Sayyidina Imam Al Hassan Ibn Ali Peace Award at Abu Dhabi

Islam is a religion of peace in the fullest sense of the word. The Quran calls its way ‘the paths of peace’ (5: 16). It describes reconciliation as the best policy (4: 128), and states that God abhors any disturbance of peace (2: 205).

The root word of Islam is ‘silm’, which means peace. So the spirit of Islam is the spirit of peace. The first verse of the Quran breathes the spirit of peace. It reads:

In the name of God, the Most Merciful, the Most Compassionate. This verse is repeated in the Quran no less than 114 times. It shows the great importance Islam attaches to such values as mercy and compassion. One of God’s names, according to the Quran, is As-Salam, which means peace. Moreover the Quran states that the Prophet Muhammad was sent to the world as a mercy to human kind. (21: 107)

A perusal of the Quran shows that most verses of the Quran (and also the Hadith) are based on peace and kindness, either directly or indirectly. The ideal society, according to the Quran is Dar as-Salam, that is, the home of peace (10: 25).

The Quran presents the universe as a model that is characterized by harmony and peace (36: 40). When God created heaven and earth, He so ordered things that each part might perform its function peacefully without clashing with any other part. The Quran tells us that “the sun is not allowed to overtake the moon, nor does the night outpace the day. Each in its own orbit runs.” (36: 40)

Video Transcript
Video Transcript

Maulana’s Keynote Address

Bismillahi-r-rahmani-r-rahim

(In the name of God, the Compassionate, the Merciful)

Rabbi-shrah li sadri wa yassirli amri wa-hlul uqdatan min lisani yafqahu qawli

(My Lord! Open up my heart, and make my task easy for me. Loosen the knot in my tongue, so that they may understand my speech)

 

Distinguished guests, Brother Shaykh Abdullah Bin Bayyah, and Islamic scholars,

We are here to discuss a very serious problem—of how to promote peace in Muslim societies. There is no doubt at all that this is a very important issue. At the same time, I would say that mere condemnation of this violence is not enough. The problem is an intellectual one. A section of Muslims are misguided into engaging in terrorism. And so, we need to remove their misconceptions. Only then will it be possible for peace to prevail.

The Right, Peaceful Interpretation of Islam

According to a well-known dictum, ‘Violence begins in the mind’. So also is the case with peace. Peace, too, begins in the mind. Hence, we need a peaceful ideology, the right ideology. Only then can we hope that the Muslims who have wrongly taken to terrorism in the name of Islam will change their minds.

The sources of Islam—the Quran and the Sunnah of the Prophet—tell us that Islam is a religion of peace. The Prophet of Islam started his mission in 610 CE in Makkah. What was his manhaj, or method of preaching? He used to visit gatherings of people and say to them: Ya ayyuhan-nas qulu la ilaha illallah tuflihu (“O people! Say, ‘There is no god but God’ and you be successful”). This is the ideology of Islam. It is based on tawhid, the oneness of God.

Hazrat Aisha says of the Prophet of Islam: “Whenever the Prophet had to choose between two options he would always opt for the easier one, [not the harder one].” (Bukhari)

Now, what is the easier option, and what is the harder one?

An easier option is the peaceful method, while a harder option is violence. The Prophet always opted for the peaceful method. This was his manhaj, his practice.

These two—tawhid or the oneness of God, and peace—are thus two basic principles of Islam. We need to make people aware of this.

It is an undeniable fact that due wrong interpretations of Islam, some sections of our society are today engaged in hate and violence.

Once, during a visit to America, I was invited to speak at a church. After the talk, a Christian scholar asked me a question. He said, “In the Bible, there is a beautiful teaching, to ‘love your enemies’. Can you cite any such teaching from the Quran as well?”

At the back of this gentleman’s mind there was lurking this misunderstanding that Islam teaches hate for others. His mind had probably been shaped by media reports of Muslims engaging in violence in different parts of the world, and so he might have been led to believe that there must be some intellectual basis for this in the Quran.

I replied to him, saying, “It is a fact that some Muslims are indeed engaged in violence. But this is not based on Islamic teachings. The Quran says: ‘Good and evil deeds are not equal. Repel evil with what is better; then you will see that one who was once your enemy has become your dearest friend.’ (41:34) It means do good in return for bad deeds and you will see that your enemy has become your dearest friend.”

 

I explained to the man that this is a law of nature. According to the law of nature, people should be categorized not as friends and enemies, but, rather, as friends and potential friends. Every person is our friend—either actual friend or potential friend. So, turn your potential friend into an actual friend by doing good to him, and then you will discover that everyone is your friend!

