Tuesday 24 January 2012

My journey to the Beloved One

Dear Companion,

This wasn't the first time my semi-functional iPhone alarm let me down. Nor was it the first time that we slept at 3 in the morning! So let me set the scene for you. Its was 7:50 AM, we hadn’t packed, showered or ate breakfast and Steve was shouting his head off that we were going to miss the flight to Medina. The thought of missing a chance to visit the Prophet (pbuh)’s mosque was the driving power behind our swift exit from the hotel. It was funny when Steve pointed out that he left the room shouting at Ahmed for being too slow for putting on his belt on, only to find him still trying to put it on 10 minutes later. Our Arrival to Medina was welcomed with a pleasant breeze. The temperature was 20oC but the expression on our Saudi tour guide looked like someone had just shoved him into a freezer. It is compulsory to enter the mosque with the upmost humbleness and humility 

The lack of preparation meant that I was frantically looking through my luggage for my thobe. The visit to the Medina mosque is just as significant as visiting the Haraam in Makkah. This is the city where which God chose for His Messenger to flee to safety when he was driven out of Makkah from the Quraish. This is the city where God revealed many commandments the Prophet (pbuh). When I think of it like that, it enables me to understand just how important Medina is to Muslims. Its is the city where the muslims were among some of the first to understand and apply the obligatory duties. 1400 years later and I am still practicing those obligatory duties. It is advised to give some charity and be in constant supplication before going to mosque.

I was travelling with great enthusiasm and excitement and increasing the yearning, as we got closer. I was overjoyed when the green dome came into sight. Underneath the green dome is where the Prophet (pbuh) is buried. The mosque was more beautiful than I had imagined it. The minarets and the umbrella shaped shelters stood out the most for me. Once inside, the excitement had reached it’s climax, I offered my prayer and tried very hard to focus my thoughts on the exalted personage of the Holy prophet. His high position, means that some pilgrims unintentionally perform wrong practices during the visit. It was a different feeling to the Haraam mosque. Time just seemed to slow down for me. The thoughts of how God had granted me this blessed opportunity filled me with emotions. You can’t explain the feeling. Just as the within the Haraam, I felt a surge of energy as I conversed with my Lord asking him to forgive me. I collected myself and proceeded towards the grave. I walked towards the gold wire-meshed enclosures. Tears flowed through my eyes in an unrestrained manner as I sent salutations upon the Final Messenger. My role model.  My beloved. Prophet Muhammed (pbuh)

Sincerely,

Awais Ali

Tuesday 17 January 2012

Speaking to the Heart


Dear Companion,

Praised be God, who extended His invitation to me in 2010 and gave me an amazing opportunity to visit the holy land for the first time, an experience that will remain with me forever.

