Showing posts with label Shaykh abdalhaqq Bewley. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Shaykh abdalhaqq Bewley. Show all posts

Friday, 31 May 2024

The Essential Difference between Zionism and Judaism by Shaykh Abdalhaqq Bewley

I am writing this to elucidate something that I believe to be generally recognised but that I have not seen clearly articulated elsewhere. It concerns the use of the term “antisemitism”. The adjective “antisemitic” has long ceased to have anything to do with semitic ethnicity and has come exclusively, in its present usage, to mean anti-Jewish. By definition an antisemite is now a person who is against Jews. However, it is an accusation that has, for instance, recently been levelled at many people participating in demonstrations against the present Israeli bombardment of Gaza. Yet the truth is that the demonstrators are not anti-Jewish. They are pro-Palestinian and in many cases anti-Zionist, in as far as the present policies of the Israeli government can be seen as furthering the political goals of the Zionist movement, but they are not against Jewish people. 

 

What has happened is that for a considerable period of time there has been a concerted and deliberate effort to equate Zionism – the political movement to establish a permanent homeland for Jews in Israel – with Judaism itself. The two things are in reality, of course, in no way synonymous. The one is a venerated, ancient religion and the other a modern political movement. But this connection between the two has been brought about so that supporters of Israel can accuse anyone who opposes Israel and its policies of being antisemitic. As we know, the accusation of antisemitism has, since the unspeakable horrors of the Second World War and the necessary measures to protect the Jewish community that followed it, become a powerful and effective indictment against anyone accused of it. But the end result of what has been done is that it has made it possible to by extension label anyone who is actively pro-Palestinian as antisemitic. 

 

Its effectiveness as a weapon on this basis can be seen in the way that it was used to oust Jeremy Corbyn firstly from the leadership of the Labour Party and then from the party itself. Jeremy Corbyn was clearly pro-Palestinian and against political Zionism – in as far as it affected Israeli government policy and its implementation – but he was in no way anti-Jewish. No one could be less anti-Jewish. So he was not in fact antisemitic. Yet the fact that Zionism and Judaism have been conflated enabled his enemies to wield the weapon of antisemitism against him and ensure his removal. It is now being used in the same way to discredit those demonstrating against Israel’s actions in Gaza. The demonstrations are pro-Palestinian and anti-Zionist but they are certainly not anti-Jewish. 

 

The grave danger in what has happened is that that the conflation of Zionism and Judaism might actually come to be seen to be a reality and that people might indeed start to view Zionism and Judaism as the same thing. This would lead to the Jewish community being wrongly blamed for the actions of the Israeli government, something which must be avoided at all costs. It is, therefore, absolutely vital that the distinction between Zionism and Judaism is clearly delineated and the responsibility for the awful situation of the Palestinians in Gaza laid where it actually belongs, at the door of the Zionist policies of the Israeli government, aided and condoned by its international supporters, and nowhere else. 

Friday, 31 March 2023

NATIONAL DHIKR DARS - MARCH 2023, by Shaykh Abdalhaqq Bewley


All of us are aware of the tremendous emphasis placed by our Shaykh on the restoration of zakatHe often referred to it as the fallen or missing pillar of the deen. He again and again stressed the need for the correct reimplementation of its collection and distribution. Indeed at times it seemed that he was more concerned about that than anything else. We have all accepted this aspect of his teaching and done our best in various ways to see it put into practice but why did he make it a matter of such paramount importance. It was because he understood the absolutely pivotal role played by zakat in the deen of Islam, not just in terms of taking care of those in need and ensuring the fair distribution of wealth in society, but in a far deeper way as that element in the deen that truly addresses the prevalent sickness of Islam in the present age.

Friday, 7 February 2020

RESSENTIMENT AND VIOLENT EXTREMISM by Shaykh Abdalhaqq Bewley

A discourse given on Thursday, 6th February 2020 

In his book, Age of Anger, the author Pankaj Mishra incisively demonstrates that the present wave of atrocities attributed to Islamic extremism cannot be viewed in isolation and must be seen as part of a historical continuum that originated in the 18th Century in the sweeping intellectual, social, economic and moral dislocation brought about by European Enlightenment thinking. 

