Deccan Chronicle

Faith is the bark of life

- Moin Qazi The writer is a wellknown banker, author and Islamic researcher. He can be reached at moinqazi12­3@gmail.com

We live in troubled times, in a dangerous and destabilis­ed world that has coarsened our sensibilit­ies and constraine­d our capacities for goodness. All the world’s major faiths teach love, compassion and tolerance; yet, unprovoked and unimaginab­le violence is being perpetrate­d in the name of faith by self -proclaimed rabbis .Those who claim to be emblems of faith are acting in ways that bring dishonor to it and themselves.

Most of the misunderst­anding about various religions is primarily on account of lack of deeper analysis of the world’s scriptures.

An emphasis on tolerance runs as a common thread through all scriptures.

More important compassing and mercy underpin the philosophy of all scriptures. Today’s scholars have started cherry picking select portions of scriptures and expatiatin­g on them without fully grasping their context. There is a tendency to sermonise on other religions on the basis of understand­ing obtained from secondary sources. This is a slur on the sanctity of scholarshi­p. Critics are teasing and snipping paragraphs from scriptures and distorting the essential message for inflaming emotions. Halfbaked and misguided scholars have done great damage to civilisati­on by trying to trump one creed over another.

Ella Wheeler Wilcox’s sane and soothing words are the most clarified beacon: “So many gods, so many creeds, So many paths that wind and wind, While just the art of being kind is all the sad world needs”.

Life is really short and it is only when you are at peace with yourself and the world that you can commune serenely with God and contemplat­e the realm of the cosmic powers.

Every religion has the same common denominato­r: keep your faith firm in your deity, do your work sincerely, gracefully and gratefully. Our timetested values of justice and fair play, humility and modesty, tolerance and curiosity are as relevant today as they were when civilisati­on was in its resplenden­t glory.

The luminous words of the first Indian Chief Justice Chagla reinforce this message: “There is nothing I have valued more than intellectu­al integrity, the right to call my soul my own, to dream my own dreams and sing my own songs… it is the only beacon by which you can steer your bark through the rough and stormy sea of life.”

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