Sunday 26 February 2006

The People of Bliss




The People of Bliss

Imam Ibn ul Qayyim al Jawziyyah


From the book Ar-Risaalat ut-Tabukiyyah

Translation & Comments by Muhammad al-Jibaali

© QSS


The people of happiness and bliss can be divided into two classes.



The First Class of Happy People



The first class consists of those who possess the quality ofintellectual independence; they are described by Allah (T) as follows:



"The first and foremost [to embrace Islam] of the Muhaajireen(1)and the Ansaar(2), and also those who follow them in the bestway; Allaah is well-pleased with them, and they are with Him." [Soorah at-Tawbah 9:100]



These are the happy ones for whom Allah's acceptance is confirmed. They are the Companions of Allah's Messenger (S) and those who follow them in the best way until the Day of Resurrection.



The conventional expression 'Taabi'oon' applies to the companions' followers who have met with them in person. However, the description here is not restricted to them, but includes anyone who righteously follows their way; and any such person is of those with whom Allah (T) is pleased and who are also pleased with Him.



FOLLOWING WITH IHSAAN



The manner of following the Sahaabah (in this aayah) is notambiguous. It is restricted by Allah (T) to being in the 'best way'. It cannot be fulfilled merely by wishes, or by adhering to them in some matters while rejecting them in others. It should always be done with Ihsaan (with righteousness and in the best way); this is a condition to deserve Allah's (T) acceptance and His Gardens. He (T) said:



"He it is Who has sent among the unlettered a messenger [Muhammad] from among themselves, to convey unto them His messages, to sanctify them, and to instruct them in the Book and the Wisdom, although they had been before in manifest error. And He has sent him also to other people who have not quite reached them (the Sahaabah); He is All-Mighty, All-Wise. That is the bounty of Allaah which He bestows on whom He wills. Allaah is the One of great bounty." [Soorah Al-Jumu'ah 62:2-4]



The first group of people mentioned here are those who met the Messenger (S) and accompanied him. The latter are those who did not meet the first group; this applies to anyone who comes after them and adheres to their way, until the Day of Resurrection.This group falls behind the first group (the Sahaabah) both in era and in stature, even though both groups are of the happy ones.



THREE KINDS OF HEARTS



A third group of people would be those who reject the Guidance that Allaah (T) sent with His Messenger (S), or who do not benefit from it. Those are described by Allah (T) in the following:



"The likeness of those who were entrusted with the responsibility of the Torah, but who subsequently failed in that, is as the likeness of a donkey which carries a huge burden of books [but understands nothing of them]..." [Soorah Al-Jumu'ah 62:5]



The Prophet (S) also classified people into three groups based on their response to his Message and Guidance. He said:



"An example of the guidance and knowledge with which Allah (T) has sent me is that of a rain that falls on different kinds of land:



1) One land is good; it accepts water and produces vegetation and grass in plenty.



2) Another land is dry with a solid bed that reserves water so that people can drink and irrigate with it.



3) The third kind is a porous land that can neither retain water nor produce vegetation.



This is an example of those who acquire the knowledge of the Deen and benefit from that with which Allah (T) sent me, and of those who do not take heed and who insist on rejecting Allah's (T) Guidance." (3)



The Messenger (S) likens the knowledge (with which he came) to rain, because both are causes of life. Rain is the cause of life for the body, while knowledge is the cause of life for the heart. He (S) also likens different hearts to different valleys, as Allah (T) said:



"He sends down water from the sky, making different valleys flow according to their different natures..." [Soorah Ar-Rad 13:17]



Thus, just as there are three kinds of land, there are three kinds of hearts:



1) The first is a good land which accepts water and is ready to produce vegetation. When rain falls on it, it absorbs the water eagerly, giving rise to all sorts of pleasant vegetation.



This is an example of one with a healthy, pure, and intelligent heart, which embraces knowledge, and is guided by its true intelligent nature, blossoming by that wisdom and true faith. Therefore, it is eager to take the knowledge, and ready to bear fruits because of its good nature.



It is also like a rich business man who has experience in different trades and investments, which enables him to invest his wealth inthat which brings the best profit.



2) The second kind is a hard, solid land prepared to preserve and keep water: It benefits people who visit it to drink or irrigate.



This is an example of one whose heart preserves knowledge and safeguards it so as to convey it just as he hears it, without changing it or deriving conclusions from it. This is also described in another hadeeth:



"There is often one who conveys knowledge to one who is more knowledgeable than himself; and there is often one who carries knowledge when he himself is not knowledgeable."(4)



It is also like a rich man who does not possess the knowledge orexperience to invest his wealth, but who knows very well how to preserve it.



3) The third is a barren land which is incapable of holding water or producing vegetation: no matter how much rain falls, it does not profit by it.



This is an example of one whose heart does not accept any knowledge or wisdom. It is also like a poor man who neither possesses wealth nor knows how to preserve it.



The first of the above three examples applies to a learned man who teaches knowledge, and who calls people to Allah (T) with clear guidance; such are the inheritors of the Prophets.



The second applies to one who preserves the knowledge, and who transmits what he hears precisely; he carries to other people precious goods that they can use for trade and investment.



The third applies to one who neither accepts Allaah's Guidancenor benefits from it.



Thus this hadeeth covers the different types of people and their different attitudes toward the Prophet's (S) Da'wah, which make them either happy or miserable.



The Second Class of Happy People



The second class of Happy People consists of the believers' followers from their offspring who die before reaching the status of takleef (5). They will be with their parents [in the Hereafter], as Allaah (T) said:



"As for those who believe and whose offspring follow them in faith, We shall unite them with their offspring, and We shall not let any of their deeds go to waste; every person is responsible for that which he has earned." [Soorah At-Tur 52:21]



Allah (T) tells that He unites the offspring with the parents in the Jannah(6), just as He united them in faith (Eemaan). And because the offspring did not do deeds that would make them deserve this high honour, Allah (T) informs that this union does not waste any of the deeds of the parents. They receive their full reward for what they did, plus the bonus of uniting them with their offspring.



Also, because this reunion in rewards and ranks is a bounty from Allah (T), one might imagine that it would be in violation of the rules of justice. To clarify this, the ayah indicates that if the children committed sins, they alone would be liable for punishment, and that every person is responsible for what he does without involving others with him in punishment. Thus this union takes place in terms of rewards and bounties, but not in terms of justice and penalty.



This is indeed one of the keys and treasures of Qur'aan, the knowledge of which Allah (T) gives only to those whom He wills.



Thus this ayah covers all people: the miserable and the happy - those who are followed, and those who follow them.