This ushered in a new way of looking at the world and instigated profound changes in the political and social landscape, which are still being felt to this day. The new worldview found early political expression in the violent convulsions of the American war of independence and then, shortly afterwards, the French revolution, in which the idea of “terror” as political policy was openly advocated. Violent political acts based on these ideas continued throughout the 19th Century in various guises – often taking the form of revolutionary and nationalist movements – and in the 20th Century in anti imperialist, anti-colonialist and nationalist movements in Africa, America and Asia. 

Tuesday, 26 March 2019

THE REAL AIM OF RSE by Shaykh Abdalhaqq Bewley

Speaking on the Today programme about communities who were objecting to their primary-school aged children being taught the presently proposed form of relationship education, Sir Michael Wilshaw, the ex-Ofsted chief, made the following astonishing, and profoundly shocking, statement. He said, “These people, who have very conservative views, sincerely held, have also got to understand that they’re living in this country with the values that this country holds and they’ve got to balance these two issues.” This remark has the unavoidable corollary: “if they don’t do that they shouldn’t be living in this country.” Who on earth does this man think he is speaking about and speaking to? Who are “these people” he’s referring to? Well, Sir Michael, I am one of them. I wholeheartedly espouse the views they put forward and completely uphold the objections they are making. My family arrived in this country in the entourage of Eleanor of Aquitaine; are you suggesting I should go back there?

Monday, 4 March 2019

THE EXPATRIATION OF SHAMIMA BEGUM by Shaykh Abdalhaqq Bewley

The Home Secretary has stripped Shamima Begum of her British citizenship on the basis of the fact that, although she was born and brought up in the EastEnd, her parents were born in another country. Hundreds of thousands of young and not so young British citizens, including the Home Secretary himself, are in exactly the same situation: born here of parents who weren’t.


Quite apart from the rights and wrongs of the specific circumstances in Shamima’s case – her departure for Syria as a fifteen-year-old girl, her life in Raqqa under ISIL, the recent statements she, as a traumatised young mother, has been induced to make in Interviews conducted by very experienced journalists in search of a sensational story – the most worrying factor in this situation is the apparently extremely fragile legal nature of British nationality. This has also been highlighted in very recent times by the disgraceful Windrush fiasco and the revoking of the citizenship of a number of dual nationals on account of crimes they have committed.

Thursday, 16 January 2014

Muhammad by Shaykh Abdalhaqq Bewley


In the name of Allah, the Merciful, the Compassionate

Muhammad
by Shaykh Abdalhaqq Bewley

There is no god but Allah
Muhammad is the Messenger of Allah.

This affirmation is the gateway to Islam and the foundation of all that makes up the way of life of a Muslim. It tells first of Allah, the One, alone, without partner. All is dependent on Him. He is independent of everything. He is everywhere manifest and yet invisible. He is before past time. He is beyond endless time. And nothing bears any resemblance to Him. We have no access to the awesome Presence of the Divine Reality except through Muhammad, the Messenger of Allah.

This description of Muhammad is divided into three parts. One is historical, one is concerned with his character, and the other is about his essential nature.



Thursday, 21 March 2013

The Transformative Nature of Islam by Shaykh Abdalhaqq Bewley


The following is a transcript of a Khutba given by Shaykh Abdalhaqq Bewley on Friday 23rd June 2000 [taken from Aisha Bewley's Islamic Home Page]. What he presents here is directly related to our own situation here in Leeds and, indeed, anywhere in the world that Muslims live. It is hoped that posting this will inspire the Muslims here, myself included, to think outside the box, so to speak, and to take the deen forward. 

He calls us to look firstly at ourselves and secondly the community at large and to not become content, but rather constantly chip away at, reform and polish ourselves and in doing so our situation. Islam is by its nature transformative, at both the individual and the communal level. Those who tell us that we don't need to change are in fact lying, whether or not they know it. They are also limiting the Deen, and stunting their own spiritual development and the development of any who imagine their advice to be worthwhile.

Anyone who looks at our history will clearly see that the earliest Muslims, under the leadership and guidance of the Rasool, peace and blessings be upon him, were constantly working to improve themselves and encouraging each other in the same pursuit (refer to surat al-'Asr for the Quranic imperative). From this we can see that community, that is jama'a, is therefore a necessary element of the deen and a condition of its establishment. 

We have an extremely important role to play in the re-establishment of the deen, and those who take on the task of its re-establishment will be remembered by history and, more importantly, will be given a generous reward by the Lord of the Worlds.

