-Imam Ibn Qayyim Al Jawziyyah
Posts with category - Personal
Breaking the Inner Demon Chain for a Better Change!
-Imam Ibn Qayyim Al Jawziyyah
The Deeper Understanding of Shouting!
A Hindu saint who was visiting river Ganges to have a bath found a group of family members on the banks, shouting at each other. He turned to his disciples, smiled and asked,’Why do people shout at each other?’
The disciples thought for a while, one of them said, ‘Because we lose our calm, we shout.’
‘But, why should you shout when the other person is just next to you? You can as well tell him what you have to say in a soft manner.’ said the saint.
The disciples gave some other answers but none satisfied the other disciples.
Finally the saint explained.
‘When two people are angry at each other, their hearts are very distant. To cover that distance they must shout to be able to hear each other. The angrier they are, the stronger they will have to shout to hear each other to cover that great distance. What happens when two people fall in love? They don’t shout at each other but talk softly, because their hearts are very close. The distance between them is either non-existent or very small…’
The saint continued, ‘When they love each other even more, what happens? They do not speak, only whisper and they get even closer to each other in their love. Finally they even need not whisper, they only look at each other, that’s all. That is how close two people are when they love each other.’
He looked at his disciples and said, ‘So when you argue do not let your hearts get distant, do not say words that distance each other more, Or else there will come a day when the distance is so great that you will not find the path to return.
Dua for a Heavenly Companion
Dear God,
All praise and thanks belong to You. The source of all good and pleasure is from Your mercy and compassion. There is no amount of thankfulness and praise that can do justice to what You deserve.
My dear and beautiful Rabb, please grant my friends who are seeking life partners beautiful companions that will fulfill their needs and make them happy. Please allow them to bring ease and coolness of the eyes and hearts to their spouse and vice versa. Ameen.
Dear God please grant me a companion that will be the coolness of my eyes and heart. Someone with an undying yearning for sacred knowledge, a love of deep words of wisdom, and a passionate appreciation of the living, breathing, intellectual and yet practical sciences of Islam (Sufism). Someone who has deep love and respect for our intellectual and spiritual giants: Ibn al Arabi, Shaykh Jalaluddin Rumi, Imam Ghazali, Imam Al Haddad, Shaykh Ibn Ata’illah, and more. Someone who appreciates deep reflection of this world, the afterlife, the human soul. Someone who passionately appreciates service to others, and the united and compassionate spirit that ties all humans together. Surely the reality of all things comes back to one unity. Oneness.
Happiness in Pain
A man is happy when he has pain, for the pain of having no pain can only be cured by the fire. -a poet
This quote was stolen from my friend’s blog.
Real Spirit
“To others he is a mountain, but to me he is just a grain of sand.
The flashes of lightning and rivers that flow make him seem grand.
Once you meet the mountain, it will be a mirage and crumble to the slightest wind.
Look beyond the subtle form, and you will find the precious spirit within.”
I love real people with real spirits.
One part of the human soul will feel the pain of other parts
Human beings are members of a whole,
In creation of one essence and soul.
If one member is afflicted with pain,
Other members uneasy will remain.
If you have no sympathy for human pain,
The name of human you cannot retain!’
-Shaykh Saadi Sherazi al-Shadilli
Inherent Tolerance in the Islamic Deen
Islam holds the view that there have been approximately 124,000 perfected humans that have exemplified wise actions and beautiful character. Amongst these humans (messengers of God, prophets) mentioned in the Quran are Noah, Abraham, Joseph, Moses, David, Solomon, Jesus, and finally Muhammad (May God grant them peace). Other scholars have speculated that Buddha, Lao Tse, and Confucius have also been prophets. It is interesting to note that Islamic scholarship accepts all prophets previous to Muhammad while no other religion accepts the Islamic Prophet. Thus there is an obvious, inherent universality and tolerance in the Islamic faith:
To every people (was sent) a Messenger: when their Messenger comes before them the matter will be judged between them with justice, and they will not be wronged. (Quran 10:47).
Say: We have faith in God, and in that which has been sent down on Abraham, Ishmael, Isaac, and Jacob, and the Tribes, and that which was given to Moses and Jesus and the Prophets by their Lord. We make no distinction among any of them, and to Him we have submitted. (Quran 2:136)
He has sent down upon you the Book with the truth, confirming what was before it, and He has sent down the Torah and the Gospel aforetime, as guidance to the people. (Quran 3:3)
Through his own actions and speech, each prophet of God embodied his respective divine revelation. Therefore, prophetic example is the best source of guidance for social matters and is worthy of emulation.
