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Sunday, August 12, 2001
Focus
Need to stress the sweet
side of Islam
In the days of the Prophet Muhammad, Islam was propagated
as a beautiful religion that encompassed discipline and
knowledge. However, over the centuries scholars have turned
Islam into a rigid and unapproachable religion. In an
interview with Shaykh Muhammad Hisham Kabbani, chairman of the
Islamic Supreme Council of America (ISCA), FARIDAH BEGUM finds
out what can be done to reverse this.
BY the time we secured an interview with Shaykh Muhammad
Hisham Kabbani, he had already been in Malaysia for four days.
A stocky man with piercing eyes set in a friendly face
which quite readily breaks into a smile, he exudes warmth and
weaves a magical effect that makes his audience creep closer
to him to listen to his words of wisdom on Islam.
He speaks of the wonder of Islam as it should have been
told to us during religious lessons in primary schools.
His description is a far cry from our own experiences of
grudgingly reciting prayers. At such tender ages, sometimes
not even 10 yet, we were told to get the sound right before
parroting the meanings and reasons for reading a particular
scripture.
Where is the sweetness that we Muslims have been told is
there but are still searching for?
Shaykh Hisham said it very simply: SPIRITUALITY! "The
spirituality of Islam has almost been lost," he stated
many times.
Touching on the mentality, the mindset, of those who had
been raised as Muslims, he said: "They believe that the
religion must be presented in a serious manner or all
importance is lost. They convey their messages by shouting and
yelling, thinking that the young would pick up and understand
whatever they are teaching."
Shaykh is not a man given to sudden outbursts. Steeped in
religion for as long as he has been walking--what with his
paternal home being the centre of education for ulamaks
headed by his uncles, one of whom was in charge of the
religious ministry in Lebanon, and having a cousin who is
currently the mufti of Lebanon--he knows his stuff.
"I grew up in a conservative Muslim family that
believed in schooling all their children with strong Islamic
values. Therefore, when I speak of the mindset, it is not out
of grudge. I have been through it myself. The teacher holds an
extremely long cane in his hand. If he didn't particularly
like the way a scripture was being read, he just hit you on
the knuckle or hand," he said.
Shaykh Hisham acknowledges that rigidity is a bane for the
young who will end up becoming frustrated from regimentation.
"The young cannot associate themselves with regimented
processes. It is different when they self-regiment things but
not vice-versa," he said with some degree of amusement.
He said that the young today are raised with more
Westernised inclination and will not accept threats feebly.
"You can no longer go about yelling or shouting at
them, or threatening them that if they didn't do as you say,
they would be kafir (infidel), or saying that something
was haram or halal without explanations.
"The teacher or scholar does not try to balance his
way of approaching the student in a more persuasive and
amicable manner," he said, adding this was where the
danger lay.
Shaykh Hisham said the current presentation, which was
common in almost all Muslim institutions of learning, was
strict and dry.
"It is in this manner that the good, tasty and sweet
aspects of Islam goes unlearned. This frustrates the students
and starts a rebellion within them," he said.
For example, he said: "I graduated with a Bachelor's
Degree in Chemistry in the United States and after that had a
brief stint in Belgium. It was there in Europe that I saw
youths from good families in Lebanon give in to their
frustrations and dabble in negative elements.
"Many had gone into devil worshipping and the like.
They did it out of frustration."
We, Shaykh Hisham said, have to understand that many things
could be said in a rational and logical manner, but in subtle
and persuasive tones.
"You can try the negative way--tell people, if you
don't pray, you will enter hellfire.
"But why can't we say, in a more encouraging manner,
that if you pray, you will enter paradise, and so on."
The moral is that you cannot teach in a way to frighten
people, he said. "We must bring about Allah's mercy, not
the harsh side of punishments and difficulties."
Shaykh Hisham said this could be the reason why a growing
number of students from religious schools are getting involved
in devil worship.
He said an influential family in Malaysia had approached
him about one of their members. This person who was in his 40s
was schooled in religious studies and had all the while
followed the Islamic teachings ingrained in him.
"It is now that the person has rebelled against all
that he has been taught. Why? All out of frustration,"
Shaykh Hisham said.
So, what must be done?
Shaykh Hisham said scholars must change their style of
presenting religious edicts and teachings to effectively
reflect the spirituality of Islam.
"Islam is not only about its physical aspects of
praying five times a day, paying the zakat, fasting
during the Ramadan month or performing the haj.
"There are two other aspects that the scholars have
not emphasised on--the six pillars of Iman and the
state of perfection, Ehsan," he said.
Shaykh Hisham said scholars must learn to balance their
teachings with spirituality, that is, to expound the mercy of Allah
and not His punishments or anger.
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