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Tuesday, 29 July 2014
Friday, 25 July 2014
An Individual Person’s Peace and Tranquility by Dr Israr Ahmed
I shall deal with the topic
of “The Qur’an and World Peace” at three different levels, viz., the peace and tranquility
of an individual person, the socio-political peace of a group, and finally,
world peace. An Individual Person’s
Peace and Tranquility One may be surprised that I am embarking upon a discussion of
world peace by first mentioning an individual’s personal peace and inner state
of harmony. But a moment’s reflection will be sufficient to bring home to the
reader the all-important truth that the most effective factor in establishing
world peace is personal peace and mental satisfaction of an individual. This is
so because of the following four reasons:
Firstly, an individual human being is the basic unit of humanity.
A wall, however high and long it may be, is after all a complex of bricks. Its
strength and stability depends on the strength and good quality of individual bricks.
Similarly world peace is unthinkable without the spiritual and psychological
peace of a large majority of its inhabitants.
Secondly, man in himself is a “miniature universe” and as such his
consciousness reflects the entire cosmos. This important truth has been fully
realized by the Sufis of Islam — the greatest researchers into human
psychology. That is the reason why I have chosen their term — “miniature
universe” or microcosm — to express my meaning. Just as external and
environmental happenings influence the inner state of man, it is equally true
that man also influences the macro-cosmic physical universe around him. His
inner state affects and brings about changes in the vast expanses of the
material cosmos. Therefore, the peace and tranquility enjoyed by human
individuals necessarily makes its impression on the outer world. In other
words, the subjective peace experienced within makes harmony possible in the
world outside the individual.
Thirdly, even a cursory glance at world history is enough to show
that often the personal disquietude of a few individuals led to disastrous wars
resulting in widespread bloodshed and destruction. If we study closely the
life-history and personalities of leaders like Hulagu Khan, Genghis Khan,
Hitler and Mussolini, we come to know that it was due to their mental
disquietude and perversity that the world peace was shattered and innumerable
innocent human beings were savagely killed.
Saturday, 19 July 2014
The Qur’an and World Peace - Intro
The Qur’an and World Peace
by
Dr. Israr Ahmad
Translated by Dr. Absar Ahmad
Markazi Anjuman Khuddam-ul-Qur’an
Markazi Anjuman Khuddam-ul-Qur’an
Lahore
2002
First Edition
1st Printing July, 1980
2000 Copies
2nd Printing July, 1982
2200 Copies
3rd Printing Nov., 1987
2000 Copies
4th Printing Dec., 1992
2000 Copies
5th Printing May, 1994 2000
Copies
Second Revised Edition
Printing Nov. 1998 2200
Copies
Third Revised Edition
Printing Oct. 2002 2200
Copies
Published by:
Markazi Anjuman Khuddam-ul-Qur’an Lahore
36-K, Model Town, Lahore-54700
Phone: 5869501-3 Fax:
5834000
E-Mail: anjuman@tanzeem.org
Webpage: www.tanzeem.org
No rights reserved.
The Anjuman does not reserve to itself any copyright for the
publication of this tract.
It may be published by any person who happens to be inspired by
the same purpose as the author.
Rs. 20/-
Translator's Note
Man’s most fundamental needs can be summed up as the need for knowledge,
the need for peace and harmony, and the need for a way to salvation.
the need for peace and harmony, and the need for a way to salvation.
That these needs have
many degrees and modes and that they are closely related to one another cannot
be denied. It is with these very questions that the Holy Qur’an — the last of
the Divine Books — deals. Mostly people from outside look at it as a book
containing some instructions about certain facts and principles of life and
conduct. It, however, is not so. There are guiding principles regarding all
vital issues, and one can unfold any number of valid interpretations.
Many of the best
minds devoted to burning questions such as ecological problems, pollution,
feeding of mankind, conquest of disease, bridging the gap between rich and poor
and, in particular, world peace, have been inspired by the faith and tenets of
Islam. And rightly so. Belief in One God brings us to believe in the oneness of
mankind and on the unity of mankind is built the concept of human dignity and
brotherhood. On the metaphysical existential plane, many would concede today that
true human happiness (in contradistinction to sensuous pleasure), mental peace,
and tranquility are not possible to attain without some sort of spiritual orientation.
When man follows Divine Guidance, he becomes free from any fear for the present
or the future, and any grief or sorrow for the past (khauf and huzn in
the Qur’anic terminology).
According to the
Qur’anic teachings, it is shirk (assigning partners to Allah) and kufr
(repudiation and disbelief in Allah)
that causes fasad (colossal
wrongness) across the world — the corruption and disorder in which people
indulge in this world, an active perversity which degrades things and depraves
men. Iman (staunch religious
belief), on the contrary, grants a believer serenity of spirit and heart,
resultant upon faith and prayer, the awareness of the Divine sufficiency and
inner tranquility. A truly believing and practicing Muslim experiences in his heart
sakinah (the Scheehinah of the Old Testament), the token of Divine
Presence and the peace it brings with it. Needless to say, true faith and
belief also entails ceaseless vigil on purity of motive and inner
integrity. Dr. Israr Ahmad, the author of this tract,
firmly believes that the deep trouble and distress in today’s world may have a
simple cause that we humans — and we must also add, we Muslims too — have not
properly obeyed God’s essential instructions and thereby have missed our main
goal. In his own modest way, Dr. Israr Ahmad has been actively busy in
propagating and disseminating the Qur’anic message for the last twenty years.
The present tract is based on a speech which he delivered on several occasions
at well-attended meetings of students and general public with the sole purpose
of calling people back to the Qur’an. I pray to the Almighty that this humble
effort may serve the purpose of bringing entire humanity in the fold of genuine
religious fellowship.
DR. ABSAR AHMAD
Director, English Department