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Showing posts with label SurahFatihah. Show all posts
Showing posts with label SurahFatihah. Show all posts

Wednesday, June 29, 2016

Surah Fatiha - Rediscovering the Fatihah





  • Hadith Qudsi about Surah Fatihah:


  • Abu Hurairah radhiyallahu anhu reported: I heard Rasoolullahi sallalahu alaihi wasallam narrating a Hadith Qudsi in which Allah Subhanahu wa Ta'aala has said, "I have divided Surah Fatihah into two halves between Me and My slave, and my slave will receive what he asks. So, when His slave says Alhamdulillahi Rabbil Aalameen (Praise be to Allah, the Lord of the universe), Allah Subhanahu Wa Ta'ala says "My slave has praised Me!". 

    And when His slave says Arrahmanirraheem (The Compassionate, the Merciful), Allah Subhanahu  Wa Ta'ala says "My slave has extolled Me!" 

    And when His slave says Maliki Yaumiddeen (Master of the Day of Judgement), Allah Subhanahu Wa Ta'ala says "My slave has glorified Me! (or) entrusted Me!" 

    And when His slave says Iyyaka Na'budu was iyyaka nasta'een (You alone do we worship and You alone do we seek for help), Allah Subhanahu Wa Ta'ala says "This is between Me and My slave, so whatever he asks, it will be granted. 

    And when His slave says Ihdinas Siratal mustaqeem siraatal ladhina an'amta 'alaihim ghairil maghdhubi 'alaihim wa laddaallin (Guide us to the straight path, the path of those upon whom You have bestowed favours and not of those who have incurred Your wrath and nor of those who have gone astray), Allah Subhanahu Wa Ta'ala says, "This (part of the Surah is exclusively) for My slave and my slave shall receive whatever he has asked for.

    [Source: Sahih Muslim]




    بِسْمِ اللَّـهِ الرَّحْمَـٰنِ الرَّحِيمِ
    ﴿١﴾ الْحَمْدُ لِلَّـهِ رَبِّ الْعَالَمِينَ ﴿٢﴾ الرَّحْمَـٰنِ الرَّحِيمِ ﴿٣﴾ مَالِكِ يَوْمِ الدِّينِ ﴿٤﴾ إِيَّاكَ نَعْبُدُ وَإِيَّاكَ نَسْتَعِينُ ﴿٥﴾ اهْدِنَا الصِّرَاطَ الْمُسْتَقِيمَ ﴿٦﴾ صِرَاطَ الَّذِينَ أَنْعَمْتَ عَلَيْهِمْ غَيْرِ الْمَغْضُوبِ عَلَيْهِمْ وَلَا الضَّالِّينَ ﴿٧﴾ـ




  • In the name of Allah (God), the Most Gracious, the Most Merciful.
  • All the praise is due to Allah, Lord of the worlds (universe).
  • The Most Beneficent, the Most Merciful
  • Lord of the Day of Judgment.
  • You (Alone) we worship, and You (Alone) we ask for help.
  • Guide us to the Straight Path.
  • The path of those You have blessed, not (the path) of those who earned Your Anger, nor of those who went astray.




    Fatiha is literally the opener because when we understand Fatiha, we understand faith.

    1. الْحَمْدُ لِلَّـهِ

  • HAMD has two meanings:
    1. Praise مدح
    2. Gratitude شكر

    Thanks/gratitude is usually in return of something done for us. e.g. we thank someone who has done a favour for us. Thanks is usually a reaction and acknowledgement.

    Praise can be for anything that we find beautiful e.g. If we see a beautiful house, we praise it. Praise can even be fake in order to get some benefits e.g. we praise someone who has authority over us just to avoid getting into trouble or to exploit them for personal benefits.

    Sometimes we praise without thanking or thank without praising. Hamd is a combination of praise and gratitude so it is always genuine and sincere. Moreover, Hamd does not have to be a reaction to something, but it is a constant internal feeling.

    Why didn't Allah say Madah and Shukar? 
    The best kind of speech is that which is brief yet conveys the full meaning. Allah used ONE word hamd instead of using separate words for praise and gratitude. 
    Secondly, saying Madah wa shukar would imply that BOTH do not have to be present simultaneously, so WA makes it optional. Hamd necessitates that BOTH have to be present at the same time. 

    Alhamdulillah is not a verbal statement. It is an attitude towards life. It means as bad as things might seem, I know there is wisdom in it and I know it will be best for me , and I thank you for it. It forces us to think positively. When we praise and thank Allah in every situation, we stop complaining about things and are forced to think positively. This provides us with the right lens to see and appreciate Allah.

    Hamd is a Noun!

    1. Nouns do not have a tense while verbs have tenses. Allah used hamd which is a noun so it is constant, permanent and timeless. Verbs are temporary and associated with زمان. Hamd of Allah has always been there and will always be there. It is eternal. 

    2.  A verb needs a subject/doer who performs the verb, but noun is not dependent on any doerAllah did not talk about hamd in a way that it depends on us. This makes us humble because we realise that Allah is independent  غنى of our praise. 

    Moreover, Allah did not issue a command to us to praise Him. If Allah had given us a command, the ball would be in our court and the existence of HAMD would depend on our action. Allah merely said praise BELONGS to Allah, even if perform Hamd of Allah or not.

    Why didn't Allah say انّ الحمد للّه for emphasis?

    In Arabic, there are two kinds of sentences:
    1. Jumla Khabriya(informative sentences) e.g. I bought a chair, the program starts after Maghrib etc.
    Information could be right or wrong.

