Saturday, May 30, 2026

Respond with What Is Best and Beautiful

 

بِسْمِ اللّهِ الرَّحْمـَنِ الرَّحِيمِ 

وَلَا تَسْتَوِى ٱلْحَسَنَةُ وَلَا ٱلسَّيِّئَةُ ۚ
ٱدْفَعْ بِٱلَّتِى هِىَ أَحْسَنُ
فَإِذَا ٱلَّذِى بَيْنَكَ وَبَيْنَهُۥ عَدَاوَةٌۭ كَأَنَّهُۥ وَلِىٌّ حَمِيمٌۭ

Wa lā tastawī al-ḥasanatu wa lā al-sayyi’ah.
Idfaʿ billatī hiya aḥsan.
Fa-idhā alladhī baynaka wa baynahu ʿadāwatun ka’annahu waliyyun ḥamīm.

“Good and evil cannot be equal. Respond to evil with what is best, then the one you are in a feud with will be like a close friend.”

Sūrat Fuṣṣilat 41:34 

There is a whole education in this verse. Not only about evil, but mistakes, slights, perceived sins and the like as well.

Allah does not only say: respond with good. He says: respond with that which is aḥsan.

Not merely correct. Not merely legal. Not merely deserved. 

Give the best and most beautiful response.

Anyone can react. Anyone can expose. Anyone can correct with a hard voice and then call it truth. Anyone can defeat another person in a moment of their shame. But to see a mistake clearly, and still choose the path that saves the heart — that is a rare kind of moral fiber and wisdom.

This is sitr: covering what does not need to be exposed.
This is rifq: gentleness that knows when a soul is fragile.
This is futuwwa: noble-hearted conduct, where a person would rather carry discomfort himself than place humiliation on another.

But here we need a boundary.

Sitr is not the hiding of abuse. It is not protecting injustice. It is not asking the harmed to remain silent so that the wrongdoer can continue.

That is not mercy. 

The stories of sitr are about private embarrassment, poverty, weakness, repentable mistakes, and moments where correction can be given without crushing the person. When there is ongoing harm, the beautiful response is to stop it. Sometimes the most merciful thing is protection, accountability, and truth brought into the light.

But when the matter is a human stumble, an awkward moment, a teachable mistake, a poor person’s need, or a soul trying to come back, then this verse opens a very different door.

Idfaʿ billatī hiya aḥsan.

Respond with what is best and most beautiful.

There is the famous story told about Ḥātim al-Aṣamm. The reason why this saint and friend of God got the title al-Aṣamm (the deaf one) is the following.

As a scholar he often had people consult him on religious matters. A woman came to ask him a question. During the conversation, something embarrassing happened to her (she broke wind). She was ashamed. He could have pretended not to notice. He could have quickly moved on. But he did something deeper. He acted as though he could not hear properly, asking her to raise her voice, so that she would believe he had not heard what had embarrassed her.

And then he continued that appearance for years, so that she would never discover that he had protected her dignity that day.

Most people protect themselves for years. He protected someone else’s dignity for years.

This is not simply a story about hearing. It is a story about what the heart chooses to hear. Some people hear a private embarrassment and turn it into gossip. Some hear it and store it as power. Some hear it and enjoy the secret superiority it gives them.

But the noble heart hears and buries.

It hears and covers. It hears and forgets for the sake of Allah.

Then there is the story in al-Qushayrī’s Risālah of the bridegroom whose would-be wife became ill with smallpox. She felt she had sinned and hence her face was marked, and now she is ruined for life. On the night of their wedding, he feared that she would spend her life knowing that he saw those marks and perhaps feeling diminished in his eyes. So he started off by apologizing for his weak eyesight. Then after a while he said he had become near blind. He lived with her for twenty years like that, until she died. Only then did people discover that he had not been blind at all.

He had chosen to become “blind” to protect her heart.

Twenty years.

Not twenty minutes of politeness. Not a kind sentence. Not a social performance. Twenty years of carrying a hidden mercy.

This is love with adab. This is chivalry without announcement. This is the kind of nobility that does not need to be seen, because it was never done for people in the first place.

And this is important for us because we live in an age of social media where everything is exhibited.

Food is shown. Children are shown. Charity is shown. Pain is shown. Anger is shown. Even apologies are shown. Even tears are shown. There is almost no private courtyard left for the soul.

But these stories teach the opposite.

The most beautiful things are often hidden.

A covered weakness. A secret charity. A correction given softly. A person saved from public shame.

There is also the story of Sayyidunā al-Ḥasan and Sayyidunā al-Ḥusayn عَلَيْهِمَا ٱلسَّلَامُ when they saw an elderly man making wuḍūʾ incorrectly. They were young. He was old. The mistake was real. But so was his dignity.

They did not say, “You are wrong.” They did not make his age a burden upon him.

They asked him to judge between them as they each performed wuḍūʾ. As he watched, he understood. He learnt. And because his honour had been protected, his heart remained open.

This is a whole curriculum for teachers and parents.

Correction is not only about transferring information. It is about protecting the learner’s relationship with truth.

A child can be corrected in such a way that he loves truth more.

And a child can be corrected in such a way that he begins to fear truth, resent truth, avoid truth, and hide from truth.

The information may be the same.

But the adab changes everything.

Of course we remember the hadith of the Prophet ﷺ when he was in the masjid with the Bedouin who urinated in the masjid. It was a serious mistake. It was public. People rushed toward him. They were ready to react. But the Prophet ﷺ told them to leave him, and then to clean the place with water. He taught them that they had been sent to make matters easy, not difficult.

He ﷺ  corrected the problem without crushing the person.

The masjid was cleaned.

The man was not humiliated or harmed in any way

This is not softness without standards. This is standards carried with mercy. The mistake was not approved. The urine was not ignored. The place was purified. But the human being was not turned into a spectacle.

How often do we do the opposite?

We correct the small spill but create a larger wound. We fix the outer mess but break the inner person. We protect the floor but not the heart.

Then there is the man who came to the Prophet ﷺ saying, “I am ruined.”

He had made a serious mistake in Ramadan. He came in distress. He did not come proud. He came ashamed. The Prophet ﷺ walked him through the expiation, but the man was too poor for each option. The Prophet ﷺ gave him dates told him to give them in charity. The man said there was no family in Madinah poorer than his own. The Prophet ﷺ smiled and told him to feed his family with them.

A man came saying, “I am ruined.” He left with food for his family.

This is what mercy does.

It does not make sin light. But it also does not make the sinner believe that return is impossible.

Some people speak about sin in such a way that the sinner feels pushed further from Allah. The Prophet ﷺ taught in such a way that the sinner found a path back to Allah.

Do not make Shayṭān’s work easier by closing the door of hope.