So, this is the Islamic teaching on this matter. The Islamic teaching is based on friendship, on harmony, on peace, on love, on compassion.

Dawah Work: The Greatest Target

Here, I want to add an important point. If you want to make people peaceful, you will have to give them a target to work for. Giving them an ideology is good, but that alone will not work. We have to give them a target. And what is that target? It is dawah work, the work of inviting people to God. It is to communicate the word of God to others.

We, at the Centre for Peace and Spirituality, have prepared translations of the Quran in various languages, and there are many people in different countries who are engaged in distributing these, as well as other literature on Islam and peace. Our volunteers are engaged in doing dawah work in different parts of the world. We are giving a target for our youths. They go around distributing literature, interacting with people and engaging in dawah work in different ways. Prior to this, these people were living in negativity, in hate, but now they are living in love and compassion.

So, I would say that if we want to make people peaceful, we will have to help them change their minds, but that, at the same time, it is also necessary to give them a purpose, a task, a target.

There are numerous Quranic verses and hadith reports that tell us that the Quran was sent for the whole of humankind. For instance, the Prophet of Islam is reported to have said: “No house on earth – big or small – will remain but God’s word shall enter into it.” (Musnad Ahmad)

 

It means that in the Divine Plan, this book, this message of God, must reach all of humankind. This work needed some resources and technology, which were not available in the 7th century. Now, however, everything is available. Today, there is openness, there are modern methods of communication and publishing, and so on. Everything we need to perform the task of conveying the message of the Quran to people is available today.

According to the Divine Plan, we have to spread this word of God to the whole of humankind. This is our target. This means that we must prepare translations of the Quran in every major language and spread them throughout the world to reach every human being. As mentioned earlier, if we want people to live in peace, we need to give them a target, and this is the greatest target.

It is a fact that we have the preserved book of God, the Quran. We have the Sunnah. The Quran and the Sunnah are the only source of Truth, Truth with a capital ‘T’. It is our belief that everyone is born as a seeker. Everyone wants to discover the Truth with a capital ‘T’, but only the Quran and the Sunnah are sources of this Truth. Thus, the Quran and Sunnah need to be conveyed to every person across the world.

If our youth have this target, it will create a great enthusiasm, a great sense of mission and purpose in them. When they are motivated by a target of this sort, they will abandon all hatred and violence.

Two-Point Formula

To reiterate, the problem of terrorism is an extremely serious one, and the way out is a two-point formula. First, we need to help people who are engaged in terrorism to realise that Islam is a religion of peace, a religion of compassion, a religion of blessing. This we can do through literature and other means. Then, we have to give them a target. Without a target, a theory or ideology will not work. And the best and biggest target is dawah work, conveying the message of the Quran to people across the world. This is the greatest mission. Muslims are dayees, those who invite people to God. The greatest mission of Muslims is shahadah ala an-nas (bearing witness to the truth before humankind), that is, dawah ilallah (calling people to God).

It is a mission that earns eternal Paradise for those who sincerely engage in it.

Political Interpretation of Islam

If we want to make the people who are engaged in terrorism to give up violence and become peaceful, if we want to change their minds, we will have to give them an alternative ideology. In the first half of the 20th century, Muslims were living in a sense of loss—of loss of political power. At this time, some thinkers emerged among them. They propagated a political interpretation of Islam. This appealed to the mindset of many Muslims who were living in this sense of loss caused by the loss of Muslim political power. And so, they accepted this interpretation of Islam very easily. Today, many Muslims are obsessed with this interpretation. The real problem is this political interpretation of Islam.

The advocates of the political interpretation of Islam wanted to establish Islamic rule or Muslim rule all over the world. They found that the seats of political power were already occupied by some people, and so they set about trying to unseat them. This led to violence between these two groups.

From Living in a Sense of Loss to Living in a Sense of Gain

The political interpretation of Islam is the root of all this violence that Muslims are today engaged in in the name of Islam, and the only reason why it became so widely acceptable was that Muslims were living in a sense of loss. Given this, it is imperative that we provide them with a sense of gain. We have to help them realise that Islam is a faith that leads one to Paradise, and so in every situation a Muslim can live in a sense of gain. The Prophet of Islam lived in every situation in a sense of gain, not in a sense of loss.

So, this is the solution of this problem of terrorism. We need to explain the right interpretation of Islam to people. In addition, we need to provide them a target, a goal—which is dawah work. Then, I believe, the problem of terrorism in the name of Islam will be solved.

Thank you!

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QURANIC VERSES1:7
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