| 17. RESPONSIBILITIES TO MANKIND
Verse 36, Chapter 4 of the Holy Qur’an reminds mankind
to “Serve God, and join not any partners with Him; And do good to
parents, kinsfolk, orphans, those in need, neighbors who are near,
neighbors who are strangers or live far, the companions by your
side, the wayfarer you meet, and the captives you take in war, for
God loveth not the arrogant, the vainglorious.”
Prophet Muhammad said, “He will not enter paradise whose neighbor
is not secure from his wrongful conduct.” And, “You are
not a believer if your neighbor goes to bed hungry and you had
eaten.”
The Prophet also said that the Arch Angel Gabriel reminded him so
many times about the rights of neighbors that he thought, may be the
neighbors would become participants in the heritance as well.” He
also said, “The best among you is the one who gives the
maximum benefits to others.”
Prophet Muhammad said: “God will question a person on the Day of
Resurrection saying:
‘O son of Adam, I was sick but you did not visit me.’
The person will say: ‘O my Lord, how could I visit thee when Thou
art the Lord of the worlds?’ Thereupon God will say: ‘Didn’t you
know that a servant of mine was sick but you did not visit him, and
were you not aware that if you had visited him, you would have found
me by him?’
God will then say, ‘O son of Adam, I asked you for
food but you did not feed me.’ The person will say: ‘My Lord, how
could I feed Thee when Thou art the Lord of the Worlds?’ God will
say: ‘Didn’t you know that a servant of Mine asked you for food but
you did not feed him, and were you not aware that if you had fed him
you would have found me by his side?’
18. INTENTION AND DEEDS
Islam gives great importance to a person’s intentions when
carrying out any deed, good or bad.
Prophet Muhammad said, “Verily the deeds are by the
intentions, and for every person (there is in store for him) what he
intended. God looks not to your figure, nor to your wealth, but He
looks to your heart, and deeds.”
The Prophet also said: “When two Muslims fight each
other with swords, the killed and the killer both are doomed to
hell.” Then the Prophet was asked, O’ Messenger of
God, as to the one who kills, it is understandable, but what about
the “killed”? The Prophet replied, “The other longed to
murder his opponent.”
God Almighty reminds us in the Holy Qur’an about doing good
deeds:
“And whatsoever good you do, God is aware of it.”
(Chapter 2, Verse 215).
“Then shall anyone who has done an atom’s weight of
good, see it.” (Chapter 99, Verse 7).
“If anyone does a righteous deed, it inures to the
benefit of his own soul; if he does evil, it works against his own
soul. In the end will ye all be brought back to your Lord.”
The Prophet also said: “Three things follow a dead
body: The members of his family, his possessions, and his deeds. Two
of them return back and only one accompanies him. The people and his
wealth return back, but his deeds remain with him.”
19. KNOWLEDGE
Islam places great emphasis on learning and knowledge.
Chapter 20 Verse 114 of The Holy Qur’an reminds us that God is
above every human event or desire. His purpose is universal, but He
is the Truth, the absolute Truth: and His kingdom is the true
kingdom that can carry out His Will, that truth unfolds itself
gradually, as it did in the gradual revelation of one Qur’an to
Prophet Muhammad. But even after it was completed in a volume, its
true meaning and purpose only gradually unfold themselves to any
given individual or nation. No one should be impatient about it. On
the contrary, one should always pray for an increase in one’s
knowledge, which can never at any given moment be complete.
In Chapter 58, Verse 11 of the Qur’an, God Almighty
says that faith makes all people equal in His Kingdom, as regards
the essentials of citizenship in the Kingdom. But then are
leadership, and rank, and degree, joined with greater or lesser
responsibility, and that depends on true knowledge and insight.
Prophet Muhammad said: “Anyone who travels on a road in quest of
knowledge, God will cause him to travel on one of the roads of
Paradise. The angels will lower their wings over the seeker of
knowledge. The inhabitants of the heavens and the earth and the fish
in the depth of water will seek forgiveness for him. The superiority
of the learned worshiper is like that of the full moon over the rest
of the stars. The learned are the heirs of the Prophets who leave no
inheritance of wealth, but only of knowledge, and that who acquires
it, acquires an abundant portion.”
