In truth, the ways we can bring about barakah in our lives can be quite small, yet deeply meaningful.
Thursday, December 14, 2017
The Fragility of a 'Good Day'
In truth, the ways we can bring about barakah in our lives can be quite small, yet deeply meaningful.
Posted by AnonyMouse at 6:37 PM 1 comments
Virgin Hunters
1) sexual abuse and rape
2) those who may have engaged in zina but also did sincere tawba (this includes converts and 'born Muslims' alike)
3) divorcees and widows
4) the importance of MALE chastity
He purposely chose an older, more experienced woman so that his sisters could have a loving maternal figure who would look out for them and care for them... not someone who herself was too young to know how to raise children well.
"Allah's Messenger (ﷺ) said to me, "Have you got married O Jabir?" I replied, "Yes." He asked "What, a virgin or a matron?" I replied, "Not a virgin but a matron." He said, "Why did you not marry a young girl who would have been playful with you?"
Posted by AnonyMouse at 6:36 PM 0 comments
Friday, October 13, 2017
One of many princesses of the Ottoman sultanate's harem, Gulfem was an avid student of sacred knowledge in her brother's court.
At the age of twelve, she surpassed all the tutors the harem had to offer; by the age of fifteen, she was offering her brother political advice on how to negotiate the tensions between themselves and the Persian Safavid empire.
Gulfem had a great talent for poetry in particular, penning lyrical stanzas and witty sonnets in Farsi, Arabic, and Turkish alike. At times deeply religious and spiritual, at others cutting and sardonic, Gulfem's words were robustly enjoyed - but only within the harem walls. As a member of the royal blood rather than a jaariyah (slave girl), it was prohibited for her to mingle with the male masters of her art, to attend poetic salons freely, or even to publish her works and distribute them in her own name.
Frustrated by the lack of opportunity she had to share her writings, Gulfem realized that deception was her only option. She adopted the pen name Abu Bakr Shamsuddin alBaghdadi, an homage to her maternal grandfather, a respected 'aalim of Baghdad.
Unencumbered by the burdens of a feminine name, Gulfem's poetry became famed across the Ottoman empire and beyond. Such was her popularity that her works were compiled, published, and sold widely - referred to in shorthand as 'Shamsuddins.'
The true identity of the great poet Abu Bakr Shamsuddin alBaghdadi remained unknown and would have vanished from memory if not for one mere note recorded in the annals of history by Gulfem's loyal scribe and handmaiden, Hatice Begum.
...
If solitude is the succor of women and of saints,
Whence wisdom is found, honour preserved, and Divine Pleasure obtained
Should not the Sultan and his Viziers embrace the silence of the harem's walls for themselves?
- Abu Bakr Shamsuddin alBaghdadi, "Political Advice."
...
Wisdom, like youth and faith and the blossoms along the Bosphorus, oft withers as swiftly as it blooms.
...
Hands outstretched in supplication,
Begging for another morsel, another moment of munificence -
Who is the beggar, and who the benefactor?
...
If the proof for murder lies in the garnet drops upon the blade,
How then do we seek justice for the female minds sacrificed at the altar
...
In gardens of reverence,
The weeping of scholars perfumes their beards -
Love and tears more fragrant than jasmine and frankincence.
...
Verily, a vale of beauty unveiled is the likeness of the Greatest Beauty unveiled.
Posted by AnonyMouse at 11:55 PM 0 comments
Labels: creative writing, parody
Saturday, July 08, 2017
Female leadership as a sign of Qiyaamah
Question: "I saw a Hadith that says that female leadership is a sign of Qiyamah is this authentic? Does it necessarily say it's a bad thing?
When the best among you are your rulers, the rich amongst you are liberal and the affairs of your State are decided upon by consultation among yourselves, then the surface of the earth is better for you than its inside. And when the worst among you are your rulers, the rich among you are miserly and the affairs of the State are entrusted to women, then the inside of the earth is better for you than its surface (Tirmidhi)."
