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Children’s Day: More Than a Custom!

The history of Children’s Day dates back to 23 April, 1929 when the Republic Of Turkey officially declared it a national holiday for the first time. The officially recognized date of Children’s Day varies from nation to nation, but Universal Children’s Day is observed on 20 November. On 20 November 1959 the United Nations adopted the Declaration of the Rights of the Child. The United Nations adopted the Convention on the Rights of the Child on 20 November, 1989. The Declaration of the Rights of the Child, sometimes known as the Geneva Declaration of the Rights of the Child, is an international document promoting child rights. The text of the document, as published by the International Save the Children Union in Geneva on 23 February, 1923, is as follows:
I. The child must be given the means requisite for its normal development, both materially and spiritually.
II. The child that is hungry must be fed, the child that is sick must be nursed, the child that is backward must be helped, the delinquent child must be reclaimed, and the orphan and the waif must be sheltered and succored.
III. The child must be the first to receive relief in times of distress.
IV. The child must be put in a position to earn a livelihood, and must be protected against every form of exploitation.
V. The child must be brought up in the consciousness that its talents must be devoted to the service of its fellow men.
This text was endorsed by the League of Nations General Assembly on 26 November, 1924 as the World Child Welfare Charter, and was the first human rights document approved by an inter-governmental institution. It was reaffirmed by the League in 1934. Heads of State and Government pledged to incorporate its principles in domestic legislation. In France, it was ordered to be displayed in every school.
While as the United Nations Convention on the Rights of the Child (UNCRC) is a human rights treaty which sets out the civil, political, economic, social, health and cultural rights of children. The Convention defines a child as any human being under the age of eighteen.
Nations that ratify this convention are bound to it by international law. Compliance is monitored by the UN Committee on the Rights of the Child, which is composed of members from countries around the world. Once a year, the Committee submits a report to the Third Committee of the United Nations General Assembly, which also hears a statement from the CRC Chair, and the Assembly adopts a Resolution on the Rights of the Child. Governments of countries that have ratified the Convention are required to report to, and appear before, the United Nations Committee on the Rights of the Child periodically to be examined on their progress with regards to the advancement of the implementation of the Convention and the status of child rights in their country.
Regardless of these measures, the children continue to suffer and suffocate across the globe. In some parts they become victims of drone attacks while in other parts they are blinded with pellets. Only in Iraq, tens and thousands of children were butchered by the so called ambassadors of peace and human rights. The world powers have turned a blind eye to the use of chemical weapons in Syria which killed scores of innocents including children. Only organizing conventions and drafting rights is not enough. Action speaks louder than words. You can’t befool the world community for long. Alas! The people who speak for the rights of children, their hands are drenched with blood of these young buds, they mash before they bloom.
None may dare to disagree with this fact that children are the future of any nation. And if we care about our future, we must care about our children. We must invest on them to fulfill their basic needs of education, nutrition and health care. Children can be the greatest blessing or the greatest liability, it all depends on us that what we make them. Today, parents have no time for their children which has increased the graph of child crime manifold especially in western countries. Given the contemporary plight of children the future is bleak. The onus is on us, the dire need of the hour is to come above the level of farce and opportunism to work for the welfare of children. And the so called ambassadors of peace and human rights must give up cosmetic approach and sincerely pledge to safeguard children’s rights and work for their welfare and well-being across the globe. Mere lip service and having fun is not gonna make any mark, think beyond custom!
P.S. Messenger of Allah (Peace and blessings of Allah be upon him) says: “Observe justice in dealing with your children in the same manner in which you expect them to observe justice in being kind and good to you.”

​William Harvey is wrongly credited with the modern theory of Pulmonary Circulation!

William Harvey is wrongly credited with the modern theory of Pulmonary Circulation. Ibn Al-Nafis, an Arab physician of the 13th Century, explained the basic principles of Pulmonary Circulation nearly 350 years before Harvey was born.

Ibn Al-Nafis (Ala al-Din Abu al-A’la Ali ibn Abi Hazm al-Quraishi) of Damascus, an Arab physician of the thirteenth century (1210-1288 CE), explained the basic principles of the modern theory of the lesser or PULMONARY circulation. This was nearly three hundred and fifty years before Sir William Harvey of Kent, England, who is wrongly credited with this discovery.

This fact was acknowledged in 1957 by Professor Dr J B Latham of the University of Manchester at the tercentenary of the death of William Harvey (Sunday Times 9 June 1957).

He also stated that Ibn Al-Nafis had “recognised the fallacy of Galen’s theory of invisible channels between the ventricles.
He similarly explained that blood was purified in the lungs where it was refined on contact with the air inhaled from the outer atmosphere. “It should not be assumed too readily that great discoveries were made only in Europe.” (The Statesman, Calcutta, 11 June 1957).
Ibn Al-Nafis was the chief physician at the Al-Mansuri Hospital, Cairo, Egypt, where he practised and taught medicine and Muslim theology until his death at the age of 77. He wrote a book “Sharh Tashrih al-Qanun” in which he expounded the pulmonary circulation for the first time. This commentary was consulted by Ibn Al-Quff, a great scientist and contemporary of Ibn Al-Nafis.
All scholarly standards and historical fairness should accredit Ibn Al-Nafis as being the first to discover and describe the Pulmonary Circulation.

Braid Chopping: Another Evil Trick In The Book!

In the light of international law, the state of Jammu and Kashmir is a disputed territory which has been under forced occupation by India since 1947, the year India got its freedom from foreign occupation. For past around seven decades, this so called largest democracy has turned this state into an open prison by deploying more than seven lakh occupational forces here. And these occupational forces enjoy infamous acts like AFSPA (Armed Forces Special Powers Act). Since the day occupational forces landed here, India has left no stone unturned to strengthen this occupation. Back in early 90’s, when I was only a blooming bud of grade one, I vividly remember how occupational forces used to break into our houses in the dead of the night and harass inmates for no reason. This was the time when armed resistance against occupation was at its peak. The people here especially youth had taken up arms, for India choked any peaceful means possible. The 1987 elections were rigged and people like Mohammad Yousuf (now Syed Salahudin), fighting elections from Amira kadal constituency were left with no option, but to join armed resistance. They realized the fact that no freedom can be and has been achieved hitherto with peaceful means alone. Not a day passed when we were not asked to show our identification. Until today, my grey matter has failed to think of any humiliation worse than this. It breaks you to the core when someone from Bihar or Bengal asks you to produce your identity card in your own motherland. Assembling male population at one place, leaving behind female inmates for indefinite time was as common as stars in the night sky.

India has been using every evil trick in the book to suppress the idea of freedom here. But every trick ends in vain, for suppression is no solution. You can arrest a person but not an idea. The haunting memories of ghosts in the early 90’s to frighten people are yet lurking in my mind. From late night until dawn, we used to stay awake, beating every sonorous object to keep these ghosts away. This was an evil trick used by the occupational forces to break our resolve, the resolve for freedom. Beyond this, rape, loot and arson have been their culture here. In the recent past, the paddy crop was burnt to ashes; innocent people especially children were turned blind with pellets. India wants status quo to continue, for peace is not profitable. India has never been sincere and honest to resolve this dispute. Rather, they have let loose the reign of terror here.

Braid chopping is yet another evil trick India has been using to break our resolve for freedom and divert our attention from the core issue. Creating fear, chaos and confusion among people here is what she has been doing since long. But these evil tactics have never paid off, every time they have backfired and disappointed them. India started off this drama of repression here the day they illegally occupied us. Braid chopping is one of the episodes of this drama. There might be more episodes to follow. There is no reason to scare of these evil tricks. The dire need of the hour is to stand united and be cautious. We must do our utmost to fight these evil tricks by taking every precautionary measure/s possible. Furthermore, it’s time to come above the level of farce and fight occupation to the best of our capacities, for occupation is the root issue while others are just offshoots.

P.S:

We, oh heaven, aren’t to be suppressed by falsehood!

A hundred times you have tested us! (IqbalRA)

IN POLYGENIC INHERITANCE, A CHARACTER IS CONTROLLED BY THE COMMON EFFECTS OF SEVERAL GENES!

Some characters follow a pattern of inheritance in which there is a more or less even gradation of types, forming a continuous distribution, rather than “on” or “off” (discontinuous) effects such as the production of purple or white flowers in pea plants. For example, in the human population, people range from short to tall, in a continuous distribution of gradations in height between limits of about 4 and 7 feet. Typically, a continuous distribution of this type is the result of polygenic inheritance, in which several to many different genes contribute to the same character. Other characters that undertake a similar continuous distribution include skin color and body weight in humans, ear length in corn, seed color in wheat, and color spotting in mice. These characters are also known as quantitative traits. The individual genes that contribute to a quantitative trait are known as quantitative trait loci or QTLs.

Polygenic inheritance can be detected by defining classes of a variation, such as human body height of 60 inches in one class, 61 inches in the next class, 62 inches in the next class, and so on. The number of individuals in each class is then plotted as a graph. If the plot produces a bell-shaped curve, with fewer individuals at the extremes and the greatest numbers clustered around the midpoint, it is a good indication that the trait is quantitative.

Polygenic inheritance is oft en modified by the environment. For example, height in humans is not the result of genetics alone. Poor nutrition during infancy and childhood is one environmental factor that can limit growth and prevent individuals from reaching the height expected from genetic inheritance; good nutrition can have the opposite effect. Thus, the average young adult in Japan today is several inches taller than the average adult in the 1930s, when nutrition was poorer. Similarly, individuals who live in cloudy, northern or southern climates usually have lighter skin color than individuals with the same genotype who live in sunny climates.

Ants Are Even Stronger Than You Imagine

Ants Are Even Stronger Than You Imagine

 

 

New research finds that ants’ strength lies in their neck joints.
Credit: manbeastextraordinaire via flickr | http://bit.ly/1oW8lkH

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While the world watches Olympians skate, jump and fly through the air in Sochi, researchers have turned their eyes to a much tinier but equally impressive athlete: the humble field ant.

New research published last month showed that the neck joint of a common field ant can withstand 5,000 times the ant’s weight. Previously, ants had been photographed carrying dead baby birds, so it was estimated they could carry around 1,000 times their weight. But the new numbers surprised even the researchers.

“We guessed that the ants could withstand about 1,000 times their weight, so we figured we’d start there,” said Carlos Castro, a mechanical and aerospace engineer at The Ohio State University in Columbus. “Initially we didn’t think this ant had any extreme capabilities, but they surprised us.”

Testing the ants’ strength involved extreme and destructive measures.

Castro and his colleagues anesthetized common field ants and glued their heads to a centrifuge about the size of a compact disc. As the disc spun faster and faster, the forces applied to the ants increased – until their necks deformed, and their heads separated from their bodies at the tiny neck joint.

“We had to put a Plexiglas barrier around the centrifuge to protect the grad students,” said Castro, “because the ant bodies would go flying at the moment of rupture.” The ants’ necks ruptured when the centrifuge applied forces of 3,400 to 5,000 times their average body weight.

In addition to the centrifugal studies, Castro used microcomputed tomography to reconstruct a 3-D model of the ant’s neck joint.

