The effects of reciting the Quran-1

4714741125_9cc16d246d_zThe month of Ramadan is a month in which the whole reality of the Quran was descended to the Prophet of Islam in the night of Qadr. There are many benefits, material and spiritual for reciting this book.

So let’s look at some of them.

Imam sadiq peace be upon him said: The Quran is the treaty and covenant of Allah with His creation, so it is appropriate for every Muslim to look at his treaty and recite every day fifty verses.

The holy Prophet of Islam said: The superiority of the Quran over other words is like the superiority of Allah over His servants.

Allah has descended this book in a way that is sufficient for the guidance of mankind till the Day of Judgment.

Of course it must be noted that the holy Prophet of Islam before his departure delivered a sermon which is narrated by both Shia and Sunni schools of thought. The holy Prophet said:

I leave among you two precious things, the book of Allah and my progeny. You will never go astray after me as long as you grasp them. These two never get separated from each other till the day that they enter on me at the Lake-fount (a spring in Paradise).

So we must not be away from the main and basic interpreters of the holy Quran i.e. Imam Ali, Lady Fatimah, and their infallible sons (peace be upon them all).

Nowadays is a time in which different devils try to deviate mankind by their various temptations. The holy Prophet of Islam prescribed a useful solution in those times. He said:

When different tests or seditions encounter you which are like the parts of the dark night, so I advise you (to refer) to the Quran.

In the similar way, the holy Quran describes itself in chapter Ibrahim, verse1:

الَر كِتَابٌ أَنزَلْنَاهُ إِلَيْكَ لِتُخْرِجَ النَّاسَ مِنَ الظُّلُمَاتِ إِلَى النُّورِ بِإِذْنِ رَبِّهِمْ إِلَى صِرَاطِ الْعَزِيزِ الْحَمِيدِ

“Aliflaamra. We have sent down to you (this book) in order that you bring mankind from darkness to the light by the permission of your lord, to the path of the almighty, the praised.”

It is good for us to recites the holy Quran in our house because according to the Narrations:

-It causes the blessings of Allah to be increased in the house.

– It causes the angels to be present in our houses.

– It causes the devils to run away from our house.

-The houses in which the Quran is recited, they shine for the inhabitants of the heaven just like the shining of the stars for the inhabitants of the earth.

Reciting the holy Quran is a kind of remembrance of Allah and according to the holy Quran itself in chapter Raad verse 28, by the remembrance of Allah the hearts find peace. So for those who are suffering from different stresses and they are looking for a safe place in order to find tranquility, they can recite the holy Quran.

To be continued.

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Source: howzah.net

The best deed in the month of Ramadan

910278_47990856The holy Prophet of Islam delivered a sermon before the starting of the month of Ramadan in which he mentioned very important features of this month. Imam Ali peace be upon him ask a very essential question, he asked the Prophet: “What is the best deed in this month?” And the holy Prophet answered: “Wara and avoidance from the prohibitions of Allah.”

We sometimes lose the main point. We perform many recommended deeds and worships, but we are negligent of the most important thing and that is Taqwa or God-fearing.

The great Iranian poet Molavi composed a very interesting poem which in brief is as following:

We try and do our best in order to gather wheat in the store, but we are negligent of the mice in it that they eat the wheat.

In the above mentioned poet, committing sins is likened to the mice and recommended acts are likened to the wheat. We must firstly remove and eradicate the mice from the store and then try to gather the wheat; otherwise we cannot take benefits from gathering the wheat.

Wara is defined in the words of Imam Ali peace be upon him as this:

Wara means to stop at the time of doubts.

The author of the Tafsir Bayan Almaani mentions the difference between Taqwa(God-fearing) and Wara. He said: Taqwa means to avoid from what Allah has prohibited, and Wara means to avoid from the doubtful situations and even sometimes avoid from Halal and allowed things in order not to be trapped in committing the prohibited and Haram things, and the position of Wara is greater than the position of Taqwa.

Let me mention some of the benefits of Taqwa and Wara according to the verses of the holy Quran and Narrations of the infallibles in brief:

-Recognition of the right from wrong.

Allah said in chapter Anfal verse 29:

يِا أَيُّهَا الَّذِينَ آمَنُواْ إَن تَتَّقُواْ اللّهَ يَجْعَل لَّكُمْ فُرْقَانًا وَيُكَفِّرْ عَنكُمْ سَيِّئَاتِكُمْ وَيَغْفِرْ لَكُمْ وَاللّهُ ذُو الْفَضْلِ الْعَظِيمِ

“Believers, if you fear Allah, He will give you a criteria and cleanse you of your sins and forgive you. Allah is the owner of great bounty.”

Imam Ali peace be upon him said:

The intellect gets destroyed by the lust and the wishes of soul.

-Being benefited from the divine teachings.

Imam Sadiq peace be upon him said:

(the real) knowledge is not through learning so much, but rather it is a light that Allah puts in every heart that he wishes to guide him/her.

Throughout the history the great Islamic scholars were recommending their students the purification of the soul and avoiding from committing sins as a necessary factor for achieving to knowledge.

-Being benefited from the blessings of the heaven and the earth.

