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    The Last of the Ramadân Warriors

    In the early days of Islâm, those that believed in Rasûl Allâh – sal Allâh u
    alayhi wa sallam – and the message of Lâ ilâha illah Allâh , were tested in
    the core of their faith. Every means of punishment was inflicted upon them.

    (NOTE: If you want to build a strong and powerful relationship with Allah, check out Islamia TV, where you can watch Islamic speakers from across the globe deliver inspiring and motivational courses. Learn more at www.islamia.tv.)

    In those young days, Khabbab ibn Al-Arat, radi Allâh u ‘anhu, came to Rasûl
    Allâh – sal Allâh u alayhi wa sallam – and remarked, “Won’t you pray for us!
    Won’t you seek help from Allâh for victory over these people!”

    Rasûl Allâh – sal Allâh u alayhi wa sallam – turned to him and said,

     “ “There were believers that came before us, they would be cut from the top of their
    head right down their body – others were combed with iron rakes, their skin
    separated from their muscles separated from their bones … but all that did
    not cause them to renounce their faith. But nay ye are hasty.”

    Allâh ta’ala revealed:

    Remember before Ramadân we spoke about the Ramadân Warrior. He’s just like
    the weekend warrior – an employee who sits at a cubicle all week long, eating
    donuts and drinking coffee, then on the weekend he rushes to the sport courts
    and mountains, and by Monday he is in the hospital.

    The Ramadân warrior is the one who fasts only when Ramadân comes. He is the
    one who does Qiyâm-ul-Layl only on the nights of Ramadân. The generosity and
    feeding of the hungry is a practice for him that ends with the moon of
    Shawwal.

    Allâh ta’ala tells us in the Qur’ân; a verse that we read so many times in
    the past month:

      [Or did you reckon you will enter Jannah when the same
    thing never happened to you such as happened to those who have passed away
    before you? Suffering and hardship assailed them, and they were battered
    about until the Messenger and those who believed along with him said, ‘When
    is Allâh ‘s support?’ Indeed Allâh ‘s support is near.] – sûrah Al Baqarah 2/214

    This piety that Allâh wants us to achieve is not Ramadân exclusive piety. For
    the entire year, Ramadân is the training period.

    For our early generations, from the Sahâbah, Tâbi’în, and Tabi’
    at-Tâbi’în, their intensity of work for the pleasure of Allâh was
    all-seasonal. Their intensity was focused in (a) learning the Qur’ân and
    Sunnah and teaching it to others (b) Ibâdah (c) Da’wah and Jihad.

    Let’s spend a few moments with each:

    (a) Learning the Qur’ân and Sunnah and teaching it to others

    The media is full of stories of men and women lost in the ocean or a deserted
    island and the struggle those people went through to survive. But seldom do
    we hear of all the Ulumâ’ that suffered very horrific moments where they
    were on the threshold of death – all in the path of traveling to learn the
    Qur’ân and Sunnah.

    Bakr ibn Hamdân al-Mirwazi said, “I heard Ibn Kharash say that he drank his
    urine in the path of this knowledge 5 times.”

    And al-Wakhshî Abu Alî Al-Hasan said, “I was in ‘Asqalân attending the
    lessons of Ibn Musahhah and others. In those days, my money dwindled and I
    spent many nights with nothing to eat. I sat one day to write some notes and
    the pain was just too intense. So I went out to the market and sat by a
    vendor selling bread just to smell the aroma of food. After a while my senses
    returned and I was able to return home.”

    When you see people in our society spending the nights outside on the streets
    to by tickets to a pop concert, or to save $5 on a radio, our Ulumâ’ strove
    harder in their pursuit of knowledge, to get ‘front row seats’ to the hottest
    Halaqahs in town.

    Ja’far ibn Distuwayh said, “We used to camp out by the chair of Ali bin
    al-Madînî after Asr the day BEFORE his class. All night long we would sit
    there for fear that when the people come the next day we won’t be in position
    to hear the Shaykh.”

    And the examples go on and on.

    (B) Ibâdah

    Here is just a sampling of their attitude to the Ibâdah of Allâh :

    Al Hasan said,

      [O ye who believe! Fasting was prescribed for you as it was
    prescribed for those before you so that you may become pious.]
      “Whoever races you in your Dîn, then race them; Whoever races
    you in their Dunya, throw it back in their face.”

    Wuhayb ibn Al-Wird said,

      “If you can, do not allow anyone to beat you to
    Allâh ‘s pleasure.”

    And Ash-Shaykh Shamsuddin Al-Turkistânî said,

      “If news every came to me
    that someone had done something for the pleasure of Allâh , I would always do
    exactly what that person did and then some.”

    Compare this now to Arab countries that have received news of the Guiness
    book of World records and are spending their time and the Ummah’s wealth to
    outdo those records. Wallâhul Musta’ân.

