Sunday, May 31, 2026

How to Learn: No Knowledge Except What Allah Teaches Us

Series: Teach Me How to Learn

Post 6 : No Knowledge Except What You Teach Us

بِسْمِ اللّهِ الرَّحْمـَنِ الرَّحِيمِ

فَتَعَـٰلَى ٱللَّهُ ٱلْمَلِكُ ٱلْحَقُّ ۗ

وَلَا تَعْجَلْ بِٱلْقُرْءَانِ مِن قَبْلِ أَن يُقْضَىٰٓ إِلَيْكَ وَحْيُهُۥ ۖ

وَقُل رَّبِّ زِدْنِى عِلْمًا

Fa-taʿālā Allāhu al-Maliku al-Ḥaqq.
Wa lā taʿjal bil-Qur’āni min qabli an yuqḍā ilayka waḥyuh.
Wa qul Rabbi zidnī ʿilmā.

“Exalted is Allah, the True King. Do not hasten with the Qur’an before its revelation is completed to you, and say: My Lord, increase me in knowledge.”

Sūrat Ṭā-Hā 20:114

The do'a is:

رَّبِّ زِدْنِى عِلْمًا

My Lord, increase me in knowledge.

But the verse teaches us that knowledge is not rushed. It is not grabbed. It is not a decoration for the ego. It is not merely the ability to answer quickly, speak strongly, or appear informed.

Knowledge is a trust. And before the trust enters, the heart must be trained.

So perhaps the first prayer of the learner is not only:

My Lord, teach me.

It is:

My Lord, teach me how to learn.

  

The Qur’anic Anchor

Allah tells us the words of the angels:

قَالُوا۟ سُبْحَـٰنَكَ لَا عِلْمَ لَنَآ إِلَّا مَا عَلَّمْتَنَآ ۖ

إِنَّكَ أَنتَ ٱلْعَلِيمُ ٱلْحَكِيمُ

Qālū subḥānaka lā ʿilma lanā illā mā ʿallamtanā.
Innaka anta al-ʿAlīmu al-Ḥakīm.

“They said, ‘Glory be to You. We have no knowledge except what You have taught us. Indeed, You are the All-Knowing, the All-Wise.’”

Sūrat al-Baqarah 2:32

This is the adab of knowledge.

The angels do not pretend. They do not compete. They do not speak beyond what they have been given.

They say:

لَا عِلْمَ لَنَآ إِلَّا مَا عَلَّمْتَنَآ

We have no knowledge except what You have taught us.

To learn with adab is to know, while still knowing that the knowing came from Allah.

It is to receive a light without imagining that the light began with us.

It is to see a part without claiming the whole.

It is to be taught and remain humble before the Teacher of all teachers.

At the end of all true learning, perhaps the most truthful sentence is this:

Ya Allah, whatever I know is what You taught me.
And whatever I do not know is far more.

  

What Have These Stories Been Teaching?

The stories are different, but the thread is one.

Nasruddin’s sermon teaches that the learner must be ready.

Ahmad Yasawi teaches that the means may be part of the mercy.

Abu Said’s box teaches that a great secret cannot be entrusted to someone who cannot keep a small trust.

The quick learner teaches that speed can become pride.

The scholar in the marketplace teaches that fear of looking foolish may block real learning.

The same breath teaches that wisdom is not mechanical.

The lost key teaches that we must search where the truth is, not where the light is easy.

The physician’s son teaches that medicine cannot be taken by a servant.

The young man who had not loved teaches that some truths require a softened heart.

The elephant in the dark teaches that partial sight is not vision.

All of them return us to one do'a:

رَّبِّ زِدْنِى عِلْمًا

My Lord, increase me in knowledge.

But now the prayer has deepened:

My Lord, increase me in knowledge.

And make me ready for it.

Make me humble enough to receive it.

Make me patient enough to wait for it.

Make me disciplined enough to carry it.

Make me soft enough to be changed by it.

Make me wise enough to place it rightly.

Make me brave enough to search in the dark room.

Make me honest enough to say, “I do not know.”

 

In a School

A school should not only ask:

How much does the child know?

It should ask:

How does the child learn?

Can the child listen? Can the child wait? Can the child ask without mocking? Can the child be corrected without collapsing? Can the child try again without shame? Can the child carry a small trust? Can the child serve? Can the child care for materials? Can the child see another person’s need? Can the child admit partial sight? Can the child say, “I do not know”?

These are not small matters. They are foundations.

A clever child without humility is in danger. A talented child without service is in danger. A religious child without tenderness is in danger. A successful child without responsibility is in danger. A confident child without truthfulness is in danger. Education is not only the filling of the mind.

It is the forming of the human being.

Body. Heart. Mind. Soul. Habit. Imagination. Responsibility. Worship. Amanah.

The child is not a container for information. The child is a trust from Allah.

So the school must teach the child not only to know, but to become worthy of knowing.

 

In an Adult

This is not only for children. Adults also need to learn how to learn.

An adult may have years of experience and still resist correction. An adult may have religious language and still lack adab. An adult may teach children and still not know how to listen. An adult may speak of humility and still be ruled by image. An adult may speak of wisdom and still apply one rule without seeing the person. An adult may speak of service and still avoid low work. An adult may speak of truth and still search only where the lamp is bright.

So we must keep learning.

Not only new things.

Old things again.

Prayer again. Listening again. Serving again. Apologising again. Waiting again. Seeing again. Being corrected again. Returning to Allah again.

The one who says, “I have finished learning,” has stopped seeing himself.

And the one who has stopped seeing himself is in danger.

 

The Final Adab of Knowledge

At the end, the angels’ words return:

سُبْحَـٰنَكَ لَا عِلْمَ لَنَآ إِلَّا مَا عَلَّمْتَنَآ

Glory be to You. We have no knowledge except what You have taught us.

This is not false modesty.

It is truth.

The mind is a gift. The teacher is a gift. The book is a gift. The question is a gift. The answer is a gift. The mistake that humbled us is a gift. The person who corrected us is a gift. The delay that trained us is a gift. The small task that lowered us is a gift. The partial sight that taught us caution is a gift.

All beneficial knowledge is from Allah.

And any knowledge that does not make us more truthful, more humble, more responsible, more merciful, and more aware of Allah must be questioned.

What kind of knowledge is this?

Who is it serving?

Allah?

Or the nafs?

 

Closing Reflection

Perhaps learning begins when we stop asking only:

What can I know?

And begin asking:

What kind of person must I become?

A person ready to listen. A person willing to be corrected. A person patient with what he does not yet understand. A person humble before what Allah has not shown him. A person who does not search only under the lamp. A person who takes his own medicine. A person who does not mistake one part for the whole.
A person who says:

I have no knowledge except what Allah has taught me.

This is the heart of learning.

Not pride. Not speed. Not display. Not argument. Not information alone.

Adab. Taqwa. Humility. Patience. Service. Wisdom.
A heart that can receive.

Ya Allah, teach us how to learn.

Do not let knowledge become a veil. Do not let intelligence become pride. Do not let speed replace depth. Do not let our words outrun our deeds. Do not let us search where it is easy while avoiding where the key was lost. Do not let us give our medicine to others. Do not let us mistake a part for the whole.

Make us people of useful knowledge.

Knowledge that softens the heart. Knowledge that straightens the life. Knowledge that serves Your creation. Knowledge that returns to You.

رَبِّ زِدْنِى عِلْمًا

My Lord, increase me in knowledge.

And make me worthy of what You teach.

Āmīn.

  

Source Note

These are teaching stories from the Sufi and Islamic wisdom tradition. They should be shared as adab stories, not as hadith, unless a story has a clear Qur’anic or hadith source. Nasruddin stories often work through humour: the joke opens the door, but the lesson is deeper than the joke. This closing post gathers the main story groupings of the series into one final reflection on the adab of learning.

How to Learn:Partial Sight Is Not Vision

Series: Teach Me How to Learn

Post 5 : Partial Sight Is Not Vision

بِسْمِ اللّهِ الرَّحْمـَنِ الرَّحِيمِ

فَتَعَـٰلَى ٱللَّهُ ٱلْمَلِكُ ٱلْحَقُّ ۗ

وَلَا تَعْجَلْ بِٱلْقُرْءَانِ مِن قَبْلِ أَن يُقْضَىٰٓ إِلَيْكَ وَحْيُهُۥ ۖ

وَقُل رَّبِّ زِدْنِى عِلْمًا

Fa-taʿālā Allāhu al-Maliku al-Ḥaqq.
Wa lā taʿjal bil-Qur’āni min qabli an yuqḍā ilayka waḥyuh.
Wa qul Rabbi zidnī ʿilmā.

