A Muslim's Nationality and his Belief
The day Islam gave a new concept of values and standards to mankind and showed
the way to learn these values and standards, it also provided it with a new
concept of human relationships. Islam came to return man to his Sustainer
and to make His guidance the only source from which values and standards
are to be obtained, as He is the Provider and Originator. All relationships
ought to be based through Him, as we came into being through His will and
shall return to Him.
Islam came to establish only one relationship which binds men together in
the sight of God, and if this relationship is firmly established, then all
other relationships based on blood or other considerations become eliminated.
"You will not find the people who believe in God and the Hereafter
taking as allies the enemies of God and His Prophet, whether they be their
fathers or sons or brothers or fellow tribesmen." (58-22)
In the world there is only one party of God; all others are parties of Satan
and rebellion.
"Those who believe fight in the cause of God, and those who
disbelieve fight in the cause of rebellion. Then fight the allies of Satan;
indeed, Satan's strategy is weak." (3:78)
There is only one way to reach God; all other ways do not lead to Him.
"This is My straight path. Then follow it, and do not follow
other ways which will scatter you from His path." (6: 1 53)
For human life, there is only one true system, and that is Islam; all other
systems are Jahiliyyah.
"Do they want a judgement of the Days of Ignorance? Yet who
is better in judgement than God, for a people having sure faith? (5: 50)
There is only one law which ought to be followed, and that is the Shari'ah
from God; anything else is mere emotionalism and impulsiveness.
"We have set you on a way ordained (by God); then follow it,
and do not follow the desires of those who have no knowledge." (45:18)
The truth is one and indivisible; anything different from it is error.
"Is anything left besides error, beyond the truth? Then to
which do you go?" (10:32)
There is only one place on earth which can be called the home of Islam (Dar-ul-Islam),
and it is that place where the Islamic state is established and the Shari'ah
is the authority and God's limits are observed, and where all the Muslims
administer the affairs of the state with mutual consultation. The rest of
the world is the home of hostility (Dar-ul-Harb). A Muslim can have only
two possible relations with Dar-ul- Harb: peace with a contractual agreement,
or war. A country with which there is a treaty will not be considered the
home of Islam.
"Those who believed, and migrated, and strove with their wealth
and their persons in the cause of God, and those who gave them refuge and
helped them, are the protectors of each other. As to those who believed but
did not emigrate, you have no responsibility for their protection until they
emigrate; but if they ask your help in religion, it is your duty to help
them, except against a people between whom and you there is a treaty; and
God sees whatever you do. Those who disbelieve are the allies of each other.
If you do not do this, there will be oppression in the earth and a great
disturbance. Those who believe, and migrate, and fight in the cause of God,
and those who give them refuge and help them, are in truth Believers. For
them is forgiveness and generous provision. And those who accept Faith afterwards
and migrate and strive along with you, they are of you." (8:72-75)
Islam came with this total guidance and decisive teaching. It came to elevate
man above, and release him from, the bonds of the earth and soil, the bonds
of flesh and blood-which are also the bonds of the earth and soil. A Muslim
has no country except that part of the earth where the Shari'ah of God is
established and human relationships are based on the foundation of relationship
with God; a Muslim has no nationality except his belief, which makes him
a member of the Muslim community in Dar-ul-Islam; a Muslim has no relatives
except those who share the belief in God, and thus a bond is established
between him and other Believers through their relationship with God.
A Muslim has no relationship with his mother, father, brother, wife and other
family members except through their relationship with the Creator, and then
they are also joined through blood.
"O mankind, remain conscious of your Sustainer, Who created
you from one soul and created from its mate, and from the two of them scattered
a great many men and women. Remain conscious of God, from Whose authority
you make demands, and reverence the wombs (from which you were born). (4:1)
However, Divine relationship does not prohibit a Muslim from treating his
parents with kindness and consideration in spite of differences of belief,
as long as they do not join the front lines of the enemies of Islam. However,
if they openly declare their alliance with the enemies of Islam, then all
the filial relationships of a Muslim are cut off and he is not bound to be
kind and considerate to them. Abdullah, son of Abdullah bin Ubayy, has presented
us with a bright example in this respect.
Ibn Jarir, on the authority of Ibn Ziad, has reported that the
Prophet called Abdullah, son of Abdullah bin Ubayy, and said, "Do you know
what your father said?" Abdullah asked. "May my parents be a ransom for you;
what did my father say?" The prophet replied, "He said, 'If we return to
Medina (from the battle), the one with honor will throw out the one who is
despised." Abdullah then said, "O Messenger of God, by God, he told the truth.
