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Hajj: Trusting in the Promise of Allah

By: Fahad Ansari
Hajj: Trusting in the Promise of Allah

The historical background to the Hajj is about trusting in the promise of Allah.

The Hajj season is upon us once again with millions of pilgrims preparing to don their Ihram and travel to the holy cities in search of Allah’s Mercy and Forgiveness, striving to turn over a new leaf in their lives and come closer to their Creator.

In preparation for this journey, pilgrims will spend many hours hunting for the best value Hajj packages by speaking to friends and family, checking references, and comparing price plans.

Hard earned savings, which may have been accumulated over a lifetime, will be invested for this three week journey. Wives and children may be left at home alone for this entire period.

Basic luxuries such as a change of clothes, toothpaste, and scented soap will be abandoned for those precious few days when the pilgrims undergo severe hardship in the most testing conditions, even sleeping outdoors in the desert beneath the stars without a tent amongst millions of others from all over the world, all dressed identically in a humble pair of towels. The question inevitably arises as to why these pilgrims voluntarily subject themselves to such difficulty.

What motivates them to leave their families, spend their life savings and suffer such troubles? The answer is simple – it is the promise of Allah.

The Messenger of Allah (peace be upon him) is reported to have said, “The one who performs Hajj and does not commit any obscenity and wrongdoing will come out as the day he or she was born,” i.e. pure and free from sins. (Al-Bukhari)

In another hadith, the Prophet Muhammad (peace be upon him) said, “The reward for an accepted Hajj is nothing less than the gardens of Paradise.” (Al-Bukhari)

It is belief in this promise of complete forgiveness, of the treasures of Paradise and the eternal pleasure of Allah that drives Muslims to make these sacrifices for His sake.

In essence, the historical background to the Hajj is about trusting in the promise of Allah. Almost every ritual performed and every step taken derive from a moment in which a member of the family of the Prophet Ibrahim (Abraham, peace be upon him) trusted in the promise of Allah with complete submission.

Let us reflect upon the moment when Ibrahim was commanded to abandon his wife Hajar (Hagar, peace be upon her) and their baby son Isma`il (Ishmael, peace be upon him) in the empty barren desert of Makkah with not a living soul for miles.

At that time, Makkah had neither inhabitants nor a known source of water. He left them there alone with them a bag full of dates and a waterskin. For any father, it is difficult to leave his infant child in such circumstances. For Ibrahim (peace be upon him), it would have been even more heart-wrenching, for Allah had blessed him with this son after he was childless until he was 86 years old. Now, he had been commanded by that same Lord to leave his precious son in a barren desert valley.

When Ibrahim started to depart, Hajar followed him, saying, “O Ibrahim! Where are you going and leaving us in this valley that does not have any inhabitants or anything else?” She repeated this several times, but he was not paying any attention to her. She then said to him, “Did Allah command you to do this?” Ibrahim replied, “Yes.” She said, “Then certainly, He will not abandon us.” She went back, while Ibrahim kept on walking, until he was next to a hill where he could no longer be seen. He then recited the following supplication,

Our Lord, I have settled some of my descendants in an uncultivated valley near Your sacred House, our Lord, that they may establish prayer. So make hearts among the people incline toward them and provide for them from the fruits that they might be grateful. (Ibrahim 14:37)

Imagine Hajar sitting with her baby in the scorching desert sands alone in glaring silence not knowing what was to be their fate, how they would survive and how she would raise her child.

It was not long before the water ran out and baby Isma`il began to become weak with thirst. With not a drop of water in sight and her infant’s cries echoing in her ears, Hajar began climbing the hills of Safa and Marwa repeatedly, desperately searching for anyone who could help.

Due to her sincerity and her faith and most of all, her trust in the promise of Allah, Jibril (the angel Gabriel) descended from the Heavens to dig the well of Zamzam which continues to flow and quench the thirst of pilgrims to this day.

Moreover, after a few days a group of Bedouins, seeking new pastures, happened to pass by the mouth of the valley. When they saw flocks of bird circling over it, they concluded that there must be water.

Some of their men rode into the valley to explore it and found a lonely woman with a child sitting by the rim of an abundant well.

By the mercy of Allah, the tribesmen asked Hajar’s permission to settle in her valley. She agreed with the condition that the well of Zamzam forever remain the property of Isma`il and his descendants.

Today, during our Hajj, we literally follow in the footsteps of Hajar as she ran frantically between these hills in the roasting desert sun, believing in the promise of her Lord, which He fulfilled.

Years later, Allah commanded Ibrahim (peace be upon him) to return to Makkah where he found his wife and son alive and secure, as was promised by Allah. But Ibrahim’s (peace be upon him) test of belief in the promise of Allah was not over as he was commanded to sacrifice his son Isma`il (peace be upon him) for Allah, his son for whom he had yearned for decades, his son who he had not seen for years.

Moreover, his compliance did not betray any feeling of distress, horror or panic; it was marked by calm acceptance and reassurance, reflected in his words as he put this most grave matter to his son:

O my son, indeed I have seen in a dream that I [must] sacrifice you, so see what you think.” (As-Saffat 37:102)

These are the words of a man in full control of himself and his feelings, knowing that he is only doing his duty.

That it was hard for Ibrahim is beyond doubt. He was not required to send his only son to war, nor to put him to a task that would end in his death. Nothing of the sort.

Instead he was required to undertake the task himself, by his own hand. And what task was that? It was to slaughter his son by way of sacrifice. This was the order he received calmly, the one that he put to his son and asked him to consider carefully. He did not take his son by surprise and do what was bidden. Rather, he puts the question to him as if it were both normal and familiar.

To Ibrahim, the question was one of obedience. Since his Lord wanted something, so be it, without hesitation. His son should also know and accept it willingly, with submission so that he too would earn the reward of obeying God and experience the pleasure of submission to Him. He himself had known that pleasure and now wants his son to feel it as the pure goodness that surpasses all else that life can offer.”

The reply of Isma`il (peace be upon him) can only be the response of the child of a mother and father who sacrificed all comforts out of a firm belief in the promise of their Lord.

He said, “O my father, do as you are commanded. You will find me, if Allah wills, of the steadfast.” (As-Saffat 37:102)

The response is not one of mere obedience and resignation but marked with acceptance and certainty. Isma`il (peace be upon him) addressed his father with love and affection and fully surrenders to the will of his Lord, trusting in His promise.

During Hajj, the pilgrims commemorate Ibrahim’s (peace be upon him) stoning of Satan who tried to tempt him away from obeying Allah in this command by the stoning of the pillars, thereby displaying our enmity towards Satan and our allegiance to Allah.

Finally, let us ponder on the moment after this noble father and son have built the Ka’bah when Allah commands Ibrahim (peace be upon him) to make the call for pilgrimage promising him that

And proclaim to the people the Hajj [pilgrimage]; they will come to you on foot and on every lean camel; they will come from every distant pass (to perform Hajj).(Al-Hajj 22:27)

When Ibrahim (peace be upon him) made this call, how many people would have heard it that people would come from the farthest regions of the world?

Yet, due to Ibrahim’s (peace be upon him) unwavering belief in the promise of His Lord, he obeyed without question. The phenomenal result of this call to Hajj can be seen today when millions of Muslims from the four corners of the globe make the journey by plane, by ship, by road, by camel and even by foot. All answering the call of Ibrahim made thousands of years ago.

All firmly believing in the promise of their Lord to forgive them and cleanse them to the state they were in when their mothers gave birth to them – pure and without sin.

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Source: www.islam21c.com

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