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EsinIslam
Ramadan
By Br. Abu Dharr The first
part of this is based on an extract from Ibn Rajab al-Hanbali's
Lata'if al-Ma'arif (pp. 179-182), quoted by Fahd bin
Sulaiman in Kayf Nastafeed min Ramadan (pp. 48-50).
The advice given in this article is all the more
important now that we are in the last ten nights of
Ramadan. Imam Bukhari reports from 'Aishah that the
Messenger of Allah (may Allah bless him and grant him
peace) would tighten his waist-cloth (i.e. detach
himself from his wives), spend the night in worship
and awake his family, during the last ten nights of
Ramadan. Ramadan is nearly over, so make the most of
this precious opportunity!
Ramadan has a special relationship with the Qur'an, of
course: "The month of
Ramadan is the one in which the Quran was sent down, a
guidance for mankind, clear proofs for the guidance,
the Criterion; so whoever amongst you witnesses this
month, let him fast it." (cf. Surah al-Baqarah 2:185)
The word 'so'
(fa) in this ayah leads to the following paraphrase of
one aspect of its meaning: "Fast this month because it
is the one in which the Qur'an was sent down" -- see
Fasting in Ramadaan by Ali al-Halabi & Saleem al-Hilali,
Al-Hidaayah, 1414/1994, pp. 11-12. Ibn 'Abbas
narrates "that the Messenger of Allah (may Allah bless
him and grant him peace) was the most generous person,
and he would be at his most generous in Ramadan
because Jibril would come to him every night and he
would rehearse the Qur'an with him." (Sahih al-Bukhari,
Eng. trans. 6/486) This hadith
contains recommendation of the following: Further,
Fatimah (may Allah be pleased with her) narrated from
her father (may Allah bless him and grant him peace),
who told her that Jibril would rehearse the Quran with
him (in Ramadan) once every year, and he did so twice
in the year of his death. (Bukhari 6/485) After
mentioning the above aspects of the Sunnah, Ibn Rajab
talks about the situation of the Salaf (the early
Muslims) during Ramadan: "... Some of
the Salaf would complete reciting the whole Quran
during the night prayer of Ramadan every 3 days,
others every 7 days e.g. Qataadah, others in 10 days
e.g. Abu Rajaa' al-Atardi. The Salaf would recite
Quran in Ramadan in Prayer as well as outside it. Al-Aswad
would finish the Quran every 2 nights in Ramadan;
Ibrahim an-Nakh'I would do likewise in the last 10
nights specifically, & every 3 nights during the rest
of the month. Qataadah would regularly finish the
Quran in 7 days, but in 3 days during Ramadan, when he
would study the Quran especially, and every night
during its last 10 days. Al-Zuhri would say when
Ramadan began, 'It is recitation of the Quran and
feeding of people.' When Ramadan began, Imam Malik
would cease narrating Hadith and sitting with the
people of knowledge, and stick to reciting the Quran
from its pages, while Sufyan al-Thawri would leave
other acts of worship and stick to reciting the Quran.
'Aishah would recite from the pages of the Quran at
the beginning of the day in Ramadan (i.e. after Dawn),
until when the sun had risen, she would sleep. Zayd
al-Yaami would bring copies of the Quran when Ramadan
began and gather his companions around him. ..."
Ibn Rajab
later continues, "The forbiddance of completing
recitation of the Quran in less than 3 days applies to
this being made a regular practice, but as for
favoured times such as Ramadan, esp. the nights in
which Laylat al-Qadr is sought, or favoured places
such as Makkah for the visitor, it is recommended to
increase reciting the Quran to avail the time and
place. This is the view of Ahmad, Ishaq & other Imams,
and the practice of others indicates this too."
The purpose
here is not to discuss whether or not the latter view
is correct or not, since that is purely academic for
most of us, as we do not get anywhere near reciting
the whole Quran in three days! However, the practice
of the Prophet (may Allah bless him and grant him
peace), his Companions, and those who followed their
path, should be clear enough. As a further example,
Bukhari (3/79) quotes from the noble Companion Zaid
bin Thabit who answered the question, "How much time
was there between the pre-dawn meal and the Dawn
Prayer?" by saying, "Enough time to recite fifty ayat";
since the practice of the Arabs was to measure time in
terms of everyday actions, this shows that the Sahabah
were pre-occupied with the Qur'an, especially in
Ramadan. Compare all
this with our sad state, when we talk so much about
establishing Islam, implementing the Quran, etc. and
yet have such little contact with it, maybe not
completing its recitation ever at all since childhood,
or perhaps never! Hence we become imbalanced in our
understanding of Islam, because there are ayat which
we rarely or never hear or think about; we repeat only
certain selected ayat over and over again; we lost the
context of the verses, the overall flow, argument and
balance of the Quran, all of which is beautiful &
miraculous. Because of this ignorance we go astray
from the Straight Path, split up into sects, lose the
blessings of Allah ... "We took a
covenant from those who said: we are Christians, but
they forgot part of the message with which they had
been reminded, so we ingrained amongst them enmity and
hatred until the Day of Judgment..." (Surah al-Ma'idah
5:14) In Sahih
Bukhari (6/521), there is an amazing piece of advice
from the Prophet (may Allah bless him and grant him
peace): "Recite the Quran as long as your hearts agree
on it; if you disagree about it, stop reciting it (for
the time being)" -- studying the Quran should bring
people together! In Surah al-Mu'minoon
(23:53), there is mention of the people before us (in
whose footsteps we would follow), who broke up their
Deen into sects (zuburan), each party rejoicing in
what it had. One understanding of this, from the word
zuburan meaning literally 'books', is that each sect
left the Book of Allah, & concentrated solely on the
books of its own sect, so "they split their deen up
into books"! The most
twisted, ridiculous, shallow ideas, innovations and
superstitions are propagated amongst Muslims when they
are away from the Quran, because any little knowledge
of the Quran would be enough to dispel them.
Hence, O
slave of Allah, leave aside secondary books and
concentrate on studying the Blessed Book of Allah in
this Blessed Month (use a good translation/commentary
if needed), for it is the source of all Knowledge in
other books, and keep away from wasting time,
especially in futile discussions and arguments which
lead nowhere, for that is a sure sign of being
misguided, as the Prophet (may Allah bless him and
grant him peace) said, "Whenever a people went astray
after they had been on guidance, they were given to
argumentation (jadl)." (Ahmad, Tirmidhi, Ibn Majah -
Sahih al-Jami' al-Saghir, no. 5633) Finally,
remember that the Messenger (may Allah bless him and
grant him peace) will complain to Allah on the Day of
Judgment that his people neglected the Qur'an (Surah
al-Furqan 25:30). Neglect of the Qur'an is of
different levels, as Ibn al-Qayyim writes: All Praise is
due to Allah, Lord of the Worlds. Abu Dharr,
Ramadan 1415.
Ramadan Team |