Answer:
Although this hadith was narrated by Imam atTirmidhi, he himself commented the following regarding its authenticity:
“This hadith is ghareeb (strange), and we do not know of it except from the statement of Saalih al-Mirri, and Saalih al-Mirri has strange ahadith which only he narrates. They are not to be followed, while he is a righteous man.”
As well, Shaykh al-Albani has declared this hadith weak in his book Da’eef al-Jaami’ asSagheer, and it is included in the collection of weak ahadith, Al-Targheeb wat’Tarheeb.
Due to the weakness of this hadith, it should not be taken into consideration and there is no need to discuss its meaning.
http://fatwa.islamweb.net/fatwa/index.php?page=showfatwa&Option=FatwaId&Id=80325
Posted by AnonyMouse at 10:10 PM 4 comments
Labels: hadith analysis, misogyny, sexism
Tuesday, June 13, 2017
It's easy to feel like we're 'failing' Ramadan because of it. It's easy to feel as though the day of fasting was wasted, that the night of prayer in the masjid was pointless, because our minds are still roiling and our hearts is still feeling heavy and it feels like our souls are pretty much doomed because, well, we suck.
I'm not going to give some warm fuzzy platitudes about how to feel warm and fuzzy. (I'm not particularly good at that kind of thing anyway.)
I'll be blunt: Ramadan is *meant* to be this way. It's not a month where we magically turn into angelic creatures; nor will all our bad habits (physical or mental) disappear; nor will our lives suddenly become easy.
To the contrary, everything becomes exponentially harder.
There's the obvious fact that we are trying to fast from ill speech and ill deeds in addition to physical needs, but there is also the fact that everything in our daily lives becomes suddenly highlighted and almost exaggerated - average things like food and drink are deeply appreciated, small annoyances become spectacularly aggravating... and our sorrows are felt more deeply, our character failings become more obvious, and our daily struggles become infinitely more difficult.
Many of us are praying Taraweeh in these blessed nights seeking reward from Allah, and a precious sense of peace and tranquility. But that sakeenah is not always - and not necessarily - the true goal of our worship.
Often, we don't realize that it is bringing ourselves to Allah with our negative emotions that is the real litmus test. He already knows us better than we know ourselves, but the challenge is in *us* trusting in Him - instead of turning to other human beings to vent our frustrations. So many times, our first instinct is to tell our best friends, or our parents, or our spouses (or Facebook) how upset we are, yet we forget that the only being capable of doing anything about it is the One in control of Divine Decree.
Whatever is happening in our lives, whatever we are feeling, it is because He has decreed it to occur - perhaps as a test, perhaps as a punishment, perhaps as something that will result in benefit for us in the future, perhaps as something that we don't realize is actually preventing us from a greater harm... and perhaps as a means of us growing closer to Him.
While we should certainly try to seek patience and contentment (and of course that ever-elusive yet ever-desired inner peace), we must remember that the Prophets, the Messengers, and the pious had their fair share of feeling restless and troubled. Their tests didn't disappear because of their prayer, yet they consistently turned to Allah with their distress.
As Ya'qub ('alayhissalaam) said:
{...I only complain of my suffering and my grief to Allah...} (Qur'an 12:86)
And what better time to complain to Allah than now?
Posted by AnonyMouse at 10:23 AM 0 comments
Labels: Ramadan
We have watched it blossom every night, accompanying us on our drives to the masjid, peeking through our windows at suhoor. As the crescent has grown with every moonrise, so has our own emaan - strengthened by hours of qiyaam, illuminated by dhikr.
As amazing as the full moon is, however, its beauty is nothing compared to the true Light of the Heavens and the Earth:
{Allah is the Light of the heavens and the earth. The example of His light is like a niche within which is a lamp, the lamp is within glass, the glass as if it were a pearly [white] star lit from [the oil of] a blessed olive tree, neither of the east nor of the west, whose oil would almost glow even if untouched by fire. Light upon light! Allah guides to His light whom He wills. And Allah presents examples for the people, and Allah is Knowing of all things.}
And the following verse should resonate with us even more:
{[Such niches are] in mosques which Allah has ordered to be raised and that His name be mentioned therein; exalting Him within them in the morning and the evenings...}
As the moon wanes, our worship and our faith should not. Rather than start focusing on Eid coming up or giving into the mid-Ramadan slump, these nights of the full moon should remind us to fill our own hearts with light, to hasten to the niches of light, to seek the Light of our Creator.
