Answer: Your
message reminded me of my early days. I was cricket crazy
right from the beginning. I inherited the craze from my
father. When he died I was not yet nineteen. I lost interest
in everything and turned extremely religious. We migrated from
Sargodha to Lahore soon afterwards. Not long afterwards the
Indian cricket team visited Pakistan. My mother forced me to
go and see the match at the Qaddafi stadium. I didn’t like the
atmosphere and returned early without watching the entire
match.
Things have
changed since then. I realize that life can’t continue without
healthy entertainment within limits of volume and ethics. My
love for the game staged a comeback. When I went to study in
the UK, I played a lot of cricket. I guess if we know the
limits it is not an evil to take interest in cricket or other
sports. As I said life without healthy entertainment can be
extremely boring. And boredom can breed both evil and
extremism.
I am not saying
that it is necessary to take interest in sports. All I am
saying is that there is no religious requirement that one must
give up sports to become religious. We need to strike a
healthy balance between religious obligations and the other
non-religious healthy activities.
Of course, the
kind of immoral trends we see amongst the cricket players and
cricket fans should be discouraged and good Muslims must never
participate in them. In other words, instead of abandoning
cricket and other sports, we should try to bring in morality
and God-consciousness in them too.
I quite agree
with you that we must love all humans irrespective of their
nationality and religion. I see it as a part of nature as my
religious obligation. When we believe in one God Who created
all humans how can we discriminate against some of them? It
would be silly, immoral, and irreligious to do so. |