Who are these people? Living
examples of our illustrious forefather? Simply dressed, shalwars
above their ankles, caps upon their heads, gleaming forebeads,
shining eyes, beards gracing their faces, modesty embracing
their foot-steps, humbleness dripping from every word, respect
from every action. With sleeping bas upon their shoulders,
suitcases in their hands they're making their way to and from
the railway stations. Who are they? Ah yes, are the talaba
of deeni madaris.
Shawwal is the first month of their academic year. Having
spent two months of vacations they are now on their way to
their Alma Maters. Oh wait! O most fortunate people in the
world, wait! Give us the honour of few words with you. Your
love and prayers just night become a means of deliverance
for this uneducated, unworthy one. For it is you, yes you,
for whom angels in the shies, ants in their ant-holes, fish
in the seas, birds in the air pray day and night. Of the peoples
of this world, some are the successors of Fir`oun, some of
Qarun some are disciples of Abu Jahal, some of Shaddad. But
how lucky are you that upon completion of your studies you
shall become the heirs of ambia alaihissalaam!
It is to acquire this very legacy that you have left your
homes. For what had Rasool ullah (sallallahu `alaihe wasallam)
left behind except some weapons of war and a wealth of knowledge?
When be left this world, neither dirham nor dinar, neither
lands nor houses did he leave behind. But yes! He had left
behind him a vast, never-ending wealth of knowledge. This
wealth is being distributed among the people since the last
fourteen hundred years but it doesn't seem to come to an end.
Remember what Hazrat Abu Hurairah (radhiallahu `anhu) had
said in the market place of Madina one day? "O people"
he had cried aloud, "you are busy in buying and selling
in the market - place where while there in the Masjid-I-Nabawi,
the legacy of Rasool ullah (sallallahu `alaihe wasallam) is
being distributed", everyone had run to the Masjid-I-Nabawi
but nothing was being given out there. There was only a group
of Sahaba busy in teaching Hadith. The people came back and
asked Hazrat Abu Huriarah (radhiallahu `anhu) why he had said
such a thing. "When you went there what did you see?"
Asked Hazrat Abu Hurairah (radhiallahu `anhu). "We saw
some Sahaba busy teaching Ahadith and ayaat of the Quran to
each other", they replied. "So what else is the
legacy left by Rasool ullah (sallallahu `alaihe wasallam)?
It is the knowledge of the Quran and Sunnah. That is the inheritance
he has left behind". O respected talaba! You have left
your homes in search of this legacy. You have preferred religion
to materialism, poverty to riches, traveling to staring at
home. You have preferred trouble to luxury, plain fare to
new and rich dishes, being alone rather than being in company,
living in a foreign land than in your own country, trial and
tribulation to comfort and luxury. You have left your homes
for a great aim. Don't lose sight of this aim. There is no
dearth of people who study for ten or twenty years but their
goal is nothing else but a handful of gold or silver, a lucrative
job, a grand house, a shining car and false pomp and show.
Between you and them lies a distance as of the East and West.
You belong to the East while they belong to the West. They
are seekers of livelihood, seekers of this materialistic world
while you are in search of Aakhirah. Your aim is the world
of your inner self, their object is the world of their carnal
selves. Don't eat this difference of aim and intention come
to an end otherwise there will be no difference left between
a 'maktab' and a school, a 'madrasah' and a college. It is
this intention which is the very base. If it changes the entire
building becomes different, the aim changes, the goal becomes
different. A person whose intention is not pure keeps traveling
towards Madinah all his life but his life come to an end in
London or Paris. A good-intentioned man passes his entire
life in kafiristan but when his days come to an end the kalimah
is upon his lips, the light of emaan in his heart. Believe
me it's a fact that many people come out of the wash-room
clean and 'paak' while others leave even Bait ullah in the
same unclean, 'na-paak' state they went in. There was Hazrat
Asiya who did not let the light of emaan die even though she
was living with Fir`oun himself, while the wife of Hazrat
Nuh (Noah) alaihissalaam was not blessed with emaan though
she lived her entire life with a prophet. What else can be
more ironical and unfortunate than that a man is blessed with
the company of good people, with a favourable environment
yet he does not take advantage of it? In the book 'Qaisheeriyyah'
it is mentioned that Abu Usman Khairi (Rahimahullah) asked
Muhammad Bin Fazal (Rahimahullah), 'who is the most wretched
of all people'. There are three persons he answered. 'A person
who is given knowledge yet he is deprived of the power of
acting upon it; a person who is given the power of acting
upon his knowledge but is deprived of sincerity and a person
who is blessed with the company of pious people yet he does
not hold them in deep respect'.
Two words learnt with good intention are better than a thousand
words learnt when the intention is not good. The person who
acquires the knowledge of religion just to earn wealth or
to impress the illiterate people or to challenge the ulama
to debates or 'munazaras', he shall on the Day of Qiyamah
not even go near Jannah let alone enter it.
O seekers of Knowledge! Remember who you are. You are a continuation
of the search and yearning, the thirst knowledge of the Ashaab-i-Suffah.
The Ashaab-i-Suffah, the most exalted of students the world
has ever seen. Food was never cooked for them in any 'madrasah'.