Consequently, let a prudent person who cares about his well-being see to which class he belongs. Let him not be influenced by habits or ruled by laziness. If he finds that he belongs to a happy class, let him strive to move to a higher rank, seeking Allah's help and facilitation. And if he finds that he belongs to the miserable class, let him move out of it into a happy class while it is still possible, and before he would have to say:



"Oh! Would that I had followed the path shown to me by the Messenger." [Soorah Al Furqan 25:27]



FOOTNOTES:



1 Muhaajir: A migrator - one who undertakes hijrah. Plural: muhaajiroon or muhaajireen. Reference here is specifically to those who migrated from Makkah to al-Madeenah in obedience to Allah.



2 Ansaar: Those who give help and aid. It usually refers to the citizens of al-Madeenah who gave aid to the Muhaajireen when they migrated to their town.



3 Al-Bukharee and Muslim.



4 Narrated by Zayd bin Thaabit, Anas bin Maalik and others; recorded by Aboo Daawood, at-Tirmithee, Ahmad, and others; authenticated by al-Albaanee (as-Saheehah no.404).



5 Takleef: Responsibility for one's deeds.



6 Jannah: Literally: garden. It usually refers to the Gardens of Paradise.



Source: http://islaam.com/Article.aspx?id=449


Five Things Cause Five Others

Five Things Cause Five Others

Imam as-Samarqandi

Tanbeeh al-Ghafileen
© 2003 Darul Ishaat


Abu Hurayrah, radhiallahu `anhu said, "If anyone has five things then he will not be deprived of five others.

1. He who is enabled to show gratitude will never be deprived of increase of blessings.

"If you give thanks, certainly I will give you more." (14:7)

2. He who is guided to persevere will not be deprived of reward.

"Truly the persevering will be paid their reward in full without reckoning." (39:10)

3. One who is inspired to repent will not be deprived of its acceptance:

"And He is (Allah) Who accepts repentance from His servants." (42:25)

4. One who is enabled to seek forgiveness will not be deprived of receiving pardon.

"Seek forgiveness of your Lord; surely He is Ever-Forgiving." (71:10)

5. He who is spurred to make supplication is not deprived of an answer.

"Call upon Me, and I shall answer you." (40:60)

Someone else added a sixth proposition that one who is encouraged to spend will not be deprived of reward thereof.

"And whatsoever you expend (for good) He shall replace it." (34:39)

As Long As You Are Not Angry With Me: By Babar Ahmad

As Long As You Are Not Angry With Me Then I Do Not Care
(In Lam Takun Ghaadiban Annee Falaa Ubaalee)


A poem by British political prisoner, Babar Ahmad

(If you don't know who Babar Ahmad is, then please visit http://www.freebabarahmad.com/ and always remember him in your duas please)


As long as You are not angry with me then I do not care
For me is the model of Musab bin Umayr
The best dressed man in the city
But that was for him a state of pity
Until there came to him the Message
All did he leave of his privilege
For the sake of Allah and His Beloved

As long as You are not angry with me then I do not care
For I think of Bilal when his chest was bare
On the burning sand did they make him lie
Until he thought he was going to die
They crushed him with rocks in the blazing sun
And begged him to reject the Almighty One
But never did he give in to the wicked

As long as You are not angry with me then I do not care
I remember Khabbaab when they pulled his hair
In the blacksmiths of his evil mistress
With burning rods did she cause him distress
She twisted his neck and burnt his skin
Until his fat dripped into a tin
But he remained firm to his belief as long as he lived

As long as You are not angry with me then I do not care
For I picture Khubaib when he was there
Tied and bound to an immovable tree
With no chance of him being free
Their spears and arrows did they fling
Yet grapes to him did his Lord bring
Until his noble soul was lifted

As long as You are not angry with me then I do not care
I think of Yasir, Sumaiyah and their heir
Even when placed on sizzling ember
None but their Lord did they remember
Patience you all when paying this price
Indeed your abode is Paradise
As a reward for all that you did.

As long as You are not angry with me, then I do not care
My example is Your Beloved when struck from the rear
By the sticks and stones of Taif's crowd
Yet he did cry in a voice so loud:
"O Lord! Forgive my people for they do not know,"
And even thought I am feeling so low...
As long as You are not angry with me, then I do not care.

by British Political Prisoner Babar Ahmad MX5383

In a recent letter from Belmarsh prison Babar urges people to persevere in their supplications and reminds his family and friends to be strong and patient:

“If Allah can release Yunus from the whale with du’a (supplications), then for Him to release me with du’a is a small thing... Things could have been worse. Allah knows that I am innocent…

“But now I don’t need your tears – I need your du’as and I need you to be strong so we all pass this test with what Allah has planned for us all.”


There are three ways to leave your cell temporarily in a prison, and you can do this almost whenever you want

1) The first way is by reading the Qur’an, whereby Allah makes you leave your cell and embark on a journey away from the prison. Sometimes He takes you millions of years in the past, to before the Creation of the Heavens and the Earth. Sometimes, thousands of years ago, to the time of the Prophets that came before you. Sometimes he drops you into the life of Prophet Muhammad (salla Allahu alayhi was-salam) and you are living with the Sahabah (1). Sometimes He takes you to another prison, the prison of the Hellfire. Or He may take you into the future, thousands of years ahead. You might go to court on the Day of Judgement where He is the Judge and there are no barristers, solicitors, jury, nor media; there are NO human rights and the only prison guards are stern, harsh angels. Frequently He will take you to meet Him and tell you about Himself.

2) The second way is to go back into your own past, as much as your memory permits. Go back 5 years, 10 years, more or less. Go back to your wedding day, graduation, the day Allah guided you to Islam, the birth of your first child, happy moments, sad moments, difficult moments, but not moments where you say, "If only..." and question Allah's destiny.

3) The third way into your future, having taken assumptions.

What if you spend the rest of your life in prison - what will you do? What if you are released tomorrow? What if you spend three more years in prison


He concludes with a message for the British public:

“I am not a threat to the public and nor am I a terrorist… I am a political prisoner and not a murderer or armed robber or [like the] other criminals with whom I spend my breaks. My only crime was to ask for justice but because of that crime, they want to extradite me to America. The start of any nation’s end is when they replace justice with injustice

Friday 24 February 2006

Fiqh of Backbiting

Backbiting

from "Mukhtasar Minhaj al-Qasideen" (being Ibn Qudamah's abridgement of Ibn al-Jawzi's summary of al-Ghazzali's "Ihya' `Ulum al-Deen")

NOTE: This text is copyrighted.