Coming from a culture so immersed in rights and individualism, it’s often easily forgotten that the world is much bigger than us. Before going for my Umrah trip, I didn’t know what to expect. I had looked at pictures, Youtube videos, and heard a few lectures but nothing compared to actually being there. This was my attempt to escape, isolate myself and discover peace but I came to find, the experience of Umrah, as Imam Suhaib Webb describes, is not so much internal as it is external. As I walked towards the haram, I had a mixture of feelings. Being excited and fearful at the same time, muddled with awe, trying to imagine the spiritual high with every step and invoking the talbiah quietly as I marched with a lowered gaze, clinging behind my friend, reminding myself of the honour of following the footsteps of the holy Prophet  - and indeed honour is a gift from God: “[O God] You exalt whomever You will, and You debase whomever You will” (Quran 3:26).
When I managed to get through the sea of people and find a spot to pray, I was in a state of complete admiration for the ka’ba and its surroundings. Upon the first sujood (prostration) I felt a sense of bliss and reflected on the sins that had made me neglect God’s grace – how Exalted is He! A quote of Shaykh Abdal Hakim Murad comes to mind: “To purify the body from the disorders which both engender and result from sin, a system of worship is gifted in revelation, which culminates in the placing of the forehead, the symbol of human pride and of self-oriented thought, upon the earth.” As I completed the tawaf (circling of the Ka’ba), I engaged in prophetic invocations, a beggar pleading for God to open the doors of mercy, and beseeching His forgiveness. Shaykh Hamza Yusuf mentions the ritual of circulating the Ka’ba is performed in a counterclockwise fashion, with the left side facing the House i.e. the heart, which is centered slightly to the left of our bodies, inclined towards it to ‘remind us of God and His presence in the life of humanity.’
There were so many people present, providing me with a simple, yet profound realisation. No one cared about how rich or poor you were, where you were from, what post you have or how many degrees you have. Millions travel to redeem themselves, to begin a new chapter and while I didn’t know what sacrifices were made to visit the holy land, I knew that I was there in Makkah, with my insignificance apparent in the midst of the ocean of believers. I concluded that I had truely lost focus on what is beyond me and thought my problems were big, until there God, through His infinite mercy, had sent me a reminder.
The second part of my trip led me to visit the blessed city of Madinah, and Masjid Al-Nabawi (the Prophet’s Mosque) where I visited the Beloved, the one who demonstrated the true essence of magnificence, the one who’s reality cannot be perceived in this world by the inattentive and the one who surpassed all prophets in appearance and virtue – peace and blessings upon him, his family and companions. This is the same city in which it’s reported Imam Malik would never ride or mount an animal and would say, “I am too shy before Allah to trample with an animal's hoof on the earth where Allah's Messenger is buried.” (Al-Shifa, Vol 2). When the great Owais Qarani entered the mosque of Madinah, he waited at the door and at once lost consciousness. Upon my entering, I conveyed my Salams, and as Imam Ghazali says, met with him as though he was alive and I was standing before him ﷺ.
This city is contrasting from the city of Makkah. The feeling of tranquillity is unparalleled, and the raised level of sanctity is evident through the way you feel purified by one visit, hence the city’s other name Tayba, meaning pure and pleasant, for the beautiful fragrance that is found in its sacred air. During my stay there I pondered over the words of Qadi Iyaad: “For you (O Madinah) I have intense, ardent love. And a yearning which kindles the embers of my heart.” (Al-Shifa)

The Imam of the haram recited beautifully and precisely for every prayer, his deep voice resonating around the walls where the Prophet
would walk past, being heard inside and outside the grand, elegant structure. People formed their rows quickly after the call to prayer and there was a constant rush around the grave of the Messenger of God ﷺ, with pilgrims stopping at the golden carvings, some crying while trying to gain that connection, standing humbly before the graciousness of the Prophet . “And attribute to him whatever you wish of honour, and attribute to his status whatever you wish of greatness, for the graciousness of Rasulullah has no limit, to an extent beyond what can be expressed in words” explains Imam al-Busiri. I remember an encounter I had after the evening prayer with a Mauritanian individual. He sat there with his prayer beads, concentrating in his dhikr (remembrance of God), harbouring his thoughts, diligent in his devotional act of worship, wearing the light blue Mauritanian costume which resembles the ihram in appearance. Visiting righteous people for spiritual ascendency has always been encouraged by scholars, and I had read of the vast Islamic knowledge that people from Mauritania gain from a young age. I managed to talk to this man in my broken Arabic as he smiled while asking me to sit next to him. I couldn’t help but ask him of his past studies, as his fingers continued to move one bead at a time, and he spoke little and to the point, but a normal quiet simple individual such as this would be considered a great Shaykh in the small part of London where I’m from! I also managed to gather that he had either studied with or taught Shaykh Hamza Yusuf. Although I never saw him after that it was a blessed meeting for me as I asked him to pray for me.
Praised be God and with sorrow, I departed from the great city, and the great land. I now gained a better understanding of maintaining good kinship with good people, because a spiritually high journey like Umrah can lead to a spiritual low once returning to your normal life, unless there is something there to maintain that state, which is a difficult task because of the environment that we live in. The lesson I learnt of associating myself with the right people is one that I would like to end with as Ibn Ata’illah once said, “Do not take as a companion someone whose state will not elevate you and whose speech does not direct you to God.” Purification of the heart is indeed an ongoing process and so we also must ensure we do not let our hearts become encrusted, accumulate wholesome deeds and work on consistency to adopt good conduct. I consider this journey of mine to the holy land a stepping stone for this process, God Willing.
Sincerely,