The Prophet also said: “Learn from cradle to grave”,
and travel to China if you have to for the sake of knowledge.”
20. PATIENCE
Several verses of the Qur’an, talk about patience. Let us share the
translation of a few:
O’you who believe, be patient, and out do all others
in endurance” (Chapter 2, Verse 200).
“Those who patiently persevere will truly receive a
reward without measure” (Chapter 39, Verse 10).
Be sure, We shall test you with something of fear and
hunger, some loss in goods or lives or the fruits of your labor, but
give glad tidings to those who patiently persevere – who say when
afflicted with calamity: To God we belong, and to Him is our return.
They are those on whom descend blessings from their Lord, and mercy,
and they are the ones that receive guidance” (Chapter
2, Verse 155 thru 157).
“We will surely test you until we know the valiant
and the steadfast among you” (Chapter 47 Verse 31).
God Almighty has said: “I have no reward other than
paradise for a believing servant of mine who remains patient when I
take away his loved one from among the denizens of the world.”
Prophet Muhammad said: “How excellent is the case of a faithful
servant; there is good for him in everything. If prosperity attends
him, he expresses gratitude to God, and that is good for him, and if
adversity befalls him, he endures it patiently, and that is better
for him.”
The Prophet also said: “Never a believer is stricken
with discomfort, hardship or illness, grief or even with mental
worry that his sins are not expiated for him. His sins drop away
just as a tree sheds its leaves.”
21. ANGER AND GOOD MANNERS
Someone asked Prophet Mohammad for a simple advice
that he could follow. His answer was, “Do not get angry.”
The Prophet also said: “The strongest among you is
not the one with most power or the one in authority or the one with
the most money. It is the one who can control his anger.”
The Prophet also gave some practical advice as how to control
anger. He advised Muslims that when they are angry, to make ablution
or wash their face, forearms, and feet with water. Also, that if
they are standing, to sit down, and if they are sitting, to lie
down.
Prophet Muhammad said: “Seven kinds of people will be
sheltered under the shade of God on the Day of Judgment. They are:
- A just ruler;
- A young man who passed his youth in the worship, and service
of God;
- One whose heart is attached to the mosque;
- Two people who love each other for the sake of God;
- A man who is invited to sin but declines, saying: “I fear
God”;
- One who spends his charity in secret, without making a show;
- And one who remembers God in solitude so that his eyes
overflow.
The Prophet also said: “A believer, through his good
manners, may achieve the status of the one who regularly fasts to
please God during the day, and spends the night in prayer.”
22. CHARITY
Islam places great emphasis upon charity i.e. sharing one’s
wealth with those who are less fortunate. The subject of charity is
discussed at least 45 times in the Holy Qur’an.
Translation of Chapter 2 Verse 261 of the Holy Qur’an reads:
“The parable of those who spend their sustenance in the way of God
is that of a grain of corn: it growth seven ears, and each ear hath
a hundred grains. God gives manifold increase to those He pleaseth:
and God careth for all, and He knoweth all things.”
Translation of Verse 263 of the same Chapter 2 reads,
“Kind words, and covering of faults are better than charity
followed by injury. God is free of all wants and he is most
forbearing.”
The Qur’an is setting a very high standard for charity: It must
be in the way of God, with no expectation of reward in this world,
and must not be followed by references or reminders about the act of
charity.
Prophet Mohammad said, “Charity is due on every Muslim.” Someone
asked the Prophet, “What if he does not have anything to give?” The
Prophet said, “Let him work with both his hands, doing benefit to
himself and giving charity at the same time.” The person asked
again, “What if he does not have the means to do so?” the Prophet
said, “Then let him assist the needy and the aggrieved.” The person
asked again, “What if he cannot even do this?” The Prophet replied,
“Then he should enjoin what is reputable or what is good.” The
person asked one more time, “What if he cannot do that either?” The
Prophet then replied, “He should do no evil, for verily that is a
charity on his behalf.”