Permission is granted to include it on web sites, and to make hard copies for the SOLE PURPOSE of da`wah (propagation) or educational efforts. Due acknowledgement should be given. (c) Suheil Laher

"O you who believe! Avoid much suspicion, for some suspicions are a sin. Do not spy on one another, nor backbite one another. Would one of you love to eat the flesh of his dead brother? Nay, you would abhor it, [so similarly, avoid backbiting]. And fear Allah. Indeed, Allah is Most Forgiving, Most Merciful." Qur'an, [49:12]

"And do not follow that of which you do not have knowledge. Indeed, the hearing, the sight and the heart - [you] will be asked about all of those." Qur'an, [17:36]

"He does not utter a [single] word, except that there is, with him, [an angel] ready and waiting [to record it]." Qur'an, [50:18]

Imam Nawawi says "It is obligatory for every sane adult to guard his tongue against talking, except when it contains a clear benefit. If talking and remaining silent are of equal benefit, it is sunnah to abstain, for permissible talking might lead to something undesirable or forbidden, as in fact is very often the case, and nothing matches safety."

On the authority of Abu Hurayrah :

"Whoever believes in Allah and the Last Day should say [something] good, or he should keep silent." [Bukhari, Muslim, Ahmad, Tirmidhi, Ibn Majah]

Nawawi says, "This hadith is quite explicit that it is imperative to not talk unless the speech is good, which is that wherein there is some benefit. If a person is in doubt as to whether there will be any benefit, then he should remain silent."

On the authority of Sahl ibn Sa`d :

"Whoever guarantees for me what is between his two jaws and what is between his two legs, I guarantee Heaven for him." [Bukhari, Muslim]

On the authority of `Uqbah ibn `Amir : I said, 'O Messenger of Allah! What is salvation?"
He said, "Hold your tongue, let your house contain you, and weep over your sins." [Bukhari, Muslim]

Mu`adh ibn Jabal said, "Are we even going to be held accountable for what we say?!"
The Messenger of Allah (may Allah bless him and grant him peace) said, "May your mother be bereaved of you! Is there anything which drags people into the Fire on their faces other than the harvest of their tongues?!" [Tirmidhi (hasan sahih)]

On the authority of Abu Bakrah, from the Farewell Pilgrimage:

"Indeed, your blood, property and honor are sacred to [one another], like the sanctity of this day of yours in this city of yours." [Bukhari, Muslim]

On the authority of Abu Hurayrah :

"All of a Muslim is prohibited to another Muslim : his blood, his honor and his property." [Muslim]

"O assembly of those who have believed with their tongues, but into whose hearts faith has not yet reached! Do not backbite the Muslims, nor seek out their secrets! For, whoever seeks out the faults of his brother, Allah will seek out his secrets. And, whoever has his secrets sought out by Allah, Allah will disgrace him, even [if he hides] in the depths of his house. [Abu Dawud in al-Adab, 4/271, #4880]

"Beware of backbiting, for backbiting is more serious than adultery. A man may commit adultery, and drink [wine], and then repent, and Allah will forgive him. But, the backbiter will not be forgiven by Allah until his [backbited] companion forgives him." [Suyuti, Al-Jami` as-Saghir, 1/174, #2919, from Ibn Abid-Dunya, and Abush-Shaykh, Al-Tawbikh.]

Meaning of ghibah

It has been defined precisely by the Prophet (may Allah bless him and grant him peace) as, "Your mentioning your brother with something about him that he dislikes [being spoken about]."
Someone asked, "How about if my brother contains that [characteristic which I am mentioning]?"
He replied, "If he possesses that which you mention, then you have [indeed] backbited him. And, if he does not contain that which you say, then you have slandered him." [Muslim in al-Birr, 4/2001, #70; Ahmad in Al-Musnad, 2/230,384]

Body.
Lineage.
Character.
Clothing.

Ghibah in the guise of religiousity

"Praise be to Allah who has saved us from such evil."
"We ask Allah for protection."
"That poor fellow! Allah has afflicted him with a great calamity. May Allah forgive him and us."

Listening to Ghibah

Someone who listens to backbiting is a partner to it. He is not absolved of the sin of listening unless he remonstrates verbally, or in his heart if he is afraid. If he is able to start talking about something else, or to change the subject of the conversation, then it is imperative for him to do so.

"And, when they hear vain talk, they turn away from it." [Qur'an, 28:55]

"[Successful are] those who shun vain talk." [Qur'an, al-Mu'minun: 3]

"Whoever is present while a Muslim is humiliated before him, and is able to assist him [and yet does not], Allah will humiliate him before [all of] creation." [Ahmad in al-Musnad, 3/487; Suyuti in Al-Jami` As-Saghir, 2/510, #8375]

"Whoever protects a believer from a hypocrite, Allah will send to him an angel to protect him from the Fire of Hell on the Day of Arising. [Abu Dawud in al-Adab, 4/272, #4883]

"Whoever averts [an attack] from the honor of his brother, Allah will avert the fire from his face on the Day of Arising." [Tirmidhi (hasan)]

Causes of ghibah

  1. Thirst for revenge. Backbiting one's brother and obtaining gratification from his anger.
  2. Peer pressure. Desire to fit in with and be accepted by one's companions.
  3. Desire to exalt one's self by degrading another. In the same way, one may become jealous when another is praised, and therefore seek to disparage him.
  4. Jest and play. A desire to make others laugh. Some people even make a living out of this.

Cure for ghibah

Realize that it exposes you to the displeasure of Allah, the Exalted. Remind yourself that your good deeds will go to the person whom you are backbiting, and his sins will be borne by you. Ponder over your own faults, and occupy yourself with correcting them. Feel ashamed to discuss the faults of others when you yourself have so many faults. If you are rally free from fault, then occupy yourself with thanking Allah for His favor. Just as you would dislike someone else backbiting you, out yourself in the place of the one whom you are inclined to backbite.

"Indeed, truthfulness leads to righteousness, and righteousness leads to Heaven. And, a man [continues to] tell the truth, until he is recorded before Allah as a truthful one. And, indeed, lying leads to evil, and evil leads to Hell. And, a man [continues to] lie until he is recorded before Allah as a liar. [Bukhari, Muslim]

"Insulting a Muslim is impiety, and killing him is [a form of] unbelief." [Bukhari, Muslim, Ahmad, Nasa'i, Ibn Majah, Tirmidhi, Tabarani, Daraqutni.]

Ghibah of the heart

To think the worst of Muslims. You may not think badly of a Muslim unless you have definite knowledge of his having done something evil, and there is no possible excuse or justification for him. You should try to make 70 excuses for your brother, and if you cannot find an excuse for him, look for some flaw in your perception. If someone informs you of something bad about someone else, it is obligatory upon you to investigate the matter. Is there some enmity between the informer and the one he is telling you about? You are obliged to think the best of your Muslim brother/sister. Thwart Satan by making du`a for the person. Do not spy on your brother, under the pretext of trying to find out the truth. If it does turn out that he has done something wrong, then advise him in secret.