These are the nights to beseech our Lord:
{O Allaah, place within my heart light, and upon my tongue light, and within my ears light, and within my eyes light, and place behind me light and in front of me light and above me light and beneath me light. O Allaah, bestow upon me light!}
Posted by AnonyMouse at 10:22 AM 1 comments
Labels: Ramadan
But for some of us - even born Muslims - Ramadan is a time where our solitude is more pronounced than ever.
The true nature of fasting is such that it is a deed that we do that no one else can truly know about except our Lord - not just whether we are abstaining from food and drink, but how well we are struggling with our inner selves.
Anger, resentment, frustration, heartache... in the absence of the distractions of food and socialised rituals surrounding it, our baser selves emerge at the forefront in all their uncomfortable, unpleasant glory.
Ramadan is a time of taking ownership of who we really are, of admitting our own faults, of confronting ourselves, of being forced to stop deflecting blame onto others.
Ramadan is a time when only we know how well we have made it through the day - or not. In the moments between sajdas and suhoors, between the physical humbling of our bodies and the rituals of worship, we alone know if our hearts are any softer, any purer, any more penitent.
We are not all saints and spiritual paragons. Most of us are painfully human, stumbling over ourselves, clinging with bloodied, tear-stained fingertips to the knowledge that every time we fall - once, twice, ten times a day - alLateef, alWadud, arRahmaan, alGhaffaar is there to catch us, to love us, to have mercy on us, to forgive us.
We who are so very alone, whether in the midst of bustling households or the silence of our own company, are never truly abandoned, though it may feel that way.
{The one who comes with a good deed, its reward will be ten like that or even more. And the one who comes with vice, their reward will be only one like that, or I can forgive them. The one who draws close to Me a hand's span, I will draw close to them an arm's length. And whoever draws near Me an arm's length, I will draw near them a fathom's length. And whoever comes to Me walking, I will go to them running. And whoever faces Me with sins nearly as great as the earth, I will meet them with forgiveness nearly as great as that, provided they do not worship something with Me.}
Posted by AnonyMouse at 10:19 AM 0 comments
Labels: Ramadan
In the winter, the days are over so swiftly that we've barely done our basic chores before it's time for iftaar and the taraweeh rush.
In the summer, though, we have more than enough time for everything: the kids' school routine, our own work, time to work on our khatmas, time to prepare food, and best of all, time to squeeze in a nap (if you're extra privileged, that is).
If we have slipped up in the morning, we have hours to do tawbah and seek to perfect the rest of our fast. If we have used harsh words or watched too many YouTube cat videos or spent too much time on Pinterest staring at food (*cough*), we still have many chances to do istighfaar and work on filling the remainder of our time with activities pleasing to our Lord.
Our nights may be too short for lengthy qiyaam, but our long days as fasting believers means that we have ample opportunity for du'a, dhikr, & qira'ah.
Though sometimes the wait for iftaar seems interminable, it is in those moments that we have even more to be grateful for - more chances for us to be counted as those who endured hunger and thirst solely for the pleasure of our Lord, more time for us to be counted amongst those ransomed from Hellfire, more opportunities to be of those who will enter Jannah from Baab arRayyaan, more blessed minutes and hours to become of Ahlul Qur'aan.
In years to come, we who have been blessed to witness this year's Ramadan will be deeply grateful for it. We were chosen to be of those who sacrificed comfort for a long month, a month of heat and hardship, and for that, we will inshaAllah be of those:
{Reclining therein on raised thrones, they will see there neither the excessive heat of the sun, nor the excessive bitter cold,
The shade thereof is close upon them and the clustered fruits thereof bow down.} (Qur'an 76:13-14)
Posted by AnonyMouse at 10:19 AM 0 comments
Labels: Ramadan
In that moment, the choice before us is even more difficult - and more meaningful - than it is at other times.