May Allah make this transcript, which were originally the words of a great man of Allah, a benefit to the community here and may Allah open our hearts so that we may embody its meanings. 

-Yusuf Rowland

Shaykh Abdalhaqq Bewley
Picture posted with the kind permission of Qiyama Media
[qiyamahmedia.com]

First Khutba

As for him who overstepped the bounds and preferred the life of the dunya, 
the Blazing Fire will be his refuge. 
But as for him who feared the Station of his Lord 
and forbade the lower self its appetites, 
the Garden will be his refuge. 
(79:37-40)

That is because Allah would never change a blessing He has conferred on a people 
until they had changed what was in themselves. 
Allah is All-Hearing, All-Knowing
(8:54)

The second ayat is repeated twice in the Qur'an and is usually quoted in the context of improvement, in other words: Allah will not make things better for us until we better ourselves. But in fact, although it clearly can mean this, the meaning both times it is used appears to be the opposite: that Allah will not make things worse for us unless we change for the worse. The change can be in both directions. The important thing to grasp from the ayat is that everything in existence is in a state of constant change and that this also applies to Muslims both as individuals and communities. Islam is a dynamic, it is a process, it is an organic patterning. It is not a fixed, solid structure, a rigid legal framework which you somehow get hold of and fit yourself into. It is vital to understand this if we want Islam to spread and become fully established and implemented in the world again.

Thursday, 3 January 2013

Shaykh Abdalhaqq Bewley on the Four Madhhabs


An invaluable discourse on the Four Legal Schools of Thought by Shaykh Abdalhaqq Bewley.
The Shaykh gives a very concise overview and reflects on the state of the madhhabs in the modern context.



Available at
diwanpress.com

This collection tackles the issue of the four madhhabs of Islam in a ground-breaking and thought-provoking way. 

“The Four Madhhabs of Islam and Their Relationship with the Present Time”, by Shaykh Abdalhaqq Bewley presents a historical understanding of the origins of the madhhabs and their development which allows us to grasp our present situation in a new and liberating way. 

Aisha Bewley focuses upon the often misunderstood term, the ‘amal, or practice, of the People of Madinah. 

In his paper, “The Importance of Malik and the Maliki Madhhab Today”, Dr. Yasin Dutton considers the importance of Imam Malik’s magisterial work the Muwatta’, in preserving our historically most valid – because closest to the source – transmission of sunna and hadith. 

In the fourth contribution, Shaykh Abdalhaqq shows how the deen reached him (and the other authors) in transmitted practice from the first community. Together, they show that just as a way based exclusively on scholarship and study of texts can be paralysing and inhibiting, and to it can be attributed much of the helplessness of contemporary Muslims, recovery of transmitted practice backed by scholarship is a dynamic and liberating way that can lead to a new flowering of the deen in every age.

Monday, 22 October 2012

The Legalisation of the Deviation of Tasawwuf, by Shaykh Abdalhaqq Bewley


An address delivered at the 12th International Fiqh Conference in Cape Town, South Africa on Saturday 17th October 2009

As many of you will know, a group of us were invited earlier this year to a meeting of Sufi tariqas in Marrakesh organized by the Moroccan Ministry of Awqaf. I would first like to say that the event was extremely well organised and that the hospitality of our hosts was impeccable from beginning to end. I am, however, using our experience there as an illustrative example of a worldwide phenomenon whereby tasawwuf – sometimes consciously, frequently unconsciously – has been utilised to serve the purposes of a political agenda which has nothing to do with Islam and which ends up presenting it as something very different from what it has always been throughout Islamic history.


I will start by quoting directly from the official website of the Sidi Chiker Gathering – the name given to the meeting we were attending – a list which can in a way be summarised as the stated objectives of the organisation:

The idea which presides over the Sidi Chiker Gathering rests on the conviction that the Sufic Path, which has its source in the Qur’an and Prophetic Tradition, has contributed everywhere throughout the Muslim world to the edification of Islamic society and its civilisation in numerous ways:


  • Spreading Islam by peaceful means and by example.
  • Elaboration of methods for assuring a professional class among the Muslims.
  • Elaboration of a moral path for the perfecting of the individual at a religious and social level.
  • Diffusion of the love of God among the People of the Path.
  • Giving weight to the interior dimension of Islam and assisting the individual in the acquisition of noble virtues.
  • Promoting cooperation and solidarity
  • Establishing an intellectual and literary patrimony with the object of promoting a spirit of self-abnegation and love of truth, that truth whose knowledge gives man the aspiration to remain true to the sacred trust of tawhid which he takes on in conformity with the noble mission which God has assigned to him.