“Exalted is Allah, the True King. Do not hasten with the Qur’an before its revelation is completed to you, and say: My Lord, increase me in knowledge.”

Sūrat Ṭā-Hā 20:114

The do'a is:

رَّبِّ زِدْنِى عِلْمًا

My Lord, increase me in knowledge.

But before Allah teaches us to ask for increase, He teaches us restraint:

وَلَا تَعْجَلْ

Do not hasten.

Do not rush to speak. Do not rush to judge. Do not rush to conclude. Do not rush to think that the little you have seen is all there is to see.

This too is part of learning.

A person may know one fact and still not know the matter. A person may see one behaviour and still not know the child. A person may hear one sentence and still not know the heart. A person may touch one part and still not know the whole.

So the prayer for knowledge must also become a prayer for humility:

My Lord, increase me in knowledge,
and do not let the little I know make me proud. 
 

The Qur’anic Anchor

Allah says:

وَلَا تَقْفُ مَا لَيْسَ لَكَ بِهِۦ عِلْمٌ ۚ

إِنَّ ٱلسَّمْعَ وَٱلْبَصَرَ وَٱلْفُؤَادَ

كُلُّ أُو۟لَـٰٓئِكَ كَانَ عَنْهُ مَسْـُٔولًا

Wa lā taqfu mā laysa laka bihī ʿilm.
Inna as-samʿa wal-baṣara wal-fu’āda 
kullu ulā’ika kāna ʿanhu mas’ūlā.

“Do not follow what you have no knowledge of. Indeed, the hearing, the sight, and the heart — each of these will be questioned.”

Sūrat al-Isrāʾ 17:36

This verse should slow us down.

Allah does not only warn us against falsehood. He warns us against following what we do not truly know.

Not every judgment we make is built on knowledge. Sometimes it is built on a fragment of knowledge. Sometimes on a feeling. Sometimes on fear. Sometimes on anger. Sometimes on one painful experience that we have turned into the whole truth.

But Allah tells us that hearing will be questioned. Sight will be questioned. The heart will be questioned.

What did you hear? What did you see?
What did your heart add to what you heard and saw?

This is why partial sight is dangerous.

Not because it sees nothing.

Because it sees something, and then becomes proud of that something.

 

The Elephant in the Dark

A group of people were brought into a dark room.

Inside the room was an elephant.

Because they could not see the whole animal, each person reached out and touched one part.

One touched the ear.

“An elephant is like a fan,” he said.

Another touched the leg.

“No,” he said. “An elephant is like a pillar.”

Another touched the tail.

“No,” he said. “An elephant is like a rope.”

Another touched the side.

“No,” he said. “An elephant is like a wall.”

Another touched the trunk.

“No,” he said. “An elephant is like a snake.”

Then they began to argue.

Each one was certain.

Each one had touched something real.

But each one mistook the part for the whole.

The one who touched the ear was not lying. The ear was real.

The one who touched the leg was not lying. The leg was real.

The one who touched the tail was not lying. The tail was real.

But the elephant was more than each part.

The error was not that they had touched nothing.

The error was that they had touched something and then spoke as though they had seen everything.

 

The Pride of Partial Truth

Complete falsehood is sometimes easier to reject. Partial truth is more dangerous.

Because partial truth feels strong.

It gives us evidence. It gives us confidence. It gives us a story to stand on.

We say:

“I saw it with my own eyes.” “I heard it myself.” “I know what happened.” “I know what kind of person he is.” “I know why she did that.” “I know what this child needs.” “I know what this school is.”

Maybe we did see something. Maybe we did hear something. Maybe we touched the ear of the elephant.

But the Qur’an asks for more care:

وَلَا تَقْفُ مَا لَيْسَ لَكَ بِهِۦ عِلْمٌ

Do not follow what you do not know.

There is an ignorance that says, “I do not know.” That ignorance can be healed.

But there is another ignorance that says, “I know,” because it has touched one part.

That ignorance is more dangerous.

Because it has become proud.

 

In a Child

This matters deeply in education.

A teacher sees one behaviour.

The child refuses to write. The child interrupts. The child sits alone. The child answers rudely. The child cries too easily. The child seems lazy. The child seems careless. The child seems defiant.

The teacher has seen something. But has the teacher seen the whole child?

Perhaps the child who refuses to write is afraid of making mistakes. Perhaps the child who interrupts has never been taught how to wait. Perhaps the child who sits alone is not proud, but overwhelmed. Perhaps the child who answers rudely is carrying shame. Perhaps the child who cries easily has been strong for too long elsewhere. Perhaps the child who seems lazy has lost hope. Perhaps the child who seems careless has never experienced the joy of careful work. Perhaps the child who seems defiant has learnt that adults only notice him when he resists.

This does not excuse every behaviour.

Children need boundaries. They need correction. They need to learn responsibility. But correction without sight can become harm.

If we only touch the tail, we may think the elephant is a rope. If we only see the behaviour, we may think we know the child.

A wise teacher asks:

What have I seen? What have I not yet seen? What might this behaviour be protecting? What strength is hidden beneath this weakness? What wound may be speaking through this action? What responsibility must still be taught?

The child is not only the behaviour we noticed.

The child is an amanah.

And an amanah must be seen with humility.

 

In a Family

Families also suffer from partial sight.

A parent sees a child’s weakness and forgets the child’s goodness. A child sees a parent’s anger and forgets years of sacrifice. A husband sees one failure and forgets many quiet acts of care. A wife sees one wound and forgets the person behind the wound. A sibling remembers an old version of someone and cannot see that the person has changed.

One moment becomes the whole person. One mistake becomes the whole marriage. One sharp word becomes the whole parent. One disappointment becomes the whole child.

This is how hearts become unfair. Not always through lies. Often through partial sight.

The hearing heard something. The eyes saw something. But the heart wrote a whole story from a single page.

Allah will ask about hearing. Allah will ask about sight. Allah will ask about the heart.

So we must be careful with the stories we build about people, especially the people closest to us.

Closeness does not always mean we see the whole.

Sometimes it only means we have touched the same part many times.

 

In a Community

Communities can also become dark rooms.

One group touches one part of the truth and becomes proud. Another group touches another part and becomes proud.

One says, “The problem is discipline.” Another says, “The problem is compassion.”

One says, “The problem is tradition.” Another says, “The problem is change.”

One says, “The problem is parents.” Another says, “The problem is teachers.”

One says, “The problem is children.” Another says, “The problem is the system.”

Sometimes each has touched something real.

But the whole may be larger.

Discipline may be needed. Compassion may be needed. Tradition may need to be honoured. Change may need to happen. Parents may need to grow. Teachers may need support and correction. Children may need firmer guidance. The system may need repair.

The person who has only touched one part may become loud. The person who knows the matter is larger becomes more humble.

This does not mean we become silent before wrong. It does not mean we postpone judgment forever.

It means that when we judge, we judge with taqwa.

We do not let anger do the work of knowledge. We do not let pain do the work of fairness. We do not let ideology do the work of sight. We do not let one part pretend to be the whole.

 

The Dark Room Within

The elephant was in a dark room. But the darkest room is often inside us.

Our anger can become a dark room. Our fear can become a dark room. Our ego can become a dark room. Our wounds can become dark rooms. Our loyalties can become dark rooms. Our need to be right can become a dark room. Our dislike of someone can become a dark room. Our admiration of someone can also become a dark room.

When we are angry, we see only what supports the anger. When we are afraid, we see only what supports the fear. When we are proud, we see only what protects the pride. When we are hurt, we see only what confirms the wound. When we are loyal to a group, we may not see its faults. When we dislike a group, we may not see its good.

Then we say, “I am seeing clearly.” But perhaps we are only touching in the dark.

This is why the Qur’an joins hearing, sight, and the heart.

The problem is not always the eye.

The eye may see correctly. The ear may hear correctly. But the heart may interpret wrongly.

The heart may add suspicion. The heart may add pride. The heart may add fear. The heart may add old pain.

