Jewish Kabbalah?

Question:

Assalamu Alaikum wa Rahmatullahi wa Barakatuhu,

A few years ago my mother started studying Jewish Kabbalah, I have heard that it is connected with black magic, is this true? Some time ago she started learning about Islam, but when I told her Kabbalah is dangerous, it greatly diminished her enthusiasm for Islam. Alhamdulillah she is now learning about Islam again, but I don’t know if she is still doing Kabbalah and I don’t want to bring up the subject for fear of again discouraging her from Islam. Should I then read 3 Surah Falaq, 3 Sura An-Nas, and 3 Ayat-al Kursi in the mornings on her behalf? Could there be any influence on me, my husband, or our unborn child from her involvement with Kaballah? If yes, how should we protect ourselves?

She was also going to a group which claims to attain healing by directly looking at the sun and saying a formula which consists of the group’s founders name, some words like “universe” and “Creator” etc. and the numbers 40, 37, 6, 8, 10 if I remember correctly. Is this dangerous or harmless? My mother and the entire group have said the formula onto my and my husband’s name with the intention of sending healing energy, was there any harm in that? If yes, how should it be removed?

In general, what is the best Dua when praying that non-muslim relatives should be protected from evil/misguiding influences and have their hearts opened to Islam?

What is the best Dua when praying for Muslim family to become strong in their Deen?

Please pray for my parents, my husband and his parents, and our unborn child that Allah may guide us all onto the right path and grant us protection.

May Allah continue to shower his blessings on you!
Salam

Answer:

Aoodhu Billahi min ash-Shaytaani ‘r-rajeem
Bismillahi ‘r-Rahmani ‘r-Raheem

`Alaikum Salaam wa rahmatullah,

It sounds like you are anxious for your mother to be on the same path you are on, it is from faith to want good for your parents and humanity.  The Quran gives a du`a: Rabbirhamhuma kama rabbayani saghira, “My Lord have mercy upon my parents as they brought me up from childhood.” (al-Isra, 17:24)

It sounds like you were not raised as a Muslim but something in your upbringing from your parents gave you an openness to Islam. As you love your parents and it sounds like they love you too,  pray for them. We must also know that Allah says: “You cannot guide whom you love but Allah guides whom He wills.”,(al-Qasas, 28:56) All you can do is lower your wings of mercy towards your family, treating them well and avoiding behaviors that will drive them away from Love of Allah and His Prophet (S).

She has interests in spiritual knowledges which attracts her to Kabbalah and other  esoteric arts, as well as opens her to study Islam. Allah knows best.  As I understand it, Kabbalah has to do Jewish mysticism and understanding of the universe and these days there are groups that might commercialize the teachings and there are Jewish Rabbis that teach Kabbalah.    There are people these days that try to understand the energy of this universe through meditation, tai chi, sun gazing, etc.  Many of these people are trying to find spiritual and emotional healing.  When people are sincere in their quest this might bring them to behave well and embody qualities that Islam praises.  If they are trying to heal, and not becoming arrogant and egoistic, searching for false power and show, but seeking to connect with the Creator what is the harm? Perhaps they will connect with the Oceans of Islamic knowledge and gain an even deeper understanding

Islam has its own sciences of the soul and finding Reality in Tasawwuf and these knowledges are safeguarded and connected through chains of transmission directly to the Prophet Muhammad (saws).  Prophet Muhammad was given the greatest of knowledge in Quran and through his ascension and intimacy with Allah swt.  Especially his power of shafa`ah, intercession to save humanity from their sins as he (saws) said.  “My intercession is for the sinners of my community.” and many other hadith describe his intercessory power.  Meditate on and discover what kind of healing energy is with the Prophet (saws).

As you said, keep the three Quls, Ayat al-Kursi, and deepen your understanding of Islam’s teaching of healing and spirituality, this will hopefully strengthen the light of your faith and de-mystify any misgivings you have.

