Islamic-View Admin
Most of us live our lives with
feelings of hatred for certain people and also feeling jealous of what Allah
has granted others in provisions of this life. Such feelings not only rob us of
our peace within but also hurt us both in this life and the hereafter.
It is reported in the Musnad of
Ahmad from Anas, (radi-Allahu-anhu), that he said,
We were sitting in the
presence of the Messenger of Allah (s.a.w.) one day and he said, `A person is
about to arrive from this mountain path who is from the people of Paradise.’ So
a person from the Ansar arrived, his beard dripping with the water of wudu and
holding his sandals in his left hand, and he gave us the salam. The next day
the Prophet (s.a.w.) said similar words and the same person appeared in the same
condition. On the third day the Prophet (s.a.w.) again said similar words and
again this person appeared in the same condition, so when the Prophet (s.a.w.)
left, `Abdullah bin `Amr al-Aas followed this person and said, indeed I have
abused my father and I swore that I would not go to him for three days so if
you would let me stay with you until those three days expire, I would do so.’
He replied, `Yes.’
Anas continued saying,
So `Abdullah told us
that he spent three nights with this person yet he did not see him stand for
the night prayer at all. All he did was when he turned sides on his bed he
would mention Allah and make takbir and would do this until he stood for the
Fajr prayer. `Abdullah said, `Except that I never heard him speak except good.’
So when the three days were over I was eager to make little of his actions. I
said, `O servant of Allah there was no hatred or disassociation between my
father and me but I heard the Messenger of Allah (saying on three occasions, `A
person is about to arrive who is from the people of Paradise,’ and you arrived
on those three occasions, so I wished to stay with you so that I may look at
your actions and emulate them. But I have not seen you perform a great deal of
actions, so what is it that has reached you to make the Messenger of Allah
(s.a.w.) say what he said?’ He replied, `It is nothing more than what you have
seen, except that I do not find in myself any disloyalty (animosity) toward any
of the Muslims, and neither do I find any jealousy for the wealth that Allah
has bestowed upon them.’
We see from the above hadith that
keeping a clean heart rather than one filled with hatred, jealousy, animosity,
and so on can be a source of peace in this life and salvation on the day of
judgment.
In our daily dealings with people,
some of us not only have such feelings about others but we also forsake them.
We should remind ourselves that it is not permissible to forsake a Muslim,
because the Prophet (peace and blessings of Allaah be upon him) said: “It
is not permissible for a man to forsake his Muslim brother for more than three
days, each of them turning away from the other when they meet. The better of
them is the one who gives the greeting of salaam first.” (Narrated by
al-Bukhaari, 5727; Muslim, 2560). This applies especially if the believer is a
relative because forsaking relatives is an even worse sin.
We learn from scholars that the only
exception of this is in cases where the other’s company and mixing can hurt one
spiritually and in other areas of ones life. Ibn ‘Abd al-Barr also said: “The
scholars are unanimously agreed that it is not permissible for a Muslim to
forsake his brother for more than three days, unless there is the fear that
speaking to him and keeping in touch with him will affect one’s religious
commitment or have some harmful effect on one’s spiritual and worldly
interests. If that is the case, it is permissible to avoid him, because
peaceful avoidance is better than harmful mixing.” (Tarh al-Tathreeb,
8/99)
The general principle is that “the
Muslim must be forbearing and sincere towards his brothers, he must be tolerant
towards them and overlook their mistakes. He should not hasten to adopt a
solution that may cause division and haraam kinds of forsaking.”
(islamqa.info)
Feeling
jealous of other’s provisions and rizq
To avoid feelings of jealousy of the
provisions that others may have, we should remind ourselves that Allah has
apportioned our provisions in this life and trying to feel jealous of others is
akin to disagreeing with Allah on His decisions. Consider the following verses
from the Quran:
“Aoum yuqsimun rahmata robbika nahnu qosamna baynaoum
ma’aishataoum filhayaati dunya warafa’ana ba’adoum fawqa ba’ad daraja’atin
lliyattakiza ba’adoum ba’adon sukriyyan wa rahmatu robbika kayrun mimmo yajmou’un”
[Surah al-Zukhruf 43:32]
“Is it they who would
portion out the Mercy of your Lord? It is We Who portion out between them their
livelihood in this world, and We raised some of them above others in ranks, so
that some may employ others in their work. But the Mercy of your Lord is better
than the (wealth of this world) which they amass. [Surah al-Zukhruf
43:32]
In a hadith narrated by Al-Tirmidhi
from al-Zubayr ibn al-‘Awaam that the Prophet (peace and blessings of Allaah be
upon him) said:
“There has come to you
the disease of the nations before you, jealousy and hatred. This is the
‘shaver’ (destroyer); I do not say that it shaves hair, but that it
shaves (destroys) faith. By the One in Whose Hand is my soul, you will
not enter Paradise until you believe, and you will not believe until you love
one another. Shall I not tell you of that which will strengthen love between
you? Spread (the greeting of) salaam amongst yourselves.” (A hasan hadeeth.
Jaami’ al-Tirmidhi, 2434).
Cleaning
our hearts of jealousy and hatred
As part of our personal purification
efforts, we should constantly work to rid our hearts of such feelings. No one
is free from such feelings but we should venture to avoid Satan’s whispers
regarding instilling such feelings in our hearts. Shaykh al-Islam Ibn Taymiyah
said: “Nobody is free from hasad (jealousy), but the noble person hides
it whilst the base person shows it.” (Amraad al-Quloob). A person will
not be brought to account for whatever crosses his mind, but he will be brought
to account for what he says and does. The Prophet (peace and blessings of Allah
be upon him) said: “Allah will forgive my ummah for their mistakes, what they
forget and what they are forced to do.” (Narrated by al-Bukhaari, 2033).
Shaykh al-Islam Ibn Taymiyah also
said in his book Amraad al-Quloob (diseases of the heart): “Whoever
finds in himself any hasad towards another has to try to neutralize it by means
of taqwa (piety, consciousness of Allah) and sabr (patience). So he should hate
that (the feeling of hasad) in himself… But the one who does wrong to his
brother by word or deed will be punished for that. The one who fears Allah and
is patient, however, is not included among the wrongdoers, and Allaah will
benefit him by his taqwa.”
— End
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