A person can be guilty and still beloved to Allah in ways we do not see. A person can be struggling and still have īmān. A person can fall more than once and still have a road back. We must hate the sin without learning to even dislike the human being.

This is especially important in education. Children and young people are still becoming. They are not finished books. They are pages being written.

A child who lies is not “a liar” forever. A child who is angry is not “an angry child” forever. A child who fails is not “a failure.” A child who disturbs is not “a problem.”

The language we use can either become a prison or a bridge.

The Prophet ﷺ built bridges.

Then there is Jaʿfar al-Ṣādiq  رحمه الله وَ عَلَيْهِ ٱلسَّلَامُ.

A man in Madinah thought his purse had been stolen. He saw Jaʿfar al-Ṣādiq and accused him. Jaʿfar did not defend himself loudly. He did not demand an apology. He did not gather witnesses to protect his own name. He asked how much had been in the purse, took the man home, and gave him the amount. Later, the man found his own purse and returned to apologize and give the money back. Jaʿfar refused to take it back, saying that when he gives something, he does not reclaim it.

There are people who cannot bear to be misunderstood for one minute.

Jaʿfar bore false suspicion and turned it into generosity.

This does not mean we must always allow false accusations to stand. Sometimes truth must be clarified. Sometimes reputations must be protected because other people may be harmed by lies. But the story shows one kind of nobility: the soul that does not need to win every scene.

Sometimes the highest person in the room is not the one who proves himself right.

It is the one who saves the other person from sinking deeper into shame.

Then there is the story of the stolen eggplants. Some eggplants used in a meal were discovered to have been stolen. When the matter reached the landowner, he did not only ask, “How do I punish this man?” He gave him land, two oxen, a donkey, and a plow so that he would not need to steal again.

This is restorative mercy.

It does not praise theft. It asks a deeper question: what road can help this person leave theft behind?

When we place all these stories beside Sūrat Fuṣṣilat 41:34, one meaning begins to appear.

The good deed and the bad deed are not equal.

The first situation is one thing. Our response is another.

Someone is embarrassed. Become “deaf” if you must. Become “blind” if you must. Let your ego lose so another heart may remain whole.
Someone is feeling bad about themselves. Respond with what is more beautiful.
Someone makes a mistake. Respond with what is more beautiful.
Someone creates a public mess. Respond with what is more beautiful.
Someone comes ashamed after sin. Respond with what is more beautiful.
Someone falsely accuses you. If you are able, respond with what is more beautiful.
Someone is poor. Give in a way that protects their honour.
Someone steals from need. Help him find a lawful path.

This is not small adab. This is civilization.

A community is not only judged by how it honours its successful people. It is judged by how it treats the embarrassed, the poor, the mistaken, the struggling, the emotionally overwhelmed, the socially awkward, the one who has fallen and does not know how to stand again.

A school is not only known by its assemblies and displays. It is known by the way a teacher corrects a child when no one else is watching. A home is not only known by its rules. It is known by the tone in which those rules are carried. A heart is not only known by what it refuses. It is known by how it responds when it has the power to shame and chooses not to.

This is why aḥsan is such a demanding word.

It does not let us hide behind minimum goodness.

It asks: what is the most beautiful response available to me now?

Not the easiest. Not the loudest. Not the one that makes me look right. Not the one that gives my anger a stage.

The most beautiful.

Sometimes the most beautiful response is silence. Sometimes it is a private correction. Sometimes it is cleaning the masjid floor. Sometimes it is telling people not to curse their brother. Sometimes it is refusing to expose a person who is already ashamed.

The careful heart must learn the difference.

May Allah make us people of sitr without cowardice.

People of mercy without weakness.

People of truth without harshness.

People who correct without crushing.

People who give without humiliating.

People who teach without making the learner small.

People who do not help Shayṭān against their brother or sister.

May Allah make our homes and schools places where mistakes become doors to growth, not labels that follow a child forever.

May He give us the adab of the Prophet ﷺ, the generosity of the righteous, and hearts that search, in every difficult moment, for allatī hiya aḥsan.

For the response that is more beautiful.

Āmīn. 

Source note 

The reports of the Bedouin in the masjid anc the man who came distressed in Ramadan are in Ṣaḥīḥ al-Bukhārī. The story of al-Ḥasan and al-Ḥusayn teaching wuḍūʾ is cited by Hadith Answers from al-Kardarī’s Manāqib al-Imām al-Aʿẓam and should be presented as an adab/manāqib report, not as a Prophetic hadith. The stories of the bridegroom, the stolen eggplants, Jaʿfar al-Ṣādiq and the purse are found in al-Qushayrī’s al-Risālah, in sections dealing with futuwwa and reports of the righteous; they are moral reports rather than ṣaḥīḥ hadith. The Ḥātim al-Aṣamm story is best used as an adab retelling, with IslamiCity giving the common version that he acted hard of hearing to protect the woman’s embarrassment.  

The Blessings of an Atom's Weight of Good

بِسْمِ اللّهِ الرَّحْمـَنِ الرَّحِيمِ 

فَمَن يَعْمَلْ مِثْقَالَ ذَرَّةٍ خَيْرًا يَرَهُۥ

Faman yaʿmal mithqāla dharratin khayran yarah.

“So whoever does an atom’s weight of good will see it.”

Sūrat al-Zalzalah 99:7

There is something very comforting and very awe-inspiring in this verse.

Comforting, because no good is lost. Awe-inspiring, because no good is small.

We live in a world that has trained us to admire size. Big projects. Big speeches. Big donations. Big platforms. Big changes. Big names. Big buildings. Big announcements.

But Allah mentions the weight of a dharrah.

A speck. A particle. Something almost invisible to the eye. An atom or even smaller.

As though Allah is teaching us that the moral life is not built only in public moments. It is built in the quiet place. In the hand that bends down. In the foot that stops. In the heart that notices. In the mercy shown when no one is clapping. In the good that may not even look like good to the people.

One paper. One thorn. One thirsty dog. One coin. One continued support after deep hurt. One basket of food carried in the night.

This is not smallness. This is the hidden architecture of the soul.

A story is told in the Sufi tradition about Bishr al-Ḥāfī. Before his repentance, he once saw a piece of paper on the road bearing the name of Allah. Many people may have passed it. Some may not have noticed. Some may have noticed and still walked on. But he stopped. He picked it up. He perfumed it. He placed it somewhere elevated.

A piece of paper. But not only a piece of paper.

Because when a thing carries the name of Allah, the heart that loves Allah cannot treat it carelessly. The story says that this act became a turning point in his life. A small reverence opened a large door. The paper was lifted, but in truth, the man was lifted.

This is the first lesson.

Reverence begins before explanation. Sometimes the body understands before the tongue can speak. The hand bends down. The eye softens. The heart says: this is not to be stepped over.

