Blindspot!
Subject of History
Sawm should not be misunderstood as an act of
self-denial, and an act of asceticism and, therefore, a renunciation of
the world and of life, as an act of self-mortification. This life and
this world are God's creation, and are, therefore, good. He established
them as people's destiny enjoined upon him to seek and promote them. His
Prophet, Muhammad, defined, the good, the noble, the felicitous
person as one whose career adds a real plus to the total value of the
universe, who leaves the world a better place than that in which he was
born. But, sawm is definitely an abstinence from food, drink and physical intimacy. What then is its meaning?
Besides constituting another act of
obedience to Allah, hence realising all values appertaining to
obedience to and a communion with the Divine, sawm is an exercise of self-mastery.
The instincts for food and physical intimacy are the basic ingredients
of which life is made. They are the strongest and ultimate urges a
person possesses. For their sake as ultimate goals, normal human life
and energy are spent. Sawm addresses them. It does not deny
them continuously and perpetually, but only during the month of Ramadan,
and does so only between dawn and sunset. That is precisely what
self-mastery requires: to deny and to satisfy, to deny again and to
satisfy again, and so on for every day of Ramadan. Had denial been the
consequence of condemnation, it would have been commanded for continuous
observance. That is why the Muslim rejoices and celebrates at every
sunset in Ramadan. For the sunset signifies his victory over himself
during the day! This is why Ramadan is the happiest month of the year.
Sawm is, furthermore, an act of 'retreat' and self-stock-taking; an occasion for hisab
or evaluation with oneself as to one's whence and whither; a
remembrance of and commiseration with the poor and hungry, the destitute
and deprived. It is the prime occasion for every noble act of
sadaqah or charity, of altruistic concern which is the opposite of
egotism, and ultimately for all ummatic values. Its effect on the
development of the human personality is capital and decisive. It
disciplines a person and enables him to master the strongest urges
raging within him. It trains him to subdue them to the nobler ends of
the ethics of religion. It orients him - in his physical and psychic
being - towards the Ummah, and, thus, makes him an effective executor
and actualiser of the Divine cause in history.
Indeed, it prepares him, par excellence, to enter the arena of history, and there to fulfil the pattern of God. The true observant of sawm is a person ready to be the subject of history, not its object.
Compiled From:
Islam: The Way of Revival, "Inner Dimensions of Worship" - Ismail al-Faruqi, pp. 175, 176 |
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