THE sacrifice of an animal on the occasion of Eid ul-Azha every year
has a great bearing on human life. It symbolizes the moulding
and making of a pure life. Today, however, this sacrifice has
become an annual ritual. It remains alive only as a soulless religious
tradition, as something to be done as a ritual on a particular day. It
seems to have no impact whatsoever on people’s lives. However, if the
sacrifice were done in its true spirit, our entire society would have been
very different.
Referring to the sacrifice, the Quran says:
Their flesh and blood do not reach God:
it is your piety that reaches Him.
THE QURAN 22: 37
Flesh and blood are present in the bodies of the animals that are
slaughtered, while piety should be present in the heart of the person
who slaughters them. From the above-mentioned Quranic verse it is
clear that while it appears the animals are being presented before God,
in reality it is human beings who are presenting themselves before Him.
In other words, the actual sacrifice is not the slaughter of an animal,
but, instead, the slaughter of one’s self.
Today, sacrifice has become an annual ritual. It remains
alive only as a soulless religious tradition.
Sacrifice, understood in this way, is more about the one who engages
in the act of slaughter rather than the being that is slaughtered. On
the face of it, this slaughter seems an external or outwardly act. But,
in actual fact, it is — or should be — an inner action. That person’s
sacrifi ce alone is proper who converts his outwardly act of slaughter
into an inwardly one.
By slaughtering an animal, we express our determination to slaughter
our egos for the sake of God, to sacrifi ce our own personal interests
and be fi rmly established in the path of righteousness, to ignore all
personal interests whilst obeying God’s commandments. In this way, we express our readiness to slice off with a knife our egos if they
become a hurdle in our journeying on God’s path.
In another verse that mentions sacrifi ce the Quran says:<,/p>
Pray to your Lord and sacrifi ce to Him alone.
THE QURAN 108: 2
In a sense, this verse speaks about two aspects of faith: one, humility
and modesty, and the other, selfl essness and sacrifi ce. Prayer
symbolizes humility, while slaughtering an animal symbolizes sacrifi ce.
It is on these two fundamentals — humility and sacrifi ce — that the
entire edifi ce of the faith stands.
While it appears that the animals are being presented
before God, in reality it is human beings who are
presenting themselves before Him.
It can, in a sense, be said that we should relate to God through humility
and to God’s servants — our fellow beings — through sacrifi ce. God is
Great, and we are small. God is the Giver, and we are recipients. God is
the Master, and we are His slaves. In this sense, the only appropriate
way to relate with God is through humility. Here, the excellence of
the slave is to accept his insignifi cance before God. In this context, we
accept our utter insignifi cance before Him and express our humility
and complete surrender and obedience to Him.
The act of sacrifi ce has much to do with our relations with fellow human
beings. It is linked to morality and appropriate behaviour in society.
The Quran tells us that when the Prophet Abraham wanted to sacrifi ce
his son, Ismael, the latter said:
O my father, do as you are commanded;
and God willing, you will find me steadfast.
THE QURAN 37: 102
From this we learn that patient steadfastness or sabr is the underlying
basis of sacrifice. Unless we become truly steadfast and able to
persevere and patiently face things, we really won’t have made any
sacrifice at all. In sacrificing an animal, we express our resolve to become as steadfast in our lives as the Prophet Ismael.
Patient steadfastness is the sole foundation of a healthy society.
Without patience, such a society is impossible. This is because when
many people live together, it is inevitable that things will repeatedly
arise that people regard as unpleasant. This happens even in a family
situation or in a small locality. And, so, naturally, it will happen in a
large community, too. If a room is full of statues, of course the statues
won’t ever come into conflict with each other. But things are different
when human beings live together. It is but natural that they will have
their differences and complaints.
To slaughter the animal inside us that comes to life
when faced with differences and complaints,
is the real sacrifice that God desires.
In such conditions, the only way to prevent confl ict and chaos in
society is for people to embody the virtue of sabr or patient
determination. They must learn to patiently face the unpleasantness
of others. They must rise above complaints whilst forging relationships
with each other.
Patience always demands sacrifice. It is impossible to steadfastly
face difficult situations without sacrifice. In life, one repeatedly faces
situations when, because of someone else’s actions, we feel insulted.
Our egos are hurt by the behaviour of others. We get provoked and
driven to anger. In such situations, the animal in us is rudely awakened.
At such moments, we need to slaughter this ‘animal’ inside us. The
sacrifi ce of this ‘inner animal’ alone is the true sacrifice. Only through
this sacrifi ce can we build and lead a truly God-oriented life. Only then
can we go on to build a truly healthy society.
To slaughter the animal inside us that comes to life when faced with
diff erences and complaints is the real sacrifi ce that God desires. By
off ering this sacrifi ce, we off er proof of that exalted quality that is
called taqwa or piety in the Quran (THE QURAN 22: 37).
Only after we sacrifice this ‘psychological animal’ does the great virtue
of sabr or steadfastness begin to appear in us. Steadfastness, patient
toleration, forgiveness and avoidance are indispensable for a healthy
society. These qualities can only emerge in the true sense of the term only when we slaughter the ‘inner animal’ that resides within each one
of us.
The Quran says:
Call mankind to the Pilgrimage […] so that they may witness
its benefi t for them and, on the appointed days may utter the
name of God over the cattle He has provided for them. Then
eat their fl esh, and feed the distressed and the needy […]
THE QURAN 22: 27-28
From this verse we learn about two more aspects of sacrifi ce. One is that
whenever we use anything given by God we have to take God’s name.
Taking the name of God when using something is an acknowledgment
that it, along with everything else, is a direct gift from God. God has
given human beings countless things to fulfi ll our needs. And so, we
must recognize them as gifts from God and use them accordingly,
rather than thinking them to be a product of our intelligence or power.
By slaughtering an animal, we express our determination
to slaughter our egos for the sake of God.
When an animal is slaughtered, we are commanded to eat its meat
and to share it with others. In this way, this sacrifice enkindles in us
the spirit of generosity, compassion and mutual help and sharing. It
teaches us to share our food with others, to recognize that our food
and our earnings are not ours alone to enjoy, but that others, too, have
a share in them. It teaches us not to be concerned only with our own
aff airs and with solving our own problems, but to also make efforts to
help others solve their problems, too. It teaches us that we cannot live
as isolated and unrelated individuals, and that, instead, we need to
learn how to live as useful members of society, thereby, becoming a
good ‘part of the whole’ of mankind.
If we keep these aspects in mind, we can better appreciate that the
sacrifice is not just a soulless historical tradition but a live act with a
message and meaning. The message of sacrifice is this: Slaughter the
‘animal’ within you and bring to life the humanness that also resides
inside you. This is what sacrifice really means. This is the real message
of sacrifice.
THE personality that should emerge after performing Haj is one
in which a two-fold activity is set in motion, one form being
external; and the other, internal.
‘External activity’ here refers to the dawah work which a person
undertakes after having seen the places where Prophet Abraham,
Ismael and Prophet Muhammad with his companions spent much of
their lives or in this divine task. Until then, the pilgrim had just heard
about these places, but when he physically goes to those places, he
receives a great inspiration to continue this prophetic mission.
Haj removes one completely from one’s worldly
environment so that one can completely
concentrate on God.
‘Internal activity’ here means a heightened sensitivity and awareness
towards piety, self-control, the avoidance of violence and aggression
and the need to lead life devoted to God, instead of one devoted to selfglorifi
cation. In other words, during and after Haj, the haji undergoes a
continuous process of de-conditioning.
Lesson of Piety
In a verse about Haj, the Quran says:
The pilgrimage is in the appointed months. Whoever intends
to perform it during them must abstain from indecent speech,
from all wicked conduct, and from quarrelling while on the
pilgrimage. Whatever good you may do, God is aware
of it. Make provision for yourselves — but surely,
the best of all provision is God-consciousness.
Always be mindful of Me, you that are
endowed with understanding.
THE QURAN 2: 197
Haj, for the Arabs, was an ethnic festival, not an expression of the
worship of the one God. In pre-Islamic times, Haj was associated with
all sorts of practices that are characteristic of tribal or ethnic festivals.