The holy Quran mentions this factor in chapter Talaq verses 2- 3:

وَمَن يَتَّقِ اللَّهَ يَجْعَل لَّهُ مَخْرَجًا   وَيَرْزُقْهُ مِنْ حَيْثُ لَا يَحْتَسِبُ

“Whosoever fears Allah, He will appoint for him a way out,

and provide for him from where he does not expect”

or in verse 96 chapter Araf Allah said:

وَلَوْ أَنَّ أَهْلَ الْقُرَى آمَنُواْ وَاتَّقَواْ لَفَتَحْنَا عَلَيْهِم بَرَكَاتٍ مِّنَ السَّمَاءِ وَالأَرْضِ

“Had the people of the villages believed and been cautious, we would have opened upon them the blessings from heaven and earth.”

-Being a cause for our deeds to be accepted by Allah.

Allah said in chapter Maedah verse 27:

إِنَّمَا يَتَقَبَّلُ اللّهُ مِنَ الْمُتَّقِينَ

“Allah accepts only from the righteous”

-Being rescued from the hardships

Alalh said in chapter Talaq verse 4:

وَمَن يَتَّقِ اللَّهَ يَجْعَل لَّهُ مِنْ أَمْرِهِ يُسْرًا

“Allah will ease (matters) by his order for whosoever fears Him”

-Being profited from the guidance of the Quran.

Allah said in chapter Baghare verse 2:

ذَلِكَ الْكِتَابُ لاَ رَيْبَ فِيهِ هُدًى لِّلْمُتَّقِينَ

“That is the (holy) book, where there is no doubt. It is guidance for the cautious (of evil and hell)”

-Being forgiven by Allah.

Allah said in chapter Talaq verse 5:

وَمَن يَتَّقِ اللَّهَ يُكَفِّرْ عَنْهُ سَيِّئَاتِهِ وَيُعْظِمْ لَهُ أَجْرًا

“Whosoever fears Allah, shall be relieved of his sins and given a mighty wage”

-Being a cause for entering the Paradise.

In some verses of the holy Quran Allah talks about the hereafter and the position of the pious there, like chapter Maryam verse 85:

يَوْمَ نَحْشُرُ الْمُتَّقِينَ إِلَى الرَّحْمَنِ وَفْدًا

“On the day when we will ceremonially gather the righteous to the merciful”

Or this verse in chapter Shoara verse 90:

أُزْلِفَتِ الْجَنَّةُ لِلْمُتَّقِینَ

“And Paradise shall be brought forward to the cautious”

So this holy month is a great opportunity that we can practice Taqwa and piety in order to have this great state in the other months of the year too.

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Source: Howzeh.net

The benefits of hunger

empty-plateThe holy Prophet of Islam Prophet Mohammad (peace be upon him and his family) delivered a sermon before starting the month of Ramadan, in which he said: “You are invited into the banquet and feast of Allah.”

A question that might arise here is that what is the relation between a feast and hunger and thirst? As you know in this holy month we are ordered (of course by its conditions) to fast i.e. to avoid from some prohibitions like eating or drinking, so what does this feast mean?

Pondering upon this relation is a very interesting subject for those who want to be among the people of ponder who are praised extremely by Islam.

It is appropriate to mention some of the sayings of the scholars in the field of morality in this regard.

The late Mirza Javad Maleki Tabrizi in his honorable book by the name of Al-Moraqibat (the observations) when he wants to describe about the great position of the month of Ramadan, he states:

There are many benefits for hunger for those who want to purify their souls. The All-Mighty Allah in a divine Narration which is called the Narration of Miraj, addressed the Prophet of Islam: O Ahmad, do you know what are the effects of fasting? The holy Prophet replied: No. Allah said: “The result of fasting is to eat and speak little, and this brings wisdom and wisdom brings knowledge and knowledge brings certainty.”

There are different benefits for hunger like:

-The purity of heart.

When a person eats so much, it causes the steams to be increased around the brain and in this state the brain finds a position which somehow is like being drunk, so he/she cannot think properly, but in the state of hunger and not eating so much, it causes the brain to be ready to think more proper and in this state having spiritual relation with God can be deeper and easier.

It must be noted as an important point that when we talk about the importance of hunger in Islamic point of view, it does not mean not to eat anything and being starving and weak and unable to do our daily social and religious duties, but rather it means to be moderate in eating and drinking.

-Breaking extremely the lust and the powers which cause human to commit great sins like adultery.

-Medical benefits.

It is medically undeniable that a lot of diseases are caused by eating and drinking so much.

-Being aware of the state of the needy and poor people.

It is appropriate for the economically ordinary Muslims who fast to think that after some hours of hunger and thirst, they have different foods and drinks, but in the same time there are some people that they hope to have the simplest kinds of foods and drinks but they cannot afford them, so through fasting Muslims can feel and understand the poor better and be motivated to help them.

-Remembering the Day of Judgment.

In the above mentioned sermon of the Prophet of Islam he said:

Remember by your hunger and thirst in this month (the month of Ramadan), the hunger and thirst of the Day of Judgment.

So fasting can help us to remove the veils of negligence and forgetting the hereafter.

