Wednesday, June 10, 2026

Ziarat of Gurgurra

 

 بِسْمِ اللّهِ الرَّحْمـَنِ الرَّحِيمِ  

وَمَا بِكُم مِّن نِّعْمَةٍ فَمِنَ ٱللَّهِ
Wa mā bikum min niʿmatin fa-minallāh

“Whatever blessing you have is from Allah.”

Sūrat an-Naḥl 16:53

There is an old darkly funny story from the Khyber.

It is not a story to build belief upon. It is one of those sharp teaching stories that makes us laugh first, then become uncomfortable a moment later.

A saintly man once came into the lands of a tribe.

He was a holy man. A traveller. A man of prayer. A man whose presence seemed to carry barakah.

When he arrived, the village changed.

The sick felt lighter. The anxious slept better. The quarrels became fewer. The goats gave milk. The traders returned smiling. The children stopped throwing stones at each other for almost half a day, which everyone agreed was close to a miracle.

People began to say:

“This man has brought blessing.”

The women sent food. The elders visited him. The children stared at him. The men who had never prayed in the first row suddenly remembered that the first row existed. Even the dishonest people became honest for a little while.

Not completely honest. But honest enough to surprise their neighbours.

And the village was pleased.

Then one day the saint said: “I must go.”

The village became silent. “Go?” they said.

“Yes,” he said. “I am a traveller. I must continue.”

The elders gathered. This was a serious matter.

They had received blessing, and now the blessing was walking away on two feet.

One elder said, “Perhaps we should ask him to stay.” Another said, “We already did.” A third said, “Perhaps we should offer him more food.” A fourth said, “We already fed him until he began to look afraid.”

Then a practical man spoke. There is always one practical man in every village. Sometimes he is useful. Sometimes he is the beginning of a disaster.

He said, “If he leaves, the blessing leaves.”

The elders nodded. This sounded reasonable.

Then he said, “But if he does not leave, the blessing remains.”

The elders nodded again. This also sounded reasonable.

Then he said the sentence that should have made everyone pause, make wudu, pray two rakʿah, and seek refuge from Shaytan.

He said:

“What if we keep him here permanently?”

There was a silence. Not the silence of wisdom. The silence of men doing arithmetic with their nafs.

Another elder said, “Also, we do not have a proper shrine.”

This was true.

Other tribes had shrines. A shrine gave dignity. A shrine gave identity. A shrine gave people a place to swear oaths. This was especially useful for people whose ordinary promises were not always believed.

If a man said, “I promise,” people might laugh. But if he said, “I swear by the saint buried in our land,” people became more careful.

A shrine was not only spiritual capital. It was social capital. And, someone added quietly, it was also good for business.

Pilgrims would come. Travellers would stop. Offerings would be made. Food would be sold. Animals would be tied nearby. Stories would spread.

A village with a saint was not like an ordinary village. A village with a saint had weight.

The elders looked at each other. Then they looked at the saint. Then they looked at the future shrine.

The saint, who had spent his life reminding people that all blessing comes from Allah, was now being discussed as though he were a useful piece of land.

So they honoured him. They fed him. They praised him. They told him how much they loved him. Then, according to the dark version of the story, they killed him.

And they buried him. And they built a shrine.

Now the blessing would remain.

This was their thinking. They had solved the problem. The saint could no longer leave. The village now had barakah, a place for oaths, a reason for pilgrims to visit, and a small business plan.  

The Terrible Joke

The story is funny because it is so foolish. But it is terrible because it is not only foolish.

It is familiar.

A people receive a blessing. Then they want to own it.

They do not ask: How do we become worthy of this blessing?

They ask: How do we keep control of it?

They do not say: This blessing came from Allah, so let us become more grateful, more truthful, more humble, more clean in our dealings, more careful with our tongues, more sincere in our worship.

They say: Where can we build the shrine?

The saint came to remind them of Allah. They turned him into a possession.

He came as a sign. They turned the sign into property.

He came to soften hearts. They used him to strengthen reputation.

He came with barakah. They used the barakah as a village asset.

And this is the oldest mistake.

We love the gift, but forget the Giver.

What Did They Want?

They wanted blessing. That is understandable. Who does not want blessing?