He found that the surface of the ant’s neck had a microstructure of bumps and folds that helped the ants shoulder large loads.

“From a materials standpoint, we found that the properties themselves are similar to other insects,” said Castro. “We think it’s this design rather than material design that helps the ants.”

The full research was published in late January in the Journal of Biomechanics.

Other researchers noted that while ants are certainly strong, the research doesn’t necessarily show how much weight than can actually lift and carry.

Karin Moll, a biologist and ant researcher at University College Freiburgin Germany who was not involved in the research, said that the 5,000 mark is impressive, but that it doesn’t necessarily mean that the ants could lift that amount. “The authors showed that the ants can hold that amount, but this situation is different from carrying a load…loads that are actually carried are usually much smaller,” Moll wrote in an email toInside Science.

Thomas Endlein, a researcher at the University of Glasgow who has studied the sticky pads on ants’ feet, added that lifting large weights is problematic for several reasons — including the muscle strength, the structural stiffness and balance.

“Muscle strength is often not a problem as smaller animals have relatively more muscle strength to their body weight compared to larger animals,” he wrote in an email to Inside Science. “Still, balancing the weights is a big problem. First, ants have to lever off the weights from the ground which is a tricky business if items are oddly shaped or heavy…then, balancing the item overhead when walking, [it] is also very tricky to avoid falling over.”

Mike Kaspari, a biologist at the University of Oklahoma, said that microbotics – the blending of biology and engineering to build tiny semi-smart animatrons – is one of the most exciting new technologies. “The hope is that these cheap microbots can explore, monitor, and fix our environment, as well as perform other tasks through sheer force of numbers,” he said. “This is another lovely example of how engineers look to the ant to inspire their designs.”

Castro said that the research could be applied to creating robots that could lift and carry more efficiently, taking a nod from the ants’ hybrid soft-hard components. Researchers could also create better composite materials using the combination approach of soft and hard.

He also plans to study more ants from a mechanical point of view by looking at their musculature, and also at ants with different roles within the same species. “We really chose an everyday ant,” he said. “The most optimized ants may be able to withstand forces of 10,000 times their weight.”

 

The Ever-awaited Death of Materialism

The Ever-awaited Death of Materialism

Think over it ………….! ! ! ! ! ! ! ! ! ! ! !

With the advancement in the development of Science, the materialist philosophy had suffered a serious setback. The material philosophy which is forced down the throat of humanity in the guise of science is defeated by science itself. Materialism is the philosophy which firmly believes that everything is composed of matter and rules out the existence of the creator (Allah). The materialist claim is based on the concept of “evolution” which was first introduced in the pagan cultures of the ancient Sumerians and then the ancient Greeks. Later it was revived in the 19th century by a group of materialist scientists and brought onto the world agenda. Charles Darwin is the best known of these scientists.   Darwin put ahead his theory in his book “The origin of species” according to which “natural selection” or “survival of the fittest” was the driving force of evolution. The theory of evolution has collapsed. The theory of evolution in our time has taken quite a beating and its black boxes have been exposed.

A remarkable milestone in the history of Biological science was the discovery of DNA as genetic material. The 1944 publication by Oswald Avery, Colin MacLeod, and Maclyn McCarty concerning the chemical nature of a “transforming principle” in bacteria was the initial event leading to the acceptance of DNA as the genetic material. Their work, along with subsequent findings of other research teams, constituted the first direct experimental proof that DNA is the biomolecule responsible for heredity. It marked the beginning of the era of molecular genetics, a period of discovery in biology that made biotechnology feasible and has moved us closer to an understanding of the basis of life. After it was confirmed that DNA is the genetic material what remained to be explored next was the precise structure of DNA. From the year 1940 to 1953, many scientists were curious to reveal the structure of DNA. Erwin Chargaff, Maurice Wilkins, Rosalind Franklin, Linus Pauling, Francis Crick, and James Watson sought information that might answer what many consider to be the most significant and intriguing question in the history of biology: How does DNA serve as the genetic basis for life? The answer was believed to depend strongly on the chemical structure and organization of the DNA molecule, given the complex but orderly functions ascribed to it. In 1953, James Watson and Francis Crick proposed that the structure of DNA is in the form of a double helix. Their model was described in a short paper published in the journal “Nature”.  In a sense, this publication was the finish of a highly competitive scientific race.  

This progress of science makes it clear beyond doubt that living organisms have an extremely complex structure and a perfect order. It is sheer foolishness to believe that this perfect order has come into existence by chance. Furthermore, DNA is delicately protected in the nucleus located in the center of the cell. The average diameter of human cell is 10microns (1 micron = 10-6m). You can better understand how small the nucleus is. The DNA, which is found in the nucleus of each of the 100 trillion cells in our body, contains the complete construction plan of the human body. It is evident that such a complex molecule could not be formed by coincidence spontaneously, as a result of an evolutionary process. Therefore, this wonderful molecule i.e., DNA is a clear evidence that all living organisms have been created with a superior design.                                                                                                                                          

G.G Simpson had rightly put,

“The information necessary to specify the design of all the species of organisms which have ever existed on the planet, a number approximately one thousand million, could be held in a teaspoon and there would still be room left for all the information in every book ever written.”

These scientific facts must open the closed brains of materialists for truth. For how long you will turn deaf ears and blind eyes to these facts. A time would dawn when the whole humanity will realize this fact and accept the supremacy of Allah-the creator of the universe. Allah clearly mentions in His final revelation:

Your Lord is Allah, Who created the heavens and the earth in six days and then established Himself firmly on the Throne. He directs the whole affair. No one can intercede except with His permission. That is Allah your Lord, so worship Him. Will you not pay heed?  (Chapter 10: Verse 3)

Have they not reflected within themselves? Allah did not create the heavens and the earth and everything between them except with truth and for a fixed term. Yet many people reject the meeting with their Lord. (Chapter 30: Verse 8)

There is no law against daydreaming, but science must not indulge in it. Indeed, the theory of evolution, which claims that inorganic matter came together by itself and formed living beings with such glorious systems as DNA, is a scenario totally contrary to science and reason. All this leads us to an evident conclusion. Since life has a plan (DNA) and all living beings are fashioned according to this plan, it is evident that there is a superior Creator Who devised this plan. This simply means that all living beings are created by God, the All-Powerful, All-Wise. Allah states this fact in the Qur’an in this way:

 He is Allah the Creator, the Maker, the Giver of Form. To Him belong the Most Beautiful Names. Everything in the heavens and earth glorifies Him. He is the Almighty, the All-Wise. (Surat al-Hashr: 24)

Today, what people have achieved by means of technology can at best be described as ‘an approach to the understanding of a tiny fragment of Allah’s knowledge, as manifested in human DNA.’  On the other hand, the theory of evolution which tries to explain the origin of life as a series of coincidences loses all validity in face of the question: “How then, did DNA originate?”To all these questions materialists have only one reply- “Coincidence?” But the logic fails to understand this illogical reply. A single molecule of DNA – the repository of genetic information contains information equivalent to one million (1,000,000) encyclopedia pages. For the sake of better understanding let us make an analogy, the greatest encyclopedia in the world i.e., 23-volume Encyclopedia Britannica has only 25,000 pages.                                                          

If you happen to discover a paper in your room with something written on it e.g., “Allah is merciful”, the immediate question that will strike your mind is, “who has written it?” When you ask such a question to yourself you firmly believe that this three word sentence has not come into existence by chance or coincidence. If this simple three word sentence can’t come into being by coincidence, how your grey matter accepts that this microscopic, miraculous biomolecule DNA containing enormous information has come into existence, merely by coincidence. So, the scientific achievements pose a serious threat to the philosophy of materialists and their concept Evolution.

Thus, it needs no mention and goes without saying that Science that claims to be the panacea for our intellectual ailments is not good enough to be held as our yardstick. It is too small a field to tackle human problems. Our yardstick must be something far more superior and sublime than Science. Our yardstick must be the word of the Creator Himself i.e. nothing else but The Glorious Quran.

Glory  be to You! We have no knowledge except what You have taught us. You are the All-Knowing, the All-Wise. (Qur’an, 2: 32)

stranger’s voice

The revival of an obligation

The obligation we are about to discuss is something the Muslims took for granted, for well over a thousand years, much like the obligation of Salah (prayer) and fasting today which, al-hamdu lillah, are not open to discussion and debate. However the Prophet (Sallalahu Alaihi Wasallam) did warn us there would come a time when the Deen will become strange and unrecognizable to the people and those carrying its Call will be seen as strange due to the Message that they carry.

He (Sallalahu Alaihi Wasallam) said:

”Islam began strange and it shall return strange. So glad tiding to the Strangers.” [Reported by Muslim]

This hadith holds a meaning that is especially reflective of our times, for in the last hundred years this noble Ummah has witnessed the destruction of her State and with that, due to the colonization of her lands by the colonialists, the crushing tidal wave of the western culture. The western culture completely engulfed her to the point of suffocation. It turned black into white and white into black. Never did the Ummah encounter such cultural strangulation, which left her bewildered and confused about the most basic and rudimentary tenets of her Deen.

To cause maximum damage the colonialists chose their targets carefully when they unleashed their degenerate culture upon us:

  • they attacked the notion of one Ummah by disseminating the idea of nationalism and nationhood
  • the Sharee’ah was depicted as barbaric, harking back to a medieval age but not suited to an age of reason and modernity
  • the ruling system of Islam, the Islamic Khilafah, was describes as nothing short of despotism justified under the name of religion.

So what impact did this western polemic have upon the sons of this Ummah? First of all the effect was mostly noticeable amongst the scholars, authors and men of letters. Some answered back but with an apologetic tone – so the Khilafah was deemed to be a democratic system all along– whilst a handful who had succumbed to the western culture even denied it as having any Sharee’ah legitimacy, such as the likes of ‘Ali Abd ar-Raaziq who, which will come as no surprise, was influenced by none other than the Kaafir orientalist Sir Thomas Arnold! For example in his book: ‘al-Islam wa Usul al-Hukm’ after attempting to prove that there is no daleel (evidence) for Khilafah in the Ayah:

”O you who believe! Obey Allah and obey the Messenger and those in authority from amongst you” [4:59]

he says on page 11: ‘If you want to find out more on this discussion then please refer to the book ‘The Caliphate’ by the scholar Sir Thomas Arnold. The explanation in chapter two and three of that book is excellent and convincing’ This book, quite opportunely it seems, was published a year after the Khilafah was destroyed in 1925. In it he went to great pains to argue that the above and other such hadith and ayat which command the obedience to a Khaleefah do not establish the obligation to appoint a Khaleefah because they apply only when an imam exists and if he does not exist then there is no obligation to appoint one.

To prove this he adduced the following breathtaking argument: ‘Are we not ordered by the Sharee’ah to be generous to beggars, respect the poor and treat them well and show kindness to them? So can anyone who has any intelligence say that this means the Sharee’ah has obliged us to bring about paupers and orphans?’ [al-Islam wa Usul al-Hukm’ pp.125-126, in edition published by al-Mu`assasa al-‘Arabiyyah lid dirasaat wan nashr.]