Then there is the man in Ṣaḥīḥ al-Bukhārī who saw a thorny branch lying in the road. He removed it so that people would not be harmed. No sermon. No audience. No banner. No institution. No photograph or instareel of the deed.

An ordinary road. Only a branch. Only strangers who would pass later and never know who protected their feet.

But Allah knew. And Allah forgave him. (Sunnah)

This is a whole education.

Leave the world better, safer than you found it. Do not wait for someone else to remove the harm.

Do not say, “It is not my branch.” Do not say, “It is only the road.”

The road is also a place of worship when the heart walks through it with responsibility.

The masjid teaches us how to stand before Allah. The road teaches us whether that standing changed us.

Then there is the woman who saw a dog dying of thirst near a well. Society may have judged her by her past. People may have known her by her sins. But in that moment, she saw a creature of Allah in pain. She went down to the well, filled her shoe with water, and gave the dog a drink.

A shoe became a cup. A well became a mercy. A dog became a witness. And Allah forgave her. (Sunnah)

SubḥānAllah.

Sometimes the heart is revealed by what it does for the one who cannot repay it.

The animal cannot praise her. The dog cannot write her name. The creature cannot improve her reputation. But Allah saw the mercy.

This should make us careful.

Careful with how we speak about people. Careful with how quickly we decide who is far from Allah. Careful with how we measure a life.

A person may carry a dark history and still have one living place in the heart. And perhaps Allah, in His mercy, opens the door through that living place.

Then there is the man who gave charity at night. He wanted to give sincerely. But each time, the charity reached someone people thought unsuitable: a woman known for immorality, a wealthy person, and a thief. By the standards of public opinion, his charity had missed its target.

But he was told that his charity had been accepted. Perhaps the woman would leave her sin. Perhaps the rich man would learn to spend. Perhaps the thief would stop stealing. (Sunnah)

This is the third lesson.

We do not control the journey of goodness after it leaves our hand.

We plant. Allah knows what the fruit is.

Sometimes we want our charity to produce a visible result immediately. We want the poor person to behave in a way that pleases us. We want the recipient to be grateful in the language we understand. We want to feel that our giving was wise, clean, efficient, and appreciated.

But sincerity is not ownership. Once the deed has left the hand, it belongs to Allah.

And Allah may use it in a place we would never have chosen.

The coin may enter a house and stop a sin. The meal may enter a heart and soften arrogance. The gift may reach a thief and interrupt a crime. The giver may never know. But Allah knows.

Then we remember Abū Bakr al-Ṣiddīq رضي الله عنه and Misṭaḥ.

This was not an easy story. It was not theoretical forgiveness. It was not a polite sentence spoken from a safe distance. Misṭaḥ had been involved in the painful slander against ʿĀ’ishah رضي الله عنها. Abū Bakr رضي الله عنه had been supporting him financially. After such hurt, he swore he would stop. And then came the reminder. Do you not love that Allah should forgive you?

Abū Bakr رضي الله عنه resumed his support. (Sunnah)

This is not soft forgiveness. This is strong forgiveness.

It is one thing to say, “I am no longer angry.” It is another thing to continue protecting someone’s future when they have wounded your home.

There are wounds after which the ego says: withdraw every good. Let them feel it. Let them know what they lost. Let them taste the absence of my help.

But the heart trained by Allah asks a harder question: Do I want only justice from Allah, or do I want forgiveness? If I want forgiveness, then I must learn to let mercy pass through me, even when it burns. This does not mean we erase boundaries. It does not mean we allow harm to continue. It does not mean we become foolish in the name of kindness.

But it does mean that the believer’s heart should never enjoy cutting off mercy.

Then there is the report about Zayn al-ʿĀbidīn, ʿAlī ibn al-Ḥusayn رحمه الله وَ عَلَيْهِ ٱلسَّلَامُ.

He would carry food secretly at night to the poor of Madinah. Some people did not know where their provision was coming from. After he passed away, the night food stopped, and the marks from carrying those loads were seen on his shoulders. 

This is one of the most beautiful images of hidden service.

Food in the night. Shoulders carrying what the tongue did not announce. A body marked by mercy.

Some people want their names carved into stone. Others allow service to carve itself into their shoulders.

The first seeks remembrance from people. The second is remembered by Allah.

And perhaps this is one of the great needs of education today: to teach children the dignity of the unseen deed.

True good action needs no certificate. True kindness needs no likes. True service needs not be converted into reputation. Sincere deeds should be left between the servant and Allah, like a seed buried in dark soil, waiting for the Day when all hidden things will rise.

When we place these stories beside Sūrat al-Zalzalah, one meaning begins to appear.

Allah is not only watching the Universe. Allah is watching the atom.

The paper on the road. The thorn in the path. The dog by the well. The coin in the undeserved hand. The support continued after injury. The basket carried at night.

And this changes how we live.

It removes the word “only” from our moral vocabulary. It is only a paper. It is only a branch. It is only a dog. It is only a small coin. It is only one person who hurt me. It is only one family in the night.

No.

A living heart says: Allah sees. This is why the small deed matters. Not because the deed is always large in itself, but because it reveals the state of the heart.

Different stories. One thread.

A heart that notices. A heart that still trembles. A heart that does not walk over the small. A heart that knows that Allah may hide a door to His mercy inside an act that people barely count.

This is also a curriculum for our children.

Teach them to lift a paper with Allah’s name. Teach them to remove harm from a path. Teach them to give water to an animal. Teach them to give without controlling the result. Teach them to forgive without becoming weak. Teach them to serve without needing to be seen. Teach them that the world is not divided into religious and ordinary.

Allah is watching the road. Allah is watching the well. Allah is watching the hand. Allah is watching the shoulder. Allah is watching the heart.

And one day, the atom will speak.

One day, the small deed will no longer be small. One day, what was hidden will be shown.

May Allah give us hearts that notice.

May He make us people of quiet mercy.

May He make our children tender without making them weak, careful without making them anxious, generous without making them proud.

May He allow us to see the good before the moment passes.

May He forgive us through deeds we have forgotten, and accept from us the deeds no one saw.

May He make even an atom’s weight of good heavy on our scales.

Āmīn.  

Source note: The hadith-grounded stories are from Ṣaḥīḥ al-Bukhārī and Ṣaḥīḥ Muslim; Bishr is carried here as a Sufi/devotional report, and Zayn al-ʿĀbidīn’s story as a biographical/manāqib report, not as Prophetic hadith. The Bishr report is associated with ʿAṭṭār’s tradition and retold in later devotional writing. 

