Individual Responsibility |Sheikh Salman al-Oadah|
  

The individual is, without doubt, a part of society and an essential aspect of 
the Islamic way of life.

Allah says: “You began to say: Whence is this? Say: It is from yourselves.” 
[Sûrah Âl `Imrân: 165]

Allah also tells us: “Truly, Allah does not change the condition of a people 
until they change what is within themselves.” [Sûrah al-Anfâl: 53]

Indeed, the very idea of the resurrection and the judgment in the Hereafter is 
founded on the concept of individual responsibility. The same can be said for 
our creation. Allah says: “Leave me to deal with the one whom I created in a 
lonely state.” [Sûrah al-Mudaththir: 11]

A person will be all alone, though he might fancy that he will be resurrected 
along with his wealth, his children, his particular group, or his fellow 
countrymen. However, the truth is that even his nearest and dearest will 
forsake him on that day.

Allah says: “On the day when a man will flee from his brother, from his mother 
and his father, from his spouse and his children. Every person on that day will 
have concern enough to make him heedless (of others).” [Sûrah `Abasa: 34-36]

When we observe i`tikâf in the mosque, one aspect of the wisdom behind our 
doing so might be so we can restore to ourselves our awareness of our 
individual responsibility. This is because i`tikâf frees us from the outside 
pressures of our group affiliations and of society as a whole, pressures that 
normally weigh heavily on our thoughts. When we observe a retreat in the 
mosques, we as individual Muslims can restore the health and natural state of 
our minds.

The general public can cry out, prod and push, and carry out all kinds of 
activities. This is why Allah guides us as follows: “Say: (O Muhammad): I do 
admonish you on one point – that ye do stand up before Allah, - (it may be) in 
pairs, or (it may be) singly, - and reflect (within yourselves): your Companion 
is not possessed: he is no less than a warner to you, in face of a terrible 
Penalty.” [Sûrah Saba’: 46]

The clear thinking and reflection that Islam calls for is something that does 
not follow after the whims of the people, but it demands respect for the 
opinions of others and to give those opinions due consideration. One of us may 
disagree with what someone else might say, but he has to be prepared to defend 
that other person’s right to express what he believes.

Each individual has to wrestle with most of the concerns that people generally 
have. Each Muslim faces most of the problems that confront Muslims today. When 
a person faces problems without the awareness of individual responsibility that 
Islam seeks to cultivate in him, that person finds it easy to foist the blame 
on outside influences. He starts talking about globalization, Zionism, hidden 
hands, and shadowy powers playing some clandestine game. He might blame the 
government, the scholars, fate, or history for whatever crisis he faces.

He will never think of blaming himself. He takes his own innocence for granted. 
His views and opinions are always right. He knows it all. If only everyone else 
would follow his lead, everything would be alright.

We might find this same person incapable of solving his own domestic problems, 
unable to put one and one together to make two, inexperienced, unschooled, and 
indecisive. He might be incapable of overcoming his bad habits and character 
flaws.

We see this often in a young man who has just recently become religious. He 
thinks that he has the keys to everything in his hands. He acts as if he, like 
Christ, can heal the leper and the blind with a mere touch of his finger and 
resurrect the dead with Allah’s leave. When he talks about the Qur’ân and the 
Sunnah, he acts as if only he understands it. How easy it is for him to accuse 
others of ignorance and misguidance.

This is a great personal failing and it contributes the general crisis facing 
the Muslims today and contributes nothing to the solution.

Individual responsibility varies from person to person depending on the 
importance of that person’s position in society, his knowledge and his 
expertise. Individual responsibility exists within a historical context and is 
not something that just appears overnight. Responsibility means having to bear 
burdens, fulfill obligations, uphold rights, and do what is proper.

Though individual responsibility is by definition focused on the individual, it 
reaps rewards for society as a whole. The Prophet (peace be upon him) said: 
“Every joint in a persons body has charity due upon it for every day that the 
Sun rises. It is an act of charity to bring reconciliation between two people. 
It is charity to help a man onto his horse. Likewise, to raise his luggage up 
to him is charity. A good word is charity. Every step taken on the way to 
prayer is charity. It is charity to remove an obstacle from the road.”

Even holding ourselves back from abusing others – if we find ourselves 
incapable of anything else – is a form of charity that we give to ourselves.

The individual obligations discussed in the classical books of Islamic Law are 
nothing other than individual responsibilities. All of those obligations are 
prescribed to develop a person’s Islamic character so that the person can make 
a positive contribution to society.

In spite of this, we find a good number of Muslims preoccupied with general 
concerns and global problems at the expense of dealing with their own 
deficiencies. They think about the affairs of Muslims world and neglect the 
matters affecting them in their own countries. They fret about the state of 
humanity but fail to correct their own numerous faults or make amends for their 
own wrongdoings, though they may be perpetrating injustices and be beset by 
ignorance, indolence, and weakness of faith.

If we as individuals are in such a sorry state – where we are misappropriating 
the wealth of others, engaging in licentiousness, backbiting and slandering 
people, and operating under vested interests that cloud our judgments – then 
how can we speak generally about the problems of the Muslims? If we are in such 
a state, we will ourselves have become pat of the problem.

Therefore, in order to solve the problems of the world, we have to starts by 
rectifying ourselves as individuals. The first steps on the long road to 
reforming society are the steps we take to reform ourselves.

We are easily distracted by the general problems and crises that erupt around 
the world and forget about the serious problems that exist within our own 
selves. We neglect the important task of developing ourselves and our thinking 
– which will contribute to solving our general problems. All of the individuals 
that make up the organizations, institutions, and nations of the world they 
have considerable power to make a difference, though they may be unsung by 
history and unknown in the media.

The great expansion of Islam in the early days should not only be remembered in 
the context of the prominent leaders whose names have gone down in history. All 
of those who sacrificed, struggles, and even laid down their lives, and all of 
the women who gave their support and lent their fortitude, they must be 
remembered as well.

Islamic civilization is not to be credited only to the caliphs and rulers, but 
to all the workers, artisans, thinkers, planners, and investors who built that 
civilization, though history might only remember the names of the rulers 
associated with it.

The meaning of individual responsibility is embodied in the teachings of the 
Qur’ân and Islamic thought. It is the essential building block of society. A 
building is made of many individual bricks.

The Prophet (peace be upon him) said: “The believers with respect to one 
another are like a building, each one lending support to the whole.” [Sahîh 
al-Bukhârî and Sahîh Muslim]

  http://www.islamtoday.com/showme_weekly_2006.cfm?cat_id=30&sub_cat_id=812



      

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