The
cartoons are awful! They’re insulting and stereotypical. They
are clearly a product of crass ignorance and misinformation. As
Muslims, we need to raise our voices and register our
displeasure, nay, anger at the insensitivity of Dutch
provocateurs whose sole aim was to anger the Muslim community
and prove to the rest of the world that the stereotype fits
100%.
And
we’re playing right into their hands. Our flag-burning -
stone-throwing barbarism drives their point home more eloquently
than their distasteful cartoons, portraying Muslims as
blood-thirsty savages ever could.
As
Muslims, we should know that the Prophet Muhammed (pbuh)’s
life was marked by terrible treatment at the hands of the
disbelievers. He was insulted, the innards of a camel were
placed on his back during Salaat, thorns were strewn in his
path, he was stoned in Taif… Even his family was not left in
peace.
To
this very day people write blasphemous things about his blessed
person. But the question I ask is, “Does it change his
greatness in the least? Does it lessen our love for him at all?
Does it diminish his high rank in the sight of Allah even a
little?”
The
answer to all these is a resounding no. If anything, it serves
to unite Muslims under a common banner, that of Love for The
Prophet (pbuh) and only increases our love for him. For once, we
are all working towards a common goal. But at this crucial time,
we must ask ourselves, “What would the Prophet (pbuh) want us
to do?”
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Throughout
the Blessed Prophet (pbuh)’s life he opted for a display of
superior character even with his enemies. On the occasion of the
conquest of Makkah, a companion exclaimed, “Today is the day
of revenge,” to which the blessed Prophet (pbuh) replied,
“Today is the day of mercy/forgiveness.” He (pbuh) said this
to a people who stopped at nothing to discredit him, who called
him a madman; possessed; power-hungry liar, even though in their
hearts they knew that this could not have been further from the
truth. Why, they even tried on more than one occasion to end his
life. He said to them as his brother Yusuf (pbuh) said to his
own brothers who had cast him in a well and wrenched him away
from a father so dear to him, “There is no blame on you today.
May Allah forgive you.”
Now
compare this with a poorly drawn, distasteful cartoon. This
display of sublime character was what attracted even his most
bitter enemies to Islam. Would our actions do the same?
The
litmus test of love for the Prophet (pbuh) has always been how
much of his Sunnah we bring into our lives. How much do we know
about his blessed life? Do we know the names of his children? Do
we know the names of his wives? Do we?
Are
we living our lives with Islam as our cornerstone? This was,
after all the very message for which the Prophet in whose name
we are protesting, marching and calling for boycotts, endured
such great difficulties. How many Surahs in the Quraan aren’t
there where Allah consoles His beloved, reminding him that Moosa
(pbuh) and other prophets too met with similar difficulties in
their quest to spread the truth?
Do
we read this Quraan? Do we know of the great weight that would
descend on the Prophet (pbuh) during its revelation? Do we know
of the time that revelation came to him while he was mounted on
his camel? Do we know that the camel struggled with the weight
of the words that were descending on his blessed heart?
So
yes, we love our Prophet. We recognize his struggle. We would
readily lay our lives down to protect his honour - perhaps, as
readily as we rise to perform the five daily prayers; as readily
as we recite the Quraan and make an all-out effort to understand
it; as readily as we learn Islamic knowledge; as readily as we
teach our children to perform their Salaat; as readily as we
enjoin what is good and forbid what is evil.
Yes
, we really love our Prophet (pbuh).