In time a sense of apathy towards the issue of Khilafah reigned over the Ummah and in cases even embarrassment. Many saw the Khilafah as a relic of the past and which should remain in the past or simply impossible to implement in this day and age; hence there was no alternative but to make recourse to secularism.

This was a time of great turmoil and change for the Ummah. This is the time when we witnessed the hadith of the Messenger (Sallalahu Alaihi Wasallam) unfolding before our eyes when he (Sallalahu Alaihi Wasallam) said:

”Verily, the knots of Islam will be undone one by one. Whenever one knot is lost then the people grabbed onto the one which came after it. The first of these knots will be the Ruling and the last will be the Salah.” [Reported by At-Tabaraani]

And in another version:

”Verily, the knots of Islam will be undone and there shall be misguided rulers.” [Authenticated by al-Hakim in his Mustadrak]

In time a sense of apathy towards the issue of Khilafah reigned over the Ummah and in cases even embarrassment. Many saw the Khilafah as a relic of the past and which should remain in the past or simply impossible to implement in this day and age; hence there was no alternative but to make recourse to secularism.

After losing the Khilafah, like people clutching at whatever they can on a sinking ship, the Ummah grabbed onto whatever remained of the Deen as poignantly depicted in the hadith above. However, the good is, and always will be, in this Ummah and it was not long before she started embarking on the path of awakening due to the work of the sincere Da’wah carriers.

One by one she began to reclaim the knots she had lost and now she is poised to reclaim that final knot; the knot of Ruling by Islam.

Today, by Allah’s Grace and Mercy, the notion of Khilafah is not strange to the Ummah, except to those of course who have been inebriated by the western culture. However, it is important to go beyond the recognition of this obligation and to familiarize ourselves with its detailed evidences.

Like all other obligations it should be anchored deep within the hearts and minds of the Ummah such that it can never be expunged from her memory again.

The hadith of our times

The evidences for Khilafah are many. But the evidence I wish to discuss perfectly describes our reality today: which is that we live at a time when no Khaleefah exists. And that evidence is the hadith reported by Imam Muslim on the authority of Nafi’ that the Messenger (Sallalahu Alaihi Wasallam) said:

”The one who removes his hand from obedience he will meet Allah without a proof for himself’ and Whosoever dies without a bay’ah on his neck dies the death of Jahiliyyah.”

This hadith provides the Hukm Shar’i for a situation when Muslims die without the presence of a Khaleefah to rule over them. Perhaps, this is what explains the Fuqahaa`s (jurists) relative silence over this hadith while the numerous other evidences which establish the obligation of Khilafah have received greater attention and scrutiny.

In short, they could not imagine a situation when a Muslim would die without the presence of a Khaleefah; that was simply unthinkable! Hence the discussion tended to centre on the obligation of appointing a Khaleefah after the death of the previous Khaleefah. Or that it is obligatory to obey the existing Khaleefah and so having a Khaleefah must be obligatory.

However, one thing is for sure; the unthinkable has happened and the Khilafah has been destroyed and Muslims are dying while they have no Khaleefah over them. So what better evidence to start off with than the hadith which directly addresses our reality?

The process of extraction

What is the Manaat (reality) of the text?

The hadith is describing not one but two types of people since it came in two parts as indicated by the waw al-isti`naaf or ibtidaa` (in English the word ‘and’ is used) (ie the disjunctive syntax where the waw begins a new sentence). In the first part it says ‘The one who removes his hand from obedience he will meet Allah without a proof for himself’ This is when the Khaleefah exists and someone withholds his obedience to the Khaleefah.

As for the second part it is not describing the same person since the waw al- isti`naaf indicates it is beginning a new sentence to make a different point. This time he (Sallalahu Alaihi Wasallam) says: And (waw al- isti`naaf) the one who dies without a bay’ah on his neck he dies the death of jahiliyyah’. This is further confirmed by the fact that he repeats the personal pronoun ‘man’ (the one who or whosoever). This also indicates the hadith discusses two types of people in two different situations.

To appreciate this point better let us look at another hadith where exactly the same thing happens: He (Sallalahu Alaihi Wasallam) said: man maata fee sabeelillah fahuwa shaheed wa man maata bit-taa’oon fahuwa shaheed[sahih Muslim]

”The one who dies in the Path of Allah he is shaeed and (waw al- isti`naaf) the one who dies in a plague he is a shaeed”

The death here occurs in two states separated by the waw al- isti`naaf. So the first death is in the Path of Allah whilst the second death occurs in a plague. It would be absurd if someone claimed here that the hadith is talking about the same situation.

Thus the hadith in question is talking about two different situations. The first situation as we said is when someone withholds his obedience to the existing Khaleefah. But what about the second part? The second part begins by saying: ‘the one who dies without a bay’ah on his neck..’ The waw al-Haal (waw of condition) in wa laysa fi ‘unuqihi bay’ah clarifies the state in which the person dies, and in this case it is when he dies ‘without a bay’ah on his neck’.

So what is that state when someone does without a bay’ah on his neck. It can’t mean giving the bay’ah because the hadith did not say ‘wa lam yu’til bay’ah’ (and he did not give the bay’ah) let alone the fact that giving the bay’ah (pledge) is a kifayah duty (sufficiency) and not an individual obligation in the first place as indicated by the Ijma’ as-sahabah (consensus of the Sahabah).

What explains the meaning of bay’ah on the neck is the fact that the contractual bay’ah does not require every single person to physically give it, rather it is enough for the Ahlul Halli wal ‘Aqd (those who represent the Muslims) to give the bay’ah on behalf of the people. This means that a person living even outside the Islamic authority has a bay’ah on his neck if a Khaleefah has been contracted to his post by the representatives of the Muslims.

In fact this was the basic format in which all the Khulafaa’ ar-Rashidoon were appointed. None of them were appointed by a bay’ah which was given by the whole of the population of the Islamic state, rather it was always the representatives of the Muslims who appointed them.

For example when ‘Umar b. al-Khattab was elected as Khaleefah by the ahlul halli wal a’qd in Madinah the people of ash-Sham and Egypt did not have to give the bay’ah because the bay’ah was on their neck by virtue of the fact that the contractual bay’ah had taken place through their representatives the ahlul halli wal aqd. Those who died in ash-Sham and Egypt during the Khilafah of ‘Umar b. al-Khattab did not die the death of jahiliyyah because they had the bay’ah on their necks even though they did not come to Madinah and physically give the bay’ah themselves. This is the difference between giving the bay’ah and having the bay’ah on one’s neck. If however the representatives of the Muslims in Madinah after ‘Umar’s death did not appoint a Khaleefah then the Muslims of ash-Sham and Egypt would not have the bay’ah on their necks because the contractual bay’ah had not taken place i.e. a Khaleefah had not been appointed.

Thus, the hadith is very accurate in its description; it is not talking about giving bay’ah to a Khaleefah but rather having a: ‘Bay’ah on the neck for a Khaleefah’ which describes a situation when someone dies without the presence of a Khaleefah. Hence it is wrong to argue that one cannot use this hadith to prove the obligation of Khilafah by claiming that it is talking about situation when the Khaleefah exists. Such an assertion is not established by the internal indications of the text which show that the Haal (condition) described is the death which occurs when a Khaleefah is not present.

As for Ali Abd ar-Raaziq’s argument that Sharee’ah has obliged us to look after beggars and orphans so does that mean if they don’t exist we have to bring them about to fulfill this command or the argument that we are obliged to obey parents so does that mean we are obliged to bring them back if they die?! Such arguments to say the least are highly fatuous and cannot be considered as scholarly opinions for they disregard the fact that the ahkaam (rules) come with their asbaab (causes). The sabab (cause) of obedience to parents is their existence and hence upon their death the sabab (cause) ceases which means the hukm of obedience also ceases. Also the same applies to beggars and orphans in respect to the ahkaams (rules) which came pertaining to them.

But this is different when it comes to appointing a Khaleefah because the sabab (cause) of the presence of a Khaleefah is the presence of the Jama’ah i.e. Ummah or community which has to look after its affairs by Islam. So if the community exists then Khaleefah must exist to look after their affairs.

The Prophet (Sallalahu Alaihi Wasallam) said in a hadith that has been narrated by Imam Ahmed in his Musnad;

”It is not allowed for three people to be in a fulaatin (journey) without appointing one of them as an Ameer.”

This hadith makes it clear that whenever a collection of Muslims exist i.e. jamaa’ah it is prohibited for them to exist except with an ameer i.e. therefore it is an obligation to appoint an Ameer WHEN there is any jama’ah i.e. the existence of jama’ah is the sabab (cause) of the obligation of appointing a Khaleefah.

 

In fact the term jama’ah in the Islamic text means State, authority, and Khaleefah. Let us look at the following hadith: Ibn ‘Abbas narrated that Messenger (Sallalahu Alaihi Wasallam) said:

”The one who sees in his Ameer something which displeases him, let remain patient, for he who separates himself from the community (Jama’ah) by even so much as a hand span and dies (in this state), he will die the death of Jahiliyyah,” (reported by Bukhari and Muslim.)

This hadith makes it clear that whenever a collection of Muslims exist i.e. jamaa’ah it is prohibited for them to exist except with an ameer i.e. therefore it is an obligation to appoint an Ameer WHEN there is any jama’ah i.e. the existence of jama’ah is the sabab (cause) of the obligation of appointing a Khaleefah.

Here disobedience and rebellion against the Khaleefah is synonymous with separation from the Jama’ah. This is because it is obligatory on the Jama’ah to look after their affairs by Islam. Having a Khaleefah present means this duty is being fulfilled. But if he is disobeyed this means the obligation of looking after their affairs by Islam is being neglected since he is the one who undertakes this task. So the Jama’ah has to obey a Khaleefah so that their affairs can be looked after.

The reason why a Khaleefah needs to exist is because the affairs cannot be looked after except by him. Thus, the sabab (cause) of the presence of a Khaleefah is the presence of Jamaa’ah which is obliged to look after its affairs by Islam. Hence, when the Messenger of Allah (Sallalahu Alaihi Wasallam) orders us to obey the Khaleefah this means by Ishaarah (alluded meaning) it is obligatory to appoint a Khaleefah for how can the Fard (obligation) of ruling by Islam be accomplished if he did not exist. So it is wrong to say a Khaleefah does not exist so we are not sinful for not appointing and obeying the Khaleefah. This is because the sabab (cause) is not his existence, rather the sabab (cause) of his presence is the presence of a Jamaa’ah which is obliged to look after its affairs by Islam.

We can see the same point much more clearly in another narration by Ibn ‘Abbas which uses the word Sultan instead of Jamaa’ah:

”If anybody sees in his Ameer something which displeases him, he should remain patient, for he who separates himself from the authority (Sultan) by even so much as a hand span and dies thereupon, he would die the death of the days of ignorance,”[Reported by Muslim]

Here we can see that separation from Jamaa’ah and authority (sultan) are used synonymously.

Authority (sultan) means the body which looks after the affairs. Jamaa’ah refers to the community whose affairs are looked after by the Khaleefah. The key thing in both is the obligation of looking after of the affairs which occasions the presence of a Khaleefah.

