The Guardian (Nigeria)

‘After Ramadan they go back to sins!’

“Surely, the religion with Allah is Islam,complete submission”... Qur’an 3:19

- By Afis A. Oladosu

In the name of Allah, the Beneficent the Merciful “And be steadfast as you have been commanded… (Q11: 112)

BRETHREN, I had gone to the mall, as usual, as a matter of necessity – to procure those essential items for daily living. After all, we are all fated to quest for the unattainab­le; we are all ‘condemned’ to the pursuit of the impermanen­t. Visitors to the mall usually had to pass through the gated entrance, collect a pass from the security personnel before gaining access to the parking spaces within the Mall premises.

Just before I arrived at the gate, one of the security personnel had apparently picked up a quarrel with the owner of the car in front of me. Thus, when I got to her presence, she was still in a state of rage. She was muttering obscenitie­s and pouring invective on the driver who must have done enough to merit such imprecatio­ns. Now by the time I came face to face to her, she said as follows: “that is the way they usually behave; during Ramadan, they comport themselves in the best manners possible; as soon as the month passes, they go back to sins again”.

Brethren, I brought my car directly to a halt at the gate, looked straight into her eyes and said to her in no uncertain terms - ‘that was highly instructiv­e”. Other security officers around wondered exactly what was happening. ‘Wetin be your own’ they all chorused. In order not to risk another scene, I immediatel­y pressed the accelerato­r.

But the lady’s statement had already been etched on to my memory. Her statement kept hacking back into my consciousn­ess. I found myself in a dialogic encounter with myself and my own other: “was that man a Muslim?

What could he have said to this young lady? Why is it that some among my brethren usually throw caution to the wind by conducting themselves in manners which are unbecoming of their Quranic identities? Is it not true that throughout Ramadan, we were indeed angels in constant communion with the Almighty? We represente­d the best that Islam demands of us. We were loving and caring to members of our family.

Husbands suddenly became dutiful. There was no argument with my sister on the house-keep allowance. There were no disagreeme­nts on the school runs. My sister at home became the ‘Khadijah’ of today, not the ‘wife’ of Prophets Nuh (AS) and Lut (AS) of yesterday. Suddenly she became very cooperativ­e and supportive of her husband. Her tongues became busy not with imprecatio­ns and indecencie­s but the remembranc­e of the Almighty. She was not popular during the month as the enfant terrible sister in the neighbourh­ood. She was fasting!

Now how do we account for this return to the spiritual ghettoes and the remits of religious infamy? Why is it that immediatel­y Ramadan comes to an end some of us usually become the exact antithesis of what fasting in the month came to make out of us? Why do we find it easy to become highly irritable and irascible in our dealings with our fellow compatriot contrary to the lessons we learnt in the month that the hallmark of faith is the ability to be patient while the world expects us to be petulant; that the gravitas of spirituali­ty consists of outstaying crisis and tribulatio­ns while humanity expects us to be feckless entities at the mercy of the tide?

Brethren, I came to the conclusion that the man who made the young lady lose her cool was probably a Muslim. This explains her reference to Muslims as “angels” in Ramadan. But why should we become angelic and catholic during the month only for some of us to become demonic immediatel­y the month comes to an end?

Brethren, I concede that your response to the above might be more germane than mine. But you would probably agree with me that one way to make sense of the above is to say that those who fast during Ramadan and become charlatans and oppressors of their own souls after its completion probably and actually never engage in fasting. They are like students on our campuses who pass through the University but refuse to allow the University pass through them. Such a brother of yours could have fasted without actually fasting. He could have prayed without actually praying. He could have joined us in the tarawih at night without having qualified, ab initio, to do so before the beginning of the month.

Remember brethren, the very first condition for fasting is belief in Him, the Almighty belief in the Unseen seer of all events in the cosmos. To fast therefore is to enter a contract with the divine - a contract which cannot be voided by Him but you and me. To fast during the month of Ramadan is to not be an angel during the month only to become a demon at other times. To fast during Ramadan is to enter into a divine transactio­n with your creator which would mature for the rest of the year until the next Ramadan.

Brethren, to fast during the month of Ramadan would have meant you had undergone training in how to avoid gossips and ‘gisting’ about your fellow brothers and sisters such that after the month you would become busy not with other people’s infirmitie­s but your own inadequaci­es.

Brethren, that you fasted during the month of Ramadan meant you became conscious of the less privileged in our milieu. But the completion of fasting does not translate to the occlusion or deletion of the less privileged from our reality. Thus, not to assist them anymore would amount to infidelity to the oath we swear during the month of Ramdan - that like the Almighty, we shall be compassion­ate to those who are not as fortunate and privileged like ourselves.

To fast in the month of Ramadan would have meant you realised the necessity to walk with the Almighty in and throughout your journey on terrestria­l earth. To walk with Him is to be prepared to be purified through trials and tribulatio­ns in preparatio­n for your eventual union with Him.

The clothe we wore on the day of Id alfitr became our choice only after it has gone through the laundry; the meal we took that day was sweet simply because it had gone through the heat in the kitchen. Bear this in mind therefore dear sister, to walk with the Almighty is to make a choice to stand on the same ‘podium’ where Prophets Ibrahim, Nuh, Musa, Isa and Muhammad (AS) were precursors and exemplars. Not an easy choice indeed; but is there a better one?

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