http://www.atimes.com/atimes/Front_Page/EL25Aa02.html
De. 25, 2003

ISLAM AND HINDUISM

Part 4: Similarity of the two divine messages
By Sultan Shahin

Part 1: Spiritual symbiosis
Part 2: Non-Muslims and co-existence
Part 3: The concept of jihad


TIRUPATI, South India - Research shows the distinct probability of Hindus 
being the lost ummah (people) of Prophet Noah, and thus one of the four 
major Ahl-e-Kitab (people bearing revealed books), communities that the 
Koran mentions repeatedly. These findings have still not percolated down to 
the Muslim masses. But this information has been welcomed as an intellectual 
confirmation of what Muslims have known intuitively for centuries. It also 
satisfies the students of comparative religion who have been amazed to find 
passages in the Vedas, Puranas, the Holy Koran, the Hadees and the Old and 
New Testaments that correspond to each other almost word for word.

Beginning with the term employed to describe themselves, dharma and deen 
(both meaning ways of life), and an emphatic assertion of the oneness of God 
(Ekam sat: la llaha lllallah), Islam and Hinduism share the vision of a 
moral order prevailing in the universe.

In a manner reminiscent of the Hindu guidance on social relations, the 
Koran, too, outlines essential components of relationships between people. 
These include respect, kindness, honesty, tolerance, self-restraint, 
patience, forgiveness and compassion. Such virtues apply between parents and 
children, spouses, business partners, neighbors and friends, regardless of 
gender. The following Koranic verses illustrate these ideals:


And as for the believers, both men and women, they are close unto one 
another: they [all] enjoin the doing of what is right and forbid the doing 
of what is wrong, and are constant in prayer, and render the purifying dues, 
and pay heed unto God and His apostle. (9:71)

And vie with one another to attain your Sustainer's forgiveness and to a 
paradise as vast as the heavens and the earth which has been readied for the 
God-conscious who spend [in His way] in time of plenty and in time of 
hardship, and hold in check their anger, and pardon their fellow men because 
God loves the doers of good.(3:133-134)

And among his wonders is this: He creates for you mates out of your own 
kind, so that you might incline towards them, and He engenders love and 
tenderness between you: in this, behold there are messages indeed for people 
who think.(30:21)

And do good unto thy parents. Should one of them, or both, attain to old age 
in thy care, never say [a word of disdain] to them or scold them, but 
[always] speak unto them with reverent speech, and spread over them humbly 
the wings of thy tenderness, and say: "O my Sustainer! Bestow Thy grace upon 
them, even as they cherished and reared me when I was a child!" (17:23-24)

Similarly, both dharmas inform us of cosmic agencies keeping an account of 
all our deeds for which we will be made accountable. Take, for instance, the 
following verses from the Koran:

We shall set up scales of justice for the Day of Judgment, so that not a 
soul will be dealt with unjustly in the least, and if there be [no more 
than] the weight of a mustard seed, we will bring it [to account] ... and 
enough are we to take account. Al-Anbiya 21.47)

To these will be allotted what they have earned; and God is quick in account 
... God will not call you to account for thoughtlessness in your oaths, but 
for the intention in your hearts; and He is oft-forgiving, most forbearing. 
(Al-Baqara 2.20-22)

If God so willed, He could make you all one nation: But He leaves straying 
whom He pleases, and He guides whom He pleases: but ye shall certainly be 
called to account for all your actions. (An-Nahl 16.93)

Similarly both Hinduism and Islam talk about life after death, though in 
Islam there are differences of opinion about whether reincarnation 
constitutes a part of Islamic teachings as well.

Reincarnation in Islam
The Hindu belief in reincarnation is well known. But it is not known that 
the Koran refers as kafir (deviant) anyone who doesn't believe in the 
possibility of rebirth. Not many in India have perhaps come across the 
verses of the great mystic, Hazrat Jalal-ud-Deen Rumi, describing the 
process of evolution through reincarnation - from mineral and plant to 
animal and man and then to angelhood and beyond. Take the verses from the 
world famous Masnawi by Hazrat:

I died as mineral and became a plant,
I died as plant and rose to animal,
I died as animal and I was man.
Why should I fear?
When was I less by dying?
Yet once more I shall die as man,
To soar with angels blest;
But even from angelhood I must pass on ...