Also it is reported that ‘Umar b. al-Khattab said:

”There is no Islam without Jamaa’ah and there is not Jamaa’ah without Imaarah (leadership). And there is no Imaarah (leadership) without obedience.” (Reported by ad-Darimi in his Sunan)

That is there is no looking after of the affairs of the Jamaa’ah or authority (sultan) without an ameer (Imaarah) and naturally there can be no Ameer when there is no obedience to him. So the Jamaa’ah in order to exist ie for its affairs to be looked after must appoint an Ameer. And consequently obedience to this Ameer is obligatory because the obligation of looking after the affairs is not possible without an Ameer.

”There is no Islam without Jamaa’ah and there is not Jamaa’ah without Imaarah (leadership). And there is no Imaarah (leadership) without obedience.” (Reported by ad-Darimi in his Sunan)

Thus, when the Prophet (Sallalahu Alaihi Wasallam) ordered us to give allegiance (bay’ah) or obey the Khaleefah it has a greater meaning than when he orders us to feed the poor or look after our parents. We feed the poor because they are poor and we obey parents because they are parents. Thus when they cease to exist the hukm ceases. But our obedience to the Khaleefah is because he looks after the affairs of the Jamaa’ah which itself is an obligation.

Thus when the Khaleefah dies the obligation of obedience to him does not cease because the sabab (cause) of the obedience still exists which is the looking after of the affairs. Hence, so as long as the cause of appointing a Khaleefah exists which is the presence of a Jamaa’ah whose affairs have to be looked after by Islam then the obligation of appointing him and obeying him remains even if he did not exist. This is the reason why the order to obey the Khaleefah by Ishaarah (alluded meaning) means the order to appoint him.

Let us consider the following ayah:

”O you who believe! Obey Allah and obey the Messenger and those in authority from amongst you” [4:59]

Here we are obliged to obey those in authority because they are the ones who look after the affairs. So obedience is due as long the ruler looks after the affairs by Islam. Since looking after affairs by Islam is Fard then the obedience to them indicates by Ihsraah that they need to exist.

In another hadith this point is made even more clearer:

”Even if a slave was appointed over you who leads you with the Book of Allah then hear and obey.”[reported by Muslim]

Here to emphasis the obedience to the one who looks after the affairs we are commanded in the style of mubaalagha (exaggeration) to obey even if the ameer is a slave. I.e. obedience is due because he looks after the affairs which is an obligation. Hence the order to obey

indicates by ishaarat an-nass (alluded meaning from the text) the obligation of his presence.

Otherwise we are saying the hukm does not have be fulfilled because something necessary for its fulfillment does not exist even though the sabab (cause) of the hukm still exists!

For example if we apply this type of erroneous thinking on other ahkams look what happens: Jihad for instance is an obligation whose sabab (cause) is the presence of Kuffar under the authority of Kufr. So if Kuffar exist under dar al-kufr then Jihad exists. However to fulfill the Jihad one requires an Ameer by Iqtidaa (required meaning). Without an Ameer jihad cannot be undertaken and hence appointment of an Ameer becomes obligatory in order to fulfill Jihad because that which is necessary to fulfill a wajib is itself a waajib. So by Iqtidaa the presence of an Ameer becomes waajib. But if we follow the silly logic mentioned above the conclusion would be Jihad is not Fard because an Ameer does not exist! Such a conclusion is completely wrong because the sabab (cause) which caused the obligation of Jihad to exist is not the presence of an Ameer but the presence of Kuffar in Dar al-kufr. So as long as kuffar exist the Fard of jihad exists regardless of an Ameer’s presence. Rather what we take from the existence of the Fard is that a Ameer needs to be appointed in order to fulfill the obligation.

Finally, the use of the expression ‘man maata’ deserves a further comment. The reference to the point of death indicates that the hukm (rule) must exist throughout his life. There cannot be a point in his life when he is in a state without a bay’ah on his neck i.e. without the presence of a Khaleefah. So the hukm is continuous unlike the ahkam of obeying parents where the hukm ends upon their death or the hukm of giving to the poor which ends when poverty ceases. But the obligation of having a Khaleefah over you never ceases because text says ‘the one who dies’ indicating the continuity of the hukm throughout the life of a person for he is not allowed to die in situation where the Khaleefah is not present.

What is the Hukm Shar’i?

The legislative value of the above discussion is that it allows us to extract two hukms: that it is Fard ‘ayni (individual obligation) to have a Khaleefah present and also that it is Fard Kifayah (obligation of sufficiency) to appoint a Khaleefah.

As for the first hukm it is deduced from the request (talab) in the hadith that a Muslim should not die without a Khaleefah present. As we said before ‘bay’ah on the neck’ is not possible to have without the presence of the Khaleefah. So if it is not allowed to die without a bay’ah on the neck, this means it is not allowed to die without the presence of a Khaleefah. This type of indication (dalaalah) in Usul al-Fiqh is known as dalaalat al-Iqtidaa (the required meaning of the text). I.e. this is when the truthfulness or correctness of a statement (sidq al-mutakallim wa sihhatul malfooz bihi) cannot be established unless one understands the lafz (expression) in a certain way.

For example: ”And never will Allah grant to the disbelievers a way over the believers.”[4:141]

Here the mantooq (pronounced meaning) is Allah will not allow the kaafir to have authority over the believers. However, is this permission in terms of the occurrence of authority or prohibition of authority? It cannot be the first because we know the kuffar in actuality have authority over the believers in Palestine and Kashmir so the only meaning which will give truthfulness to the statement is prohibition. So we say the mafhoom (implicit meaning) of this ayah through dalalat al-iqtidaa (required meaning) is that Allah prohibits that Kuffar have authority over the believers.

In the same manner the mafhoom (implied meaning) of ‘bayah on the neck’ is the presence of the Khaleefah by the required meaning (dalalaatul iqtidaa). Thus for the expression ‘bayah on the neck’ to be truthful we must understand it to mean presence of the Khaleefah.

Thus, the one who dies without the presence of the Khaleefah would be sinful due to the qaraa’in which make the request decisive. For example the preposition ‘fee unuqihi’ actually means ‘ala unuqihi ie obligation to have on one’s neck much like when we say in English someone has ‘a debt on his neck’ i.e. he has a debt he has to pay. We can also see the use of the ‘ala in the following hadith of Prophet (Sallalahu Alaihi Wasallam) said:

wa ‘alayka bis sam’I wat taa’ah fee ‘usrika wa yusrika wa manshitika wa makrahika wa atharatin ‘alayk

 

”It is obligatory for you (‘alayka) to hear and obey the ruler in adversity and prosperity, in pleasure and displeasure, and even when another person is given (rather undue) preference over you.” [Reported by Muslim in his Sahih/num:1836]

In addition to this is the explicit qareenah (indication) ‘dies the death of Jahiliiayh’. The attribution of a death occurring in the days of Ignorance establishes beyond any doubt the decisiveness of the request. This means the command is a Fard which if neglected would entail sin and punishment. Also, since the personal pronoun ‘man’ is general this means it includes every single Muslim i.e. every individual faces death and therefore the indefinite term ‘maata’ i.e. dies, coupled with the negation is clear that every single individual is addressed and hence it is a Fard ‘ayni (individual obligation) to have a Khaleefah present.

As a further proof of the above understanding let us look at other narrations of the same hadith. It has been narrated on the authority of ‘Umar that the Messenger (Sallalahu Alaihi Wasallam) said: ”The One who dies without an Imam he dies the death of Jahiliyyah”. [Reported on the authority of ‘Umar by at-Tabarani and Abu Nu’aym. The latter declared the hadith as authentic]

Yet in another hadith narrated on the authority of Ibn ‘Umar by al-Hakim in his Mustadrak we have the following version:

”He who abandons the Jamaa’ah by even so much as a hand span is as if he has taken the knot of Islam off his neck, until he returns.’ And he (Sallalahu Alaihi Wasallam) said: ‘whoever dies while there was no Imaam of a Jamaa’ah ruling over him, his death would be that of the days of Jahiliyyah.”

It well known the scholars of hadith permitted the narration of hadith by meaning (riwayah bilma’na). So in the above hadiths the raawi (transmitter) narrated the meaning of the saying of the Prophet (Sallalahu Alaihi Wasallam). So whilst the extraction of the hukm from the man maata hadith in Sahih Muslim is from the implicit meaning (mafhoom), the above two hadiths however are even more explicit as they make the same point in the uttered meaning (manTooq). Incidentally, the hadith in Sahih Muslim and the one above from al-Hakim are both narrated by Ibn ‘Umar. The first says ‘bay’ah on the neck’ while the second says ‘while there was no Imaam of a Jamaa’ah ruling over him’. The meaning is same but the difference is that the former is understood from the implicit meaning (mafhoom) while the latter is taken from the uttered or pronounced meaning (mantooq).

As for the second hukm which is that it is Fard to appoint a Khaleefah, this is deduced from the dalalaatul Ishaarah (the alluded meaning of the text). The ishaarah is a hukm derived from the text which was not intended directly from the speech.

For example when Allah (Subhanahu wa ta’ala) says: “So ask the people of the message if you do not know”[16:43] This cannot be done without the presence of Mujtahideen and hence the presence of mujtahideen in every age obligation in order to find out the sharee’ah rule on a matter. The ayah did not directly mention the obligation of having mujtahideen but it is understood from the ishaarah when it commanded us to ask those who know if we do not know.

In the same manner the ‘man maata’ hadith establishes the obligation of having a Khaleefah present, this means by ishaarah that it is an obligation to appoint a Khaleefah. Therefore, when the text says it is Fard to have a Khaleefah present it also alludes to the obligation of appointing a Khaleefah such that he is present over us.

Thus, the above hadith clearly establishes the obligation of having a Khaleefah over us and the obligation of working to appoint a Khaleefah.

On WHOM does the Hukm shar’i apply?

Is it an individual (Fard ‘ayni) or collective obligation (Fard kifaa`i) and what does that mean for the Muslim ?

The obligation of having a Khaleefah present is an individual duty. This is because the personal pronoun ‘man’ (which means whoever) is from the general expression (seeghatul ‘umoom) and it encompasses all people. Its nature is such that if the Khaleefah is present then he is present for all and if he is absent then he is absent for all thus the obligation covers all people. It is well known in Usul that the general remains general until there is another evidence to specify it. Yes the insane, non-baligh are excluded from this generality but that is not from the mind but there is a text to say they are not legally responsible (ghayr mukallaf) and hence they cannot be held responsible for duties they did not have capacity for.

He (Sallalahu Alaihi Wasallam) said:

”Three types of people are exempted from accountability, the one who sleeps until he wakes up, a child until he reaches the age of puberty and the insane until he is cured.”[Reported by Abu Dawood]

Thus, the general remains in its generality unless another text comes to specify it. And in this case the obligation of having a Khaleefah present is on every legally responsible (mukallaf) Muslim whether man, woman, layman or scholar.

As for the obligation of appointing a Khaleefah this is Fard kifaayah (obligation of sufficiency). However this should not be taken as an excuse for inaction. This is because in terms of obligation (wujoob) and removal of the sin (isqaat) the Fard ‘ayn and kifayah are the same. This is because Fard means the Legislator has demanded in a decisive form the performance of an action which if neglected will result in sin.