W ‘Allahu `Alam

Kamau Ayyubi

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Black magic and nazar

Request:

Assalaam waleykum warahmatullahe wabarakatu Shaikh , helpers and readers.
Both my parents have passed away, may Allah grant the jannat. For years my mother told us that we have black magic done to us all in the family by someone from my fathers side of family. She always was in the company of pious(syeds) people and in their service. Alhamdullilah, we are blessed, Shaikh Adnan did our nikah ceremony. Cyprus, April2010, Alhamdullih. Soon everything is going downhill slowly. I have no more work. debts mounting up. I am scared that it will affect my marriage and children. I ask pious people if it nazar, they say its a lot stronger and there are blockages in my affairs, also this person who is doing this black magic on us will not stop. All my brothers are affected, always there is a problem in their affairs, none of them are settled. It has affected my brother Yunus who lives with me very badly. Please help , do duas and what shall I do /pray. May Allah protect us all from shaitan, Ameen.

Response:

wa alaykum salam,

Most people who see sihr, black magic, all around them are incorrect. Mostly these kind of issues come from a negativity in the home or in the family, not from black magic. The negativity can come from `ayn, bad eye, which is hasad, or envy. It can have a negative effect on you but it is not active magic.

Most important is to get rid of the idea someone is doing black magic on you. Allah gave to Muslims three big protections from black magic and we are taught these by the Prophet (s), who had magic done on him also. So before you sleep take fresh wudu, pray 2 raka`ts of Sunnat al-wudu, then recite 3x Surat al-Ikhlas, 3x Surat al-Falaq, 3x Surat an-Nas, one time Surat al-Fatiha, then blow all over yourself and on your family and sleep on wudu. When you wake up in the night, make sure to make wudu before sleeping. When you leave the house, leave on wudu, put 10 pence/pennies or more sadaqa, recite A`udhu Billahi min ash-Shaytaani ‘r-rajeem Bismillahi ‘r-Rahmani ‘r-Raheem and then step out of the house.

Insha-Allah by means of these powerful recitations gifted to us by our Holy Prophet (s) and taught by our mashaykh, your situation will improve.

Taher Siddiqui

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Dream: Medicine for diarrhea

Dream:

Sallamun Allaykum Mawlana Sheikh Hisham and TEAM,

I am writing on behalf of our sister in Tariqah who saw in her dream another sister in Tariqah coming to her asking for medicine for diarrhea for her husband who is also a brother in Tariqah.

Thank you for your interpretation and support.

Interpretation:

Wa `alaykum as Salam wa Rahmat Allahi wa Barakatuh,

Diarrhea is a cleansing. Our egos need cleansing. Cleansing can be a time of difficulty and support for our fellow humankind is rewarded by Allah the Most Merciful. The mercy extended by the wife for her husband by asking help for him is a sign that she is supporting her husband on a spiritual plane. May Allah reward her for that help. His diarrhea is a sign that he is improving but going through tests. The wife’s friend who was asked for medicine is also her supporter and they are in a position to benefit spiritually by praying for and helping each other. That way the mercy and love spreads through Allah’s creation and we pray He is pleased with us all. And Allah knows best.

Dr. Hesham Bazaraa

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Dream: Ahl-ul-Bayt

Question:

Assalamualaikum Shaykh,

Forgive me for my lack in adab.

I had a dream in which my maternal uncle told me that his family was an ahl-ul-bayt. And so I asked if the blood being from my mother would it have any effect/impact on me as usually I thought its run down from father to son. My uncle said yes.

Does this dream mean I am under the bloodline from our beloved Prophet s.a.w? Or is it literally like they say, ” in your dreams!”

May Allah bless you more and more and forgive me

Assalamualaikum.

Answer:

`Alaykum as-Salam,

If established, maternal lineage is not the same but it allows one to say that their mother is from the lineage of the Prophet, upon him blessings and peace, and this is nobility also.

Hajj Gibril Haddad

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Superiority of Syedna Ali al Murtaza and Syedna Abu Bakar

Question:

Assalam u alayekum !

Is it permissible for a person who is in Naqshbandi Tariqah to think Syedna Ali superior than Syedna Abu Bakr (may Allah be pleased with them both),yet respecting and having love for both?

Answer:

`Alaykum as-Salam,

It is superior not to think that as it contravenes the majority of the Ummah and the teachings of the Prophet, upon him and them peace.