Cases in which ghibah is permissible

  1. Injustice. One who has suffered injustice is entitled to mention the one who has committed injustice to someone who is capable of restoring his rights to him, such as a legitimate Muslim ruler or judge.
  2. Seeking help to change an evil, or to reform the wrongdoer. If the intention in telling the ghibah is not to change the wrong, then it is forbidden to relate it.
  3. Asking for a fatwa. A person may say, 'My father/brother/wife has done such-and-such to me. What can I do about it?

    On the authority of `A'ishah : Hind, the wife of Abu Sufyan, said to the Prophet (may Allah bless him and grant him peace), "Abu Sufyan is a miserly man, and he is not giving me what would suffice me and my child, unless I take from him without his knowing." He said, "Take what suffices you and your child according to common usage." [Bukhari, Muslim]

    However, it is more precautionary to avoid mention of names, for example by asking instead, "What is the verdict regarding a person who has done such-and-such?"

  4. Warning, such as warning a prospective buyer that the merchant is a swindler, or warning a student that his prospective teacher is an innovator or a deviant. Also, revealing the faults of weak narrators and forgers of hadith, and giving someone a candid appraisal of a person whom the former is thinking of marrying.

    On the authority of Fatimah bint Qays : she said, "I came to the Prophet (may Allah bless him and grant him peace) and told him, "Abu Jahm and Mu`awiyah have [both] proposed to me." He said, "As for Mu`awiyah, he is a poor man with no money, and as for Abu Jahm, his stick never leaves his shoulder." [Bukhari, Muslim, Malik]

  5. If someone is commonly known by a nickname, although if there is some alternative way to refer to him, it is preferable.
  6. Someone who sins openly, and has no qualms about his sins being mentioned.
    However, it is not permissible to mention any of his secret sins.

    "There can be no backbiting of one who casts off the mantle of modesty." [Suyuti, Al-Jami` As-Saghir, 2/519, from Bayhaqi.]

Expiation for ghibah

The backbiter has committed two infringements; one upon the limits of Allah, and this must be expiated by repentance and regret. The second is on the rights of his brothers/sisters. If news of the backbiting has reached the person, the backbiter must apologize to him/her, and express regret at having said it.

"Whoever has wronged his brother, in the way of property or honor, let him go to him and repair it, before it is taken [from him on a day] when he has no dirhams or dinars, such thatif he has any good deeds, some of the good deeds will be taken and given to [the wronged one], otherwise [if he has no good deeds], some of the other's evil deeds will be taken and cast upon him." [Bukhari, Al-Mazalim, 5/121, #2449. Ahmad, Al-Musnad, 2/435]

If the person has not learned that he has been backbited, then the backbiter
need not tell him, but he should ask Allah to forgive him.

"The expiation with regard to one who has been backbited is that forgiveness be asked for him." [Suyuti, Al-Jami` As-Saghir, 2/390, #6259]

Mujahid said : the expiation for eating the flesh of your brother is that you praise him and pray for good for him, and similar is the case if he has died.

On Backbiting non-Muslims

In the Name of Allah, Most Gracious, Most Merciful.

Praise be to Allah, Who sent His messenger with the Guidance and the religion of truth, in order that He might make it prevail over all religions, though the pagans may be averse. Blessings and peace be upon the Messenger of Allah, who was sent to perfect the noble traits of character.

To proceed : May Allah guide you to felicity! You have asked about the permissibility of a Muslim’s backbiting a non-Muslim. A possible source of confusion here is that the Qur’anic verse prohibiting backbiting is addressed to the believers, and says, in translation,

‘O you who believe! Avoid much suspicion; indeed, some suspicions are a sin. And do not spy, nor backbite one another.’ [Qur’an, 49:12]

Hence, one may mistakenly conclude that backbiting non-Muslims is permissible. However, one should beware of relying on first impressions, and especially in matters related to the Sacred Law, one should refrain from pronouncing one’s own, unlearned opinion on a matter based on one’s own impressions. The Qur’anic and hadith texts prohibiting speaking without knowledge, and censuring those who pronounce verdicts (fatwa) rashly, are numerous, and we will not mention them here. The verdict here requires consideration of the evidence and texts in their totality, for only such can yield a full picture of the situation.

Firstly, the fact that the address is made to the Muslims, rather than to mankind in general, is understandable when one takes into consideration that the unbelievers, although also subject to all of Allah’s commands, and technically obligated to follow them, (as evidenced by the clear texts of the Qur’an, and backed by the consensus of Muslim scholars) are first and foremost called upon to believe. This is because rectitude of doctrine is a prerequisite for the acceptability of a good deed, and without belief in Allah and all His Messengers, deeds are rendered worthless, like floating dust or scattered ashes, not earning their doer any reward in the Hereafter. It is only by accepting the message of Allah, and all his Prophets, that one can ‘validate’ one’s good deeds so as to earn reward for them in the Hereafter. This includes those who followed the message of a previous Prophet, and they shall receive a double reward upon embracing the Final Message.

`Those to whom We gave the book before it, they believe in it. And, when it is recited to them, they say, ‘We believe in it. Indeed, it is the truth from our Lord. Indeed, we were, [even] before it, Muslims’. They will be given their reward twofold, because they persevered.’ [Qur’an, 28:52-54]

Furthermore, there are some orders and prohibitions (or all, according to the epistemology of the Ash`aris) whose goodness or baseness can be known only through scriptural communication, such that an unbeliever would not be likely to obey them without first embracing faith.

That the address is made to the believers does not rule out its applicability to unbelievers; i.e. the command, `Do not backbite one another,’ does not, logically, imply a permission to backbite others. For example, Allah says, (translated),

‘O you who believe! Devour not your wealth amongst yourselves by falsehood, except if it be by trade, by mutual consent amongst yourselves.’ [Qur’an, 4:29]

This verse does not give permission to consume the wealth of the Dhimmis (non-Muslim subjects of the Islamic state). It is reported that the Messenger of Allah (may Allah bless him and grant him peace) said,

‘Does any of you, while reclining on his couch, imagine that Allah has prohibited only that which is to be found in this Qur'an? By Allah, I have preached, commanded and prohibited various matters as numerous as that which is found in the Qur'an, or more numerous. Allah has not permitted you to enter the houses of the people of the Book without permission, nor to beat their women, nor to eat their fruits when they give you that [tax] which is imposed on them.’ [Narrated by Abu Dawud]

And it is reported in another narration that he (peace and blessings be upon him and his Household) said: ‘Indeed, whoever wrongs a person of the contract (i.e. a Jew or a Christian), or deprecates him, or imposes upon him [something] beyond his capability, or takes anything from him without his consent, I shall be his adversary on the Day of Arising.’ [Narrated by Abu Dawud; al-Mundhiri said : it contains unknown narrators.]

