In the name of Allah, the Most-Merciful, the All-Compassionate
 
"May the Peace and Blessings of Allah be Upon You"
 
Praise be to Allaah, we seek His help and His forgiveness. We seek refuge with 
Allaah from the evil of our own souls and from our bad deeds. Whomsoever Allaah 
guides will never be led astray, and whomsoever Allaah leaves astray, no one 
can guide. I bear witness that there is no god but Allaah, and I bear witness 
that Muhammad is His slave and Messenger.
 
  
Bismillah Walhamdulillah Was Salaatu Was Salaam 'ala Rasulillah
As-Salaam Alaikum Wa-Rahmatullahi Wa-Barakatuhu
 
 

Advice On Dealing With Anger 


Anger is one of the evil whispers of Shaytan, which leads to so 
many evils and tragedies, of which only Allah knows their full extent. 
For this reason Islam has a great deal to say about this bad 
characteristic, and the Prophet (saws) described cures for this 
“disease” and ways to limit its effects, among which are the following: 



(1) Seeking refuge with Allaah from the 
Shaytaan: 


Sulayman ibn Sard said: “I was sitting 
with the Prophet (saws), and two men were slandering one another. One of them 
was red in the face, and the veins on his neck were standing out. 
The Prophet (saws) said, I know a word which, if he were to say it, 
what he feels would go away. If he said “I seek refuge with Allaah from 
the Shaytan,” what he feels (i.e., his anger) would go away.’” 
(Reported by al-Bukhari, al-Fath, 6/337) 

The Prophet 
(saws) said: “If a man gets angry and says, I seek refuge with Allaah, his 
anger will go away.” (Saheeh al-Jaami‘ al-Sagheer, no. 695) 



(2) Keeping silent

The Messenger of Allaah (saws) said: “If any of you becomes 
angry, let him keep silent.” (Reported by Imam Ahmad, al-Musnad, 1/329; 
see also Sahih al-Jaami, 693, 4027) 

This is because 
in most cases, the angry person loses self control and could utter words of 
kufr (from which we seek refuge with Allaah), or curses, or the word of divorce 
(talaaq) which would destroy his home, or words of slander 
which would bring him the enmity and hatred of others. So, in short, 
keeping silent is the solution which helps one to avoid all that. 



(3) Not moving


The Messenger of Allaah (saws) said: “If any of you becomes angry and he is 
standing, let him sit down, so his anger will go away; if it does not go away, 
let him lie down.” 


Among the benefits of this advice given by the 
Prophet (saws) is the fact that it prevents the angry person from going 
out of control, because he could strike out and injure someone, or even 
kill - as we will find out shortly - or he could destroy possessions and so on. 
Sitting down makes it less likely that he will become 
overexcited, and lying down makes it even less likely that he will do 
something crazy or harmful. 

Al-Allaamah al-Khattaabi, may Allaah have 
mercy on him, said in his commentary on Aboo Daawood: “One who is 
standing is in a position to strike and destroy, while the one who is 
sitting is less likely to do that, and the one who is lying down can do 
neither. It is possible that the Prophet (peace and blessings of Allaah 
be upon him) told the angry person to sit down or lie down so that he 
would not do something that he would later regret.”(Sunan Abee Daawood, with 
Maaalim al-Sunan, 5/141) 



(4) Following the advice of 
the Prophet (saws): 


Abu Hurayrah, 
may Alalah be pleased with him, reported that a man said to the Prophet 
(saws), “Advise me.” He said, “Do not become angry.” 
The man repeated 
his request several times, and each time the Prophet (saws) told him, 
“Do not become angry.”
(Reported by al-Bukhari, Fath al-Baaree, 10/456) 

According to another report, the man said: “I thought about what the Prophet 
(saws) said, and I realized that anger combines all kinds of evil.”(Musnad 
Ahmad, 5/373) 



(5) Do not become angry and Paradise will 
be yours 

(a saheeh hadeeth, see Saheeh al-Jaam, 7374. Ibn Hajr 
attributed it to al-Tabaraanee, see al-Fath 4/465): 

Remembering what Allaah has promised to the righteous (muttaqeen) who keep away 
from the causes of anger and struggle within 
themselves to control it, is one of the most effective ways of 
extinguishing the flames of anger. 