Islam put an end to these. In this context, the Quran, as the aboveverse
tells us, forbade things like indecent speech, wicked conduct
and quarrelling during Haj, things that are forbidden even in ordinary
circumstances but which are to be avoided with particular care during
Haj. One major reason for this is that because when an occasion
demands travel and a large number of people coming together, the
chances of such misbehaviour are greater. If a person is not fully
conscious of such matters, it is possible that he may indulge in such
activities, willingly or unwillingly. Since Haj involves travel and a large
gathering, such misbehaviour is clearly and explicitly forbidden as
these things destroy piety.
A true believer is one whose life is driven not by lust, but, rather,
by a higher purpose. He takes every care not to disobey God in any
of his dealings. He abstains from confl ict with others. This is how a
true believer should always behave, but during Haj when a person
exemplifi es these traits, he shows himself to be a true haji. If he has
really imbibed these values of piety that he should possess during Haj,
he will desist from the sort of misdemeanour that above-quoted verse
of the Quran refers to.
Additional Precautions
Things that are forbidden during Haj are also forbidden at other times,
too. They are to be particularly abstained from, during Haj, but they
must be avoided at other times as well. By stressing that we should be
particularly careful about avoiding them during Haj, it is so that we are
more conscious of such activities and develop the special capability to
abstain from them at other times also.
One of the most dangerous things that constantly
threaten to undermine harmonious collective
living is one’s tongue.
When we are in our homes or in our workplaces, we are deeply engrossed
in our personal aff airs. We forget the realities that exist beyond these
levels. That is why people are encouraged to go to mosques every day
to pray — so that for at least some time they come out of their personal
environments, free their minds from irrelevant aff airs, and focus, with
deep concentration, on God. Travelling for Haj is also like this. During
Haj, one is taken out of one’s limited environment and is taken to various places in Arabia over a period of several days. In this way, Haj
removes one completely from one’s worldly environment so that one
can completely concentrate on God.
There are several religious traditions associated with Arabia. The Kabah
is in Arabia — and a great many religious traditions, accumulated over
several thousand years, are associated with it. Stories of the sacrifi ces
of prophets have been written here. Here are memorials testifying to
the divine blessings received by pious servants of God. Here are also
signs of the lives of God’s last prophet and his companions.
The ihram worn in Haj is a practical expression of the
Islamic principle of human equality.
Historical connections of this sort have given the places associated with
Haj a unique sanctity and respect. As soon as one enters this area, an
entire religious history comes to life in one’s mind and one’s religious
spirit is enkindled. One begins to abide by one’s religious duties with
greater seriousness and commitment. Because of the special historical
importance of this area, God selected it to be an arena where people
come to rehearse the Islamic way of life, so that when they go back to
where they came from they can be better equipped and inspired to
lead God-oriented lives.
Among the things that are forbidden while on Haj are hurting anyone
through one’s tongue and killing or wounding any animal. One is also
to abstain from certain comforts and indulgences, such as wearing
stitched clothes, using perfume and engaging in sexual relations.
Being Careful While Speaking
One of the most dangerous things that constantly threaten to
undermine harmonious collective living is one’s tongue. The greatest
hurt you can do to someone is through your tongue. Vast numbers of
people gather together on the occasion of Haj, and hence situations
which hold the possibility that people may lose control over their
tongues and use them to hurt others. So, the training and instruction
of being especially watchful of what one says is given emphasis to by
people during Haj. Although not hurting others in words is an Islamic
value during all times, during the Haj, it is made a mandatory condition.
It is made into a necessary part of an Islamic act of worship, despite
it being a general Islamic teaching that applies at other times, too.
The Prophet said that he who performs Haj in such a way that others
are safe from his tongue and hands, will have all the sins that he has
committed till then, forgiven.
If we speak something indecent, it can hurt others. So also when we
say bad and disrespectful things about others. It isn’t good to speak
harshly, too. All these things are totally forbidden while on Haj. In this
way, people will appreciate the need to abstain from such speech at
other times as well, when they return to their homes after Haj.
Abstaining From Violence and Aggression
After donning the ihram, it is forbidden for pilgrims to hunt animals.
Also forbidden for the pilgrim are accepting as a gift, the meat of
animals that have been hunted, plucking the feathers of birds, assisting
others in hunting, giving someone a knife to slaughter an animal that
has been hunted and so on. All these are forbidden.
During Haj, one can kill a pest or an animal such as a snake, and also
the sacrifi cial animal that is part of the Haj rituals. But besides these, it
is strictly forbidden for the pilgrim not only to kill but also to hurt any
animal. Hunting animals under normal conditions is allowed. However,
during Haj, this is completely forbidden.
A true believer is one whose life is driven
not by lust, but, rather, by a higher purpose.
This, in actual fact, is reiteration, in a stronger sense, of a general
commandment of the Islamic law. Humans are expected not to kill
fellow humans or to torment animals. These are general shariah laws
that every Muslim is expected to follow at all times. But during Haj,
these laws are expanded to include a ban on hunting. In this way,
the pilgrim experiences a heightened awareness of these laws, and
so when he returns to his home after Haj he will be more mindful in
observing them. He will also become more mindful at all times not to
oppress others.
A Life of Self-Control
A concise way of describing the Islamic way of life is to say that it is a
life of self-control. The various controls and the code of discipline that
one is expected to observe during Haj can be seen as a training for such a way of life. This is reflected in the hadith report that we earlier
quoted, in which the Prophet said that he who performs the Haj in a
way that Muslims are safe from his tongue and his hands will have all
his earlier sins forgiven.
So, while performing Haj the pilgrim must be very careful not to hurt
anyone with his tongue and his hands — by his words and deeds. In
this way, his earlier sins can be forgiven. The Haj where all of a person’s
sins are forgiven, is the Haj after which the haji returns with such a
tongue and such hands.
Avoiding Self-Importance
During Haj, luxuries and indulgences are discouraged. Haj begins with
the donning of the ihram — which is a very simple white dress. Every
pilgrim must wear the ihram. It is, in a sense, a dress that denotes
humility and simplicity. It is an announcement, in a way, through
which God teaches His servants that all of them are equal. Outwardly
or external things, on the basis of which people claim superiority or
inferiority vis-à-vis others, are all hollow and false in the eyes of God.
The Prophet said that he who performs Haj in such a way
that others are safe from his tongue and his hands,
will have all the sins that he has committed
till then, forgiven.
God sees everyone with the same eyes. It is like during Haj, when
vast numbers of people, wearing the same sort of dress, appear to be
identical to each other. It is as if the ihram worn in Haj is a practical
expression of the Islamic principle of human equality. Those who truly
want to become dutiful servants of God must remove every other
‘dress’ and, instead, don the same divine ‘dress’.
The Prophet was asked who a haji is, and to this he replied, ‘Unkempt
hair, dusty clothing.’ These words describe a true pilgrim. Unkempt hair
and dusty clothing are symbolic of a man with purpose. When a person
devotes himself with total seriousness to a certain cause, he will have
no time for lavish grooming and beautifi cation. During Haj, voluntarily
abstaining from such activities is an instruction in leading a purposeful
life. This means that we should immerse ourselves so deeply in the
Divine cause that we lose all concern with the temptations of the external world and forget all temporary enjoyments. In seeking higher
purposes, we should forget our own personal desires and demands.
While referring to Haj, the Quran says:
Make provision for yourselves — but surely, the best of all
provision is God-consciousness. Always be mindful of Me, you
that are endowed with understanding.
THE QURAN 2: 197
In pre-Islamic Arabia, it was thought that making material provision
for Haj refl ected a materialistic outlook. If a person did not make such
arrangements and set out for Haj, it was thought that he was very pious.
Such a person would say about himself that he relied only on God.
But the Quran does not consider this sort of external or exhibitionist
religiosity as true piety. Religiosity has to do with the heart and mind,
not with external demonstrations of this sort. True piety is not the mere
lacking of material provision; it is a cleansing of the mind and heart of
the fear of everything and everyone other than God.
Accept, Introspect,
Make Amends
There are different kinds of bad deeds,
but no matter what kind of bad deed
you have committed, after each one you
should feel repentant and try to erase
the eff ects of your bad deed
by doing a good deed.