This latter hadith is explicit regarding the prohibition of deprecating a Dhimmi, but its isnad contains weakness, and so it cannot be used as a proof. However, the evidences to follow establish the prohibition of backbiting, and in their light, the above hadith can serve as supporting evidence.

The human being should realize that all his/her words are witnessed by Allah, and recorded by the angelic scribes.

‘He does not utter a [single] word, except that there is, with him, [an angel] watching and waiting [to record it].’ [Qur’an, 50:18]

Imam al-Nawawi says, ‘It is obligatory for every sane adult to guard his tongue against talking, except when it contains a clear benefit. If talking and remaining silent are of equal benefit, it is sunnah to abstain, for permissible talking might lead to something undesirable or forbidden, as in fact is very often the case, and nothing matches safety.’

Allah does not love the loud utterance of harsh/hurtful words, except by one who has been wronged. And Allah is Seeing, Hearing.’ [Qur’an, 4:148]

The Prophet (may Allah bless him and his Household and grant them peace), has said,
‘Whoever believes in Allah and the Last Day should say something good, or should remain silent.’ [Narrated by Bukhari, Muslim, Ahmad, Tirmidhi, Ibn Majah]

Al-Nawawi says, ‘This hadith is quite explicit that it is imperative to not talk unless the speech is good, which is that wherein there is some benefit. If a person is in doubt as to whether there will be any benefit, then he should remain silent.’

And, the Prophet (may Allah bless him and his Household and grant them peace) said,

‘Treat people with good character.’ [Narrated by Tirmidhi, who said it is a good hadith; Nawawi quoted it in his ‘Forty Hadith.’]

The Muslim is not insulting, nor cursing, nor obscene, nor shameless. [Riyad al-Salihin]

From the above Qur’anic and hadith texts, it becomes clear that a Muslim should only speak if there is some benefit in his words, and in particular, it does not become him to engage in harsh or hurtful speech. This forms a basis for not engaging in backbiting, even if it be against a non-Muslim. If we consider the underlying reasons and implications of this, our idea is reinforced. The motive for backbiting is often anger and a thirst for revenge, whereas the believer is supposed to control his anger. Or, it may be intended to degrade the one being backbited and to thereby exalt oneself, which tends to indicate a feeling of arrogance, and arrogance is prohibited by clear scriptural texts. Furthermore, the enmity and other such bad consequences of backbiting are detrimental to society and its smooth functioning. In general, a Muslim is supposed to deal well with people, except if there is some justifying misconduct from the opposite party.

‘Allah does not prohibit you from being kind and equitable to those who have not fought you on account of your religion, nor driven you from your homes. And Allah loves those who are equitable.’ [Qur’an, 60:8]

Al-Haskafi, the Hanafi jurist, says in "al-Durr al-Mukhtar," about the dhimmi, "Backbiting him is prohibited, just like [backbiting a Muslim]." Ibn `Abidin remarks in his marginal annotations "Hashiyat Radd al-Muhtar," And, it has been said : Backbiting a dhimmi is more severe [than backbiting a Muslim]."

All this having been said, it should be pointed out that although backbiting in general is prohibited, there are certain circumstances which make it permissible. At this point, it is useful to distinguish between two types of misdemeanors and sins of unbelievers :

  1. deeds which they do openly and shamelessly, because they maintain that they are permissible according to their religion, or because they have little modesty or concern for public opinion. Mentioning such misdeeds of an unbeliever is not considered backbiting, just as in the case of a sinful Muslim who sins in public with impunity.
  2. evil deeds which they do covertly and in hiding, due to their admitting their evil nature. It is not permissible to backbite them regarding these.

Backbiting a non-Muslim is also permissible in the other cases where backbiting a Muslim is justified, viz. To redress an injustice, to seek help to change an evil, asking for a fatwa, accepted nicknames, and warning people against evil.

We conclude with the following hadith, which mentions the punishment for backbiting people (without distinguishing between believers and unbelievers; it therefore serves as support for the verdict we have mentioned).

Abu Dawud has reported that the Prophet (peace be upon him) said, ‘When I was taken up to heaven (i.e. during the Mi`raj) I passed by people who had nails of copper with which they were scratching their faces and their breasts. I said, ‘Who are these [people], O Gabriel?’ He replied: ‘They are those who consumed the flesh of people [i.e. backbite them] and aspersed their honor.’

And Allah, the Exalted knows best.

Source: http://qa.sunnipath.com/issue_view.asp?HD=1&ID=212&CATE=13

The Effect of Hellfire & Heaven on Motivating the Ummah

The Effect of Hellfire & Heaven on Motivating the Ummah


Islam is a complete way of life, with concepts revealed to govern every aspect of the Muslims' lives, as they live their lives fulfilling their needs and satisfying their interests. On the struggle to revive the Ummah to abide by Islam we must give them the motivation, the force, which will lead them to implement Islam, and put in them the fear from the punishment resulting from non- implementation.

The essential motivation to implement Islam on an individual and political level, and to carry it to the world, comes by realising that Islam is their destiny, and is the sole reason for their existence. This realisation comes from the fundamental belief ('aqeeda) that we hold, since the Islamic belief entails complete submission to Allah (swt). When this belief ('aqeeda) is strong and clear in our hearts and souls the motivation for Islam will exist. When its light grew dim in our hearts, its effect on our
actions disappeared, and that is why we lost the essential motivation which pushes us to abide by Islam.

Elements of the belief such as the intellectual belief in Allah and the Qur'an, and the transmitted aspects of belief (from the Qur'an and Sunnah) such as the belief that Rizq (sustenance) and Ajal (lifespan) are from Allah (swt) all have a strong affect on our actions as Muslims, and always should be kept alive in our hearts and minds. But one aspect of 'aqeeda which has become dimmed is the appreciation of the Day of Judgement and its ordeals. Accountability to Allah (swt) is no longer on
our minds, and as a result we are not affected by the punishment of Allah (swt) anymore. We have also lost the desire for Heaven and the unimaginable eternal joys of the afterlife The result was that we lost the desire to please Allah (swt), the highest aspiration of all, and have
instead spent our time and effort on this life and on gaining its temporary pleasures such as wealth, power and family. Our highest aspirations became to attain the material desires and please whoever can satisfy those desires. We started looking towards the earth instead of the sky.
This dimming of the Islamic 'aqeeda in our souls is what led to what we see today. It led to disobedience of Allah's (swt) laws in our daily transactions and relationships, whether economic or social. It led us to accept kufr political ruling system and kufr laws implemented by oppressive leaders. It led to the dominance of the Kuffar over our societies. Our lives and wealth became under their complete authority. We live in humiliation fear and surrender. It has become easy to commit the haram which Allah ( swt) forbade, and leave the obligations which Allah ( swt) has commanded.


