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When
Ibrahim (Alaihis salaam) completed the structure
of the Ka'bah, Allah (Subhanahu wa ta'ala) commanded
him to call the people to Hajj. Ibrahim (Alaihis
salaam) pleaded, "O Allah! How shall my voice
reach all of those people?" Allah (Subhanahu
wa ta'ala) told him that his duty was only to
give the call and it was up to Allah to make it
reach the people.
Ibrahim (Alaihis salaam) then climbed Mount Arafat
and called out in his loudest voice, "O People!
Verily Allah has prescribed upon you Hajj, so
perform Hajj."
Allah (Subhanahu
wa ta'ala) revealed in the Qur'an: "And proclaim
the Hajj among mankind. They will come to thee
on foot and (mounted) on every camel, lean on
account of journeys through deep and distant mountain
highways" (Surat Al-Hajj, Ayat 28).
To this very day millions upon millions of Muslims
continue to answer the call of Prophet Ibrahim
(Alaihis salaam). Perhaps this year you shall
be amongst those who answer the call.
'Amr ibn
Al-'Aas narrates, "When Islam entered my
heart, I went to the Messenger of Allah and said,
'Give me your hand so that I may pledge allegiance
to you.' The Prophet spread his hand, but I withdrew
mine. He said, 'What is wrong 'Amr?' I said, 'I
want to make a condition.' 'And what is that?'
he said. I said, 'That Allah will forgive me.'
Then the Messenger of Allah said, 'Did you not
know that Islam wipes out what came before it,
and that Hijrah wipes out what came before it
and that Hajj wipes out what came before it!"
(Sahih Muslim).
Hajj is
the fifth pillar upon which Islam stands. Allah
(Subhanahu wa ta'ala) made it compulsory upon
every able Muslim male and female to perform it,
at least once in a lifetime. Allah revealed: "Hajj
thereto is a duty mankind owes to Allah, those
who can afford the journey, but if any deny faith,
Allah stands not in need of any of His creatures"
(Surat Ali Imran, Ayat 97).
Performance
of the Hajj washes away all sins. Abu Hurairah
narrates: I heard the Prophet say, "Whoever
performs Hajj and does not commit any Rafath (obscenity)
or Fusooq (transgression), he returns (free from
sin) as the day his mother bore him" (Sahih
Bukhari).
Hajj is one of the greatest deeds one can accomplish
in his or her lifetime. Abu Hurairah narrates:
The Prophet was asked, "What deed is the
best?" He said, "Iman in Allah and His
Messenger." "Then what?" "Jihad
in the sake of Allah." "Then what?"
"Hajj Mabroor, a Hajj accepted by Allah (Subhanahu
wa ta'ala)."
Abu Sha'thaa'
said, "I contemplated the good deeds that
a person does. I found that salaat as well as
fasting are a jihad of the body. And that sadaqa
is a jihad of someone's wealth. But Hajj is a
jihad of both body and wealth."
Hajj is
the greatest jihad. Aishah (Radiallahu anha) asked
the Prophet (Sallallahu alaihi wa sallam), "We
find that jihad is the best deed, shouldn't we
(women) do jihad?" The Prophet replied, "Rather
the best jihad is a Hajj Mabroor!" Aishah
later said, "I'll never cease performing
Hajj after I heard that from Rasul Allah"
(Agreed Upon).
The dua
of the one in Hajj shall be accepted. The Prophet
(Sallallahu alaihi wa sallam) said, "The
soldier in the path of Allah and the one who performs
Hajj and the one who performs 'Umrah, all are
the delegation of Allah! He called them and they
answered. And they asked Him, and He shall grant
them (what they ask for)!" (Authentic, narrated
by Ibn Majah and Ibn Hibban).
In the
Islamic history books it was narrated that on
the day of Arafat, a man from Turkmenistan stood
on the plains of Arafat in Hajj. To his left all
he could see was Muslims crying and praying to
Allah (Subhanahu wa ta'ala). To his right all
he could see was Muslims crying and praying to
Allah (Subhanahu wa ta'ala). Because of his native
tongue, he could not imitate the lengthy prayers
of the others. At this realization everything
blurred in front of him. His face reddened, his
eyes poured tears as he raised his hands, "O
Allah! Grant me everything that they are asking
for! Grant me everything that they are asking
for!" And Allah (Subhanahu wa ta'ala) accepted
his dua.
There is
not a single day that the sun has come up on more
beloved to Allah (Subhanahu wa ta'ala) than the
Day of Arafat. The Prophet (Sallallahu alaihi
wa sallam) said, "There is no day on which
Allah frees more of His slaves from Fire than
the Day of Arafat, and He verily draws near, then
boasts of them before the angles, saying: 'What
do they seek?'" (Sahih Muslim). And in another
hadith: "Verily Allah boasts of the people
of Arafat before the people of Heaven (angels)
saying: 'Look to my servants who have come to
Me disheveled and dusty.'"