The fact is that every bad deed you commit
can pollute your soul. Cleanse it by your tears, or
by some other kind of penitent behaviour.
THERE are very few people who believe that their lives will end
after death and that life will not continue in one form or another.
About 99% believe that death does not put an end to life, and
that there is life after death which will continue eternally.
Despite this belief, there is almost no one who has any fears about the
next stage of life. People accept life after the present life as a belief,
but it has no bearing on their everyday lives. There are few exceptions
to this rule.
What is the reason for this? It is because everyone has devised a selfmade
belief regarding life after death which has placed this concept
within the framework of ritualism.
People accept life after the present life as a belief,
but it has no bearing on their everyday lives.
Jews believe in the concept of life after death. But they believe, in
addition, that they are the 'chosen people of God' (THE QURAN 5: 18); that
they will all go to heaven after death. This concept of a certain salvation
has made Jews fearless about the Hereafter.
Christians also believe in the concept of life after death. But they believe
furthermore, that Christ allowed himself to be crucifi ed to atone for
their sins and, in this way, he assured the salvation of his followers.
This concept has relieved Christians of any fear of the Hereafter.
The same is true of Hindus, Jains and Buddhists. They also believe that
human life is not ended by death but, rather, continues after death.
Moreover, these religions have a common belief that man is repeatedly
born into this very world after death, sometimes in human form and
sometimes in non-human form. But, after this new birth, man’s memory
mysteriously vanishes. For instance, if a person in his previous life was
healthy but led an immoral life, in his next life he will be born disabled.
But he will have no memory of his previous life and will not realize that
he has been born disabled due to the bad deeds committed by him
in his previous life. Since he is not conscious of his past actions, he neither feels repentance nor has he any urge for introspection. He lives
on in unawareness and dies in unawareness.
In this matter, exactly the same is true of the Muslims. Almost all
Muslims accept the concept of life after death and the belief in heaven
and hell. But if you go deeper, you will fi nd that almost all the presentday
Muslims have no fears either about the Hereafter or about hell.
They have, likewise, devised self-made concepts according to which
salvation in the Hereafter appears certain to them.
For instance, all Muslims consciously regard themselves as being a
special class. Any man or woman born into a Muslim family is surely
entitled to paradise — so, many of them wrongly think. This concept
is undoubtedly self-made, having nothing to do with either the Quran
or the hadith. But it has become so common that it has become a part
of Muslim thinking. All Muslims, whether scholars or commoners,
rich or poor, intellectuals or laymen, have accepted this as an alleged
established fact.
The belief in life after life acts as a powerful deterrent to man when he
is about to commit evil, but when other self-made beliefs are added to
this belief, then believing in the life after life is almost as good as not
believing in it at all.
Not yielding to
frustration
By forgetting what is lost,
one reorganizes one’s work
on the basis of whatever
one still possesses.
Planning anew replaces getting frustrated
and this makes it possible to set oneself to
starting one’s life’s journey all over again.
Voltaire (1694-1778), the well-known French philosopher, once
commented:
Life is a shipwreck, but we must not forget
to sing in the lifeboats.
THE truth is that in life, opportunities will never cease. When
one opportunity gets exhausted, another opportunity at once
emerges. A person who loses an opportunity and does not
discover the next opportunity will almost defi nitely meet with failure.
Life is replete with unexpected circumstances. One repeatedly
experiences things that one has never even thought of before. And
because of this, the plans we make show themselves to be faulty. That
is why one should repeatedly re-examine one’s plans.
To compensate for this, the Creator has fi lled the world with possibilities
and opportunities. And so, when faced with failure, one must consider
it as an experience and then move on to a new path and carry on with
one’s journey.
Failure is often a means for the evolution of one’s personality. Failure
can make you wiser. Failure can make you more serious. Failure can
make you a stronger person. Failure can open even bigger doors of
success for you.
Man’s intellect is his greatest strength. He can solve all problems using
his intellect, even the most apparently insoluble ones. If you remain
courageous, your intellect will guide you in every circumstance.
THE Quran is the book of God. It has been preserved in its
entirety since its revelation to the Prophet of Islam between
610 and 632 A.D. It is a book that brings glad tidings to mankind,
along with divine admonition, and stresses the importance of man’s
discovery of the Truth on a spiritual and intellectual level.
Translated from Arabic and commentary
by Maulana Wahiduddin Khan
The pilgrimage is in the appointed months. Whoever intends to perform
it during them must abstain from indecent speech, from all wicked
conduct, and from quarrelling while on the pilgrimage. Whatever
good you may do, God is aware of it. Make provision for yourselves —
but surely, the best of all provision is God-consciousness. Always be
mindful of Me, you that are endowed with understanding.
You will be committing no sin if (during the pilgrimage) you seek to
obtain any bounty from your Lord. When you return from Arafat,
remember God at the sacred place, and remember Him as He has
guided you. Before this you were surely astray. Then press on from
where the pilgrims stream forth and ask God’s forgiveness. God is
ever forgiving and most merciful.
When you have performed the acts of worship prescribed for you,
celebrate the praises of God as you celebrated the praises of your
fathers, or even more fervently than that. There are some who say,
‘Our Lord, give us abundance in this world.’ These shall have no share
in the world to come.
Fear of God is the basic element of worship. As long as one remains in
this frame of mind, it does not matter if the order of a rite is changed
by mistake in performing the rites of pilgrimage, or if one attends
to some private business while in the holy land. What is important
is that one should enter into the spirit of pilgrimage—fear of God,
remembrance of Him, prayerfulness, thanksgiving and wholehearted
submission to God. While on pilgrimage, one should make sure not
to do anything which runs counter to this spirit. There should be no feeling of superiority over fellow pilgrims, that is, one should ‘press on
from where the pilgrims stream forth.’
Making too much of one’s forefathers and praising their great deeds is
also against the spirit of pilgrimage. Pilgrimage is for the glory of God,
not for praise of the self. What place can such attitudes and activities
have in Haj, the very lesson of which is the equality of man before one,
supreme God? If one does not learn this lesson during the pilgrimage,
what chance is there of one applying it throughout the rest of one’s
life?
But there are others who pray, ‘Our Lord, grant us good in this world
as well as good in the world to come, and protect us from the torment
of the Fire.’
Prayers, especially those off ered during the pilgrimage, are an outward
manifestation of an inward state. Whatever one cherishes in one’s
heart, one expresses in prayer. One who has set his mind on worldly
riches and grandeur will concentrate on little else when he prays to
God, whereas one who seeks the next world, with its infi nite happiness
and blessings, will make this the central theme of his devotions.
This prayer on the part of the believer is not a request for worldly riches.
Material gain and worldly wealth are only parts of a ‘test paper’. And no
one would like to pray to increase the diffi culty of his ‘test paper’. This
prayer is more like asking God to give him what is best for man in the
eyes of God in this world and what is best for man in the eyes of God
in the Hereafter.
Therefore, the best prayer for man is to say to his Lord, ‘O my God, give
me in this world whatever You see is good for this world, and give me
in the next life whatever You see is good for that world and save me
from eternal doom.’
They shall have a good share from what they have earned. God is swift
in His reckoning. Remember God during the appointed days; for one
who hastens to leave in two days, it shall be no sin; and for one who
stays on, it shall be no sin for him either. This is for one who fears
God. Have fear of God, and know that you shall all be gathered before
Him.
‘You shall be gathered before Him’ is the greatest lesson of pilgrimage,
given in the plain of Arafat where millions of pilgrims gather annually.
This gathering symbolizes the fi nal gathering of all human beings on
Doomsday. Practical results are always produced by actions, not by
words.
ABOUT 4000 years ago, Prophet Abraham had to leave his wife
Hajira and his son Ismael in the deserts of Arabia and returned to
Al-Sham in present day Syria. When Ismael grew up, he married
a woman from the tribe of Jurham. After some time, Prophet Abraham
visited this place where he met his son Ismael’s wife. She complained
to him of the severe conditions of life. While leaving, Prophet Abraham
told her to pass on a message to Ismail when he returned — “to change
the ‘threshold’ of his house”. On his return, Ismail divorced his wife and
married another woman. A few years later, Prophet Abraham returned
once again to visit his son’s family. When he met Ismael’s wife, she
did not complain about anything, and, instead, expressed gratitude at
the conditions. On hearing this, Prophet Abraham told her that when
Ismael returned she should give this message to him: “Maintain the
‘threshold’ of your house.”