Now I would like to contrast that agenda with the comparatively recent historical examples, from the 19th and 20th centuries, of five different tariqas across the Muslim world. Let us first take the example of the Naqshbandi Tariqa in the Caucasus. At the beginning of the 19th Century the Russian Empire expanded into the Caucasus which had, until that time, been an Ottoman territory. The task of defending Islam against Russian domination fell to the hands of the Naqshabandi tariqa under the leadership of Imam Shamil. The first battle against the Russians was fought in 1832 under the leadership of the then leader of the tariqa Shaykh Mansur. He was killed and the murids were utterly defeated. Only two escaped the slaughter, one of whom was the badly wounded Imam Shamil, a highly educated ‘alim respected for the depth of his knowledge throughout the whole of the Caucusus. He recovered from his wounds and went on to re-establish the rule of shari’a throughout Daghestan and Chechenya. For the next nearly 30 years until 1859 he fought tooth and nail in the face of incredible hardships and personal tragedies to preserve the integrity of the deen in the Caucasus. He was finally forced to surrender but, by Allah, was treated with great respect by his Russian captors and received by the Czar himself. He was exiled to a mansion in Kiev, where he spent nearly 10 years. He was finally granted permission to go on Hajj and en route was greeted with great honour by the Ottoman Sultan, becoming his guest in the Topkapi. The seal was set on his glorious life, after the completion of his final Hajj, by his death in Madina and his burial alongside the Companions of the Messenger of Allah, salla’llahu ‘alayhi wa sallam, in the cemetery of al-Baqi.

My second example is the Qadiriyya Tariqa on the other side of the Muslim world in Algeria. There is, strangely enough, a direct connection with Imam Shamil. Imam Shamil went on Hajj for the first time as a young man in 1825. While he was there he met another very learned young ‘alim from the town of Mascara in western Algeria whose name was Abdalqadir al-Hasani. They apparently spent a lot of time together and spoke at length on many different topics, including that of how to defend the deen in the face of the serious threat of the encroaching colonial powers. Not long after Abdalqadir returned to the land of his birth the French invaded Algeria. He became shaykh of the Qadiri Tariqa and for the next seventeen years, under the title Amir Abdalqadir al-Jaza-iri, he fought tirelessly against the French domination of his native land and the imposition of a legal system contrary to the laws of Allah which that entailed. The inhuman nature of French brutality against his countrymen eventually forced Amir Abdalqadir to surrender and, in violation of a promise they had made to allow him to go to a Muslim land, they exiled him to France. As in the case of Imam Shamil, however, they treated him with respect, confining him in the Chateau of Amboise in the Loire Valley. The purity of his niyya was confirmed by the fact that he was soon allowed to go to Damascus where he spent the rest of his life, eventually being buried at the feet of his acknowledged master, Shaykh al-Akbar Ibnu’l’Arabi al-Hatimi.

There is a postscript to this story that shows that the work of the awliya extends beyond their death and which also has immediate relevance to our gathering here today. At a certain point in the fairly early days of his Islam, our esteemed ra’is, Abu Bakr Rieger, reached the end of his tether with the situation we were then in in Freiburg and, breaking loose, decided to run off with Fatiha to get away from the community and everything connected to it. They arrived at the River Loire and decided to visit the Chateau of Amboise, knowing, of course, nothing whatsoever about its history. They connected with a tour which was being taken around the castle and imagine the surprise of the the ra’is when suddenly, out of nowhere, he heard the tour guide say, “This is the appartment where Shaykh Abdalqadir lived while he was in France.” He later told me that that was the moment he realised that there was no escape and that his destiny was sealed!

My third example is that of the Mahdiyya Tariqa in Sudan. Towards the end of the 19th century Muhammad Ahmad, known as the Mahdi, drove the British and their influence out of Sudan and established the rule of the shari’a throughout the country. In 1885 he took Khartoum and made it his capital. Although he died of natural causes soon after this the Islamic governance he established remained in force for well over a decade until 1898 when his community was finally defeated by General Kitchener at the Battle of Omdurman. The fourth example is the Sanussiya Tariqa. Under its founder and his successors the tariqa established a vast but unified area of Islamic governance from Libya right across the Sahara into West Africa and later valiantly defended it with considerable success throughout the whole of the first half of the 20th century against both the French and the Italians.