    2. Jumla inshaiya(emotional sentences/expressive sentences) e.g. Oh man, Oh my God etc.
    Emotions cannot be right or wrong. They cannot be refuted.

    Alhamdulillah can both be an information (Praise belongs to Allah) or an emotion when we say Alhamdulillah spontaneously as an expression/feeling.
    INNA is used ONLY in informative sentences and cannot be used in emotional sentences. If Allah had used Inna, Alhamdulillah would have been limited to Khabriya only. By excluding inna, Alhamdulillah becomes flexible and we can interpret this as Inshaiya or Khabriya.

    Why didn't Allah add emphasis by saying lillahil Hamd?

    In Arabic, whenever we say a sentence in an unusual way by changing the sequence, it is used for emphasis(e.g. instead of saying I went to school, we say TO school I went). This is just to add emphasis and imply that I went nowhere except school.  


    Alhamdulillah= Hamd belongs to Allah
    lillahil Hamd= Hamd ONLY belongs to Allah (اختصاص), not to anyone else

    Sometimes Allah says lillahil hamd: it means Allah is emphasising that it does not belong to anyone else. This is usually said in a conflict, where people have a disagreement about something. Allah only needs to say lillahil Hamd when people are debating about who Hamd truly belongs to e.g. Allah says lillahil hamd in Surah Jathiya which is about people who are doing Shirk.
    Surah Fatihah, in contrast, is not a debate. Surah Fatihah appeals to our fitrah saleema, and this argument doesn't even exist in our pure fitrah. There is no need to emphasise  here as the concept of Hamd belonging to Allah comes naturally to us. Allah introduced hamd to us in such a way that we are already aware of it and we don't need any convincing. 

    Why did Allah use Allah instead of any of his other names? 

    How do your praise Allah in one word, acknowledging every single one of His attributes? This is only possible by using Allah, as this would automatically include ALL sifaat of Allah. Allah is introducing himself in the Fatiha so instead of using any of His descriptive names, He used his proper name to introduce himself. 

    Allah comes before Rabb ul Aalimeen in Fatihah because people have different ideas of rabb in different religions and they might have not appreciated Tawheed by the use of rabb alone. So, Allah negates shirk through the use of "Allah" e.g. In the story of Musa AS, the magicians professed imaan to Allah and said: aamanna bi rabbil alimeen but Firaun also called himself rabb. He thought they are referring to him, so they clarified by saying rabbi harooni wa musaa and THEN it became clear. 


     رَبِّ  



    RABB رب is primarily someone who owns something and is in charge of it. It is not necessary for someone to be an owner and in charge of something simultaneously. But, Rabb has both meanings simultaneously. It can be translated as Master.

    Rabb is the OWNER (Malik مالك)

    Rabb is the one who is in charge and in full control (SAYYID سيّد)

    Other meanings of Rabb:

    Rabb is someone who ensures the growth and takes care of something (MURABBI مربّى).
    Allah not only owns us but He also takes perfect care of us. Allah does Tarbiyyah of the whole Universe i.e. He maintains the growth, progress and development of everything.

    Rabb is the one who maintains existence and ensures things stay intact and don't fall apart (QAYYIM قيّم), just like a gardener that maintains/takes care of delicate plants. If Allah stopped taking care of us and the world for even a second, then everything will fall apart.

    Rabb is the one who gives gifts and benefits on top of what the other person deserves (MU'NIM منعم). We do not earn or are entitled to everything we receive, but rather Allah blesses us beyond measure. This means that if we received the gift, we should be grateful because we did not deserve it. It also means that if we didn't receive the gift, we have no right to complain as we didn't earn our right to it. 

    We fail to appreciate the blessings and gifts we have been given. The whole world and all it contains has no comparison to what Allah has given us. Allah's gifts are priceless and there is no way we can pay for them. e.g. we won't exchange our hands or our legs for even the whole wealth in the world, as it is a priceless gift. 

    When we put all of these meanings together, we get the complete meaning of Rabb.

    RABB-ABD RELATIONSHIP

    There are two partners in every relationship e.g.employee-employer relationship, teacher-student relationship, parent-child relationship etc. Similarly, when Allah calls himself Rabb, it establishes our relationship with Allah as His ABD. We have a RABB ABD relationship with Allah.

    We unfortunately have a very negative connotation of slavery in our society. Human beings have an innate desire to be free from authority, and they hate being told what to do. We have a desire to be free. So, if we hear the word "slavery", we want to run miles away from it. We hate being bossed around by teachers, our boss, our parents etc. We like freedom and independence. 

    In reality, our worldly concept of "freedom" is a delusion. None of us are truly free. Some of us are enslaved by money, some by culture, some by power, some by peer pressure  some by fashion and so on. If we choose to become slaves of our Creator, it saves us from slavery of the creation. If we submit ourselves to Allah, it frees us from the pressure of our culture, society, people, trends etc. 

    ABD IS A SLAVE

    Abd is a SLAVE, and not a servant or a worshiper. 

    Worship is performed at a certain time and place but slavery is not restricted to a specific time, rather it is a state of being. A slave does exactly what the master wants to do, and whenever he wants him to do it, and salah is merely a practical demonstration of that. Acts of worship are merely supposed to reinforce the fact that we are an abd. But we think that by performing worship, we have fulfilled our duty to Allah so now we can spend the rest of the day however we like. 

    Servant is also the incorrect translation as service is usually performed in exchange of something e.g. people work for different organisations with a certain job description in exchange for something. Service is usually voluntary and we can negotiate the terms and conditions. Slavery is usually voluntary. We can only be a true slave if we know what the master wants from us. That is why we ask Allah to guide us to the straight path.