A man came to Prophet Muhammad and said, “O! Messenger
of God, which charity is most rewardable?” The Prophet replied,
“That you give charity in a state when you are healthy and close
fisted and haunted by the fear of poverty, hoping to become rich.”
You must not defer charity until that you are about to die and would
be saying: This is for so and so.
The Prophet also said: “Hasten to do good deeds before you are
overtaken by one of seven things:
- Such starvation as will make you unmindful of devotion,
- Or such prosperity as will make you corrupt,
- Or such disease as will disable you,
- Or senility as will make you mentally unstable,
- Or sudden death,
- Or the antichrist,
- Or the day of destruction.
Greed : Prophet Muhammad said: “If the
son of Adam, had a valley full of gold, he would desire two of them.
Nothing can fill his mouth except the earth of his grave. God turns
with mercy to the one who feels penitence.”
23. DOES GOD NEED OUR GOOD DEEDS?
Prophet Muhammad told what God has said:
“My servants, I have made oppression unlawful for Me
and unlawful for you, so do not commit oppression against one
another. My servants, all of you are liable to err except the one
whom I guide to the right path, so seek the right guidance from Me,
so that I lead you to the right path. O’ My servants, all of you are
hungry (needy) except the one whom I feed, so beg food from Me, so
that I may give that to you. O’ My servants, all of you are naked
(need clothes) except the one whom I provide garments, so beg
clothes from Me, so that I may clothe you. O’ My servants, you
commit error night and day, and I am there to pardon your sins, so
beg pardon from Me so that I should grant you pardon. O’ my
servants, you can neither do me any harm, nor can you do me any
good. O’ my servants, even if the firsts among you and the lasts
among you and even the whole of human race of yours, and that of the
Jinn’s (ghosts) even, become (equal in) God conscience like the
heart of a single person amongst you, nothing would add to my power.
O’ my servants, even, if the first amongst you and the lasts amongst
you and the whole human race of yours and that of the Jinn’s too and
unison become the most wicked (all beating) like the heart of a
single person, it would cause no loss to my power. O’ my servants,
even if the first amongst you and the last amongst you and the whole
human race of yours and that of Jinn’s also all stand in one plain
ground, and you ask me and I confer upon every person what he asks
for, it would not, in any way, cause any loss to me (even less) than
that which is caused to the ocean by dipping the needle in it. My
servants, these deeds of yours which I am recording for you I shall
reward you for them, so that who finds good should praise, and that
who encounters something else should blame only himself.”
Chapter 3, Verse 195 of the Qur’an reminds us, “So their
Lord answers their prayers, saying: ‘I will not let the good deed of
any worker among you, whether a male or female, be wasted. You are
the offspring of one another.”
Prophet Muhammad also said, “If anyone summons others
to follow the right guidance, his reward will be equivalent to those
of the people who follow him, without their reward decreased in any
way. And if anyone invites others to follow the error, his sin will
be equivalent to those people who follow him, without their sins
being decreased in any way.”
Huston Smith, the distinguished Professor of Religion at the
University of California, Berkley Campus, while discussing the
existence and presence of God with Bill Moyers in the Television
Program Series, Wisdom of Faith, says:
Let us say, that a bunch of dogs decide that they are
going to prove the existence of mathematics. So they take some
papers on which some math problems have been solved, and give them a
“Sniff Test”. What answer would they come up?
Huston gives another example from the Muslim scholar Rumi, who
says that there are 3 ways to learn about fire:
i) To be told about it;
ii) To see it;
iii) To be burnt by it.
At this point, Bill Moyers asks Huston, “Have you been burnt by
it?” Houston replies, “Yes”, and he ads, “Those are the
moments of bliss that don’t last for ever, but show you another
world, and give you hope”.
24. STATUS OF WOMEN
Contrary to the customs practiced in most of the
Muslim world today, Islam granted equal but not the same status to
men and women, 1400 years ago.