Waqaar Butt

Wednesday 11 January 2012

Passage to Peace

In the name of Allah, the Most Gracious, the Most Merciful.
Dear Companion.
Peace. One word, one entity that needs to be in abundance in the world, yet wherever we look it’s as if nobody knows its definition. I couldn’t find my Oxford Dictionary so I guess the Wikipedia entry will have to suffice: “Peace is the state of harmony characterised by the lack of violent conflict.” I don’t think I could have found a better definition anywhere else. I’m not just referring to peace in war-torn countries or peace within our families or friends, but one that most of us often neglect: inner peace.
When I left for my journey to Umrah with my family and our relatives from Bangladesh, I had absolutely no idea what to expect; would I be awed? Would I cry? Would I be bored? (Subhanallah the last one never happened!) The one thing that I never expected to feel is that of such overwhelming tranquillity that it was as if nothing else in the world mattered, but the worship of Allah. I felt it the moment I laid my eyes on the Ka’bah (after I shed a few tears; how can you not?).
I’m someone that loves the internet, and often have friends telling me I’m a Facebook addict and what not. But staying in Makkah, just walking in the streets and looking around at the people made me forget everything about the internet; these people live without it, so why can’t I? It was more of the fact that I didn’t need the internet, I felt like I didn’t need anything at all except my clothes, food, shelter, and Allah.
I’m drifting from my point. As I sat there, looking at the Ka’bah) I remember feeling like nothing mattered, and I just wanted to sit there in the state of the utmost calm I’ve ever felt in my life. Sitting there, surrounded by beautiful architecture, the chanting of prayers from every direction, I was lost in a trance where I reflected upon my life, my goals, what, and most importantly, who I wanted to become in this life. It’s not every day we sit and ponder things like this, is it?
Alhamdulillah I’m happy to say that the experience changed me. I’ve learned so much from it, both about this amazing way of life we call Islam, and about myself as a person. I’ve never taken a peaceful moment for granted since then, and let’s face it: we could all use it in our lives. With university, having personal problems, financial problems or any other troubles makes us forget that there is only one being that we can turn to, and sitting on your own in the mosque or in a tranquil environment will remind you that there are things in this life more important than what goes on in our lives.  After all, Islam is derived from the Arabic root "Salema": peace, purity, submission and obedience[1].
 Sincerely,
Raiyan Ali

Monday 2 January 2012

Yearning for the Holy Land


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

Dear Companion,

By the mercy of Allah, this was my second visit to the holy land, and I have to say that the experience of the sacred lands never diminishes.

A group of my friends had made the intention of performing their Umrah in the summer; I had been informed and asked if I was able to accompany them. I had already been only the previous summer with my family and did not have the finances to go again this year, so my response was a sad “no”.

Weeks and months passed by and my friends had bought and arranged their tickets and stay. They were very eager about the trip so had been doing extensive mental, physical and spiritual preparations far before their departure date. I had witnessed this and was moved by their dedication, as well as yearning for another opportunity to visit Allah’s house and give my salaam upon Rasulullah (saas).

The primary reason for not being able to go was my financial situation in regards to my university costs, I did not want to fall into the student loan trap, so had to be very vigilant about my spending. However, by the mercy of Allah an opportunity arose for me which lessened this financial burden. Coincidently at this same time, I heard of several people who had returned, were planning to go and were currently there. My yearning grew stronger and stronger. Until one day I just had overwhelming persistence in my heart that I had to go. For a few days nothing else consumed my thoughts, and I finally made the decision to go.

Now, I had the task of seeking my parent’s permission. After a while discussing with my mother and father, they had gracefully decided that I could go. That night I could not sleep with the excitement. I informed the group as soon as I was entirely certain I was going. I did not hesitate to get the bookings quickly out of the way. As from past experience I regretted the actual spiritual preparation that I had done and was adamant that this was my sole objective. I wanted to ensure (by the mercy of Allah) that for this Umrah trip I would be as ready as I can be. I thus joined with my brothers in their preparation sessions. Among many was the weekly class our group and another group of young brothers attended about the various aspects of Umrah. These were extremely valuable; even though I was a second timer I appreciated these aspects even more.

To be continued insha Allah…

Sincerely,

Your Brother,