So we must ask Allah not only for eyes that see, but for hearts that see rightly.

 

What Humility Sounds Like

Humility does not mean refusing to speak.

It does not mean pretending to know nothing. It does not mean weakness. It does not mean being unable to make decisions.

Humility means truthfulness about what we do and do not know.

It says:

“I saw this, but I may not have seen everything.” “I heard this, but I should check.” “I felt hurt, but my hurt may not be the whole truth.” “I have experience, but this situation may still require listening.” “I have knowledge, but I may still need wisdom.” “I touched something real, but I may not have touched the whole elephant.”

This kind of humility protects relationships.

It protects classrooms. It protects communities. It protects the soul.

Many harms begin when someone cannot say:

I may be missing something.

That sentence can save a parent from harshness.

It can save a teacher from labelling a child. It can save a leader from injustice. It can save a friend from suspicion. It can save a believer from speaking beyond what he knows.

 

In Learning

A learner must know that the first thing he sees may not be the whole.

This is true when learning about people.

It is also true when learning about religion, history, culture, science, and nature.

A single fact may be true.

But where does it sit? What else must be known? What is the context? What is the exception? What is the purpose? What is the limit? What is the wisdom?

A child who learns one rule may apply it everywhere. A student who learns one cause may think it explains everything. An adult who reads one article may think he now understands a whole field. A religious learner who learns one ruling may think he can judge every situation.

This is why learning needs patience.

The Qur’an says:

وَلَا تَعْجَلْ

Do not hasten.

The quick conclusion may feel satisfying. It may make us feel intelligent. It may make us feel safe.

But real learning often requires us to remain with the matter longer.

To hear more. To see more. To ask better. To wait.
To allow the whole to appear.

 

A School of Whole Seeing

A school should train children not only to answer, but to see.

To see the plant as more than a leaf. To see the river as more than water. To see the worker as more than a function. To see the classmate as more than a mistake. To see the earth as more than a resource. To see knowledge as more than marks. To see discipline as more than punishment. To see freedom as more than doing whatever one wants. To see beauty as more than decoration. To see truth as more than winning an argument.

This is whole-child education.

Not because we use the phrase. Because we refuse to reduce the child.

The child is body, heart, mind, soul, habit, imagination, memory, longing, fear, strength, weakness, and trust.

If we educate only the mind, we have touched one part. If we discipline only the behaviour, we have touched one part. If we care only about emotion, we have touched one part. If we speak only of spirituality but ignore practical life, we have touched one part.

A child is not a mark sheet. Not a behaviour report. Not a talent. Not a problem. Not a project. Not a reflection of our success.

A child is an amanah.

And an amanah must be seen with humility.

 

The Qur’anic Mirror

Allah says:

وَلَا تَقْفُ مَا لَيْسَ لَكَ بِهِۦ عِلْمٌ

Do not follow what you do not know.

This includes the tongue. Do not speak beyond knowledge.

It includes judgment. Do not judge beyond knowledge.

It includes the heart. Do not let the heart run after stories it has not verified.

Then Allah says that hearing, sight, and the heart will be questioned.

This should make us tremble.

How many things have we repeated without knowing? How many motives have we assigned without knowing? How many children have we labelled without knowing? How many people have we reduced to one mistake? How many communities have we judged from one story? How many times have we touched a part and spoken as though we held the whole?

The verse does not ask us to be passive.

It asks us to be responsible.

Use the hearing responsibly. Use the sight responsibly. Use the heart responsibly.

Do not let them become servants of the nafs.

 

When the Whole Appears

In the dark room, each person argued. But imagine if a lamp had been lit.

The one who touched the ear would not need to deny the ear. The one who touched the leg would not need to deny the leg. The one who touched the tail would not need to deny the tail.

Each could simply say:

What I touched was real, but it was not the whole. This is the mercy of fuller seeing.

It does not always destroy what we first saw. Sometimes it places it correctly.

The child’s behaviour was real, but now we also see fear. The parent’s mistake was real, but now we also see exhaustion. The teacher’s firmness was real, but now we also see care. The community’s failure was real, but now we also see hidden effort. The wound was real, but now we also see that the person was not only the wound.

This is not the same as excusing everything. It is putting things in their proper place.

A part in its place may be useful.

A part pretending to be the whole becomes dangerous.

 

Where This Appears in Us

This story is not only about people in a dark room.

It is about us.

It is about the teacher who thinks one incident reveals the whole child. It is about the parent who thinks one report reveals the whole school. It is about the child who thinks one correction means the teacher dislikes him. It is about the community member who hears one story and spreads it as truth. It is about the leader who listens only to the voices that confirm him. It is about the religious person who knows one ruling and loses the person in front of him. It is about the wounded person who sees everything through old pain. It is about the angry person who mistakes intensity for clarity. It is about anyone who has touched part of the elephant and begun to argue as though he has seen the whole.

The lesson is not: Do not trust anything.

The lesson is:

Be careful with what you think you know.

 

Closing Reflection

The elephant was real. The ear was real. The leg was real. The tail was real. The side was real. The trunk was real.

But partial sight was not vision.

This is one of the deepest lessons in learning.

We must not make a throne out of a fragment. We must not build certainty on a glimpse. We must not let anger, fear, pride, or pain complete the picture for us. We must not follow what we do not truly know.

So we ask Allah:

Ya Allah, increase us in knowledge. And increase us in humility before what we do not know.

Protect our hearing from gossip. Protect our sight from shallow judgment. Protect our hearts from suspicion, pride, and haste.

Do not let us reduce people to one moment. Do not let us reduce children to one behaviour. Do not let us reduce truth to the part that serves us.

Give us the courage to say, “I may not have seen the whole.” Give us the patience to listen longer. Give us the wisdom to place each part in its right place.

And let our knowledge become light, not arrogance.

Āmīn.

 

Source Note

These are teaching stories from the Sufi and Islamic wisdom tradition. They should be shared as adab stories, not as hadith, unless a story has a clear Qur’anic or hadith source. The story of the Elephant in the Dark is used here as a teaching story about partial sight: a person may touch something real and still be wrong when he mistakes the part for the whole.

How to Learn:The Medicine Must Touch the Patient

Series: Teach Me How to Learn

Post 4: The Medicine Must Touch the Patient

بِسْمِ اللّهِ الرَّحْمـَنِ الرَّحِيمِ

فَتَعَـٰلَى ٱللَّهُ ٱلْمَلِكُ ٱلْحَقُّ ۗ

وَلَا تَعْجَلْ بِٱلْقُرْءَانِ مِن قَبْلِ أَن يُقْضَىٰٓ إِلَيْكَ وَحْيُهُۥ ۖ

وَقُل رَّبِّ زِدْنِى عِلْمًا

Fa-taʿālā Allāhu al-Maliku al-Ḥaqq.
Wa lā taʿjal bil-Qur’āni min qabli an yuqḍā ilayka waḥyuh.
Wa qul Rabbi zidnī ʿilmā.

“Exalted is Allah, the True King. Do not hasten with the Qur’an before its revelation is completed to you, and say: My Lord, increase me in knowledge.”

Sūrat Ṭā-Hā 20:114

The prayer is:

رَّبِّ زِدْنِى عِلْمًا

My Lord, increase me in knowledge.

But knowledge is not only something that comes to us.

It is something that must work on us.

A person may want to learn, but not want to change.
He may want the teacher’s words, but not the teacher’s discipline.
He may want the path, but not the struggle that makes the path real.

So within the prayer for knowledge, we need another prayer:

Ya Allah, do not only increase me in knowledge.
Make me able to take the medicine. 
 

The Qur’anic Anchor

Allah says:

وَأَن لَّيْسَ لِلْإِنسَـٰنِ إِلَّا مَا سَعَىٰ

Wa anna laysa lil-insāni illā mā saʿā.

“And that the human being will have nothing except what he strives for.”

Sūrat al-Najm 53:39

This is a direct and sobering verse.

A person does not receive what another person merely wishes for him. He does not become transformed because someone else wants transformation on his behalf. He does not grow in character because another person speaks beautifully about character.

There are things others can do for us.

They can advise us. They can love us. They can teach us. They can pray for us. They can open a door. They can point to the path.

But they cannot walk the inner path in our place.

