Friday Nasiha - Issue #442 
Shaban 25, 1428, A.H. - September 7, 2007, C.E.
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Living the Quran
Surah al-Baqarah (The Cow) - Chapter 2: Verses 17-20
Hypocrites
"Their similitude is that of a man who kindled a fire; when it lighted all 
around him, Allah took away their light and left them in utter darkness. So 
they could not see. Deaf, dumb, and blind, they will not return (to the path). 
Or (another similitude) is that of a rain-laden cloud from the sky: in it are 
zones of darkness, and thunder and lightning: they press their fingers in their 
ears to keep out the stunning thunderclap, the while they are in terror of 
death. But Allah is ever round the rejecters of Faith! The lightning all but 
snatches away their sight; every time the light (helps) them, they walk 
therein, and when the darkness grows on them, they stand still. And if Allah 
willed, He could take away their faculty of hearing and seeing; for Allah hath 
power over all things."

The first parable means that when a person, Muhammad (Allah's peace be upon 
him), spread the light of Truth that discriminated right from wrong and virtue 
from vice, those who used their faculties properly began to distinguish between 
these things. But the hypocrites, who were blinded by self-interest, could not 
see the right path even with the help of this light. 

Allah deprives of the sight only he who is not a seeker of truth; who chooses 
error for himself instead of guidance, and who shuts his eyes to the truth. 
When the hypocrites themselves turned away from the light of truth and chose to 
wander only in the darkness of falsehood, Allah also let them go astray.  And 
thus they become "Deaf" to hearing the Truth, "dumb" to speaking the Truth and 
"blind" to seeing the Truth.  

In the second parable, by thrusting their fingers into their ears, the 
hypcorites delude themselves for a while that they have escaped destruction. 
But they cannot, in fact, save themselves because Allah, with all His powers, 
is encircling them on all sides.  The first parable depicts those hypocrites 
who in their inmost hearts did not believe in Islam at all, but had become 
'Muslims' for the sake of self-interest or expediency. The second parable gives 
a description of those hypocrites who were suffering from doubt, suspicion and 
lack of faith. Though they were not wholly unbelievers, they practiced Islam 
only to the extent, which may not involve them in trouble. 

In this parable rainfall stands for Islam which came as a blessing to humanity; 
pitch darkness, thunder and lightning stand for the impending obstacles, the 
threatening dangers and the glaring difficulties which were being experienced 
on account of the strong resistance from the opponents of Islam. When the 
situation eased a little, they began to move onward on the path of Islam, but 
when the clouds of difficulties began to appear, or when they were given such 
commands as were against their self-interest or their superstitious beliefs and 
prejudices, they again stood still in sheer perplexity.  

Finally, it is important that we realize that Allah could, if He so willed, 
totally deprive these hypocrites also, of the power to see the Truth just as He 
deprived the hypocrites described in the first parable. But Allah does not do 
so because it is His will to give them respite to see the Truth and hear the 
Truth to the extent they want to see and hear it. That is why He left them with 
only as much power as they made use of in seeing and hearing the Truth.  

Source:
"Towards Understanding the Quran" - Sayyid Abul Ala Maududi

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Understanding the Prophet's Life
Sports in Islam
Features of sports in Islam are many. In fact, many Islamic obligations include 
physical activities in addition to spiritual activities and ways of 
straightening behaviour. Prayer, for example, is a spiritual purification as 
well as motions for the body. Hajj also involves physical effort in its various 
rituals. So do visiting fellow Muslims and the sick, and walking to mosques. 
All kinds of social activities in Islam can be considered to be a physical 
exercise of the body and a way to strengthen it, as long as these activities 
are done moderately.

Among the sports that the Prophet, peace be upon him, played are the following:

1. Running. It was a form of training for traveling, jihad, seeking provision, 
etc.  It was reported by Ahmad ibn Hanbal that the Prophet raced Aishah and she 
outran him. Then they had another race where he outran her, whereupon he said, 
"This time makes up for the other."

2. Horsemanship and horse racing. In Sahih Muslim it is reported that Allah's 
Messenger said, "Ride horses, for they are the legacy of your father Ismail 
(Ishmael)."