For any great mission the people who are suitable are
only those who have the highest level of positive
thinking and who are free from all complaints.
Prophet Abraham had settled his family in the deserts of Arabia. The
purpose of this was to begin a new generation in a pure and simple
uncorrupted environment. A generation that would devote themselves
to the mission of Tawheed (Oneness of God), spreading it throughout
the world. From the above incident we can understand that for the
great mission of spreading the message of the oneness of God the
people who are suitable are only those who have the highest level of
positive thinking, and who are free from all complaints and negative
thinking.
We also understand from this that in the process of purifi cation of our
minds, the most important aspect is for us to develop a personality free
of all types of complaint. Despite what one might want to see as causes
for complaint, one should have a completely positive personality.
Negative thinking destroys the purity of the mind, while positive
thinking is a necessary condition for the purifi cation of the mind. A
negative thinker becomes prey to evil tendencies. On the other hand,
a positive thinker begins to live in the company of angels and it is not
possible for purifi cation of our minds without divine help.
SACRIFICE is about giving up all that you have, and, in return,
receiving that which you do not have. Sacrifice teaches us that if
we want to acquire something, we first need to have the courage
to give up what we have. If we want to truly live, we should fi rst be ready
to face death. Sacrifice is not a soulless ritual. Rather, it is a living reality
that is intertwined with life in the same way as the laws of Nature are
inextricably linked with the entire cosmos.
Sacrifice is not the end, but, rather, the beginning of true action.
Sometimes, a seemingly small thing turns into something of great
significance. What may appear small may actually symbolize something
of enormous importance. So is it with sacrifice on the day of Eid ul-Azha.
On the face of it, the sacrifice involves offering an ordinary animal in the
name of God. But it actually is a symbol of something really big, rather
than an occasional, spiritless and meaningless custom. By sacrificing
an animal on this day, we symbolize our determination to sacrifice
everything, including even our lives, for a higher purpose.
Sacrifice teaches us that if we want to acquire
something, we first need to have the courage
to give up what we have.
Here is an example of how an apparently small act can indicate
something very big. This is about an incident that happened in
November 1962, when the aggression of a neighbouring country had
caused grave danger to India. The whole country was stunned. At this
time, about 25,000 young men in Ahmedabad got together, determined
to do something to protect the country, even if they had to sacrifi ce
their lives. After deciding this, each of them contributed one paisa. In
this way, they collected a sum of 25,000 paisas, and presented this
money to the then Prime Minister, Jawaharlal Nehru. While giving this
money, they said that they were actually giving themselves to him.
On the face of it, each of these youths gave just a single paisa to the
Prime Minister, a sum which ordinarily didn’t have much value. But
their single paisa was actually of enormous value because it symbolized
a human being who was off ering himself. Thus, the 25,000 paisas that they donated was a symbolic expression of the 25,000 lives that they
had determined to off er for the country.
In the same way, sacrifi cing an animal is a symbolic expression of Man’s
determination to sacrifi ce his all, even his life, for the sake of higher,
divine, purposes.
God has made this world in such a way that he who eff aces himself
alone is crowned with success. The sacrifi ce of an animal on the day of
Eid ul-Azha is an annual event that reminds us of this divine law. It is not
something that has no connection with the mainstream of life. Sacrifi ce
is, in fact, a universal law.
If we want to truly live, we should
first be ready to face death.
This can be clarifi ed with the help of an analogy. If you keep a seed
in a cold storage, it will remain as a seed. But if you plant it in the
ground, then something really astounding happens. In a while, the
seed transforms into a tree. The tree adds colour to its surroundings
and brings joy to the beholder, besides proving to be useful in many
other ways. It produces a great many seeds, which, in turn, soon turn
into trees. And so on.
What is the reason for the diff erence of the fate of the seed that lies
in the cold storage and the one that is planted in the earth? It lies in
this thing called sacrifi ce. The seed that is planted in the soil sacrifi ces,
as it were, itself. It eff aces itself. This is how it is transformed into a
sturdy tree. In contrast, the seed that lies in the cold storage doesn’t
make any such sacrifi ce of itself. And that is why it remains of no use
or importance.
A seed becomes a tree only when it eff aces itself. The tree produces
a beautiful fl ower. When the fl ower eff aces its beautiful self, it is
transformed into a fruit. In turn, the fruit agrees to eff ace itself — and
then it is eaten by human beings and becomes part of their blood
and fl esh.
In this world, the root to success for everything is one and the same:
sacrifi ce. Whether it be in the fi eld of knowledge, commerce, politics,
social welfare or ethics and morality — in every sphere, success is possible only through sacrifi ce. The Creator of this world has made the
world in such a way that no success is possible without sacrifi ce.
If you think that you can achieve great success simply by mouthing a
few slogans or doing some superfi cial activities, without making any
sacrifi ces, you are simply fooling yourself. It just cannot happen in this
God-created world. How, then, can God be pleased with someone if
he or she doesn’t want to make any sort of sacrifi ce? When God has
established a principle — that success is possible only if one undergoes
sacrifi ce — it is as if God has also made it known to us the way to fi nd
Him, is through sacrifi ce. Sacrifi ce — the condition for getting anything
in this world — is also the condition for fi nding God. If we want to
please God, we will have to sacrifi ce ourselves for Him. God bestows
His all on those who give Him their all. Without sacrifi ce, one cannot get
anything in this system that God has made.
Sacrificing an animal is a symbolic expression of Man’s
determination to sacrifice his all, even his life,
for the sake of higher, divine, purposes.
The principle for success in this world is the same as that in the life after
death. Life after death is much more valuable than life in this world.
That is why the sacrifi ce that is required for success in the life after
death is much greater than what is required for success in this world.
According to Islam, our life is divided into two parts. One, extremely
small part is our existence in the world in which we presently live. The
infi nitely bigger part, which lasts forever, is the life that we will face
after death. Success in the life after death, like success in the present
world, is dependent entirely on sacrifi ce. The world of heaven is like
a colony of excellent, selected people who, while on earth, excelled
in terms of belief and actions. Those who do not measure up to this
standard in this world will be pushed into the fi res of hell.
What does it mean to become a good human being? It means to begin
to live on the divine plane, to cultivate divine attributes within oneself.
For this, we have to fi ght with the evil inclinations inside us. We have
to work throughout our lives to keep away from negative infl uences.
This is a path of continuous sacrifi ce. Only those who have cultivated
the courage for this sort of sacrifi ce will fi nd a place in God’s heavenly
realm. For this, one needs to cleanse one’s mind of all false ideas and
beliefs. We must engage in this ‘intellectual operation’, no matter what the cost, even if it demands that we have to slaughter some of our
deeply-cherished beliefs. This requires that we mould our character
on the basis of the Truth, even if this means sacrifi cing our worldly
interests. We must bow our heads before the Truth, even if this means
having to lose our so-called superiority. We must make love and
commitment to the Truth the manifesto of our lives, even if this means
that we have no status or position in this world.
Success in the life after death, like success in the
present world, is dependent entirely on sacrifice
In every age, certain practises become popular, certain social bonds
become deeply cemented, and certain beliefs become deeply cherished.
One gets used to these things and strongly believes that they are right,
true and proper. And so, when one is faced with the call of the Truth,
it is often the case that one instinctively takes it as a threat to one’s
interests. We might construe this call of the Truth as a challenge to our
social relations, and as a negation of our beliefs that we cling to in the
hope of a blissful future. Because of this, to accept the call of the Truth
entails great sacrifi ce. It is tantamount to off ering one’s very life at the
sacrifi cial altar of the Truth.
But it is this sacrifi ce that makes human beings beloved in the eyes of
God. It is this sacrifi ce that leads to the opening of the doors of eternal
bliss in heaven. The only price of heaven is the sacrifi ce of one’s self.
Without this sacrifi ce, no one can gain entry into God’s paradise.
