My father, Syed Fasihuddin, died a quarter of century ago, on February 21,
1977. With him ended one phase of my life. And another began. I was a few
months away from my nineteenth birthday when it happened. His influence on
me was as profound as a father can have on a son. During the time he was
alive, I couldn’t imagine doing anything without keeping him in my plans.
Despite the deep attachment I had with him, I was able to survive the shock
of his death, even though for a few months after him, I was wondering
whether there was really any reason for me to live any more. The one quest
that obsessed me during that period was to know where my father had gone. In
other words, I wanted to know whether he got transferred to another world,
as the traditional wisdom would make me believe, or whether he had perished
into nothingness, as my own teenage philosophical understanding influenced
by Bertrand Russell and the likes would lead me to conclude. Prior to the
death of my father, I considered myself an atheist. I had stopped praying
for quite sometime and had quietly concluded on my own that it was primarily
the wishful thinking of some noble men that had led to the creation of
traditional religion. It was a casual conclusion drawn partly under the
influence of the forceful writings of authors like Russell and partly
because that view enabled me to pursue my teenage ambitions with carefree
abandon.
My father’s death however forced my intellect to question the basis of the
philosophy, which had earlier influenced me because I had questioned the
roots of the traditional religion. It seemed to me that the kind of reality
my father’s death had thrown across at me to confront, my Godless world-view
was incapable of handling the questions my mind was raising as a consequence
of it. Surprisingly, the line of thinking I had admired for years for being
intellectually superior to the traditional wisdom all of a sudden seemed
completely baseless and bereft of any shred of sanity in it. It dawned upon
me then that I was helped by some intelligent but misguided intellectuals to
build a splendid structure on the foundation of my desires, which was blown
into pieces by the reality of my father’s death. The only other source to
look up to for overcoming my anxiety was the Qur’ān, the book I had hitherto
only read to complete the traditional formality in the Muslim families of
reciting its Arabic text once. Thanks to my teacher’s overwhelming
propensity to sleep while I used to read out the text to him, I was able to
conveniently skip many pages without getting noticed. I had thus not read
even the original Arabic text of the Qur’ān from cover to cover. However,
when I approached the book with a view to find answers to the extremely
pressing questions that my wretched mind raised after my father’s death, my
spiritual and intellectual satisfaction was unbelievable. Even my initial
attempt at understanding the meanings of life and death was so richly
rewarding that the thirst it created for more knowledge has not been
quenched as yet. In fact, it has only increased. It is amazing how such a
relatively brief text could manage to retain its freshness for me despite
being read over and over again on numerous occasions in the last twenty-five
years. I came to realize that the only reason why I am getting the kind of
response from the Qur’ān which many others complain they don’t get is that I
was able to satisfy the most significant condition the book demands from its
reader for getting proper guidance from it: honest yearning to know the
truth. That yearning was forced on me by my circumstances. It was as if I
had no choice but to seek answers to the pressing questions I was struggling
with. Because of that temporary phase in my life when I was able to
completely reject all forms of worldly ambitions, I was able to make myself
fully available to the Qur’ān for guidance, and what I got was -- and still
is -- like the unstoppable flow from the font of Zam Zam, the immense wisdom
of the Qur’ān. It is amazing for me to imagine how privileged I have been in
getting introduced to the Qur’ānic wisdom despite not deserving it. But then
that is how God’s mercy is boundless.
The truth is that if you approach the Qur’ān with strings of conditions
attached to your probing, you are bound to fail in your quest. However, if
you surrender yourself to that greatest treasure of knowledge
unconditionally, its marvellous wisdom will never disappoint you. I owe my
guidance to the Almighty, Who despite my numerous shortcomings considered me
worthy of coming close to His Book, which is unquestionably the greatest
blessing one can pray to get in this worldly life. I also owe it, even
though indirectly, to the deep attachment I had with my late father, whose
death took away from me the obsessive love of worldly life and thus the way
was paved for me to learn the Qur’ān.
May Allah Almighty forgive him and shower His mercy on him. |