The Qur’an specifically declares that the souls of men and women
are equal, and that obligations and rewards are equally bestowed
upon both. In Verse 124 Chapter 4 of The Holy Qur’an, God Almighty
says:
“If any do deeds of righteousness – Be they male or
female – and have faith, they will enter Heaven, and not the least
injustice will be done to them.”
Although, men and women are equal in the eyes of God, Islam
acknowledges that they are physically, biologically, and emotionally
different. It is for this reason that some lifestyle details are
different. A woman is made to be a mate or companion for man, and is
not to be considered a source of all evil, but a blessing from God.
Islam granted women complete economic independence, before and after
marriage. A Muslim women is under no obligation to provide for or
supplement the family income. The husband has the entire
responsibility.
Islamic law gives women the right to choose their
husbands and to initiate a divorce. Muslim women have always had the
right to vote, a right achieved by the women in the West only
recently.
Prophet Muhammad said: “Paradise is under the feet of
your mother.”
25. WAR AND PEACE
The word “Islam” is related to the word “salam”, which means
“Peace”.
A Muslim is not allowed to initiate a war. “Fight in
the way of God against those who fight against you, but begin not
hostilities. Lo! God loveth not aggressors.” (Chapter
2, Verse 190 of The Qur’an).
The only time in which Muslims are allowed to take up arms are
when they need to defend their own lives, the lives of their people,
when they see the weak being oppressed, and when they are prohibited
from practicing their religion.
Islam makes a clear distinction between combatants
and non-combatants. Soldiers are not allowed to hurt or harm the
civilians, cut down trees, destroy livestock, wells, homes, or land
of the enemy. Mutilation of the enemy bodies is also strictly
forbidden.
Prisoners of war are to be treated with kindness. They are to be
fed the same food that is consumed by their captors.
Muslims are forbidden to breach any treaty to which they have
agreed. However, they are not expected to tolerate treachery.
“And if thou fearest treachery from any folk, then
throw back to them (their treaty) fairly. Lo! God loveth not the
treacherous.” (Chapter 8, Verse 58 of The Qur’an)
26. JIHAD: THE HOLY STRUGGLE
The word Jihad means, “to strive.”
Translation of Verse 69 of the 29th Chapter of the Qur’an reads:
“And those who strive in God’s cause, God will certainly
guide them to His path: For Verily, God is with those who do right.”
God also says that whatever good you send forth for your souls,
you will surely find it with God, better and greater in recompense.
The biggest Jihad or struggle that a human being
experiences is against himself or herself, in striving to lead his
or her life in accordance with the guidance provided by God
Almighty.
In spite of the fact that the consumption of alcohol, and pork is
strictly forbidden by the Islamic teachings, Prophet Muhammad said,
that if a Muslim breaks the bottle of wine of a Non-Muslim, or kills
a pig belonging to a Non-Muslim, then on the Day of Judgment, he,
the Prophet will take the side of the Non-Muslim. Then the Prophet
reminded all of us that on the Day of Judgment, God Almighty will
dispense justice even between two rams that may have locked horns in
a fight.
Prophet Muhammad also said, “The biggest Jihad is to
speak a word of justice to an oppressive ruler.” Translation of
Chapter 5 Verse 32 of the Qur’an reads: “That if anyone slew a
person – unless it be for murder or for spreading mischief in the
land – It would be as if he slew the whole humanity. And if anyone
saved a life, it would be as if he saved the life of the entire
humanity.”
Even during a war of self-defense, a Muslim is not allowed to
hurt or kill non-combatants, women, children, or old people. He is
not allowed to destroy crops or event cut down a single tree.
In the conquest of Makkah in 632 A.D., Prophet Muhammad
left a tremendous example of behavior for a victorious party in a
conflict. Prophet Muhammad preached the message of
Islam, in and around Makkah, for 13 years with limited success.
After suffering many hardships and persecution from the pagans of
Makkah, The Prophet was ordered by God Almighty to migrate, along
with his followers to Madinah. Prophet Muhammad mediated a peace
between the warring tribes in Madinah, and established an Islamic
State.
