THE
WITNESSER AND THE WITNESSED
from
"Living Islam – East & West"
(Excerpts Only)
By:
Shaykh
Fadhlalla Haeri
As
Muslims we inherit the belief that there is One Reality encompassing
all existence both perceivable and unperceivable. We believe in One
God we believe in Allah. Therefore, praise belongs to the One
and Only Reality. Whatever or whoever we may praise, we know that
ultimately;
All
praise is due to Allah, the Lord of the Worlds. (1:1)
All
praise goes back to Allah. By seeing this connection, we are on the
path of unification with Allah. If we praise a good thing, we are
ultimately praising the Creator of that thing.
So
praise belongs to Allah. Those who see the one hand of Allah behind
what appears to be diversity see the one interconnecting fiber and
force. We experience life in this existence as a balance of
opposites, whether it be ignorance and knowledge, health and
illness, darkness and light, day and night, sleep and wakefulness,
wealth and poverty, or life and death. What we conceive, or
perceive, is necessarily one of a pair of opposites. Life cannot be
experienced except as being composed of this balance. The melting
pot of this existence is set up so that we interact, yet remain
capable of discrimination, as the actors as well as the acted upon.
We cannot avoid either of these two apparently opposite roles. At
all times we are witnessing and being witnessed. At all times we are
involved in a situation and yet have an awareness, a higher
consciousness, of the situation.
This
is the greatest puzzle and the source of the greatest gift of life
for humankind for the children of the Prophet Adam. If man
perceives a dilemma or a situation which is not harmonious, it is
because he has not seen what has brought about that situation.
Looking back into the history of humankind, we find that man has
been a seeker in whose primal nature there is programmed the desire
to know whence he has come and whither he is going. From the time
when the cell divided into multiplicity, we were programmed
subgenetically with the desire to know the meaning of time, with the
curiosity to know where we were before experiencing time and life,
and where are we going after this experience ceases.
Some
of us are more anxious about the experience of death than others.
While some of us accept it simply as their inheritance, others are
anxious to know and experience it here and now. The Prophet says: "Die
before you die." The Prophet, being a most kind, generous
and gentle being, did not mean that this life should be a
slaughterhouse. What he meant was that one should experience the
meaning of death in order to experience absolute purity of heart in
this life. The Qur`an says:
So
when you are free, still toil. And make your Lord your exclusive
objective. (94:7-8)
What
is meant by 'free' is the emptiness which manifests in the mind when
there is no thought, implying a life free from agitations. The
reflection of this state is described in the Qur`an when Allah says:
So
that you may not grieve for what has escaped you, nor be
exultant at what He has given you. (57:23)
This
means that the situation most conducive to a noble life is that of
being aware and alert to the here and now.
We
are obviously the products of our past thoughts and actions
interacting with the thoughts and actions of the people around us.
The present state of affairs is the result of this interaction, and
the future will be what we now make of it. According to the Qur`an
and Sunnah (the sayings and doings of the Prophet), man's condition
as God's representative or Khalifah is to be the slave of the
moment ('abd al-waqt). This means he should be completely
present from one moment to the next moment. The slave of the moment
is not an irresponsible person who cares little about tomorrow or
about his past mistakes, rather, he is a man whose energies are
totally available to him when he needs them. He is efficient because
he is undisturbed either by the past or by the future, and therefore
he is able to harness all his will to the present. When the muezzin
calls the Muslims to prayer, he cries out, "Hayya 'ala`l-falah"
(come to success). Falah is connected with the verbal root falaha
whose meaning is to plough the earth, turn the earth, which, by
extension, means 'to turn the heart' and therefore encompasses all
the parts that one plays in life.
If
there is any dilemma facing us in this life, whether it be how to
improve our state or our qualify of life as Muslims, our one
underlying goal is to attain a state in this existence which will
fully prepare us for the next experience about which we know
nothing. One thing we know for certain: we will taste death. There
is no escaping it. It is a statement of fact that we share with each
other in the hope that we can reflect upon it and find our own
personal meanings and conclusions.