So it is wrong for someone to say appointing a Khaleefah is Fard kifayah so let some people do it and we will be saved. This will not save that person on the Day of judgment because the Fard has not been accomplished and hence the obligation remains on every single neck.

Thus the obligation to fulfill the command is on all. Only if the command has been fulfilled by some then the sin is removed from the rest. This is because the consideration is for the accomplishment of the Fard and not the undertaking of the Fard. Until and unless the Fard is accomplished it continues to be an obligation on all no matter how many people undertook it. That is why the definition of Fard kifayah is: ‘What some have accomplished then the rest are absolved from sin’ (maa aqaamuhul ba’d saqata ‘anil baaqeen) not ‘what some have undertaken …’ (maa qaama bihil ba’d). There is a big difference between undertaking an action and accomplishing it. So until the Fard is accomplished the obligation remains on all. That is why if the kifayah obligation neglected everyone is sinful and not just a few people.

For example it is Fard Kifayah for a group to respond when salam is given to them. The obligation remains on all of them until the obligation is fulfilled. If one responds with the salam and the Fard is accomplished then all are saved from sin because the consideration is the accomplishment of the Fard but if no one respond then all are sinful. Thus Fard kifayah and ‘ayn are the same in obligation and removal of the sin.

So it is wrong for someone to say appointing a Khaleefah is Fard kifayah so let some people do it and we will be saved. This will not save that person on the Day of judgment because the Fard has not been accomplished and hence the obligation remains on every single neck.

The Ummah has only three days and two nights to choose a Khaleefah, if they fail to do this after this time the obligation continues on all and those who undertake the Fard are saved from the sin. But those who neglect will be sinful for not fulfilling their Lord’s command and they will have to explain themselves to Him on the Day when His Account (Hisab) is swift.

stranger’s voice

The revival of an obligation

The obligation we are about to discuss is something the Muslims took for granted, for well over a thousand years, much like the obligation of Salah (prayer) and fasting today which, al-hamdu lillah, are not open to discussion and debate. However the Prophet (Sallalahu Alaihi Wasallam) did warn us there would come a time when the Deen will become strange and unrecognizable to the people and those carrying its Call will be seen as strange due to the Message that they carry.

He (Sallalahu Alaihi Wasallam) said:

”Islam began strange and it shall return strange. So glad tiding to the Strangers.” [Reported by Muslim]

This hadith holds a meaning that is especially reflective of our times, for in the last hundred years this noble Ummah has witnessed the destruction of her State and with that, due to the colonization of her lands by the colonialists, the crushing tidal wave of the western culture. The western culture completely engulfed her to the point of suffocation. It turned black into white and white into black. Never did the Ummah encounter such cultural strangulation, which left her bewildered and confused about the most basic and rudimentary tenets of her Deen.

To cause maximum damage the colonialists chose their targets carefully when they unleashed their degenerate culture upon us:

  • they attacked the notion of one Ummah by disseminating the idea of nationalism and nationhood
  • the Sharee’ah was depicted as barbaric, harking back to a medieval age but not suited to an age of reason and modernity
  • the ruling system of Islam, the Islamic Khilafah, was describes as nothing short of despotism justified under the name of religion.

So what impact did this western polemic have upon the sons of this Ummah? First of all the effect was mostly noticeable amongst the scholars, authors and men of letters. Some answered back but with an apologetic tone – so the Khilafah was deemed to be a democratic system all along– whilst a handful who had succumbed to the western culture even denied it as having any Sharee’ah legitimacy, such as the likes of ‘Ali Abd ar-Raaziq who, which will come as no surprise, was influenced by none other than the Kaafir orientalist Sir Thomas Arnold! For example in his book: ‘al-Islam wa Usul al-Hukm’ after attempting to prove that there is no daleel (evidence) for Khilafah in the Ayah:

”O you who believe! Obey Allah and obey the Messenger and those in authority from amongst you” [4:59]

he says on page 11: ‘If you want to find out more on this discussion then please refer to the book ‘The Caliphate’ by the scholar Sir Thomas Arnold. The explanation in chapter two and three of that book is excellent and convincing’ This book, quite opportunely it seems, was published a year after the Khilafah was destroyed in 1925. In it he went to great pains to argue that the above and other such hadith and ayat which command the obedience to a Khaleefah do not establish the obligation to appoint a Khaleefah because they apply only when an imam exists and if he does not exist then there is no obligation to appoint one.

To prove this he adduced the following breathtaking argument: ‘Are we not ordered by the Sharee’ah to be generous to beggars, respect the poor and treat them well and show kindness to them? So can anyone who has any intelligence say that this means the Sharee’ah has obliged us to bring about paupers and orphans?’ [al-Islam wa Usul al-Hukm’ pp.125-126, in edition published by al-Mu`assasa al-‘Arabiyyah lid dirasaat wan nashr.]

In time a sense of apathy towards the issue of Khilafah reigned over the Ummah and in cases even embarrassment. Many saw the Khilafah as a relic of the past and which should remain in the past or simply impossible to implement in this day and age; hence there was no alternative but to make recourse to secularism.

This was a time of great turmoil and change for the Ummah. This is the time when we witnessed the hadith of the Messenger (Sallalahu Alaihi Wasallam) unfolding before our eyes when he (Sallalahu Alaihi Wasallam) said:

”Verily, the knots of Islam will be undone one by one. Whenever one knot is lost then the people grabbed onto the one which came after it. The first of these knots will be the Ruling and the last will be the Salah.” [Reported by At-Tabaraani]

And in another version:

”Verily, the knots of Islam will be undone and there shall be misguided rulers.” [Authenticated by al-Hakim in his Mustadrak]

In time a sense of apathy towards the issue of Khilafah reigned over the Ummah and in cases even embarrassment. Many saw the Khilafah as a relic of the past and which should remain in the past or simply impossible to implement in this day and age; hence there was no alternative but to make recourse to secularism.

After losing the Khilafah, like people clutching at whatever they can on a sinking ship, the Ummah grabbed onto whatever remained of the Deen as poignantly depicted in the hadith above. However, the good is, and always will be, in this Ummah and it was not long before she started embarking on the path of awakening due to the work of the sincere Da’wah carriers.

One by one she began to reclaim the knots she had lost and now she is poised to reclaim that final knot; the knot of Ruling by Islam.

Today, by Allah’s Grace and Mercy, the notion of Khilafah is not strange to the Ummah, except to those of course who have been inebriated by the western culture. However, it is important to go beyond the recognition of this obligation and to familiarize ourselves with its detailed evidences.

Like all other obligations it should be anchored deep within the hearts and minds of the Ummah such that it can never be expunged from her memory again.

The hadith of our times

The evidences for Khilafah are many. But the evidence I wish to discuss perfectly describes our reality today: which is that we live at a time when no Khaleefah exists. And that evidence is the hadith reported by Imam Muslim on the authority of Nafi’ that the Messenger (Sallalahu Alaihi Wasallam) said:

”The one who removes his hand from obedience he will meet Allah without a proof for himself’ and Whosoever dies without a bay’ah on his neck dies the death of Jahiliyyah.”

This hadith provides the Hukm Shar’i for a situation when Muslims die without the presence of a Khaleefah to rule over them. Perhaps, this is what explains the Fuqahaa`s (jurists) relative silence over this hadith while the numerous other evidences which establish the obligation of Khilafah have received greater attention and scrutiny.

In short, they could not imagine a situation when a Muslim would die without the presence of a Khaleefah; that was simply unthinkable! Hence the discussion tended to centre on the obligation of appointing a Khaleefah after the death of the previous Khaleefah. Or that it is obligatory to obey the existing Khaleefah and so having a Khaleefah must be obligatory.

However, one thing is for sure; the unthinkable has happened and the Khilafah has been destroyed and Muslims are dying while they have no Khaleefah over them. So what better evidence to start off with than the hadith which directly addresses our reality?

The process of extraction

What is the Manaat (reality) of the text?

The hadith is describing not one but two types of people since it came in two parts as indicated by the waw al-isti`naaf or ibtidaa` (in English the word ‘and’ is used) (ie the disjunctive syntax where the waw begins a new sentence). In the first part it says ‘The one who removes his hand from obedience he will meet Allah without a proof for himself’ This is when the Khaleefah exists and someone withholds his obedience to the Khaleefah.

As for the second part it is not describing the same person since the waw al- isti`naaf indicates it is beginning a new sentence to make a different point. This time he (Sallalahu Alaihi Wasallam) says: And (waw al- isti`naaf) the one who dies without a bay’ah on his neck he dies the death of jahiliyyah’. This is further confirmed by the fact that he repeats the personal pronoun ‘man’ (the one who or whosoever). This also indicates the hadith discusses two types of people in two different situations.

To appreciate this point better let us look at another hadith where exactly the same thing happens: He (Sallalahu Alaihi Wasallam) said: man maata fee sabeelillah fahuwa shaheed wa man maata bit-taa’oon fahuwa shaheed[sahih Muslim]

”The one who dies in the Path of Allah he is shaeed and (waw al- isti`naaf) the one who dies in a plague he is a shaeed”

The death here occurs in two states separated by the waw al- isti`naaf. So the first death is in the Path of Allah whilst the second death occurs in a plague. It would be absurd if someone claimed here that the hadith is talking about the same situation.

Thus the hadith in question is talking about two different situations. The first situation as we said is when someone withholds his obedience to the existing Khaleefah. But what about the second part? The second part begins by saying: ‘the one who dies without a bay’ah on his neck..’ The waw al-Haal (waw of condition) in wa laysa fi ‘unuqihi bay’ah clarifies the state in which the person dies, and in this case it is when he dies ‘without a bay’ah on his neck’.

So what is that state when someone does without a bay’ah on his neck. It can’t mean giving the bay’ah because the hadith did not say ‘wa lam yu’til bay’ah’ (and he did not give the bay’ah) let alone the fact that giving the bay’ah (pledge) is a kifayah duty (sufficiency) and not an individual obligation in the first place as indicated by the Ijma’ as-sahabah (consensus of the Sahabah).

What explains the meaning of bay’ah on the neck is the fact that the contractual bay’ah does not require every single person to physically give it, rather it is enough for the Ahlul Halli wal ‘Aqd (those who represent the Muslims) to give the bay’ah on behalf of the people. This means that a person living even outside the Islamic authority has a bay’ah on his neck if a Khaleefah has been contracted to his post by the representatives of the Muslims.

In fact this was the basic format in which all the Khulafaa’ ar-Rashidoon were appointed. None of them were appointed by a bay’ah which was given by the whole of the population of the Islamic state, rather it was always the representatives of the Muslims who appointed them.

For example when ‘Umar b. al-Khattab was elected as Khaleefah by the ahlul halli wal a’qd in Madinah the people of ash-Sham and Egypt did not have to give the bay’ah because the bay’ah was on their neck by virtue of the fact that the contractual bay’ah had taken place through their representatives the ahlul halli wal aqd. Those who died in ash-Sham and Egypt during the Khilafah of ‘Umar b. al-Khattab did not die the death of jahiliyyah because they had the bay’ah on their necks even though they did not come to Madinah and physically give the bay’ah themselves. This is the difference between giving the bay’ah and having the bay’ah on one’s neck. If however the representatives of the Muslims in Madinah after ‘Umar’s death did not appoint a Khaleefah then the Muslims of ash-Sham and Egypt would not have the bay’ah on their necks because the contractual bay’ah had not taken place i.e. a Khaleefah had not been appointed.