Will we swallow our pride and insecurities, and rather than allowing ourselves to wallow in our emotions, acknowledge the ways in which *we* need to change for the better?
Will we take this as a moment to turn to Allah, wounded pride and stinging hearts and all, and seek His healing?
{..."Our Lord, forgive us and our brothers who preceded us in faith and put not in our hearts [any] resentment toward those who have believed. Our Lord, indeed You are Kind and Merciful.} (Quran 59:10)
Posted by AnonyMouse at 10:18 AM 0 comments
Labels: Ramadan
Posted by AnonyMouse at 10:17 AM 0 comments
Labels: Ramadan
Ramadan is for the heartbroken and heartbruised: for those of us who fast the days and pray the nights with nothing more than sheer faith and the promise of Allah's forgiveness to keep us going.
Posted by AnonyMouse at 10:15 AM 0 comments
Labels: Ramadan
And yet... and yet, at this moment, your memory of that action is stark and gut-wrenching.
It is also a very necessary one.
how we could be affecting the person we've spoken to - as RasulAllah (sallAllahu 'alayhi wa sallam) once told A'ishah (radhiAllahu 'anha), "You have said a word which would change the sea (i.e. poison or contaminate it) if it were mixed in it." (Sunan Abi Dawud)
This experience is so much more powerful than a mere "I'm sorry," or "omg that was awful"; it is an act that embodies our submission to Allah because it requires us to make ourselves incredibly emotionally vulnerable, and in that moment, to experience a deep pain and acknowledge our wrongdoing. It is to hold your heart out to Allah and to beg Him, with every fiber of your being, with tears in your eyes, with a lump in your throat, wracked with regret, to please, please, *please* forgive you - because without it, without His Mercy and His Forgiveness and His Gentleness and His Love towards us, we have no hope and we will be utterly destroyed.
khaasireen!}
correct our transgression against others' rights over us, although there are times when we may well be unable to seek another individual's forgiveness, whether because of distance, death, or
otherwise; and the good deeds to undertake as penance are numerous, whether they be sadaqah or increased 'ebaadah.
the morning, in the depths of the last third of the night, during your lunch break or your daily commute or in the middle of a social gathering.
{Allahumma ij'alnaa min at-tawwaabeen.} - O Allah, make us amongst those who are constantly engaging in repentance!
Posted by AnonyMouse at 10:11 AM 0 comments
Labels: Ramadan
Each year, I thought that my circumstances were too much, too difficult, that I wouldn't be able to get through the month without utter failure.
Each year, my Lord blessed me with a heart that was just slightly softer, a mind just slightly wiser, and a soul just slightly more conscious of Him.
My personal faults have become painfully clearer, my weaknesses more obvious, my struggles more embarrassingly simplistic and yet feel emotionally insurmountable.
The test lies not in hunger or thirst or desire, but in discovering who we are each year. We who may have emerged strong in times of crisis may find ourselves slipping in times of leisure. It is not enough for us to rest on the laurels of past trials, to depend on mere belief as the means of passing the litmus test of true faith and character.
Do the people think that they will be left to say, "We believe" and they will not be tried?
But We have certainly tried those before them, and Allah will surely make evident those who are truthful, and He will surely make evident the liars.} (Quran 29:2)
Posted by AnonyMouse at 10:10 AM 0 comments
Labels: Ramadan
Saturday, May 13, 2017
A'ishah (ra) wore pink
A'ishah (ra) wore pink! https://sunnah.com/bukhari/25/103
Clarification on the hadith regarding A'ishah's (ra) pink hijab/niqab/jilbab from a student of knowledge:
مزمل أحمد A few points :
1. Islam never forbade women from wearing colors. Anyone that says so may be confused. Clothing resembling the other gender is more open to discussion, but even then there's a lot of things to consider before outright making something impermissible (as people tend to do with things like jeans, shirts, etc.)