The
knowledges available to man are unchanging and are of two types. One
is technological, informational, transmittable from the common man
to the common man. It is mechanistic knowledge concerned with outer
technology such as how to use a dishwasher or how to drive a car.
Although it may influence our mechanistic existence, it has no
effect upon our emotional life. There is another type of knowledge,
primal in nature, whose ultimate form is divine inspiration the
revealed knowledge, the knowledge of the prophets who were the
interspace, the interlink, between the Ultimate Reality, the Knower
of all things (al-'Alim) and the rest of humankind.
If
I inherited a defect in my eye or in my finger, though my will may
not be able to alter it, it could take me to a position in which the
deformity had no significance. What is of ultimate significance is
the will to know Reality, is the will to know Allah.
Why
not discover the nature of reality now? We investigate the physical
laws in order to bring about harmony in our environment. We want to
understand causality; we want to know the physics and mathematics of
the existentially relevant aspects of our lives. Why? We seek to
control the temperature of the air in our homes so that the body is
without agitation. Then we seek to have financial security so that
we are not worried about how we are going to feed or clothe
ourselves or our dependants tomorrow. Then what? If a person is
confronted with the possibility of having guaranteed health for the
next ten years and any of the homes he wants one winter home,
one summer home, and that he will have no need to worry about
feeding or clothing himself and his family and still have some
income left for the uncertainties of life, what is he going to do?
Honestly, what is next?
It
is an incontrovertible fact that man is a seeker whose seeking
begins at a low physical level and extends to higher levels in order
to reach a state of relative harmony and peace. From the beginning
we are seekers of death because the ultimate peace is death. We are
programmed with the desire to know whence we have come and whither
we are going. And we are also equally conditioned to be somewhat
scared of this awesome experience called, death, for we try to
postpone it, knowing all the time that every day we are closer to
it. Yet even though we are rational beings we prefer to do nothing
but drift on towards the inevitable, using different excuses to
cover up the fact that we have not the courage to confront this
incredible unknown.
Besides
having to face an awesome unknown, we perceive something within us
which says that death is very unfair. After years of having
squandered thousands of tons of consumables in the form of food,
air, fuel or whatever, and after having gained in experience and
wisdom, we are suddenly deposited, at best, under six feet of dust.
It seems pretty unfair, as though something is not right. It seems
unjust. The Qur`an says:
And
We did them no injustice, but they were unjust to themselves.
(16:118)
We
do to ourselves an injustice by not utilizing our diminishing
capital which is the time in which we are alive. Although everything
else is replaceable, time can neither be replaced nor reversed. We
will experience the non-time zone which is the definition of the
next life, but as for this present experience, it is sustained by a
dynamic factor called time which is non-directional. Allah, on the
other hand, is not bound by time. He is beyond time He is the
First and the Last so He encompasses time; therefore as Muslims we
say:
Surely
we are Allah's and to Him we shall surely return. (2:156)
If
that is the case then why are we so concerned?
"Actions
are determined by intentions and to each (individual) is his
intention." If our intention is to attain knowledge and
apply it in our lives, then we are intending to unify the inner and
the outer. Islam is the path of unification (tawhid), the
path of unifying the inner and the outer, the seen and the unseen. A
Muslim has to believe in the unseen, the next life and what are
called the angels. Angels can be imagined as being specifically
defined bundles of energy. Our experiential physics has reached but
the tip of the iceberg. The whole physical reality is sustained and
supported by a much subtler reality which science has just begun to
perceive.
As
rational human beings, we can accept that there is an underpinning
to creation that is so subtle that we cannot know it in its
specifics. Yet we can accept that there is an order to which the
entities called angels belong. Indeed we have to accept these facts
as Muslims, we have no option. We have to accept the path of Islam.
We have to accept the Qur`an. We have to accept the sunnah of
the blessed Prophet.