Abdullah
ibn Al-Mubaarak narrates: I went to Sufyaan ibn
al-Uyaynah as the day of Arafat was setting. He
sat on his knees, his hands raised to the Heavens,
and tears moistened his cheeks and beard. He turned
and looked at me, so I asked him, "Amongst
the people who have gathered here for Hajj, who
is in the worst state?" Sufyaan ibn al-Uyaynah
said, "He who thinks that Allah will not
forgive him."
Aishah
(Radiallahu anha) would see the Prophet (Sallallahu
alaihi wa sallam) standing in prayer at night
so much so that his feet would crack. She would
ask him, "Why do you do this when Allah has
forgiven all your sins, the past and anything
you may do in the future?" And he would reply,
"Shouldn't I be a thankful slave?"
With this
example of the Prophet (Sallallahu alaihi wa sallam),
what should our attitude be when we hear of Paradise
and forgiveness of sin for those who perform Hajj?
Does it mean that after Hajj we fall back into
all the disobedience that we went to Hajj with?
Does it mean that we are promised Jannah no matter
what sin we do after Hajj? Many people think this
to be the case and it is a very dangerous presumption.
You will
find in many of the Hadith regarding the virtue
of Hajj the term Hajj Mabroor. Do you know what
Mabroor means? It means an accepted Hajj. A Mabroor
Hajj is one in which Allah (Subhanahu wa ta'ala)
is not disobeyed during or after. Others have
said that a Hajj Mabroor is one that is accepted,
and the sign of it's acceptance is that a person
will go back in a better state then when he came,
and that he will discontinue the sins that were
between him and Allah (Subhanahu wa ta'ala).
I once
saw a group of Hajjis with all of their paraphernalia.
Plastered on their t-shirts and hats was 'Hajj
Mabroor 1997!' I remembered then when Ibn Umar
was on his deathbed and his son reminded him of
all the good deeds that he did with the Prophet
(Sallallahu alaihi wa sallam) and the companions.
He told him, "Quiet! Don't you know whom
Allah accepts from? Verily Allah only accepts
from the God-Fearing (Al-Muttaqoon)."
When Ali
ibn Al-Husayn (Radiallahu anhuma) wore his Ihram
towels and sat upright on his camel in preparation
for the journey to Makkah, his face changed color,
his skin shivered and he cried, unable to say
the Talbiyyah, Labbayk Allahumma Labbayk. Someone
asked him, "What's wrong?" And he replied,
"I'm afraid that when I say it, it shall
be replied, 'Laa Labbayka wa Laa Sa'dayk' (May
you never have come and may you not have happiness)."
With that
spirit, let us march forward in the search of
the Mercy of Allah (Subhanahu wa ta'ala) and His
forgiveness, to the first house of Allah (Subhanahu
wa ta'ala) on earth, to Hajj.
In the
Hajj of 1996 you may have heard of the Jamarat
crowd in which 600 people died. It was Dhuhr time
that it happened and I had been sitting there
from the early morning waiting for noon to throw
my pebbles. About 30 minutes before Dhuhr a wave
of people, like dominoes, toppled over us. I had
said to myself earlier that if I were ever in
an emergency situation I would jump up on a bus
or anything high to escape the crowd. Now, I saw
people doing just that and I knew this was the
situation that I had feared. My friend said, "What
shall we do?" With a glance over the sea
of people I knew there was no way we could walk
opposite of the crowd and so I replied, "Go
and throw our Jamarat."
People
died that day. Ambulance sirens were blaring and
helicopters were thundering above. In the pain
and exhaustion, losing my friend, I sat leaning,
my back on a sister and her back on me. We did
not even realize what we were doing. I tasted
what the Prophet (Sallallahu alaihi wa sallam)
meant when he said that on the Day of Judgment
people would be naked and Aishah (Radiallahu anha)
asked him, "Won't the men and women look
at each other?" And he replied, "Aishah,
the issue is more severe than that."
I saw 3 men looking anxiously for their friend
and I just sat staring at them. All of a sudden
their faces exploded in happiness, "Ahmad!
Ahmad!" they called, and one of them could
not handle the happiness and he cried and cried.
Limping back to the Ka'bah I found a place with
shady trees and a carpeted patio leading to a
villa. The owner, an older man, stood watching
as all the people walked by. And I sat watching
him.
People
would come up to him and beg for a glass of water.
He would jump and bring them the coldest water
he had. They would pray from the bottom of their
hearts for him. I knew what kind of dua that was,
because I was feeling the same thirst that they
all felt. Whenever he saw someone sick, he would
spring out to the road and invite them in, giving
them a bed and food to relax them.
I was shy at first, but the thirst overcame me
and I asked him for water. I had been on that
patio for some time and when I asked him, he realized
he had not offered me anything. He ran inside,
and in addition to the water, he brought me packets
of fruit juice. I thought about this man as I
made my way back to the Ka'bah. If a human was
so merciful to these people who had come for Hajj,
these people who had come for no other reason
than to say 'La ilaaha illa Allah', how merciful
was Allah (Subhanahu wa ta'ala) going to be to
these Hajjis?
Indeed,
the Prophet said, "And there is no reward
for an accepted Hajj
except Jannah!"
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