Hajj Gibril Haddad

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Dua for hardship found in Dailami

Question:

As salaamu alykum
My greetings to our beloved Shaykh Nazim, Sultanal-Awliya, may Allah grant him a long life and greetings to all his deputies. I must commend everyone on such a superb website, may Allah reward everyone involved. Amin

Many years ago, I came across a dua written in ‘Meaning and Message of the Traditions’ by Moulana Muhammad Manzoor Nomani in the section dealing with supplications for different times and situations. Specifically this dua was recommended when facing hardship and distress.

The dua (written below) is very moving and speaks to me on many different levels. I have often used it when facing difficulties I have even given the dua to family and friends. However following your reply about Dailami, I was wondering whether this is an authentic dua, for this was my impression when reading the book. I do not have a problem if it is weak but do not want to recommend a dua that may be forged. I still read this dua occasionally but since becoming a mureed I have now started to read the Grand Invocation especially when faced with difficulties or worries.

It is related on the authority of Hadrat Ali that the Prophet of Allah- blessings and peace be upon him – said to him: “O Ali! If you ever face a hardship, supplicate to Allah in these words:
“O Allah! Look at me with Your Eye that knows no slumber, and take me in Your shelter that none can dare challenge, and forgive my sins by the grace of the Absolute Power You have over me so that I may be saved from destruction. You are the centre of my hopes. My Lord! You bestowed on me many blessings for which I could not offer sufficient thanks to You. You put me to trials many times but I fell short of patience. But O’ the Benevolent Lord, who did not deprive me of Your bounties although I could not offer sufficient thanks for them, Who did not degrade me in Your sight inspite of my inability to observe patience in hardship, Who saw me indulge in sins but did not disgrace me in front of others! O You, Whose mercy is perennial and Whose bounties are abounding! I beseech You to send blessings on Muhammad and his progeny. I stand to face the enemies and oppressors on Your strength and support”
Dailami

Jazakalah

Answer:

`Alaykum as-Salam,

All the phrases and details of the supplication you quoted conform to the Qur’an and Sunnah without contravening anything of what is authentically related; therefore that supplication can be used as a du`a just as we may say extemporaneously, O Allah, save me, protect me, cure me, forgive me, guide me etc. in endlessly various ways, and Allah knows best.

Hajj Gibril

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Deobandi’s, Tablighi’s and Wahhabi’s

Question:

Bismillahir Rahmanir Raheem was-Salaatu wa Salaamu alaiyka Sayidina Muhammad,
Are Tabilghi Jamaat connected to the Deobundi School and are Deobundi’s Wahabi?
Jazaka Allah khair.
As-Salaamu alaiykum wr wb.

Answer:

A`udhu billahi min al-shaytan al-rajim, bismillah al-rahman al-rahim:

Tablighi Jamaat are an offshoot of the Deobandi movement. Deobandis are Sunni-Maturidi in doctrine, Hanafi in fiqh, and Naqshbandi in Tariqa. They have refuted several modern Indian-Subcontinent heresies and the Wahhabi movement on countless issues, and the Wahhabis have published many books and articles against them and against Tablighi Jamaat. The Deobandis have also authored some of the prominent works of Ahl al-Sunna wal-Jama`a in commentary of the Holy Qur’an and of the motherbooks of hadith such as Malik’s Muwatta’, Sahih al-Bukhari, Sahih Muslim, and the four books of Sunan as well as the proofs of Taqlid and the Hanafi Madhhab, Sira, and Tasawwuf. Their authors’ names figure prominently in the Indian hadith transmission chains of all of our contemporary and pre-contemporary Arab hadith scholars, may Allah have mercy on all of them.

At the same time, unfortunately for the Umma in our day, certain grave errors have crept into Deobandi beliefs and practices themselves, such as the verbatim attribution to Allah Almighty of imkane-kadhib i.e. the “ability to lie” (may He be exalted beyond what they describe!) and similarly ugly, innovated expressions and concepts that are rightly deemed as tantamount to disparaging the Holy Prophet Muhammad, upon him blessings and peace – Allah is our refuge from perdition. Most if not all of these errors originate from the pen of Shah Ismail al-Dihlawi (1193-1246/1779-1830), the grandson of Shah Waliyyullah al-Dihlawi, after he returned from Hajj and began to author works that until now the Deobandi authorities not only have failed to condemn (as is wajib for them), but are actually still keeping on their syllabus and disseminating in all languages. On the other hand they tend to charge the majority of Muslims with lesser contraventions – if that – for example the celebration of the Prophetic Mawlid which the majority of the Ummah deems orthodox but which Deobandis label as innovation (bid`a) in a selective, Taymiyyan style identical to that of Wahhabis. This is why their Sunni detractors in the Indian Subcontinent have called them Wahhabis although, in that part of the world, the term Wahhabi more accurately describes the so-called Ahle-Hadith movement which are a full-fledged non-Madhhabi, anti-Sufi, Najd-affiliated movement.