What does the fast of the month of Ramadan entail?

ramadanIn short, the fast involves abstention from all food, drink, vain talk, and sexual intercourse for married couples from the time before dawn when the sky becomes light enough to distinguish a black thread from the white thread of the horizon, until after sunset when redness leaves the Eastern half of the sky. Some people are not to able to fast due to age, health, child-bearing conditions, etc., and instead give charity, and/or make up the days of fast they missed at a later time.

However, the true spirit of the fast of the month of Ramadan is more than just abstention from a few things. It is a time of sustained, amplified effort toward spiritual perfection.

Thirst and hunger you undergo, feel and live through, here and now, to bring to your mind the severity and sharpness of the drought and starvation that will be the order of the day on the Day of Judgment.

  • Give alms to the poor and destitute.
  • Treat your parents and elders with respect.
  • Be kind and loving to your children and juniors.
  • Take care of and look after your relatives.
  • Keep from giving tongue to that which should not even be whispered.
  • Shut your eyes to that which is indecent to have an eye for.
  • Turn a deaf ear to that which is too slanderous to be all ears to.
  • Be compassionate, gentle and benign unto orphans so that after you, your children, if need be, receive the same treatment from others.
  • Turn repentant to God and seek His nearness.”

In addition to fasting and aiming for excellent moral character, Muslims devote as much time and energy as possible in the month of Ramadan toward prayer and supplication to the One and Only God. During some of the nights of this month, Muslims will remain awake the whole night in worship.

After the last day of the month of Ramadan, Muslims celebrate Eid ul Fitr to commemorate the completion of the fast. They get together for prayer, food, and modest gift exchange (particularly for children). However, it is a day of mixed feelings, because the most blessed month of Ramadan with all of its opportunities for forgiveness and reward are gone for another year.

“I take refuge with Thy kindest disposition, O Lord, lest the dawn of this night breaks forth, or the month of Ramadan comes to an end, and I still stand as an accused (unforgiven) sinner, liable to be punished, on the Day I am presented before Thee.”

[From a prayer of the last night of the month of Ramadan, taught by Imam Jafar as-Sadiq, peace be upon him]

What Are the Fruits of Fasting for the Servants of Allah?

Quran-lgtRamadhan has come. Muslims all over the world are fasting from dawn until sunset.

The philosophy of the fast is well-known: It gives the servants of Allah a training in discipline, self-control, unquestioned obedience to God. It cultivates self-denial in Man so that he may be able to understand the problems facing the community and society.

Islam is a religion, compact and well-balanced. It is not just a collection of some unrelated ideologies and traditions. There is good reason behind every enjoinment, every tenet and every precept.

So compact is the whole Islamic system, in fact, that you cannot believe in it piece-meal; you have either to take it in its entirety or leave it in total; you cannot select from it.

Take, for example, the lunar system of the Islamic calendar. Though Islam recognises the solar year for the purpose of Zakat and Khums (agricultural taxes etc.), it insists on following the lunar system, in other matters, like fast and pilgrimage.

Why this double standard? The reason is simple enough. Islam is an universal religion; and the fast and pilgrimage are intended for the whole mankind, wherever they may be living.

And, the fact is one cannot pinpoint a single minute in a whole year which is equally convenient for the whole world.
Season and climate in the northern hemisphere are poles apart, literally, from those of the southern hemisphere.

Distance from the equator creates great differences between the climates of the lands situated in the same hemisphere.

Altitude belies all the theoretical calculations of geographers (the people of Europe did not believe, at first, that there was a snow-capped mountain — Kilimanjaro — near the Equator).

Directions of the mountains make two nearby lands radically opposed to each other in climate (had the Himalayas been created North-South, instead of East West, the cold winds of North would have made the Indo-Pakistan sub-continent a second Tibet). The distance from the sea; the path of the sea-currents; direction of seasonal winds —-all these things have profound effect upon the climate and seasons of a given land.
For example, the Gulf Street, being a hot current, makes countries warm even in Arctic Circle; and Dar es Salaam, being on the sea shore, experiences less temperature changes than the interior regions.

I have described some of the factors which have effect upon the climates and seasons of a particular land. These factors have made the world a museum in which every conceivable kind of climate can be found in one or another corner at every given moment of the year.

Thus, it is just impossible to select a time of the year which can be equally suitable and acceptable to the whole world, for such rules as fasting and pilgrimage.

Had Islam accepted solar calendar for such religious functions it would have done a great injustice to a greater part of the world.
What would have been suitable, for instance, to India, could have been most inconvenient for Africa and/or America.

So, Allah selected a lunar calendar. about ten days than the solar calendar, cycle becomes complete in about 33 years.

As this system is shorter by the seasons rotate in it, and the

Thus a man of about 48 years of age, anywhere in the world, experiences every facility-and every hardship which the climate of his land can offer during Ramadhan.

Thus, nobody is favoured; and nobody is discriminated against.

Likewise, in pilgrimage: If a certain period of solar year would have been fixed, majority of the Muslims would have found themselves unable to go to Mecca. A farmer, in whose region it would have been cultivating or harvesting time, could never go to Hajj. Neither could a civil servant whose holidays did not coincide with the pilgrimage period. But, in a lunar system, the farmer can wait until the rotation of the seasons brings the Hajj in his off-season; and the civil servant can wait until it falls in his holiday time.