In order to destroy the Muslims, the Pagans of Makkah
attacked Madinah several times, but failed. Nine years
after the migration of Muslims from Makkah, Quraish, the most
powerful pagan tribe of Makkah, in clear violation of the “Treaty of
Hudaybiyya”, supplied men and arms in an effort to attack a
Muslim-allied tribe that was slaughtered ruthlessly, some of them
even inside the Holy Sanctuary of Ka’ba. Upon learning of the raid,
Prophet Muhammad ordered Muslims, now much larger in number
(10,000), to march on Makkah, and conquered it without any loss of
life. In spite of the fact that the people of Makkah had earlier
persecuted the Muslims and had robbed them of their properties, the
Prophet instructed them not to harm anyone who does not attack them.
It is a documented fact of history that not a single human being was
harmed, nor any property destroyed.
Therefore, under no circumstances, no matter what the
cause, Islam does not allow killing or injuring of innocent human
beings or damage to their property, or suicide bombings.
The Qur’an specifically states, “Do not kill
yourselves. God is Merciful to you, but he that does that through
wickedness and injustice shall be burned in fire.”
27. TERRORISM: PROHIBITED BY ISLAM
Question: How come that some of the most horrible
acts are sometimes committed by individuals who call themselves
Muslims?
Answer: Evil acts are committed not by Muslims,
Christians, Jews, or followers of any other faith as no religion
sanctions the killing or hurting of innocent human beings.
The Holocaust by the Nazis, the Ethnic Cleansing by the Serbians,
and the other similar heinous crimes in human history were not in
accordance with the teachings of the great prophets of God whom we a
people of faith revere, but were the actions of sick minds.
Hitler and his followers were evil, not because they believed in
Christianity, but in spite of it. That does not mean that
Christianity is evil. Had they understood Christianity they would
never have committed the horrible acts they did. Likewise, let us
hold every terrorist accountable for his action regardless of what
faith he may profess to follow. Let us judge every faith by its
tenants.
Islam rejects the notion of certain individuals or
nations being favored over another because of their wealth, power,
or race. God created human beings as equals, and they are to be
distinguished from each other only on the basis of their faith and
piety.
Prophet Muhammad said: “O people! Your God is one and your
forefather (Adam) is one. An Arab is not better than a non-Arab, and
a non-Arab is not better than an Arab, and a red person is not
better than a black person, and a black person is not better than a
red person, except in piety.”
One of the major problems facing humanity in the 21st century is
racism. We sent man to the moon, are attempting to inhabit the
space, but have not learnt to live with each other in peace.
Timothy McVeigh, an American, was responsible for the Oklahoma City
bombing. That does not mean that all Americans supported, condoned
or even understood the reasoning behind his terrorist actions. He
may have professed to be a Christian, but his terrorist actions are
no more sanctioned by the Christian teachings than any of the evil
acts of those who may call themselves Muslims, is sanctioned by the
teachings of Islam. In fact, Islam strictly prohibits any act of
terrorism against innocent victims.
Whenever an evil act to intentionally harm innocent
human beings takes place, and the perpetrator calls himself a
Muslim, the Muslims suffer three ways: firstly, as human beings they
share the pain experienced by the innocent victims; secondly, they
feel pain because the perpetrator has brought shame to Islam and
Muslims; and thirdly, the Muslims, their families, their homes, and
their places of worship become targets of those whose sensibilities
have been hurt by the evil act.
There are over 1.2 Billion Muslims in the world, i.e. one out of
every five human beings on our planet calls himself a Muslim. A vast
majority of these Muslims are decent, God conscious, and law abiding
citizens. Then there are those who have legitimate or not so
legitimate grievances for which they want to seek help or revenge.
Instead of staying within the limits of the law, they resort to
violence thinking that that their cause justifies the means.
Islam does not allow killing or hurting of innocent
human beings, or causing damage to their property under any
circumstances, and for any cause whatsoever.
28. MUSLIM CONTRIBUTIONS TO HUMANITY
Muslims was a worldwide power found simply on faith.