A home with sakinah. Children with adab. Food with enoughness. Work with honesty. Friendship without jealousy. Knowledge without pride. Worship without show. A school with light. A community with trust.

These are blessings.

But blessing cannot be trapped. It cannot be locked in a room. It cannot be buried under a dome. It cannot be forced to stay by fear, control, image, or violence.

Barakah is not magic attached to objects. Barakah is a gift from Allah.

Sometimes Allah places it around certain people. Sometimes around certain places. Sometimes around certain times. Sometimes around certain actions.

But the blessing is still from Allah.

وَمَا بِكُم مِّن نِّعْمَةٍ فَمِنَ ٱللَّهِ

Whatever blessing you have is from Allah.

So the question is not: How do I trap the blessing?

The question is: What kind of person receives blessing and does not corrupt it?

The Shrine for Oaths

There is another layer in the story. The people did not only want blessing. They wanted a shrine by which to swear oaths.

This is even more revealing.

When a community loses trust, it begins to need stronger and stronger signs. A truthful person does not need many oaths. His life speaks before his mouth speaks. But when words become cheap, people start asking for proof.

“Swear.” “Swear by Allah.” “Swear by the saint.” “Swear by the shrine.” “Swear by the grave.” “Swear by everything sacred, because I no longer trust your ordinary sentence.”

This is a sad condition.

The real problem was not that they lacked a shrine. The real problem was that they lacked truthfulness. But it is easier to build a shrine than to rebuild character. It is easier to decorate a grave than to discipline the tongue. It is easier to make a sacred place than to become a trustworthy people. So they solved the wrong problem.

They did not become truthful.

They created a place to make their untruth sound heavier.

Good for Business

Then there is the final little ugliness. The shrine would be good for business.

This part makes us smile because it is so human.

Even in religion, the nafs asks:

Will there be visitors? Will there be influence? Will there be donations? Will this make our village known? Will this increase our standing? Can holiness be useful?

The nafs can turn anything into trade.

Knowledge can become trade. Spirituality can become trade. Service can become trade. Education can become trade. Even humility can become trade, if we perform it for admiration.

This does not mean business is wrong.

Trade can be clean. Hospitality can be clean. Institutions need resources. Schools need budgets. Communities need organisation.

But when the sacred is used mainly for gain, something becomes crooked.

The shrine may stand.

The heart may fall.

In a School

This story belongs in education too.

A school may receive a blessing.

A good teacher comes. A child begins to heal. A class becomes calmer. A new practice brings life. A rhythm works. A prayer softens the day. A garden changes the children. A craft brings the hands back to attention. A story opens the heart.

Then the school becomes afraid.

What if the teacher leaves? What if the practice changes? What if the form disappears? What if we lose what made us special?

This fear is understandable. But fear can make us foolish.

We may try to trap the blessing in a system.

Or in one person. Or in a timetable. Or in a brand. Or in a method. Or in a building. Or in a sentence we repeat until it no longer has life.

But the blessing was never only in the form. The blessing was in sincerity.

In adab. In attention. In love. In truthfulness. In service. In the hidden prayer before the visible work.

If we keep the form and lose the heart, we have built a shrine and lost the saint.

In a Community

A community can also do this. It may receive a person of wisdom. At first, people benefit.

They listen. They change. They become gentler. They remember Allah.

Then slowly they begin to possess the person.

They say: “He is ours.” “Our scholar.” “Our teacher.” “Our elder.” “Our saint.”

Then they become jealous when others benefit from him. They become angry when he corrects them. They become frightened when he travels. They would rather keep him small and near than let his service be wide.

This is another way of killing the saint.

Not with a knife.

With ownership. With expectation. With control. With praise that becomes a cage.

A living teacher can be buried under people’s need. A living blessing can be suffocated by the hands that claim to love it.

The Lesson

The villagers thought the saint brought blessing. Perhaps he did. But they misunderstood the blessing.

The blessing was not that a holy man had entered their land. The blessing was that Allah had sent them a reminder.

A reminder to become truthful. A reminder to become grateful. A reminder to become people whose words could be trusted without needing stones, tombs, and dramatic oaths. A reminder that barakah comes from Allah and returns to Allah.

But they wanted the reminder without the change. So they kept the body and lost the meaning.