My final example is what happened with our own tariqa at the end of the first decade of the 20th century. It was clear by then that nothing was going to stop the French turning Morocco into a so-called French protectorate. A meeting of awliya was convened at which it was decided that our tariqa would take a two-pronged approach to the situation. The fuqara of the Middle Atlas under the Awlad Sidi Tayyibi would take up arms and fight the French, whereas Sidi Muhammad ibn al-Habib would remain in the Gharb and protect the deen, keeping it alive in the great Cities of the plains. The mountain fuqara fought on for fourteen years eventually being bombed into submission in 1926. We ourselves used to go and stay with Sidi Salih who was the shaykh of that branch of our tariqa in the 70’s and 80’s and who had himself fought and been wounded in that conflict.

And as we know we owe everything we have to the tireless work of Shaykh Muhammad ibn al-Habib who stuck staunchly to his task and preserved the deen in the face of the French occupation for sixty years throughout both Morocco and Algeria until he was able to pass it on intact to our Shaykh who has himself been true to the task entrusted to him and has spent his life protecting it and passing it on to us. May Allah reward him and give us success in taking it on and passing it on in our turn.

I hope that what will have become clear from these five examples – and any number of other examples which could also have been elicited from every epoch of Islam – is that the primary task of the people of tasawwuf in each era is to take every single necessary step, no matter what the cost, to ensure the complete integrity of Islam and the greatest possible implementation of Allah’s deen, inwardly and most importantly outwardly, in the particular time and place where they find themselves. I hope it will also be clear that the list of objectives of the Sidi Shiker Gathering I read out at the start of this presentation in no way adequately reflects this reality.

At the beginning of the 1980’s it became obvious to those who run the world’s affairs that the approach that had been taken to Islam and the Muslims up to that point was no longer viable. In the pre-colonial era their approach to Islam had been one of outright hostility and rejection. The practical exigencies of colonialism changed this into an arrogant assumption of superiority and overt attempts at subversion. The post colonial period, which saw the appearance for the first time of large numbers of Muslims in the heartlands of the colonial powers, caused another change. The first approach, adopted in the belief that the colonial attempts to subvert Islam had been effective, was to simply pretend it did not exist. Once, however, it became evident that Islam was not going away and that, far from withering on the vine, new growth was springing out in every direction, a new approach was clearly needed. The burgeoning self confidence of Muslim populations throughout the world helped on by the Iranian revolution and Mujahidun successes in Afghanistan made a new strategy for dealing with Islam an urgent imperative and the one adopted was the Good Muslim, Bad Muslim dialectic. It was possible to actually see this strategy being put into place step by step over the period of a couple of years during the early 1980’s.

Good Muslims submit to the established authority of the state, play their part by working hard and effectively in the communities where they live, pay their taxes, and provide a much needed moral element in the new world order. In return for this they are permitted to worship in their mosques and to attend meetings of dhikr, as long as that does not interfere with the right of anyone else to behave in almost whatever way they like. They must accept the status quo, become good citizens, be endlessly tolerant of other people’s lifestyles whatever they are and whatever they believe in, tow the global line and on no account rock the boat. Any other kind of Muslim is de facto a bad Muslim, a fundamentalist, a fanatic, probably a terrorist, someone who wants to oppress women, stone people to death and cut off their hands and heads whenever possible.

The point is that under the terms of this dialectic there are only these two alternatives; if you are not one then you must be the other. Both of them are, of course, in Islamic terms, totally unacceptable but the depressing fact of the matter is that we, the Muslims, have by and large accepted this definition of us. The tiny minority of actual terrorists and suicide bombers, whose methods have nothing whatsoever to do with Islam and owe almost everything to the nihilistic political theories of 19th Century European anarchism, have of course played right into their hands. Almost worse than this, however, has been the willingness of the vast majority of Muslims to accept the other alternative in this false dialectic and allow themselves to be fooled into accepting its definition of what it is to be a good Muslim.

