“There’s only one corner of the universe you can be certain of improving, and that’s your own self,” wrote Aldous Huxley, the English novelist best known for his dystopian novel, Brave New World. In his exploration of the dilemmas confronting twentieth century man – the rise of capitalism, the dehumanising demands of technology and progress, the worship of consumerism, the culture of instant gratification – Huxley hits on many truisms in his chilling forecasts to the modern world. At the heart of Huxley’s critique of modernity is his notion of the “revaluation of values:” that the modern world was radically altering established norms and standards for the worse. He envisioned that as the world gets more technologically savvy, it would begin to lose its human face. Many have since argued that the Huxlian nightmare is not so very distant.
The Crescent is Coming
This week will see Muslims the world over commence Ramadan, the month of fasting. Ramadan, essentially, is the month in which the faithful are required to buckle down more consciously and improve their own ‘corner of the universe.’ The month is characterized by heightened religious observance and a keener sense of social cohesion, and provides a powerful energy for transformation. As the month progresses, many Muslims, repentant for the ills and misdeeds of their past, resolve never to return to such ways again. “Thus,” says Shalabi, “men, women, and whole societies purify themselves during this month that becomes the turning point of the year; and, for many people, it is the turning point of their lives.”1
Ramadan, or more precisely, the act of fasting, yields to the faithful an array of timely lessons to help steer them through what is fast becoming a volatile and vulnerable world.
Undoubtedly, the core lesson of Ramadan is bound with the Quranic dictum: O you who believe! Fasting is prescribed for you, as it was prescribed for those before you; that you will perhaps be God-fearing.2 Key to this notion of a God-fearing life is the idea of ta’zim: reverence. In this Age of Irreverence, Ramadan is a call to renew our reverence and love of God by venerating the Divine commands and respecting their limits. The regime of fasting sets certain limits which, though designed to facilitate our detachment from dunya; the material world, and also from the nafs, or ego, is ultimately about according the believer an opportunity to revere and remember God more fully and faithfully.
This brings to the fore another aspect of Ramadan, often obscured to many Muslims. The act of fasting, as given in the Qur’an, is a reminder that ours is an ancient way of living. For fasting is prescribed for you, as it was prescribed for those before you. In other words, Islam calls to a way of life which, essentially, is traditional; pre-modern. It stands in stark contrast to the call of modernity, with its irreverence, individualism and cult of conspicuous consumption. This is not to suggest that Muslims are required to be luddites or anti-technology. A Muslim women donned in a hijab, using a mobile phone; or a bearded brother drinking “bepsi” or carrying bluetooth technology, are not in themselves contradictions in terms. But for believers, explains Gai Eaton, there is only one litmus test to really assess the worth of technology and progress: “Does it promote piety – awareness of the divine Presence – or diminish it? Does it lead an increasing number of men and women to the gates of Paradise or does it encourage them to stray from “God’s Path”? Does it reinforce the divinely revealed Law or does it blur the distinction between what is commanded and what is forbidden? There are, of course, other considerations but they must take a lower place in a fixed order of priorities. An increase in life expectancy is, obviously, a good thing, but it is worthless if these additional years do not lead to an increasing awareness of the divine Reality which we are soon to meet. There is nothing inherently wrong with the comforts provided by the modern world … but these count for nothing if their soft embrace encourages us to forget our origin and our end.”3
Putting a Lid on the Self
Another of Ramadan’s recurring themes is that of restraint. By temporarily denying themselves instant gratification while fasting, the faithful are taught self-restraint. Here again we confront Islam (and other traditional religions) as counter-culture. For what could be more unmodern than to keep the demands and cravings of the nafs; the lower self, in check. Modernity is about pandering to the nafs. “Free yourself”, “Be yourself”, “Indulge yourself”, is modernity’s holy trinity. Yet the Qur’an is not completely hostile to consumerism, for it insists: O you who believe! Eat of the good things which We have provided for you, and be grateful to God, if it is He whom you worship.4 It also strictures: “Eat and drink of that which We have provided you, and do not make mischief in the earth.”5 There is also the verse which exhorts: “But seek the abode of the Hereafter in that which God has given you, and forget not your portion of the world, and be kind even as God has been kind to you, and seek not corruption in the earth; for God loves not corrupters.”6
We also encounter self-restraint in the following words of the Prophet, peace be upon him: “On a day when one of you is fasting, he must not indulge in obscene language, nor shout; and if someone insults him or starts to argue with him, he should simply say: I am fasting.”7 Our current climate is one in which Muslims and their faith are now under constant scrutiny, criticism and attack. Hardly a day goes by, in the media or the world at large, without Islam being fair game in one way or another. It was around about this time last year that the Pope served up his pitiful and ill-informed portrayal of Islam. Within a fortnight of Ramadan starting, Jack Straw sparked-off the provocative, though perhaps understandable, debate about the face veil, or niqab. In both instances, there was plenty for Muslims to stomach whilst they fasted. Yet for believers, the self-restraint exercised in Ramadan is the very same restraint we must demonstrate in the face of all such provocations. The Qur’an says: You shall certainly hear much that is hurtful from those who were given the Book before you, and from the idolaters. But if you patiently persevere and fear [God], these are weighty factors in all affairs.8
But not all that is hurtful is necessarily harmful. Criticism can oftentimes be profoundly threatening, but it can also be positively challenging. Faith would indeed be fragile if it were not open to scrutiny or criticism; and in a secular society we should expect nothing less. Yet if the niqab conundrum teaches us anything, it is that fostering harmony in society is unlikely to be advanced by stifling a woman’s right to wear a face veil, or a cross for that matter: if she so chooses. Instead, peaceful coexistence means living together with those who have a different faith narrative, or worldview, in the spirit of mutual respect and tolerance.