One of the ahaadeeth that describe 
the great reward for doing this is: “Whoever controls his anger at the 
time when he has the means to act upon it, Allaah will fill his heart 
with contentment on the Day of Resurrection.”
(Reported by al-Tabaraanee, 12/453, see also Sahih al-Jaami‘, 6518) 


Another great reward is described in the Prophets (saws) words: 
“Whoever controls his anger at the time when he has the means to act 
upon it, Allaah will call him before all of mankind on the Day of 
Resurrection, and will let him choose of the Hoor al-‘Ayn whoever he 
wants.”
(Reported by Aboo Daawood, 4777, and others. It is classified as 
hasan in Sahih al-Jaami‘, 6518). 



(6) Knowing the high status and advantages offered to those who 
control themselves: 


The Messenger of Allaah (saws) said: “The strong man is not the one who can 
overpower 
others (in wrestling); rather, the strong man is the one who controls himself 
when he gets angry.” 
(Reported by Ahmad, 2/236; the hadeeth is 
agreed upon) . 


The greater the anger, the higher the status of the one 
who controls himself. The Prophet (saws) said: “The strongest man is the one 
who, when he gets angry and his face reddens and his hackles rise, 
is able to defeat his anger.” 
(Reported by Imam Ahmad, 5/367, and 
classified as hasan in Saheeh al-Jaami‘, 3859) 


Anas reported that the Prophet (saws) passed by some people who were wrestling. 
He asked, “What is this?” They said: 
“So-and-so is the strongest, he can beat anybody.” The Prophet (saws) 
said, “Shall I not tell you who is even stronger then him? 
The man who, 
when he is mistreated by another, controls his anger, has defeated his 
own Shaytan and the Shaytan of the one who made him angry.”(Reported by 
al-Bazzaar, and Ibn Hajr said its isnaad is saheeh. Al-Fath, 10/519) 




(7) Following the Prophet’s (saws) example 
in the case of anger


The Prophet 
(saws) is our leader and has set the highest example in this matter, as 
is recorded in a number of ahaadeeth. 

One of the most famous was reported by Anas, may Allaah be pleased with him, 
who 
said: “I was walking with the Messenger of Allaah (saws), and he was 
wearing a Najraanee cloak with a rough collar. A Bedouin came and seized him 
roughly by the edge of his cloak, and I saw the marks left on his 
neck by the collar. Then the Bedouin ordered him to give him some of the wealth 
of Allaah that he had. The Prophet (saws) turned to him and 
smiled, then ordered that he should be given something.”
(Agreed upon. 
Fath al-Baaree, 10/375) 

Another way in 
which we can follow the example of the Prophet (saws) is by making our anger 
for the sake of Allah, when His rights are violated. This is the kind of 
anger which is praiseworthy. So the Prophet (saws) became angry when he 
was told about the imam who was putting people off the prayer by making 
it too long; when he saw a curtain with pictures of animate creatures in 
Aaishahs house; when Usaamah spoke to him about the Makhzoomee woman who had 
been convicted of theft, and he said “Do you seek to intervene 
concerning one of the punishments prescribed by Allah?”; when he was 
asked questions that he disliked, and so on. His anger was purely for 
the sake of Allaah. 



(8) Knowing that resisting anger is one of the signs of righteousness (taqwaa)


The righteous (al-muttaqoon) are those praised by 
Allaah in the Quraan and by His Messenger (saws). Paradise as wide as 
heaven and earth has been prepared for them. 

One of their 
characteristics is that they (interpretation of the meaning) “spend (in 
Allaahs Cause) in prosperity and in adversity, [they] repress anger, 
and [they] pardon men; verily, Allaah loves al-muhsinoon (the 
good-doers).” [Aal Imraan 3:134] 


These are the 
ones whose good character and beautiful attributes and deeds Allaah has 
mentioned, and whom people admire and want to emulate. One of their 
characteristics is that (interpretation of the meaning) “.. . when they are 
angry, they forgive.” [al-Shooraa 42:47] 




(9) Listening to reminders: 


Anger is a part of human nature, and people vary in their anger. 
It may be difficult for a man not to get angry, but sincere people will 
remember Allaah when they are reminded, and they will not overstep the mark. 