It is just one example of what I had said earlier — Islam is a compact unit in which every part has the utmost significance for other parts.

Pilgrimage, fast, lunar calendar, universality of Islam, equality of its followers in every respect in the eyes of God— these things may seem unrelated to each other to a layman. But, in fact, they are closely knit together and none of them can be neglected or torn without destroying the whole fabric.

During Ramadhan, Muslims abstain from eating and drinking, sexual relations and such things. A Shia Ithna-Asheri has to abstain, in addition, from putting his head in water and from speaking a lie, however immaterial, about God, prophets, Imams and Bibi Fatima, the daughter of the Holy Prophet.
But it is only the external part of the fast. The soul and spirit of fast is something deeper. This aspect of the fast can very easily be explained in the words of our sixth Imam, Ja´far as-Sadiq (a. s.).

He said: “Your fast day should not be like ordinary days. When you fast, all your senses —. eyes, ears, tongue, hands and feet — must fast with you. ” How can these organs fast?

Eyes: Keep your eyes off unlawful things and objects; spend this most precious gift of God in good causes and pious acts; read the Qur’an, Duas, and books of knowledge.

Ears: Abstain from hearing unlawful gossip, lies, false statements, music and obscene topics; pay attention towards sermons and topics of learning.

Tongue: Do not tell lies or useless tales, do not spread rumours, and do not indulge in damaging gossip about other persons; keep aloof from falsity. Use the power of speech in spreading the word of God, in creating good will in the society.

Hands: Do not inflict injury upon others by your actions; instead strive to help them as far as possible.

Feet: Do not go towards, forbidden places, like bars and cinemas. Do not run between people creating strife. Go towards those places where God is remembered; and where you can find the means to purify your soul. And, above all, your heart and your mind must be with you in fasting. Because fast, in its real sense, will remain incomplete unless your thoughts, your emotions, your actions — in short, all aspects of your life — become pure, clean and free from blemish.

Thus, the fast should create in us an instinctive obedience to the Law of God.

I have heard about some people thinking that the fast of Ramadhan was not meant for the 20th century; or that the factory workers should be exempted from this obligation.

I think such big-headed persons are really in need of fasting more than anybody else. I mean, if a Muslim is unruly enough to disobey the commands of God, he should be made to fast so that he can acquire the habit of unquestioned obedience to God.

Such persons are the fittest candidates for fasting. They must read the commandments of Qur’an,

“O ye who believe! Fasting is prescribed to you. . . . . .that ye may (learn) self-restraint …” (Qur’an, 2:183).

Self-restraint, piety, sympathy and purity of soul; these are the fruits of fasting. Let us strive to achieve as much benefit as we can from this Holy Month of God.

Source: Fast; written by Allamah Sayyid Sa’eed Akhtar Rizvi

The holy Month of Ramadhan – A Brief Poem

RAMAZAN AYINDA KUR'AN-I KERIM OKUMA GELENEGININ DEVAM ETTIRILDIGI BOSNA HERSEK'TE, 7 KADIN HAFIZ TARAFINDAN OKUNAN MUKABELEYE, BOSNALI KADINLAR BUYUK ILGI GOSTERIYOR ''KADIN MUKABELESI'' SARAYBOSNA'NIN HACI CAMI'NDE OKUNUYOR. (ANADOLU AJANSI-SAMIR YORDAMOVIC) (20120731)

Reading lots of Quran.

Avoiding bad deeds.

Making good food.

Aiming to be a better Muslim.

Donating money to the poor.

Having fun on ‘Eid.

Always be honest.

Never forget the Almighty Allah.

 

Written by Askari Hussain
a student in the 2nd grade of an Islamic School.

Why is fasting prescribed particularly in the month of Ramadan for Muslims?

Quran-mosqueThe month of Ramadan is the ninth month in the Islamic lunar calendar. Since a lunar year is about a week and a half shorter than a solar year, the month of Ramadan cycles backward through the seasons. It is a sacred month because God ordained it for the revelation of sacred texts. Imam Ja’far as-Sadiq quotes the Holy Prophet, peace be upon him and his family, as saying,

“The Books of Abraham were revealed on the first night of the month of Ramadan; the Torah was revealed on the sixth of the month of Ramadan; the Gospel was revealed on the thirteenth of the month of Ramadan . . ., and the Holy Qur’an on the twenty-third of the month of Ramadan.”

It is also considered sacred because it contains the Night of Power (Laylatul Qadr). “Qadr” literally means destiny, and on this night God determines each and every event to occur during the next year to any and all of His creation.

Imam as-Sadiq, peace be upon him, informs us that,

“During Laylatul Qadr, the angels, the spirit, and the trusted scribes all descend to the lower heavens and write down whatever God decrees that year, and if God wishes to advance something or postpone it or add thereto, He orders the angel to erase it and replace it with whatever He decrees.”

The Holy Prophet of Islam, peace be upon him and his family, tells us about the great blessings of the month of Ramadan.

“[The month of Ramadan is] overflowing with advantages, merciful, ready to put up your sins of omission and commission to God for obtaining his forgiveness. Its days, nights and hours, in the estimation of God, are more select, refined and important than the days, nights and hours of other months. It surpasses all months in merits and favors.…. So, sincerely, free from evil and sinful thoughts and actions, with clear conscience, pray and request that God may give you heart and confidence to observe fast… throughout this month..”