This is the danger.

To keep the object and lose the adab. To keep the building and lose the worship. To keep the name and lose the truth. To keep the story and lose the warning. To keep the shrine and lose the saint.

Closing Reflection

Perhaps the question is not: Where is the blessing?

Perhaps the question is: What do I do when Allah sends me a blessing?

Do I receive it with gratitude? Or do I try to own it?

Do I let it change me? Or do I turn it into my identity?

Do I become more truthful? Or do I use sacred things to cover my lack of truth?

Do I become more generous? Or do I calculate how the blessing can serve my name, my group, my project, my business?

A blessing is a trust. And a trust can be betrayed even while we are praising it. The villagers of the story did not hate the saint.

That is what makes the story scary.

They loved him wrongly. They loved the blessing more than truth. They loved the shrine more than the soul. They loved usefulness more than adab.

So they made a grave.

And perhaps people came. Perhaps candles were lit. Perhaps oaths were sworn. Perhaps trade improved. Perhaps the village became known.

But somewhere in the unseen account, the question remained:

Did the blessing stay? Or did only the building remain?

Ya Allah, do not let us trap what You sent to free us.

Do not let us possess what You sent as a trust.

Do not let us use sacred things to hide crooked hearts.

Make us people of gratitude.

People of truth. People whose oaths are not decorations. People whose word has weight because the heart has taqwa.

And when You send blessing into our lives, let us not ask only how to keep it.

Let us ask how to become worthy of it.

Āmīn. 

Source note

This story is adapted from the old frontier anecdote of the Ziarat of Gurgurra, associated with the Zakha Khel Afridis of the Khyber region. In Sir Robert Warburton’s 1900 account, the shrine is described as a contested local story: a saintly Kaka Khel man entered Zakha Khel territory, and the dark tale says they killed him and buried him so his tomb could become a shrine and a place by which they could swear oaths. Warburton also records that Zakha Khel chiefs denied this version and said the man died after being attacked by raiders, so it is best treated as a teaching story, not established history.

Wednesday, June 3, 2026

The Adhān That Closed a Door

 بِسْمِ اللّهِ الرَّحْمـَنِ الرَّحِيمِ  

فَبِمَا رَحْمَةٍۢ مِّنَ ٱللَّهِ لِنتَ لَهُمْ ۖ

وَلَوْ كُنتَ فَظًّا غَلِيظَ ٱلْقَلْبِ لَٱنفَضُّوا۟ مِنْ حَوْلِكَ

Fa-bimā raḥmatin mina Allāhi linta lahum.
Wa law kunta faẓẓan ghalīẓa al-qalbi lanfaḍḍū min ḥawlik.

“By a mercy from Allah, you were gentle with them. And had you been harsh and hard-hearted, they would have dispersed from around you.”

Sūrat Āl ʿImrān 3:159

This verse makes me reflect every time.

Allah is speaking to the Prophet ﷺ.

The one whose truth was pure. The one whose mission was revelation. The one whose character was the Qur’an walking among people.

Yet Allah tells him that if he had been harsh, hard-hearted, severe, and rough in comportment, people would have scattered from around him.

So what about us?

What happens when our truth is mixed with ego? What happens when our religious language is correct, but our face is hard? What happens when our advice is sound, but our tone humiliates? What happens when our daʿwah becomes a display of ourselves rather than a mercy from Allah?

Sometimes people do not turn away from Islam because they have seen Islam. Sometimes they turn away because they have seen us.

And they thought we were Islam.

The Sound and the Truth

There is a story in Mawlānā Rūmī’s Mathnawī, in Book Five, about a muezzin with an ugly voice.

The story is often told in different ways. In some fuller Urdu-Persian retellings, the muezzin joins a caravan going toward the Kaʿbah, and the caravan stops one night in a non-Muslim region. In the core Persian text, Mawlānā begins more directly: a muezzin with a very bad voice calls the prayer in kāferestān, the land of unbelievers.

A small caution is needed here.

The word kāferestān in could be the historical region called Kāfiristān, associated with present-day Nuristan and its surrounding valleys. Probably in Mawlānā’s story, the word functions first as a spiritual and social setting: a place outside the Muslim community, a threshold of religious otherness.

