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Dear friends—Travelers of the realm of the unseen and Witnesses
of the omnipotent presence of God—Admirers of spirituality!
When lowliness and loftiness are mentioned, discussions turn
toward the analysis of what is lowliness, and what is loftiness or exaltation.
The tales of the rise and fall of nations tell us that nations that employ
thoughtfulness, reflection, and mental inquiry are the ones that hold an
elevated status. And nations whose conscious is devoid of reflection fall to a
status of lowliness and disgrace. It was to witness these scenarios of lowliness
and elevation that nature provided for me such resources that from my poor and
underdeveloped country I flew through the vastness of space to reach London. I
am sure it was nature's intention that my experience in the path of lowliness
and loftiness be elevated.
I am basically from an educated and learned family where
lowliness describes a person who is neglectful of his salaat and fasting etc.,
whereas loftiness describes one who is engrossed in gathering reward for his
virtues. In the world that I am in gathering of now, I did not see anything
that showed concern for the concept of reward and punishment. But I saw them
more well off, more organized, and more humanitarian than my own nation. So
much so that if a person is unemployed there, he gets enough allowance that he
can easily live with all the amenities of life. Their standard of living is
such that cannot be imagined by even the richest of men in a poor
underdeveloped country. They have access to every such thing that can possibly
be of use in human life. Their academic progress is at such a level that,
within short periods of times, new inventions are brought forth. But what they
lack there is the peace of heart and mind. There are few among them who sleep
without medication.
The point to ponder here is that the developing and the
underdeveloped nations also are deprived of the peace of heart and mind,
despite the fact that they have piled up billions upon trillions of virtues on
their side. But they are devoid of that light which turns into happiness and
joy and runs in the blood of the human body. It is seen that the person
possessing the largest store of virtues is the farthest away from peace. There
is an aridness which clings to the body; a permission that holds us in its
monstrous clutches. We have seen the upholders of virtue here, as well as
there. The condition there is much worse than here. The curse of sectarianism
[here] has reached such a low that policemen, intoxicated with alcohol, even
enter mosques wearing shoes and with dogs alongside them, and shut down the
mosques. Each person insists that he is righteous, while those of the other
sect deserve to be killed. This is the condition of poor underdeveloped
countries.
The condition of those nations that boast of their progress and
consider themselves superior is not much different than this. This is the
nation that for the sake of its selfish monetary profit has disfigured this
beautiful world. It has fogged what were once beautiful starlit nights. It has
polluted what used to be the intoxicating and magical morning breeze with
poisonous atomic fuel. This is that elevated nation that has stolen the smile
of the flowers. Songs of the birds that once lifted the spirit have now turned
into heart- wrenching sonnets. Science and technology has thrown man into the
abyss of insecurity. For humanity suffering from pang of insecurity, moonlight
has lost its charm and sunlight its beauty. Who does not know that atomic
experimentation, fumes of petroleum and diesel, and burnt debris from jet planes,
has poisoned the atmosphere to such a degree that each breath that man takes is
toxic, and this toxicity has turned man's life upside down. Nerves have been
shattered; the mind has lost focus; the heart is ever inclined to sink. The
weeping, ailing, and agonizing nation, hiding behind the illusory curtain of
progress, realized that its wellbeing lay in escaping from the monstrous hold
of insecurity, but in this escape as well, the greedy and selfish genius mind
grabbed it in its clutches like a hunter seizes its prey. And the progressive
man of this age, in order to escape this sense of insecurity, invented such
narcotics as heroin, I,SD, rockets, marijuana, and mandrax, and thus the common
man, in order to escape one problem, became entangled in thousands of others.
This entire conversation boils down to the conclusion that as
long as a commercial mind operates within individuals, humankind will never be
at peace. The developed nation is .suffering punishment because its progress is
based on selfish Interest. Each progress is a means to accumulate more wealth.
Undeveloped nations are suffering from problems because no action of theirs is
free of commercial needs [and mentality]. They remember Allah with the same
intention of profiting themselves, though Allah does not approve of this way of
thinking. Allah the Exalted states:
"Those who conceal Allah's revelations in the Book,
and purchase for them a miserable profit- they swallow into themselves naught
but Fire; Allah will not address them on the Day of Resurrection. Nor purify
them: Grievous will be their penalty." [Holy Quran ch2:v174]
It obvious that burning coal within one's belly is an agonizing
punishment, which is this same grievous punishment which at times takes the
form of anxiety, at times restlessness, and at times it turns into a sense of
insecurity, every moment taking us deeper into the world of fear, casting upon
us the enchanted spell of death.
KHWAJA SHAMS-UD-DEEN AZEEMI
Science has made immense progress, yet many believe that, even with all of the modern tools at our disposal, human beings function at no more than 10% of their mental capacity. This leads to the question of what exactly it is that comprises the remaining 90%. Yet another question that arises is this: If it has taken man four and a half billion years to be able to apply only 10% of his ability, how long will it take for him to make use of the remaining 90%?