Thus, the hadith is very accurate in its description; it is not talking about giving bay’ah to a Khaleefah but rather having a: ‘Bay’ah on the neck for a Khaleefah’ which describes a situation when someone dies without the presence of a Khaleefah. Hence it is wrong to argue that one cannot use this hadith to prove the obligation of Khilafah by claiming that it is talking about situation when the Khaleefah exists. Such an assertion is not established by the internal indications of the text which show that the Haal (condition) described is the death which occurs when a Khaleefah is not present.

As for Ali Abd ar-Raaziq’s argument that Sharee’ah has obliged us to look after beggars and orphans so does that mean if they don’t exist we have to bring them about to fulfill this command or the argument that we are obliged to obey parents so does that mean we are obliged to bring them back if they die?! Such arguments to say the least are highly fatuous and cannot be considered as scholarly opinions for they disregard the fact that the ahkaam (rules) come with their asbaab (causes). The sabab (cause) of obedience to parents is their existence and hence upon their death the sabab (cause) ceases which means the hukm of obedience also ceases. Also the same applies to beggars and orphans in respect to the ahkaams (rules) which came pertaining to them.

But this is different when it comes to appointing a Khaleefah because the sabab (cause) of the presence of a Khaleefah is the presence of the Jama’ah i.e. Ummah or community which has to look after its affairs by Islam. So if the community exists then Khaleefah must exist to look after their affairs.

The Prophet (Sallalahu Alaihi Wasallam) said in a hadith that has been narrated by Imam Ahmed in his Musnad;

”It is not allowed for three people to be in a fulaatin (journey) without appointing one of them as an Ameer.”

This hadith makes it clear that whenever a collection of Muslims exist i.e. jamaa’ah it is prohibited for them to exist except with an ameer i.e. therefore it is an obligation to appoint an Ameer WHEN there is any jama’ah i.e. the existence of jama’ah is the sabab (cause) of the obligation of appointing a Khaleefah.

 

In fact the term jama’ah in the Islamic text means State, authority, and Khaleefah. Let us look at the following hadith: Ibn ‘Abbas narrated that Messenger (Sallalahu Alaihi Wasallam) said:

”The one who sees in his Ameer something which displeases him, let remain patient, for he who separates himself from the community (Jama’ah) by even so much as a hand span and dies (in this state), he will die the death of Jahiliyyah,” (reported by Bukhari and Muslim.)

This hadith makes it clear that whenever a collection of Muslims exist i.e. jamaa’ah it is prohibited for them to exist except with an ameer i.e. therefore it is an obligation to appoint an Ameer WHEN there is any jama’ah i.e. the existence of jama’ah is the sabab (cause) of the obligation of appointing a Khaleefah.

Here disobedience and rebellion against the Khaleefah is synonymous with separation from the Jama’ah. This is because it is obligatory on the Jama’ah to look after their affairs by Islam. Having a Khaleefah present means this duty is being fulfilled. But if he is disobeyed this means the obligation of looking after their affairs by Islam is being neglected since he is the one who undertakes this task. So the Jama’ah has to obey a Khaleefah so that their affairs can be looked after.

The reason why a Khaleefah needs to exist is because the affairs cannot be looked after except by him. Thus, the sabab (cause) of the presence of a Khaleefah is the presence of Jamaa’ah which is obliged to look after its affairs by Islam. Hence, when the Messenger of Allah (Sallalahu Alaihi Wasallam) orders us to obey the Khaleefah this means by Ishaarah (alluded meaning) it is obligatory to appoint a Khaleefah for how can the Fard (obligation) of ruling by Islam be accomplished if he did not exist. So it is wrong to say a Khaleefah does not exist so we are not sinful for not appointing and obeying the Khaleefah. This is because the sabab (cause) is not his existence, rather the sabab (cause) of his presence is the presence of a Jamaa’ah which is obliged to look after its affairs by Islam.

We can see the same point much more clearly in another narration by Ibn ‘Abbas which uses the word Sultan instead of Jamaa’ah:

”If anybody sees in his Ameer something which displeases him, he should remain patient, for he who separates himself from the authority (Sultan) by even so much as a hand span and dies thereupon, he would die the death of the days of ignorance,”[Reported by Muslim]

Here we can see that separation from Jamaa’ah and authority (sultan) are used synonymously.

Authority (sultan) means the body which looks after the affairs. Jamaa’ah refers to the community whose affairs are looked after by the Khaleefah. The key thing in both is the obligation of looking after of the affairs which occasions the presence of a Khaleefah.

Also it is reported that ‘Umar b. al-Khattab said:

”There is no Islam without Jamaa’ah and there is not Jamaa’ah without Imaarah (leadership). And there is no Imaarah (leadership) without obedience.” (Reported by ad-Darimi in his Sunan)

That is there is no looking after of the affairs of the Jamaa’ah or authority (sultan) without an ameer (Imaarah) and naturally there can be no Ameer when there is no obedience to him. So the Jamaa’ah in order to exist ie for its affairs to be looked after must appoint an Ameer. And consequently obedience to this Ameer is obligatory because the obligation of looking after the affairs is not possible without an Ameer.

”There is no Islam without Jamaa’ah and there is not Jamaa’ah without Imaarah (leadership). And there is no Imaarah (leadership) without obedience.” (Reported by ad-Darimi in his Sunan)

Thus, when the Prophet (Sallalahu Alaihi Wasallam) ordered us to give allegiance (bay’ah) or obey the Khaleefah it has a greater meaning than when he orders us to feed the poor or look after our parents. We feed the poor because they are poor and we obey parents because they are parents. Thus when they cease to exist the hukm ceases. But our obedience to the Khaleefah is because he looks after the affairs of the Jamaa’ah which itself is an obligation.

Thus when the Khaleefah dies the obligation of obedience to him does not cease because the sabab (cause) of the obedience still exists which is the looking after of the affairs. Hence, so as long as the cause of appointing a Khaleefah exists which is the presence of a Jamaa’ah whose affairs have to be looked after by Islam then the obligation of appointing him and obeying him remains even if he did not exist. This is the reason why the order to obey the Khaleefah by Ishaarah (alluded meaning) means the order to appoint him.

Let us consider the following ayah:

”O you who believe! Obey Allah and obey the Messenger and those in authority from amongst you” [4:59]

Here we are obliged to obey those in authority because they are the ones who look after the affairs. So obedience is due as long the ruler looks after the affairs by Islam. Since looking after affairs by Islam is Fard then the obedience to them indicates by Ihsraah that they need to exist.

In another hadith this point is made even more clearer:

”Even if a slave was appointed over you who leads you with the Book of Allah then hear and obey.”[reported by Muslim]

Here to emphasis the obedience to the one who looks after the affairs we are commanded in the style of mubaalagha (exaggeration) to obey even if the ameer is a slave. I.e. obedience is due because he looks after the affairs which is an obligation. Hence the order to obey

indicates by ishaarat an-nass (alluded meaning from the text) the obligation of his presence.

Otherwise we are saying the hukm does not have be fulfilled because something necessary for its fulfillment does not exist even though the sabab (cause) of the hukm still exists!

For example if we apply this type of erroneous thinking on other ahkams look what happens: Jihad for instance is an obligation whose sabab (cause) is the presence of Kuffar under the authority of Kufr. So if Kuffar exist under dar al-kufr then Jihad exists. However to fulfill the Jihad one requires an Ameer by Iqtidaa (required meaning). Without an Ameer jihad cannot be undertaken and hence appointment of an Ameer becomes obligatory in order to fulfill Jihad because that which is necessary to fulfill a wajib is itself a waajib. So by Iqtidaa the presence of an Ameer becomes waajib. But if we follow the silly logic mentioned above the conclusion would be Jihad is not Fard because an Ameer does not exist! Such a conclusion is completely wrong because the sabab (cause) which caused the obligation of Jihad to exist is not the presence of an Ameer but the presence of Kuffar in Dar al-kufr. So as long as kuffar exist the Fard of jihad exists regardless of an Ameer’s presence. Rather what we take from the existence of the Fard is that a Ameer needs to be appointed in order to fulfill the obligation.

Finally, the use of the expression ‘man maata’ deserves a further comment. The reference to the point of death indicates that the hukm (rule) must exist throughout his life. There cannot be a point in his life when he is in a state without a bay’ah on his neck i.e. without the presence of a Khaleefah. So the hukm is continuous unlike the ahkam of obeying parents where the hukm ends upon their death or the hukm of giving to the poor which ends when poverty ceases. But the obligation of having a Khaleefah over you never ceases because text says ‘the one who dies’ indicating the continuity of the hukm throughout the life of a person for he is not allowed to die in situation where the Khaleefah is not present.

What is the Hukm Shar’i?

The legislative value of the above discussion is that it allows us to extract two hukms: that it is Fard ‘ayni (individual obligation) to have a Khaleefah present and also that it is Fard Kifayah (obligation of sufficiency) to appoint a Khaleefah.

As for the first hukm it is deduced from the request (talab) in the hadith that a Muslim should not die without a Khaleefah present. As we said before ‘bay’ah on the neck’ is not possible to have without the presence of the Khaleefah. So if it is not allowed to die without a bay’ah on the neck, this means it is not allowed to die without the presence of a Khaleefah. This type of indication (dalaalah) in Usul al-Fiqh is known as dalaalat al-Iqtidaa (the required meaning of the text). I.e. this is when the truthfulness or correctness of a statement (sidq al-mutakallim wa sihhatul malfooz bihi) cannot be established unless one understands the lafz (expression) in a certain way.

For example: ”And never will Allah grant to the disbelievers a way over the believers.”[4:141]

Here the mantooq (pronounced meaning) is Allah will not allow the kaafir to have authority over the believers. However, is this permission in terms of the occurrence of authority or prohibition of authority? It cannot be the first because we know the kuffar in actuality have authority over the believers in Palestine and Kashmir so the only meaning which will give truthfulness to the statement is prohibition. So we say the mafhoom (implicit meaning) of this ayah through dalalat al-iqtidaa (required meaning) is that Allah prohibits that Kuffar have authority over the believers.

In the same manner the mafhoom (implied meaning) of ‘bayah on the neck’ is the presence of the Khaleefah by the required meaning (dalalaatul iqtidaa). Thus for the expression ‘bayah on the neck’ to be truthful we must understand it to mean presence of the Khaleefah.