The Qur’an and the Heart That Treads Carefully

   بِسْمِ اللّهِ الرَّحْمـَنِ الرَّحِيمِ 

ذَٰلِكَ ٱلْكِتَٰبُ لَا رَيْبَ فِيهِ هُدًى لِّلْمُتَّقِينَنَ

Dhālika al-kitābu lā rayba fīh.
Hudan lil-muttaqīn.


“This is the Book about which there is no doubt, a guidance for those conscious of Allah.”

Sūrat al-Baqarah 2:2

As I walked today with a dear friend, colleague, and fellow-seeker along a beautiful riverside path, lined with trees, we navigated around various animal droppings — from cows to dogs to birds. I was reminded of the verse above. Of Taqwa. And subsequently of a few stories that I know in this context.

There is something very gentle and very serious in this verse.

Allah does not say only that the Qur’an is guidance. He says it is guidance for the muttaqīn. For the people of taqwā.

This should make us reflect.

Because sometimes we approach the Qur’an as though guidance is only information. As though if we understand the Arabic, read the translation, listen to the tafsīr, and collect enough points, then guidance has arrived.

But the verse is saying something deeper.

The Qur’an gives guidance. But the heart must be in a state to receive guidance.

Rain falls on stone and soil. The rain is the same. What receives it is not the same.

The Qur’an is light. But the eye must be willing to open.

So what is taqwā?

Sayyidunā ʿUmar ibn al-Khaṭṭāb رضي الله عنه once asked Ubayy ibn Kaʿb رضي الله عنه about taqwā.

Ubayy asked him, in meaning: Have you ever walked through a thorny path? ʿUmar said yes.

What did you do?

ʿUmar said: I lifted my garment and walked carefully, protecting myself from the thorns.

Ubayy said: That is taqwā.

SubḥānAllah. Taqwā is not a vague spiritual feeling. It is not a word we put on posters. It is not a beautiful sound in a lecture. It is careful walking. It is the garment lifted. It is the eye alert, awake. It is the foot placed with intention and attention. It is knowing that life has thorns. 

Thorns in money. Thorns in speech. Thorns in glances. Thorns in anger. Thorns in shortcuts. Thorns in praise. Thorns in power. Thorns in appetite. Thorns in the secret places where no one is watching.

The person of taqwā does not pretend the path is empty. He  or she walks as one who knows.

This is why the stories of the righteous are so important. Not because every report has the same level of strength. Not because we build law from every tale. But because a true story, or even a wisdom tale carried with care, can show us what a word looks like when it becomes flesh, habit, choice, sacrifice, and character.

Rūḥ al-Bayān, in its commentary on this verse, mentions some stories.

The first is about Muḥammad ibn Sīrīn.

He had forty jars of clarified butter. His servant found a mouse in one of them. Ibn Sīrīn asked: From which jar did you take it out?

The servant did not know.

So Ibn Sīrīn poured out all forty.

A modern mind may rush to calculate the loss.

Forty jars.

How much money? How much trade? How much waste? How much inconvenience?

But Ibn Sīrīn was calculating something else.

How much doubt can enter the stomach before it darkens the heart?

This is the first lesson.

Taqwā is not only avoiding what is clearly forbidden. Sometimes it is stepping away from what has become unclear.

The careless person says: It is probably fine. The greedy person says: No one will know. The anxious person says: I cannot afford to lose this. 

But the heart trained in taqwā says: I cannot afford to feed myself with doubt. This is not a call to make religion hard. It is a call to make the heart honest.

There are people who are very careful about expiry dates, brands, packaging, ingredients, and price. They inspect what enters the body.

But taqwā asks a quieter question.

What enters the soul?

A doubtful coin. A doubtful word. A doubtful transaction. A doubtful advantage. A doubtful habit.

The body may survive it. The heart may not.

Then comes the second story.

Abū Yazīd al-Bisṭāmī bought safflower seed in Hamadān. He returned to Bisṭām. When he looked through what he had brought, he found two ants among the seeds.

Two ants, rendered homeless away from their homes and families.

Most people would not notice them. And if they noticed, they would not care. And if they cared, they would say: It is only two ants.

But Abū Yazīd travelled back to Hamadān to return them to their place. Their home. For he did not want to be one to willfully separate a creature from its family.

This is not only a story about ants.

It is a story about attention.

The world becomes brutal when we decide that small lives do not matter. First two ants. Then a branch. Then an animal. Then a servant. Then a poor person. Then a child. Then a river. Then a forest. Then a whole community.

Cruelty often begins with the sentence: It is only…

It is only an ant. It is only a tree. It is only a worker. It is only a little cheating. It is only one lie. It is only one child’s heart. It is only a small wound.

Taqwā removes the word “only” from the moral life.

Nothing is too small for Allah to see. And if Allah sees it, the heart should not be blind to it.

This is a powerful curriculum for all of us.

Not merely to teach them facts about nature, but reverence for life. Not merely to teach them not to litter, but to feel that the earth is an amānah. Not merely to teach them kindness as a school value, but to let them sense that kindness reaches the ant, the branch, the bird, the soil, the water, the invisible creature under the leaf.

A child who learns to restore an ant gently back to its home may one day learn to hold power gently.

Then comes the third story.

Imām Abū Ḥanīfa رحمه الله would not sit in the shade of a tree owned by someone who owed him money.

Why?

Because he feared that even shade could become a benefit connected to a loan.

Shade.

Not coins. Not food. Not a gift. Not a written condition.

Only shade.

Most of us would not even count it.

But this is the nature of taqwā. It counts what the ego dismisses.

And in the same passage, another story is told of Abū Yazīd washing his clothes in the wilderness with a companion. The companion suggested hanging the clothes on a vineyard wall.

He refused. We do not drive a peg into people’s walls.

Then the companion suggested hanging them on a tree. He refused. It may damage the branches or the young leaves.

Then the companion suggested spreading them on the ground.

He refused. That is fodder for animals. We should not cover it from them.

So he turned his back to the sun while wearing the garment until one side dried, then turned again until the other side dried.

This is a whole education in one scene.

The wall has a right. The tree has a right. The animal has a right. The owner has a right. The unseen future has a right.

Taqwā is not only prayer in the masjid. It is how you use a wall that is not yours.

It is how you touch a branch. It is whether your comfort hides food from an animal. It is whether your convenience quietly steals from another being.

This is why the Qur’an guides the muttaqīn. Because the muttaqī is already asking: Ya Allah, where are the thorns?

Then we remember the milk seller’s daughter.

ʿUmar رضي الله عنه was walking at night, checking on the people. He heard a mother telling her daughter to mix water into the milk to increase profit. The daughter refused.

The mother said that ʿUmar could not see them. The daughter answered with a sentence that has travelled through centuries:

If ʿUmar cannot see us, the Lord of ʿUmar sees us.

This is taqwā in the marketplace.