    Dimensions of Slavery

    According to Ibn Tayyimah, slavery includes the following dimensions:

    1. Love
    The slavery of Allah is beautiful as Allah is the best master. This slavery is not enforced but it is out of recognition and desire for Allah. To be a slave of Allah, we need to love Allah above and beyond everything else.

    2. Obedience
    There is no obedience to the creation while disobeying the creator. 

    3. Sincerity
    Every act and deed should be purely for the sake of Allah. 

    4. Tawakkul
    We have to develop absolute  tawakkul in Allah that whatever happens has chair in it. If we place our trust in people, we will always be disappointed but if we trust Allah,we will never face disappointment

    5. Terms of slavery 
    Allah decides the standards and conditions of slavery and we do not negotiate with Allah.

    الْعَالَمِينَ

    عالم= world
    Plural: عوالم= worlds
    عالمين= "een" is used to refer to creatures of intellect ذوى العقول  e.g. saaliheen, siddiqeen, saabireen, shakireen, saaiymeen etc. This does not refer to creatures without intellect.

    So, a more appropriate translation would be: Rabb of different people/different nations/generations/cultures. Different generations and nations can be referred to as different worlds. e.g. when we visit a different country or converse with someone from a different generation, we say it is an altogether different world. Allah cares about all the different worlds of people, as Allah created all of them. We do Hamd of Allah for being the Rabb of all creation. 

     2. الرَّحْمَـٰنِ الرَّحِيمِ 

    رحم= Womb of the mother. 
    In the womb of a mother, the baby doesn't have to worry about anything e.g. food, drink, survival, sleep etc.
    Everything is being completely taken care of. The mother is taking care of every need of the child. The child is enveloped in the care and love of the mother. The child is not even capable of fully knowing and appreciating the thousands of ways in which he is being protected and taken care of. Allah loves us more than our mothers, and it is impossible for us to fathom Allah's Rahma entirely. Allah is constantly taking care of us in countless unimaginable ways, but we are just as ignorant as the baby in the womb of the mother. The mother gives unconditional love and care to the child without any return.

    الرَّحْمَـٰنِ 
    1. مبالغه Extreme,beyond expectations, intense, incredible (Intense love)
    2. حدث Something happening immediately (at the moment) i.e. Allah is extremely loving and caring right now
    3. It is temporary and can be taken away e.g. عطشان atshaan means extremely thirsty, جوعان Jo'aan means extremely hungry, غضبان Ghazbaan means extremely angry
    So, it means we may possibly be disqualified from it because of our actions in this world.

    الرَّحِيمِ
    1. Permanent and constant
    2. It is not necessarily happening right now

    Both combined together complete the meaning of rahmah. Al Rahman is intense like the strong tides and waves of the ocean, and Al Raheem is constant like the  ocean.

    Al Rahman is mentioned first and Al Raheem is mentioned later. Why? 

    Al Rahman means that Allah is completely taking care of our immediate needs. It is only when our immediate needs are satisfied, that we think of our future needs. It is only when our present needs are met, that we are able to think about our future. e.g. if we are really hungry and need food, we don't care if we will get food a week later. We are only concerned about our present. But, when our immediate hunger is satisfied, then our mind goes to tomorrow or the next week.

    Al Raheem means that Allah is constantly taking care of us and will continue to take care of us in our future, the way he took care of our immediate needs. 

    Ibn Abbas R.A. said: Al Rahman is for everyone in this world and Al Raheem is for the believers in akhirah.
    This world is temporary just like Al Rahman and the akhirah is permanent just like Al Raheem.

    Allah is our Master but He is not like any other Master. Allah is a unique Master because He is unimaginably loving and caring, and He takes care of all our immediate and future needs. Our Rabb-Abd relationship is that based on love. Everything Allah commands us to do is for our good and it benefits our own selves Apparently, our niyyah is to please Allah but we don't realise that it brings chair to our own selves. Allah merely wants to lighten our burdens and show us the way.

    3. مَالِكِ يَوْمِ الدِّينِ

    After mentioning His mercy, Allah immediately reminds us that He is the Master of the Day of judgement. If we identified Allah only as Rahman Raheem, we would take advantage of it and think that we can get away with everything e.g. Imagine there is master and a slave. The master tells the slave that he can enjoy as much as he wants within a huge designated area, but he shouldn't go beyond the fence. The slave crosses the fence once by mistake and falls to the other side. He comes back and apologises to the master and the master does not punish him. He does it a few times repeatedly but the master doesn't rebuke him. He thinks the master is too lenient and will not hold him accountable for anything. He continues to cross the fence and eventually begins to stay on the other side of the fence. The master just observes him quietly and doesn't say anything so he assumes he has gotten away with it. Then one day the master calls him to account and tells him he was keeping a record of everything, and now he will be punished for his violations.

    This example is about our Rabb Abd relationship. If we think Allah is full of rahmah, we can take advantage of it and cross the line, so Allah immediately balances the equation by reminding us of the Day of Judgement. 

    مالك vs ملك

    Malik has two pronunciations in Surah Fatihah:
    MAALIK مالك = owner 
    MALIKملك = king

    They have different meanings e.g. we say: I own a pen/house, but we don't say we are the king of the pen. 
    King is usually used only for ownership of a huge thing e.g. King of a country, a nation. The KING usually only controls the Macro things, but not the Micro, and the OWNER usually takes care of Micro things, but not Macro things. The king doesn't take care of the minor details, but he only takes care of the big things. Allah is the MAALIK and MALIK on the Day of Judgement, so He will be in control of everything on that day, be it little or big. 

