught her to travel light.

Masya Allah, she is right.  We carry too much baggage even though we are only travellers in this world.  We need to travel light: perhaps that is one of the meaning of the ones 'who walk gently on this earth.'  That as guests of Allah on this creation of His, we shouldn't be ungrateful guests.  Two points:
1.  Too much baggage
It is more difficult to move freely.  Just look at the chaos to come to Mina with people carrying loads.  But when we went to Arafah, we were more fluid because we only carriedd really essential stuff.  I thought I carried only essentials but so many things I brought ended up not ussed.  So a lesson here is that we really get attached to things which seem essential but actually is not.  E.g. work:  since I have been here, I have not thought about work till now that is.
And remember, we all return to Him without any of things that we can really bring with us.
2.  Impact on Earth
Looking at the state of the Haram, Mina, Muzdalifah and Arafat, I am sad.  Look at the rubbish everywhere.  Bottles, tissues, peels and whatever else.  I think we used billions of bottles and it is just thrown away and not recycled.  (and not even thrown away in a responsible manner!) Where are our manners in being His guests in His House?  And cleanliness is part of Islam.  So where is it?  Caring for the earth is part of our duty as Allah's representatives.  And yet we are leaving behind millions of tonnes of rubbish which will pollute the environment.
So, we need to understand this responsibility that Allah has bestowed on us.  By truly living a life of a traveller, you realise that a traveller shouldn't leave a print of himself/herself on the place she/he is visiting.