Gulf Today

Eid spells hope again, amid virus gloom

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Once again, the time to celebrate Eid has come. The celebratio­ns may have been tempered by the rampaging coronaviru­s, but what hasn’t been tempered is the joy and happiness that binds families, friends and acquaintan­ces on this occasion.

For the second year in a row, the coronaviru­s pandemic casts a giant, eerie shadow over every aspect of our lives, be it education, sports, health, social interactio­n or online communicat­ion. It has torpedoed normal existence like nothing else could. It has impacted economies of nations like a Godzilla gone berserk, leaving a trail of destructio­n in its wake. Airlines have been grounded, layoffs have become the norm, companies have shutered, people have become nervous wrecks, even commiting suicide.

Yes, if there is one dreaded form the virus has taken, it is that of the Grim Reaper, felling people by the wayside. Nowhere is this more evident than in India, where over 400,000 people have been infected and nearly 240,000 have lost their lives.

Yes, Life has become more dear than anything else. It has turfed out pelf, position and power from the No.1 preoccupat­ion of humans. Suddenly, there has been a paradigm shit in focus. Life has become an all-encompassi­ng, all-pervasive, and all-embracing influence. People cling to Life for dear life.

And when people cling to existence by a mere thread, belief in the Maker hits the stratosphe­re. Surely, the virus cannot be manmade, with its fast-spreading global tentacles hiting millions of living beings rendered totally helpless.

Faith is our only hope, our conduit to redemption. We need Him more than anything else in the world right now. He is our key to survival. And our escape hatch from loneliness.

Eid in 2021 is not the same as the one in 2019, and among the things that are creating problems is the ban on travel. This has prevented many husbands or wives from rejoining their spouses, children or relatives in countries both near and far. Their hapless predicamen­t only strengthen­s their belief in the Creator, whose decree is final.

At a time when the pandemic has virtually keeled over the health machinery in some countries, the UAE has capped any move by the coronaviru­s to go berserk. It has kept the virus on a leash, going by the low casualties and the number of infections.

The country just does not score high on the Planet of Wellbeing, it is also the lamp standard of peace and communal harmony. Sectarian violence is totally extinct here. Faith is not a stumbling block here but a rock that makes any disruption stumble.

Smoothness, stability and serenity are the key catchphras­es that mark existence here, and that’s what Eid highlights: communal accord in every sense of the word.

Yes, the captious diehards may keep sounding the drumbeats of dissonance, saying they have been deprived of night outings, parties and celebratio­ns with friends, but what they do not realise is they have one thing without which all these so-called social must-dos are rendered obsolete: Life.

Islam teaches us to be tolerant, compassion­ate and charitable, and these are the virtues that we must follow to the T. They carry more urgency than anything else now. The virus has rebooted our very existence; it has also overhauled our whole way of thinking.

You do not get to meet face to face; you cannot take a walk in the open in some countries for fear of contractin­g the disease; you just cannot visit a friend at his home as this may lead to heightenin­g fears of being a germ carrier.

But at least, as aforementi­oned, you are alive. And for that you have to thank God.

Emphasisin­g communion with the Creator is paramount. That is what Eid stands for, and more. It teaches us to carry the baton of hope, not despair; tolerance, not conflict; joy, not sorrow. Eid Mubarak!

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