    Moreover, Allah says Allah is the Owner of the يوم. YAUM refers to day. Human beings do not have the ability to own time. We can own things, but we can never own or control time. Allah is the owner of time, and He can expand and contract it as he wishes. The Day of Judgement will be equal to 50000 years, and it is possible for Allah because Allah OWNS time. So, Allah will own everything on that day, including time.

    Why does Allah use دين, instead of Qiyamah?
    It comes from دان يدين. It means: to deal with. Allah is the owner of the day of Judgement, on which everything will be dealt with. All records will be set straight. This world is imperfect and unjust. Sometimes, good things happen to bad people and bad things happen to good people. It is not possible to have absolute justice in this world. Allah tells us that everything will be accounted for on that day, and nobody will escape the justice of Allah.

    Justice vs. Punishment

    Rahmah is positive, punishment is negative. Judgement is in the middle and is entirely neutral. The natural expectation was that Allah would balance His Rahmah with His Punishment. But, Allah chose to mention His justice instead. Allah's punishment is never negative, unfair or based on emotions. Rather, Allah's justice is absolutely fair. We beg Allah for His mercy on Judgement Day and not His justice, because if we get questioned on Judgement day, we will not stand a chance. Nobody will be able to enter Jannah based on his Amal alone, we need Allah's rahmah to qualify for Jannah. 

    Some people get their book of deeds in their right hand. Some people will get their book of deeds in their left hand. Even if we have our book in our right hand, we would be extremely nervous on that day, but Allah will make our حساب easy for us and overlook out shortcomings. Allah will give us حسابا يسيرا. The ones who are given their book in their left hands will be hiding their books, and if Allah opens their books, they will be exposed and punished. 

    4.  إِيَّاكَ نَعْبُدُ


    After Allah has introduced Himself through the first 3 ayaat, it is our turn to speak to Allah directly, without any barriers. 

    The arrangement of this sentence is flipped so this adds emphasis to it. It means: it is only to you that we willingly give ourselves in slavery and worship.
    Some decisions are based on our heart and some decisions are based on intellect. Alhamdulillah is both emotional and intellectual (Inshaiya and Khabriya). While reading the first three ayaat of Surah Fatihah, we are so emotionally shaken and intellectually convinced that we give ourselves to Allah in aboodiyah. Surah Fatihah reinforces our faith over and over again and reminds us of why we came to Allah to begin with. If we forget the message of the Fatiha, our religion will be reduced to rites and rituals, and it will become an empty shell.

    وَإِيَّاكَ نَسْتَعِينُ
    After committing to be His Abd, we realise that we are unable to fulfil this task on our own. This realisation makes us turn to Allah for help, Allah will be sufficient as a helper. نستعين comes from استعانة and it means to seek help when you've already exerted yourself in mujahida. It means that we are making our own effort but we are seeking additional help to fulfil our task e.g. if you have a flat tyre and you are trying to fix it, but you need some additional help, that is istaana. If you're just sitting in the car doing nothing and waiting for help, then that is not istana. 

    Some people blame Allah for everything and wait for Allah's help without making any personal effort. They think Allah will solve everything for them without moving a muscle. The opposite extreme is of those people who think they can do everything on their own and they do not need Allah's help at all. We need to remember that actions depend on us and outcome/results depend on Allah. Allah only gives the outcome to those who make effort. Allah only helps those who help themselves. e.g. Ibrahim AS was also thrown in the fire and THEN the fire cooled.

    Moreover, we only ask for Allah's help after committing to our responsibilities of being an Abd. Once we make that commitment, only then are we in a position to ask for help. Another way to look at it is that iyyaka nabudu is FOR Allah while iyyaka Nastaeen is FOR us, so it is proper Adab that we do something for Allah first, before asking something for ourselves. 

    We don't specify what kind of help we need. Why? We are dependent on Allah's help at every step of the way, and we need Allah's help in so many ways that it is not possible to specify everything. Imagine that you are hanging off a cliff and about to fall. You will not specify in detail the kind of help you need at that point but you will just call out for "HELP!!!!" in desperation. When we are exasperated, we cannot even properly express ourselves. Surah Fatiha reflects our desperate need for Allah's help.

    5. اهْدِنَا الصِّرَاطَ الْمُسْتَقِيمَ 

    After asking Allah for help, the only help we specify is: Guide us to Siraat ul Mustaqeem. This is the most desperate need we have, out of all our needs. Hidaya is something we need at every step of our lives. It is very precious and can be taken from us at any time, so we need to repeatedly ask Allah for it daily in our five salah. We can never claim that once we have been guided, we don't need any more of it OR we will remain on that guidance for life. 

    Imagine you need a glass of water while you're dying of thirst, how will you ask for help in that state? Will it be different for asking for water generally? Definitely. We need to have the right attitude while asking Allah for hidaya. This prayer needs to come from our heart. There should be a thirst for guidance like there is a thirst for water. It is needed over and over again. Guidance is the one thing that we need to beg from Allah, as it is not gifted without asking. 

    Huda comes from hadiya and it means gift. When Arabs got lost in the desert and found guidance(someone to show them the way), it was a gift for them. We ask Allah for the greatest of all gifts because we are lost without His guidance.


    Why do we ask Allah specifically for guidance? 

    Our relationship with Allah was Rabb-Abd relationship. One of the most important consequences of this relationship is that the slave needs a set of instructions to follow. It is not possible to be an abd if we don't know what our Master requires of us. We need instructions to be able to follow our Master as this relationship is defined by our Master. 

