Welcome to this Month
by Tariq Ramadan
Welcome to this Month by Tariq Ramadan
Once again we welcome it, once again it welcomes us.
This month will be, for each of us, what we shall make of
it. A month of return, introspection, meditation,
brotherhood and love. The month of the Qur.an. Or a month of
mechanical fast, almost unaware, that hurries to turn upside
down nights and days ending up living the nights to .forget.
the fast of the day...
This
month is a feast... not of noise, but silence; not of
banquets but restraint; not of forgetfulness but
remembrance. This month is a feast for the faith.
We wish everyone a beautiful month of
Ramadan. May it be a month of teaching where gift wins over
avarice, generosity over selfishness, love over hatred. Be
it a month where everyone tries to master one.s anger: the
Prophet advised once to respond to adversity during these
days of meditation : .I am fasting.... and to pass over. Be
it a month where everyone of us cares more than usual for
the needy people in her/his nearest environment.
Happy Ramadan to all of you! May your
fast be accepted and blessed. May the Most-High and His
Light go along with you, protect you and love you.
Brotherly.
ABOUT
RAMADAN : A Profound Faith Married to a Profound
Critical Intelligence by Tariq Ramadan
Most of the classical religious teachings regarding the
month of Ramadan insist on the rules being respected as well
as the deep spiritual dimension of this month of fast,
privations, worship and meditation.
While thinking about it more closely, one realizes
that this month marries apparently contradictory
requirements which, nevertheless, together
constitute the universe of faith. To ponder over these
different dimensions is the responsibility of each
conscience, each woman, each man and each community of
faith, wherever they are.
We
can never emphasise enough the importance of this
"return to oneself" required during this period of
fast. Ramadan is a month of abrupt changes; this is true
here more than anywhere else. At the heart of our consumer
society, where we are used to easy access to goods and
possessions and where we are driven by the marked
individualism of our daily lives, this month requires from
everyone that we come back to the centre and the meaning of
our life. At the Centre there is God and one.s heart, as the
Qur.an reminds us: "...and know that [the knowledge of]
God lies between the human being and his heart." At the
Centre, everyone is asked to take up again a dialogue with
The Most-High and The Most-Close.. a dialogue of intimacy,
of sincerity, of love. To fast is to seek.. with lucidity,
patience and confidence.. justice and peace with oneself.
The month of Ramadan is the "month of the
Meaning".. why this life? What about God in my life?
What about my mother and my father.. still alive or already
gone? What about my children? My family? My spiritual
community? Why this universe and this humanity? What meaning
have I given to my daily life? What meaning am I able to be
consistent with?
The Prophet of
Islam (peace be upon him) had warned "Some people only
gain from their fast the fact that they are hungry and
thirsty." He was speaking of those who fast as
mechanically as they eat. They deprive themselves from
eating with the same unawareness and the same
thoughtlessness as they are used to eating and drinking. In
fact, they transform it into a cultural tradition, a
fashionable celebration, even a month of banquets and
"Ramadan nights". A fast of extreme alienation.. a
fast of counter-Meaning.
As
this month invites us towards the deep horizons of
introspection and meaning, it reminds us of the importance
of detail, precision and discipline in our practice. The
precise starting day of Ramadan that must be rigorously
found; the precise hour before dawn on which one must stop
eating; the prayers to be performed "at determined
moments"; the exact time of the break of fast. At the
very time of our profound meditation with God and in our own
self, one could have thought that it was possible to immerse
oneself into one.s feelings because this quest for meaning
is so deep that it should be allowed to bypass the details
of rules and schedules. But the actual experience of Ramadan
teaches us the opposite: no profound spirituality, no true
quest of meaning without discipline and rigor as to the
management of rules to be respected and time to be
mastered.
The month of Ramadan
marries the depth of the meaning and the precision of the
form. There exists an "intelligence of the fast"
that arises from the very reality of this marriage between
the content and the form: to fast with one.s body is a
school for the exercise of the mind. The abrupt changes
implied by the fast is an invitation to a transformation and
a profound reform of oneself and one.s life that can only
occur through a rigorous intellectual introspection
(muraqaba). To achieve the ultimate goal of the fast our
faith requires a demanding, lucid, sincere, and honest mind
capable of sane self-criticism. Everyone should be able to
do that for oneself, before God, within one.s solitude as
well as within one.s commitment among one.s fellow human
beings. It is a question of mastering one.s emotions, to
face up to oneself and to take the right decisions as to the
transformation of one.s life in order to come closer to the
Centre and the Meaning.
Muslims
of today need more than ever to reconcile themselves with
the school of profound spirituality along with the exercise
of rigorous and critical intelligence. Particularly in the
West. At a time where fear is all around, where suspicion is
widespread, where the Muslims are tempted by the obsession
to have to defend themselves and to prove constantly their
innocence, the month of Ramadan calls them to their dignity
as well as to their responsibilities. It is urgent that they
learn to master their emotions, to go beyond their fears and
doubts and come back to the essential with confidence and
assurance. It is imperative too that they make it a rule for
themselves to be rigorous and upright in the assessment of
their conduct, individually and collectively: self-criticism
and collective introspection are of the essence at every
step, to achieve a true transformation within Muslim
communities and societies.
Instead of blaming "those who dominate",
"the Other", "the West", etc. it is
necessary to make ours the teaching of the month of Ramadan:
you are, indeed, what you do of yourself. What are we doing
of ourselves today? What are our contributions within the
fields of education, social justice and liberty? What are we
doing to promote the dignity of women, children or to
protect the rights of the poor and the marginalised people
in our societies?
What kind of
models of profound, intelligent and active spirituality do
we offer today to the people around us? What have we done
with our universal message of justice and peace? What have
we done with our message of individual responsibility, of
human brotherhood and love? All these questions are in our
hearts and minds.. and there is only one response inspired
by the Qur.an and nurtured by the month of Ramadan: God will
change nothing for the good if you change nothing.
|