Thus, the one who dies without the presence of the Khaleefah would be sinful due to the qaraa’in which make the request decisive. For example the preposition ‘fee unuqihi’ actually means ‘ala unuqihi ie obligation to have on one’s neck much like when we say in English someone has ‘a debt on his neck’ i.e. he has a debt he has to pay. We can also see the use of the ‘ala in the following hadith of Prophet (Sallalahu Alaihi Wasallam) said:

wa ‘alayka bis sam’I wat taa’ah fee ‘usrika wa yusrika wa manshitika wa makrahika wa atharatin ‘alayk

 

”It is obligatory for you (‘alayka) to hear and obey the ruler in adversity and prosperity, in pleasure and displeasure, and even when another person is given (rather undue) preference over you.” [Reported by Muslim in his Sahih/num:1836]

In addition to this is the explicit qareenah (indication) ‘dies the death of Jahiliiayh’. The attribution of a death occurring in the days of Ignorance establishes beyond any doubt the decisiveness of the request. This means the command is a Fard which if neglected would entail sin and punishment. Also, since the personal pronoun ‘man’ is general this means it includes every single Muslim i.e. every individual faces death and therefore the indefinite term ‘maata’ i.e. dies, coupled with the negation is clear that every single individual is addressed and hence it is a Fard ‘ayni (individual obligation) to have a Khaleefah present.

As a further proof of the above understanding let us look at other narrations of the same hadith. It has been narrated on the authority of ‘Umar that the Messenger (Sallalahu Alaihi Wasallam) said: ”The One who dies without an Imam he dies the death of Jahiliyyah”. [Reported on the authority of ‘Umar by at-Tabarani and Abu Nu’aym. The latter declared the hadith as authentic]

Yet in another hadith narrated on the authority of Ibn ‘Umar by al-Hakim in his Mustadrak we have the following version:

”He who abandons the Jamaa’ah by even so much as a hand span is as if he has taken the knot of Islam off his neck, until he returns.’ And he (Sallalahu Alaihi Wasallam) said: ‘whoever dies while there was no Imaam of a Jamaa’ah ruling over him, his death would be that of the days of Jahiliyyah.”

It well known the scholars of hadith permitted the narration of hadith by meaning (riwayah bilma’na). So in the above hadiths the raawi (transmitter) narrated the meaning of the saying of the Prophet (Sallalahu Alaihi Wasallam). So whilst the extraction of the hukm from the man maata hadith in Sahih Muslim is from the implicit meaning (mafhoom), the above two hadiths however are even more explicit as they make the same point in the uttered meaning (manTooq). Incidentally, the hadith in Sahih Muslim and the one above from al-Hakim are both narrated by Ibn ‘Umar. The first says ‘bay’ah on the neck’ while the second says ‘while there was no Imaam of a Jamaa’ah ruling over him’. The meaning is same but the difference is that the former is understood from the implicit meaning (mafhoom) while the latter is taken from the uttered or pronounced meaning (mantooq).

As for the second hukm which is that it is Fard to appoint a Khaleefah, this is deduced from the dalalaatul Ishaarah (the alluded meaning of the text). The ishaarah is a hukm derived from the text which was not intended directly from the speech.

For example when Allah (Subhanahu wa ta’ala) says: “So ask the people of the message if you do not know”[16:43] This cannot be done without the presence of Mujtahideen and hence the presence of mujtahideen in every age obligation in order to find out the sharee’ah rule on a matter. The ayah did not directly mention the obligation of having mujtahideen but it is understood from the ishaarah when it commanded us to ask those who know if we do not know.

In the same manner the ‘man maata’ hadith establishes the obligation of having a Khaleefah present, this means by ishaarah that it is an obligation to appoint a Khaleefah. Therefore, when the text says it is Fard to have a Khaleefah present it also alludes to the obligation of appointing a Khaleefah such that he is present over us.

Thus, the above hadith clearly establishes the obligation of having a Khaleefah over us and the obligation of working to appoint a Khaleefah.

On WHOM does the Hukm shar’i apply?

Is it an individual (Fard ‘ayni) or collective obligation (Fard kifaa`i) and what does that mean for the Muslim ?

The obligation of having a Khaleefah present is an individual duty. This is because the personal pronoun ‘man’ (which means whoever) is from the general expression (seeghatul ‘umoom) and it encompasses all people. Its nature is such that if the Khaleefah is present then he is present for all and if he is absent then he is absent for all thus the obligation covers all people. It is well known in Usul that the general remains general until there is another evidence to specify it. Yes the insane, non-baligh are excluded from this generality but that is not from the mind but there is a text to say they are not legally responsible (ghayr mukallaf) and hence they cannot be held responsible for duties they did not have capacity for.

He (Sallalahu Alaihi Wasallam) said:

”Three types of people are exempted from accountability, the one who sleeps until he wakes up, a child until he reaches the age of puberty and the insane until he is cured.”[Reported by Abu Dawood]

Thus, the general remains in its generality unless another text comes to specify it. And in this case the obligation of having a Khaleefah present is on every legally responsible (mukallaf) Muslim whether man, woman, layman or scholar.

As for the obligation of appointing a Khaleefah this is Fard kifaayah (obligation of sufficiency). However this should not be taken as an excuse for inaction. This is because in terms of obligation (wujoob) and removal of the sin (isqaat) the Fard ‘ayn and kifayah are the same. This is because Fard means the Legislator has demanded in a decisive form the performance of an action which if neglected will result in sin.

So it is wrong for someone to say appointing a Khaleefah is Fard kifayah so let some people do it and we will be saved. This will not save that person on the Day of judgment because the Fard has not been accomplished and hence the obligation remains on every single neck.

Thus the obligation to fulfill the command is on all. Only if the command has been fulfilled by some then the sin is removed from the rest. This is because the consideration is for the accomplishment of the Fard and not the undertaking of the Fard. Until and unless the Fard is accomplished it continues to be an obligation on all no matter how many people undertook it. That is why the definition of Fard kifayah is: ‘What some have accomplished then the rest are absolved from sin’ (maa aqaamuhul ba’d saqata ‘anil baaqeen) not ‘what some have undertaken …’ (maa qaama bihil ba’d). There is a big difference between undertaking an action and accomplishing it. So until the Fard is accomplished the obligation remains on all. That is why if the kifayah obligation neglected everyone is sinful and not just a few people.

For example it is Fard Kifayah for a group to respond when salam is given to them. The obligation remains on all of them until the obligation is fulfilled. If one responds with the salam and the Fard is accomplished then all are saved from sin because the consideration is the accomplishment of the Fard but if no one respond then all are sinful. Thus Fard kifayah and ‘ayn are the same in obligation and removal of the sin.

So it is wrong for someone to say appointing a Khaleefah is Fard kifayah so let some people do it and we will be saved. This will not save that person on the Day of judgment because the Fard has not been accomplished and hence the obligation remains on every single neck.

The Ummah has only three days and two nights to choose a Khaleefah, if they fail to do this after this time the obligation continues on all and those who undertake the Fard are saved from the sin. But those who neglect will be sinful for not fulfilling their Lord’s command and they will have to explain themselves to Him on the Day when His Account (Hisab) is swift.

Worldwide, more than eight-in-ten people identify with a religious group. A comprehensive demographic study of more than 230 countries and territories conducted by the Pew Research Center’s Forum on Religion & Public Life, estimates that there are 5.8 billion religiously affiliated adults and children around the globe, representing 84% of the 2010 world population of 6.9 billion.

The demographic study, released on December 18, 2012, based on analysis of more than 2,500 censuses, surveys and population registers, finds 2.2 billion Christians (32% of the world’s population), 1.6 billion Muslims (23%), 1 billion Hindus (15%), nearly 500 million Buddhists (7%) and 14 million Jews (0.2%) around the world as of 2010. In addition, more than 400 million people (6%) practice various folk or traditional religions, including African traditional religions, Chinese folk religions, Native American religions and Australian aboriginal religions. An estimated 58 million people – slightly less than 1% of the global population – belong to other religions, including the Baha’i faith, Jainism, Sikhism, Shintoism, Taoism, Tenrikyo, Wicca and Zoroastrianism, to mention just a few. At the same time, the new study by the Pew Forum also finds that roughly one-in-six people around the globe (1.1 billion, or 16%) have no religious affiliation.
This makes the unaffiliated the third-largest religious group worldwide, behind Christians and Muslims, and about equal in size to the world’s Catholic population. Surveys indicate that many of the unaffiliated hold some religious or spiritual beliefs (such as belief in God or a universal spirit) even though they do not identify with a particular faith.
The geographic distribution of religious groups varies considerably. Several religious groups are heavily concentrated in the Asia-Pacific region, including the vast majority of Hindus (99%), Buddhists (99%), adherents of folk or traditional religions (90%) and members of other world religions (89%).Three-quarters of the religiously unaffiliated (76%) also live in the massive and populous Asia- Pacific region. Indeed, the number of religiously unaffiliated people in China alone (about 700 million) is more than twice the total population of the United States. The Asia-Pacific region also is home to most of the world’s Muslims (62%). About 20% of Muslims live in the Middle East and North Africa, and nearly 16% reside in sub-Saharan Africa.
With 1.6 billion populations, Muslims are most humiliated and abashed. At international level the Muslims carry no weight and have no representation in the international affairs. Your policies and programmes are drafted by the alien hands. In number, Muslims outnumber all other faiths except Christians. Furthermore, there are fifty-seven Muslim countries in the entire world but their plight is as foam on the sea water, carried by the water currents in all possible directions. Why this miserable plight? Do Muslims lack resources? Are you less in number? No, if you analyze and contemplate on the statistics, you will come to know that you are 23% of the world’s population. Furthermore, you are the masters of majority of the natural resources. The world’s mineral wealth belongs to you.
The history bears witness to the fact, when Muslims lived by the injunctions of the Qur’an and the seerah of the prophet (saw), they ruled the entire world. When they were close to the Book of Allah, they enjoyed the greatest respect. But with the passage of time the Muslims distanced themselves from the Qur’an and considered it a book which needs not to be understood. This is the book which is most read by the people but the unfortunate tale is that this book is read without understanding. This is the book with the help of which you can communicate with your Lord. But what your lord wants to communicate you, you will come to know of it only if you read it with understanding. It is an established fact that for Muslims the Qur’an is the foundation of the Islamic faith. It is this very Book that has been revealed to the prophet Muhammad (saw) as a source of guidance, and a criteria for right and wrong, which was required to be conveyed to the rest of mankind to bring them out of the darkness and into the light of Islam.
Praise is to Allah, the cherisher and sustainer of the worlds, who said in Quran:
There has come to you from Allah Light and a perspicuous book. (Chapter: 05 | Verse: 15)
And may peace and blessings be upon the seal of the prophets, Muhammad (saw), who has said that:
The best among you is he who learned the Quran and then taught it. (Narrated by the six ones except Muslim)
This hadith of the Prophet (saw) amongst many others were the very source of inspiration and motivation for Muslims of the past and present to engage in learning to read and understand the Qur’an and then teach it to others.
The Qur’an will be an intercessor for the believers on the Day of Judgment as the Prophet (saw) said ‘The Qur’an is an intercessor (which by Allah’s permission) intercedes, and an opponent (which is) truthful. He who appoints it as his leader, (then it) will lead him to Paradise. And he who puts it behind him, (then it) will lead him to the Fire.’ (Bayhaqi)
It is in this context of seeking to attain the pleasure of Allah (swt) and living for the hereafter that the Muslim ummah witnessed some eminent personalities in its history. These were people who made the Qur’an the guide of their lives and excelled in acquiring knowledge such that they mastered the Arabic language and all the relevant Islamic sciences in order to access the Book of Allah (swt) and understand its true message. These were people who truly lived up to their deen, treading in the path of knowledge and shaping their personalities in accordance with the Shariah.
Allah (swt) says in the Quran, ‘This is a Book full of Blessings that we have revealed unto you so people ponder upon its verses and men of intellect may reflect’. (Chapter: 38 | Verse: 29)
Unfortunately, now we live in a time where the Qur’an reciters are many but only few are engaged in studying and seeking the guidance of the Qur’an and acting upon its injunctions. We need to remind ourselves of the importance of contemplation, reflection and pondering over the meanings and rulings of the Qur’an, and making sure that it is read in a way that penetrates the heart and leaves a lasting and permanent impact on the believers. This is the dire need of the hour. The result of this kind of reading is the development of a dynamic Islamic personality where Muslims embrace the Islamic faith, make the Shariah the code of conduct for their lives and engage in the da’wah to revive the Islamic way of life at a state level.
It is in relation to this subject of contemplation and reflection of the Qur’an that the Prophet (saw) said in a hadith ‘Groups of people will emerge from my Ummah who will drink the Qur’an as they drink milk’ (Tabarani).
While it is true that we receive reward for the recitation of the Qur’an even when we do not understand its meanings, this should not however make us complacent such that it prevents us from studying the Qur’an and pondering over its meanings. Otherwise, this Qur’an will only be understood and practiced by the selected few whilst the masses will continue engaging in this act of Ibadah (i.e. recitation of the Qur’an) with no understanding and limited application in their daily lives.
Allah (saw) says: ‘Do they not then ponder on the Quran, or are there locks on the hearts?’ (Chapter: 47 | Verse: 24)
This was the situation of hypocrites who used to read the Quran but never attempted to sincerely understand it as the speech of Allah. And therefore, despite their recitation in their own language they were neither able to gain knowledge nor able to act according to it what was prescribed in it.
Thus, the reading of the Qur’an must be followed by one’s desire to understand it in depth and using it as a guide in one’s practical life. If understood and followed correctly, the Qur’an becomes a living guide for those who act upon it.
‘This Book which We have revealed is a blessed one. Follow its guidance and have piety so that you perhaps may receive mercy and will not say that the Book was revealed only to two groups of people before you, or that you were ignorant of its knowledge, or say: Had the Book been revealed to us, we would have followed its guidance better than they (Jews and Christians), so indeed there has come clear proof from your Lord, and guidance and mercy.’ (Chapter: 05 | Verses 155 – 157)
To revive our past glory, it is therefore, imperative to get close to the book of Allah and live by its injunctions.