Another great mystic, Mansur al-Hallaj, famous for his formulation, Anal Haq 
(I am the truth: Aham Brahmo Asmi) wrote:

Like the herbage
I have sprung up many a time
On the banks of flowing rivers.
For a hundred thousand years
I have lived and worked
In every sort of body.

The Koran itself seems quite clear: "And you were dead, and He brought you 
back to life. And He shall cause you to die, and shall bring you back to 
life, and in the end shall gather you unto Himself." (2:28). The words "you 
were dead" can only mean that they had lived before becoming dead. And the 
words "in the end shall gather you unto Himself" could very well mean the 
attainment of moksha (release) rather than an eternal life in heaven or 
hell. Those who disagree, however, contend that "dead" is very commonly used 
for non-living things. "It does not necessarily mean that you were alive 
before being a non-living thing or dead." (S Abdullah Tariq in Islamic 
Voice, February 2002)

Responding to my published view that the concept of reincarnation may be a 
part of Islamic teaching as well, Tariq also quotes the following verses in 
support of his contention that reincarnation is not an aspect of Islamic 
teaching: "Every living being shall taste death, then unto us you will be 
returned." (29:57)"Until when death comes to a wrongdoer, he will say: 'Lord 
let me go back, that I may do good works in the world I have left behind'. 
Never! It is only a word which he will speak. Behind them, there shall stand 
a barrier till the day of resurrection." (23:99-100)"And spend of that with 
which we have provided you before death befalls any of you and he says: 
'Reprieve me my Lord a while that I may give in charity and be among 
righteous'. But Allah reprieves no soul when its term expires and Allah has 
knowledge of all your actions." (63:10-11)"They [the unbelievers] will say: 
"Our Lord! Twice you have caused us death and twice you have given us life. 
We now confess our sins. Is there any way out [now]'?" (40:11)

But Tariq and other critics seem to be confusing reincarnation with 
transmigration of souls, which are not necessarily the same concepts. He 
goes on: "The theory of transmigration of souls popularly known as avagaman 
or punarjanam is non-existent even in the Hindu scriptures proclaimed as the 
word of God by them. Following are the declarations of two well-renowned 
scholars of Hindu philosophy. The rishis [seers] of the Vedic era were not 
aware of punarjanam (Rahul Sankrityayan, Darshan Digdarshan, Kitab Mahal 
Allahabad, 1992, page 388.

"In the ancient Indian literature, Chandogya [author of an Upanishad] was 
the first to talk of punarjanam ie besides parloka [the world hereafter] a 
being takes birth in this loka [this world] also according to deeds. (ibid 
P.403) There are dozens of Koran-like descriptions of heaven in Vedas, but 
at no place do the Vedas talk of humans taking rebirth in inferior moulds 
according to deeds. Much later, the philosophers of the Upanishads presented 
the idea of transmigration of souls."

Thus the debate goes on. One thing, however, is certain: most of the 
greatest saints Islam has produced believed in reincarnation and it does 
constitute a part of many Muslims' belief system. This is primarily caused 
by a reluctance on the part of many Muslims to believe that God will merely 
reward or punish human beings on the basis of a lifetime in which they may 
not have received the guidance necessary to improve their conduct. That God 
will just be reconciled to their being sent to an eternal life in heaven or 
hell withouttheir being given another chance to improve themselves becomes a 
proposition difficult to believe. The greatest mystic poet of Urdu, Mirza 
Ghalib said:
Ham ko maaloom hai jannat ki haqiqat lekin;
Dil ke bahlane ko Ghalib yeh Khyal achcha hai.

(I am aware of the reality of heaven;
But, O, Ghalib; it is a good thought, to beguile the heart.)

(Copyright 2003 Asia Times Online Ltd. All rights reserved. Please contact 
[EMAIL PROTECTED] for information on our sales and syndication policies.) 



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