Unfortunately the majority of both the leaders and the followers of the great Sufi tariqas, who in fact at the same time constitute the vast majority of the world’s Muslims, have themselves fallen into this trap and are falling over themselves in the race to be categorised as Good Muslims rather than Bad ones. Some have done this out of a purely venial motivation, chasing after the considerable funding available for groups who encourage moderation and tolerance among their followers. Others do it for political reasons in order to align themselves with the anti-terrorist, pro-democracy policies of their governments and their governments’ paymasters.

Yet others do it because they simply have not understood the nature of the world they live in. It is as if they think that today’s world is still the same as it was two centuries ago when the shari’a was still in place in many countries and a quietist approach to tasawwuf, sometimes permissible under strong Muslim governance which is fully implementing the shari’a, was still appropriate. In fact, of course, Allah’s laws are being flouted in every country in the world, Muslim or non-Muslim, and every true Sufi knows that there can be no haqiqa without shari’a. To imagine that tasawwuf can be properly practised in the present situation without its practioners doing everything in their power to change it shows ignorance of the real nature of the Sufic path and, as we have seen, runs completely counter to the example of our rightly guided predecessors who left no stone unturned in their determination to protect Allah’s deen and see it implemented in its entirety.

Given this analysis it is clear that, wittingly or unwittingly, the Sidi Chiker Gathering, like so many organisations of a similar nature, falls squarely into the Good Muslim camp. Although there were many positive aspects to our stay in Marrakech, three unfortunate instances stand out in my memory which made this abundantly evident.

One of the lectures given during the symposium was delivered by a so-called shaykha from California. Although it was couched in more or less sufic terminology, it might as well have come straight from Haight Ashbury in 1968. It was a classic “universal peace and love” message from the height of the hippy era in which the presence of classical Islam played an absolutely minimal role but which was presented seriously as a valid depiction of the Sufic path. It took a Darqawi shaykh from Aleppo, who was unable to contain his indignation at what had been said, to stand up at the lecture’s end and tell the woman in how many ways what she had put forward was totally opposed to a correct understanding of tasawwuf.

The second instance was connected with the actual organisation of the gathering. We were told one evening that there was going to be a session of dhikr. We went to the hall where dinner was being served. At one side of the hall there was a stage and shortly after the meal commenced a group of singers beautifully dressed in white jellabas and red fezzes appeared on it and sat in a semi circle facing the assembled guests. They proceeded, it seemed to me somewhat reluctantly, to sing qasidas in that most intoxicatingly melodious way that only Moroccan singers steeped in the centuries old Andalusian tradition are able to. The result was that the sublime verses of Ibn al-‘Arabi and ibn al-Farid, describing the highest spiritual states it is possible for a human being to achieve, were drowned out by the loud clatter of hundreds of sets of cutlery and banal chatter of hundreds of careless voices, as they were reduced to being background music to the meal. One or two of the delegates simply walked out in disgust. I am ashamed to say that I was one of the many hundreds who stayed eating the admittedly delicious food.

The third instance took place over two stages. The main administrative organisation of the gathering was conducted from the foyer of the extremely luxurious hotel in which most of the delegates were being accommodated. I had to alter my travel arrangements on the night before the last day of the gathering and the person in charge of such arrangements sat at a desk in the foyer. I had seen him dealing with the various travel problems of many delegates with the utmost efficiency and courtesy over the course of that day. In front of me was a small middle-aged American who wanted to change his business class return ticket to New York which had been paid for by our hosts. The discourtesy and foul language used by this man are difficult to describe and he treated the good natured and most proficient travel agent, who was doing his best to help him, with a contempt I was embarrassed to witness. He was full to the brim with self-importance and insisted that he had to be in New York by a certain time in order to attend a vital meeting at the United Nations with the president of one of the Central American republics. It was a ghastly display of the worst kind of American arrogance and self-obsession.

Imagine then my dismay when I discovered that this same man was to give the keynote speech on the final day of the conference. I sat there wondering what on earth he was going to say about Sufism, given the appalling behaviour I had seen from him the previous evening. It was even worse than I feared and a little way into his lecture he explicitly said that to be a Sufi you did not actually really need to be a Muslim at all. This time I did walk out. How, I wondered, could the organisers have allowed such a thing to be said in the city of Shaykh Jazuli and Qadi ‘Ayad. The only conclusion I could draw was that they must indeed have been extremely eager to be considered Good Muslims.

