http://www.dailytimes.com.pk/default.asp?page=2011\05\26\story_26-5-2011_pg3_3

Thursday, May 26, 2011

THINKING ALOUD: Buying a bed in paradise -Razi Azmi

 The long-winded oration of the mathematics professor milked the 'mother' to 
the last drop. The donor-to-be was advised to mail a copy of the receipt to his 
mother giving her the good news - the loving and dutiful son had bought her a 
bed in jannah

At a recent fundraiser in Sydney organised by the Islamic Forum for Australian 
Muslims, banners, slides and speeches were focused on selling to Australia's 
Muslims "a house in jannah (paradise)" through a donation towards the building 
of a new mosque.

And speaking of jannah, my generation grew up calling it jannat, as did our 
forefathers, until a successful Salafist campaign in the late 1970s and 1980s 
displaced many Urdu/Farsi words from the Urdu lexicon, replacing them with 
Arabic words. The best-known victim of this linguistic cleansing is good old 
Khuda hafiz, supplanted by Allah hafiz.

The Reformation of Christianity, which transformed Europe and laid the 
groundwork for Europe's astounding progress was triggered by The Ninety-Five 
Theses on the Power and Efficacy of Indulgences written by the German Martin 
Luther in 1517. Martin Luther not only rejected the efficacy of indulgences, 
which supposedly washed away sins and eased the holder's passage to paradise, 
but also denounced the corrupt practice of the selling of indulgences by some 
Catholic priests.

The practice of booking a berth in heaven with a payment may have been reduced 
to a historical curiosity among Christians now, but it seems to be thriving 
among many mainstream Muslims.

The website of the Bankstown mosque project is seeking donations with an offer 
that one would be utterly stupid to refuse: "Palace in Paradise; Book Now: You 
can buy 1 sq m of Masjid land for yourself, for your family members and even 
for a deceased relative @ $ 1,254 and Allah will reserve a palace in paradise 
for this noble deed, insha'Allah," (http://bankstownmasjid.org.au/updates.html).

The main speaker at the Sydney fundraiser was Maulana Yusuf Islahi, an eminent 
Islamic scholar and speaker and a member of the central Shura of 
Jamaat-e-Islami in India. He was introduced with much fanfare and bombast as a 
larger than life figure by the presenter, who further instructed the audience 
to rise to its feet and chant Allah-o-Akbar (God is Great) when the maulana 
walked to the podium. Not impressed with the effort, the presenter kept 
demanding more exertion from their vocal chords until the chants reverberated 
through the hall and resembled those at highly charged political meetings in 
the subcontinent.

The first speaker was introduced as a professor at two universities in Karachi, 
which were not named. He began by defining the 'west', which, he said, is no 
longer a geographical concept, but defines a civilisation, rather the lack of 
it.

He cited Australia as an example, for while it is in the east, it is of the 
west. Then he systematically summed up for Muslims living here half a dozen or 
so golden rules to follow in order to adhere to their religion and avoid 
becoming like the "jaanwar" (animals) of the west.

Maulana Yusuf Islahi in his speech emphasised that every Muslim had a duty to 
propagate his religion to the people of the West, show them the light of Islam 
and guide them to the "right path". He conceded that historically Muslims had 
made one big mistake by not educating their women.

For the moment, though, the maulana's thoughts and efforts were fixated on 
raising money for one more mosque in Australia. And even as he spoke of the 
need for educating women, there was no mention of women's participation in the 
workforce. Nor did he raise the issue of moral standards, character building, 
truthfulness, trust, etc, in relation to fellow citizens and society.

In answer to a question, later Maulana Islahi did mention, but only cursorily, 
the need for good citizenship. Replying to another question about whether 
Muslims should still follow the Quranic injunction not to befriend Christians 
and Jews, the maulana said that these verses in the Quran had a specific 
historical context and there was no reason to apply them when the circumstances 
had changed. One would have preferred that Maulana Islahi had emphasised these 
themes in his lecture.

When the presenter invited us to listen to a "very special talk" from a 
university professor with "two doctorates" in mathematics, I braced for a 
discourse on religion and Islam from a scientific perspective. In the event, I 
surely was not the only one to be disappointed, for the connection the learned 
professor drew was not between mathematics and religion, but rather between 
dollar amounts and plot sizes in jannah.

He spoke in the strident tone of a village maulvi giving a waaz (sermon) and 
exhorted his listeners to "dig deep into your pockets" to donate to the mosque 
project. Using the technique of a storyteller, which, he claimed, professors 
employ to drive home a point, he invoked the imagery of motherly love and threw 
the bait of heavenly bliss.

The listener was asked to think of the mother he had left behind in his 
motherland to seek a better future for himself in the west - the lonely, 
weeping, ageing, forlorn lady for whom nothing was dearer than her son, who had 
chosen to emigrate to distant shores far from her for worldly gain. But the son 
could now redeem himself - he had a God-given opportunity, so to speak. Thanks 
to the Bankstown mosque project, he could now make amends for his selfishness 
by buying his mother a place in jannah!

The long-winded oration of the mathematics professor milked the 'mother' to the 
last drop. The donor-to-be was advised to mail a copy of the receipt to his 
mother giving her the good news - the loving and dutiful son had bought her a 
bed in jannah, no less, by way of thanking her for the love and care she had 
bestowed on him throughout his life. Surely that would make for one very happy 
mother!

But what of the donor himself? I mean, what about his own place in heaven? 
After all, he is the one who has made the monetary sacrifice. Leaving nothing 
to chance, the good professor comforted the donor-son by assuring him that he 
too will have indirectly bought himself a bed in paradise - by virtue of the 
prayers of his grateful mother.

In the west they call it "buy one, get one free". Acquisition of two luxury 
beds in jannah with just one donation! Today's Muslims have learned a thing or 
two from the 'decadent' west, after all. When it comes to marketing, apparently 
they can do one notch better than those wayward westerners.

The writer can be contacted at [email protected]




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