Not in a sermon. Not in a public prayer. Not in front of an audience.

In the hidden hour. In the small business decision. In the kitchen. In poverty.

When there is a reason to cheat and a chance not to be caught. Many people are honest when honesty is inspected. But taqwā is honesty when inspection disappears.

This is the difference between reputation and character.

Reputation asks: Who is watching? Character asks: Who am I becoming?

Taqwā asks: Is Allah pleased?

Then there is the man in Ṣaḥīḥ al-Bukhārī who borrowed one thousand dinars. He promised to repay. Allah was made his witness and surety. When the time came, he tried to cross the water but found no boat.

A lesser person may have said: I tried. I am excused. But he did something strange and beautiful.

He placed the money and a letter inside a piece of wood, sealed it, and entrusted it to Allah. The wood reached the lender, and the money was delivered.

This is not a story telling us to become careless and throw obligations into water.

It is the opposite.

It is a story about a man who exhausted the means available to him, and then trusted Allah with what he could not control.

Tawakkul is not laziness. Tawakkul is effort with a heart that knows Allah is the One who carries things across oceans.

And there is another beauty in the story.

When the debtor later arrived with another thousand dinars fearing the original one might not have found their way to the lender, the lender did not take advantage. He told him that Allah had already delivered what was sent.

So both men passed the test.

The debtor passed the test of effort. The lender passed the test of fairness.

This is taqwā in contracts.

To repay when it is hard. To refuse extra when it is not yours. To keep Allah between yourself and money.

Then we remember Abū Bakr al-Ṣiddīq رضي الله عنه.

One day he ate from food brought by his servant. Afterwards the servant told him that the food came from a payment connected to fortune-telling from the days before Islam.

Abū Bakr was shaken. He put his hand into his mouth and vomited what he had eaten.

Again, the modern mind may struggle.

It was already eaten. He did not know. It was only a small amount.

But that is exactly why the story matters.

The closer the heart is to Allah, the more sensitive it becomes. A living heart feels what a deadened heart ignores.

Some people can swallow injustice and sleep. Some can swallow lies and smile. Some can swallow doubtful earnings and call it success.

Abū Bakr could not swallow one doubtful morsel.

This is the state of a heart that refuses to be nourished by darkness.

And then there is Imām Aḥmad ibn Ḥanbal as a young boy.

Before the great scholar, before the trials, before the books, before the students, there was a child with a conscience. He was asked to carry reports for his uncle. When he realised these papers contained spying on people, he threw them into the water. He chose anger from his uncle over assistance in something wrong.

This is taqwā in childhood.

And this matters deeply.

We sometimes imagine that children will learn integrity later.

Later, when they are older. Later, when the stakes are bigger. Later, when the world becomes serious.

But childhood is already serious.

A child is already making moral choices. A child is already learning whether adults care more about obedience or truth. A child is already watching whether we reward cleverness without conscience. A child is already sensing whether Allah is mentioned only in worship, or also in fairness, money, speech, work, and responsibility.

Imām Aḥmad did not become strong suddenly.

His heart had already been trained to say no.

This may be one of the most important tasks of education. To raise children who can say no to such temptations.

No to cheating even if marks are gained. No to cruelty even if friends laugh. No to waste even if everyone wastes. No to spying even if an adult asks. No to profit without purity. No to convenience without conscience.

Not a harsh no. A luminous no. A no that protects the soul.

When we place all these stories beside Sūrat al-Baqarah 2:2, one meaning begins to appear.

The Qur’an is guidance for the careful heart. 

The heart of Ibn Sīrīn, careful with doubtful food. The heart of Abū Yazīd, careful with two ants. The heart of Abū Ḥanīfa, careful with the shade of a debtor’s tree. The heart of the milk seller’s daughter, careful in the unseen moment. The heart of the debtor, careful with a promise. The heart of the lender, careful with fairness. The heart of Abū Bakr, careful with one morsel. The heart of young Aḥmad, careful with one document.

This is not smallness.

This is greatness hidden in small things.

The world teaches us to admire scale.

Big buildings. Big numbers. Big audiences. Big names. Big victories.

But Allah tests us in the small.

One jar. Two ants. A little shade. A cup of milk. A piece of wood. A morsel of food. A folded report. A thorn on the path.

Perhaps the secret of taqwā is that the person stops dividing life into “religious” and “ordinary.” Taqwa and religion are not what you do in the masjid. It is what you do in between those times, when you are not in the masjid.

Milk is religion. Shade is religion. An ant is religion. A contract is religion. A child’s errand is religion. A wall is religion. A branch is religion. The unseen intention is religion.

Because Allah is not only in the masjid.

Allah is watching the milk. Allah is watching the money. Allah is watching the ant. Allah is watching the servant. Allah is watching the document. Allah is watching the shade. Allah is watching the heart.

This does not mean we become suspicious, anxious, or harsh. Taqwā is not paranoia. It is not making life unbearable. It is not searching for difficulty where Allah has given ease.

The Prophet ﷺ brought mercy.

So the careful heart must also be a balanced heart. Balance means the heart remains alive while the feet remain steady.

We take the means. We eat what is lawful. We trade. We work. We teach. We build. We plant. We serve. We raise children. We live in the world.

But we do not walk through the world with our garments dragging carelessly through every thorn.

We lift them. We look. We ask. We slow down.

We protect the heart.

And perhaps this is why the verse comes so early in the Qur’an.

Before many details. Before many laws. Before long narratives.

The Book begins by telling us what kind of person truly benefits from it.

The careful one.

The one who wants to be guided. The one who does not argue with every light. The one who is willing to change when the truth touches him. The one who fears not being seen by people less than he fears being seen by Allah.

May Allah make us from the muttaqīn.

May He make our food pure, our earnings pure, our speech pure, our intentions pure, and our private lives purer than our public image.

May He teach our children to walk through the thorns of this world with clear eyes and soft hearts.

May He make us people who do not crush the small, betray the hidden, consume the doubtful, or take the shade that is not ours.

May He make the Qur’an a guidance for us, not an argument against us.

May He give us hearts that notice.

Hearts that tremble.

Hearts that return.

Hearts that can still hear the sound of a thorn before the garment tears.

Āmīn.

Source note: The three stories of Ibn Sīrīn, Abū Yazīd al-Bisṭāmī, and Abū Ḥanīfa are mentioned in Rūḥ al-Bayān under Sūrat al-Baqarah 2:2, where Bursawī cites them from al-Risālah al-Qushayriyyah; the same passage also includes the account of Abū Yazīd drying his garment without harming a wall, tree, or animal fodder. (GreatTafsirs.com) The “thorny path” definition is widely transmitted in tafsīr/adab discussions, with some versions differing over the Companion involved. (Hadith Answers) The story of the debt carried in wood is in Ṣaḥīḥ al-Bukhārī 2291. (Sunnah) The report of Abū Bakr vomiting the food is cited in Riyāḍ al-Ṣāliḥīn from al-Bukhārī. (Sunnah) The milk seller’s daughter and the childhood report about Imām Aḥmad are usually carried as historical/moral reports rather than Prophetic hadith. 