Our role now is to find bases of unity by analogy with the Prophetic invitation to the People of the Book that they should unite with Muslims in a common monotheism and leave behind whatever cancels it. If we can invite non-Muslims in such a way then we should be even more inviting toward Sunni Muslims who have taken the wrong path on lesser points than the contradiction of monotheism, as grave as those points might be. We should not demonize them as non-Sunnis. We already made it clear eight years ago that the position of most of our common teachers is that there is no difference between Barelwis and Deobandis in the absolute and explicit fundamentals: http://qa.sunnipath.com/issue_view.asp?HD=7&ID=498&CATE=2

I have seen two gifted people embody this position in speech and deed: one is a Barelwi in the US and the other a Deobandi in South Africa. Both have great knowledge, a refined character, and a preference for silence and meticulous hard work. Alas, the rest of our up and coming brethren remain uncommitted to this common ground and are still jockeying to promote themselves as champions of sunnism in the way of identity politics, such as what happened and is still happening, for example, over the issue of love of Ahl al-Bayt. This divisiveness was wrong back then and has even less place in the post-9/11 world.

Love of Allah and His Prophet unites us, it is not a blueprint for schism, nor is there any room for Inquisitions in Islamic tradition. As Imam Ahmad said under the whip of the Mu`tazila: “al-imtihan bid`a” (Inquisition is an innovation). We should stop condemning others in the misconceived quest for self-definition. Our true identity is servanthood to our Lord and service to His creation; and the definition of sufism is to accept the shortcomings of others and work with that (Risala Qushayriyya); not disinheriting them and demonizing them in a righteous rage. Not everyone is “either all good or all bad”; only Prophets are immune from sin and infallible. The grandson of the Holy Prophet, Sayyidina al-Hasan (upon our Prophet and his Family blessings and peace), was a rightly-guided Caliph and on Haqq, yet he stepped down from his caliphate for the benefit of unity, which Allah Most High loves more for the Umma than general disunity on the pretext of upholding His Right and the Right of the Prophet, upon him blessings and peace. Can you believe that some fanatic Sunnis at that time attacked al-Hasan b. Abi Talib as a traitor to the Umma? He only replied: “No, I am not a traitor but one who spared the Ummah bloodshed.” Let us work toward the same goal in the Subcontinent and everywhere else. Sunnism is much wider than to be found exclusively under one roof.

The latent characteristic of all of the above groupings is takfirism (declaring other Sunnis misguided, infidels and kafirs) and mutual ostracism which are characteristics of modern-day Khawarij – extremists, defined by Imam al-Nawawi as “fanatic zealots who exceed bounds in words and deeds” (Sharh Sahih Muslim). The worst of them are those who say: “If you do not declare the other side kafir the way we do, then you are one of them.” Instead of looking for 70 excuses to fend off anathema from their brethren they search out a single excuse to invoke it against them, and even against their own teachers! They are purists who claim that “we should not dilute our Deen” which is reminiscent of the fear-mongering of supremacists who claim “we should not dilute our master race.” This is what a perspicuous observer in the UK termed the Salafisation of traditional Islam. This is the Chosen-People ideology which Allah Most High warns against in the Holy Qur’an; and it is He Who protects and guarantees the Deen.

No, we do not declare any of them kafir. Rather, we denounce what is wrong and we enjoin what is right however bitter, without school partisanship; and we say as Allah Most High says and as our well-guided Rabbani elders taught us: {For each there is a direction to which he turns his face. So compete with one another in good deeds. Wherever you are, Allah will bring you all together. Truly Allah has power over all things} (2:148).

And Allah knows best. May He unite us all and take us back to Him as followers of the Sunna and adherents to the Congregation.