The real map of the story is not only geography. It is the heart.

And on that map, the muezzin does something terrible. He calls to the truth in a way that makes the truth sound ugly.

The adhān is true. But his voice becomes a veil.

The message is beautiful. But the carrier becomes repellent.

This is the danger.

Not that the truth loses its truth. But that our presentation of truth becomes a highway robber on the path to truth.

Mawlānā’s Lines

The original Persian lines are:

یک مؤذن داشت بس آواز بد

در میان کافرستان بانگ زد

Yak muʾadhdhin dāsht bas āvāz-e bad
Dar miyān-e kāferestān bāng zad

There was a muezzin with a very ugly voice;
he gave the call in the midst of kāferestān.

چند گفتندش مگو بانگ نماز
که شود جنگ و عداوت‌ها دراز

Chand goftandash: magū bāng-e namāz
Ke shavad jang o ʿadāvat-hā dirāz

They repeatedly told him: Do not give the call to prayer,
for war and enmity may become prolonged.

او ستیزه کرد و پس بی‌احتراز

گفت در کافرستان بانگ نماز

Ū setīze kard o pas bī-iḥtirāz
Goft dar kāferestān bāng-e namāz

But he argued stubbornly and, without caution,
gave the call to prayer in kāferestān.

خلق خایف شد ز فتنهٔ عامه‌ای
خود بیامد کافری با جامه‌ای

Khalq khāyif shod ze fitna-ye ʿāmma-ī
Khod biyāmad kāferī bā jāma-ī

The people became afraid of a general turmoil;
but a non-Muslim man himself came, carrying a robe.

شمع و حلوا با چنان جامهٔ لطیف
هدیه آورد و بیامد چون الیف

Shamʿ o ḥalvā bā chunān jāma-ye laṭīf
Hadiye āvard o biyāmad chun alīf

He brought a candle, halwa, and such a fine robe as gifts,
and came like a familiar friend.

پرس پرسان کاین مؤذن کو؟ کجاست‌؟
که صلا و بانگ او راحت‌فزاست

Pors-porsān: ka-īn muʾadhdhin kū? kujāst?
Ke ṣalā o bāng-e ū rāḥat-fazāst

He came asking: Where is this muezzin? Where is he?
For his call and voice have increased my comfort.

هین چه راحت بود زان آواز زشت
گفت که آوازش فتاد اندر کنشت

Hīn che rāḥat būd z-ān āvāz-e zesht?
Goft: ke āvāzash fetād andar kenesht

“What comfort could there be from that ugly voice?”
He said: His voice fell into the house of worship.

دختری دارم لطیف و بس سنی

آرزو می‌بود او را مؤمنی

Dokhtarī dāram laṭīf o bas sanī
Ārezū mībūd ū rā muʾminī

I have a graceful and noble daughter;
she had a longing for faith, for becoming a believer.

هیچ این سودا نمی‌رفت از سرش

پندها می‌داد چندین کافرش

Hīch īn sowdā namīraft az sarash
Pand-hā mīdād chandīn kāferash

This desire would not leave her head;
many of her own people kept advising her.

در دل او مهر ایمان رسته بود

هم‌چو مجمر بود این غم من چو عود

Dar del-e ū mehr-e īmān rosta būd
Hamchu mejmar būd īn gham, man chu ʿūd

The love of faith had grown in her heart;
this grief was like a brazier, and I was like incense wood.

در عذاب و درد و اشکنجه بدم

که بجنبد سلسلهٔ او دم به دم

Dar ʿadhāb o dard o eshkanje bodam
Ke bejonbad silsila-ye ū dam be dam

I was in torment, pain, and anguish,
as her chain of inclination moved moment by moment.

هیچ چاره می‌ندانستم در آن

تا فرو خواند این مؤذن آن اذان

Hīch chāra mēnadānestam dar ān
Tā forū khwānd īn muʾadhdhin ān adhān

I knew no remedy for this,
until this muezzin recited that adhān.

گفت دختر چیست این مکروه بانگ

که به گوشم آمد این دو چار دانگ

Goft dokhtar: chīst īn makrūh bāng
Ke be gūsham āmad īn do-chār dāng?

The daughter said: What is this hateful sound,
these few harsh notes that have reached my ears?