    Guidance vs. Knowledge

    Guidance is not the same as information/knowledge. We may have a lot of knowledge of the Qur'an but lack guidance. Shahadah was our first step towards guidance. In every moment of our lives, we face choices and we ask Allah to guide us in all those choices. We may be muslims and may have knowledge but we may not be on guidance. Guidance includes the strength to make the right decisions based on our knowledge. Seek knowledge, but never forget why you're seeking knowledge. Knowledge is not the goal. Guidance is the ultimate goal. If we don't have the right intentions, our knowledge misguides us and leads to arrogance. When we develop arrogance, we've lost slavery.

    We say اهدنا, plural, which means we need the company of other people on this path towards Hidaya. We need collective guidance and suhbah to stay firm on this path. We also  wish guidance for others.

     الصِّرَاطَ الْمُسْتَقِيمَ


    صراط is a specific kind of path. It has the following features:
    1. Wide path
    2. Straight path
    3. Long path

    When we ask someone for directions, we usually ask for directions to a specific destination. In Surah Fatihah, we don't ask for directions/guidance to our ultimate destination but we ask Allah for guidance to remain on the path.  Our life as Muslims is not about attaining a level of perfection, but it is about continual progress. This is a gift from Allah, because if Allah had specified a certain finishing line, some people would be able to reach it and some would be left behind. Allah values us, so long as we are on the path, even though we may be behind others. Allah did not create everybody the same way, but we are all unique and have our individual journeys to Allah.


    Mustaqeem means straight up and it comes from استقامة which means: to stand straight. So whoever travels upon this straight path, rises towards Allah and leaves the love of this world behind. The higher up we go, the greater danger there is of falling. Gravity will always be trying to pull us back to towards the Earth, so we continuously need to resist it to follow Siraat ul Mustaqeem. Also, when we go up on this path, our vision broadens and we get a better view of the reality of this world. 

    We ask Allah for Guidance TO and THROUGH and ALL the way to the Sirat ul mustaqeem. e.g. If we have to go to a destination, we first ask someone for directions, then preferably we ask someone to stay with us during the journey so we don't have to travel alone. We ask our guide to remain with us till the end so that we don't get lost. This is the ultimate hidaya we ask for, after which there is no misguidance.

     6. صِرَاطَ الَّذِينَ أَنْعَمْتَ عَلَيْهِمْ

    We need a role model who has already been on this path, so that he can guide us through this path. We take advice from graduates of the past, not from freshmen. We ask Allah for the path of those Allah has done انعام upon. In'am refers to making things smooth, easy and luxurious. This word is also used for cattle. How can a path that requires us to go upwards against gravity be easy? These people made effort, and Allah made this path easy like an elevator/escalator for them. We ask Allah to introduce us to those people whom this path was made easy for. Allah introduces them in the Qur'an through stories, so we can learn from their companionship.

    الْمَغْضُوبِ عَلَيْهِمْ وَلَا الضَّالِّينَ

    غير (change). We want to be on the path of those people whom you favoured and not those who were the recipients of rage or those who were lost.

    The people whom Allah favoured, we only look for them in the past, but the people who are lost or recipients of rage, we look for them in the past, present and future. Allah has used nouns مغضوب and ضالّين. Nouns are timeless and permanent. 

    When someone does something wrong, while knowing that the act was wrong, we feel very angry towards them. This refers to the Jews. Jews were the recipients of Allah's anger because they were very knowledgable in religion but they still kept making the wrong decisions. They had knowledge without actions. This refers to us because we also know things are wrong and do them anyway. 
    Allah is so angry with them that Allah does not even want to associate Himself with them, so Allah doesn't even say that they will face HIS rage. Moreover, they will also be the recipient of anger from those people who became lost because of their misguidance.

    When someone does something wrong because they didn't know any better, we do not hold them responsible to that extent. They are considered "lost". This refers to the Christians. They had action without knowledge. Some people don't want to be of those who earn Allah's rage so they prefer being ضالّين. They avoid acquiring knowledge and prefer to remain ignorant, so that they will not be held accountable for the knowledge they didn't act upon. Allah mentions both to complete the equation, so that we learn knowledge and act upon it.

    This does not mean that all the Jews and Christians in the world are under Allah's wrath. It just means that Allah has mentioned their case studies in the Qur'an so that we can learn from their mistakes, and not repeat their behaviour.

    What makes Surah Fatiha miraculous linguistically?

    1.
    Surah fatiha has 3 parts.
    The first 3 ayahs(including Bismillah) are about Allah
    The 4th ayah is divided between us and Allah
    The last 3 Ayahs are about us.

    2.
    Part one(first three ayahs) were about Allah so it consists of noun sentences. Noun sentences are permanent and timeless, just like Allah.
    Part three(last three ayahs) is about us so these are verb based sentences. Verb based sentences are temporary, just like humans.
    Part two(4th ayah) is amazing because it is a verb based sentence which begins with a noun(Iyyaka= مفعول به مقدم). It is a mixture of noun and verb based sentence. This verse is between us and Allah so it is combination of both. 

    3. 
    The conclusion of the first 3 Ayaat is iyyaka na'budu
    The introduction of the last 3 Ayaat is iyyaka nastaeen

    4.
    Balance in Surah Fatiha:
    The first 3 ayaat are about knowledge of Allah
    In the 4th ayah, we are ready to take action.
    In the last 3 ayaat, we ask to be of those who had knowledge and action. We ask Allah to keep us away from those people who had knowledge but no action, and those who had action without knowledge. Knowledge and action are balanced in the last ayah.

    We say Rabbul Aalimeen, and Allah mentions the worlds of people in the last ayaat: those he favoured, those who earned rage, and those were lost.