A friend cannot do your humility for you. A parent cannot do your repentance for you. A teacher cannot do your sincerity for you. A school cannot live a child’s character on the child’s behalf.

The medicine must touch the patient.

Wanting the Cure Without the Medicine

Many people say they want transformation.

But when the work of transformation appears, they resist it.

They want patience, but not waiting. They want courage, but not fear. They want humility, but not being made small. They want responsibility, but not burden. They want love, but not vulnerability. They want wisdom, but not correction. They want children of character, but not the difficulties that form character.

This is strange, but common.

We ask Allah to heal us, then complain about the medicine. We ask Allah to teach us, then resist the lesson. We ask Allah to purify the soul, then try to escape every fire that burns away impurity.

But the medicine must touch the patient.

Not the friend. Not the idea of the patient. Not the parent’s reputation. Not the school’s mission statement.

The patient. 

 

Jami and the Physician’s Son

A wealthy physician once sent her son to study with Jami. She wanted him to learn from a great teacher.

Jami accepted the young man and gave him his first task. He was to clean the latrines.

The mother was upset. Her son had come to study with a great teacher, not to do such low work. So she sent servants to clean the latrines in his place.

Jami sent the servants back. He said to her, in meaning:

“You are a physician. If your son had a disease, would you give the medicine to your servants, or would you give it to him?”

The mother understood. The work was not a punishment. It was medicine.

The son did not need servants to save him from the task. He needed the task to save him from something within himself.

Perhaps he had pride. Perhaps he had been protected from low work for too long. Perhaps he knew how to be honoured, but not how to serve.

The story does not tell us everything. It does not need to. It shows us enough. The teacher prescribed a medicine.

The mother tried to give it to someone else.

 

When We Remove the Medicine

This happens all the time.

A child must clean his own mess. The parent says, “I will do it.”

A child must apologise. The adult explains it away. Or sometimes fight for him in a misplaced sense of filial piety.

A child must face a consequence. The adult removes it.

A child must struggle through difficulty. The adult rescues too early.

A child must learn service. The adult calls it humiliation.

A child must learn discipline. The adult calls it pressure.

Then years later, people wonder why the child is not responsible.

But who took away the medicine?

Love can become confused. A parent sees a child struggling and wants to remove the struggle. Sometimes this is right. A child may be unsafe, overwhelmed, exhausted, or in need of protection.

But sometimes the struggle is not the enemy.

Sometimes the struggle is the teacher.

A child who has forgotten homework may need to face the natural consequences. A child who has hurt someone may need to learn restoration, at the very least, to apologise. A child who has broken something may need to repair or replace it. A child who has made a mess may need to clean it. A child who wants trust may need to prove trustworthiness in small ways. A child who wants freedom may need to show responsibility.

When adults remove all these medicines, they may feel kind in the moment.

But they may be stealing from the child’s future.

The child learns:

Someone else will clean. Someone else will explain. Someone else will carry. Someone else will repair. Someone else will suffer the result of my choices.

This is not love.

It is a soft form of harm.

Love does not mean doing the child’s life for him. Love means helping the child grow strong enough to live before Allah.

 

Low Work May Lift the Soul

Not every hard task is wise. Not every difficulty is educational. Not every strict adult is right.

A task can be abusive. A teacher can misuse authority. A parent can crush a child while calling it discipline.

So we must be careful.

But we must also not become people who think every discomfort is harm.

Some discomforts are medicine.

Sweeping can be medicine. Cleaning can be medicine. Waiting can be medicine. Serving food can be medicine. Putting things away can be medicine. Repeating a task carefully can be medicine. Doing unnoticed work can be medicine. Apologising can be medicine. Being corrected can be medicine. Sitting with the result of one’s own action can be medicine.

Especially for the nafs.

The nafs loves comfort. It loves status. It loves to be served. It loves to be excused. It loves to be told that its feelings are always the measure of truth.

But the soul does not grow only by being protected from pain.

The soul grows through rightly carried struggle.

A child who never cleans may not learn gratitude. A child who never waits may not learn patience. A child who never serves may not learn humility. A child who never loses may not learn resilience. A child who never hears “no” may not learn restraint. A child who never repairs what he has broken may not learn responsibility.

This is not harshness. It is mercy with form.

The medicine must touch the patient.

 

Jami and the Heart That Had Not Loved

A young man once came to Jami and asked to become his disciple.

Jami asked him a question: “Have you ever loved anyone with your whole heart?”

The young man said no.

Jami told him to go and love someone first. Then he would be ready.

At first, this seems surprising.

The young man came for spiritual training. Why speak of love? But Jami was not sending him away from the path.

He was sending him to the first school of the heart. A heart that has never loved may still be too dry for certain truths.

Love teaches what books alone cannot teach.

Love teaches waiting. Love teaches tenderness. Love teaches longing. Love teaches sacrifice. Love teaches that another person is not an object. Love teaches that the heart can be wounded and still remain alive. Love teaches that we are not always in control. Love teaches that the world does not exist merely to satisfy us.

We can understand the hadith where it says : When a man marries he has fulfilled half of the religion; so let him fear God regarding the remaining half.

Of course, not every love is pure.

Some love is desire wearing a beautiful name. Some love is possessiveness. Some love is need. Some love is ego. Some love is escape.

But even then, the heart may begin to discover its own poverty.

The young man may have wanted spiritual knowledge as an idea. Jami wanted the heart to become soft enough to receive it.

A dry heart can turn wisdom into a concept.

A softened heart can let wisdom become life.

 

The First School of the Heart

Before a person can receive certain truths, the heart must be softened.

This is why children need real relationships, not only instruction.

They need to care for plants. They need to care for animals. They need to care for younger children. They need to visit the sick. They need to serve elders. They need to cook for others. They need to see tired hands. They need to know that food does not appear by magic. They need to know that beauty requires care. They need to know that someone must sweep the floor. They need to know that gratitude is not a word for assemblies only.

These things soften the heart.

A child who has never served may study kindness and remain self-centred. A child who has never waited may study patience and remain demanding. A child who has never loved anything fragile may speak about compassion and remain careless.

This is why practical life is not separate from spiritual life.

The broom can teach. The garden can teach. The kitchen can teach. The younger child can teach. The broken object can teach. The person we love can teach. The task we did not want can teach.

The medicine comes in many forms.

But it must be taken.

 

The Qur’anic Mirror

Allah says:

وَأَن لَّيْسَ لِلْإِنسَـٰنِ إِلَّا مَا سَعَىٰ

The human being will have nothing except what he strives for.

This does not mean that Allah’s mercy is small. Allah’s mercy is vast.

It does not mean we are saved by effort alone. We are always in need of Allah.

But it does mean we must not turn passivity into religion.

We cannot only want good. We must strive toward it.

We cannot only admire humility. We must accept the moments that train humility.

We cannot only value responsibility. We must carry responsibility.

We cannot only speak about service. We must serve.

We cannot only wish for children of character. We must allow them to do the work that forms character.

A community cannot be healed only by slogans. A school cannot be renewed only by documents. A family cannot become gentle only by saying it values gentleness. A person cannot become truthful only by admiring truth.

Something inside must change.

And that change requires striving.

 

When Schools Remove the Medicine

Schools can also remove the medicine.

A school may speak of responsibility but give children no real responsibility. It may speak of service but make service only a special event. It may speak of humility but praise only performance. It may speak of resilience but protect children from every frustration. It may speak of community but let adults do all the caring work. It may speak of love for the earth but not let children plant, compost, clean, repair, and notice waste. It may speak of beauty but not ask children to help maintain beauty.

Then children hear the recipe but do not eat the meal. They hear the word value, but do not carry the value in their hands.

A school of character must give children real work. Not fake work. Not decorative work.

Real work.

Work that helps someone. Work that has consequences. Work that requires care. Work that cannot be finished by talking about it. Work that is sometimes tiring. Work that is sometimes unglamorous.

Work that lets a child feel:

I am needed. I am trusted. I can contribute. I can repair. I can serve.

This is not a distraction from education.

This is education.

 

When Adults Refuse Their Own Medicine

It is easier to talk about children. But these stories are also about adults.

We too avoid our medicine. We want peace but refuse the apology. We want closeness but refuse vulnerability. We want respect but refuse to become trustworthy. We want our children to be disciplined but do not discipline our own speech. We want our students to be reflective but do not reflect on our own practice. We want our community to change but do not change what is within ourselves.