Quranic vision…

O ye who believe! Fasting is prescribed to you as it was prescribed to those before you, that ye may (learn) self-restraint. (Chapter: 02 | Verse: 183)

Commentary: As it was prescribed: this doesn’t mean that the Muslim fast is like the other fasts previously observed, in number of days, in the time or manner of the fast, or in other incidents; it only means that the principle of self-denial by fasting is not a new one.

What prayers seek to do five times a day, fasting in the month of Ramadan (the ninth month of the lunar year) does once a year. During this period we eat not a grain of food nor drink a drop of water from dawn to dusk, no matter how delicious the dish or how hungry or thirsty we feel.  What is it that makes us voluntarily undergo such rigors? It is nothing but faith in God and the fear of Him and the Day of Judgement. Each and every moment during our fast we suppress our passions and desires and proclaim, by so doing, the supremacy of the Law of God. This consciousness of duty and spirit of patience that incessant fasting for a whole month inculcates in us help us strengthen our faith. Rigor and discipline during this month bring us face to face with the realities of life and help us make our life, during the rest of the year, a life of true subservience to His Will.

From yet another point of view fasting has an immense impact on society, for all the Muslims irrespective of their status must fast during the same month. This emphasizes the essential equality of men and thus goes a long way towards creating in them sentiments of love and brotherhood. During Ramadan evil conceals itself while good comes to the fore and the whole atmosphere is filled with piety and purity.

This discipline has been imposed on us for our own advantage. Those who do not fulfill this primary duty cannot be relied on to discharge their other duties. But the worst are those who during this holy month do not hesitate to eat or drink in public. They show by their conduct that they care nothing for the commands of Allah in whom they profess their belief as Creator and Sustainer. Not only this, they also show that they are not loyal members of the Muslim community -rather, they have nothing to do with it. Only the worst can be expected of such hypocrites.

A WAKE-UP CALL……

A study conducted by the Pew Research Center (US-based Pew Forum on Religion & Public Life.) in 2010 and released January 2011 found that there are 1.62 billion Muslims around the world. The study found more Muslims in the United Kingdom than in Lebanon and more in China than in Syria. According to the Pew Research Center in 2010 there were 49 Muslim-majority countries. Around 62% of the world’s Muslims live in South and Southeast Asia, with over 1 billion adherents. The largest Muslim country is Indonesia home to 12.7% of the world’s Muslims followed by Pakistan (11.0%), India (10.9%), and Bangladesh (9.2%). About 20% of Muslims live in Arab countries. In the Middle East, the non-Arab countries of Turkey and Iran are the largest Muslim-majority countries; in Africa, Egypt and Nigeria have the most populous Muslim communities.

Other key findings of the Pew research are:

v  If current trends continue, Muslims will make up 26.4% of the world’s total projected population of 8.3billion in 2030, up from 23.4% of the estimated 2010 world population of 6.9billion

v   From 1990 to 2010, the global Muslim population increased at an average annual rate of 2.2%, compared with the projected rate of 1.5% for the period from 2010 to 2030

v  79 countries will have a million or more Muslim inhabitants in 2030, up from 72 countries today

v   In the US the population projections show the number of Muslims more than doubling over the next two decades, rising from 2.6million in 2010 to 6.2million in 2030

v  In Europe, the Muslim share of the population is expected to grow by nearly one-third over the next 20 years, rising from 6% of the region’s inhabitants in 2010 to 8% in 2030

v  The UK’s Muslim population is set to rise from 2.9million now to 5.6million in 2030 – up from 2% of the UK population to 4.6%

If u isolate yourself from this materialistic world for a while and ponder over these statistics of the Pew Research Center, beyond any doubt, this fact will dawn on your existence that the future belongs only to the Islam. But the actual question now is; what is the role of about two billion Muslims inhabiting the entire world in shaping this future?

Do you need to get up from the deep slumber which you are enjoying since long now?

Do you need to come up above the level of self and farce?

Do you need to give up your vested interests for the larger interests of the Ummah?

Do you need to come up above the level of sectarian divide?                 (Any kingdom divided against itself is laid waste; and a house divided against itself falls. Luke 11:17)

Do you need to give up internal intrigues?

Do you need to change your modus Vivendi?

Yeah, my Muslim brethren “you need”. You have been asleep for long! It is time to wake up!

You need to draft your modus operandi afresh; only then a change is possible. You can’t expect a change without changing yourself. And if you expect so, for sure you are living in a fool’s paradise. The sooner you come out of it, the better it is. Now let me tell you how to draft your modus operandi. Allah (SWT) is crying out to you in His last and the final revelation:

O ye who believe! Shall I lead you to a bargain that will save you from a grievous chastisement? (Surat ul As-Saff; C61:V10)

In the Arabic text the word Tijarat is used which refers to the bargain, transaction, trade: something given or done, in return for something which you desire to get. What you give or do is mentioned in the next verse:

That ye believe in Allah and His messenger, and ye strive (your utmost) in the cause of Allah, with your wealth and your persons: that will be best for you, if ye but knew! (Surat ul As-Saff; C61:V11)

In verse 10 Allah (SWT) refers to the believers (O ye who believe!) and in the following verse the first and the foremost thing Allah (SWT) asks for is “believe in Allah and His messenger”. Asking a believer to believe in Allah and His messenger seems odd and illogical as it raises a question that; don’t a believer believe in Allah and His messenger? If he doesn’t; why he is referred as a believer in verse 10? And if he believes, then why he is asked to believe in verse 11? Here seems a contradiction but it is not. Actually when you say Shahadah (to testify that there is no god but Allah and Prophet Muhammad SAW is His messenger), you take admission in the institution of Islam or you enter into the fold of Islam. For the sake of better understanding let me relate an analogy; when you take admission in a school, college or university you are bound by its rules and regulations. You are bound to abide by its do’s and do not’s unless your admission will be cancelled and you will be thrown out. Same applies to the person who says Shahadah that after saying Shahadah he has to abide by the divine guidance. Only lip service (uttering Shahadah in words) is not sufficient. He has to stick to the teachings of the prophet in letter and spirit.  Not only his tongue but his practical life should testify that there is no god but Allah and Prophet Muhammad SAW is His messenger. Very often I am used to say that “the philosophy of our life is not what we believe in. Rather, the philosophy of our life is what we practice.” You must practice what you believe in. if you believe in Islam, it must reflect in all the dimensions of your practical life. And when Islam will reflect in all the dimensions of your life, your life will invite others to join this institution of peace. Such should be the character of the Muslim. With this character you are asked to strive in the cause of Allah. This is the purpose you are created and trained for. You are asked to strive with your wealth and persons because not only your life and wealth but everything belongs to Him.

As for those who hoard up gold and silver and do not spend it in the Way of Allah, give them the news of a painful punishment. (Qur’an, 9:34)

And when He asks you to strive in His cause with what belongs to Him, you have no reason to reject. This is the bargain that Allah leads you to. In it is your salvation, for sure if you understand. But you have turned deaf years to this bargain and are indulged in worldly bargains which are like seasonal flowers borne by a plant. They bloom, enjoy a short life, droop and die out. In verse 12 and 13 Allah describes what you will get in return of this bargain.

He will forgive you your sins, and admit you to gardens beneath which rivers flow, and to beautiful mansions in gardens of eternity: that is indeed the supreme triumph. (Surat ul As-Saff; C61:V12)

And another (favour will he bestow), which ye do love; help from Allah and a speedy victory. So give the glad tidings to the believers. (Surat ul As-Saff; C61:V13)

It is truly a wonderful bargain: what you are asked to give is so little; what you are promised in return is so much. There comes Allah’s unbounded generosity, bounty and munificence.

Oh my Muslim brethren, it is now time to wake up and do this bargain which guarantees our success in the life here and hereafter. This should be the modus operandi of your life. You are an Ummah morally bankrupt, spiritually dead, intellectually corrupted, and politically divided. Don’t you want to get up from this sleep and strive in the cause of Allah? Don’t you that your children should get rid of secular education? For how long your fate will be decided by America? For how long you will live at the beck and call of America? It is time to wake up! Wake up and do this bargain.

Do it or else!

Those are the people who trade the hereafter for this world. The punishment will not be lightened for them. They will not be helped. (Qur’an, 2:86)

What an evil thing they have sold themselves for in rejecting what Allah has sent down, outraged that Allah should send down His favour on whichever of His servants He wills. They have brought down anger upon anger on themselves. The disbelievers will have a humiliating punishment. (Qur’an, 2:90)

Glory, be to Allah!                                                                                                                                                      We have no knowledge except what You have taught us. You are the All-Knowing, the All-Wise. (Qur’an, 2: 32)