- Election of A Leader: After the
death of Prophet Muhammad, in 632 AD, Muslims elected Abu Bakr to
be their leader and the Head of the Islamic State. Except for the
Roman Empire, no one in the world had, at that time heard of
electing a Head of State. That was democracy.
- Water Purification & Distribution:
Tunisia, North Africa – Muslims designed an ingenious water
purification system using two water basins and gravity to filter
clean water from one basin to the other. They built a distribution
system so that the cities had clean running water. This was
hundreds of years before anyone in Europe thought of having
running water in the cities.
- Baghdad: 200 years after Prophet
Muhammad’s death, the borders of the Islamic empire stretched from
Spain to India. It took nearly a year to travel from one end of
its borders to the other. At its heart was the fabled city of
Baghdad. It had exquisite neighbor- hoods filled with parks on
both sides of the river. It was a city of learning, filled with
the best scholars, the best thinkers, and the best artists. People
from all over the empire came there looking for solutions to their
staggering scientific and engineering problems.
Baghdad’s renowned House of Wisdom and its public libraries
attracted Jewish, Christian and Muslim scholars from all over the
world. Muslim scholars embraced the ideas of
Aristotle and Plato, writers that Christian world considered
blasphemous. Renaissance had its true beginning during this
period. It was during this period that Muslims began
to challenge the earlier knowledge. Spirit of scientific
investigation and search to develop new solutions was everywhere.
System of Arabic numerals, Algebra, Trigonometry, engineering,
Astronomy, and countless other disciplines trace their roots to
this era.
- At the time when Europeans were praying to the
bones of their saints to cure their illnesses, Muslims determined
that tiny organisms transmitted disease from one person to
another. They concluded that a sick person should be
quarantined to protect the rest of the community from germs. This
is the beginning of the modern hospital. Separate wards for
patients suffering from different diseases were established. They
even studied mental illness. Their study of anatomy was so
advanced that their discoveries remained unchallenged for the next
600 years.
- The father of optics was a Muslim named Ibn
Al-Hatem. He produced the first treatise as to how the eye sees. A
thousand years before the European doctors attempted, Muslim
doctors were surgically removing the cataracts.
- For all this knowledge to be copied and
communicated throughout the vast empire, there was a new
invention, paper. Around 750 AD, when Muslims
reached Central Asia, they found paper. Within 50 years, it was
all over their empire, including Spain. From there, Europeans
learned to make paper. Scribes were writing books on paper.
Baghdad had streets of booksellers, some with as many as a hundred
shops selling books. This was at a time when in Europe, a
monastery would be lucky if it had five or ten books.
- During the dark ages, Cordoba in Spain was the
most sophisticated metropolis in Europe. It had
roads, lights, libraries, hospitals, palaces, running water, and
people lived in big houses. The Great Mosque of Cordoba is now the
famous Roman Catholic Cathedral. What is now its steeple was once
a minaret. A Christian nun in the 10th century called this mosque
the “Ornament of The World”. Al-Hambra is the best remaining
example of what a Muslim palace looked like. In the 10th century,
here the Muslim elite enjoyed the good life, while Europeans
struggled thru the “Dark Ages”.
29. ISLAMIC CIVILIZATION
On September 26, 2001, Carly Fiorina, CEO of Hewlett Packard
delivered a speech in Minneapolis, Minnesota. The speech was titled,
Technology, Business and Our Way of Life: What’s Next?
She ended her speech by telling a story.
“There was once a civilization that was the greatest
in the world.
It was able to create a continental super-state that stretched
from ocean to ocean, and from northern climes to tropics and
deserts. Within its dominion lived hundreds of millions of people,
of different creeds and ethnic origins.
One of its languages became the universal language of much of the
world, the bridge between the peoples of a hundred lands. Its armies
were made up of people of many nationalities, and its military
protection allowed a degree of peace and prosperity that had never
been known. The reach of this civilization’s commerce extended from
Latin America to China, and everywhere in between.
And this civilization was driven more than anything,
by invention. Its architects designed buildings that defied gravity.
Its mathematicians created the algebra and algorithms that would
enable the building of computers, and the creation of encryption.