We want Allah to open doors but do not walk through the door already opened.

Sometimes the medicine is a conversation we avoid. Sometimes it is a habit we must stop. Sometimes it is a task we consider beneath us. Sometimes it is a person we must forgive. Sometimes it is a truth we must finally admit. Sometimes it is silence. Sometimes it is speech. Sometimes it is work no one will see.

The medicine does not always taste noble.

Sometimes it smells like cleaning latrines. Sometimes it tastes like loving and being made vulnerable. Sometimes it tastes like taking responsibility without applause.

But if it is the medicine Allah has placed before us, refusing it will keep us sick.

 

The Danger of Outsourcing the Soul

There is a strange laziness of the spirit. We want someone else to do the hard part.

The parent wants the school to form the child, while the home contradicts the formation. The school wants the parents to form the child, while the classroom contradicts the formation. The student wants the teacher to give understanding, while he refuses effort. The teacher wants respectful students, while he does not model respect. The community wants righteous leaders, while it does not raise truthful children. The believer wants Allah’s nearness, while refusing the small acts of obedience that bring nearness.

Everyone wants the fruit. But who will plant?

Everyone wants the healing. But who will take the medicine?

This is why Sūrat al-Najm 53:39 is so necessary.

It brings us back to our own task.

Not with despair. With responsibility.

What is mine to do? What is mine to change? What is mine to carry? What is mine to repair? What is the medicine I keep trying to give to someone else?

 

Where This Appears in Us

These stories are not only about Jami. They are about us.

They are about the child who wants trust but avoids responsibility. They are about the parent who wants character but removes consequence. They are about the teacher who wants attention but has not built rhythm. They are about the school that wants values but avoids practical work. They are about the religious learner who wants spiritual openings but avoids service. They are about the adult who wants a softened heart but refuses love, apology, and humility. They are about anyone who says, “I want to change,” while avoiding the very thing that would change him.

The physician’s son had to clean. The young seeker had to love. Not because cleaning is always the answer. Not because love is simple.

But because in those stories, those were the medicines.

A wise teacher sees the medicine needed by the soul.

A sincere learner takes it.

 

Closing Reflection

The servant cannot take the medicine for the son. The parent cannot do the child’s humility. The teacher cannot do the student’s striving. The school cannot live the child’s character. The friend cannot do our repentance. The book cannot do our obedience. The story cannot do our transformation.

It can only point.

We must take the medicine. This is one of the hardest parts of learning.

Not understanding the lesson. Living it.

Letting it change the day. Letting it change the tone of voice. Letting it change the habit. Letting it change the way we treat the weak. Letting it change the way we carry work that no one sees. Letting it change what we do when the nafs says: “This is beneath me.”

So we return to the supplication:

رَّبِّ زِدْنِى عِلْمًا

My Lord, increase me in knowledge.

And we ask:

Ya Allah, increase us in knowledge, and make us able to live what You teach us.

Do not let us give our medicine to our servants. Do not let us protect our children from the work that would strengthen them. Do not let us admire humility while refusing to be humbled. Do not let us speak of service while avoiding service. Do not let our hearts remain dry because we fear love.

Give us the courage to strive. Give us the patience to be trained. Give us the humility to take the medicine.

And make our learning a means of becoming more pleasing to You.

Āmīn. 

Source Note

These are teaching stories from the Sufi and Islamic wisdom tradition. They should be shared as adab stories, not as hadith, unless a story has a clear Qur’anic or hadith source. The Jami stories are used here as teaching stories about inner work: some lessons cannot be outsourced, and some forms of knowledge require the heart to become soft enough to receive them.

How to Learn: The Key Is Not Always Where the Light Is

Series: Teach Me How to Learn

Post 3: The Key Is Not Always Where the Light Is

بِسْمِ اللّهِ الرَّحْمـَنِ الرَّحِيمِ

فَتَعَـٰلَى ٱللَّهُ ٱلْمَلِكُ ٱلْحَقُّ ۗ

وَلَا تَعْجَلْ بِٱلْقُرْءَانِ مِن قَبْلِ أَن يُقْضَىٰٓ إِلَيْكَ وَحْيُهُۥ ۖ

وَقُل رَّبِّ زِدْنِى عِلْمًا

Fa-taʿālā Allāhu al-Maliku al-Ḥaqq.
Wa lā taʿjal bil-Qur’āni min qabli an yuqḍā ilayka waḥyuh.
Wa qul Rabbi zidnī ʿilmā.

“Exalted is Allah, the True King. Do not hasten with the Qur’an before its revelation is completed to you, and say: My Lord, increase me in knowledge.”

Sūrat Ṭā-Hā 20:114

The prayer is:

رَّبِّ زِدْنِى عِلْمًا

My Lord, increase me in knowledge.

But before Allah teaches us to ask for knowledge, He teaches us not to rush.

وَلَا تَعْجَلْ

Do not hasten.

This matters because knowledge is not only a matter of gathering answers. Knowledge must become wisdom.

And wisdom does not rush.

Wisdom does not merely ask, “What is the rule?”

Wisdom asks:

What is the situation?
What is the intention?
What is the effect?
What is the right measure?
What does this moment require from me before Allah?

A child can memorise a rule.
An adult can quote a principle.
A teacher can repeat a method.
A community can inherit a tradition.

But wisdom is more than repetition.

Wisdom is knowing how to place a truth in its proper place.

 

Allah says:

يُؤْتِى ٱلْحِكْمَةَ مَن يَشَآءُ ۚ

وَمَن يُؤْتَ ٱلْحِكْمَةَ فَقَدْ أُوتِىَ خَيْرًۭا كَثِيرًۭا ۗ

وَمَا يَذَّكَّرُ إِلَّآ أُو۟لُوا۟ ٱلْأَلْبَـٰبِ

Yu’tī al-ḥikmata man yashā’.
Wa man yu’ta al-ḥikmata faqad ūtiya khayran kathīrā.
Wa mā yadhdhakkaru illā ulul-albāb.

“He grants wisdom to whoever He wills. And whoever is granted wisdom has certainly been given much good. But none will be mindful except people of understanding.”

Sūrat al-Baqarah 2:269

Allah does not only speak here of knowledge.

He speaks of ḥikmah.

Wisdom.

A person may know many things and still not be wise. He may have information but no proportion. He may know rules but not mercy. He may know principles but not understand the human being in front of him.

This is why ḥikmah is “much good.”

Wisdom saves knowledge from becoming harsh.
It saves rules from becoming mechanical. It saves intelligence from becoming arrogance. It saves sincerity from becoming clumsy. It saves strength from cruelty. It saves softness from becoming weakness.

Knowledge may say: this is the principle. Wisdom asks: how should this principle be carried here?

Knowledge may say: this is the medicine. Wisdom asks: what is the right dose and timing?

Knowledge may say: this is the truth. Wisdom asks: how should truth be spoken so that it remains truth and does not become a weapon for the nafs?

The same word may heal in one moment and wound in another. Silence may be patience in one moment and cowardice in another. Firmness may protect one child and crush another. Gentleness may soften one person and enable another person’s irresponsibility.

A shallow mind wants one answer for every situation.

A wise heart learns proportion.

 

Nasruddin and the Same Breath

A would-be disciple came to Nasruddin on a cold day.

He saw Nasruddin blowing on his hands.

“Why are you doing that?” he asked.

“To warm them,” said Nasruddin.

Later, Nasruddin served soup. The soup was hot, so Nasruddin blew on it.

The disciple was disturbed.

“First you used your breath to warm something. Now you use the same breath to cool something. I cannot trust a teacher who uses the same method for opposite purposes.”

And he left.

Nasruddin ate both bowls of soup.

The story is funny because the disciple thinks he has discovered a contradiction. But he has not discovered contradiction. He has only failed to understand context.

The breath did not change. The condition changed.

Cold hands needed warming. Hot soup needed cooling.

The same outward action served two different needs.

The disciple wanted a teacher who could be understood mechanically. He wanted one action to mean one thing in every situation.

But life is not like that. Teaching is not like that. Parenting is not like that. Spiritual training is not like that. Leadership is not like that.

One child may need encouragement. Another may need a boundary. The same child may need comfort in the morning and discipline in the afternoon.

One student may need more freedom. Another may need more structure.