 

Sunday, May 24, 2026

The Land That Already Knew His Name

 

  بِسْمِ اللّهِ الرَّحْمـَنِ الرَّحِيمِ 

قُلْ إِنَّ ٱلْمَوْتَ ٱلَّذِى تَفِرُّونَ مِنْهُ فَإِنَّهُۥ مُلَـٰقِيكُمْ

ثُمَّ تُرَدُّونَ إِلَىٰ عَـٰلِمِ ٱلْغَيْبِ وَٱلشَّهَـٰدَةِ

فَيُنَبِّئُكُم بِمَا كُنتُمْ تَعْمَلُونَ

Qul inna al-mawta alladhī tafirrūna minhu fa-innahu mulāqīkum.
Thumma turaddūna ilā ʿĀlimi al-ghaybi wa al-shahādah.
Fa-yunabbi’ukum bimā kuntum taʿmalūn.

“Say, ‘The death you are running away from will inevitably come to you. Then you will be returned to the Knower of the seen and unseen, and He will inform you of what you used to do.’”

Sūrat al-Jumuʿah 62:8

وَمَا تَدْرِى نَفْسٌۢ بِأَىِّ أَرْضٍۢ تَمُوتُ

Wa mā tadrī nafsun bi-ayyi arḍin tamūt.

“No soul knows in what land it will die.”

Sūrat Luqmān 31:34

There is an old story told about Sayyidunā Sulaymān عليه السلام.

It is not a story I would present as an authentic hadith. It is not something to build belief upon. It is a wisdom tale carried in the early books, and wisdom tales must be carried with honesty.

They are not proofs. They are mirrors. And sometimes a mirror is enough to make the heart tremble.

The story says that there was once an old man from Banī Isrā’īl. He had been close to Sayyidunā Dāwūd عليه السلام, and when Dāwūd عليه السلام passed from this world, Sulaymān عليه السلام kept the old man near him.

Perhaps because he saw in him a trace of his father. Perhaps because love does not end when one prophet leaves the world. It remains in the people who loved him, served him, sat with him, learnt from him, and carried some fragrance from his company.

So the old man sat close to Sulaymān عليه السلام.

Close to the throne. Close to honour. Close to the place where others looked and felt envy. But closeness to a king does not protect a man from what Allah has written.

This is the first lesson.

The story says that when Sulaymān عليه السلام sat in his gathering, the jinn, the humans, and the soldiers of his kingdom would enter. Among those who came was the Angel of Death, appearing in the form of a man.

He would greet Sulaymān عليه السلام. He would ask about him. He would ask whether he had any need. And if Sulaymān عليه السلام had no need, he would leave.

But on one day, the Angel of Death entered and looked at the old man.

Only a look. Not a word. Not a threat.

Only a look.

But the old man began to shake.

This is also a secret of the human being.

Sometimes the thing outside us is small, but the fear inside us is vast. A glance becomes a mountain. A silence becomes an accusation. A face becomes a verdict.

The old man trembled. When the Angel of Death left, he went to Sulaymān عليه السلام and held onto him. He asked him, by Allah, to command the wind.

The wind was under the command of Sulaymān عليه السلام by the permission of Allah.

The Qur’ān says:

وَلِسُلَيْمَـٰنَ ٱلرِّيحَ عَاصِفَةًۭ تَجْرِى بِأَمْرِهِۦ

“And to Sulaymān We subjected the raging wind, blowing by his command…”

Sūrat al-Anbiyā’ 21:81

So the old man said, in meaning: Command the wind to carry me far away. To the farthest part of India. As far as it can take me.

Perhaps he thought distance could save him. Perhaps he thought that if he changed the land, he could change the decree. Perhaps he thought that death was standing in the palace, and life was waiting somewhere else.

We understand him.

Who among us has not tried to flee something written?

We flee into work. We flee into noise. We flee into planning. We flee into travel. We flee into distraction. We flee into tomorrow.

We flee into the hope that another place, another house, another city, another season, another version of ourselves will be beyond the reach of what we fear.

But Allah says: The death you flee from will meet you.

Not chase you. Meet you.

As though it already knows the road. As though it has already been waiting at the place where your feet are running.

Sulaymān عليه السلام asked the old man why he wanted this.

The old man spoke of the look. That terrible look. That glance from the man who had entered.

So Sulaymān عليه السلام commanded the wind. And the wind carried him. Up from the palace. Away from the gathering. Away from the throne. Away from the place where his fear had begun. The wind took him far, far away, until it placed him at the edge of India.

And Sulaymān عليه السلام became sorrowful.

This part of the older Arabic telling is tender.

Sulaymān عليه السلام was not cold. He was not merely a king with power. He was a prophet with a heart. He had lost a companion of his father. He had lost someone whose presence gave him comfort. Sometimes even prophets had to taste the ache of separation.

The next morning, the Angel of Death entered again.

Sulaymān عليه السلام asked him about the old man.

Why had he looked at him like that?

The Angel of Death replied in meaning: I am still amazed at what happened.

Yesterday, the command came to me that I should take his soul at dawn in the farthest part of India. But when I entered your gathering, I found him sitting beside you. So I kept looking at him in amazement. How could he be here, when his appointed place was there?

Then, at dawn, I went to the place where I had been commanded. And I found him there. Waiting. Trembling. So I took his soul.

SubḥānAllah.

He did not escape death. He travelled to meet it. The wind did not carry him away from his ending. The wind carried him to it.

This is not a story about the cruelty of destiny. It is a story about the smallness of our maps.

We think we know where danger is. We think we know where safety is. We think the palace is danger and India is safety. We think this job is danger and another job is safety. We think this illness is danger and another diagnosis is safety. We think this city is danger and another land is safety. We think this stage of life is danger and some future stage will finally be safe.

But safety is not in the land.

Safety is with Allah.

A man may be unsafe in a palace. A man may be safe in a desert. A man may be close to death in the place he ran to for protection. A man may be close to Allah in the place he feared most. This does not mean we stop taking means.

Sulaymān عليه السلام used means. The old man used means. The prophets taught action, not laziness. We lock doors. We seek treatment. We travel wisely. We avoid harm. We protect our families. We plan with responsibility.

But the heart must not worship the means. The means are servants.

Allah is Lord.

