bismi-lLah wa-lhamdu li-lLah wa-shshalatu wa-ssalamu 'ala rasuli-lLah wa 'ala 
alihi wa ashhabihi wa ma-wwalah, amma ba'd, assalamu 'alaikum wa rahmatu-lLahi 
wa barakatuH
   
  biasaaaa, syering kiriman nech.
  silah!
   
   
  wa bi-lLahi-ttaufiq wa-lhidayah, subhanaka-lLahumma wa bihamdiKa asyhadu alla 
Ilaha illa Anta, astaghfiruKa wa atubu ilaiK. 
wassalamu 'alaikum
   
  No Haya, No Life 
By Khalid Baig 
  
Imam Shu'bah ibn Hajjaj was riding his horse when Abdullah intercepted him. 
Abdullah was a known street urchin. Not only he was given to a life of sin, he 
was also unabashed about it. Imam Shu'bah knew that trouble was ahead when 
Abdullah stopped him. Shu'bah (d. 100 A.H) is known as the "Amirul Momineen fil 
hadith." He is one of the foremost scholars of the science of Hadith Criticism. 
Abdullah knew his stature as a great hadith scholar, but he was bent on having 
some fun. 
  "Shu'bah! Tell me a hadith," he said with mischief in his eyes. 
"This is not the way to learn hadith," Imam Shu'bah replied. 
"You are going to tell me a hadith or elseĀ…" Abdullah threatened. When Shu'bah 
realized that he could not talk his way out of this he said: 
"OK, I'll tell you a hadith." He then narrated the isnad (a chain of narrators) 
and then the hadith: 
"Prophet Sall-Allahu alayhi wa sallam said: "If you have lost haya then do 
whatever you feel like." Abdullah's demeanor changed suddenly. It was as if the 
Prophet, Sall-Allahu alayhi wa sallam, had himself caught him in his mischief 
and was speaking to him: 
"Abdullah, if you have lost haya then do whatever you feel like." He was 
totally shaken. 
"I just wanted to cause trouble for you," he admitted, "but please extend your 
hand. I want to repent." This hadith turned a life around. Abdullah, the street 
urchin, became a student and then a great scholar of hadith. 

  Today he is known as Abdullah ibn Maslamah Qan'awi. His name can be found 
repeatedly in Sihah Sitta or the six most authentic collections of hadith, 
especially in the collection of Imam Abu Dawud who was his disciple. 

  What is haya? 
It is normally translated as modesty or inhibition but neither word conveys the 
same idea as haya. Modesty suggests shunning indecent behavior but it also 
implies bashfulness based on timidity. That is why the adjective based on its 
opposite, immodest, is sometimes also used as a compliment suggesting courage. 
Inhibition is defined as: "Conscious or unconscious mechanism whereby 
unacceptable impulses are suppressed." This is a very neutral definition with 
no reference to right or wrong. So one finds psychiatrist "helping" their 
patients overcome inhibitions. In contrast to the moral ambiguity of these 
words, haya refers to an extremely desirable quality that protects us from all 
evil. It is a natural feeling that brings us pain at the very idea of 
committing a wrong. Along with its unique connotation comes the unique value of 
haya in Islam. 

  Prophet Muhammad, Sall-Allahu alayhi wa sallam, said: "Every religion has a 
distinct call. For Islam it is haya." [Ibn Majah]. Another famous hadith says:
"There are more than 70 branches of Iman (Faith). The foremost is the 
declaration that there is no god except Allah and the least of it is removing 
harmful things from the path. And haya is a branch of Iman." [Bukhari, Muslim]. 
As some Muhaditheen point out, the number 70 is a figure of speech. What the 
hadith tells us is that the declaration of faith is the most important part of 
Iman but that is not all. Iman also has to reflect itself in all kinds of 
actions in real life. Moreover, haya is a centerpiece of most of the actions 
that Iman calls for. It is the basic building block of Islamic morality. When 
it is lost everything is lost.  

  Based on such teachings, Islam brought about a moral revolution of 
unprecedented dimensions with haya as its cornerstone. The pre-Islamic Jahilya 
society of Arabia knew the word but did not understand its meaning. Nudity, the 
antithesis of haya, was not only common in every day life, it was even part of 
the most important religious ritual of tawaf (circumbulation of Ka'bah). 

  So were all the other evils that flow from it. Islam exterminated all of 
those evils and changed the society in such a way that haya became one of its 
most cherished values. 
To this day in Friday Khutbahs around the world, the third Khalifah Hazrat 
Usman Radi Allahu anhu is mentioned as the person with perfect haya and perfect 
Iman (Kamil lil-haya wal Iman). Is there any other religion that celebrates 
haya like that? 

  Islam's laws about hijab, its ban against free mixing of men and women, its 
teachings about gender-relations --- all of these reflect a deep concern for 
haya. For men and women who have not lost their haya, these come naturally. 
There is a moving story from the earlier Islamic period about a woman who 
learnt that her young son had been lost in a battle. She ran in a panic to 
confirm the news, but before that she took time to make sure that she covered 
herself fully in accordance with the newly revealed laws of hijab. She was 
asked how did she manage to do that in a time of great personal tragedy. She 
replied: "I have lost my son, but I did not lose my haya." 

  And for centuries afterwards Muslim societies did not lose their haya.When 
Muslim lands came under  the western colonial rule about three centuries ago, 
they were
faced with a civilization that was no different than the pre-Islamic Jahilya on 
the issue of haya. While it did not have better morality, it did have better 
guns. At the gunpoint of military and political domination, Muslim societies 
were made to loose their grip on haya on the collective scale. 

  The powerful and attractive media became an important instrument in this war. 
 First it was books, magazines and newspapers. Then radio. Now it  is 
television. Together they projected ideas and images detrimental to haya. 
They made indecency attractive. The pace was increased tremendously by 
television, which has shown more firepower than all the previous media 
combined. When historians write about the moral decline in Muslim societies in 
the twentieth century, they will probably underscore television in subverting 
the moral fabric of society. We can get a sense of the rapidity of our fall by 
realizing that what was unthinkable just a decade ago has become routinely 
accepted today. In some cases, we seem to have lost all control. Isn't it 
shocking that while contraceptive ads cannot be shown on TV in the U.S.,U.K or 
europe for moral reasons, they are freely shown in the Islamic Countries like 
Pakistan? or  Agypt? Indonesia? 
We can get out of the morass by making haya as   our number one concern in both 
individual as well as public lives. There is no Islamic life without Islamic 
morality. There is no Islamic morality without haya.
  Taken from [al-Zawiya] list.


"Fa maadza ba'da-lhaqq, illa-dl_dlalaal"Leo ImanovAbdu-lLahAllahsSlave
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