One person may need to hear, “Be patient.” Another may need to hear, “Speak the truth.”

One wound may need silence. Another wound may need careful speech.

The person who does not understand this will accuse wisdom of contradiction.

“But yesterday you said this.”
“But last time you did that.”
“But you treated that person differently.”
“But the same breath cannot warm and cool.”

Sometimes such questions are fair.

Adults must not hide injustice behind “context.” Teachers must not call inconsistency wisdom. Leaders must not disguise favouritism as discernment.

But sometimes the complaint is not about injustice.

Sometimes it comes from a mind that wants life to be simpler than it is.

The same breath can warm and cool. The same word can heal and harm.

The same rule can guide or crush, depending on whether it is carried with taqwa.

 

The Danger of Mechanical Religion

Religion can become mechanical in the hands of the nafs.

A person learns a rule and applies it without mercy. A person learns a word and repeats it without understanding. A person learns a warning and uses it on everyone except himself. A person learns about truth and forgets beauty and goodness. A person learns about discipline and loses tenderness. A person learns about compassion and loses firmness.

But Islam is not a machine.

The Qur’an is not a machine. The Sunnah is not a machine. A human being is not a machine.

The heart must be trained to see. This is why ḥikmah is needed.

The truth does not change, but the way truth is carried requires mercy, timing, proportion, and discernment.

A school without wisdom becomes rigid. A home without wisdom becomes noisy or cold. A classroom without wisdom becomes either harsh or shapeless. A community without wisdom either breaks people with rules or dissolves everything in the name of kindness.

Wisdom is not softness. Wisdom is not cleverness. Wisdom is not compromise with falsehood. Wisdom is placing the right thing, in the right way, at the right time, for the right reason.

And that is a gift from Allah.

 

Nasruddin and the Lost Key

One evening, a neighbour found Nasruddin searching on the ground under a streetlamp.

“What have you lost?” the neighbour asked.

“My key,” said Nasruddin.

The neighbour began helping him search.

They searched carefully.

After some time, the neighbour asked, “Where did you drop it?”

Nasruddin said, “At home.”

The neighbour was astonished.

“Then why are you searching here?”

Nasruddin replied, “Because there is more light here.”

This is one of the sharpest Nasruddin stories.

Many people search where it is easy to search, not where the key was lost.

We search in public arguments for what was lost in private character. We search in more information for what was lost in adab.  We search in strategies for what was lost in sincerity.

We search in being busy for what was lost in prayer.

We search in other people’s faults for what was lost in our own hearts.

We search in new programmes for what was lost in daily discipline.

We search in screens for what was lost in human presence.

We search under the lamp because it is bright there.

But the key may not be there.

The key may be in the dark room. The key may be in the place we are avoiding. The key may be in the apology we have not made. The key may be in the habit we do not want to change. The key may be in the wound we keep protecting. The key may be in the truth we already know but have not obeyed. The key may be at home.

But home is darker.

So we search outside.

 

The Bright Place Is Not Always the True Place

There are bright places in life.

Public discussion is bright. Opinion is bright. Activity is bright. Achievement is bright. Planning is bright. Talking is bright. Being seen is bright.

These things are not always wrong. But they are not always where the key is.

Sometimes the key is quiet.

A child’s repeated misbehaviour may not be solved first by another lecture. The key may be a broken rhythm at home.

A student’s lack of focus may not be solved first by more pressure. The key may be sleep, fear, hunger, shame, or a heart that has not felt safe.

A school’s difficulty may not be solved first by another document. The key may be relationships, adult consistency, or a value that has remained only a value on the wall.

A person’s spiritual dryness may not be solved first by finding another speaker. The key may be a neglected prayer, an unresolved resentment, or a hidden disobedience.

A family’s conflict may not be solved first by proving who is right. The key may be the tone of voice, the old hurt, the lack of listening, the absence of mercy.

The place of light is not always the place of truth.

Sometimes the light only makes us feel productive.

Sometimes it helps us avoid the harder search.

 

Do Not Follow What You Do Not Know

Allah says:

وَلَا تَقْفُ مَا لَيْسَ لَكَ بِهِۦ عِلْمٌ ۚ

إِنَّ ٱلسَّمْعَ وَٱلْبَصَرَ وَٱلْفُؤَادَ

كُلُّ أُو۟لَـٰٓئِكَ كَانَ عَنْهُ مَسْـُٔولًا



Wa lā taqfu mā laysa laka bihī ʿilm.
Inna as-samʿa wal-baṣara wal-fu’āda 
kullu ulā’ika kāna ʿanhu mas’ūlā.

“Do not follow what you have no knowledge of. Indeed, the hearing, the sight, and the heart —

 each of these will be questioned.”

Sūrat al-Isrāʾ 17:36

This verse is a protection.

Do not chase guesses.
Do not build judgments on shadows.
Do not let the brightness of the lamp convince you that the key must be there.

Hearing will be questioned.

Sight will be questioned.

The heart will be questioned.

So the believer must search carefully.

Not only loudly.
Not only publicly.
Not only where others can see the effort.

Carefully.
Truthfully.
Before Allah.

 

In Learning

This matters deeply in learning.

Some students want the answer before they have understood the question.

Some want the method before they have developed attention.

Some want the result before they have practised.

Some want to correct others before they have corrected themselves.

Some want complexity because the simple thing feels too humbling.

Some want a new book because they have not lived the old lesson.

The key may not be in the next resource.

It may be in repetition. It may be in sleep. It may be in discipline. It may be in handwriting. It may be in listening. It may be in completing small tasks. It may be in repairing the relationship with the teacher. It may be in the courage to say, “I do not understand.”

This is why wisdom is needed in education.

A teacher must not only ask, “What does this child not know?”

The teacher must ask:

Where was the key lost?

Was it lost in fear? Was it lost in pride? Was it lost in haste? Was it lost in lack of practice? Was it lost because the child never felt seen? Was it lost because adults gave answers but did not build habits? Was it lost because the child learnt to look clever rather than learn deeply?

Different losses need different searches.

The same breath can warm and cool. The same child can need softness and firmness. The same classroom can need structure and wonder. The same lesson can need silence and conversation. The teacher who has only rules may miss the child. The teacher who has only feeling may lose the form.

The teacher needs ḥikmah.

 

In the Self

The hardest place to search is the self.

It is easier to search in other people’s mistakes. It is easier to search in systems. It is easier to search in history. It is easier to search in circumstances. It is easier to search in blame.

Those places have more light.

We can speak about them. We can analyse them. We can gather agreement. We can feel righteous.

But sometimes the key is inside.

My anger. My haste. My need to be right. My fear of being corrected. My unwillingness to apologise. My jealousy. My laziness. My desire to be admired. My habit of making everything about myself.
My lack of trust in Allah.

The nafs does not like this room. It is darker. There is less applause there.

No one may see the work. No one may praise the search.

But many keys are found there.

A person may spend years looking under lamps outside while the door of his own heart remains locked.

This is why the believer needs courage.

Not only the courage to speak truth to others.

The courage to let truth speak to himself.

 

The Qur’anic Mirror

Allah says:

يُؤْتِى ٱلْحِكْمَةَ مَن يَشَآءُ

He grants wisdom to whoever He wills.

This should humble us.

Wisdom is not seized by cleverness.

It is given by Allah.

A person can study for years and still need to ask Allah for wisdom. A teacher can teach for years and still need to ask Allah for wisdom. A parent can raise many children and still need to ask Allah for wisdom. A leader can make many decisions and still need to ask Allah for wisdom. A scholar can know many texts and still need to ask Allah for wisdom.

Information may be gathered. But ḥikmah must be granted.

And whoever is given wisdom has been given much good.

Not only many facts. Much good.

Good in speech. Good in restraint. Good in timing. Good in judgment. Good in mercy. Good in firmness. Good in knowing when the same breath should warm and when it should cool. Good in knowing when the key is not under the lamp.

Where This Appears in Us

These stories are not only about Nasruddin.

They are about us.

They are about the student who leaves a teacher because he sees one apparent contradiction and does not stay long enough to understand. They are about the parent who treats every child with the same method and calls it fairness, though the children need different things. They are about the teacher who uses one rule for every situation because it is easier than seeing each child. They are about the leader who searches in meetings for what was lost in trust. They are about the community that searches in new plans for what was lost in sincerity. They are about the religious person who searches in argument for what was lost in humility. They are about the family that searches in blame for what was lost in tenderness. They are about anyone who prefers the bright street to the dark room where the key was dropped.

