Boot Camp Ramadan
By Dr. Azher Quadir
(I am posting this article written by a dear friend. It is very thought provoking and it deserve a reading.)
Boot Camp Ramadan started today. Some registered for it a day earlier.
For many it is all about prayer and fasting. To our favorite poet
philosopher Iqbal, the perspective on praying is a little discomforting.
As always Iqbal articulates the ardent wishes of the truth seeker in
one verse and himself provides the response from the Divine in another
in his most eloquent and provocative style.
Kabhi Ae Haqiqat-e-Muntazir! Nazar Aa Libas-e-Majaz Mein
Ke Hazar Sajde Tarap Rahe Hain Meri Jabeen-e-Niaz Mein
Jo Mein Sar Basajda Huwa Kabhi To Zameen Se Ane Lagi Sada
Tera Dil To Hai Sanam Ashna, Tujhe Kya Mile Ga Namaz Mein
___Iqbal
O Awaited Reality (Allah st) for once show yourself in material
(visible) form as thousands of prostrations are agitating within my
submissive forehead ( for obtaining proof of your existence) and in the
next verse comes the stern response
when I laid down my head for prostration I heard a voice from the earth
beneath announcing, 'your heart craves for idols (idols of materialism,
wealth, power etc.) ' what can you get from your prayers?
As we begin boot camp Ramadan once again, hoping to strengthen our
spiritual muscles and develop a stronger relationship with the Divine,
Iqbal's message should remind us in no small way to reflect upon the
many idols we have come to worship, either consciously or unconsciously
in our contemporary lives of the day. The greed for wealth, the quest
for goods, and the pursuit for power have become intimately integrated
into our life styles and become our modern day idols. We are
increasingly seekers of pleasure, obsessed with our needs, and oblivious
of the misery or the misfortunes of others. We favor the practice of a
narcissistic piety that tends to distance us from the troubles and
tragedies of our neighbors, the struggles and sorrows of the poor, the
plight and problems of the under served. This annual boot camp is
therefore an important time to take a break from our crowded lives, to
take stalk of our priorities and our pursuits.
The Quran reminds us repeatedly that the purpose of our creation is to
worship Him who is the Creator of our universe. If worship is
understood to serve Him and do His will, then is it possible to serve
Him without serving His creation? The paradigm of worship that promotes
our meditative behavior alone without inspiring us to serve fellow man
is clearly incomplete. The dichotomy created between the spiritual and
the secular is sadly mistaken and a disservice to the faith. The Quran
also declares that those who truly worship and those who truly pursue
His will are those who will form a model community and they shall be
leaders. In a world full of so many competing ideologies, is it possible
to lead with a paradigm that fails to see the full picture and remains
obstinately incomplete? How much significance is there to our feel good
worship which remains unaccompanied by its do good complement, which can
address the problems of the world we live in? Yet we remain steadfastly
convinced that this is what makes us pious and what makes us the models
for mankind.
Boot camp Ramadan will be doubtful to do us much good if we continue to
harbor the belief that piety is promoted exclusively through the
practices of prayer and fasting. The price of piety and the prize of
leadership are neither so cheap nor so easy to obtain. Much more is
required and demanded of us if we are to be truly blessed with both.
Those who traveled this journey before us, endured a lot more,
sacrificed much more and struggled much harder to overcome powerful
adversaries, to win unwinnable wars, to gain the trust and respect of
their peers and to establish more just societies. We can be certain that
for them, Boot camp Ramadan was more than getting up for Suhoors to
party or getting together for Iftars to dialogue. Boot camp Ramadan was
not just exhaustive nights of taraweehs for them either. Boot camp
Ramadan was undoubtedly a transformational experience for them, which
made them stronger in faith, gentler in compassion and more humbler in
victory. It certainly transformed them from being unruly nomads to
disciplined warriors. It transformed them from being victims of tribal
loyalties to become devotees for inter-racial unity. It transformed them
from the bondage of lands they loved to become citizens of the world
they inhabited.
Recall that when Tareq (of Jabral Tareq fame) reached the shores of
Spain he ordered his fleet to be burned down so there would be no
possibility for his men to return home. Half a century later they were
masters of the land they had come to call as their new home. Fast
forward to our times, as another generation of Muslims landed on the
shores of America to claim it as their home. Some half a century later
our loyalties remain divided, our love for country uncertain, our
political power non existing.
If our future is to be different we will need to retrace our footsteps
in history to reflect a lot deeply on who we were once and who we have
become. Boot camp Ramadan is a good time to do just that. Change can
only come through an awareness of our paradigms, with a willingness to
see the full picture. To recognize that the boundaries of worship are
not confined to the walls of any mosque. That a line in the sand cannot
be drawn between the spiritual and the secular. That character counts.
That our purpose in life is to serve fellow man, starting from the
fellowship of family where it all begins. This much at least the boot
camp of Ramadan should produce. Otherwise it will become just another
month of hungry days and sleepless nights.
We pray Allah (st) to forgive our sins and our shortcomings, our faults
and our frailties, our trespasses and our indiscretions. We pray for His
mercy as we right our wrongs, as we rise from our falls, as we strive
to improve our souls and become better spouses, better parents, better
friends and neighbors and better members of the communities we live in.
We started this argument with the pronouncements from Iqbal on prayer.
We will conclude it (with an apology to all who are uninitiated in the
language), with a few more inspiring words from Iqbal, which can be the
rallying call for boot camp Ramadan. It is in the form of a qawwali
rendered by the famed singer and qawwal Nusrat Fateh Ali Khan
Dayaare ishq mein apna muqaam paida kar
Naya zamana, nayay subha sham paida kar
In the realm of passion establish your special place
Create new mornings and new evenings (for your destiny)
May the blessings of change visit us this Ramadan in answer to our prayers.
Azher Quader
Executive Director,
Community Builders
July 10, 2013