A COMMENTARY ON THE QUR`AN
Chapter 1: Surat Al-Fatiha
The Opening
By:
Shaykh
Fadhlalla Haeri
In
the name of Allah,
the Beneficent, the Merciful
-
Al hamdu lillahi rabb il alamin.
Hamd, is
praise. Praise comes if there is knowledge. You can only praise
something if you have knowledge of it. Knowledge of something is
an aspect of experience. You praise the rabb, the
lord-sustainer. Rabba, means to be master of, to have
command over. It also means to raise and bring up. Rabb is
the attribute of that entity which brings what is under its domain
up to its full potential, towards the ultimate end which is
huwa, He, because it has come from Him, from Allah.
We said that when you
praise the Ultimate, you must have some knowledge of it. That
knowledge could be that of avoiding the non-Ultimate, which is
what we are trying to do now. The way to that knowledge is by
avoiding that which is unreal, unconducive, unfulfilling; that
which does not permanently rehabilitate our hearts.
Up to a certain point,
it is alright to praise an aspect of it since we do not have
complete cognizance of rabb. If we are true to ourselves,
we aim for the ultimate in everything. We only want to praise the
Ultimate.
Real praise belongs
only to the Lord-sustainer, and that which sustains the foundation
of Tawheed (Unity). When you say, Al hamdu lilla,
you are only stating the fact that praise is indeed for Allah.
Furthermore, you are only able to praise in the first place
because you mirror Allah and His Attributes, since you are the
created being, having been created by the Creator, Allah. When you
abuse the use of hamd, instead of shukr, you reveal
your own shatteredness, for if you have truly witnessed that,
La ilaha il Allah, you will understand that Allah's mercy
comes not only in bast, expansion, but also in qabd,
constriction, and you will recognize that above all else Allah is
truly ar Rahman ar Rahim, so that every state reflects the
mercy of Allah. This explains why it says: Al hamdu lillahi
rabb il alamin, Alamin, encompasses all states, all
worlds, in the seen and the unseen, in sleep and in wakefulness,
here and in the hereafter.
The man of greater
perception sees the rabb, Sustainer, even in times of
constriction. To use hamd as an expression of a mood or
feeling is shirk. Praise is for Allah at all times and
under all circumstances. Hamd does not allow for the
separation between you as a praise giver and the object of praise:
you merely echo hamd.
-
Ar-Rahman
ar-Rahim
The characteristics of
the Lord whom we love and adore are ar-Rahman ar-Rahim, the
all-beneficent, the all-compassionate. There is only mercy, but we
do not see it because of our ignorance, expectations, and desires
which only arise from the use of our intellect. Was the mercy not
there when you were in your mother's womb? You stayed there for nine
months and yet you were unequivocally content. It is the mercy of
Creation that we are able to die, so that there may be breathing and
standing space for others to come. It is only we who interfere. It
is the ego, the nafs, the vanity of expectation which
frustrates and sabotages our recognition of Allah's mercy. It is the
evil I which we hear whispering in our ear. Shaytan is only a
name. He too is from the Creator. If you know how to tackle Shaytan,
then you would see nothing other than ar-Rahman. There is a
cult in the Middle East of some two to three million people that
worship Shaytan. They say that we know the Lord through Shaytan, and
that at the Yowm al Qiyama, Shaytan will be forgiven because
he has been testing all the good ones and the bad ones. They say he
will be the first to be forgiven. If you see anything other than
mercy, it is your own doing. It is your own expectations, desires
and illusions. You yourself are the author.
-
Maliki yowm ad Deen
Malik means
owner, master. We come from the Owner. We own nothing, but are all
owned. Yowm ad Deen: the day of the Deen. Yowm is not
only a day, but also a span of time. Deen, life-transaction,
finds its root in dana, to owe, be indebted to. It is the
debt of man to want to recognize reality. It is incumbent upon
everyone of us to know how to pay the debt upon us.
The deen with
Allah is Islam. It is a life-transaction. Our way of behaving
towards ourselves and towards others is deen. It is the way
of correct transaction. But if you cannot discipline yourself, you
cannot be of any use to anybody else. If interaction is not at least
two-dimensional, nothing will work. You will only accumulate more
wealth and cultivate more attachment. Eventually, you will be
toppled over. Therefore, you have to exercise yourself in order to
discipline yourself. The inner discipline begins with the outer
discipline. This is the meaning of deen. The outer is easier
because if you yourself do not stop from overshooting the limits,
someone else will. It is the inner that is more difficult, so we
start with the outer in order to gain the inner meaning. We go from
the gross to the subtle.
-
Iyyaka na'budu wa iyyaka nasta'in
Once you recognize
that you are in love and you are worshipping the rabb, you
admit it openly, we worship You and we depend upon You. If you are
worshipping and you are in love, then you are in adoration. Abada,
is to worship, adore, serve, and in its second form, it means to
make accessible. You depend upon the Merciful. This is only
meaningful if there is knowledge, for otherwise it can be considered
a tyranny.
-
Ihdina as Sirat al-Mustaqim
Show us the
direct way. A straight line is the shortest distance between two
points. A straight line is also one point traveling in only one
direction. Therefore, you ask to be shown the most direct route
towards this knowledge.
-
Sirat al ladhina an'amta 'aleyhim
Ghayr il maghdhubi 'aleyhim wa`l ad dalin
Sirat al ladhina
an'amta 'aleyhim, is the way of those upon whom delight has
been bestowed, not those upon whom anger burns, Na'ma is
delight, happiness. There is no anger in this life. If you do not
see mercy, then you have brought darkness upon yourself. Your
ignorance is not the fault of someone else. If you do something
inane and as a consequence harm comes to you, then Reality is
angry with you, angry in the sense that you are not in unification
with it. Anger implies a high degree of discontent on the part of
one entity with another, which leads to severing of the
relationship between the two.
There is only Allah.
There is only Reality. Consequently, there is no place for
superstition. It is you who decide whether Allah is angry with
you. Rahma must encompass everything. Your loss is, in
fact, within that rahma. The condition you are in is
appropriate because you have brought it about by your heart. This
is cosmos, not chaos. It is total ecology. As human beings, we are
all occasionally at a loss and often unsure. It is for this reason
that we have to keep healthy and correct companionship.
Existentially, we need guidance.
Surat al Fatiha can be
divided into three sections. The first section includes the
opening line up to Maliki yowm ad Deen. It is an exposition
of reality. You find yourself awakened suddenly and you say: I am
in gratitude, praise to Allah, Who has these attributes. You are
inspired after having been in wilderness and bewilderment, so you
say, Al hamdu lillahi rabb al 'alamin, out of contentment
and sanity. In the next section, (from Iyyaka na'budu wa iyyaka
nastain to Ihdina as-Sirat al-Mustaqim), you are the
adorer, the abd. This now is transaction and demand. It is
a request, it is action. In this section the heart cries out. The
third part is like the echo of reality in order to confirm what
you are saying and to answer your question.
Surat al Fatiha is the
most important Sura in the Qur`an. If it is completely absorbed,
and if every word comes from a pure heart, you will cease to talk
about opening and you will recognize that the vastness of Allah's
mercy is never-ending, so you can only strive to increase, for
after the constriction of ignorance, there can only come the
expansion of knowledge.
End of the Surah