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By Khalid Baig
"Suppose you learn today that you have only one more day
to live; you'll die tomorrow. How will you spend your last day?"
This interview question was posed long before the age of mass
media. The interviewer approached prominent scholars and people
known for their virtuous lives with the idea that he would compile
their answers in a book. Such a book would provide the readers with
inspiration for the most important virtues.
But the most inspiring response came from the person who did not
provide a wish list of virtuous deeds. He was the great muhaddith
Abdur Rahman ibn abi Na'um and he replied: "There is nothing
that I could change in my daily schedule learning that it is my
last day. I already spend everyday in my life as if it is going
to be my last."
Death is the most certain aspect of life. According to the latest
statistics, 6178 people die in the world every hour. These are people
of all ages, dying of all causes. Some of these deaths will make
headlines. The great majority will die quietly. Yet everyone will
enter his/her grave the same way; alone, at the time appointed by
God. Science and technology can neither prevent nor predict death.
It is solely in the hands of the Creator.
"O mankind! If you are
in doubt concerning the Resurrection, then lo! We have created you
from dust, then from a drop of seed, then from a clot, then from
a little lump of flesh shapely and shapeless, that We may make it
clear for you. And We cause what We will to remain in the wombs
for an appointed time, and afterward We bring you forth as infants,
then give you growth that you attain full strength. And among you
there is he who dies young, and among you there is he who is brought
back to the most abject time of life, so that after knowledge he
knows naught!"[Al-Haj 22:5]
We see it happening all the time. Yet it is amazing how we feel
that it won't happen to us. At least not anytime soon. We bury our
own friends and relatives but think that we'll live forever. Our
attitudes about death defy all logic. In a way we recognize it and
even plan for it. We take out life insurance policies. We may do
estate planning. Businesses and governments have contingency plans
to carry out their operations in case of sudden loss of their leaders.
But this is recognition of death as an end point of this life. Where
we fail is in recognizing it as the beginning of another
life that will never end and where we'll reap what we sow
here.
A central teaching of Islam is that it is our recognition of and
preparation for that eternity that must separate those who are smart
from those who are not. As the Prophet, Sall-Allahu alayhi wa sallam
said: "Truly smart is the person who controlled his desires
and prepared for life after death."
There is a moving story about Bahlool, who, in his innocence seems
to be on the opposite end of the scale of worldly-smartness. Khalifa
Haroon ur Rashid had given him access to his court probably because
his naiveté was a source of entertainment to him. Once the
Khalifa gave him a walking stick saying, "It is meant for the
most foolish person in the world. If you find a person more deserving
of it than yourself, pass it on." Several years later Haroon
ur Rashid fell seriously ill and no medical treatment seemed to
work. Bahlool visited him and inquired about his condition. The
conversation went something like this:
Haroon: "No treatment is working. I see
my final journey ahead of me."
Bahlool: "Where are you going?"
Haroon: "I am going to the Other World."
Bahlool: "How long will you stay there? When will you come
back?"
Haroon: "No one ever comes back from that world."
Bahlool: "Then you must have made especial preparations for
this journey. Did you send an advance group to take care of you
once you arrive?
Haroon: "Bahlool, you have to go there alone. And no I did
not make any preparations."
Bahlool: "Ameer-ul-Momineen! You used to send troops to make
extensive preparations for you for even short trips of only a few
days. Now you are going to a place where you'll live forever but
you have made no preparations! I think I have found the person more
deserving of the stick that you had given me some years ago."
This story speaks to all of us. We may not be kings but we do plan
our trips of even a few days very carefully. How about preparing
for the journey into eternity? How about making the concern for
the Hereafter the cornerstone of our lives here?
Actually, that concern can change our lives here as well. This
world is an abode of deception. Here we are not punished the moment
we commit a sin. This fools us into thinking that we can get away
with it. Remembering death is the antidote for that deception. A
person who remembers that he will have to stand before his Creator
and be accountable for his actions simply cannot defy God!
In the story of Pharaoh, we learn that when he saw death approaching
he declared belief in the God of Moses. Before that he had been
fooled by his apparent power. His repentance came too late but it
did show how his arrogance and intransigence evaporated when faced
with the certainty of death.
It is amazing how a lot of our own "confusions", frivolous
arguments, excuses (for why we cannot do this or avoid that), or
plane laziness can melt away when we visualize ourselves in our
grave! Death settles lot of arguments. Its remembrance can do that
too. Before it is too late. He was indeed a very wise person who
spent everyday of his life as if it was going to be his last day.
But that certainly should be the goal for all of us!
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