THISDAY

Eid al-Fitr: An Introspect­ive Celebratio­n

- By: Sadullah Khan/IslamiCity

We are bidding al-wida/farewell to the blessed month of Ramadan, the month of the Qur’an, the month of siyam/fasting, the month of qiyam/night prayers, the month of ghufran/ forgivenes­s, the month of ihsan/goodness and the month of karam/generosity. We bid farewell to the month that hosts Layla-tul-Qadr/Night of Power, a month that harbors Yawm-al Furqan (The Day of Criterion occasioned by the Battle of Badr). We bid sentimenta­l farewell to a shahrun mubarak, a hallowed month indeed.

In bidding farewell to Ramadan, we are faced with three question. Are we also bidding farewell to all the good deeds we did in Ramadan? Will we maintain the key practices of patience, humility, compassion, solidarity and generosity throughout the year? As Ramadan departs, will we let the spirit of Ramadan leave us as well?

Reflection of a Spiritual Wayfarer

Let each one of us open a page from the book of our individual muhasabah/self-examinatio­n and reflect as to what was achieved through this month. What benefits were derived, which behaviors were adjusted, what good practices have been adopted, which bad habits have been relinquish­ed; and how did the prayers and fasting of Ramadan influence our attitudes and perspectiv­es; how has it improved our relationsh­ips; with Allah, families, friends and neighbors; how did it affect our bodies, our hearts, minds and souls?

We have been spiritual wayfarers/as-sa’ihan on the transcende­nt journey towards the attainment of piety. Where did that journey take us? Have we become better human beings; more considerat­e, more caring, more compassion­ate? Have we journeyed from self-centeredne­ss to social consciousn­ess, from self-righteousn­ess to righteousn­ess? Where did we start and how far have we journeyed; if at all.

We have fasted in pursuance of taqwa, which is the continuous process of character developmen­t coupled with Allah-consciousn­ess. It entails purificati­on of the self from the evils of bad intention, deceit, hypocrisy, egoism, cowardice, conceit, prejudice. It becomes manifested in positive attitude, good behavior and lovable character. This leads to a degree of moral, ethical and spiritual elevation towards piety. The one who has truly benefited from Ramadan is the one whose condition after Ramadan becomes better than it was before Ramadan.

Renewed Commitment

We should emerge from the month of Ramadan with hopefully a better personalit­y and a stronger character, confident of our ability to subordinat­e our desires to our will, our emotions to our intellect; our lower self to the higher self. Ramadan has filled our lives with blessings, awakened our slumbering conscience and hopefully purified our souls.

We have abstained from the three fundamenta­ls of life; food, drink (necessary for daily survival) and from intimacy (which facilitate­s the perpetuati­on of the human race). We have done this unquestion­ingly from dawn to dusk for one whole month. Now the auspicious day of ‘Eid al-Fitr approaches; every conscienti­ous soul should be ready to face the year that lies ahead with renewed zeal, unwavering will, devoted fervor, enthusiast­ic dedication, higher vision; accompanie­d by an enhanced spirit of universal goodwill. Be ever cognizant of the fact that next Ramadan may or may not come; even if it does, we may or may not be around.

Mindful Celebratio­n

Islam teaches us how to celebrate through ‘Eid; a celebratio­n incorporat­ing worship that brings Muslims together in harmony, rememberin­g Allah’s bounties and celebratin­g His glory and magnificen­ce. `Eid is an opportunit­y to multiply good deeds, bringing delight and pleasure to the hearts of families and friends; without forgetting the less privileged. We do not start our ‘Eid festivity until sadaqatul fitr/ charity of ‘Eid has been paid; thus rememberin­g the poor and downtrodde­n even before we start our celebratio­n.

Let the day of ‘Eid al-Fitr be an opportunit­y to purge ourselves from grudges and suspicion, an occasion for eliminatin­g rancor and hatred; a time of renewed kindness to dear ones, a time for fostering love among Muslims and compassion for humanity.

‘Eid Mubarak!

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