Hajj Gibril Haddad

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“Permissibility of conventional mortgage under necessity”

Question:

Is it permitted to buy a house using a normal bank mortgage?

Answer:

by: European Council for Fatwa and Research’s Resolution

Courtesy: Fourth Ordinary Session [October 27-31, 1999] Resolution 2/4

Purchasing houses with an usurious loan for Muslims living in non-Muslim countries, i.e. taking up a mortgage to buy a house

The Council discussed in detail several papers concerning the purchasing of mortgaged houses and came to the following conclusion:

1- The Council stresses what had been agreed upon by the Muslim Ummah that usury is forbidden. It is a major sin and is one the seven gravest ones. Those who commit it are considered as being waging war against Allah (swt) and His Prophet (ppbuh). In this vein, the Council supports what has been decided by Fiqh Councils throughout the Muslim World that bank interests are usury.

2- The Council, therefore, invites the Muslim community to do its utmost to seek Islamic alternatives such as Murabaha (sale at a profit), which is practised by Islamic Banks. They should avoid doubtful matters to the furthest extent possible. It encourages them to establish their own construction companies that can build houses and sell them to Muslims with relaxed, less strict lawful ways of payments.

3- The Council calls upon Islamic organisations throughout Europe to enter into negotiations with European banks to find formulas that are acceptable to the Muslim buyer. Formulas like Bei Al-Taqsit, (sale for deferred payment), where the buyer is required to pay more money due to the fact that payment is not immediate. This formula will help both banks as well as the Muslim community. This formula is in operation in some European banks. In addition to this, some European banks opened branches in some Muslim countries, where transactions are run according to the Shari’a as in Bahrain. In this regard, the Council would send appeals to European bank to observe the needs of the Muslim community.

4- If all the above suggestions are un-available, the Council, in the light of evidence and juristic considerations, see no harm in buying mortgaged houses if the following restrictions are strictly observed:

i.            The house to be bought must be for the buyer and his household.

ii.            The buyer must not have another house.

iii.            The buyer must not have any surplus of assets that can help him buy a house by means other than mortgage.

This Fatwa is based on the following two major juristic considerations:

The agreed upon Juristic Rule which states that extreme necessities turn unlawful matters
lawful. This Rule is derived from five Quranic texts, amongst them:

“He (Allah) has explained to you in detail what is forbidden to you, except under compulsion or necessity”, and

But whosoever is forced by necessity without willful disobedience, nor transgressing due limits; (for him) certainly, your Lord is oft-Forgiving, most merciful.

Moreover, Jurists have established that that Hajah, i.e. need, whether for an individual or a group, can be treated in equal terms like Darurah, i.e., extreme necessity. Hajah or need is defined as those things which put the Muslim in a difficulty, if not fulfilled, even if he/she can do without. Darurah or extreme necessity, on the other hand, is that which the Muslim cannot manage without. Allah SWT has lifted difficulty as stated in Sura Al-Haj and Al-Ma’idah:

“And He has not laid upon you in religion any hardship” (22:78).

“Allah does not want to place you in difficulty, but He wants to purify you, and to complete His Favour to you that you may be thankful” (5:6).

The house that can satisfy the criteria set up by the definitions of Hajah i.e. need and Darurah i.e. extreme necessity above is the one that is suitable for the Muslim family in terms of size, location, locality and amenities.

But as the fatwa is built on the Rule of Darurah i.e. extreme necessity or hajah, i.e. the need (which is treated in a similar manner like Darurah), the Council stresses that there is another Rule which governs and complements the rule of extreme necessity and need. This rule reads what has been made permissible due to extreme necessity must be dealt with great care and taken in measure. It should be restricted to the category of people who is in real need for a house. However, the fatwa does not cover taking up mortgage to buy a house for commercial reasons or for purposes other than buying an own house for those who do not have one.

Undoubtedly, accommodation is necessary for individuals as well as families. Allah (swt) has granted His favours upon His servants and showed them His bounties, amongst these is their houses: “And Allah has made for you in your home an abode” (16:80). The Prophet PBUH has explained that a spacious house is one element of three or four elements that constitute the concept of happiness. Rented houses do not fulfil all that the Muslim normally needs. They do not give him the sense of security, as he/she keeps paying towards rents for long periods of time. He/she might be asked to evacuate their rented accommodation for reasons like size of the family, or the number of guests turn up for visits. When getting older or have his/her benefit suspended he/she might even be thrown out of the house. Buying one’s own house discharges Muslims from all these discomforts and helps them settle closer to mosques, Islamic centres or schools as it helps them build up their smaller Muslim community within host countries where families get to know each other and work to establish their cultural identity.