Their state was such that they ate whatever left-overs they
could find and sometimes they found not even those. The prayer
sufficed for them. "O Rabb of ours, grant us". Orchard-owners
used to hang bunches of ripe, unripe dates near their place
of study and these dates were their only food. They didn't'
have any kitchens, nor grand houses, nor lofty educational
centers, nor an army of servants, nor a team of instructors.
They had neither beds nor pillows, neither desks nor books.
There was just a raised platform which served them for a hostel,
as well as a classroom. There was only one compassionate teacher
and a few true seekers of knowledge. The light burned bright
on this side as well as on the other.
Their intention (niyyah) was pure, their yearning unalloyed.
Their resolve was to change their own selves as well as the
times; to ignite a restlessness in their own hearts as well
as in the hearts of others; and to disperse the knowledge
they had acquired far and wide. The light enkindled in their
hearts, their pure resolve, sincere intention, their deep
yearning at last bore fruit and in a very short time, lamps
of the true knowledge began burning from the East to the West.
Darkness receeded.
Just imagine. What kind of a place of learning it must have
been, what teachers, that their attention gave to the world
mighty rulers, judges, army-leaders, famous ulama, and jurisprudents,
successful traders, world-famous personalities! Yet they did
not have any of the facilities students have to-day. All that
they had was a pure intense yearning to acquire knowledge
and a strong system of education and training. There did exist
students whose memory was not exceptional but there existed
none whose deeds were not matchless. Were me to inculcate
these things in ourselves then even the cave of a mountain
a dark corner of a forest or a straw hut can be a madrasah,
a jamiah, a khanqah for us. But if we don't possess these
qualities, yet have a spacious hostel, rows of classes, heaps
of books, enticing scholarships. Then beware! This is not
a madrasah but a shop. It is nothing but hypocrisy, outward
show, a mirage, an illusion.
There is an uproar, an outcry to-day, and it is a justifiable
one, that madaris are not producing great men; that every
year thousands of ulama are coming out of madaris but there
is no sign of a change in society; in fact, the behaviour
and character of the students seems to becoming worse, day
by day. The main reason for this is that instead of paying
attention to building human beings to building character,
the focus is upon constructing buildings. More effort is being
made to beautify the outward appearance rather than to correct
the inner self. Instead of transferring knowledge, it is being
considered sufficient to transfer words and letters only.
Importance is being given more to acquiring a degree rather
than acquiring ability and competence. There is no dearth
of such talaba too to whom scholarships and facilities are
more important than a literary environment. So when importance
is given to the means of attaining the goal instead of the
goal itself, when the good-will of the people is sought instead
of the Creator's then how can the knowledge acquired be fruitful,
be blessed? The lessons learnt would just be puerile, a pastime
of idiots.
You must have beard the name of Mulla Mubarak Nagpuri. He
was the father of Faizi who has written an explanation of
the meanings of the Quran in Urdu in words without dots. He
was the founder of a great university in Agra. Maulana Manazir
Ahsan Gilani has written that he was a student, of a teacher's
teacher's teacher, of Hafiz Ibne Hajar Asqalani (Rahimahullah).
Mulla Mubarak was a very learned man but his heart was empty
of fear and awe, of sincerity. He passed his entire life in
toadying to the rulers. When he left this world, let alone
strangers, his own students had nothing good to say about
him. One of his eminent students, Mulla Abdul Qadir Badayuni,
the author of a famous history book, addressed his teacher
in these words: 'What defect did you see in the Quran and
Sunnah that you chose the dish and plate as your religion?
Instead of Allah and His Rasool (sallallahu `alaihe wasallam)
you started following the irreligious people?'
So you see, on the one hand are people who served Deen with
complete sincerity and devotion with the result that even
their enemies attested to the pureness of their character
while on the other are those sole aim was acquiring this world
and as a result not even their friends had a good word to
say about them.
O heirs of prophet hood! This is the time to succeed or fail.
What you shall sow to-day, you shall reap tomorrow. If you
plant thorns it is stupidity to expect roses to bloom forth.
If you pass your time in neglecting your studies and in sleeping,
how can you even dream of gracing exalted posts of learning?
Education, Knowledge demands your full attention. It is like
a jealous mistress. It cannot tolerate for its aspirant, its
lover to pay attention to anyone else.
The slightest bit of faithlessness is enough to send it running
away in search of a true aspirant. Our ancestors were such
that when he left home to study, Hazrat Makhdoom Bihari (Rahimahullah)
left practically everything behind him. When he received letters
from home he used to put them in an empty pitcher. Years later
when he completed his education he sat down to read the heap
of letters. As he read, sometimes he smiled, sometimes he
shed tears.
Thus when time is saved in this way, when knowledge is so
earnestly sought, so highly valued, then only shall the Makhdooms,
the Imams of the times be born. Don't think that you can never
succeed, Allah Ta`ala has made success conditional to hard
work only. A person who strives, finds doors opening for him
by themselves. So come O Guests of Rasool! Open the doors
of success with your continuous hard work. Come forward, listen
every wall, every nook and corner of the madrasah is saying
'Marhaba, Marhaba! Welcome, Welcome!' These words are for
those who have brought with them the lamp of true yearning,
the light of sincerity, and the resolve for continuous struggle.
For them are these glad greetings in this world and when they
shall rise in the next, angels will be saying in their sweet
voices:
Marhaba, marhaba, marhaba!
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