Greatest Sacrifice
It is a fact that acknowledgment of truth is worship,
nay; it is the greatest form of worship. It is an act for
which man has to make the greatest sacrifice.
What makes it such a great sacrifi ce is that it
involves the setting aside of one’s prestige.
Maulana Wahiduddin Khan, born in 1925, in
Azamgarh, Uttar Pradesh, is an Islamic spiritual
scholar who is well-versed in both classical Islamic
learning and modern disciplines. The mission of his life
has been the establishment of worldwide peace. He has
received the Padma Bhushan, the Demiurgus Peace
International Award and Sayyidina Imam Al Hassan
Peace award for promoting peace in Muslim societies.
He has been called ’Islam’s spiritual ambassador to the
world’ and is recognized as one of its most influential
Muslims
. His books have been translated into sixteen
languages and are part of university curricula in six
countries. He is the founder of the Centre for Peace
and Spirituality based in New Delhi.
WHERE THE MUSLIM BROTHERHOOD
WENT WRONG
THE present situation in Egypt reaffi rms the veracity of the
Islamic formula in this regard. The Prophet of Islam has said:
“Kama takununa kazalika yuwallu alaykum” (‘As you are, so will
be the government upon you’). According to this prophetic saying, the
government always emerges from society. It cannot be imposed from
outside. No slogan whatsoever justifi es the theory of imposition of a
government. Muslims must adopt a two-point formula in this regard. In
terms of government, they must accept the social verdict, and in terms
of personal mission, they must adopt dawah as a peaceful activity. So,
the Islamic formula in this regard is — dawah activism and political
status-quoism.
This is the only formula that is a permanent guarantee for peace in
society. This formula nullifi es the politics of opposition, and it also
abolishes all kinds of protests, confl icts and violence. If people adopt
this formula they will be able to enjoy peace in every situation. Peaceful
activism enables you to avail the opportunities, while violent activism
destroys the opportunities — and opportunity is the greatest asset for a
person as well as a party. The mistake of the ‘Muslim Brotherhood’ was
that they tried to impose their cherished system by force. However,
according to the above-mentioned hadith, fi rst of all they should have
prepared the society before imposing their cherished system. If your society is not ready to accept your system, you have to wait and engage
yourself in the task of preparing the minds of people.
The Muslim Brotherhood started the politics of opposition in Egypt in
1952. In spite of great sacrifi ces, this led to confrontation and violence,
and, fi nally, bloodshed. Thousands of people were killed during this
period. But in terms of positive gain, nothing was achieved. The
‘Muslim Brotherhood’ started their political activism in the name of
Islam. However, in terms of results, it generated only hate, infi ghting,
and destruction.
At the same time, there were and still are enormous opportunities in
the fi eld of dawah. Had the ‘Muslim Brotherhood’ adopted peaceful
dawah mission, today they could have been highly successful in
bringing people within the fold of the Truth. But due to their wrong
policies, and in spite of great sacrifi ces, they achieved nothing and,
instead, destroyed everything.
The British anthropologist Sir Arthur Keith wrote a book titled A New
Theory of Evolution (1948). In this book, referring to the history of
Egypt, he observes how Egypt was Islamized during the Khilafat period
commenting: “Egyptians were conquered not by the sword, but by the
Koran.” (p.
If we compare this experience of the history of Egypt with the present
failure of the ‘Muslim Brotherhood’, we will discover that the power of
the Quran is greater than the power of the gun. But it is very strange
that in the same land of Egypt, the ‘Muslim Brotherhood’ is trying to
achieve through the power of the gun what was achieved through the
power of the Quran.
The Quran is not a political manifesto of Muslims. The Quran is a book
of ideology. The Quran is a power when it is used for peaceful Quranic
activism. It is with regard to this point that the ‘Muslim Brotherhood’
has failed — it takes the name of the Quran as a political agenda, and
not for the basis of peaceful dawah.
The best advice for the ‘Muslim Brotherhood’ can be given in two
words: reassess your policies and re-plan your activities on the basis
of the Quran. The former Egyptian President Mohamed Morsi was
deposed from his offi ce on July 3, 2013. He delivered a long speech
on June 26, 2013 where he said: “Asabtu ahyanan wa akhtatu ahyanan ukhra” (‘Sometimes I was right in the actions I took, and sometimes I
committed mistakes.’)
I would like to add that he and his party were wrong in the target they
had opted for. They opted for a political target, while they should have
instead opted for dawah as their target. They did not gain anything
from their political target, while by making dawah their target they
could have gained both — political power and dawah.
Maulana Wahiduddin Khan
editor@thespiritofi slam.org
1. The World’s 500 Most Infl uential Muslims 2012, Royal Islamic Strategic Studies Centre, Jordan
Formula for Strength
Every tree is known to be
a composite of two parts,
half of it being below the
surface of the earth,
and the other half
standing up in the air.
This is the formula for strength.
Strength can only be achieved
from the inside and not
from the outside.
If you want to live as a strong person,
you have to develop a fi rm base,
and then you will be able to live as a
worthy member of your society.
Overcoming Handicaps
One may be beset by the most grievous handicaps in life,
but it is always possible to rise above them. However,
this can be done by one who is willing to endure
some “initial pain”; and put in some
“extra eff ort” to achieve
one’s goal.
WHEN the Russian astronaut Andriyan Nikolayev returned
to Earth after a journey in space, he addressed a press
conference in Moscow and said:
When I arrived back on Earth, I wanted to kiss the ground.
For human beings, there is nothing like the Earth — fi lled as it is with
unlimited favourable conditions—anywhere else in the entire known
universe. When this Russian astronaut went away from the Earth and
far into space, he found that there was nothing in outer space that was
suitable for human life to exist. In the vastness of space, there was
nothing that could provide peace and comfort for mankind.
The difference between a believer and one who does not
believe is that the latter is besotted by creation, while a
believer rises above creation and discovers his Creator.
After this experience, when he returned to Earth he was able to truly
appreciate the value of the Earth, just as a severely thirsty person
realizes the value of water when he fi nally gets some to drink. The Earth,
along with its wonderful life support system, appeared so precious to
Nikolayev that he wanted to embrace it and express his love for it.
This is what is called false attribution in the language of the shariah.
People are unable to see the Creator, and so they take created beings
as their deities, devoting all their emotions to them.
The true believer is one, who can see beyond the visible to comprehend
the invisible; who realizes that whatever he sees is all bestowed by
Someone Else; that everything in this world has been created by a
Superior Being. Observing the creation, he acknowledges the Creator,
and takes the Creator as his sole concern. He surrenders all his lofty
emotions to God.
The sort of emotions which the Russian astronaut experienced on his
return to earth are also felt in a much more intense form by the one
who discovers God. A true believer is one who, when he sees the sun,
finds in its light the light of God. In the vast expanses of the heavens he appreciates the infi nite power of God. In the scent of a fl ower he fi nds
the fragrance of God. In the fl ow of water he sees God’s bounty.
The true believer is one who can see beyond the visible
to comprehend the invisible.
The difference between a believer and one who does not believe is that
the latter is besotted by creation, while a believer rises above creation
and discovers his Creator. The one who does not believe thinks that the
beauty of created things is actually intrinsic to these things, and so he
gets obsessed with them.
On the other hand, a true believer sees the beauty of the Creator in
the beauty of creation and surrenders himself to their Maker. The one
who does not realize this prostrates before created things, while the
one who realizes the truth prostrates before the Creator of all things.
Ease after Hardship
There is no doubting the fact
that failure in life usually results
from the quest for immediate success.
The word 'short-cut”'may be applicable
to the world of roads and footpaths, but
there are no short cuts in the struggles of life.
Such is the order of nature.
In this world just as ease
always follows hardship,
so fruitful results come only from
arduous, painstaking processes.
ALL religions give, through rituals and ceremonies, a defi nite
form to the act of worship. Islam, too, has specifi c rites but
emphasises the spirit in which these are to be carried out. Form
is an external manifestation of the spirit. The latter is the vital and
indispensable element of every sincere religious act, while the former
is a mere ancillary.
