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Saturday, September 1, 2018

Which, then, of your Sustainer's powers can you disavow?


I am amongst those Muslims whose association with Islam has been more by chance than by choice. 
I have spent years (upon years) parroting the same short verses; managing an annual Ramzan marathon through the Quran least aware of the chance of communication the Book offered generously. And in my ignorance finding this enough: enough to claim having responded to the divine call: "Read in the name of your Lord."

Then somewhere along my dark years, between 2006 and 2009, I came across a reference of Muhammad Asad's The Message of The Quran. I laid my hands on the electronic version and was hooked to it. The commentary, for the first time in my life, seemed to prove to me that the Book is grand. That it's pages hold more than my intellect can grasp. And this realization was humbling. 

To be honest, my understanding of life has been that submission makes one more self aware. 

Around 2013, I began searching for a hard copy of The Message. Couldn't manage to lay my hands on any. Even Amazon turned me down saying that it had gone out of print. 

Years slipped by. Yearning silently. Craving quietly. One day forgetting the desire completely, and the next night waking up for midnight prayer and staying up all night longing to feel the words of Allah on paper my hands could touch. 

In the Ramzan of 2017, I followed Nouman Ali Khan's lectures for the first time. I hadn't followed him before. 

That seemed to be the crack, the kind Quran calls "Falaq". 

It was @DramaMama page that presented an introduction of Abdel Haleem's The Quran, the same year. The translation as I understood was exactly how I wished for my child to get acquainted with Quran.

Charged over these two new additions of "rizq" I had availed in 2017, both through facebook, for the first time in my life I looked forward to build a relation with Quran which went beyond the literal translation of a foreign text. This scripture with its claim of being the divine book, seemed to make a demand that it be studied with the maximum degree of mindfulness and aliveness, so that it could be appreciated befittingly. So that one could engage in the window of communication that benevolently opened through its words! 

While in quest of my favourite translations of the scripture, I got a chance to take part in two Quran comprehension courses this year: First with @hast.o.neest in January, and then with @Bayyinah institute in April. 

I remember documenting my take away from the Hast o Neest course by borrowing botanist Robin Kimmerer's explanation of the experience of flying: 

"Between takeoff and landing, we are each in suspended animation, a pause between chapters of our lives. When we stare out the window into the sun’s glare, the landscape is only a flat projection with mountain ranges reduced to wrinkles in the continental skin. Oblivious to our passage overhead, other stories are unfolding beneath us. Blackberries ripen in the August sun; a woman packs a suitcase and hesitates at her doorway; a letter is opened and the most surprising photograph slides from between the pages. But we are moving too fast and we are too far away; all the stories escape us, except our own." 

This learning to look for stories, meanings unfolding while we are in a suspended animation, had been my take away of the course. 

And now, after having explored resources in every corner of the city, and having dejectedly given up on the idea of ever finding the treasures my heart secretly desires, one fine Friday I walk into Readings to get books for some friends. I'm picking, piling, moving ... and lo and behold!

Abdel Haleem's The Quran sits there. Like a majestic lord. I grab the copy and ask if they've another copy. This was the only one, they tell me. 

I almost danced my way out of the shop.

Cometh the next day. On Saturday, I walk in to Ferozesons to explore what more could I pick for the friends. The basement, the area of my interest echoed with the noise of too many restless children. I decide to wait it out and go to explore the Quran section upstairs instead.

Guess what?

Muhammad Asad's The Message of The Quran sits there in an empty rack. Like a king. I am in disbelief. It has been 5 years of looking for it. Five years. I grab the copy and rush to the counter. 'From where did you get this?' They ask me. The copy has no price tag, no bar code. It is not even listed in their system. They look at me dumbfounded, I return the look. They put an arbitrary price tag at it calculated by taking an average of most Quran translations they have. 

And just by a sheer inexplicable stroke of luck, within 24 hours I have both the copies of Quran I had exhausted all my means to find for years!

I almost cried my way out of the shop. 



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