2. The general majority of the Sahabiyaat would observe niqab, and the term hijab was more general in reference to just covering up. Over time the words became more specified and the fiqh developed alongside it. So while hijab (with the face left open) might be the only fard (as opposed to the Niqab), the general practice of the sahabiyat (and where arguably the istihbab among the madhahib lies) is the covering of the face as well.
3. Aisha (رضي الله عنها) was known to wear multiple colors, and this included pink, red, and black (as in the Hadith of al-Ifk). As for whether she usually wore a black outer garment and inner colorful one (as some people indicated, and the wording of the Hadith leaves open - and as we see in popular culture today), this is up for further discussion.
4. The usual practice of the sahabiyat became to wear black after the revelation of the veil as it was seen as the furthest from displaying zeenah (because their understanding of veil was broader than just a headcovering), not necessarily because it was obligated :
عَنْ أُمِّ سَلَمَةَ قَالَتْ : لَمَّا نَزَلَتْ يُدْنِينَ عَلَيْهِنَّ مِنْ جَلابِيبِهِنَّ خَرَجَ نِسَاءُ الأَنْصَارِ كَأَنَّ عَلَى رُءُوسِهِنَّ الْغِرْبَانَ مِنْ الأَكْسِيَةِ
Umm Salamah (رضي الله عنها) said that when the ayah of the veil was revealed, the women of the Ansar would leave looking like there were crows on their heads because of their clothing.
I) The women of the Ansar implies the vast majority of the sahabiyat (hence the general culture).
II) Crows on their heads means black clothing draped across their heads and bodies.
5. That being said, and keeping in mind the conservative culture of the Indo-Pak world (and maybe the Arab world to a lesser degree), one can understand why the culture is to wear black.
The ahnaf would have a tendency to consider the culture of the first generation of Arabs as something Islamically legislated, and this includes other matters too like their understanding of mustakhbath for example, and we see it here as well.
They legislated black for their women because it's seen as part of the original Islamic culture and they see that as something to be legislated, when in fact, it doesn't need to be (it's arguable whether it can be deemed preferred or not though).
Eventually this school of thought became widespread and so did the culture which is why we see women wearing, or being made to wear, black as the default dress code and any color outside of it being seen as taboo.
6. Should wearing colorful clothing be taboo? Absolutely not. We see it from the sahabiyat. Should black be given preference? Depends on circumstance, culture, and individual. Allah knows best.
7. As for the mention of Turkey, then this isn't a later addition by a rawi. It's the qawl of the sahabi. It's also used elsewhere such as in the books of i'tikaf and includes other sahabah such as Abu Saeed al-Khudri (رضي الله عنه).
There was a lot of contact between the Arabs and the Turks (of Byzantium at the time) as well as many other cultures. It's a myth that the Arabian peninsula was isolated from the rest of the world. There is a ton of proof to establish vast connections between cultures during the time of the Prophet صلى الله عليه وسلم in hijaz and the jazeerah. And the term turk/turkey had been coined across cultures (with each culture including Arabic having their own rendition of the word) before the advent of Islam. So it's no surprise seeing it used in ahadith just like 'Indian sword (مهند) or persian/roman this or that...'
Modern day Turkey is just an example, like many others, of cultures and nations wanting to reach back into their history and coin themselves titles from the earliest independent parts of their culture. They see other titles as having been forced upon them by external influences and they want to shed that for their own identity (and in Turkey's example they shed the title of the Ottoman Empire under Mustafa Kemal - he sought identity within the original 'Turk' title and created a secular Turkish state, as opposed to maintaining the Islamic Ottoman one).
From Shaykh Younus Kathrada:
The word "muwarridah" in Arabic means reddish-pink. It was common for the Arabs of the time to make dyes out of various plants, and it was a commonly worn colour. The word "mu3asfar" is usually translated as "saffron," but in fact refers to the same shade of reddish-pink in this hadith.