من همه عمر این چنین آواز زشت

هیچ نشنیدم درین دیر و کنشت

Man hama ʿumr īn chunīn āvāz-e zesht
Hīch nashnīdam dar īn deyr o kenesht

In all my life I have never heard such an ugly voice
in this monastery or house of worship.

خواهرش گفتا که این بانگ اذان

هست اعلام و شعار مؤمنان

Khāharash goftā ke īn bāng-e adhān
Hast eʿlām o shiʿār-e muʾminān

Her sister said: This is the call of adhān;
it is the proclamation and sign of the believers.

باورش نامد بپرسید از دگر

آن دگر هم گفت آری ای پدر

Bāvarash nāmad, beporsīd az degar
Ān degar ham goft: ārī, ey pedar

She did not believe it, so she asked another;
the other also said: Yes, indeed.

چون یقین گشتش رخ او زرد شد

از مسلمانی دل او سرد شد

Chun yaqīn gashtash, rokh-e ū zard shod
Az musulmānī del-e ū sard shod

When she became certain, her face turned pale;
her heart grew cold toward Islam.

باز رستم من ز تشویش و عذاب

دوش خوش خفتم در آن بی‌خوف خواب

Bāz rastam man ze tashvīsh o ʿadhāb
Dūsh khwush khaftam dar ān bī-khawf khwāb

I was freed again from anxiety and torment;
last night I slept sweetly, free of fear.

راحتم این بود از آواز او

هدیه آوردم به شکر آن مرد کو

Rāḥatam īn būd az āvāz-e ū
Hadiye āvardam be shokr; ān mard kū?

This was the comfort I received from his voice;
I have brought gifts in thanks—where is that man?

چون بدیدش گفت این هدیه پذیر

که مرا گشتی مجیر و دستگیر

Chun bedīḍash goft: īn hadiye pazīr
Ke marā gashtī mojīr o dastgīr

When he saw him, he said: Accept this gift,
for you became my protector and helper.

آنچ کردی با من از احسان و بر

بندهٔ تو گشته‌ام من مستمر

Ānche kardī bā man az iḥsān o birr
Banda-ye to gashta-am man mostamir

For the kindness and goodness you did to me,
I have become your servant continually.

گر به مال و ملک و ثروت فردمی

من دهانت را پر از زر کردمی

Gar be māl o molk o servat fardamī
Man dahānat rā por az zar kardamī

If I were unmatched in wealth, kingdom, and riches,
I would fill your mouth with gold.

هست ایمان شما زرق و مجاز

راه‌زن هم‌چون که آن بانگ نماز

Hast īmān-e shomā zarq o majāz
Rāh-zan hamchun ke ān bāng-e namāz

Your faith is display and semblance;
it becomes a highway robber, like that call to prayer.

The Terrible Line

The terrible line is not that the adhān was false.

The adhān was true.

The terrible line is that a true call became, through its carrier, a cause of distance.

از مسلمانی دل او سرد شد

Her heart grew cold toward Islam. This line worries me.

Not every person who leaves, hesitates, withdraws, or becomes cold has necessarily rejected truth in its essence. Sometimes the heart was moving toward faith, but it met a harsh face. Sometimes a child was moving toward prayer, but prayer was presented through anger. Sometimes a young person was moving toward the Qur’an, but the Qur’an was used to shame him. Sometimes a seeker was moving toward Islam, but Islam reached her through arrogance, mockery, self-righteousness, or a lack of mercy.

The problem was not the adhān. The problem was  how it was delivered and also the voice.

And perhaps this is why the Qur’anic anchor is so powerful. Allah does not only teach us what to say. Allah teaches us what kind of person must carry what is said.

The truth has its own beauty.

But the carrier of truth must not deform it.

The Other Version in Saʿdī

There is also a related but different anecdote in Saʿdī’s Gulistān, in the chapter on the benefits of silence.

Saʿdī tells of a bad-voiced caller in the mosque of Sinjār. He used to call voluntarily, but with a manner that made listeners feel aversion. The patron of the mosque, being just and good-natured, did not want to wound his heart directly. So he said, in effect: this mosque already has old muezzins, and I give each of them five dinars; I will give you ten dinars if you go somewhere else.