Muslims
born into Muslim families are suffering from the dilemma of having
inherited the Islamic model. Fortunately, of course, Islam is
uninheritable; on the contrary, it has to be earned. Throughout the
ages Muslim communities have experienced cycles of revival and
decline. It is in the nature of reality that whenever Islamic
culture and civilization reaches its zenith, its people begin to
take it for granted, and lead this to its dilution. The people no
longer recognize the boundaries clearly and they begin to
transgress. Worship ('ibadah) is the inner technology of
Islam, and when this is strong and its people are true slaves of God
('ibad), then the outer technology of Islam surrounds them in
safety. Architecture and the forms of art are also peripheral
manifestations of an inner reality. Soon the wealth that living
according to Islam brings can lead to luxury which, as you know from
descriptions in the Qur`an, leads to the destruction of a people.
The Qur`an says:
And
when we wish to destroy a town, We send Our commandment to the
people of it who lead easy lives, but they transgress therein;
thus the word proves true against it, so We destroy it with
utter destruction. (17:16)
It
is inevitable that there will be corruption as a result of
decadence. We must determine what is necessary to attain our first
priority, relative tranquility. If our bodies are not relatively
healthy, our nature is compelled to rectify that problem before all
others. The body should be reasonably intact, the environment
reasonably healthy. Then we need some clothing and food. Beyond that
there are gray areas in terms of needs. Those who are pursuing the dunya
or worldly existence will never stop seeking the things of this
world. Ask a businessman what is enough? Whereas thirty years ago it
would have been considered an insult to call someone aggressive,
ambitious and competitive, today, especially in the business world,
it would be taken as a compliment and a sign of the highest worth.
When a bank advertises itself as 'aggressive', it means that it will
callously forsake you when you need it most.
<snipped>
In
the sunnah of the Prophet Muhammad, it is very clear: you are
not to recommend your goods over the goods of others. Among true
Muslims there are very subtle, but clear courtesies. When the
Muslims lived as members of a strong and united community (ummah),
the non-Muslims around them were curious to know why the Muslims
were so self-contained and content; why their culture was so
superior.
Then
the Europeans came into the Muslim citadels riding on the banners of
service, basically health and education. They dominated the Muslim
people through their possession of certain advanced techniques
within the mechanistic side of health. These people were, and still
are, mechanistic and materialistic, and this is partly because of
their environment. One cannot live in a cold climate without being
materialistic. It is not possible to live in the north of England
and not be constantly concerned about sufficient fuel for the
winter.
In
the warmer climates, the reverse is true. It is a burden to have too
many clothes. As a young man I came to live in a village at the
southern tip of India where the staple diet was fish. The people had
been living in great harmony. The village was composed of Muslims
and Christians, yet as long as they could remember there had been no
problems or strife among them. These people literally lived the
whole year with only two loincloths. They had no need of anything
more than that because the climate was so benign.
At
the moment throughout the so-called Muslim countries, Muslims share
the same desire for Islam. They know that therein lies their
salvation, but they do not know how to bring it into reality. Most
Muslims live under Muslim governments of varying degrees of
hypocrisy. The Prophet said that a good intention was enough. But,
although we may be redeemed by the purity of our hearts, the
recipient of our actions may still have reason to complain. For
example, I have the intention of painting a house using the best
materials and best techniques, but out of a lack of knowledge about
painting, I make a terrible mess. I may feel good that I have done
my best, yet the owner of the house will have received nothing but a
headache.
Our
goal is to harmonize our intentions with the outcome, the inner with
the outer. We must be men of tawhid (unification), otherwise,
we are not in Islam. We have to unify the intention with the outer
result. The Muslim wants success. We should remember the phrase in
the call to prayer: "hayya `ala'l-falah" (come to
success). We need to leave this world both having done our best and
seen its results. If we fail to use the Qur`an as a manual for
correct and effective action, then we have missed its meaning.
Decadence and corruption spreads because the people are not getting
inner nourishment. If they cannot get this nourishment, quite
naturally they pursue the path towards outer fulfillment.
If
you are not able to see the Creator's handiwork at every corner. If
you are unable to take delight in a simple life. If you are unable
to see the magnificence of this creation. If you are not drunk with
the incredible gift of life. If you are not prepared to be
intoxicated simply because you have been given the gift of being
able to see though only for a brief moment. If you have not been
trained in these ways you will be trained to make a quicker buck on
the side. What else can you do?