That is why in our work for revival we must wake up the Islamic 'aqeeda in our souls and to concentrate on it. Once life is given to this 'aqeeda, then life will come back in the Ummah, and the Muslims will go back to Allah (swt), and to abiding by His shar'a and adhering to His (swt) commands, and avoid disobeying Him. At this instant the Muslim Ummah will stop referring to Kuffar laws , and work to remove the corrupt kufr governments imposing themselves over Muslims. They will desire Heaven and its pleasures more than they desire the pleasures of this life, and thus they will work to gain the afterlife much more than the pleasures of this life. Their fear from Allah's (swt) punishment will by far outweigh the fear from the oppression and punishment of the Kufr governments, and as a result the Ummah will speak against the corruption and seek to remove it. So in our work to establish the rule of Islam we must motivate the Ummah by raising the 'aqeeda and discussing how it should be perceived, using this verse and similar verses to remind us of hellfire:

''Those who reject our signs We shall cast into the fire. As often as their skins are roasted we will give them fresh skins so they experience the pain.'' [ 4:56]

Similarly to remember the pleasures of heaven:

''Those who believe and do good deeds, We shall admit them to Gardens with rivers flowing underneath. This is their eternal home in which they have pure companions.'' [ 4:57]

We find that the Qur'an's concentration on the 'aqeeda and its concept of accountability is related to heaven and hellfire. When any rule is revealed, we find that with this law the obedience is linked to the belief in Allah ( swt) and the concept of accountability. Some examples to illustrate this point are:


''O you who believe fear Allah and give up what remains of your demand for usury, if you are indeed believers.'' [ 2:278]

''O you who believe do not eat each' others wealth by haram means.''
[ 4:29]

''O you who believe obey Allah and obey the Messenger and the people in authority among you, and if you dispute over a matter then take it back to Allah and His Messenger if you believe in Allah and
the day of Judgement
.'' [ 4:59]

''O you who believe, if you listen to a faction from among the people of the Book, they would render you indeed apostates after you have believed'' [: 3:100]


In conclusions, hundreds of ayahs and ahadith mention ahkam(laws) and link their implementation to belief. This is a reminder that the true manifestation of our belief is in the obedience of every law revealed.
Our daw'ah should be geared towards addressing the emotions of belief as well as the addressing the obligation of the Ummah to implement Islam. For only this method will motivate the Ummah to remove the kufr laws and authority and implement Islam in their lives.


Islamic aqeedah

Source: http://www.adduonline.com/articles/motive.htm

Thursday 23 February 2006

It's Only A Cartoon!


It's Only A Cartoon!

''
Rank hatred has already appeared from their mouths, what their hearts conceal is greater still. We have made plain for you the revelations if you will understand.'' (3:118)

Fourteen hundred years on and we are now beyond mouths. Hatred has appeared from their pens and their drawing boards. As with everything else, here too we see movement with the times, with the latest attacks on Islam employing more sophisticated tools than those used by the contemporaries of the Messenger (SAW). The end, without a doubt, is the same.

Calling it an attack on Islam is going a bit too far you may think. For the believers the 'aqeedah (creed) is the foundation. It is the most important aspect of Islam. From it emanates Islamic jurisprudence, spirituality, moral codes and societal organisation. It is the root from which the branches rise and the Messenger of Allah is an integral part of it. Belief in his Prophethood is required. Loving him, above anyone else, is obligatory. His Sunnah is a source from amongst the sources of Islam, an example for humanity and an explanation of the Book of Allah, which he conveyed.

Making a mockery of Allah's Messenger, as done recently by publications in Denmark, followed soon after by other Western States, is indeed an attack on Islam. Yet it is not the first.

The French Scholar Count Henry Du Castry wrote in his book 'Islam' in the year
1896, ''I don't know what Muslims would say if they knew the tales of the Middle Ages, and understood the content of Christian song, for all our songs, even those which appeared before the twelfth century, originate from one notion which was the cause of the Crusade wars.''

This notion was overloaded with a feeling of resentment against Muslims due to a complete ignorance of Islam. As a result of these songs, Christian minds absorbed all the distortion about Islam and Muslims and had them implanted in their minds until now, for the songs all portrayed Muslims as infidels, idolatrous pagans and heretics.

This enmity continued even after Europe benefited immensely from contact with the Islamic Lands. Professor Leopold Vice writes, in 'Islam on the Cross Road': ''The Renaissance or the resurrection of European Sciences and arts during their wide adaptation of Islamic and Arab sources confess that such efforts are due to the materialistic contact between the West and the Orient. Europe won more than the Islamic world but with no gratitude and no minimising of its hatred towards Islam. The case was vice versa. This hatred enlarged by time and was changed into a habit. Such hatred was at the mouth of their peoples especially when the word 'Muslim' was uttered. It entered into their popular sayings and into the heart of every European man or woman. The strangest thing of all is that this hatred lasted all through the steps of cultural change which took place in Europe.''

Even when we come to academic study and critique, the Orientalists have ventured where no group calling themselves academics can venture. Professor Vice writes in the same book, ''The Orientalist pioneers during modern times were Christian missionaries engaged and active in Muslim countries. The false picture they had already fabricated about Islam and its history was originally organised to guarantee the effect on the European attitude towards the heretics (i.e. Muslims). Such false pretension continued through the orientalist science and (even) after it freed itself from missionary influence and had no more excuse for continuing such false practice.''

This inherited antagonism still enkindles the flames of hatred in the Western spirit against Muslims. In modern times we have had no shortage of examples showing what the breasts of the colonialists carry. Britain installed Israel in the heart of the Muslim Lands in spite of the fact that such a move had no legal or moral justifications whatsoever. America then took over in standing by Israel as it slaughtered the Muslims of Palestine, plundering their land, raping their women and killing their sons. The hypocrisy is as clear as day. In Denmark it is against the law to deny the holocaust but as we now see it is more than legal to ridicule Islam.