Buying an own house also helps the Muslim family to modify it to accommodate their social and religious needs. Besides all these individual benefits, it helps the Muslim community, being a minority, to free themselves from the financial pressure that renting accommodation often causes, and focus their attention to the call to Islam and help the host community wherever possible and permissible. This cannot in fact be possible if the Muslim family works all the time just to pay towards the costs of their rented accommodations as well as their living costs.

The Second criterion upon which the fatwa was based is the juristic verdict which claims that it is permissible for Muslims to trade with usury and other invalid contracts in countries other than Islamic countries. This opinion is held by a number of renowned scholars such Abu-Hanifah, his colleague Muhammad As-Shaybani, Sufayn At-Thawri, Ibrahim An-Nakha’i, and according to one opinion of Ahmad Ibn Hanbal which was declared as true by Ibn Taymiah, according to some Hanbalite sources. It is also the declared opinion of the Hanafi school of jurisprudence. What makes this last criterion accommodates our fatwa is a number of considerations, amongst which are the following:

1.       According to Sharia, Muslims are not obliged to establish the civil, financial and political status of shari’a in non-Muslim countries, as these lie beyond their capabilities. Allah (swt) does not require people to do things that are beyond their capacity.

2.       Prohibiting usury is a matter that concerns the host non-Muslim countries, and which Muslim communities can do nothing about it. It has many things to do with the socio-economic philosophies of the host countries. However, in these counties what is required of the Muslim is to establish the shari’a’s rulings in matters that concerns him in person such as the rules that govern acts of worship, food, drinks and clothes, marriage, divorce, inheritance and so on. If Muslims choose not to deal with these invalid contracts, including contracts involving usury in non-Muslim countries, this would weaken them financially. Islam is, however, supposed to strengthen Muslims not weaken them, increase rather than diminish them, benefit and not to harm them. Some Salafi scholars claimed that Muslims could inherit non-Muslims as this goes in line with the Hadith which says: “Islam increases and does not decrease”, i.e. increases Muslims in power, wealth, etc. Similar in content is the other hadith which says: “Islam is superior and none can excel it”. Therefore, if Muslims are not to trade with these invalid contracts and transactions (where extreme necessity and urgent need is involved), then they will end up paying what is required from them (in transactions that involve usury) without receiving any benefit in return. They will be losers as they will be obliged to honour these transactions, and in return they will get nothing. This way Muslims will be financially deprived and suppressed. Islam never punishes Muslims for their Islam nor abandons them in countries other than their own Muslim countries. Islam never means to let unbelievers abuse Muslims financially or otherwise, at a time where it prohibits them from getting any benefit in return.

Concerning the claim that the Hanafi Madhab allows usury in cases where the Muslim is the recipient, i.e. the beneficiary, and that the Madhab permits invalid contracts only if two conditions are satisfied:

First: Where the Muslim is the beneficiary, and

Second: Where deception -involving non-Muslims- is not involved.
Arguing against this claim, first we would maintain that in our case, the benefit has not been realised. The second is the claim has not been authenticated as this has been affirmed by Muhammad Ashaibani – one the chief scholars of the Hanafi Madhab and a student of Abu-Hanifah in his book: As-Siar Al-Kabir. Moreover, earlier scholars of the Madhab did not set up any conditions (regarding trading with usurious contracts in non-Muslim land). However, in our case even if the Muslim is the giver (of usury) he/she is still the beneficiary as he/she will win an own house after a number of years.
Furthermore, statements forwarded by Muslims living in Europe to the Council through correspondence and/or direct contacts inform that payments made towards a mortgage are equal, and sometimes lower, than those paid as mere rent mortgage. It follows that if we are to forbid usurious transactions, Muslims will be impeded from securing their own house, despite it being one of Al-Hajat Al-Asliyyah i.e. the essential needs, according to the jurists terminology. Hence, Muslims will end up paying towards rents for a number of years without owning their houses, while they can own them if these payments are to be made towards mortgages.