Some examples follow: 

Ibn Abbaas (may Allaah be pleased with him) 
reported that a man sought permission to speak to Umar ibn al-Khattaab 
(may Allaah be pleased with him), then he said: “O son of al-Khattaab, 
you are not giving us much and you are not judging fairly between us.” Umar 
(may Allaah be pleased with him) was so angry that he was about to attack the 
man, but al-Hurr ibn Qays, who was one of those present, said: “O Ameer 
al-Mu’mineen, Allaah said to His 
Prophet (saws) (interpretation of the meaning): ‘Show forgiveness, 
enjoin what is good, and turn away from the foolish’ [al-Araaf 7:199]. 

This man is one of the foolish.” By Allaah, Umar could go no further 
after al-Hurr had recited this aayah to him, and he was a man who was 
careful to adhere to the Book of Allaah.
(Reported by al-Bukhari, 
al-Fath, 4/304). 



This is how the Muslim should be. The evil munaafiq (hypocrite) was not like 
this when he was told the hadeeth of the Prophet (saws) and one of the 
Companions said to him, “Seek refuge with Allaah from the Shaytaan.”



(10) Knowing the bad effects of anger


The negative 
effects of anger are many; in short they cause damage to ones own self 
and to others. The angry person may utter words of slander and 
obscenity, he may attack others (physically) in an uncontrolled manner, 
even to the point of killing. The following story contains a valuable lesson: 

Ilqimah ibn Waail reported that his father (may 
Allaah be pleased with him) told him: “I was sitting with the Prophet 
(saws) when a man came to him leading another man by a rope. He said, O 
Messenger of Allaah, this man killed my brother. 
The Messenger of 
Allaah (saws) asked him, Did you kill him?
He said, Yes, I killed 
him.
He asked, How did you kill him?
He said, He and I were hitting a tree to make the leaves fall, 
for animal feed, and he slandered me, so I struck him on the side of the head 
with an axe, and killed him.’ . . .” 
(Reported by Muslim, 1307, 
edited by al-Baaqi).


Anger could lead to less than 
killing, such as wounding and breaking bones. If the one who caused the 
anger runs away, the angry person turns his anger in on himself, so he 
may tear his clothes, or strike his cheeks, or have a fit, or fall unconscious, 
or he may break dishes and plates, or 
break furniture. 


In the worst cases, anger 
results in social disasters and the breaking of family ties, i.e., 
divorce. Ask many of those who divorced their wives, and they will tell 
you: it was in a moment of anger. This divorce results in misery for the 
children, regret and frustration, a hard and difficult life, all as a 
result of anger. If they had remembered Allaah, come to their senses, 
restrained their anger and sought refuge with Allah, none of this would have 
happened. Going against the Shariah only results in 
loss. 


The damage to health that results from 
anger can only be described by doctors, such as thrombosis, high blood 
pressure, tachycardia (abnormally rapid heartbeat) and hyperventilation 
(rapid, shallow breathing), which can lead to fatal heart attacks, 
diabetes, etc. We ask Allaah for good health. 



(11) The angry person should think about himself 
during moments of anger


If the angry 
person could see himself in the mirror when he is angry, he would hate 
himself and the way he looks. If he could see the way he changes, and 
the way his body and limbs shake, how his eyes glare and how out of 
control and crazy his behaviour is, he would despise himself and be 
revolted by his own appearance. 

It is well-known that inner ugliness is 
even worse than outer ugliness; how happy the Shaytan must be when a 
person is in this state! We seek refuge with Allaah from the Shaytaan 
and from failure. 



  


 Permission is granted to circulate among private individuals and groups, to 
post on Internet sites and to publish in full text and subject title in 
not-for-profit publications.
 

 
http://groups.yahoo.com/group/LoveIslam_LiveIslam/



      

[Non-text portions of this message have been removed]

Reply via email to