Muslims observe fast, as in any act of devotion, to seek nearness to God, seek His pleasure and Forgiveness, and generate a spirit of piety in Man. Fasting in this month honors the revelation of God’s word and purifies one in preparation for the night of decrees and in hope of forgiveness. Fasting is a yearly spiritual renewal, given abundant reward in this month of God’s Mercy, that is part of the Islamic path to the ideal self.

What Is the General Fast?

ramadan-3The general fast is the fast that is obligatory on every one who meets the conditions of fasting.  Basically it is to refrain from eating, drinking, copulation, and all those things mentioned by the esteemed jurists in their books of Divine law.  To abstain from some of the basic necessities is really a challenge, but its result is so rewarding that it can determine the eternal salvation of the human being.  There is a universal law Almighty Allāh mentions in the Qur’ān which despite its brevity reveals a world of meaning.  After excusing the traveler and ailing one from fasting in this holy month and allowing them to fast after the holy month, He says:

يُرِيدُ اللٌّهُ بِكُمُ الْيُسْرَ وَلاَ يُرِيدُ بِكُمُ الْعُسْرَ

“…God desires ease for you, and He does not desire hardship for you…

Although this clause is brought after a particular case, it should be known that it applies in every dimension of human life.  The ambiguity that remains however is that ‘what is the definition of ‘yusr’ (ease), and whether ‘one who is healthy’ does not feel the pangs of hunger and thirst.  To respond to this query, we should look at the following verse:

فَإِنَّ مَعَ الْعُسْرِ يُسْرًا. إِنَّ مَعَ الْعُسْرِ يُسْرًا

“For indeed ease accompanies hardship; Indeed ease accompanies hardship.

Most commentators, appreciating the lexical intricacy involved in the verse say that ‘difficulty’ is interlinked with two kinds of ease- ease in this world and ease in the Hereafter.  Or, more accurately, ease in this world, and ease in the realm beyond; the latter, due to our limited comprehension cannot be fathomed, save by one who is endowed with the penetrating sight mentioned in the following verse of Sūrat Qāf:

لَقَدْ كُنْتَ فِي غَفْلَةٍ مِنْ هٌذَا فَكَشَـفْنَا عَنْكَ غِطَاءَكَ فَبَصَرُكَ الْيَوْمَ حَدِيدٌ

“You were certainly oblivious of this.  We have removed your veil from you, and so your sight is acute today.

Some traditions clearly state that Paradise can be achieved (only) through the pains and difficulties of worship in this world.  The Holy Prophet (s) is reported to have said:

حُفَّتِ الْجَنَّةُ بِالْمَكَارِهِ، وَحُفَّتِ النَّارُ بِالشَّهَوَات.

“Paradise is enveloped by difficulties and Hell Fire is enveloped by desires.”

Imām ‘Alī (‘a) is reported to have said in a lengthy tradition:

…وَاللٌّهِ إِنَّ صَائِمَكُمْ لَيَرْتَعْ فِي رِيَاضِ الْجَنَّةِ، تَدْعُو لَهُ الْمَلاَئِكَةُ بِالْفَوْزِ حَتّى يُفْطِرَ.

“I swear by Allāh, surely the fasting one among you enjoys in the gardens of Paradise, and the Angels pray for his success until he breaks his fast.”

Observe the tone of the tradition: Imām ‘Alī (‘a) swears when he informs his true followers about their state when they fast.  Many of those who sincerely fast do enjoy these stations in Paradise while they fast, but the curtains that veil them from perceiving the higher realms of existence do not allow them to appreciate this reality.  If the curtains were lifted they would witness their exalted state while they still reside in this mortal world.

In the introduction to his anthology ‘Shahrullāh fī al-Kitāb wa al-Sunnah’, when explaining the kind of Divine Banquet that believers should anticipate in the holy month of Ramadān, Hujjat al-Islam Muhammadī Ray Shahrī quotes al-Risālah al-Majdiyyah of Shaykh Ridā al-Isfahānī, where the latter explains the kind of Divine Repast that the believers are invited to.  At one point he says:

Indeed I have heard several times and repeatedly from one who is closest to me in terms of relationship and kinship6 saying: ‘ I was busy reciting the well-known Ziyārat Amīn Allāh’ in the holy sanctuary in Najaf, and when I reached the verse ‘wa māwā’id al-mustat‘īmīna mu’addah” (and the banquets of those who seek sustenance are ready) and reflected over its meaning and thought about it, I was suddenly made to see a banquet on which lay different kinds of food and drinks, which I had never thought of, and I was eating from them, and in the course of that state I was contemplating about an Islamic ruling.  Surely it is an amazing state which renders one perplexed! The truth is that this is the reality of [Paradisal] food, which does not break the fast…’

Al-Isfahāni later continues saying:

ولا تظنن أنّ تعبيرات هذا العبد هي من قبيل خيالات الشعراء وأوهامهم، أو من شطحيات غلاة المتصوفة، فحاشى أن أتجاوز لسان الكتاب والسنة، أو اتخطى في معتقدي غير ما جاء به الله والنبي وأمر به، وإنما المقصود هو قول الله نفسه في سورة “هل أتى” حيث يقول سبحانه: وَسَقٌهُمْ رَبُّهُمْ شَرَابــاً طَهُوراً