This is why we need ḥikmah.

Without wisdom, we may be sincere and still be clumsy. We may be principled and still be harsh. We may be compassionate and still be weak. We may be learned and still lack proportion.

We may be searching and still searching in the wrong place.

 

In a School

A school needs wisdom as much as it needs curriculum. A school may have rules, but wisdom asks whether those rules are forming the child. A school may have freedom, but wisdom asks whether that freedom has become neglect. A school may have discipline, but wisdom asks whether that discipline has become fear. A school may have love, but wisdom asks whether love has become indulgence. A school may have tradition, but wisdom asks whether tradition is still alive. A school may have innovation, but wisdom asks whether novelty has replaced depth.

The same breath can warm and cool.

The same child may need to be held and challenged. The same class may need beauty and order. The same teacher may need compassion and firmness. The same day may require silence in one hour and laughter in the next.

This is not confusion. This is living attention.

The heart that teaches must keep asking Allah for ḥikmah.

Because children are not machines. Teachers are not machines. Education is not the delivery of content into containers. Education is the formation of human beings.

And human beings require wisdom.

 

Closing Reflection

Nasruddin warmed his hands with his breath. Then he cooled his soup with the same breath.

The disciple saw contradiction. He did not see context.

Nasruddin searched for his key under the lamp.

The neighbour saw effort. But the key was not there.

These two stories are teaching the same lesson.

Do not mistake rigidity for truth. Do not mistake brightness for guidance. Do not mistake searching for finding. Do not mistake one rule for wisdom. Do not mistake the easy place for the true place.

The same breath can warm and cool. The key is not always where the light is.

So we ask Allah:

Ya Allah, grant us ḥikmah. Do not let our knowledge become mechanical. Do not let our rules lose mercy. Do not let our mercy lose truth. Do not let us search where it is easy while avoiding where we lost the key.

Give us the courage to enter the darker room of the self. Give us the patience to understand context. Give us the humility to say, “I may not yet see the whole matter.” Give us speech when speech is right. Give us silence when silence is right. Give us firmness when firmness protects. Give us gentleness when gentleness heals.

And make our learning a path to wisdom, not merely a collection of answers.

Āmīn. 

Source Note

These are teaching stories from the Sufi and Islamic wisdom tradition. They should be shared as adab stories, not as hadith, unless a story has a clear Qur’anic or hadith source. Nasruddin stories often work through humour: the joke opens the door, but the lesson is deeper than the joke.

 

 

How to Learn: When Knowledge Becomes a Veil

Series: Teach Me How to Learn

Post 2 :When Knowledge Becomes a Veil

بِسْمِ اللّهِ الرَّحْمـَنِ الرَّحِيمِ

فَتَعَـٰلَى ٱللَّهُ ٱلْمَلِكُ ٱلْحَقُّ ۗ

وَلَا تَعْجَلْ بِٱلْقُرْءَانِ مِن قَبْلِ أَن يُقْضَىٰٓ إِلَيْكَ وَحْيُهُۥ ۖ

وَقُل رَّبِّ زِدْنِى عِلْمًا

Fa-taʿālā Allāhu al-Maliku al-Ḥaqq.
Wa lā taʿjal bil-Qur’āni min qabli an yuqḍā ilayka waḥyuh.
Wa qul Rabbi zidnī ʿilmā.

“So exalted is Allah, the True King. Do not hasten with the Qur’an before its revelation is completed to you, and say: My Lord, increase me in knowledge.”

Sūrat Ṭā-Hā 20:114

The prayer is beautiful:

رَّبِّ زِدْنِى عِلْمًا

My Lord, increase me in knowledge.

But before Allah teaches us to ask for knowledge, He teaches us not to rush.

وَلَا تَعْجَلْ

Do not hasten.

This order matters.

Knowledge is not merely something to collect. It is something to carry. And the one who wants to carry knowledge must first learn how to carry himself.

Many people want knowledge quickly.
Few people want to become humble slowly.

Many people want answers.
Few people want correction.

Many people want to be seen as intelligent.
Few people are willing to pass through the smallness that real learning requires.

So the prayer is not only:

My Lord, increase me in knowledge.

It is also:

My Lord, make me able to receive what You teach.

 

The Qur’anic Warning

For this reflection, another verse becomes a mirror:

سَأَصْرِفُ عَنْ آيَاتِيَ الَّذِينَ يَتَكَبَّرُونَ فِي الْأَرْضِ بِغَيْرِ الْحَقِّ

Sa-aṣrifu ʿan āyātiya alladhīna yatakabbarūna fil-arḍi bighayri al-ḥaqq.

“I will turn away from My signs those who act arrogantly upon the earth without right.”

Sūrat al-Aʿrāf 7:146

This verse makes me worry often to the point of being afraid.

Allah does not say that the arrogant person will see nothing. He may see many things. He may read books, attend lessons, hear reminders, quote sacred texts, and speak confidently about religion.

But arrogance changes the way the heart receives.

The sign is there, but the heart is turned away from it.
The words are there, but the meaning does not enter.
The reminder is there, but the nafs bends it into something else.

This is one of the great dangers of knowledge.

Knowledge can become light.

But it can also become a veil.

It becomes a veil when a person uses it to feel above others. It becomes a veil when learning protects the self-image instead of purifying the self. It becomes a veil when a person becomes more attached to being clever than to becoming true.

Ignorance is easy to see when a person knows nothing.

It is harder to see when ignorance has memorised many things.

 

Nasruddin and the Quick Learner

A man once came to Nasruddin and said:

“I am intelligent. I learn quickly. I am sure I will become one of your best students. How long will it take me to become a master?”

Nasruddin said, “Ten years.”

The man was disappointed.

“What if I work twice as hard?”

Nasruddin said, “Twenty years.”

The man became upset.

“But I told you I am a fast learner.”

Nasruddin smiled and said:

“That is the problem.”

The man thought speed was a sign of readiness.

Nasruddin saw that speed had become part of his pride.

There are things that can be learnt quickly: a formula, a method, a definition, a rule. But wisdom is not learnt in the same way. Adab is not learnt in the same way. Taqwa is not learnt in the same way. Humility is not learnt in the same way.

A sentence may be understood in one minute. But it may take ten years to become the kind of person who can live it.

A proud quick learner may be slower than a humble slow learner.

Why?

Because the humble learner is not always defending himself. He is not trying to prove that he understood first. He is not using the lesson to decorate his image. He can pause. He can be corrected. He can ask again. He can say, “I do not know.”

He can sit with confusion without rushing to appear clever.

Some students who look slow may be learning deeply.

Some students who look quick may only be collecting surfaces.

The question is not only:

How fast did I understand?

The question is:

What did this understanding do to my heart?

Did it make me more humble?
More careful?
More useful?
More grateful to Allah?

Or did it only make me more pleased with myself?

 

The Speed of the Nafs

The nafs loves speed.

Not always because speed is useful, but because speed gives the nafs a story:

I am quick.
I am sharp.
I understood before others.
I do not need repetition.
I do not need the basics.
I do not need the slow path.

This is dangerous in children.

It is even more dangerous in adults.

A child may say, “I already know,” because he is immature. But an adult may say, “I already know,” because he has built a whole identity around knowing.

Then every correction feels like a threat.
Every simple practice feels beneath him.
Every slow step feels like humiliation.

But most real things are built through repetition.

Prayer repeats.
Dhikr repeats.
Reading repeats.
Serving repeats.
Apologising repeats.
Trying again repeats.

The earth itself teaches repetition.

Morning returns. Rain returns. Seasons return. Seeds do not become trees because they are in a hurry.

A person does not become truthful because he has heard one story about truth.
A community does not become compassionate because it has used the word compassion.
A learner does not become humble because he can define humility.

Some things must be practised until they enter the limbs.

The quick learner wanted mastery.

Nasruddin saw the veil.

 

Nasruddin and the Scholar

A scholar once came to Nasruddin.

He had read much. He had studied much. He had spoken much. But he felt that his knowledge had not carried him beyond book-learning.

So he asked Nasruddin to accept him as a student.

Nasruddin agreed and gave him his first practice.

