The Prayer of the Oppressed
By Hamza Yusuf
()
About this ebook
The Power of this prayer of Imam Muhammad al-Dar’i lies in its simplicity, its purity, and its sincere supplication. It is essentially a plea to God that our transgressions be overlooked, that divine mercy be bestowed upon us, that social justice be restored in spite of us, that wrongs be righted, and that righteousness reign once again in
Hamza Yusuf
Hamza Yusuf nació en Walla Walla, estado de Washington (USA). A los dieciocho años se hizo musulmán. Posteriormente, se trasladó a Oriente Medio donde pasó más de diez años estudiando las ciencias del Islam en la Península Arábiga y también en el norte y oeste de África. Después regresó a los Estados Unidos, y durante los últimos veinte años ha proseguido sus estudios con Šeij Abdallah bin Bayyah, el jurista más destacado del mundo islámico. Hamza Yusuf ha estado ocupado también enseñando y escribiendo desde que regresó a los Estado Unidos. Ha traducido al inglés varios textos y poemas clásicos, entre ellos The Content of Character, una recopilación de dichos morales del Profeta Muhammad (la paz sea con él); The Burda: The Poem of the Cloak, un poema laudatorio del siglo XIII considerado como el poema más recitado del mundo; The Creed of Imam al-Tahawi, un credo unificador de principios del siglo X, que sirve de base sólida para la fe islámica, y es la más fiable de las primeras redacciones del credo musulmán; y The Prayer of the Oppressed, que incluye su traducción de la poderosa y profundamente espiritual súplica del Imam Mubammad ibn Nasir al-Dar'i junto con el análisis de Hamza Yusuf sobre la naturaleza de la opresión y su impacto en la sociedad en general y en el corazón del individuo. A través de sus numerosas conferencias y apariciones en los medios, Hamza Yusuf participa activamente en el discurso público actual sobre el Islam, en el plano nacional e internacional. Es también cofundador del Zaytuna College, el primer Instituto Islámico de Humanidades creado en Occidente.
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Book preview
The Prayer of the Oppressed - Hamza Yusuf
Imam Muḥammad b. Nāṣir al-Darʿī’s
THE PRAYER of
THE OPPRESSED
THE SWORD OF VICTORY’S LOT
OVER EVERY TYRANNY AND PLOT
Translated and Introduced by
Hamza Yusuf
The Prayer of the Oppressed
Imam Muḥammad b. Nāṣir al-Darʿī’s
ebook Edition
Published by eboosk2go logo
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ISBN #: 978-1-61813-020-4
ISBN #: 1-61813-020-X
Published by Sandala Productions Inc., 2010.
Copyright 2010 by Hamza Yusuf. All rights reserved.
No part of this book may be used or reproduced in any manner whatsoever without prior written permission from Hamza Yusuf, except in the case of brief quotations embodied in critical articles and reviews. For more information, please contact Sandala, Inc. at info@sandala.org. Visit us at www.sandala.org.
First edition 2010.
Printed in the United states of America.
ISBN - 978-1-61813-020-4
Cover Photograph: Mikhail Evstafiev
This photograph, taken in 1995, shows a Chechen man praying during the battle of Grozny.
Cover Design and Layout: Abdallateef Whiteman
Calligraphy: Elinor Aishah Holland
Editor: Safir Ahmed
Arabic Editors: Shaykh Jamal Zahabi and Hisham Mahmoud
Managing Editor: Uzma Fatima Husaini
Copy Editor: Tom Devine
Poetry Editors: Daniel Abdal-Hayy Moore and Tom Devine
CD Production: Abdallateef Whiteman
IN THE NAME OF GOD,
THE BENEFICENT, THE MERCIFUL
Fierce is My wrath upon the one who oppresses anyone
who can find no ally other than Me.
– GOD
The Prophet Muḥammad once said to us, Help your brother, the oppressor and the oppressed.
We asked, O Messenger of God, we understand how we can help one oppressed, but how should we help one who is oppressing?
By stopping him from oppressing others,
he replied.
– IMAM AL-BUKHĀRĪ’S HADITH COLLECTION, 9TH CENTURY
It is not that you should invoke the wrath of God upon an oppressor, but rather the essence of this affair is that you should implore God to guide the oppressor that he might leave his tyranny and redress the wrongs he has committed or beg the forgiveness of those whom he has wronged. Surely, that God should guide one lost soul due to your prayers should be worth more to you than all that the sun rises upon.