 “Do not think that the expressions of this servant resembles the imaginations of the poets and their vain ideas or the theopathetic utterances (shatahiyyāt) of the extremist so-called sūfīs (mutasawwifah).  I dare not transcend the bounds of the speech of the Book of God and the Sunnah, or adopt a course in my belief that is other than what Allāh and His Messenger brought and ordered [us to follow].  What I only mean here is the word of Allāh in chapter ‘Hal Atā’ where Allāh says:

وَسَقَاهُمْ رَبُّهُمْ شَرَابًا طَهُورًا

“…and their Lord made them drink a pure drink.

Therefore despite the apparent hardship of fasting, ‘the ease that it accompanies’ is inexpressible.  Those endowed with deep insight also term hunger as the ‘the clouds from which rains of wisdom heavily fall’.  In his poetic masterpiece of Islamic laws & their secrets called Nibrās al-Hudā, Mullā Hādī Sabzawāri says:

وَالْجُوْعُ لِلْحِكْمَةِ مُزْنٌ مَاطِرٌ.

“And hunger is a rainy cloud of wisdom.”

Source: A Short Treatise on The Divine Invitation; wriiten by Muhammad M. Khalfan

What Is the Most Specific Fast?

ramadan-2The highest level of fasting is to disengage oneself from other than Allāh (SwT).  Every thought, speech, action, etc.  is solely for Allāh (SwT).  The fasting one in this level ensures that not only does he observe the first two levels of fasting, but protects his heart from other than Allāh (SwT).  Perhaps this noble dictum of Imām al-Sādiq (‘a) refers to this very station:

أَلْقَلْبُ حَرَمُ اللٌّهِ، فَلاََ تُسْكِنْ فِي حَرَمِ اللٌّهِ غَيْرَ اللٌّهِ.

“The heart is the sanctuary of Allāh; therefore do not make other than Allāh reside in the sanctuary of Allāh.”

The result of such a fast is ‘the Paradise of Divine Encounter’ (Jannat al-Liqā’).  If we ponder over the supplications of the Holy month of Ramadān and try to understand what kind of reception and banquet we can anticipate, we would realize that it is this level of fasting that we must struggle to attain.

Imām Khumaynī in one of his sermons to the seminarians in Najaf al-Ashraf says:

  “And enlighten the eyes of our hearts with the light of Your vision, until the vision of the hearts tears through the curtains of light and reaches the Source of Greatness (ma’din al-’azamah).’
The banquet of Allāh (SwT) is that very “source of greatness.”  God, the Blessed and Exalted, has invited His servants to enter the source of light and greatness.”
He also says:

 “The reward of such a fast is God, as He has stated: “The fast is for Me and I am its reward.” Nothing else could be the reward of such a fast.  The Gardens of Blessings would not count as a worthy reward for such a fast.  If a man takes fasting to mean closing his mouth to food but opening it for backbiting, and he engages in backbiting until sahar in the warm and friendly company in the nights when there is opportunity and time, such fasting will be of no benefit and have no effect…”

Elsewhere he also says:

 “In this noble month, in which you have been invited to the divine banquet, if you do not gain insight (ma’rifah) about God the Almighty nor insight into yourself, it means that you have not properly participated in the feast of Allāh and failed to observe the etiquette of the feast…”

Therefore, our aspirations should be high, and we should struggle to attain the position which would enable us enter the Divine Feast.  In the supplication of Abū Hamzah al-Thumāli, which Imām al-Sajjād (‘a) taught to his noble companion, we are taught to pray in the following way:

“…And I aspire to be a guest near You…”

Notice ‘to be a guest near Allāh’ is quite different from being just an ordinary guest.  In the above verse we seek that kind of insight and knowledge that is obtained ladā Allāh – in the neighborhood of Allāh; In simpler terms, we are not just after any kind of knowledge, but that which is Divinely inspired, which is also known as al-‘ilm al-ladunnī and is, according to the Qur’ān, a product of piety; it is not a knowledge acquired from a human tutor.

It is, using the words of the Holy Prophet (s) ‘a light that Allāh infuses in the heart of whosoever He wishes to guide.’ This is the kind of knowledge, say some exegetes of the Qur’ān, that the following verse speaks about:

وَاتَّقُوا اللٌّهَ وَيُعَلِّمُكُمُ اللٌّهُ وَاللٌّهُ بِكُلِّ شَيْءٍ عَلِيمٌ

“Be God-wary and God shall teach you, and God has knowledge of all things.

And the path towards achieving taqwā, as clearly specified in the Holy Qur’ān, is siyām (fasting).  The Holy Qur’ān says:

يَا أَيُّهَا الَّذِينَ آمَنُوا كُتِبَ عَلَيْكُمُ الصِّيَامُ كَمَا كُتِبَ عَلَى الَّذِينَ مِنْ قَبْلِكُمْ لَعَلَّكُمْ تَـتَّقُونَ

“O you who have faith! Prescribed for you is fasting as it was prescribed for those who were before you, so that you may attain taqwā.