There are some scholars who say that A'ishah's pink garment was her qamees (shirt/ dress - loose and thus equivalent to what we would consider jilbab today), and in that case, it is an even stronger evidence for the permissibility of women wearing colourful clothing in public or around nonMahrams.
Posted by AnonyMouse at 11:57 AM 0 comments
Wednesday, May 03, 2017
Dead or Alive: Stories of Muslim Women Who Had Abortions
- Birth control failure (measures were taken to prevent pregnancy but were unsuccessful).
- Finances (fear of not being able to afford a baby).
- Relationship issues (negative reaction from the partner following discovery of pregnancy; being in an abusive relationship)
- Medical complications (whether in relation to the mother or to the fetus).
- Personal circumstances (not feeling ready to have a child; having a child would interfere with school or career; already has children and does not want more).
- Interference with work, school, or ability to care for dependents (74%)
- Finances (73%)
- Relationship issues (48%)
- Family structure (4 in 10 women said they had completed their
childbearing, and almost one-third were not ready to have a child) - Medical concerns (13% of women were concerned about their or the fetus’s health)
Muslim Women Attitudes
Sister A:
Star Hussain:
Gretchen Balmer:
Umm Aasiyah:
Sister B:
Sister C:
This was when my first child was still in Turkey (being kept away from me by her biological father), so I thought I’d die childless and I wanted to keep baby
Conclusion
Posted by AnonyMouse at 8:54 AM 0 comments
Labels: abortion, misconceptions, taboo
Sunday, April 16, 2017
Dead or Alive: Juristic Permission for Abortion in Islam
Juristic Permission for Abortion
1- Rape
2- Zina
For example, for a woman whose life may be endangered if her family discovers her pregnancy that resulted due to an illicit relationship, Shaykh Salah asSawy permits an abortion as long as it is done before the soul is blown into the fetus.
The rule is the abortion is prohibited because the fetus enjoys the right to life. His status is that of any other human being; it bears no relation to the error of his/her mother, nor will (s)he be asked about her [the mother’s] crime. Also, how could she add to the crime of zina, [the crime of] murder? Fiqh scholars agree on this ruling if the fetus has had its spirit blown into it; if it is before that, however, it is subject to the deliberation and ijtihad of the scholars.
3- Medical Complications with the Fetus
4- Severe difficulty
This could include the case of a woman who already has children and who would experience severe psychological distress (such that it would impair her physical and/or mental well-being); a woman who is in a situation where she feels that she does not have the capacity to raise a newborn[10]; or a woman whose husband is a faasiq (someone who is morally corrupt or defiantly disobedient towards Allah).[11]
When Is Abortion Completely Forbidden?
1- Fear of Poverty
{Say, “Come, I will recite what your Lord has prohibited to you. [He commands] that you not associate anything with Him, and to parents, good treatment, and do not kill your children out of poverty; We will provide for you and them.} (Qur’an 6:151)
{Indeed, your Lord extends provision for whom He wills and restricts [it]. Indeed He is ever, concerning His servants, Acquainted and Seeing. And do not kill your children for fear of poverty. We provide for them and for you. Indeed, their killing is ever a great sin.} (Qur’an 17:30-31)Sh Salah asSawy says on the topic: The basic principle concerning the abortion of a pregnancy within the first forty days of development is to refrain, except when there is dire necessity, clear need or obvious benefit. Fear of providing for the child is not one of those reasons, for verily, the One who creates the child and forms it in the womb is responsible for its provision.After the soul is blown into the fetus, the rule on abortion is that it is strictly forbidden, except in the case when a choice must be made between the life of the child and the life of the mother, according to the testimony of trustworthy, reputable physicians. In such a case, the life of the mother would be given preference since she is the origin. As such, we advise the afflicted couple to give thanks for this blessing and to keep it, unless they find real interests besides the fear of poverty.[12]
2- Abortion After Ensoulment
Expiation
The following discusses the issue of diyah in more detail:
Posted by AnonyMouse at 2:53 PM 0 comments
Labels: abortion