You are the one with honor and he is the one who is despised. O Messenger
of God, the people of Medina know that before you came to Medina, no one
was more obedient to his father than I was. But now, if it is the pleasure
of God and His Prophet that I cut off his head, then I shall do so." The
Prophet replied, "No". When the Muslims returned to Medina, Abdullah stood
in front of the gate with his sword drawn over his father's head, telling
him, "Did you say that if we return to Medina then the one with honor will
throw out the one who is despised? By God, now you will know whether you
have honor, or God's Messenger! By God, until God and His Messenger give
permission, you cannot enter Medina, nor will you have refuge from me!" Ibn
Ubayy cried aloud and said twice, "People of Khazraj, see how my son is preventing
me from entering my home!" But his son Abdullah kept repeating that unless
the Prophet gave permission he would not let him enter Medina. Hearing this
noise, some people gathered around and started pleading with Abdullah, but
he stood his ground. Some people went to the Prophet and reported this incident.
He told them, "Tell Abdullah to let his father enter". When Abdullah got
this message, he then told his father, "Since the Prophet had given permission,
you can enter now."
When the relationship of the belief is established, whether there by any
relationship of blood or not, the Believers become like brothers. God Most
High says, "Indeed, the Believers are brothers," which is a limitation as
well as a prescription. He also says:
"Those who believed, and migrated, and strove with their wealth
and their persons in the cause of God, and those who gave them refuge and
helped them, are the protectors of each other." (8:72)
The protection which is referred to in this verse is not limited to a single
generation but encompasses future generations as well, thus linking the future
generations with the past generation in a sacred and eternal bond of love,
loyalty and kindness.
"Those who lived (in Medina) before the Emigrants and believed,
love the Emigrants and do not find in their hearts any grudge when thou givest
them something, but give them preference over themselves, even though they
may be poor. Indeed, the ones who restrain themselves from greed achieve
prosperity. Those who came after them (the Emigrants) say; 'Our Lord! Forgive
us and our brothers who entered the Faith before us, and leave not in our
hearts any grievance against those who believe. Our Lord! You are indeed
Most Kind, Most Merciful." (59:9-10)
God Most High has related the stories of earlier Prophets in the Qur'an as
an example for the Believers. In various periods the Prophets of God lighted
the flame of faith and guided the Believers.
"And Noah called upon his Lord and said, 'O my Lord, surely
my son is of my family, and Your promise is true, and You are the Justest
of Judges'. He said, "O Noah, he is not of your family, as his conduct is
unrighteous; so do not ask of me that of which you have no knowledge. I give
you the counsel not to act like the ignorant.' Noah said, O my Lord, I seek
refuge with You lest I ask You for that of which I have no knowledge, and
unless You forgive me and have mercy on me, I shall be lost". (11:45-47)
"And when his Lord tried Abraham with certain commands which he fulfilled,
he said, 'I will make you a leader of people'. He said, 'And also those from
among my offspring'? He answered, 'My promise does not extend to the evildoers".
(1:124)
"And when Abraham said, 'My Lord! Make this a city of peace and feed its
people with fruits, such of them as believe in God and the Last Day'. He
said, 'And those who reject faith, I will grant them their pleasure for a
while, but will eventually drive them to the chastisement of the Fire. What
an evil destination!" (2:126)
When the Prophet Abraham saw his father and his people persistent in their
error, he turned away from them and said "I leave you and those upon whom
you call besides God. I will only call upon my Sustainer, and hope that my
Lord will not disappoint me." (19:48)
In relating the story of Abraham and his people, God has highlighted those
aspects which are to be an example for the Believers.
"Indeed, Abraham and his companions are an example for you,
when they told their people, 'We have nothing to do with you and with whatever
you worship besides God. We reject them; and now there is perpetual enmity
and anger between you and us unless you believe in One God." (60:4)
When those young and courageous friends who are known as the Companions of
the Cave saw this same rejection among their family and tribe, they left
them all, migrated from their country, and ran toward their Sustainer so
that they could live as His servants.
"They were youths who believed in their Lord, and We advanced
them in guidance. We gave strength to hearts, so that they stood up and said,
'Our Lord is the Lord of the heavens and the earth. We shall not call upon
any god apart from Him. If we did, we should indeed have said an awful thing.
These our people have taken for worship gods other than Him. Why do they
not bring a clear proof for what they do? Who can be more wrong than such
as invert a falsehood against God? So, when you turn away from them and the
things they worship other than God, take refuge in the cave. Your Lord will
shower mercies on you and will provide ease and comfort for your affairs"!
(18:13-16)
The wife of Noah and the wife of Lot were separated from their husbands only
because their beliefs were different.