Hence, ‘fasting’ is a factor that can refine the spirit of the human being so much that he can qualify to be taught directly by Allāh (SwT).

Some supplications teach us to ask Almighty Allāh to be hosted in ‘paradise’ in this month.  In one of the supplications recommended during sahar time of the nights of the Holy month of Ramadān, we ask Almighty Allāh for Paradise:

وَقَدْ أَوْجَبْتَ لِكُلِّ ضَيْفٍ قِرىً، وَأَنَا ضَيْفُكَ، فَاجْعَلْ قِرَايَ اللَّيْلَةَ الْجَنَّةَ، يَا وَهَّابَ الْجَنَّةِ، يَا وَهَّابَ الْمَغْفِرَةِ، وَ لاَ حَوْلَ وَلاَ قُوَّةَ إِلاَّ بِكَ…

“…And very you have made obligatory for every guest to be entertained, and I am Your guest; therefore make my banquet tonight to be ‘Paradise’, O the Bestower of Paradise, O Bestower of forgiveness, and there is no strength nor any power save by You…”

It is possible that the reason why this supplication was followed by the two sublime names of Allāh – ‘Yā Wahhāb al-Jannah’ and ‘Yā Wahhāb al-maghfirah’ was to ask Allāh (SwT) for Paradise, and thus, necessarily also ask Him for relief from the Hell Fire, which enables one to enter Paradise.  In other words, we are trying to seek the same ‘qirā’ (meal served to the guest) that we seek in holy precincts of Ka’bah during the seventh round of our circumambulation around the Ka’bah.  We are taught to say:

أَللٌّهُمَّ الْـبَيْتُ بَيْـتُكَ، وَالْعَبْدُ عَبْدُكَ، وَهٌذَا مَقَامُ الْعَائِذِ بِكَ مِنَ النَّارِ، أَللٌّهُمَّ اِنِّي حَلَلْتُ بِفِنَائِكَ، فَاجْعَلْ قِرَايَ مَغْفِرَتَكَ…

“O Allāh, the house is Your house; and this servant is You servant; and this is where one who seeks Your Refuge from Hellfire stands; O Allāh, surely I have stopped at Your courtyard; therefore make my banquet to be Your forgiveness.”

In fact there is clear mention of seeking salvation from the Hell Fire in many supplications that we are taught to read in the Holy month of Ramadān.  In the famous duā that most of us recite after every prayer, we say:

يَا عَلِيُّ يَا عَظِيمُ يَا غَفُورُ يَا رَحِيمُ…مُنَّ عَليَّ بِفِكَاكِ رَقَبَتِي مِنَ النَّارِ…

“O Exalted One, O All-Great, O All Forgiving, O All-Merciful….bless me with freedom from the Hell Fire.”

And during the ā‘māl of laylat al-qadr we are taught to open the Holy Qur’ān and say:

…وَفِيهِ اسْمُكَ الأَكْبَرُ، وَأَسْمَآؤُكَ الْحُسْنَى، وَمَا يُخَافُ وَيُرْجَى، أَنْ تَجْعَلَنِي مِنْ عُتَقَائِكَ مِنَ النَّارِ…

“…and in it is Your Great Name and Your Most Beautiful Names and that which should be feared and hoped for, that you make me from those whom you have freed from Hell Fire…

Another very important point to bear in mind is that since these supplications were from infallible masters, the Paradise sought is not that which the laity like the author aspire, but levels beyond.

The mystics have classified Paradise into different levels, the highest of which is Jannat al-liqā’ (Paradise of meeting the Lord).  And this is what a true believer’s delight is in.  The following prophetic tradition alludes to this verity:

لِلصَّائِمِ فَرْحَتَانِ؛ فَرْحَةٌ عِنْدَ إِفْطَارِهِ، وَ فَرْحَةٌ عِنْدَ لِقَاءِ رَبِّهِ‏.

“For the one fasting there are two joys: joy when breaking his fast, and joy when he meets His Lord.”

Source:
A Short Treatise on The Divine Invitation
written by Muhammad M. Khalfan

What is the Significance of Ramadhan Month?

ramadan-1The Month of Ramadhan is the holiest one in the Islamic calendar and begins with all its social, moral and spiritual blessings. The following sentences of an invocation point to some of these blessings:-

“O Allah, this is the month of Ramadhan, in which Thou didst sent the Quran as a guide for people and as a clear sign to differentiate between right and wrong; and it is the month of fasting, month of prayers, month of returning (to Thee) and month of repentance; it is the month of forgiveness and mercy . . . ; the month in which is the ‘Night of Qadr’ which is better than thousand months

. . . . ; O Allah Bless Muhammad and his progeny . . and keep me free for Thy worship and for reciting Thy Book. “

It appears from the above sentences that some amongst the blessings of this month are the Qur’an, the Night of Qadr, the repentance from sins and mutual understanding and forgiveness.