Reclaiming Responsibility
Ramadan reminds us of our responsibility to God and the good. The month is ultimately about salvation and about being enveloped by divine forgiveness. Nowhere is this better demonstrated than in the prayer Muslims utter during what Islam deems to be the holiest night of the year: laylat al-qadr – “The Night of Eminence.” Here, believers can be heard earnestly entreating: “O God! You are the Effacer of Sins, You love to efface sins; efface my sins.”9
Ramadan further reminds us of our responsibilities to the world’s poor and hungry. For by the end of a day’s fast, Muslims usually experience some sensation of hunger. Thus we are awakened, in a most direct manner, to the plight of hundreds of millions of our fellow human beings who suffer hunger and starvation every day. This should compel us to extend to them our help and support. In a world filled with grotesque human inequalities, and soaked in the unholiness of poverty, we must each commit ourselves to eliminating this global indignity.
As with other issues, the veil debate also compelled us to examine the issue of responsibility. Was it, for example, responsible for politicians to wade into the niqab debate, or should they have exhibited some sense of secular impartiality? How responsible is it to impose restrictions on Muslim women wearing the veil from getting fair and equal access to their elected representatives, or to institutions of the state? If a majority find the dress code of a minority discomfiting, or a barrier to integration, where does the responsibility of understanding and acceptance lie? Is there a responsibility on Muslim scholars to reevaluate the wisdom of wearing the veil in Britain? Do Muslims have a responsibility to take into consideration the cultural sensitivities of the British public with respect to overt religious practices? Then there is the question of the media’s responsibility: ever eager to sensationalize and be alarmist. And finally, of course, there is the issue of Muslim responsibility vis-a-via their perceived lack of integration into mainstream British society.10
As for a more meaningful integration of Britain’s 1.8 million Muslims into wider British society, this is the challenge that awaits us now. Yet the question of integration cannot be reduced to how much or not we declare ourselves to be British. For we are not desperately seeking to be British Muslims as much as we are trying to be conscientious believers and responsible citizens.
This year, schools began the academic year a few weeks before Muslims will commence their month of fasting. As schools all over Britain embark on the task of grounding students in the three R’s (reading, writing and arithmetic), Ramadan, it would seem, offers its own set of three R’s: reverence, restraint and responsibility.
SURKHEEL (ABU AALIYAH) SHARIF
Notes
1. Islam: Religion of Life (USA: Starlatch Press, 2001), p.72.
2. Qur’an 2:186.
3. Remembrance of God: Reflections on Islam (Cambridge: The Islamic Texts Society, 2000), pp.25-6.
4. Qur’an 2:172.
5. ibid., 2:60.
6. ibid., 28:77.
7. Al-Bukhari, no.1905; Muslim, no.1151.
8. Qur’an 3:186.
9. Al-Tirmidhi, Sunan, no.3508.
10. Cf. Yahya Birt, The Veil and the Limits of English Tolerance, accessible at www.yahyabirt.com/?p=36



Salaam & Ramadan Mubarak,
Re. “Do Muslims have a responsibility to take into consideration the cultural sensitivities of the British public with respect to overt religious practices?”
-Yes, i think it is from our religion to do so, as eluded to by ibn Taymiyyah in his fatwa re. benefits of outward conformity when living as a minority.
“Does it promote piety or awarenss of the devine presence?” that for me sums up what Ramdan means to me. I often wonder how I would be if Allah had not blessed me with the love for Ramdan. It always seems to come at the right time of the year when one is feeling weary… and without it i am sure that I wouldnt last…
The portal of opportunity shall soon descend,
A special time for all to make amends.