Its doctors examined the human body, and found new cures for
diseases. Its astronomers looked into the heavens, named the stars,
and paved the way for space travel and exploration.
Its writers created thousands of stories. Stories of courage
romance and magic. Its poets wrote of love, when others before them
were too steeped in fear to think of such things.
When other nations were afraid of ideas, this civilization
thrived on them, and kept them alive. When censors threatened to
wipe out knowledge from past civilizations, this civilization kept
the knowledge alive, and passed it on to others.
While modern Western civilization shares many of
these traits, the civilization I’m talking about was the Islamic
world from the year 800 to 1600, which included the Ottoman Empire
and the courts of Baghdad, Damascus and Cairo, and enlightened
rulers like Suleiman the Magnificent.
Although we are often unaware of our indebtedness to
this other civilization, its gifts are very much a part of our
heritage. The technology industry would not exist without the
contributions of Arab mathematicians. Sufi poet-philosophers like
Rumi challenged our notions of self and truth. Leaders like Suleiman
contributed to our notions of tolerance and civic leadership.
And perhaps we can learn a lesson from his example: It was
leadership based on meritocracy, not inheritance. It was leadership
that harnessed the full capabilities of a very diverse
population–that included Christianity, Islamic, and Jewish
traditions.
This kind of enlightened leadership — leadership that
nurtured culture, sustainability, diversity and courage — led to 800
years of invention and prosperity.”
These are profound words of Carly Fiorina, CEO, Hewlett
Packard Company.
30. ISLAM: A JEWEL TO BE UNCOVERED
Islam is a jewel that has, over the centuries, gotten
covered with layers of ignorance and prejudice. It teaches human
beings to be peaceful, caring, humble, and God conscious.
Prophet Muhammad said that a person is not a Muslim unless he
wishes for another human being what he wishes for himself. He also
said that a person is not a Muslim if his neighbor goes to bed
hungry, while he himself has eaten a meal.
A Muslim is not allowed to start a war, but is obligated to
defend himself and others when attacked. Even when defending
himself, he must not harm or attack non-combatants, elderly, women,
and children. He is not allowed to cut even a single tree, damage
the water supply, or do any other harm to the environment.
Chapter 5, Verse 32 of The Qur’an, translated reads;
“…That if anyone slew a person – unless it be (after due process)
for murder or for spreading mischief in the land – it would be as if
he slew the whole people. And if anyone saved a life, it would be as
if he saved the life of the whole people.”
Chapter 2, Verse 256 of The Qur’an, translated reads;
“Let there be no compulsion in religion.”
Chapter 109, Verse 6 of The Qur’an translated reads; “
To you be your way, and to me mine.”
As Muslims, Christians, Jews, and followers of many other
faiths, we believe that we all had a common father and a mother,
i.e. Prophet Adam and Eve. We all have love and affection for our
immediate biological brothers and sisters. Why not remind us that
every human being is our biological brother or sister, though
somewhat removed. We all carry the same genes that we inherited from
our parents, Prophet Adam and Eve. We should never allow ourselves
to get so angry that we forget our blood relationship, and cause
pain to each other.
We need to be God conscious. Islam teaches us that
there are only two states of beings; the Creator, and the Creation.
In other words, we as human beings need to be conscious of our
kinship with everything around us. Our Creator had a reason and a
purpose for creating each and every one of us, and every thing
around us, animate as well as inanimate. We as humans, are allowed
to use and consume some of these things to take care of our needs,
but we are not allowed to waste or destroy. We must constantly
remind ourselves that each of us will be held accountable for what
we do, and will face the consequences.
It is our hope and prayer that God Almighty will
guide us all to the right path, and help us become better human
beings. Amen.
“Our Lord! Give us good in this world and good in
the hereafter, and save us from the torment of the (Hell) fire.”
(The Qur’an, 2:201)
“Our Lord! We have wronged our own souls: If
Though forgive us not And bestow not upon us Thy Mercy, we shall
certainly be lost.” (The Qur’an, 7:23)
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