According to Islamic belief, every action, whether good or bad, carries more weight in this month. Thus, charity is a virtue at all times, but is more virtuous in this month; and injustice is an evil at all times, but is more evil in these days. Reciting Qur’an is a commendable deed whole year around, but during the fast it assumes a far greater significance. The Holy Prophet has said: “Everything has its own spring season, and the spring of the Qur’an is the month of Ramadhan. “

It was in this month that the Qur’an was revealed to the Holy Prophet. According to his words, the Qur’an is “the deliverer from wilderness, eyesight for the blind, pardon for the sinner, light in blackness, safety from disaster, rescue for the castaway, clarity in the chaos, and the means to reach safely from this world to the life hereafter; and herein is the perfection of your religion; and the path away from the Qur’an goes to Hell only.”

One of the miracles of the Qur’an is its everlasting freshness even after such long crushing centuries. The Holy Prophet said that everything becomes old by usage and passage of time except the Qur’an, because its treasure would never exhaust and its wonders would never cease.
Mr. James A. Michener refers to this aspect of the Book in “Islam — the Misunderstood Religion” (Readers’ Digest, May, 1955) in these words: “The Koran is probably the most often read book in the world, surely the most often memorised, and possibly the most influential in the daily life of the people who believe in it…. It is neither poetry nor ordinary prose, yet it possesses the ability to arouse its hearers to ecstasies of faith.”

Laura Veccia Vaglieri writes in “Apologie de I’lslamisme” a translation of which runs as follows: “But there is another proof of the Divinity of the Qur’an; it is the fact that it has been preserved intact through the ages since the time of its revelation till the present day….. Read and re-read by the Muslim world, this book does not rouse in the faithful any weariness; it rather, through repetition, is more loved every day. It gives rise to a profound feeling of awe and respect in the one who reads it or listens to it. “

But we must remember that reciting the Qur’an is just a step towards the ultimate goal: understanding and following. Allah says:

Do they not earnestly seek to understand the Qur’an, or are their hearts locked up by them? (Qur’an, 47:24.).

Reading the Qur’an with proper understanding bears the fruits of spiritual and moral upliftment and material and intellectual advancement. It is better to read a few verses with meditation rather than finishing the whole book in a day like a parrot without knowing what is said.

The Qur’an is the purest and highest of Arabic literature. But those who depend upon the translations for Qur’anic knowledge often fail to appreciate its lofty standard. First of all, there is the difficulty of translating this book into any other language; because in the words of A.J. Arbury, it is “a foreign idiom, for the Koran is God’s revelation in Arabic, and the emotive and evocative qualities of the original disappear almost totally in the skilfullest translation.” (The Holy Koran, an introduction; London, 1953).

But according to the same author, “bad translation is not the whole story by any means . . . No, the fault lies not so much in the manner of translation as in the manner of reading the translations. The root of the trouble is that the ordinary reader, and for that .matter the extraordinary reader as well, has not been sufficiently advised how to read the Koran . . . The Koran, like the poetry it resembles in so many ways, is best sampled a little at a time; and that little deserves and needs meditation.”

Laura Veccia Vaglieri comments: “On the whole we find in it a collection of wisdom which can be adopted by the most intelligent of men, the greatest of philosophers and the most skilful of politicians.”

If a man recites the Qur’an with meditation and understanding, he would learn morals which would help him acquire spiritual perfection; he would feel encouraged to follow the foot-prints of the men of God; he would be sorry for whatever sins and mistakes he might have committed in his life. This will make him turn towards God with a soul full of gratitude for all the blessings bestowed upon him by God, and full of remorse for all his misbehaviours.

It is for this reason that the month of Ramadhan is described as the month of repentance. The Holy Prophet has said: “There is no intercessor better than repentance.” Allah in His grace forgives all sins and transgressions if a sinner repents sincerely. The operative word is “Sincerely”, A repentance without a change of heart is no repentance. It must produce change in habit, honesty in dealing, love and fear of God in actions.

According to Imam Ali, “repentance must have six elements: the repentant must be really sorry for what he had done; he must have firm determination not to do it again; he must make amends for whatever wrongs he might have done to others; he must fulfil all the obligations of religion previously neglected; he should fast long enough to melt away the flesh grown of unclean and unlawful food; and he should feel the taste of obedience to Allah as he was previously enjoying the taste of sin.”

When a man repents sincerely, Allah makes him as clean as he was the day he was born. The Holy Prophet has said: “One who repents from sin is like the one who never committed any sin.”

It is obvious from the above discourse that the month of Ramadhan and its fast purify the soul and bring a man nearer to Allah. “Fast is a shield against Hell”, said the Holy Prophet. The fast mentioned in this tradition is not merely abstinence from food and drink. It is an act of self-denial for the love of God. And this voluntary self-denial imposes a very high discipline , where the external regulations occupy the lowest rung of the ladder. Imam Ali said: “Many are the people whose only share in the fast is the hunger and thirst.”

The measure of a man’s nobility is his love of, and obedience to, God. When for a whole month he follows the words of Allah unquestioningly, without regret and without complaint, and when he spends his time in prayer, charity, humility and noble works, should one wonder if he gets fully disciplined to obey each and every command of God unhesitatingly and spontaneously without any thought of avoiding or dodging any order.

A fast which produces such results is surely a shield against Hell, and is worthy of the pronouncement of Allah: “Fast is for me and I will reward it Myself.”

Source: Fast; written by Allamah Sayyid Sa’eed Akhtar Rizvi