    Hammad ibn Salamah said,

      “We have seen Sulaymân At-Tîmî in a moment of
    worship to Allâh , except that he was participating in that worship. If it was
    time for Salah, we would see him in Salah. If it was other than the Salah
    time, he would be either making wudu or visiting the sick, or following a
    funeral procession, or reflecting in the Masjid. Such much so, that we
    actually thought he didn’t know how to disobey Allâh .”

    (c) Da’wah and Jihâd

    Allâh ta’ala tells us in the Qur’ân of the strenuous concern Rasûl Allâh –
    sal Allâh u alayhi wa sallam – had for the people’s acceptance of this Dîn.

    It is not a simple matter that we have accepted the responsibility of the
    Messengers to teach humanity about Allâh . As Shaykh Salah As-Sawi spoke about
    this matter here during Ramadân, he said,

      [Tâ, Sîn, Mîm / These are the verses of the clear Book / Perhaps, (O
    Muhammad), you would kill yourself with grief that they will not be
    believers. / If We willed, We could send down to them from the sky a sign for
    which their necks would remain humbled. / And no mention comes to them anew
    from the Most Merciful except that they turn away from it.] Sûrah Shura
    26/1-5
      “What if all these people on the
    day of judgement come and say as their excuse, ‘O Allâh , here the Muslims
    lived all around us and they never came to tell us about this Dîn.’

    Indeed
    the matter is grave.

    Ja’far ibn Sulaymân said,

      “I hear Malik ibn Dînar saying, ‘If I was
    capable of never sleeping I would never sleep for fear that Allâh ‘s wrath
    would befall me while I am sleeping. And had I those that would assist me I
    would send them all around the world to announce: O humanity, save yourselves
    from Hellfire, save yourselves from Hellfire!'”

    And when it came to defending the Dîn of Allâh , we see the example of Rasûl
    Allâh – sal Allâh u alayhi wa sallam – shining for all those who would wish to
    be guided by it.

    Ali – radi Allâh u ‘anhu – said,

      “Whenever the battle would intensify, and the
    swords began to burn red, we would seek shield from Rasûl Allâh – sal Allâh u
    alayhi wa sallam. There was no one closer to the enemy ranks than him.”

    And ‘Imrân ibn al-Husayn – radi Allâh u ‘anhu – said,

      “Whenever the Muslim
    battalion would encounter the enemy, Rasûl Allâh – sal Allâh u alayhi wa
    sallam – was always the first one to strike.”

    There is a principal that we spoke about earlier: Al-Maysûr Lâ YasQut bil
    Ma’sûr. It means: What one finds easy is not cancelled by what is difficult;
    i.e. those things that the Mukallaf can do with ease does not get cancelled
    just because he or she cannot do what is hard upon them.

    Examples of this in Fiqh include: If someone knows a few verses of AlFâtiha,
    then they must read it in Salah. Just because they do not know the whole
    Sûrah does not mean they don’t have to read the verses they CAN recite.

    If a person is in such a situation that he cannot cover his complete private
    area during Salah, then he must cover whatever he can. Just because he cannot
    cover the entire area does not cancel the obligation to cover what he can.

    If a person is not capable of performing Sajdah, that doesn’t mean he can
    sit down throughout the entire Salah if he is capable of standing for Ruku’
    or Qiyâm.

    When it comes to studying the Qur’ân and Sunnah, Ibâdah, and Da’wah
    you’ll see that many people focus on the ideal which is unattainable for them
    at that moment. Then they say to themselves, since it is unattainable then I
    just have to be patient and do nothing. No, keep moving a step down until you
    find what is attainable and do it.

    If you can’t memorize the Qur’ân by next Ramadân, you can for sure finish 2
    Juz’. If you can’t do 2 Juz’ in one year, then you can do one. If one is all
    you can do, then do it. In sha’ Allâh , 30 years from now you would be Hafidh
    al-Qur’ân.

    If you can’t come to every Minhâj-ul Muslim Halaqah all year long, doesn’t
    mean that you come to none.

    If the Masjid is far away from your home and it’s hard to come for every
    Salah, doesn’t mean you never come to the Masjid. Come for Maghrib and stay
    for Isha or something similar.

    The proof of this is the words of Rasûl Allâh – sal Allâh u alayhi wa sallam,
    “What I command you in, perform what you are capable of.”

    In conclusion, there are three ingredients to making your resolution to
    improve yourself successful.

    1. Have a truthful determination.

    2. Be economical in what you decide to do.

    3. Make dua to Allâh to make your effort successful.

    (NOTE: If you want to build a strong and powerful relationship with Allah, check out Islamia TV, where you can watch Islamic speakers from across the globe deliver inspiring and motivational courses. Learn more at www.islamia.tv.)



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