If
you have energy, an intellect, and time on your hands Shaytan will
divert you. The Prophet said, "Everyone has a shaytan. But I
have been given the gift of knowing my shaytan, and therefore he is
under my control." Shaytan is present to keep us alert and
make us aware of our potential to make mistakes. Shaytan can teach
us the boundaries of proper action and thought.
The
Qur`an says:
I
swear by time, Most surely man is in loss. (103:1-2)
and:
Nay,
most of them do not understand. (29:63)
And
most of them do not hear, and most of them do not see. (11:20)
If
man is at a loss at the physical, existential or basic state, this
enables him to rise upward. From this platform he is powered to take
off through the motive of discontent. No matter where we look there
is discontent. If we were content it would be a sign that something
was wrong. How can we be content with ourselves when there is always
something more that we can do? If we turn towards materialism we
find that we can never get enough; and if we turn towards
spiritualism we find ourselves increasingly concerned about the
purity of our intentions and ever seeking to leave the results to
Allah and living the moment. By purifying our intentions and leaving
the outcome to Allah, we will encounter what is best for us, what is
guaranteed by Allah. We must remember that this life is Allah's
arena, Allah's creation and Allah's plot.
If
we enslave ourselves to this truth, we will cease to be a slave to
any other reality or being. We will then be fearless of everything
other than Allah. We will be courageous and willing to give up this
life at any moment. Islam gives us this willingness because it
teaches us that our life begins after death. And if, in this life,
we have invested for the next, there is no need to fear death and
what follows. It is un-Islamic to fear death and yet we find that,
in the so-called Muslim societies, people are afraid of talking
about it. The Prophet said, "This world is the believer's
prison and the unbeliever's garden." It is a prison for the
believer because he already contains within him the meaning of the
cosmos, therefore his body confines him and is a nuisance.
"Beware
of the believer's insight," said the blessed Prophet. The
man of true faith has the gift of insight. By means of this gift he
can quickly assess the extent of the illness of a person or society.
So I share with you the news that we are sick. But in this knowledge
is half of the cure.
Once
we accept the fact of our illness, we will find a way to the cure.
One of the main causes is our lack of discrimination. We are in a
state of unclarity, whereas Islam demands clarity. The Prophet said,
"There are things that are correct and things that are
wrong, take what is correct and avoid what is incorrect."
Between these two there are many shades. We tend to allow our
actions to fall within this gray, unclear area, because we have not
as yet developed and applied the science of the nafs (the
self).
Islam
spread through the efforts of the Sufis. These were men of inner
knowledge who knew how to cure the self. Today we often find, even
in great institutions of knowledge, that something is lacking.
Usually there is a lot of outer knowledge knowledge of the
Qur`an, the sunnah, the Shari`ah and the Sirah
(the life of the Prophet), but somehow these knowledges are not
directly applied. The knowledge (`ilm) and the action (`amal)
have not become one. And as we all know, little knowledge applied is
far better than a lot of knowledge not applied. The reason why we
are not able to apply our knowledge is because our nafs (the
self) has been allowed to get in the way. We have not been watching
our nafs nor have we been aware of its interference between
our knowledge and our action. Actually, as a result of the confused
state of our self, we will intend one thing but actions will result
in something else. This is, of course, contrary to tawhid,
the path of unification which is Islam. So something is wrong; not with
Islam but with how we apply our knowledge. I, the self, has
destroyed the intended project: some of me wanted one thing, another
part of me wanted another, therefore, I have not been clear. That
which is in us, the confusion, must become manifest. There is a
tradition that the Prophet said: "Tell me where a person
lives and what he eats and I can tell you who he is." You
cannot be a man of simplicity, clarity, purity, and live in
confusion. Such a thing is impossible. If you want Allah, you will
get Allah. Allah says in the words of a hadith qudsi:
If
you take one step towards Me, I will take ten steps towards you.
Like
most of you here, [Note: This was a talk given by Shaykh Haeri]
I was given Islam as a gift by my parents and by the blessed people
of Karbala where I grew up. During the years that I have lived there
I never heard of a theft. There were no policemen, nor hospitals.
