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Showing posts with label Sadia Dehlvi. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Sadia Dehlvi. Show all posts

Thursday, June 21, 2012

Islam Encourages Us to Conserve and Protect, Islam and Environment, NewAgeIslam.com

Islam and Environment
Islam Encourages Us to Conserve and Protect
BY Sadia Dehlvi

The consequences of unprecedented climate change are expected to adversely impact the lives of millions. Could spirituality help resolve these issues so that peace is given a chance?

Islamic, Christian and Jewish traditions say that God made Adam in His own image. Islam tells us that God, the Divine Potter, ordered the angels to collect handfuls of earth from the four different corners of the earth. He mixed it with water and moulded the image of Adam, then blew His own Spirit in him. Adam, the first human being becomes the prototype for all humanity. God created man as His vice-regent; he entrusted the care of earth to him. At Islam’s most universal level, plants, animals, angels and planets all glorify God and follow His instructions; but only human beings are privileged with the capability to make choices.

Allah refers to humanity as the best of creation; He endowed it with the gifts of nature. He taught Adam all the names, giving humanity the power of knowledge and free will, so He may see how we behave. In the verse on Trust, the Divine Message says that the Heavens, the earth and the mountains refused to carry Trust for they were afraid and so God handed over the responsibility to humans.

Over 500 verses in the Quran deal with nature. We are repeatedly called upon to reflect on the trees, mountains, seas, animals, birds, stars, the sun and the moon and our own hearts. “Allah has subjected to you whatever is in the skies and the earth; Behold! Therein are sure signs for those who reflect.’’ In another verse the behaviour of those who destroy crops and cattle is condemned. The Quran calls on us to recognise our own contribution to the environmental crisis: “Corruption doth appear on land and sea because of (the evil) which men’s hands have done, that He may make them taste a part of that which they have done, in order that they may return.”

http://newageislam.com/islam-encourages-us-to-conserve-and-protect/islam-and-environment/d/2551


Tuesday, June 19, 2012

Love God for God’s sake, Spiritual Meditations, NewAgeIslam.com

Spiritual Meditations
Love God for God’s sake

By Sadia Dehlvi

January 7th, 2010

Although born a Muslim, I embraced true faith at the feet of my Sufi master who taught that religion is meaningless unless warmed by emotions of love. Thirty years ago, I took the oath of allegiance in the Chishti Sufi order, making the lifelong commitment to spiritual Islam.

Sufism, the accepted name for Islamic mysticism, is about awakening the higher consciousness through submission to divine will. Prophet Mohammad said, “Surely in the breasts of humanity is a lump of flesh, if sound then the whole body is sound, and if corrupt then the whole body is corrupt. Is it not the heart?”

The Sufi path is about purification of the heart. It’s about how to free oneself from the ego and realise God’s countless attributes within one’s own spirit. Sufis desire to unravel divine mysteries and remove the veils that separate mankind from God. Sufism is the eternal quest for union with God, the beloved.

The life of Rabia Basri, my favourite woman Sufi saint, best illustrates the philosophy of divine love. The 8th century mystic remained a celibate for her overwhelming love for God left no room for any worldly relationship. She wrote:

I have made You the companion of my heart,

But my body is available to those who desire its company,

And my body is friendly toward its guest,

But the Beloved of my heart is the guest of my soul.

http://newageislam.com/love-god-for-god%E2%80%99s-sake/spiritual-meditations/d/2342


Sunday, June 10, 2012

On Televangelist Zakir Naik: Don’t give in to pretenders who condemn Sufi followers as “grave worshippers”, says Sadia Dehlvi

Radical Islamism and Jihad
On Televangelist Zakir Naik: Don’t give in to pretenders who condemn Sufi followers as “grave worshippers”, says Sadia Dehlvi

By Sadia Dehlvi

November 11, 2008

A doctor by training and inspired by the late India-born South African evangelist Sheikh Ahmed Deedat, Naik loves to debate with Hindus on the Vedas, with Jains about vegetarianism and atheists on religion and science. In the garb of inter-faith dialogues, he not only runs down all major religions, but also rubbishes as haraam (sinful) all Muslim devotional aspects that differ from his viewpoint.

Legacy of the Sufis

In the subcontinent, Islam is the legacy of the Sufis who gave us traditions of syncretism and communal harmony. By condemning Sufi followers as “grave worshippers”, Salafi and Wahabi ideology-inspired speakers such as Naik reject an entire historical body of Islamic scholarship, jurisprudence and almost 80 per cent of Islamic literature. Naik is on record saying, “If Osama bin Laden is terrorising America or the enemies of Islam, every Muslim should become a terrorist.” Excerpts of this video are circulating on the internet, damaging the already wounded perception of Islam and its followers.

Social injustices cannot be used as a theme to create havoc and destruction in society. However, some rabid ideologues continue providing fuel to Muslim animosity by overturning the spirituality of Islam into a rationalised discourse leading to pragmatic political activism. If Muslims insist that Hindutva ideologues be quietened, we must do the same with Muslim radicals. Dialogue within the Muslim community on what form the rightful Islamic traditions should be has long been overdue. Thankfully, Muslims are now alert, identifying and rejecting intolerant elements within their own people.

http://newageislam.com/on-televangelist-zakir-naik--don%E2%80%99t-give-in-to-pretenders-who-condemn-sufi-followers-as-%E2%80%9Cgrave-worshippers%E2%80%9D,-says-sadia-dehlvi/radical-islamism-and-jihad/d/977


Monday, September 5, 2011

Quran speaks to the pure, Spiritual Meditations, NewAgeIslam.com


Spiritual Meditations
17 Aug 2011, NewAgeIslam.Com

Quran speaks to the pure


By Sadia Dehlvi
Ramzan is the month when God sent down the Quran, a month of blessings and intensive worship for Muslims. Like others devoted to the faith, I make the effort to read the entire Quran at least once during this sacred month. What I love about the Holy Book is that it constantly invites intelligent faith and reflection.

Friday, September 2, 2011

Ramadan: Time for Reconciliation, Islam and Spiritualism, NewAgeIslam.com


Islam and Spiritualism
13 Aug 2011, NewAgeIslam.Com

Ramadan: Time for Reconciliation


By Sadia Dehlvi
Aug 12, 2011
Ramadan is a time for intensive worship, reading of the Quran and purifying one's behaviour by engaging in charity and other good deeds. It is an opportunity to bond with friends and family. Islamic scriptures say that those who abandon their loved ones will not enter Paradise till they make peace with them. Getting together for Iftar meals is encouraged as a blessing so that families and friends make time for each other.
Ramadan is a gift from Allah for fasting and prayer that reminds us of the primordial covenant made with the Supreme.
Ramadan is an opportunity to look up to God, just like in Haj or in the daily ritual prayer, when the hands are lifted to the ears in an upward motion, pushing away trivia and saying, Allah ho Akbar, God is the Greatest.