    Allah balanced hope and responsibility through Al Rahman al Raheem and Maaliki youmiddin

    Hamd is felt in the heart and Allah will test us individually on the day of judgement. So, it is about individual actions while iyyaka nabudu wa iyyaka nastaeen is about collective actions.

    5.
    There are 4 kinds of conflicts in the world:
    1. Internal conflict: Body vs. Soul
    (Spiritual needs/conscience vs. Physical needs/temptations)

    2. Social conflict: Men vs. Women
    Our world has always debated about the rights of men and women. If in the divorce court, the judge is a man he would favour the man, and vice versa.

    3. Economic conflict: Boss(Capital) vs. Employee(Labour)
    Work more/pay less/less vacation vs. Work less/pay more/More vacation 

    4. Political conflict: Government vs. people
    More taxes/ Less freedom vs. Less taxes/more freedom

    These 4 conflicts have always existed. How can we decide between this conflicts without any bias?Who can find balance and determine the rights of everyone fairly?

    We ask Allah to show us the middle path so that we can have a just and unbiased approach towards all of these conflicts. Allah is unbiased towards all parties and He can give the true balance that humanity is looking for.





    Saturday, July 12, 2014

    QUR'AN for Young Adults - (Surah Fatiha) - Nouman Ali Khan - Ramadaan 2014 Day 6


    1:1
    Sahih International
    In the name of Allah , the Entirely Merciful, the Especially Merciful.
    1:2
    Sahih International
    [All] praise is [due] to Allah , Lord of the worlds -
    1:3
    Sahih International
    The Entirely Merciful, the Especially Merciful,
    1:4
    Sahih International
    Sovereign of the Day of Recompense.
    1:5
    Sahih International
    It is You we worship and You we ask for help.
    1:6
    Sahih International
    Guide us to the straight path -

    1:7
    Sahih International
    The path of those upon whom You have bestowed favor, not of those who have evoked [Your] anger or of those who are astray.

    This is the introduction to Allah and introduction to the Qur'an
    HAMD=Praise and gratitude
    You may praise something and not be grateful or you could be grateful and not praise something, but in hamd both things coexist.
    And we say Praise be to Allah(Praise has always been around and will always be around, it is not dependent on US, all creations praise Allah)

    A lot of movies such as terminator or Superman or Xmen etc show this theme that their is this outer power that wants to take over this world and that is more powerful and dominant, and people have to resist it and avoid getting enslaved to it, as it is a humiliating concept, we would rather die than be enslaved, and so we are agitated by the idea of a higher power and we hate anything that imposes a set of rules on us or CHAINS us, such movies even depict that higher power as something similar to God

    But WE as muslims are slaves of Allah,and the Quran does impose a set of rules on us

    There have also been many apocalyptic films which show that the world is going to end by a giant meteor or an invasion or whatever, Now our religion also talks about the End of the world on Judgement Day where everything will come to an end. But what do these movies always show? they always show that some people survive, human spirit is always strong enough to survive. And even if the world ends, we will find another planet. So all these movies show that humans will survive even if judgement day comes.

    Praise and Gratitude belongs to Allah. It shows that it comes naturally and we do not force ourselves to do Hamd. Its natural. And then we say that to you we give ourselves in worship and slavery. Only you do we worship. SO in Surah Fatiha Allah is not FORCING US to do this. Allah is not saying worship me and enslave yourselves to me and praise me etc. It is as though its out inner voice that is saying this naturally.

    In some video games, Role playing games, we have a character which has certain weapons, certain combos etc. and that character has to keep making progress in the video games and as he makes progress he upgrades himself and earns bonus and upgrades his character.
    Just like that humans are also created with some basic abilities, some invisible spiritual powers of our Ruh, this gives us the power to be a decent person. It is not something we download later on, its something thats programmed into us. So we have inherent goodness in us.
    Other religions like Christians belief that they are born into sin. But we believe our programming is good. What is the proof?If somebody does any favour to us, the least we do is thank them verbally or in our heart. We praise it or are thankful to it. e.g. we are grateful to our mothers even if we are nonmuslims, we just need to be a decent human being to be grateful. Then we thank our dad because he supported your mom. Then we thank their institute, the grandparents which made it possible for your father to get education and earn. So its a whole chain, you thank one thing and then another and then another. All of this leads to the thought that this chain must lead to something, and that is Allah. Allah is the ultimate source of all these blessings. Everything we are grateful for keeps going back to Allah.

    Quran calls on that element of a human being, the spirit of gratitude that is within every decent human. Some people do lose that decency and think that they are completely independent and don't need to think anyone and just earned and deserved everything they have. Such people won't understand Islam. They have even lost that BASIC sense and basic ability. Some people either lose the sense of gratitude because they become too depressed that they cease to appreciate the beauty around them OR they associate everything with their own ability so they become selfish and full of themselves and self indulged.

    Allah has given us taste buds, to enjoy food and appreciate it. We could have survived even without them but Allah gave us buds to enjoy it. Allah gave us this beautiful world and eyes to see it and eyes to see colours. We did not need it for survival. But Allah gave us this ability.Allah has given us a sense of smell . It wasnt necessary for survival. But Allah gave it so that we could appreciate things. Remember Kafir is someone who is not grateful.