Most of my ancestors, including my grand-mother, died in their
nineties, even in their hundreds. I did not dare misbehave in the
street for fear that someone would grab me and bring me home and
say, 'Look! Your son was being disorderly.' There was no
disorderliness. People knew each other. There was harmony. There was
not much wealth, but all the food was fresh. In the center of my
house was an enormous kitchen in the middle of which was a big fire.
Usually half a dozen elderly women would be around it having a good
time, enjoying their lives there. Although they were servants, they
were not considered socially inferior, rather they were considered
more important than even my own mother.
Now
that whole way of life has been destroyed. Today Karbala is a city
of villas, cars, banks, and worries about higher interest rates. Now
there are hospitals, ulcers, and imported drugs. What have we done
with our traditional sciences? For example, Islamic medicine was an
outer manifestation of an inner reality of Islam. The doctors in
Islam (hukama) were servants of God. They would pray in the
morning for God to send them someone whom they could help on the
physical level so that eventually they could help him on the
spiritual level. This was the true essence of medicine. Thus,
medicine and spiritual teaching were working hand in hand. They did
not separate physical well-being from inner well-being. Being
Muslims, we have access to a great and powerful body of knowledge,
in medicine as well as in other sciences. The Prophet said: "There
is a lump in a man's chest; if it is well, everything is well, and
if it is not well, then nothing is well; and it is called the
heart." The root of the Arabic word, as you all know is, qalb
and the verb is qalaba, yaqlibu (to turn). That means it is
fresh, it is not stuck, it is not connected with one thing, it is
connected with the One and only One. It turns. When people used to
come to the Prophet and told him that a certain thing had happened,
that a certain person had broken something, he would ask: "Did
it happen?" They would say: "Yes." He
would say: "(Glory be to God) it happened, what can we do?
It is done, it is the will of God." This means: we were
negligent. The will of Allah manifested in the form of the laws of
gravity, the thing fell. The will of Allah manifests in a perfect,
understandable, logical sense. Allah does not work in an illogical
way. When we call something a miracle, it is because we are ignorant
about the scenes that brought it about. We call something lucky
because we do not understand all the physical and other forces that
brought it about. It is a confession of our ignorance that is all
and we will remain ignorant no matter how much we know. There is
bound to be a certain measure of ignorance.
The
situation we are in is fully understandable and it is our own doing.
If we complain, it is out of ignorance. We have given priority to
outer physical knowledge as opposed to inner knowledge. We have
sought to acquire outer rather than inner technology. We have lost
touch with our own hearts. If, in my heart, I intend to be nasty to
my wife, bringing her flowers will be of no use. The lie will be
apparent even to the children. We cannot lie, the liar lies to
himself. The cheater cheats himself. God says in the Qur`an:
If
you are good to one person you are good to all creation, if you
are bad to one person you are bad to all creation. (17:7)
The
meaning of this is that we are all from one self. The believers are
brothers. If we believe that, and we truly come to know it, then we
see everyone as our brother. Maybe some of them are asleep, but
potentially they are our brothers.
He
brings forth the living from the dead and brings forth the dead
from the living, and gives life to the earth after its death,
and thus shall you be brought forth. (30:19)
God
says, how do you know what will happen to him tomorrow? He may be
far more fully awake than you and I. We have no right to turn our
faces and be arrogant simply because at that stage we are in a
better state of knowledge, or health, or wealth or whatever. How do
we know?
The
Prophet says: "You are not a Muslim if you greet a poor man
differently than a wealthy man." Do we greet our kings and
presidents the same way as we greet the beggar at the door of Sayyid
'Ali Hujwiri? [Note: Shaykh Haeri is referring to the tomb of a great Sufi master,
Sayyid 'Ali Hujwiri in Lahore, Pakistan, where one would find poor
beggars] We have
to be honest, we have to be aware of what we are doing and what
state we are in. Then we should be able to unify the inner with the
outer. What is missing, to a great extent, is the knowledge of the nafs
(self). This is a much neglected science.
<snipped>