A hadith on fasting shows how this act must be illumined by spirit: “One
who did not forsake telling lies while on a fast, God has no need of
such a person forsaking food and water.” Numerous statements in the
Quran and hadith make it clear that in Islam the form of ritual practices
and their spirit are not equal constituents of worship. In relation to
one another, one is the crucial and the other, a sub-ordinate element.
Each act of worship may or may not — depending upon its nature and
circumstances — have an external form, but, whether ritualised or
formless, what is truly important is the spirit that underlies it.
Form is an external manifestation of the spirit which is
the vital and indispensable element of every
sincere religious act.
While rituals serve partly as palpable identifi ers of religious acts or acts
of worship and partly as physical reinforcements of or prompters to
religious ardour, the essence of Islam is the inner spirit, eternal and
unassailable, unlike its outer forms. Whenever this reality is lodged in
the recesses of the individual psyche, its eff ects are outwardly refl ected.
Sincerely performed ceremonial acts are but concrete expressions of
the incontrovertible inner truth.
When, near the end of his life, Prophet Muhammad went on his
pilgrimage, he laid down specifi c ways of performing Haj. More than
100,000 of his companions went with him. Then the Prophet seated
himself in the courtyard of the Kabah and his companions queried
him on the procedures of this important part of worship, especially
concerning rites and their proper forms. (Haj involves the performance
of a series of rites, and since this was the fi rst proper Haj, there was
uncertainty about their correct order.) The Prophet allayed their
fears, saying: “There is no harm. There is no harm. Real harm lies in the dishonouring of a person.” This saying throws light on how form
relates to spirit in Islam: the spirit is the essential factor, while the form
or ritual is a matter of externals. If the believer is not lacking in spirit,
any defi ciency in the form of his worship is tolerable.
The converse of this is illustrated by a tradition set down in the books
of hadith. Once, the Prophet was seated in the mosque in Medina when
a worshipper came to meet him after performing his ablutions and
saying his prayers with full observance of their form. The Prophet sent
him back to say his prayers again as, he said, he had not said his prayers.
Here, a distinction was made between form and spirit. The Prophet
sensed that this worshipper’s performance of the rituals of prayer had
been mechanical and not imbued with religious spirit. Indeed, the true
spirit of salath is modesty. But this individual’s behaviour showed that
while he was praying, modesty was far from his mind. The Prophet told
him to go back and say his prayers so that he should concern himself
with the kernel of prayer, not its outer shell.
However punctilious the worship in form, without the true spirit the
performance of the ritual is invalid. The mere observance of the form
of worship does not make worship acceptable in the eyes of God.
The word 'ritual', in fact, has the same connotation as 'form'. The only
diff erence is that 'form' is a term of general application, and 'ritual' has
become a religious term.
A hadith report tells us that the value of an act depends upon the doer’s
intention. That is, a practice must be evaluated on the basis of the
motivation behind it. Here is an example from the Prophet’s migration
from Makkah to Medina, known as the Hijrah. This emigration was for
the sake of Islam, wherein people abandoned hearth and home for
God. It was an act of great religious signifi cance. One of the emigrants,
however was not pure in intent. He left Makkah for Medina with the
ulterior motive of marrying a girl from Medina, who had agreed to
marry him only if he came to Medina as she could not go to Makkah. The
Prophet told his companions that, since this individual had migrated
not for the sake of God but for his own private benefi t, he would not
be rewarded.
This makes it clear that rituals are of relative value in Islam. The true
value of an act in Islam depends entirely upon the spirit in which it is
carried out, and not on the trappings of its outward form.
THE Prophet Abraham was born about 2000 years before Christ,
in the Sumerian city-state of Ur, which is located in present-day
Iraq. He lived for more than 175 years. Ur was the capital city
and the centre of Mesopotamia.
Those were the times when polytheism was the predominant thought.
Whatever appeared great to human observation was considered
either as God or was attributed as something divine. This culture was
prevalent everywhere, from individual homes to political fi elds. The
old world order was established on these false assumptions, known in
religious terms as polytheism and in rational language as superstition.
The negative fall-out of these assumptions was that nature became a
subject of holiness and worship. All the prophets, including Prophet
Abraham and Prophet Muhammad, came with the sole mission of
conveying the message of the worship of the one God to humankind. As
far as nature was concerned instead of making it an object of worship
one should make it a subject of contemplation and explore ways of
harnessing it for our real benefit.
Instead of making Nature an object of worship one should
make it a subject of contemplation and explore ways of
harnessing it for man’s benefit.
Prophet Abraham started his mission with this same message in ancient
Iraq. At that time, his father enjoyed the position of a priest in society.
Hence, Prophet Abraham began his mission from his own house, as
a result of which he was soon homeless. After this, he continued to
convey the message of worship of the one Creator to his people in
various ways. But his people also turned against him and his message.
Another serious matter of this age was that kingdoms fl ourished based
on divinity of the rulers, and this was linked to the worship of nature.
Such superstitious beliefs were a means used by rulers to maintain
their hold and their domination of the people. Hence, they used all
their powers to put down any movement that they felt was against
these superstitious and false beliefs.
This was the case with King Nimrod of ancient Iraq, who was a contemporary of Prophet Abraham. Nimrod had established his
kingship claiming to be an incarnation of the Sun God. Prophet Abraham
called on Nimrod to the worship of the One God. Nimrod rejected this
call and instead resorted to violence against Abraham. Despite his best
eff orts, Prophet Abraham was forced to leave his homeland. At this
time, there were only two people with him. One was his wife Sarah and
the other was his nephew, Prophet Lot.
Prophet Abraham then married Hajira (Hagar). He settled his nephew
Lot in the land of Sodom, where he started his mission of conveying
to humankind the message of God. He settled his fi rst wife, Sarah, in
Palestine, and, along with Hajira, went through diff erent lands fi nally
reaching Makkah. These journeys were undertaken by Abraham with
the guidance of God through the Angel Gabriel (Sahih Bukhari).
For the mission of conveying God’s message,
such individuals were required who would be
uncorrupted of any cultural conditioning.
Prophet Abraham left his wife Hajira and his infant son Ismael in this
desert land with a bag of dates and a pouch full of water. His wife
Hajira went behind him, seeking an explanation on why he was leaving
them alone in this place. When he did not answer she herself asked if
it was the commandment of God. He replied in the affi rmative. Then,
Hajira said, “If it is God’s will, then surely He will not let this go fruitless.”
Prophet Abraham had to do this as the people of those times were
so conditioned in their culture that they were unable to accept the
message of truth which now appeared alien to them. They refuted all
attempts to change their beliefs and system of life so much so that
it became obvious that their false beliefs and cultures would remain
for centuries. Prophet Abraham had settled his family in the barren
desert of Arabia because this uninhabited place, being far from urban
settlements, was ideally suited for the development of a new and
pure generation that would be uncorrupted by the infl uences of city
life and culture.
Prophet Abraham then dreamt that he was sacrifi cing his son. This was
an injunction from God that he should dedicate his son to a divine
mission; one such mission which would begin from the parched
deserts of Arabia. For the new mission of conveying God’s message, no other place was suitable as wherever there were people, they were
under the infl uence of superstition and false beliefs and were unable
to think diff erent to their cultural conditioning. At that time, there was
not a single house that in the world of God that had been made for the
remembrance of God. For such a House of God also, this very place in
the desert of Arabia was the most suitable. Here, Prophet Abraham,
with the help of his son, Ismael, constructed a house dedicated to God
which is known as the Kabah or the House of God.
The eff orts of Prophets Abraham and Ismael culminated some 2500
years later in a new generation that is referred to in the Quran as
‘qair-e-ummah’ (
numbered just a handful, but by this time a team had been created
that would refl ect the supplication of the Prophet, ‘...make of our
descendants a nation that will submit to you....’ (THE QURAN 2: 128).
The Islamic scholar-historian Philip. K. Hitti, referred to them in his book,
History of the Arabs (1937), as a ‘nursery of heroes’. English scholar and
orientalist, David Samuel Margoliouth has described them as a ‘nation
of heroes’. This kind of acknowledgement was nothing but acceptance
of an established fact that was well recorded in history. Quranic words
are a prediction about the companions of the Prophet, which no one
knew about at the time of revelation of these verses.