3. Archery. A number of hadiths show that this sport was popular among early 
Muslims. Uqbah ibn Amir said, "I heard the Messenger of Allah saying while he 
was on the pulpit, 'In the verse, [And make ready against them all you can of 
power, including steeds of war], the word power means archery; the word force 
means archery.'"

4. Fencing. Arabs knew a sport by the name niqaf, which is in fact the origin 
of fencing as known today. One of its forms was a special dance that the 
Prophet witnessed being done by Abyssinians inside a mosque. This niqaf refers 
to some movements being performed with arrows. In a narration reported by Abu 
Salamah, those Abyssinians were playing with their spears.

5. Wrestling. The Prophet wrestled with a number of men, one of whom was 
Rukanah ibn Abd Yazid ibn Hashim ibn Abdul-Muttalib, who lived in Makkah and 
was a skillful wrestler. (Al-Hakim, Abu Dawud, and At-Tirmidhi).

6. Swimming. As-Suyuti reported that Abu Al-Qasim Al-Baghawi narrated on the 
authority of Ibn Abbas that the Prophet and some of his Companions once swam in 
a stream. That day, the Prophet said, "Let everyone among us swim towards his 
friend." The Prophet himself swam towards Abu Bakr until he embraced him 
saying, "Here I am and my friend" (see Al-Zurqani's comment on Al-Mawahib 
Al-Ladunniyyah, vol. 1, p. 194).

Source:
"Sports Practiced by Early Muslims" - Atiyyah Saqr

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Cool History!
Hospitals in the Islamic Civilization
During the Islamic civilization, hospitals had much developed and attained 
specific characteristics:

1. Secular: Hospitals served all peoples irrespective of color, religion, or 
background. They were run by the government rather than by the church, and 
their Directors were commonly physicians assisted by persons who had no 
religious color. In hospitals, physicians of all faiths worked together with 
one aim in common: the well-being of patients.

2. Separate wards: Patients of different sexes occupied separate wards. Also 
different diseases especially infectious ones, were allocated different wards.

3. Separate nurses: Male nurses were to take care of male patients, and vice 
versa.

4. Baths and water supplies: Praying five times a day is an important pillar of 
Islam. Sick or healthy, it is an Islamic obligation; of course physical 
performance depends on one's health, even he can pray while laying in bed. 
Before praying, washing of face, head, hands, and feet must be done, if 
possible. For certain conditions, a bath is obligatory. Therefore, these 
hospitals had to provide the patients and employees with plentiful water supply 
and with bathing facilities.

5. Practicing physicians: Only qualified physicians were allowed by law to 
practice medicine. In 931 A.D., the Caliph Al-Mugtadir from the Abbasid 
dynasty, ordered the Chief Court-Physician Sinan Ibn-Thabit to screen the 860 
physicians-of Baghdad, and only those qualified were granted license to 
practice (Hamarneh 1962). The counterpart of Ibn- Tbabit, Abu-Osman Sai'd 
Ibn-Yaqub was ordered to do the same in Damascus, Mecca, and Medina. The latter 
two cities were in need for such an act because of hundreds of thousands of 
pilgrims visiting them every year. This was to prevent taking advantage of 
these pilgrims and to curb the spread of diseases among them.

6. Medical schools: The hospital was not only a place for treating patients, 
but also for educating medical students, interchanging medical knowledge, and 
developing medicine as a whole. To the main hospitals, there were attached 
expensive libraries containing the most up-to-date books, auditoria for 
meetings and lectures, and housing for students and house-staff.

7. Proper records of patients: For the first time in history, these hospitals 
kept records of patients and their medical care.

8. Pharmacy: During the Islamic era, the science and the profession of pharmacy 
had developed to an outstanding degree. The Arabic materia medica became so 
rich and new drugs and compounds were introduced because the Muslims had 
contact with almost all the known world at that time, either through control or 
trade. Their ships sailed to China and the Philippines, and their convoys made 
trades with black Africa, Europe and Asia. Chemistry became an advanced 
science, and there were means and need for a specialization called pharmacy.

Thus, the main Arabian hospitals were models for medieval hospitals built later 
in Europe. They were rather medical schools to which those seeking advanced 
medical knowledge, from the East or West, attended.

Source:
"Contributions Of Islam To Medicine" - Ezzat Abouleish

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