The man went.

After some time, he returned and complained that the patron had wronged him. “You drove me out for ten dinars,” he said, “but where I have gone, they are offering me twenty dinars to go somewhere else, and I am not accepting!”

The patron laughed and said: “Be careful. Do not accept, for they may become pleased with fifty.”

Then Saʿdī says:

به تیشه کس نخراشد ز رویِ خارا گِل

چنان که بانگِ درشت تو می‌خراشد دل

Be tīshe kas nakharāshad ze rū-ye khārā gil
Chunān ke bāng-e dorosht-e to mīkharāshad del

No one scrapes clay from the face of hard rock with an axe
as your harsh voice scrapes the heart.

Saʿdī’s version is smaller, sharper, and more humorous.

Rūmī’s version is more devastating.

In Saʿdī, the bad voice hurts people.

In Rūmī, the bad voice turns a heart away from Islam.

The Hidden Daʿwah of Behaviour

We often imagine daʿwah as speech.

A lecture. A reminder. A post. A sermon. A correction. A proof.

But behaviour is also daʿwah.

Tone is daʿwah. Patience is daʿwah. Cleanliness is daʿwah. Listening is daʿwah. Fairness is daʿwah. Apologising is daʿwah.
Not humiliating people is daʿwah. 

How we treat the weak is daʿwah. How we speak when we are angry is daʿwah. How we behave when no one can benefit us is daʿwah.

A person may never attend our lesson. But he may see how we treat a waiter.
A child may forget the exact words of our advice. But she may remember whether our correction felt like mercy or contempt.

A student may not remember the worksheet on akhlāq. But he will remember whether the teacher of akhlāq had akhlāq.

This is the hidden curriculum of religion.

We may teach Islam in the textbook and contradict it in the corridor. We may teach mercy in class and humiliate children in discipline. We may teach the Prophet ﷺ in assembly and forget his gentleness when we are interrupted. We may teach tawḥīd with our tongues and teach ego with our behaviour.

That is the danger.

Not that Islam is weak. But that our presentation of the lived Islam is ugly.

When Correctness Is Not Enough

Sometimes we comfort ourselves by saying:

But what I said was true.

Perhaps.

But was it placed with wisdom?

Was it carried with mercy? Was it spoken at the right time? Was it spoken for Allah, or for the nafs? Was the other person invited, or defeated? Was the truth made luminous, or used as a weapon?

The Qur’an does not command us only to invite.

It commands us:

ٱدْعُ إِلَىٰ سَبِيلِ رَبِّكَ بِٱلْحِكْمَةِ

وَٱلْمَوْعِظَةِ ٱلْحَسَنَةِ

Udʿu ilā sabīli Rabbika bil-ḥikmah
wal-mawʿiẓati al-ḥasanah

Invite to the way of your Lord with wisdom
and beautiful exhortation.

Sūrat al-Naḥl 16:125

Not every correct sentence is wise.

Not every reminder is beautiful.

Not every defence of religion serves religion.

Sometimes a bad defence damages the truth more effectively than a direct attack.

If you want to ruin a beautiful thing, do not always attack it from outside.

Sometimes it is enough to represent it badly from inside.

The Muezzin in the Mirror

The easiest reading of Rūmī’s story is to laugh at the muezzin.

The harder reading is to see him.

The hardest reading is to see ourselves in him.

Where has my voice become ugly?

Not only the physical voice.

The voice of my behaviour. The voice of my parenting. The voice of my teaching. The voice of my leadership.
The voice of my correction. The voice of my religious certainty. The voice of my anger when I think I am defending Allah.

Is my Islam opening doors? Or closing them? Is my presence making faith more imaginable?

Or less?

When people leave my company, do they feel the fragrance of Islam, or only the pressure of my ego? This is not a call to dilute truth. It is a call to stop deforming it.

Truth does not need our harshness to become strong.

Truth needs our surrender.

Iḥsān as the Fragrance of Truth

Iḥsān is not decoration.

It is not a soft add-on after Islam and īmān. It is the beauty by which truth becomes livable. It is to worship Allah as though we see Him, and if we do not see Him, to know that He sees us.

