**
*

Learn to listen, just as you learn to speak

  *



**





IF a person starts telling you, whether in private or public, something that
you already knew very well, pretend as if you do not know it. Do not rush to
reveal your knowledge or to interfere with the speech. Instead, show your
attention and concentration.



Imam Ata Bin Abi Rabah said: “A young man would tell me something that I may
have heard before he was born. Nevertheless, I would listen to him as if I
had never heard it before.”



Ata was a Tabi’ee, i.e. the one belonging to the generation coming after the
Companions.



Khalid Bin Safwan Al-Tamimi, who frequented the courts of two Caliphs, Umar
Bin Abdul Aziz and Hisham Bin Abdul Malik, said: “If a person tells you
something you have heard before, or news that you already learned, do not
interrupt him to exhibit your knowledge to those present. This is being rude
and ill-mannered.”



Ibrahim Bin Al-Junaid said: “A wise man said to his son*: *‘Learn the art of
listening as you learn the art of speaking.’”

* *

Listening well means maintaining eye contact, allowing the speaker to finish
the speech, and restraining your urge to interrupt his speech. Al-Hafiz
Al-Khateeb Al-Baghdadi said in a poem: “Never interrupt a talk; though you
know it inside out.”









__,_._,___


-- 
Faizan Shaikh,
Servant of Allah subhanau taa'la

“O Allah! Guide me to have beautiful manners and characteristics, no one can
guide me to beautify them except You. And turn me away from all evil actions
and characteristics, no one can turn them away from me except You.”

-- 
Nor can Goodness and Evil be equal.  Repel (evil) with what is better; then the 
enmity between him and you will become as if it were your friend and intimate!
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