"God gives as an example for the unbelievers the wife of Noah
and the wife of Lot. They were married to two of Our righteous servants;
but they were false to their husbands, and they profited nothing before God
on their account, but were told, 'Enter you both into the fire along with
those who enter it." (66:10)
Then there is another kind of example in the wife of Pharoah.
"And God gives as an example to those who believe the wife
of Pharoah. Behold, she said, 'My Lord, build for me in nearness to You a
mansion in heaven, and save me from Pharoah and his doings, and save me from
those who do wrong." (66:11)
The Qur'an also describes examples of different kinds of relationships. In
the story of Noah we have an example of the paternal relationship; in the
story of Abraham, an example of the son and of the country; in the story
of the Companions of the Cave a comprehensive example of relatives, tribe
and home country. In the stories of Noah, Lot and Pharoah there is an example
of marital relationships.
After a description of the lives of the great Prophets and their relationships,
we now turn to the Middle Community, that is, that of the early Muslims.
We find similar examples and experiences in this community in great numbers.
This community followed the Divine path which God has chosen for the Believers.
When the relationship of common belief was broken - in other words, when
the very first relationship joining one man with another was broken,-then
persons of the same family or tribe were divided into different groups God
Most High says in praise of the Believers:
"You will not find any people who believe in God and the Last
Day loving those who fight God and His Messenger, even though they be their
fathers, or their sons, or their brothers, or their kindred. These are the
people on whose hearts God has imprinted faith and strengthened them with
a spirit from Himself. And He will admit them to Gardens beneath which rivers
flow, to dwell therein. God will be well-pleased with them and they with
Him. They are the party of God; truly the party of God will prosper.' (58:22)
We see that the blood relationships between Muhammad -peace be on him - and
his uncle Abu Lahab and his cousin Abu Jahl were broken, and that the Emigrants
from Mecca were fighting against their families and relatives and were in
the front lines of Badr, while on the other hand their relations with the
Helpers of Medina became strengthened on the basis of a common faith. They
became like brothers, even more than blood relatives. I his relationship
established a new brotherhood of Muslims in which were included Arabs and
non-Arabs. Suhaib from Rome and Bilal from Abyssinia and Selman from Persia
were all brothers. There was no tribal partisanship among them. The pride
of lineage was ended, the voice of nationalism was silenced, and the Messenger
of God addressed them: "Get rid of these partisanships; these are foul things",
and "He is not one of us who calls toward partisanship, who fights for partisanship,
and who dies for partisanship."
Thus this partisanship-the partisanship of lineage-ended; and this slogan-the
slogan of race-died; and this pride- the pride of nationality- vanished;
and man's spirit soared to higher horizons, freed from the bondage of flesh
and blood and the pride of soil and country. From that day, the Muslim's
country has not been a piece of land, but the homeland of Islam (Dar-ul-Islam)
- the homeland where faith rules and the Shari'ah of God holds sway, the
homeland in which he took refuge and which he defended, and in trying to
extend it, he become martyred. This Islamic homeland is a refuge for any
who accepts the Islamic Shari'ah to be the law of the state, as is the case
with the Dhimmies. But any place where the Islamic Shari'ah is not enforced
and where Islam is not dominant becomes the home of Hostility (Dar-ul-Harb)
for both the Muslim and the Dhimmi. A Muslim will remain prepared to fight
against it, whether it be his birthplace or a place where his relatives reside
or where his property or any other material interests are located.
And thus Muhammad - peace be on him - fought against the city of Mecca, although
it was his birthplace, and his relatives lived there, and he and his Companions
had houses and property there which they had left when they migrated; yet
the soil of Mecca did not become Dar-ul-Islam for him and his followers until
it surrendered to Islam and the Shari'ah became operative in it.
This, and only this, is Islam. Islam is not a few words pronounced by the
tongue, or birth in a country called Islamic, or an inheritance from a Muslim
father.
"No, by your Sustainer, they have not believed until they
make you the arbiter of their disputes, and then do not find any grievance
against your decision but submit with full submission." (4:65)
Only this is Islam, and only this is Dar-ul-Islam- not the soil, not the
race, not the lineage, not the tribe, and not the family.
Islam freed all humanity from the ties of the earth so that they might soar
toward the skies, and freed them from the chains of blood relationships -the
biological chains - so that they might rise above the angels.