The wind obeyed Sulaymān عليه السلام. But the wind was still under Allah. Distance obeyed the journey. But distance was still under Allah. The Angel of Death obeyed the command. But the Angel of Death was still under Allah.

The Qur’ān says:

قُلْ يَتَوَفَّىٰكُم مَّلَكُ ٱلْمَوْتِ ٱلَّذِى وُكِّلَ بِكُمْ
ثُمَّ إِلَىٰ رَبِّكُمْ تُرْجَعُونَ

“Say, ‘Your soul will be taken by the Angel of Death, who has been assigned to you. Then to your Lord you will be returned.’”

Sūrat al-Sajdah 32:11

Then to your Lord you will be returned.

This is the part we forget.

Death is not only an ending.  It is a returning. We speak of death as though it is falling into emptiness.

The Qur’ān speaks of it as return.

Back to the One who knew us before our mothers knew us. Back to the One who fed us before we knew how to ask. Back to the One who saw every secret grief, every hidden intention, every silent tear, every act of mercy no one thanked us for, every cruelty we thought no one saw, every apology we delayed, every prayer whispered when the world was asleep.

Death is frightening because the body loves the world. But death is also truthful because the soul belongs to Allah.

The old man’s mistake was not that he feared death.  Fear of death can be natural.

His mistake was that he thought geography could defeat qadar. He thought elsewhere was outside Allah’s knowledge.

But the verse says: No soul knows in what land it will die.

Not only when. Where. The place is also hidden. The soil is also written. The final breath has a geography known to Allah.

This should humble us.

The earth under our feet is not ordinary. Any place may become the place of our return.

The classroom. The kitchen. The road. The hospital bed. The prayer mat. The airport. The garden. The home we complain about.

The land we are trying to leave. The land we are trying to reach.

We do not know.

So the question is not only: Where will I die?

The deeper question is: How am I living before that place is revealed?

Am I running from death while also running from repentance? Am I afraid of the grave but careless with the heart? Am I protecting my body while poisoning my character? Am I making plans for every journey except the one journey every soul must take?

The old man asked to be carried far away.

Perhaps our duʿā should be different.

Ya Allah, do not merely carry us away from what we fear. Carry us toward what pleases You.

Do not let us run from death while wasting life. Do not let us seek safety in distance while forgetting safety is with You. Do not let our fear make us blind. Do not let our planning become arrogance. Do not let our comfort make us heedless. Do not let our final breath find us empty of repentance.

Make our last land a land of mercy. Make our last day a day of forgiveness. Make our last words words of tawḥīd. Make our last movement a movement toward You.

Because death will meet us.

But so will Allah.

And the believer’s work is not to pretend the meeting will not come. The believer’s work is to prepare the heart for the meeting.

May Allah make us people who take the means without worshipping them. People who plan without forgetting His decree. People who remember death without becoming dark. People who remember the grave without losing hope. People who live gently because time is short. People who forgive quickly because tomorrow is hidden. People who return to Allah before we are returned to Him. May He make our endings better than our beginnings. May He make the land where we die witness for us, not against us. May He take us only when He is pleased with us.

Āmīn.

Source note

This retelling stays close to the older Arabic version in which an old man connected to Sayyidunā Dāwūd عليه السلام sits near Sayyidunā Sulaymān عليه السلام; the Angel of Death enters in human form, glances at the old man, and the frightened man asks Sulaymān عليه السلام to command the wind to carry him to the farthest part of India. The next morning the Angel of Death explains that he had been commanded to take the man’s soul there, and was astonished to see him still sitting with Sulaymān عليه السلام. This fuller form is preserved in Abū al-Shaykh al-Aṣbahānī’s al-ʿAẓamah.

The story is also mentioned in shorter form in early and later Islamic sources, including Ibn Abī Shaybah’s al-Muṣannaf, Aḥmad’s al-Zuhd, al-Thaʿlabī’s tafsīr, Ibn Baṭṭah’s al-Ibānah, Abū Nuʿaym’s Ḥilyah, and others. It should not be presented as an authentic Prophetic hadith. Islamweb notes that the chains stop at Shahr ibn Ḥawshab, a tābiʿī, and therefore the report is not attributed to the Prophet ﷺ; it may be from Isrā’īliyyāt material.

The Qur’anic anchors used here are Sūrat al-Jumuʿah 62:8, “The death you are running away from will inevitably come to you”; Sūrat Luqmān 31:34, “No soul knows in what land it will die”; Sūrat al-Sajdah 32:11, which mentions the Angel of Death assigned to take souls; and Sūrat al-Anbiyā’ 21:81, which mentions the wind being subjected to Sulaymān عليه السلام by Allah’s command.

Wednesday, May 20, 2026

What Is Written, What Is Blessed

  بِسْمِ اللّهِ الرَّحْمـَنِ الرَّحِيمِ 

وَيَرْزُقْهُ مِنْ حَيْثُ لَا يَحْتَسِبُ

وَمَن يَتَوَكَّلْ عَلَى ٱللَّهِ فَهُوَ حَسْبُهُ

إِنَّ ٱللَّهَ بَـٰلِغُ أَمْرِهِۦ

قَدْ جَعَلَ ٱللَّهُ لِكُلِّ شَىْءٍ قَدْرًا

Wa yarzuqhu min ḥaythu lā yaḥtasib.
Wa man yatawakkal ʿalā Allāhi fa-huwa ḥasbuh.
Inna Allāha bālighu amrih.
Qad jaʿala Allāhu li-kulli shay’in qadrā.


“And He will provide for them from sources they could never imagine. And whoever puts their trust in Allah, then He alone is sufficient for them. Certainly Allah achieves His Will. Allah has already set a destiny for everything.”

Sūrat al-Ṭalāq 65:3


There is a story told about Sayyidunā Mūsā عليه السلام.

It is not a story I would present as hadith. It is not something I have found with a chain that makes it an authoritative report. It is a wisdom tale. And wisdom tales must be carried with honesty. They are not proofs. They are mirrors.

And sometimes a mirror is enough to show us the state of our own heart.

Mūsā عليه السلام was once passing through the desert when he was received with kindness by a man. The man had little. Very little. In some tellings, only one loaf of bread was his daily portion. In the version I heard, it was two loaves of bread.

But the number is not the secret. The secret is what the heart does with what it has been given.

The man asked Mūsā عليه السلام to pray for him. He wanted more provision. Perhaps we understand him. Who does not ask for more? More ease. More food. More certainty. More security. More room in life to breathe.

So Mūsā عليه السلام prayed. And the answer came that the man’s provision had been written as only two loaves of bread.

Only that. Just two loaves.

When Mūsā عليه السلام returned and told the man what had been written for him, the man did not collapse into complaint. He did not say, “Is this all?” He did not ask, “Why me?” He did not compare his two loaves with another man’s feast.