It was in this generation that Muhammad-bin-Abdullah was born in
570 A.D. God chose him to be a prophet in 610 A.D., and when he
breathed his last, in 623 A.D., his companions numbered over 125,000.
This was the team that was the culmination of a historical process that
had started 2500 years before. Through the generations of Prophet
Abraham and Ismael, a group of precious individuals were selected
who would devote their lives to God and who for the fi rst time in history
would take the message of the Oneness of God towards an ideological
revolution.
The pilgrimage of Haj is an annual reminder of this great mission that
was originated by Prophet Abraham.
‘NO man is an island entire of itself’. Every man is born in a
particular society, and it is this society that creates the mindset
of an individual. We imbibe the aff ects of our surroundings
and the prevailing culture. Every man and woman is a product of the
environment or society he or she lives in. These societal eff ects that are
cultivated in one's mind is what is referred to as the conditioning of the
mind. Everyone possesses a mind that is conditioned in some way or
the other, and this is the biggest issue we face.
It is this conditioning that is responsible for turning us away from
our original pure nature. In this respect, every one is a sure case of
a conditioned mind. It is very important that this unnatural eff ect is
eliminated; that is the conditioned mind is de-conditioned. Hence, it
becomes imperative that each one of us de-condition ourselves and
bring ourselves back on to our pure original nature. This process of
de-conditioning of the mind can also be called as the re-engineering of
the mind.
Every man and woman is a product of the
environment or society they live in.
In society, various activities are undertaken with the aim of purifi cation
of the mind. Despite diverse activities, this goal is far from being
realized. This is because all these activities are attempted without fi rst
de-conditioning the mind. It is as if everyone is on a journey which
has yet to commence. It is only after de-conditioning the mind that
one can have a truly well-prepared mind. Without such a well-prepared
mind, one will be unable to accept anything with an open mind, and
will, instead, understand things based on preconceived notions.
We are all born in a pure natural state. Due to the conditioning we receive
from society and family, our nature is infl uenced. This conditioning is
like a series of coverings over our true nature, similar to the peels of an
onion. De-conditioning is a process that can be symbolically explained
as a removal of these layers, one by one, until the true, pure nature is
uncovered. In this respect an onion is a material example of the deconditioning
process.
All efforts to purify the mind are unproductive until and unless a deconditioning
of the mind is fi rst undertaken. And the biggest thing that
requires de-conditioning is the total elimination of negative thinking.
Tazkiya is the Islamic name for this process of de-conditioning and
purifi cation of the mind, which has to be undertaken continuously, till
the end of one's life.
The Process of De-conditioning
De-conditioning of the mind can only be done by one process alone,
and that is introspection. This is a continuous, merciless examination of
our own selves in order to improve. This improvement can come in two
ways. One is to accept the harsh criticism of others by acknowledging
their external ‘hammering’ with an open mind. Without being off ended,
one should take on board harsh criticism from others, and, after an
objective analysis, carry out a complete re-assessment of oneself.
Every man is born in a society and it is this society
that creates the mind-set of an individual.
The other method of de-conditioning can be called ‘self-hammering’.
This is to look at ourselves with a critical eye, to evaluate ourselves day
and night; to perceive every mistake with severity and then introspect
by mercilessly ‘hammering’ ourselves without giving ourselves any
concessions in any matter. Instead of accusing others, we should carry
out an objective analysis of ourselves and fi nd our own faults.
These are the only two possible ways of de-conditioning. Either one
accepts the ‘hammering’ of others or one becomes one’s own worst
critic by ‘self-hammering’. The one who likes to hear good things about
himself from others and makes excuses to himself for his mistakes
will always remain a conditioned person and will never be able to decondition
or purify his mind.
THE significance and message of the pilgrimage is for man to turn
towards God, making God the central focus of his life. Although
the Haj lasts for just a few days, the lessons it provides have a
much broader significance. Haj is a comprehensive guide for the whole
of one’s life.
When we take leave of our homes and families and set off for Haj, we
feel that we are journeying towards God. It is as if we have left our world
and are entering the world of God. We feel we are heading towards the
House of God, to the abode and place of experience of God’s Prophet
and his companions — to the historically signifi cant places of people
who had devoted their entire lives for the sake of God, and who gave their lives in God’s
path. With this, the pilgrim also realizes the fact that he is setting off
for that place which God specially chose to reveal his fi nal guidance to
humankind.
The significance and message of the pilgrimage
— is for man to turn towards God, making God
the central focus of his life.
In this manner, Haj leads to the pilgrim becoming a God-oriented
person. He recalls and remembers God. His mind is fi lled with thoughts
of God. If earlier he used to think principally about himself, now he
thinks mainly or wholly of God.
A man’s psyche is moulded in accordance with his thoughts. If we
think about and act only for ourselves, we become self-centered. But
when we set off towards God, our mind turns towards Him. We begin
to think of God. We now remember that it was God who created us.
That it is God who gave us so many diff erent opportunities. That it was
He who made us capable of doing many things in this world. That it
was because of His blessings that we are able to journey towards His
house. That, fi nally, the day will dawn when we will die, after which we
will have to directly appear in His court. All this makes the pilgrim’s
journey into a truly spiritual one. Although, the Haj is in the form of a physical journey, due to its internal spirit it becomes a meaningful one
that takes the pilgrim to a high spiritual plane.
During the journey, the pilgrim calls out the following words:
God is the Greatest! God is the Greatest! There is none worthy,br>
of worship other than Him! And God is the Greatest!
God is the Greatest! And all praise is for Him!
By constantly repeating these words, a consciousness develops in a
haji (Haj pilgrim) that all greatness is for God alone. In comparison to
God, everything else pales into complete insignifi cance. The greatness
of everything else is only so that it can be drowned or surrendered in
this greatest of all glory — the glory of God. This is the real secret of
social consciousness. You cannot have unity and harmonious collective
living where every person thinks that he/she is greater than the others.
On the other hand, when everyone surrenders their sense of individual
greatness, you will fi nd unity and harmony. Disunity is a result of the
dispersal of greatness and unity is a result of the acknowledgement of
a single greatness. People can live harmoniously together only when
everyone surrenders their sense of greatness before a single being.
When people from diff erent parts of the world arrive close to the place
of pilgrimage, they remove their distinctive dress and don the same
sort of simple, unstitched white clothes — a uniform known as ihram.
This symbolizes that they have now entered a new world. By removing
their national costume or personal dress, it is as if they are shedding
the lifestyles that they had been conditioned into. They are now stirred
by a powerful God-consciousness, being dyed in the hue of God.
As we set off for Haj, we feel that we are journeying
towards God. It is as if we have left our world
and are entering the world of God.
Putting divine clothes on their bodies, the pilgrims begin to utter
divine words. Labbaik! Allahuma Labbaik! ‘Here I am at Your service!
Here I am at Your service!’, they cry out, as if God had called them and
they are rushing towards Him. The cries of Labbaik! Labbaik! ‘Here I
am at Your service! Here I am at Your service!’ resound continuously
from the pilgrims all around. When the pilgrim cries, Labbaik! ‘Here I
am!’, he doesn’t mean to say that he has come to settle in Makkah.
It isn’t a declaration of his having left his homeland and arriving in
Makkah. Rather, it is a declaration of having left his previous conduct
or behaviour. It is an announcement to say that, ‘I am here with a
complete willingness to obey You (God), and do whatever You (God)
command. To submit my life and soul to Your command.’ Although the
pilgrim declares, Labbaik, ‘Here I am at Your service!’ at the place of Haj;
he must stand by this declaration in practice in his personal life on his
return from Haj.
On reaching Makkah, the fi rst thing that the pilgrim does is to
circumambulate the Kabah. This is an important ritual of Haj known as
the tawaf. The Kabah is a historical structure originally built by Prophet
Abraham in the centre of a large courtyard also called the House of
God. In the courtyard, the pilgrims go around the Kabah seven times,
symbolizing their willingness to have God as the centre of their lives.
They affi rm that they will consider God as the focus around which
their lives will revolve. It is as if scattered bits of iron are being pulled
towards a divine magnet.