    Allah has given so many things, so many abilities. Imagine our father gives us a new car or a playstation or anything we love and gives us a few instructions and asks us to use it wisely. And we dont follow them. Wont that hurt him? And what do we do when we get that thing, we thank our Dad and we praise that thing. Imagine all the faculties Allah has given us. All the things Allah is doing for us consistently and constantly. Whenever somebody does something for us e.g. our mothers do so much for us, even if they dont ask anything in return, we do owe them at least some appreciation, and some respect, and do something for them. Suppose you give someone a gift and instead of thanking they complain about it. You get mad about it or feel offended and might say I would rather give it to someone who appreciates it. Yet Allah continue to give us although we are so ungrateful. Allah not only owns the things around us but He also owns us. We are not out own creator but Allah gave us this body and mind and heart. And not just me, but Allah gave the whole world their existence.

    When you own something that does not do anything for you or what you expect from it, you throw it in the garbage or replaces it e.g. if your gadgets stop working. or something you own stops working.
    Have we been doing anything for Allah?What right does Allah have now? Allah can replace us with something else the same way we replace something that does not do anything for us . No one can question Allah when he does that because HE has both the right and the power.Now Allah HAS the right to do it yet he still does not do it, the possibility is that either you are doing a good job OR that He is so loving and caring and so patient with you and willing to give you chance after chance after chance. There is no one else, not even our parents, who you disappoint over and over again but they still keep giving you chances, eventually people give up on you. But Allah does not give up on you even if you have ignored Him or not valued Him or even bothered to ask what He wants.

    Rahman= means loving and caring.
    Rahma comes from Rahm which is the womb of the mother
    In the womb the child does not even know that he is being taken care of, the mother is going through a lot of pains, the child is doing nothing for the mother and the mother is doing everything of the child. Same implies to our relationship with Allah. There is nothing we can offer to Allah yet Allah is constantly doing so much for us
    The child is completely surrounded by the care of the mother. As the child keeps growing it drains the mother more and more but the mother loves him even more and more. The mother loves the child even though the child caused her so much pain. This is similar to Allahs love for us.
    Rahman means that Allahs love is extreme, but it is not forever. According to Ibn e Abbas,Allah is Rahman for all of us, until the Day of judgement, because Rehman cannot be forever. It is for all humanity.

    Raheem means always loving and caring. It is special for believers so it is for Paradise when Allahs love and care will be constant. Allah says that He will say to the believers Salaam in Jannah from Rabbul Raheem

    Suppose your parents keep giving and giving to you,fulfilling all your desires, and a moment comes when they dont give you something and you freak out, why do you go crazy at that thought? If Allah puts you under a trial or puts you in a difficult situation why do you go crazy and become ungrateful?

    After mentioning Rahmah,Allah should have mentioned Punishment. But Allah mentions justice. Thats Allahs mercy.

    You WILL be interrogated. Now maaliki yaumiddeen is mentioned
    We often have such questions that why is there so much injustice in the world? Why is God unjust? Why did so and so thing happen to me?
    This world is not designed to be perfect. The Quran openly declares it. You can never get perfect justice in this world. Even if we follow the Shariah law, it might not give perfect justice because even a reliable witness may lie!Suppose somebody committed 50 murders, whats the maximum you can do? You cannot kill him 50 times! So The Quran claims that there will come a day when perfect justice will be developed and people will have to pay fully for what they did. If you dont believe in judgement day you cannot believe in god because if there is no judgement day we are stuck with this imperfect unjust world and if the world is unjust that means Allah would be unjust and then there cant be any god MuaazAllah..So basically belief in Judgement Day strengthens the belief in Allah. There are some pains we suffered in this world which we shouldnt have suffered or some joys we enjoyed which we should not have enjoyed, we will pay for all of that. For example when somebody was ill the Prophet SAWW used to say to him that it is a means of purification, and when a person is purified he will receive so many rewards in Jannah.

    When we come to all these conclusions we say that we give up ourselves to you in slavery, out of happiness.
    I owe you a lot but I dont know how to pay back to you. So I ask you for your help in doing this.I dont think I can do so much. So Allah asks us to do little but it counts for a lot.

    Technically when we are slaves, we should be slaves 24/7 every second. For example if we own a mobile phone, it is a slave to us 24/7. It doesnt work 9 to 5. But it isnt practically possible for us to do that. All other creations of Allah are in constant submission to Allah, but we cannot do that, although we have been blessed the most. So Allah makes ease for us and asks only for bare minimum. Just 5 namaz, just one Hajj, Just zakat once a year, Allah asks very little from us.

    We can only be a slave if we know what our master wants, so now we ask Allah, guide us to the straight path because we dont know what to do.

    Unfortunately as humans all of us are biased.We have certain emotional attachments and experiences.
     1-Human judges can never be completely fair in every situation.Men are biased about women and women are biased about men. Both have a soft corner for their own gender. In conflicts they wont support the other side generally. (SOCIAL CONFLICT)
    2-Bosses are biased about employees and employees are biased about their bosses. Bosses want to decrease pay and increase workhours. Employees have labour unions to do the opposite. (ECONOMIC CONFLICT)
    3.Government and Citizens
    Government wants more taxes, more laws,less freedom for citizens and literally want dictatorship, citizens want the opposite in fact they dont even want a government.  (POLITICAL CONFLICT)
    4-The biggest war is within ourselves. Ruh vs. Body. Ruh wants to do spiritual stuff. Body wants to do physical stuff. If we give preference to one, the other one suffers. Some people just want to take care of Ruh and others just want to take care of Body.(INTERNAL CONFLICT)

    We asked Allah for a straight path, for guidance. It has to be the middle path. The only one who can be fair and can create a balance between these conflicts is Allah. Allah is the only neutral being which can create a balance between all these.
    When we follow the rules and balance Allah has given, then the world will become beautiful. It cannot be absolutely perfect but it will become wonderful. For following that we need to have both fair laws and fair people to follow those laws without manipulation. The more important of the 2 is YOU being fair. When you are fair, the laws will automatically be fair and implemented.