He became calm.

Because if Allah had written it, then it would reach him.

This itself is a station.

Many of us are not hungry because our portion is small. We are hungry because our comparison is large.

Many of us are not poor because Allah has withheld from us. We are poor because our eyes are always sitting at someone else’s table.

The man heard: two loaves. And instead of hearing deprivation, he heard guarantee.

This is the difference between the nafs and the heart.

The nafs says: only two? The heart says: written by whom?

If Allah has written it, it is not small. If Allah has promised it, it is not uncertain. If Allah has placed it in your path, it is not random. If Allah has measured it for you, then the measure itself contains mercy.

The Qurʾān says:

لَئِن شَكَرْتُمْ لَأَزِيدَنَّكُمْ

“If you are grateful, I will certainly give you more.”

Sūrat Ibrāhīm 14:7 (Quran.com)

Notice the word is not only “If you possess more.” It is “If you are grateful.” Because increase begins in the heart before it appears on the table.

The man became content. His worry reduced. His grasping softened. His appetite became smaller because his anxiety became smaller. He began to eat what he needed and leave what remained.

And what remained did not disappear.

This is another secret.

When the heart is restless, even abundance is swallowed. When the heart is at peace, even a little begins to remain.

A little bread remained. Then more. Then more. Until there was enough stale bread to be useful to someone else.

A herdsman passed by. His animals needed feed. The old bread, which may have looked like leftovers to one person, became provision for another creature. The man gave what he had. The herdsman, grateful, gave him a pregnant goat.

And from that goat, Allah opened another door.

Days became months. Months became years.

When Mūsā عليه السلام passed by again, the place was no longer the same. The man who had once had only two loaves now had food, milk, cheese, dates, honey, animals, and a garden of provision.

So Mūsā عليه السلام wondered.

Was his rizq not only two loaves?

And the answer of the story is the answer we need.

The two loaves were his written rizq.

The rest was barakah.

SubḥānAllah.

Rizq is what reaches you. Barakah is what Allah places inside what reaches you.

Rizq may be counted. Barakah cannot be counted.

Rizq may be two loaves. Barakah may make those two loaves feed the body, calm the heart, soften the ego, help another servant, nourish an animal, open a relationship, bring a goat, grow a garden, and turn a dry corner of life into a place of mercy.

This is why we should be careful when we ask Allah for “more.”

More of what?

More things?
More appetite?
More comparison?
More anxiety?
More storage?
More fear of loss?

Sometimes we ask for more rizq when what we really need is more barakah.

Barakah in time. So one hour does the work of many.

Barakah in food. So simple bread strengthens the body and does not make the soul heavy.

Barakah in knowledge. So one verse changes the character more than a shelf of unread books.

Barakah in children. So they are not only successful in the eyes of people, but soft, truthful, responsible, and close to Allah.

Barakah in work. So it becomes service, not only survival.

Barakah in speech. So a few words heal instead of many words impressing.

Barakah in a home. So even if it is small, it is filled with mercy.

The man’s life changed when his focus changed. Before, he looked at the bread and saw lack.

After, he looked at the bread and saw Allah’s promise.

The bread did not change first. The seeing changed first.

This is often how mercy enters.

Not always by changing the outside immediately, but by changing the meaning of what is already in our hand.

The same two loaves can be a complaint or a sign.

The same salary can be a prison or a trust.

The same house can be too small or full of warmth.

The same child can be a burden or an amanah.

The same day can be ordinary or filled with openings.

The same life can be “not enough” or “Ya Allah, You have not forgotten me.”

The world trains us to count.

Allah trains us to notice.

The world says: increase your portion.

Allah says: purify your heart before your portion destroys you.

The world says: you are safe when you have more.

Allah says: whoever puts his trust in Allah, He is sufficient for him.

This does not mean we stop working. It does not mean we romanticise poverty. It does not mean we become careless with responsibility. Mūsā عليه السلام did not teach laziness. The prophets did not teach passivity.

But it does mean that work without trust becomes fear.

And provision without gratitude becomes hunger.

And asking without adab becomes complaint.

The old man asked. There is nothing wrong with asking. We should ask Allah for good, for ease, for lawful provision, for expansion, for protection from need and humiliation.

But when the answer came, he accepted.

This is where the story becomes difficult.

Can we accept the answer Allah gives while still hoping in His mercy?

Can we be grateful for the two loaves while still making duʿā for wider good?

Can we stop insulting the door that is open because we are staring at the door that is closed?

Can we say: Ya Allah, increase me, but do not let my desire for increase make me blind to what You have already sent?

The man’s two loaves became a garden because he did not treat them as nothing.

He honoured what came.

He trusted the One who sent it.

He shared what remained.

And Allah placed barakah where the eye did not expect it.

This is the Qurʾānic way.

“And He will provide for them from sources they could never imagine.”

Not always from the door we keep knocking on.

Sometimes from a heap of stale bread.

Sometimes from an animal’s hunger.

Sometimes from a passing herdsman.

Sometimes from the leftovers we thought had no future.

Sometimes from the very thing we were ready to complain about.

We do not know where Allah has hidden the opening.

So do not despise the two loaves.

Do not despise the small beginning.

Do not despise the simple meal.

Do not despise the ordinary day.

Do not despise the child who learns slowly.

Do not despise the work that is unseen.

Do not despise the little strength you still have.

Do not despise the one person you can help.

Do not despise the small act of gratitude that no one claps for.

Allah can place a garden inside two loaves.

Allah can place light inside one sajdah.

Allah can place a future inside one sincere duʿā.

Allah can place healing inside one apology.

Allah can place guidance inside one verse.

Allah can place mercy inside what remains after you have given.

So we ask Allah:

Do not give us rizq without barakah.

Do not give us increase without gratitude.

Do not give us comfort that makes us forget You.

Do not give us hunger that makes us bitter.

Do not let us compare our two loaves with another person’s table.

Do not let us call Your measure small.

Make us people who receive with adab.

People who eat with shukr.

People who share without fear.

People who trust without becoming lazy.

People who work without worshipping work.

People who ask without complaining.

People who know that what is written will reach us.

And what reaches us can be widened by Your barakah.

May Allah place barakah in our bread, our homes, our children, our schools, our work, our time, our health, our intentions, and our endings.

May He make what is little enough.

May He make what is enough blessed.

May He make what is blessed a means of nearness to Him.

Āmīn.

Source note: This piece is based on a popular wisdom tale attributed in retellings to Mūsā عليه السلام. I have not found it as a verified hadith or an authoritative early report, so it should be shared as a reflective teaching story, not as a proof-text. Public versions of the story commonly mention one loaf of bread, the man’s acceptance of his written provision, and later abundance described as barakah rather than the written daily rizq.  

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