Saturday, April 26, 2008

Good books


Great books by great Scholars. Read them online- http://darululoom-deoband.com/english/books/index.htm

  • Rights in Islam - Maulana Ashraf Ali Thanvi Rahmatullah Alaihi
  • Nikah (Marriage) in Islam - Maulana Ashraf Ali Thanvi Rahmatullah Alaihi
  • Masail of Hairs - Maulana Ashraf Ali Thanvi Rahmatullah Alaihi
  • Post-Emigration, Islamic Conduct with Enemy - Mufti Shabbir Ahmed Qasmi
  • Who are Qadyane's - Maulana Yusuf Ludhyanvi Rahmatullah Alaihi
  • What Islam is? - Maulana Muhammad Manzoor Nomani

Friday, April 25, 2008

COOKING TIP

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To warm biscuits, pancakes, or muffins that were refrigerated, place them in a microwave with a cup of water. The increased moisture will keep the food moist and help it reheat faster.

Sunday, April 20, 2008

Mawlana Ashraf Ali Thanwi's sincerity and honesty

Hakīm al-Ummah Mawlānā Ashraf Ali Thānwi (rahimahullah) says:
After I had written Tafsir Bayan ul-Quran (his unique Urdu exegesis of the Noble Quran) an Englishman met me very eagerly. He asked, “How much money did you get for this work?” I informed him that I had obtained nothing. Expressing surprise, he said “Then what benefit did you get?” I replied, “Here in this world my Muslim brethren benefit from this work and in the hereafter is the pleasure of the true Lord.”
Hakīm ul-Ummah Mawlānā Ashraf Ali Thānwi was the most prolific author of his time. Some onethousand or so works are attributed to him but he did not use any of his books as a means of income.
There are countless incidents from the life of Hakīm ul-Ummah which illustrate his strict adherence to the law of countries/authorities, even if they be non-Islamic countries. One of our teachers in the Jamiyah Dar al-ulum (Karachi) once related an incident from the life of Hakīm ul-Ummah to illustrate this. *A khalifah-e-mujaz (and not 'majaz' as many tend to say!) of Hakīm al-Ummah once came to Thana Bhavan to visit him. He had travelled by train from another part of India to get to the khanqa in Thana Bhavan. When he met Hakīm al-Ummah, the latter, when asking the former of how he was etc, asked him how old his son who was accompanying him was. The khalifah replied that he was x number of years old. Hakīm al-Ummah then asked him whether he had bought him an adult's ticket for the train journey. He replied in the negative justifying it (as many people would) by saying that though the boy was not eligible to travel on a child's fare due to his age, he appeared to be a child. Upon hearing this Hakīm al-Ummah exclaimed "Inna lillahi wa inna ..." and stripped the khalifah of his khilafah or ijazah in suluk (tasawwuf).
*There is another incident regarding Hakīm al-Ummah when he once went to a train station in order to board a train, his luggage turned out to be beyond the allowable weight limit. The station master, knowing very well who Hakīm al-Ummah was, assured him that it did not really matter as he (the station master) was giving him permission to take the overweight luggage on board the train. Hakīm al-Ummah refused to do so asking him that though he was helping him on this journey, would he (the station master) help him (Hakīm al-Ummah) in the ultimate journey - the journey of the hereafter? These incidents are illustrations of sublime taqwa in a modern context - when you know that no one except Allah knows that you are committing a wrong and it is easy for you to justify that wrong.
May Allah taala bless us with such taqwa and sincerity and honesty. Àmen

Our State of Salah

Maulana Thanvi tells us about the state of our salah in this time.
People were praying Asr with jamaat at one masjid when the Imam forgot the number of raka'ats he'd led. After finishing the namaz, he turned around and asked the muqtadi's if they could tell him but no-one had any idea. The Imam was obviously angered at the chronic inattentiveness of his congregation and was chiding them when one man stood up to say that he remembered, and it was three rakaats that had been read. 'Ah! One true servant of Allah we have here' said the Imam, pleased 'how did you know?'

'err...' the man began 'You see, I have four shops and for Asr, I go over the days dealing of each one in each rakaat. This time, I'd only done three when you sat down and finished the namaz. I still have one more shop's accounting to do!'

After this Maulana Thanvi offers a solution for the problem that blights the salah of nearly all of us - lack of khushoo'.
He says that when a hafiz is forgetful in his recitation, you will find that he reads with full concentration whenever he is called to relay from memory. Nothing is on his mind apart from the actual words he is reciting because he is so careful to avoid a mistake. We can apply this to ourselves in salah and read the words as if we have just newly learnt them, and may make a mistake. When our mind is occupied with this, all other thoughts will not enter, and slowly khushoo will be attained.

Another method is to memorise the meanings of each word we read, and keep them in mind as we say each sentence, keeping a medium pace (as opposed to the sprinting that our tongues are accustomed to). We will realise that we are actually addressing Allah in the words that we use and this thought should be enough to rectify our waywardness.

Maulana Thanvi mentions a friend of his who went to Turkey to visit the then Sultan of the Ottoman dynasty. When he entered the compound he saw that the window of the Sultan's room opened out to where he was walking, and it struck him that the Sultan could be watching. This thought compelled him so much that he was unable to lift his gaze again, nor start looking around and taking in the beautiful scenery. All he thought of was to look respectable in front of the Sultan, in case he was watching.

Maulana comments that at the mere possibilty of a King watching us, we are so awestruck and yet we know for sure that Allah, the Lord of the Worlds, is watching us in Salah, but we still indulge our minds in frivolous thoughts and fiddle and scratch and do whatnot during it.
One last thing, nobody is pretending it's easy, but we should not stop trying. If a thought comes to our head, we expel it and if it comes again we expel it and again the same. Even if we do not achieve a thought-free salah, as long as you don't succumb to them, Allah will reward you insha Allah .

HANDY HINT

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Use a dry cotton ball to pick up little broken pieces of glass – the fibers catch the ones you cannot see!

HEALTH TIP

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Health is not something the doctor can apply to you like calamine lotion. Health is something you do on a daily basis, and making wise decisions at the dinner table is one of the best things you can do to assure your health." - Ml Klaper, M.D.

HANDY HINT

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Add a dash of water to your sugar prior to pouring your coffee so you don't give it a burnt flavour.