The mass destruction and utter disregard for human life with which the invading Western forces hit Iraq again uncovers their deep enmity towards Islam and those who adhere to it. And the examples abound, our ink cannot suffice them. The difference of late in Western policy towards Islam is that things now are out in the open. It is all out war. 'Terror' being the codeword for 'Islam'. After having lost the ideological war, where Islam was distorted, made to look redundant and backward in order to get the Muslims to renounce it, now it is time for bully tactics. The West has adjusted styles in its war on Islam adopting forceful material actions (the distortion of course remains). So all the Islamic movements working to revive the Muslims are extremists and radicals, regardless of 'how' they choose to go about the revival. All those calling for the Book of Allah and the Sunnah of His Messenger to become the sources of legislation in the Muslim Lands are extremists. All those who reject secularism are extremists. In sum, any Muslims who faithfully adheres to his/her Islam in all affairs of life is an extremist.

Back to the most recent manifestation of Western hatred for Islam as it is, not in the diluted forms in which Western leaders are full of praise for it. Next time someone says that they're only cartoons, let him or her know the noble position of the Messenger in the hearts of Muslims. Let them know that we love the Messenger more than we love our fathers and mothers, even more than ourselves. Narrate to them, specifically to your fellow Muslims the examples of the Companions and their love for the Messenger.

When Khubaib was being tortured by Quraish and prepared for execution, Abu Sufyan asked him ''I adjure you by Allah, don't you wish that Muhammad were here in your place so that we might cut off his head, and that you were with your family?'' Khubaib answered, ''By Allah, I do not wish that Muhammad now were in the place I occupy or that a thorn could hurt him, and that I were sitting with my family.''

On accompanying the Prophet (s) on the Hijrah, Abu Bakr with great anxiety would sometimes would go ahead of the Prophet and sometimes behind him. The Prophet asked him about his, ''O Abu Bakr, What is the matter? Sometimes you are walking behind me and then sometimes you go ahead of me.'' He replied, ''O Messenger of Allah, when I think of the enemies that they might be pursuing you, I walk behind you, but when I think of some ambush I go in front of you.'' So he said: O Abu Bakr! Do you wish that something happened to you rather than to me? He said, ''Yes, by Him Who sent you with truth, I wish no hardship but occur to me rather than to you.''

For Muslims, two things need to be very clear.

First, to know the enemies of Allah and not to be tricked into taking them as friends or as neutral by-standers, whilst at the same time our 'aqeedah is insulted and our blood spilt by the very same group. To know of their devious plans to hit at Islam in an attempt to make the Muslims not adhere to it, exhausting all efforts in the quest to suppress the Islamic revival that is well on its way around the world.

Second, that Islam exhorts them to undertake vocal but non- violent actions. More importantly, the Muslims must understand that without the Amir of the believers, they have no real way of defending Islam from being slandered and attacked, from having their brothers' and sisters' blood being recklessly split around the globe, from having their resources plundered and their lands divided rendering them weak and impotent. The Messenger of Allah (saw) said, ''The Imam is a shield. The people (Muslims) fight behind him and are protected by him''. Having this Imam in place is obligatory upon the Ummah by the clear texts of the Qur'an, the Sunnah and Ijma as-Sahaba. This, the Muslims must wake up to, working towards it as the vital issue that it is.


To those in authority that seek to fan the flames of ignorance and insult in the name of freedom, we remind you of the response of the Caliph Sultan Abdul Hamid II to the French play which ridiculed the Prophet(SAW). The play was quickly shelved when it was clear that the Khilafah state was readying itself for war. Indeed the re-establishment of the Khilafah is only around the corner. Having an open discussion about the Islamic faith is welcomed, but insulting it is not.

To the masses of the non-Muslims, we extend an invitation to the critical study of Islam and its creed from which emanates a comprehensive system embodied in the Khilafah State which will not treat those who do not agree with its foundational ideology in the degrading manner in which Western States treat minorities. All citizens living under the shade of the Islamic State are equal and treated with respect and basic human dignity. The fulfillment of their needs is the responsibility of the State, just as those of the Muslims.

It is now becoming clearer to all that Islam is the only viable alternative to Capitalism with its shallow sloganeering of freedom, democracy and human rights. It is Islam that truly liberates. It is Islam that gives authority to the people to choose their leader and organises society in the best ways bringing harmony and tranquility to all. At the same time, it is Islam that ties the hands of the tyrants, keeps the oppressors in check and spreads justice to all. Hence the Bush's and Blair's of the world do their utmost to keep it suppressed in a vain attempt to prolong their transgressive way of life.

''
They desire to put out the light of Allah with their mouths but Allah will perfect His light, even if the disbelievers detest (it).'' (61:8)

Source: http://www.adduonline.com/articles/page2.htm

Inimitability of the Quran

Inimitability of the Quran

http://www.az-customs.net/news/photo/Quran.jpg

What are miracles?

To a lot of people today miracles are just extraordinary actions performed by someone like healing a man from a fatal illness or predicting the future very accurately. Many people use these kind of events as a reason to believe in a religion or a set of beliefs. But is this correct? For one thing we know many people who believe in different beliefs perform the same ''miracles''. For example religions as different as Hinduism and Christianity are full of ''miracle'' healers and ''future predictors.'' So how can these actions be from the Creator when they are performed by people who all say contradicting things?

In actual fact in nearly all cases you will see that even people who do not promote any religion at all can also do the same ''miracles''!!!!!

So something must be wrong with our understanding of the word miracle.

So what is a miracle?
Miracles in actual fact are events which are from God, the Creator. They are signs that He sends with Prophets and Messengers to show that the message they come with is from God and cannot possibly be from anything or anybody else. Therefore they are events that man is incapable of imitating, because man is subject to the laws of the universe which are subject to the laws of the Creator, unlike the Creator.
As we said before this means the wonders of faith healers, predictors, magicians etc cannot be called miracles because they can be imitated by other people.


However like all other Prophets before him, Prophet Muhammad (saws) brought a real miracle - a sign that proved the message he brought was from the Creator and not something made up by him or anybody else.

The Qur'an is a miracle
The miracle Prophet Muhammad (saws) brought was the Qur'an. Allaah (swt) Himself challenged those who didn't believe in Muhammad to produce one chapter like the Qur'an:

''If you are in doubt as to what We (Allaah) have revealed from time to time to our servant (Prophet Muhammad) then produce a chapter like thereunto and call your witnesses or helpers besides God if your doubts are true but if cannot - then fear the fire, whose fuel is men and stones- which is prepared for those who reject faith.'' (2:23-24)

But what was special about each chapter that made it impossible to imitate? Was it its great poetry? It's great stories?

In fact what was noticed by the people as soon as it revealed that was outstanding about every chapter of the Qur'an was it's eloquence.

What is eloquence?

A lot of people think that eloquence is beautiful words. In other words they think it is subjective (it has no rules and depends on peoples taste) like how someone might like baked beans and another person might hate it or how someone might think Picasso paintings are beautiful and another person might think they're ugly.
But eloquence it is not subjective because it has rules. When we write or speak we convey ideas to an audience. Eloquence is defined as the perfect way of conveying these ideas.