Reflections on the past year are a must,
For we do not know when we will become dust.
The days will fly past at a startling pace,
who will they uplift, who will they debase?
Will hours will be spent on worthwhile pursuits,
or will we debate about “permissible” flutes?
The month beckons us to read the magnificent Quran,
undoubtedly the most amazing Book since time began
Sadly disconnected are we from this treasure,
instead we focus on fulfilling Shaytans pleasure
Let us supplicate and let us strive away,
hoping, begging, seeking blessings for judgement day
Please dont forget us in your all devotions,
For Al-Firdaus only should we pour out emotions.
May this be the best ramdaan yet,
sadly it could be the last one we neglect…
Please remember us in your duas!
The reoccurring theme within this article is that opportunities bring with them responsibilities, whether it is opportunities brought about through technical advancements or social scenarios where we engage in open and frank dialogs regarding the Deen of Allah and or practice (or sometimes malpractice) of it.
“Drink responsibly” the government cries out, while extending drinking hours, “Smoking kills” they warn you in big letters on the cigarette packet in your hand just before you light up. These attempts to instill a sense of responsibility in a populance who regard this as intrusion by the state seems doomed to failure. In order for someone to feel responsible for their actions they need to feel that these actions tie back to what matters to them, their values and ultimately their beliefs. If your values and beliefs do not restrain you, or at the least instill a sense of regret and remorse should you breach them, then any social or legal constraints placed on you are but transient in nature and devoid of any lasting ability to constrain you from the fulfillment of your desires.
But where do these values and beliefs come from, from where do you get your moral compass, and how was its direction set. Bullying at school may teach you the value of staying silent and inconspicuous, arguments at home may teach you the value of raising your voice, but ultimately these values were pressed onto you, willingly or unwillingly you adopted them to become part of you and part of your moral compass for your future actions to be judged against. Self indulgence and social apathy has, in some places, become the desired state – like the beer advert states “wazzuup, just chillin, having a Bud” it has become desirable to not take action, not to be aware of the injustices around you, and to not ‘rock the boat’ by being seen to take action when no one else around you is doing so – thus society, and you as a product of such society, are gradually coated with a sense of hopeless acceptance of a social situation that continues to deteriorate rather than actively doing something about it.
Your active choices as to your values and beliefs (yes these can be choices also) are formed of your limited understanding of and a view of how you would like to see yourself. For those who are god-oriented, seeing themselves through the eyes of a set of beliefs and values set out by the one who has created them, created you, fashioned you, and guided you, therein lies the peace of knowing that there can be no greater understanding of you, of society, of all the situations which you have seen and will ever see, then that of the almighty, the all-knowing, the all-wise. Therein lies the certainty of beliefs and values that will never steer you wrong.
Salams,
I was asked once by a non-Muslim friend, “so what is ramadan all about?” I wish I had the 3Rs to base my answer on, alhamdulillah, it would be a lot easier to explain to people some important foundations of ramadan.
ws
Jazaak Allah for an article relevant to questioning one’s degree of responsibilty with regard to the individual and the collective. Indeed, our conduct in such matters will have an impact on our dunya and akhirah.
The blessings which are ordained upon us in this month are not fully appreciated. May Allah guide us towards the mentality of the Sahaba, who spent half of the year in praise of Allah for witnessing Ramadan, and the remainder of the year praying that they would be alive for the following Ramadan. Subhan Allah!
Assalaamu-Alaikum
Very interesting article, leading to equally interesting and valid issues.
Having grown up through the Sixties and experiencing eras without today’s technology I see the dramatic effect this technological era has had on us all – some advantageous, others not so. Does blaming technological advancements, such as the internet, mobile phones and i-pods for the lack or ignorance of our religion make a good cop out excuse for not fasting or following Islam? – I think not. All these 21st century advancements can benefit us in understanding and learning more about our Deen. eg:
1. The internet has opened the world to information previously so hard to
find. Now at the touch of a button you can access audio formats of the
Qur’an, Hadeeth and other Islamic material and join online tutorial courses.
2. You can set your mobile phones to play the Adhaan at prayer times and
download surahs to learn at your convenience.
3. Islam is now not only in your head and your heart but it’s in your pocket
too! – you can listen to the whole Qur’an and learn surahs from your i-pod.
There really is no excuse to be ignorant of our Deen in this day and age. The fact that I’m posting a comment in response to a blog I’ve just read online about Ramadan just goes to prove that!
The three “Rs” you mention (reverence, restraint and responsibility) are an excellent example of values that can be applied not only to Ramadaan but to practicing our Deen and to bettering ourselves as well rounded Muslims – Insha’allah.
Jazak Allah Khair