Although the pilgrim declares, Labbaik, ‘Here I am at
Your service!’ at the place of Haj; he must stand by
this declaration in practice in the personal life
that he leads on his return from Haj.
The tawaf is symbolic of making all one’s eff orts constrained around
a single focus. This is akin to our solar system, where all the planets
revolve around a single sun, making it the focus around which they
revolve. In the same way,
Haj essentially teaches us to lead God-centric lives; to make
God the focus of every aspect of our lives and to spend our
lives according to His will. This is the same with all the other rituals
of Haj that in diff erent symbolic ways impart the lesson of a
God-conscious life.
Believers all over the world turn towards the Kabah every day, off ering
their fi ve daily prayers. Ordinarily, this is just a notion in the minds
of people, but when they gather together during the Haj, it becomes
an astounding reality. When believers from all over the world pray
together facing the Kabah, they experience an amazing sense of unity when they realize that they are facing the same Kabah of the believers
of the whole world.
During the tawaf, the orderly circumambulation of the Kabah provides
the pilgrims another invaluable lesson — of working together, of doing
things together and in harmony. Here, diff erences between rulers and
subjects are eliminated completely, as are ethnic diff erences. It is as if
every single person has just one status: as a servant of the one God. At
this time, they have no other status but this.
After the tawaf, the pilgrim runs seven times between the hillocks of
Safa and Marwah. This too, is a symbolic declaration — an expression
of the pilgrim’s determination to devote all eff orts in God’s path. This
running between the two hillocks is not simply a mere physical act.
Rather, in the form of repetition of a historical act, it stands for the
pilgrim’s willingness to spend his whole life running in God’s path. It is
symbolic of making all activities throughout one’s life to be contained
within certain boundaries. Such regulation is necessary for a wellordered
life. If our activities are not bounded or regulated in this
manner, it would lead to chaos.
Disunity is a result of the distribution of greatness
and unity is a result of the acknowledgement
of a single greatness.
One of the most important acts of worship during Haj is the heading
to and staying in the plain of Arafat. This presents a truly astonishing
sight. Vast numbers of people, from across the world, assemble here,
wearing the same simple clothes and uttering the same words, ‘Here I
am at Thy service O Lord, here I am.’ It is a worldly rehearsal of the Day of
Judgment, when all people will be brought before God. It is a reminder
of this great truth that one day we will all have to stand before God,
accountable for all our actions. If one realizes this signifi cance of the
assembly at Arafat, one’s life can be totally transformed. It is as if all the
diff erences among human beings have suddenly vanished, and that,
setting aside all their confl icts, they have surrendered themselves to
the one God. It is as if they have all become one, just as their God is
one. Despite their diff erences of language, colour, status and gender,
they have become identical and one. Diff erent nationalities, it appears,
have all turned into one single nation or community. Haj is a glorious and unparalleled expression of human unity and collectiveness. One
cannot fi nd anything similar elsewhere in the world.
Another part of the rituals of Haj is the stoning of the Jamarat. It symbolizes
preparation for warding off the evil whispers of the devil. By stoning the
Jamarat, the pilgrim refreshes his determination to repel evil and cause the
devil to fl ee from him. He announces his enmity against, and opposition to,
the devil. If one converts this symbolic act into actual practice, one can truly
expel all evil and negativity from oneself.
After this, the pilgrim sacrifi ces an animal in God’s path. In the Quran
it is considered as a divine symbol. Sacrifi cing an animal stands for
sacrifi cing one’s own self. By sacrifi cing an animal, the pilgrim symbolizes
his willingness to sacrifi ce everything in God’s path, including even his
own life if need be. He expresses, thereby, his commitment to off er his
everything for God’s sake.
Haj teaches us to lead God-centric lives; to make God
the focus of every aspect of our lives and to
spend our lives according to His will.
Although the rituals of Haj are completed in Makkah, many pilgrims
go to Medina after fi nishing their Haj. The ancient name for Medina is
Yathrib. Towards the end of his life, the Prophet of Islam made it his
centre, and that is why it came to be known as Madinat ul-Nabi or ‘The
City of the Prophet’. Medina is a short form of this term.
In Medina is a mosque built by the Prophet, where his grave is also
located. Here also one fi nds the footprints of his prophetic life. When
hajis arrive in Medina, they are reminded once again of the collective
unity of mankind despite its diversity. The mosque of the Prophet
reminds them that their one true guide is the same Prophet. They
return from here with the feeling that despite their geographical or
national diff erences, they have to follow the same path, the one shown
by the Prophet.
This is another powerful symbol of their unity. They return from Medina
inspired by the understanding that no matter what their diff erences—
of nation, ethnicity and so on—they must all walk on the path of their
same prophet, that they must take as their guide the same blessed
fi gure, and that their God is the One God.
THE mission of Muslims is dawah or the communication of the
Word of God. It is in its performance that they will be held
deserving of being raised in the Hereafter as the followers of the
Prophet of Islam. This is expressed in the following verse of the Quran:
O Messenger, deliver whatever has been sent down to you
by your Lord. If you do not do so, you will not have
conveyed His message.
THE QURAN 5: 67
Although this verse is addressed to the Prophet Muhammad, his
followers are included in it. The fi rst thing that this verse tells us is
to convey the divine revelations to the people. This is the task which
God wants Muslims to perform. According to the Quran, God has made
the Muslims a middle nation, so that they may act as witnesses over
mankind, and the messenger may be a witness for them. (THE QURAN
are God’s witnesses on this earth.”
All the problems which Muslims face in this life have a
common solution — in the form of calling people to God.
It is a known fact that when a person is appointed to any position of
responsibility, his future depends on how well or badly he carries out
the duties which that post entails. If he satisfactorily performs the duty
for which he has been appointed, he will be held deserving of all kinds
of rewards. But if he neglects his duty, no other work done, even if it
is on a larger scale, will make him deserving on any honour in the eyes
of his Creator. In this matter, Muslims must pay heed to this warning
which was given to the previous people of the Book, when they stopped
conveying God’s message to mankind:
God made a covenant with those who were given the Book
to make it known to people and not conceal it. But they cast it
behind their backs and bartered it for a paltry price:
what an evil bargain they made!
Those who exult in their misdeeds and love to be praised for what they have not done should not suppose that they
are secure from punishment; they shall suffer
a grievous punishment.
THE QURAN 3: 187-188
The mission of Muslims is dawah or the
communication of the Word of God.
A sect which is the bearer of the Divine Book becomes valueless in
the eyes of God when it fails to convey the Divine revelation to the
people. Engaging in other activities at the cost of preaching God’s word
and wrongly designating other activities as dawah work is adding insult
to injury. No such group can ever be held deserving of any credit for
carrying out the Divine task.
Dawah work — the solution to all problems.
Muslims face many problems but they do not need to devote their
energies to solving those problems (THE QURAN 5: 67). God has given
them a master-key, and that is, dawah work, which can solve all their
problems. For instance, man needs a number of things in his life,
but, rather than pay attention to them separately, he sets about
making money, because he knows that if he can make money all his
needs will be fulfi lled on their own. The same is true of spreading
God’s word. All the problems which Muslims face in this life have a
common solution — in the form of calling people to God. This is what
the message of Haj is.
Mind at Peace
Spirituality is the result of a peaceful mind.
And, living with a mind at peace lies within
your own domain. No one can interfere with it.
Your mind is your own exclusive property.
Do not allow anyone to rule your mind
– by remote control as it were. This is the only
practical formula for the attainment of spirituality.
Maulana Wahiduddin Khan (1925-2021) was an Islamic scholar, spiritual guide, and an Ambassador of Peace. He authored over 200 books and recorded thousands of lectures giving the rational interpretation of Islamic concepts, prophetic wisdom, and the spiritual meaning of the Quran in the contemporary style. His English translation, The Quran, is widely appreciated as simple, clear and in contemporary style. He founded Centre for Peace and Spirituality (CPS) International in 2001 to re-engineer minds towards God-oriented living and present Islam as it is, based on the principles of peace, spirituality, and co-existence. Maulana breathed his last on 21 April, 2021 in New Delhi, India. His legacy is being carried forward through the CPS International Network.
© 2024 CPS USA.