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Our Fajr
Double Advantage
The key to spiritual
and material success for Muslims
By Michael Young
"Early to
bed, early to rise makes a man healthy, wealthy and wise" - a famous maxim
coined by the American scientist, writer and inventor, Benjamin Franklin. And
he was not alone in these beliefs. The writer Samuel Johnson also warned that
"nobody who does not rise early will ever do any good".
This is
not just opinion but proven scientific fact. A study by researchers at Brigham
Young University in Provo in the American state of Utah found that:
"students who habitually go to
bed late and sleep late the next day have lower grade point averages (GPAs) than
students with early-to-bed and early-to-rise sleeping habits. The later
students slept in the morning, the lower their grades tended to be. Out of all
the factors studied, weekday and weekend wakeup times had the strongest
association with students' GPAs. Each hour over the average that students slept
in on weekdays was associated with a 0.13-point drop on the GPA (0.0-4.0
scale)."
Source: Journal of American College Health 2000; 49: 125-130
Of
course, we Muslims are well used to getting up not just at the crack of
dawn but actually half an hour before it to begin the day with the ritual
worship of fajr salat (and even earlier in Ramadan before starting the day's
fast).
Spiritual
Success
What are
the spiritual blessings of fajr salat?
According
to a hadith recorded in Sahih Muslim, prophet Mohammed
stated that the action which is
dearest to God is salat at its proper times. On another occasion prophet
Mohammed also said to his
companions:
"The five
set prayers may be compared to a stream of fresh water, flowing in front of your
house, into which you plunge five times each day. Do you think that would leave
any dirt on your body?' When they replied: 'None at all!' Mohammed
said: 'Indeed the five prayers
remove sins, just as water removes dirt." (Bukhari, Muslim)
And once
while standing beside a tree in autumn, he stated:
"When a
Muslim observes his salat with due attention and devotion, he sheds his sins
just like this tree is shedding its leaves." (Ahmad)
Moreover,
in the Quran we are told that prostrating (in salat) brings us closer to God
(96:1).
Prophet
Mohammed also tells us that fajr
salat along with isha is particularly rich in blessings:
"If
people only knew what blessings are in the fajr and isha prayers, they would
come to them, even if they had to crawl." (Bukhari and Muslim)
And
according to Utham, (RA), prophet Mohammed
said:
"To
perform the dawn prayer, [fajr], in congregation is like keeping vigil
throughout the night." (Muslim).
Material Success
In Surah
23, ayats 1-2 of the Quran we learn that:
"Certainly the believers have succeeded, those who offer salat with devotion."
Spiritual
success certainly. But as Muslims we are also called upon not just to earn
spiritual blessings for the next world but also to be materially successful in
this one. Despite the obvious call to work hard and make the most of our
abilities demonstrated in the parable of the talents, the Christian West has
often had an ambiguous attitude towards wealth, sometimes glorifying poverty and
misinterpreting Jesus's gospel statement that "love of money is the root
of all evil" to mean that money itself is the root of all evil. As a Muslim, I
am more inclined to agree with the playwright George Bernard Shaw who is
reported to have said that "lack of money is the root of all evil".
[Shaw was
an admirer of prophet Mohammed
and in the 1936 book The Genuine Islam referred to him as "the wonderful
man" and "the saviour of humanity".]
Prophet
Mohammed himself stated:
"There
will dawn a time over people when the destruction of a man will be at the hands
of his wife, parents, and children. They will humiliate him because of his
poverty and will make such demands which will induce him to engage in such
activities (to gain more money) which will finally destroy his religion." -
Baihaqi. Narrated by Ibn Mas'ood (RA) and Abu Hurairah (RA)
The other
side of the coin, so to speak, is:
"How
excellent is the wealth of the Muslim". - Sahih Bukhari hadith 4.95 Narrated by
Abu Said Al Khudri (RA)
It is
wealth which enables us to take care of our families, keep on the straight path
and avoid doing wrong in order to make ends meet. It is wealth which enables us
to meet our obligation to pay Zakat. It is wealth which enables us to help
others and contribute to Dawah through additional charity. It is wealth which
enables us to meet our obligation to go on Hajj.
It was
wealthy Muslim traders who peacefully spread Islam throughout West Africa and
the areas we now know as Malaysia, Indonesia and Brunei. And if we look at the
first generation of Muslims, we find the shining example of Abdur-Rahman Ibn
Awl. The eighth person to embrace Islam, he migrated twice to Abyssinia.
Abdur-Rahman distinguished himself in both the battles of Badr and Uhud,
suffering more than twenty wounds at the latter. Then starting with nothing, he
went on to achieve tremendous success as a merchant, becoming the richest of the
companions. From his great wealth, Abdur-Rahman financed the Muslim armies,
contributed to the upkeep of the family of Mohammed
after the prophet's death and
was universally renowned for his fabulous generosity.
So how
can we turn getting up for Fajr to our material advantage? Certainly not by
slinking back into bed again and snuggling up for another few hours. As prophet
Mohammed said:
"The most
excellent jihad is that for the conquest of self." (Bukhari)
In the
context of fajr, what this means is, once up, stay up! Stay up and do something
useful. Work on your goals. If you don't have any, set some. Decide what you
want to achieve in life. Devise a plan to make those goals a reality then take
action. You will be amazed at what you can get done in those few quiet hours
when most of the rest of the world is still asleep. You can organise your day,
learn a language, work on your degree course or get fit by going jogging in the
coolness of the morning.
You can
also turn staying up after fajr to your career advantage by driving into work
earlier, beating the traffic then packing so much productive work into the next
hour without interruption because no one is there to pop into your office and
the phone hasn't started ringing yet.
A further
fajr advantage is that along the way you can listen on cassette to the wisdom
and inspiration of motivational and business speakers. We spend hundreds of
ours commuting in our cars every year, by some estimates the equivalent to two
full terms of university tuition. Put this time to good use, especially first
thing in the morning when you are relaxed and driving on a virtually empty road,
when you are bright and fresh and can best take it all in. Turn your car into a
university on wheels.
Each of
our lives is different, but you know how to apply these ideas to your own
situation.
Take
action now!
"Ah,
that's too hard", I hear you say. Well God assures us in the Quran that:
"We do
not lay a burden on anyone beyond his capacity." (Quran: 23:62)
It is
possible to turn these early hours to great advantage. It's desirable and it's
beneficial. We are obliged to get up for fajr anyway. From this we derive a
spiritual advantage. Let's stay up and get to work. Why have just one type of
advantage when we can have two - spiritual and material. As Muslims we
are uniquely placed. The next fajr is less than 24 hours from now. First thing
tomorrow morning make sure that you take advantage of your fajr
double advantage.
[Author's footnote: After
working on other tasks, I started this article at 6 am and have just finished it
at 8.20. Now for a day's work!]
© Michael Young 2003
Read other articles by Michael
Young here.
MichaelYoung101@yahoo.com
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