The upshot of all this is that, as demonstrated by the Sidi Chiker Gathering and many other similar organisations throughout the world claiming to represent the Sufic Path, the role of tasawwuf within the Muslim umma today has been deviated drastically from the pivotal crucial position it has always held throughout the whole history of Islam. The great tariqas were largely responsible for the spread of Islam around the globe in the first place, then for preserving the integrity of Islam both inwardly and outwardly – the zawiyyas and khanqas of the Sufis have always been places devoted as much or more to teaching and implementing the basic practices of the deen as they have to any kind of spiritual training – and, as my examples showed, for the unremitting defence of Islam against its enemies when that became necessary.

This pernicious deviation of tasawwuf has ensured that the great tariqas have been reduced to emasculated and impotent shadows of what they were intended to be, unable to fulfil the function for which their great founders, may Allah have mercy on all of them, brought them into being. Unfortunately the deviators have all but succeeded, in that rather than being people whose lives are spent actively propagating, preserving and protecting Allah’s deen in its entirety, a large number of the leaders and the great majority of the followers this deviated version of tasawwuf have become passive, docile and, in many cases, willing participants in a system which is explicitly dedicated to the destruction of Islam.

There will, however, always be true men of Allah who, by Allah, will ensure that the great tradition of real tasawwuf, that river of the transmission of every aspect of Islam, which had its source in the Messenger of Allah, salla’llahu ‘alayhi wa sallam, and has illuminated and invigorated every generation of Muslims since, will never come to an end. We have Allah’s promise for this and I will let Him subhanahu wa ta’ala have the last word as He most certainly will in all our affairs in this world and the Next. He says in Sura at-Tawba:

They desire to extinguish Allah’s Light with their mouths. But Allah refuses to do other than perfect His Light, even though the kafirun detest it.

It is He who sent His Messenger with guidance and the Deen of Truth to exalt it over every other deen, even though the mushrikun detest it.

Source: http://www.shaykhabdalqadir.com/content/conference2009.html

Tuesday, 5 June 2012

A selection from Al-Shifa of Qadi 'Iyad regarding love of the Prophet







TAKEN FROM AISHA BEWLEY'S WEBSITE - bewley.virtualave.net











Section 4: The signs of love of the Prophet, may Allah bless him and grant him peace

Know that someone who loves a person prefers them and prefers what they like. Otherwise, he is a pretender, insincere in his love.

Someone who has true love of the Prophet, may Allah bless him and grant him peace, will manifest the following signs.

1) The first sign is that he will emulate him, apply his Sunna, follow his words and deeds, obey his commands and avoid his prohibitions and take on his adab in ease and hardship, joy and despair. Allah testifies to that, "Say: if you love Allah, then follow me and Allah will love you." (3:31)

2) He will prefer what the Prophet, may Allah bless him and grant him peace, has laid down as law and encouraged, over his own passions and appetites. Allah said, "Those who were already settled in the abode, and in belief, before they came, love those who have emigrated to them and do not find in their breasts any need for what they have been given and prefer them to themselves even if they themselves are in want." (59:9)

3) His anger against people will only be for the sake of the pleasure of Allah. Anas ibn Malik said, "The Messenger of Allah said to me, 'My son, if you can be without any grudge in your heart against anyone in the morning and evening, be like that.' Then he added, 'My son, that is part of my Sunna. Whoever gives life to my sunna has loved me and whoever loves me is with me in the Garden.'" (at-Tirmidhi)

Anyone who possesses this particular quality has perfect love for Allah and His Messenger. Anyone slightly lacking in it is imperfect in his love, while not entirely devoid of it. The proof of this is in what the Prophet said about the man who was given the punishment for drinking. A man there cursed him and the Prophet said, "Do not curse him. He loves Allah and His Messenger." (al-Bayhaqi)

4) Another of the signs of love for the Prophet is to mention him often. Whoever loves something mentions it a lot.

5) Another is great yearning to meet him. Every lover yearns for their beloved.

When the Ash'arite clan came to Madina, they chanted, "Tomorrow we will meet those we love, Muhammad and his Companions!"