Admirable Trait of the Apostate
Anyone who has the ability to publicly denounce his/her own faith in public, uncaring to the opinions of others, has a quality that I admire. Their indifferent nature to the opinions of others. This is actually much better than to pretend to be something that you are not, and to live as a hypocrite amongst people of a faith that you do not believe in. This may be one reason why the Prophet Muhammad (pbuh) stated that the hypocrites will be in the lowest areas of “Hell”. The apostates and disbelievers will be in a higher level. At least they were able to wear their beliefs on their sleeves and be sincere in what they believed in. Sincerity. That’s what it boils down to.
Problematic “Islam”
Do you see anything wrong in the following imaginary situation?
Story
Yunus is an admired brother in the community. Everyone looks up to him. He has an amazing charisma when he speaks and everyone, especially his peers on his college campus, loves hearing his Quran recitation. He leads a halaqah every wednesday afternoon on campus, friday nights at the masjid, and is a volunteer teacher at his masjid’s sunday school.
On Thursday, Yunus comes home immediately after school to prepare for his halaqah the next day. His father–retired and aging– is mowing the lawn. Yunus says salam and briskly enters the house. He warms up some food from the refridgerator, eats, leaves his dishes in the sink to be washed later, and marches up the stairs to his computer where he spends the majority of his time at home. Yunus’s mom arrives home from the grocery store. She pants as she comes into the house holding a cart of water bottles.
“Yunus! Can you help me bring in the groceries?” Yunus forgets to say “Assalamualaikum.” “Not now, mom, I have to finish writing this khutbah for Jummah tomorrow.” His mom sighs and asks her husband to help her. He leaves the lawn mower and helps carry the groceries. They laugh as they enter the house and finish bringing in the groceries. Abdul–Yunus’s dad, pours himself a glass of water and walks up the stairs to chat with his beloved son. He knocks on the door. Yunus replies, “Dad, I’m really trying to focus, I can’t talk right now.” A bit disappointed, Abdul enters the room anyway. Yunus has a hard time controlling his look of annoyance, but manages to pull off a smile. Abdul ignores the look and says to his son, “You know, it gets really lonely at home, with your sister married and gone, and your mom working full-time, I don’t seem to have the energy anymore to do the things I used to do. I wish you could spend more time at home, I miss you a lot. It seems like you spend most of your time with the MSA brothers now.” “DAD, I hold a halaqah every wednesday and fridays. And monday nights are the MSA board meetings, I can’t skip out on those.” For a brief moment, the treasurer of the MSA–Sister Sarah–runs through Yunus’s mind. “Okay,” Abdul whines softly, “But just remember your dad misses you, and Oh, what about Tuesday nights? You come home late even though you don’t have class?” Yunus laughs and says, “Ahhh dad, those are MSA basketball practice meets, I can’t miss out on those! I need to exercise for the sake of Allah.” Yunus winks at his dad, “Maybe I can bring you one day?” His dad laughs and replies, “I wish, however it seems like after 7 Pm I begin to get really tired, I dunno why…it’s strange.” Yunus turns aways from his father to continue writing the khutbah, “Listen, just make dua, Allah will help you, trust me, just place your trust in Allah, what can I do?” Abdul thinks and gets up, “Ok, I will make dua, make dua for me too, and add that the strength in my left arm returns, for some reason it is weaker than my right.” As Abdul leaves, Yunus mutters “ok” and that Muslims are not supposed to use their left hand most of the time anyway.
I may continue to write this story. But there is something obviously missing from the way Yunus practices his religion. Due to his imbalanced priorities, Yunus has neglected the rights of his parents. I subtly included details about how his father is developing a muscular degenerative disorder. After the diagnosis, Yunus begins to realize his imbalance.
Precious Distraction =)
Hold my hand and let’s run in the sand
Listen while I sing with the vibes of the land
Be my distraction that comforts me
A precious friend and thereby set me free
Let’s study the deen with Imam Amin
His tangents filled with wisdom supreme
Laugh with his jokes as a united team
Cheer on each other in our young dream
Praise be to God for these moments of gold
Our time spent in warm company away from the cold.
The entrapments of dunya that we have sold
I pray they don’t consume us though we grow old.
Your smiles gently revive my heart
Your diligence awakened my mind’s headstart
To re-focus on what matters the most
Refine the ego and to the world be a host.