– SĪDĪ AḤMAD ZARRŪQ’S COMMENTARY ON
AL-WAGHLISIYYAH, 15TH CENTURY
Foolish men imagine that because judgment for an evil thing is delayed, there is no justice, but an accidental one, here below. Judgment for an evil thing is many times delayed some day or two, some century or two; but it is sure as life, it is sure as death!
– THOMAS CARLYLE, PAST AND PRESENT, 1843
Dedication
To Rachel Corrie, a gentle lamb who resisted the oppressor without hatred or rancor in her heart and paid the ultimate price; to Chris Hedges and all those who have, despite its political incorrectness, stood by the Palestinian people in their just cause; to the people of Darfur; to the six million victims of the 21st century holocaust of the Congo; to the Kashmiris, Iraqis, Afghans, Chechnyans, and every other victim of the many tragic oppressions I have witnessed in my lifetime; to victims of oppression everywhere whose only weapon is the power of prayer, this work is humbly dedicated.
Table of Contents
Introduction
A Reflection on Divine Love
About the Author
About This Translation and Recording
License to Transmit
The Prayer of the Oppressed
Transliterated Text
Appendix on Intercession
Transliteration Key
Acknowledgments
Introduction
If a man is slain unjustly, his heir shall be entitled to satisfaction. But let him not carry his vengeance to excess, for his victim is sure to be assisted and avenged. – QUR’AN, 17:33
Limit your hostility toward your enemy, for one day he may become your beloved. – PROPHET MUḤAMMAD
It is strange that we should not realize that no enemy could be more dangerous to us than the hatred with which we hate him, and that by our efforts against him we do less damage to our enemy than is wrought in our own heart. – ST. AUGUSTINE
The last sphere to be conquered by the spirit of justice is the sphere of reactive feelings. – FRIEDRICH NIETZSCHE
THE WORLD IS FILLED with wonders, and nature exhibits order and perfection. Stars follow a calculable course, seasons come with the exactitude of clockwork, and all life on earth reveals undeniable design and divine generosity. Each creature knows its place in the natural order and follows similar patterns of embryonic development, birth, growth, decay, and finally death. Beasts of prey take only what they need to survive from weaker ones, none oppressing the other, never guilty of massacres or capricious killings, all living together, from our perspective, in a world of harmony and mutual understanding. The Qur’an says, There is not an animal on the earth nor a bird that flies upon two wings except they form communities like you. We have omitted nothing from the Book, and then all shall be gathered to their Lord
(6:38) .
Human beings, too, live largely in structured societies of immense complexity that fulfill the many needs and aspirations of men and women in their daily lives and provide avenues for both their individual and collective pursuits. Each person, in seeking a livelihood, helps others to fulfill their needs. Commenting on this veiled but vital aspect of humanity, the 10th century Arab poet, al-Mutanabbī (d. 354/965), said:
Men, though separate, need one another;
Without knowing, each serves the other.
While our collective social organization is premised on order, balance, and mutual respect, we are also imbued with the capacity to violate that very order and balance. Men, like animals, are part of the natural world, but, unlike animals, betray in their actions a nature wholly incongruous with Nature. We breach natural laws in our thoughts, emotions, desires, and diets. Instead of loving people and using objects, we love objects and use people. We strive for our own success through aggression, by enviously and consciously undermining the success of others. We feel slighted easily and forgive with great difficulty; we desire far more than we use, eat much more than we need, lust too often, and love too seldom; we pursue luxury for ourselves and neglect those in need. Indeed, pride, envy, wrath, greed, sloth, gluttony, and lust sometimes seem to be the defining traits of our species. These deadly sins
were once despised, denounced, and disciplined. Yet, unlike our ancestors, our advertisers pander with pride to these human weaknesses; they are now packaged for display to please our eyes, tease our tongues, and seduce our hearts and minds.
Men and women have always struggled with temptation. But what is different today is how acceptable it has become, in the name of commerce, to publicly prey on the human weaknesses of others and to entice them to indulge in their whims and cave in to their cravings. But where have all these efforts brought us? What exactly have they wrought? Individually, our hunger increases as our happiness diminishes, and collectively, conflict and war plague our world, making the panacea of peace seem more distant than ever.
This predicament is largely a result of our ignorance of the nature of good and evil—because we often cannot distinguish between the two, we are unable to use our intellect to see clearly and make choices (intelligere literally means to choose among
). Thus, we