A person aware of being seen by Allah cannot afford to be ugly in the name of Allah. A teacher aware of being seen by Allah cannot humiliate a child and call it tarbiyah. A parent aware of being seen by Allah cannot crush a soul and call it discipline. A leader aware of being seen by Allah cannot use religion to preserve image. A daʿī aware of being seen by Allah cannot make the path to Allah repellent through arrogance.

Iḥsān means that the truth should not only be correct in our mouths.

It should become beautiful in our conduct. It should be visible in the way we carry ourselves. It should soften the face. It should discipline the tongue. It should purify the intention. It should make our knowledge useful, not merely impressive.

It should make our religion a mercy, not a performance.

In a School

A school should not only ask:

How much Qur’an has the child memorized?

It should ask:

How much Qur’an has become visible in the child’s life?

Can the child tell the truth? Can the child apologise? Can the child wait? Can the child serve? Can the child speak without mocking? Can the child be corrected without collapsing? Can the child correct another without humiliating? Can the child see the weak? Can the child use knowledge without becoming proud?

And the school must ask the same of itself.

Can the school correct without cruelty? Can the school uphold standards without contempt? Can the school teach prayer without making prayer feel like punishment? Can the school teach adab with adab?

A school that teaches Islam badly may produce students who know religious words but are cold toward religion.

This is a serious matter.

Because the child is not a container for information. The child is an amanah.

And an amanah must not be called to Allah with an ugly voice.

In an Adult

This is not only for children. Adults also carry an adhān.

Every day, something in us calls people toward or away from what we claim to believe.

Our spouse hears it. Our children hear it. Our students hear it. Our colleagues hear it. Our neighbours hear it.

The person of another faith hears it. The person who has been wounded by religion hears it. The person who is quietly thinking of returning to Allah hears it.

A cold word may close a door we never knew was open. A gentle word may open a door we never knew was closed.

So we must become careful.

Not weak.

Careful.

Not vague.

Merciful.

Not silent before falsehood.

But beautiful in the service of truth.

Closing Reflection

Perhaps the question is not only:

Am I calling to the truth?

It is:

What does the truth sound like when it passes through me?

Does it sound like mercy? Does it sound like humility? Does it sound like the Prophet ﷺ?

Or does it sound like my anger, my insecurity, my need to win, my desire to appear religious?

The adhān is beautiful. But the muezzin must also be trained.

The Qur’an is light. But the carrier must not become a veil.

Islam is truth. But our behaviour may either witness to it or turn people away from it.

Ya Allah, do not let our words outrun our deeds.

Do not let our voice become ugly while Your truth remains beautiful. Do not let our knowledge become a veil. Do not let our correction become cruelty. Do not let our daʿwah become display.

Make us people whose presence opens doors. Make our Islam iḥsān.

Not noise, but fragrance. Not harshness, but mercy.
Not performance, but truth.
Not ego, but surrender.

Make us callers whose lives call before their tongues call.

Āmīn.

Source Note

This is an adab story from Mawlānā Rūmī’s Mathnawī, not a ḥadīth. The core Persian text is in Book V, Section 143 on Ganjoor, where the story is titled as the account of the ugly-voiced muezzin who called the prayer in kāferestān and received gifts from a non-Muslim man; the key lines include the daughter’s longing for faith, her reaction to the sound, and the line that her heart grew cold toward Islam.

The fuller Urdu-Persian retelling on Tazkia includes the caravan toward the Kaʿbah, the halt in kāferestān, the warnings not to call the prayer there, and the arrival of the gift-giver.

Saʿdī’s related but different version is in the Gulistān, Chapter 4, Hikāyat 13. It concerns a bad-voiced caller in the mosque of Sinjār and does not include the daughter turning away from Islam; that element belongs to Rūmī’s story.

I used Sūrat Āl ʿImrān 3:159 as the main Qur’anic anchor because it directly links harshness and hard-heartedness with people dispersing from even the Prophet ﷺ; Sūrat al-Naḥl 16:125 supports the call to wisdom and beautiful exhortation.

I also kept the draft close to your existing blog rhythm: Qur’anic opening, transliteration, translation, short reflective sections, and a closing duʿā. Your academic writing on iḥsān also shaped the emphasis on Divine Presence, character, applying the Qur’an in life, and “spreading its fragrance.”

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.

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