6) One of its signs is that as well as mentioning him often, someone who loves him will exalt and respect him when he mentions him and display humility and abasement when he hears his name. Ishaq at-Tujibi said, "Whenever the Companions of the Prophet heard his name after he died, they were humble, their skins trembled and they wept. It was the same with many of the Followers. Some of them act like that out of love and yearning for him, others out of respect and esteem."

7) Another sign is love for those who love the Prophet and the people of his house and his Companions, both of the Muhajirun and Ansar, for his sake. Such a person will also be hostile to those who hate them and curse them. Whoever loves anyone, loves those he loves.

The Prophet said about al-Hasan and al-Husayn, "O Allah, I love them, so love them." In al-Hasan's variant, "O Allah, I love him, so love the one who loves him." He also said, "Whoever loves them loves me. Whoever loves me loves Allah. Whoever hates them hates me. Whoever hates me hates Allah." (al-Bukhari)
He said, "Allah! Allah! My Companions! Do not make them targets after me! Whoever loves them loves them by loving me. Whoever hates them hates them by hating me. Whoever does something hurtful to them does something hurtful to me. Whoever does something hurtful to me does something hurtful to Allah. Whoever does something hurtful to Allah is about to be seized." (at-Tirmidhi)

He said about Fatima, "She is a part of me. Whoever hates her hates me." (al-Bukhari)

He said to 'A'isha about Usama ibn Zayd, "Love him for I love him." (at-Tirmidhi)

He said, "The sign of true faith is love for the Ansar and the sign of hypocrisy is hatred for them." (al-Bukhari and Muslim)

In a hadith related by Ibn 'Umar we find, "Whoever loves the Arabs, loves them because he loves me. Whoever hates them hates them because he hates me." In reality, whoever loves someone loves everything he loves. This was certainly the case with the Salaf, even regarding permitted things and the appetites of the self.

Anas once saw the Prophet reaching for the pumpkin in the plate. He said, "I have loved pumpkin from that day."

Al-Hasan ibn 'Ali, 'Abdullah ibn 'Abbas and Ibn Ja'far came to Salma [a servant of the Prophet] and asked her to prepare some food for them which the Messenger of Allah liked. Ibn 'Umar began to wear tanned sandals dyed yellow when he saw the Prophet wearing ones like that.

8) Another sign is hatred for anyone who hates Allah and His Messenger, having enmity towards all who have enmity towards him, avoidance of all those who oppose his Sunna and introduce innovations into his Deen, and finding every matter contrary to his Shari'a burdensome. Allah says, "You will not find any people who believe in Allah and the Last Day who having love for anyone who opposes Allah and His Messenger." (58:22)
His Companions killed their loved ones and fought their fathers and sons to gain the pleasure of the Prophet, may Allah bless him and grant him peace. 'Abdullah ibn 'Abdullah ibn Ubayy said to him, "If you had wanted, I would have brought you his head (his father's)."

9) Another sign of it is love for the Qur'an which the Prophet brought, by which he guided and was guided, and whose character he took on so that 'A'isha said, "His character was the Qur'an." Part of love for the Qur'an is its recitation and acting by it and understanding it, and loving his sunna and keeping within its limits.

Sahl ibn 'Abdullah said, "The sign of the love of Allah is love of the Qur'an. The sign of love of the Qur'an is love of the Prophet. The sign of love of the Prophet is love of the Sunna. The sign of love of the Sunna is love of the Next World. The sign of love of the Next World is hatred for this world. The sign of hatred for this world is that you do not store up any of it except for provision and what you need to arrive safely in the Next World."

Ibn Mas'ud said, "No one needs to ask himself about anything except the Qur'an. If he loves the Qur'an, he loves Allah and His Messenger."

10) One of the signs of love for the Prophet is having compassion for his community, giving them good counsel, striving for their best interests and removing what is harmful from them just as the Prophet was "compassionate, merciful to the believers." (9:128)

11) One of the signs of perfect love is that the one who aspires to it does without in this world and prefers poverty.

The Prophet said to Abu Sa'id al-Khudri, "Poverty for those among you who love me comes quicker than a flood from the top of the mountain to the bottom." (at-Tirmidhi)

In a hadith from 'Abdullah b. Mughaffal, a man said to the Prophet, "O Messenger of Allah, I love you." He said, "Take care what you say!" He said, "By Allah, I love you" three times. He said, "If you love me, then prepare for poverty quickly." There is a similar hadith from Abu Sa'id al-Khudri.