    If you are selfish you will not want this guidance, because if you are selfish you will not care about justice and you will only want everything for yourself, you wont care ab about others

    Who are those Allah has favoured? We often think why everybody else is wrong and how come we are the right ones?Are we really the right ones?How can we be so sure?
    Siraat is a word used for a wide path, a straight path,and the only path possible, there are no alternate routes
    This word has NO plural in Arabic because its the ONLY road that goes to the straight path
    Event the prophets that came before have always taught the same morals and beliefs, only the laws changed according to the need of the time as the societies developed and became more complex. Allah gave constitutions for nations.
    Morals are about how to become better and better.
    Laws are to prevent people from becoming criminals and to teach restraint. They define the absolute bare minimum. Abiding by law doesnt make people a good person, they are just law abiding citizens.Laws are just about things you must do and things you cannot do. Following laws just not make you an amazing person, it is just to prevent you from causing harm to others.
    The first consitution was giving to Bani Israel when Hazrat Musa AS got them freedom from firaun.
    Morals are personal and laws are enforced by Governments.And there have to be punishments for breaking the laws in order to enforce them. There needs to be a government machinery to enforce laws. for e.g. in Quran theres a punishment Qisas for murder or bloodmoney or forgiveness, so the family gets the option of making the decision. The family cannot do it themselves, there needs to be an authority to do it. We cannot take the law in our own hands.

    In Islam there are spiritual laws and there are social laws. Spiritual laws include rules of fasting and halal/haram.
    Social laws include inheritance laws.Wordly punishments are associated with social laws mainly. We dont need a government to abide by spiritual laws and we usually get punishment for them in Jahnnum.
    Our role models for beliefs and morals are those Allah FAVOURED ( those from the past) and that includes all prophets. Allah does not talk about laws of other prophets in Quran but he talks about morals and beliefs.
    For laws, the only one we follow is the Prophet SAWW. We can only follow his constitution.
    So our true heroes are from the past, just like we get career counseling from those people who have already
    been through that stage and not from our friends. So we follow those who are experienced.
    Those are Anbiyaa(Prophets), Siddiqeen(Those who believed in prophets no matter what), Shuhada(people who gave their lives for their faith),Saliheen(people of great character) e.g. Luqman AS, and how amazing these people are in company (it means we will get to hang out with them in Jannah InshaaAllah ameen)

    Allah says that He has recorded everything and videotaped it and it will be shown to us on the Day of judgement. That was really hard for people to believe back in the day but now with advancement of technology, its so easy for us to believe. Its no longer the matter of the unseen. Allah has shown us how its possible to record everything, to replay it, to use it as evidence.

    MAGZOOB=people you are angry at because they know something is wrong and they do it anyway
    Their knowledge does not translate into the right thinking. Abu Jahl and Abu lahb had a lot of knowledge, they knew Arabic yet they rejected the message.
    Bani Israel had a LOT of knowledge, but Allah criticizes them that why dont you THINK and use your intellect.
    These are the Jews

    ZAALEEN= someone who had no idea it was wrong and they did it
    They had the power of finding out.  Yet they did not bother to make the effort. These were the Christians.
    They are just doing certain things without putting in any thought and if you ask them why, they say thats how we always did it or thats how our forefathers did it.

    This does not mean that every jew is magzoob and every christian is zaaleen, rather Allah is giving an example of their behaviours which were mentioned in the Quran to warn us not to do the same.

    For example, when it comes to weddings why do we have 10 events, why do we waste food, why do we go in debt to have grand functions, whats the point! why do we need a gigantic hall? I dont know why we are doing it, we are just doing it. And I dont even want to think about it. Christians used to say that Jesus is Allahs son.Why? because he did not have a father. But Adam AS also did not have a father. I dont want to think! Okay if he is paying for my sins can I go rob a bank? NO you should be a good person. But why? He  has already paid for my sins! I dont want to think..thats the problem Christians had. The Christians became all about the heart and NO knowledge and the Jews became all knowledge and forgot the heart.
    The Quran gives us a path that balances heart and mind. Unfortunately Muslims have also developed groups where some groups are too dependent on the heart and some are too dependent on knowledge. Sometimes we become purely academic and our hearts become hard

    Some Amazing facts about Sura Fatiha:
    1)Surah Fatiha has 7 ayahs. The first 3 are about Allah. The Middle Ayah is common between us and Allah(what we are giving to Allah and what we want for Allah). And the last 3 are about us.
    Iyyaka Nabudu is the conclusion of part 1(the first 3 ayahs) when we give up ourselves to Allah
    Iyyaka Nastaeen is the conclusion of part 2 (asking Allah for help)

    2)The first part was KNOWLEDGE because we learnt about Allah
    The 2nd part is ACTION because it had to be with our amaal
    Surah Fatiha talked about ihdinasiraatul mustaqeem(both knowledge and action), then about people who had EITHER just knowledge or just action, so its a complete picture

    3)From a grammatical perspective, the 1st part is noun based (Jumla Ismiya) and nouns are timeless and they are about Allah and Allah is also timeless
    And the last part is verb based(Jumla failiya) and it is time-bound(has tenses) and we are also timebound(not eternal) so its for us
    And the middle part is although a verb based sentence but the noun is muqaddam over the verb, so its a mixture of a verb and noun based sentence

    Such precision is not humanly possible

    4) Link with Surah naas
    The way Quran begins and the way it ends complements each other