Explaining eloquence
Eloquence is made of 3 things which convey ideas differently:

Style - this is the arrangement of words in a sentence.
For example in Arabic if you say, ''Zayd came to me'' this means you are more interested in Zayd than in his coming because you mention Zayd first. But if you say ''There came to me Zayd'' it means you are more interested in his coming than Zayd because you mention coming first.


Meaning - this is the choice of words in a sentence.
For example in the Qur'an 'rayb' is used in the verse (2:1) however the nearest word in meaning to 'rayb' is 'shakk' which means literally doubt. However 'rayb' is more descriptive here since it means doubt with a connotation of unrest and agitation which is not found in the word 'shakk'.
Another example is in one verse Allah (swt) uses the word 'mawr' to describe the movement of the universe at the end of the universe. The word with the nearest meaning to this is 'harakah' which literally means movement. However 'mawr' not ONLY means movement but means light, swift movement which is the most descriptive word for this context.


Grammar - These are endings of words. These indicate whether the word is a predicate, object, subject, feminine, masculine etc...

So all these 3 things affect how well you convey the ideas and so decide whether a sentence is eloquent or not .

Why the Qur'an is unmatchable ?
The Qur'an is eloquent because in every situation described it has perfect:

Style � arrangement of words
Meaning � choice of words
Grammar - ending of words

No human has been capable to meet the challenge and produce a chapter with such a high standard of all these 3 qualities. This is why the Qur'an is inimitable.

What about other great works of literature?
Some people say if the Qur'an is inimitable what about the works of great writers such as Shakespeare or Homer? The answer is simple:
These authors and the experts in the area of literature never claimed them to be inimitable but only great works of literature. In other words they never claimed they to go out of human capacity but just reach the heights of human capacity.
It is definite that their works are not inimitable because they always have parts which we are unsure if they actually written by them or just attributed to them by other people. For example Homer's ''Illiad'' which is supposed to be his greatest work has a whole section (Book 10) which the scholars are unsure whether he actually wrote it or not.
Another example is Shakespeare's ''All is True (Henry VIII)'' which has whole sections which scholars are unsure whether Shakespeare wrote it or not. If these writers are supposed to be unmatchable how come we can't even tell whether some of their works are forgeries of other people?

So how can anyone think they are inimitable at all?

How we know for sure the Qur'an is inimitable ?
The following is a conversation between a Muslim and a skeptic who is not convinced that the Qur'an is inimitable.

Skeptic: How do I know, though, that the Qur'an is really unmatchable? I don't understand Arabic let alone eloquent Arabic!!!!!


Muslim: Knowledge (Certainty) we have in our everyday life can be direct or indirect

Skeptic: What is direct knowledge?

Muslim: Knowledge that you sense yourself: for example that fire burns, glass cracks when dropped or water quenches thirst.

Skeptic: What is indirect knowledge?

Muslim: Knowledge which we hear from other people; for example that World War II occurred or that humans have kidneys.

Skeptic: Direct knowledge is certain since we experience it ourselves but how is indirect knowledge certain since we have to trust other people who have told us it and they may have lied to us or just made a mistake?

Muslim: Although we don't or haven't directly seen or heard these things you can still be certain about them since loads of other people have sensed them and they tell you. It is impossible for the information to be a lie or mistake since they are so large in number. For example is absolutely impossible that all the sources which tell you about World War II (TV reports, relatives' stories, monuments, biographies, photographs, museums etc) actually grouped together to make it up since there is too many of them to all know each other and all these sources could not all of made the same mistake about the event.

Skeptic: But this is only true about a large amount of people since if only 1 or a few people were to tell you something there is a possibility that they could have made a mistake or lied.


Muslim: This is very true, reports that you hear in your every day life, like a story your relative tells you, are not believed by you straight away because of this reason: the possibility of error. However undisputed well known facts can be and are believed due to the fact that such a large number of people tell you the information it is impossible that they all lie together because they don't know each other or that all of them make a mistake.

Skeptic: But the only way I know about the Qur'an being inimitable is from you only! I've never heard it from anyone else before. Even if I ask other Muslims they will obviously say it is because it is part of their religion!

Muslim: This is not completely true. If I asked you if you knew for certain that humans have kidneys what would you say?
Skeptic: Yes, of course!

Muslim: Why is that?

Skeptic: Well it's like you said before even though I have never seen a human kidney the information has been transmitted to me in such a way that removes any doubt. Since hundreds of doctors have seen it and sensed them and then transmitted the information which I receive and due to their large number it is impossible for them to conspire on a lie or for all to commit a mistake.

Muslim: Likewise the Arabic rhetoricians, linguists, philologists and others who specialise in eloquence and the rules of language sense the matchlessness of the Qur'an's eloquence and transmit it to the common people. Because of their large numbers (which makes it impossible for all of them to lie together or make a mistake) the fact is certain and so becomes a well-known fact. Because of this the fact of the Qur'an being inimitable is known to the common Arab people Muslim, Christian, Jew etc. This is exactly how any well-known fact is known like how Shakespeare was a great playwright is to known to the English people or how we know that Malaria is a disease or how we know Pele was a great footballer.

Skeptic: So how would I be certain myself about it - I am not an Arab.

Muslim: Well like a villager from a remote part of the world who comes to live and study in Britain and learns that Shakespeare was a great playwright from many different sources and so he becomes certain of it the same is true here. Certainty that the Qur'an is inimitable can come through different sources through many ways. For example you could ask loads of Arabs until you are satisfied, you can ask those who have skill in Arabic rhetoric and eloquence and study it etc.


Comment

Therefore, we ought to think, believe the same way the Sahaba used to. That is to think about the Qur'an and reach from this thinking that this book is indeed Allah's word, then believe based on this that Muhammad who brought this miracle is the messenger of Allah. Once we establish this foundation, we should not refer to another source to prove the validity of an idea/event/concept mentioned in the Qur'an. For example, we have to believe in Isrra the way it is mentioned in Al-Qur'an. Any attempt to compare this miracle with space travel or to claim that Muhammad's spirit was so strong that it controlled his body and disabled the natural law that made his body in no need for food, air or being affected by time travel is absurd. The fact that this event has been mentioned in the Qur'an, which is the miracle of Allah, is sufficient for us to believe in all the verses without any justification from our minds. Even if our intention is to simplify the concept of ISRRA to those who cannot comprehend it. Also, the revelation cannot be explained as ELECTROMAGNETIC wave transference. Such approach means that we do not believe in the miracle.

Source: http://www.adduonline.com/articles/mujiza6.htm