“For one week,” he said, “go to the marketplace every morning and evening. Kiss the ground. Pull your ears. Then bray like a donkey.”

The scholar was shocked.

But he obeyed.

The first morning, he went to the marketplace. People stared. He kissed the ground. He pulled his ears. He brayed like a donkey.

People laughed.

He felt shame burn inside him.

The next day, he did it again.

And again.

At the end of the week, he returned to Nasruddin.

“I felt like a fool,” he said.

Nasruddin replied:

“Good. That is the first real thing you have learnt.”

This is not a story about cruelty. It is not an educational method to imitate in schools. It is not a permission to humiliate students.

It is a parable about the prison of self-image.

The scholar did not first need another book. He needed to discover how terrified he was of looking foolish.

Sometimes pride hides inside dignity.
Sometimes vanity hides inside seriousness.
Sometimes the learned person is not protected by his knowledge, but imprisoned by his reputation for knowledge.

The scholar wanted higher learning.

Nasruddin gave him a mirror.

And the mirror was painful.

It showed him that the fear of appearing foolish may be stronger than the desire to become wise.

That fear can rule a person quietly.

It decides what he will ask.
It decides what he will admit.
It decides whose correction he will accept.
It decides which truths he will avoid.
It decides how much of his learning is only performance.

The scholar had knowledge.

But he was still trapped inside the dignity of being “a knowledgeable person.”

Nasruddin did not give him more words.

He gave him a test of the self that words had not yet purified.

 

The Fear of Looking Foolish

Many people do not fear ignorance.

They fear being seen as ignorant.

These are not the same.

A person who fears ignorance will ask.
A person who fears being seen as ignorant may pretend.

A person who fears ignorance will study.
A person who fears being seen as ignorant may hide behind big words.

A person who fears ignorance will thank the one who corrects him.
A person who fears being seen as ignorant may become angry at correction.

This matters deeply in education.

If a child is laughed at for asking, he may stop asking.

If a child is praised only for speed, he may begin to fear depth.

If a child is valued only for correct answers, he may begin to hide confusion.

If a child is never allowed to make a mistake with dignity, he may prefer pretending to learning.

Then the classroom may look successful from the outside.

But inside, many hearts are protecting an image.

Real learning needs safety.

Not the safety of comfort.

The safety of truth.

A place where “I do not know” is not a disgrace.
A place where correction is not an attack.
A place where the slow child is not humiliated.
A place where the quick child is not allowed to become arrogant.
A place where the teacher also remains a learner.
A place where knowledge is not used as a weapon.

 

The Qur’anic Mirror

Allah says:

“I will turn away from My signs those who act arrogantly upon the earth without right.”

The verse continues with an even more severe meaning: if they see every sign, they will not believe in it; if they see the path of guidance, they will not take it; and if they see the path of error, they will take it.

This should make every learner tremble.

Not with fear of learning.

With fear of pride.

Because arrogance does not merely reduce information. It distorts direction.

The arrogant heart may reject the straight path because the straight path requires humility. It may choose the crooked path because the crooked path preserves the nafs.

This is why knowledge alone is not enough.

A sign must be seen by a heart willing to submit.
A lesson must be received by a soul willing to change.
A teacher must be approached with adab.
A book must be read with sincerity.

Even the Qur’an can be recited by a tongue that has not surrendered.

Sacred words do not become guidance merely because they pass through the mouth. They become guidance when Allah opens the heart, and the heart responds.

 

When Knowledge Makes Us Less Human

There is a simple test.

After learning, am I easier to live with?

After learning, am I more truthful?

After learning, am I gentler with the weak?

After learning, am I more willing to apologise?

After learning, am I more careful with my words?

After learning, am I more aware of Allah?

After learning, am I less hungry for praise?

If not, what kind of learning is this?

A person may study religion and become harsher.
A person may study education and become more controlling.
A person may study psychology and become better at labelling people.
A person may study leadership and become more skilful at hiding his ego.
A person may study children and forget how to love them.
A person may study the Qur’an and forget to tremble.

This is the tragedy.

Knowledge that should have softened the heart becomes a tool for the nafs.

Then a person can explain everything, but cannot lower himself.

He can correct everyone, but cannot receive correction.

He can speak about humility, but cannot bear being treated as ordinary.

He can describe the path, but cannot walk it without wanting witnesses.

 

In a School

A school can accidentally train children to worship cleverness.

Who answers fastest?
Who finishes first?
Who speaks most confidently?
Who gets the highest marks?
Who is seen as gifted?

There is nothing wrong with recognising ability.

But ability without humility is a danger.

A fast mind can become impatient with others. A bright child can become addicted to praise. A serious student can begin to look down on ordinary work. A successful learner can become unable to face failure.

A child who is always called clever may begin to avoid anything that threatens that identity.

Then the praise becomes a cage.

We should teach children to love truth more than appearing smart. To love effort more than easy praise. To love correction more than image. To love depth more than speed. To love Allah’s pleasure more than being seen.

A child should be able to say:

“I was wrong.”
“I do not know.”
“Please teach me.”
“I need to practise.”
“I will try again.”

These are not signs of weakness.

They are signs that the vessel is still open.

 

In Religious Learning

This danger also enters religious learning.

A person may learn a few Arabic words and become proud.
A person may learn a few rulings and become harsh.
A person may memorise quotations and lose mercy.
A person may learn the errors of others and forget his own.
A person may study aqīdah and become proud of being correct.
A person may study spirituality and become proud of being humble.

This last danger is especially subtle.

To be proud of humility is to lose it.

To be proud of taqwa is to stain it.

To be proud of sincerity is to reveal its absence.

The more sacred the knowledge, the more carefully the nafs must be watched.

Shayṭān does not need to stop a person from learning if he can make him proud of learning.

Then the person carries books, but the books do not carry him.

He gathers language, but not light.

He gathers arguments, but not surrender.

He gathers identity, but not closeness to Allah.

 

Where This Appears in Us

These stories are not only about a proud student and a scholar in a marketplace.

They are about us.

They are about the child who says, “I already know,” before he has listened.

They are about the adult who cannot be corrected by someone younger.

They are about the teacher who asks students to learn but has stopped learning himself.

They are about the parent who wants the child to be humble but cannot apologise to the child.

They are about the leader who speaks of consultation but feels wounded when people speak honestly.

They are about the religious person who can detect arrogance in everyone except himself.

They are about the educated person who uses knowledge to remain safe from change.

They are about anyone who would rather look wise than become wise.

The quick learner wanted to arrive quickly.

The scholar wanted higher knowledge.

Both had to meet the same truth:

The path is blocked by the self that wants to be admired on the path.

 

Closing Reflection

There is knowledge that opens the heart.

And there is knowledge that the nafs uses to close it.

There is speed that is a gift.

And there is speed that becomes arrogance.

There is dignity that protects truth.

And there is dignity that only protects self-image.

There is scholarship that brings a person nearer to Allah.

And there is scholarship that becomes another robe for the ego.

So we ask ourselves:

Do I want knowledge, or do I want to be known as knowledgeable?

Do I want truth, or do I want to win?

Do I want correction, or only confirmation?

Do I want Allah to increase me in knowledge, or do I want knowledge to increase me in the eyes of people?

The prayer remains:

رَّبِّ زِدْنِى عِلْمًا

My Lord, increase me in knowledge.

But let us hear within it another prayer:

My Lord, do not let knowledge become a veil.

Do not let my intelligence become arrogance.

Do not let my seriousness become hardness.

Do not let my learning become a throne.

Do not let me use Your signs to decorate my nafs.

Teach me to be corrected.

Teach me to be slow when slowness is needed.

Teach me to be small before truth.

Teach me to learn without needing to be admired for learning.

Let every true thing I know make me more of a servant.

Āmīn. 

Source Note

These are teaching stories from the Sufi and Islamic wisdom tradition. They should be shared as adab stories, not as hadith, unless a story has a clear Qur’anic or hadith source. Nasruddin stories often work through humour: the joke opens the door, but the lesson is deeper than the joke.

 

How to Learn: No Knowledge Except What Allah Teaches Us

Series: Teach Me How to Learn Post 6 : No Knowledge Except What You Teach Us بِسْمِ اللّهِ الرَّحْمـَنِ الرَّحِيمِ فَتَعَـٰلَى ٱللَّهُ ٱلْمَ...