Finally, even if this transaction is declared as invalid by the Hanifi School of jurisprudence, and those who hold a similar view, it will certainly be permitted where Hajah (i.e. the need that is treated by jurists on similar grounds like Darurah, i.e. extreme necessity, which makes impermissible things permissible) comes into consideration.

What makes our argument sound and valid is that Muslims are compelled to take usury, i.e. they do not deal with it on purpose or by their free choice. The prime criterion for forbidding usury, according to a number of Quranic Verses, revolves essentially around taking usury (not giving it). However, giving usury was forbidden only to obstruct pretext, i.e. ways lead to usury, i.e., Sad Athara’i. On similar grounds, notaries and witnessing usurious transactions was prohibited. They were made as such to check the means that lead to usury.

While taking usurious loan is categorically forbidden, paying interest towards a loan is permitted if there is Hajah i.e., an urgent need as maintained by a number of jurists. It has also been maintained that taking a usurious loan is permitted if there is no other way available. A famous rule that we could put forward in this regard is what has been made forbidden for an essential reason within the transaction can only be made permissible for cases where Darurah i.e. extreme necessity is involved, and what has been made forbidden to obstruct further ways that lead to usury can be made permissible for Hajah, i.e. need.

May Allah (swt) correct our course.

Dr. Homayra Ziad

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Dream: A Form to Fill

Dream:

Assalam.o.Alaykum Wa Rahmatullah Wa Barakaatuhu..

Accept my Salam, nd Give my love to Sultaanul Awliya Mawlana Shaykh Nazim Adil al Haqqani (q) and Mawlana Shaykh Hisham Kabbani (q).

I took bay’a through Naqshbani website and on the following night, I had a dream that I was presented with a form to fill. There was a blank space on the top and I was asked to write “Allahu Akbar” in that blank space. Therefore, I wrote Allahu Akbar in that space. The form has some instructions for me, like things that I should do throughout my life and things that I should avoid doing. This is all I remember.

I am so delighted to see eshaykh.com as it provides us the opportunity to share our questions and get the best possible and the true answers.
Thank You.

Interpretation:

The dream signifies the acceptance of your Internet baya` and is evidence that awliyaullah transcend the dimensions and limits we know. That is the baya` through internet reaches them, not by someone telling them but by Allah’s informing them. Thus “Allahu Akbar!”, Allah can grant to whomsoever He wishes of His servants information, knowledge and realities that defy the mind.

Allahu akbar, tells us whatever we see or experience of visions or realities, Allah is greater and beyond reach. His Signs however are within the grasp of human beings. The Holy Prophet (s) said, “Ponder over the creation of Allah and do not ponder over the essence of Allah because your minds cannot possibly encompass that.”

Taher Siddiqui

reviewed and approved by Shaykh Hisham Kabbani

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Dream: vision

Dream:

First im not so sure wether it was a dream…in the last two weeks im practicing what S.Hisham Kabbani and Hajjah Naziha Adil wrote to me about my dream and a prayer that i asked…700x Astagfirllulah e’day ,1500 ‘Allah,Allah‘+ 300 Shalawat and one time Al-fatihah then blow on the water and drink it…hope Allah will bring the man that i love back so much….

since im starting to practicing…many things happen..suddenlly in front of me,there’s a house of the one that i love, where i used to live in there…i can enter the house,i can see e’things and touch it every single things in that house…like theres no distance between me and him…i can see my pure love for him…

then tonight suddenly i woke up around 2 or 3 o’clock in the morning…cause i feel my room that so dark suddenly there’s a light so bright come …it was green light…and i feel someone are watching me…and smile on me…but i can’t see clearly who he was…just the face are so peacefull…so bright…

it was a dream ? im afraid…hope im in the right path….

assamualaikum

Interpretation:

This was as you guessed a vision and is more real than a dream. Keep doing as instructed, insha-Allah all will work out for what you are praying. Do not be afraid, but know that through your love to a man the guiding saints of this way are opening to you different kinds of “information channels” by which you can perceive things in a new and more real way (and one of them was present in the vision in the early morning). Imagine then, how much they will open for love to Allah, His Prophet (s) and His Saints?

W ‘Allahu `alam,

Taher Siddiqui

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