The homeland of the Muslim, in which he lives and which he defends, is not
a piece of land; the nationality of the Muslim, by which he is identified,
is not the nationality determined by a government; the family of the Muslim,
in which he finds solace and which he defends, is not blood relationships;
the flag of the Muslim, which he honors and under which he is martyred, is
not the flag of a country; and the victory of the Muslim, which he celebrates
and for which he is thankful to God, is not a military victory. It is what
God has described:
"When God's help and victory comes, and thou seest people
entering into God's religion in multitudes, then celebrate the praises of
thy Lord and ask His forgiveness. Indeed, He is the Acceptor of Repentance."
(110:1-3)
The victory is achieved under the banner of faith, and under no other banners;
the striving is purely for the sake of God, for the success of His religion
and His law, for the protection of Dar-ul-Islam, the particulars of which
we have described above, and for no other purpose. It is not for the spoils
or for fame, nor for the honor of a country or nation, nor for the mere protection
of one's family except when supporting them against religious persecution.
The honor of martyrdom is achieved only when one is fighting in the cause
of God, and if one is killed for any other purpose this honor will not be
attained.
Any country which fights the Muslim because of his belief and prevents him
from practicing his religion, and in which the Shari'ah is suspended, is
Dar-ul-Harb, even though his family or his relatives or his people live in
it, or his capital is invested and his trade or commerce is in that country;
and any country where the Islamic faith is dominant and its Shari'ah is operative
is Dar-ul-Islam, even though the Muslim's family or relatives or his people
do not live there, and he does not have any commercial relations with it.
The fatherland is that place where the Islamic faith, the Islamic way of
life, and the Shari'ah of God is dominant; only this meaning of 'fatherland'
is worthy of the human being. Similarly, 'nationality' means belief and a
way of life, and only this relationship is worthy of man's dignity.
Grouping according to family and tribe and nation, and race and color and
country, are residues of the primitive state of man; these jahili groupings
are from a period when man's spiritual values were at a low stage. The Prophet-peace
be on him-has called them "dead things" against which man's spirit should
revolt.
When the Jews claimed to be the chosen people of God on the basis of their
race and nationality, God Most High rejected their claim and declared that
in every period, in every race and n every nation, there is only one criterion:
that of faith.
"And they say: 'become Jews, or Christians; then you will
be guided'. Say: 'Not so: The way of Abraham, the pure in faith; and he was
not among those who associate other gods with God'. Say: 'We believe in God,
and what has come down to us, and what has come down to Abraham, Ismail and
Isaac and Jacob and the Tribes (of Israelites), and what was given to Moses
and Jesus and to other Prophets by their Sustainer. We do not make any distinction
among them, and we have submitted to Him. If then they believe as you have
believed, they are guided; but if they turn away, then indeed they are stubborn.
Then God suffices for you, and He is All-Hearing, All-Knowing. The baptism
of God: and who can baptise better than God? And we worship Him alone." (2:135-138)
The people who are really chosen by God are the Muslim community which has
gathered under God's banner without regard to differences of races, nations,
colors and countries.
"You are the best community raised for the good of mankind.
You enjoin what is good and forbid what is evil, and you believe in God."
(3:110)
This is that community in the first generation of which there were Abu Bakr
from Arabia, Bilal from Abyssinia, Suhaib from Syria, Selman from Persia,
and their brothers in faith. The generations which followed them were similar.
Nationalism here is belief, homeland here is Dar-ul-Islam, the ruler here
is God, and the constitution here is the Qur'an.
This noble conception of homeland, of nationality, and of relationship should
become imprinted on the hearts of those who invite others toward God. They
should remove all influences of Jahiliyyah which make this concept impure
and which may have the slightest element of hidden Shirk, such as Shirk in
relation to homeland, or in relation to race or nation, or in relation to
lineage or material interests. All these have been mentioned by God Most
High in one verse, in which He has placed them in one side of the balance
and the belief and its responsibilities in the other side, and invites people
to choose.
"Say: If your fathers and your sons and your brothers and
and your spouses and your relatives, and the wealth which you have acquired,
and the commerce in which you fear decline, and the homes in which you take
delight, are dearer to you than God and His Messenger and striving in His
cause, then wait until God brings His judgment; and God does not guide the
rebellious people." (9:24)
The callers to Islam should not have any superficial doubts in their hearts
concerning the nature of Jahiliyyah and the nature of Islam, and the characteristics
of Dar-ul-Harb and of Dar-ul-Islam, for through these doubts many are led
to confusion. Indeed, there is no Islam in a land where Islam is not dominant
and where its Shari'ah is not established; and that place is not Dar-ul-Islam
where Islam's way of life and its laws are not practiced. There is nothing
beyond faith except unbelief, nothing beyond Islam except Jihiliyyah, nothing
beyond the truth except falsehood.