One
of the moral traits recommended in the Qur’an is forgiveness:
Hold
to forgiveness, command what is right, and turn away from the ignorant. (7:
199)
In
another verse Allah commands: “… They should
rather pardon and overlook. Would you not love Allah to forgive you? Allah is
Ever-Forgiving, Most Merciful.” (24:22)
Those
who do not abide by the moral values of the Qur’an find it very difficult to
forgive others. Because, they are easily angered by any error committed.
However, Allah has advised the faithful that forgiveness is more proper:
The
repayment of a bad action is one equivalent to it. But if someone pardons
and puts things right, his reward is with Allah… (42:40)
….
But if you pardon and exonerate and forgive, Allah is Ever-Forgiving, Most
Merciful. (64: 14)
It
has also been revealed in the Qur’an that forgiveness is a superior moral
trait: “But if someone is steadfast and forgives, that is the most resolute
course to follow.” (42:43) For that reason, believers are forgiving,
compassionate and tolerant people who, as revealed in the Qur’an, “control
their rage and pardon other people.” (3:134)
Believers’
notion of forgiveness is very different to that of those who do not live by the
morals of the Qur’an. Even though many people may say they have forgiven
someone who has offended them, it nevertheless takes a long time to free
themselves of the hatred and anger in their hearts. Their behaviour tends to
betray that anger. On the other hand, the forgiveness of believers is sincere.
Because believers know that human beings are tried in this world, and learn by
their mistakes, they are tolerant and compassionate. Moreover, believers are
also capable of forgiveness even when they are in the right, and the other in
the wrong. When forgiving, they make no distinction between large errors and
small ones. Someone may cause severe losses to them by mistake. However,
believers know that everything takes place under the command of Allah, and
according to a specific destiny, and therefore, they surrender themselves to
these developments, never acquiescing to anger.
Established
Through Research
According
to recent research, American scientists established that those capable of
forgiveness are healthier in both mind and body. Dr. Frederic Luskin, who holds
a Ph.D. in Counselling and Health Psychology from Stanford University, and his
team, studied 259 people living in the city of San Francisco. The scientists
invited the subjects to attend six one-and-a-half-hour sessions, and aimed to
instruct the subjects in forgiveness during their conversations.
The
subjects of the experiments stated that they suffered less after forgiving
people who had wronged them. The research showed that people who learned to
forgive feel much better, not only emotionally but also physically. For example,
it was established that after the experiment psychological and physical symptoms
such as stress-related backache, insomnia and stomachaches were significantly
reduced in these individuals.
In
his book, Forgive for Good, Dr. Frederic Luskin describes forgiveness as
a proven recipe for health and happiness. The book describes how forgiveness
promotes such positive states of mind as hope, patience and self-confidence by
reducing anger, suffering, depression and stress. According to Dr. Luskin,
harboured anger causes observable physical effects in the individual. He goes on
to say that:
The
thing about long-term or unresolved anger is we've seen it resets the internal
thermostat. When you get used to a low level of anger all the time, you don't
recognize what's normal. It creates a kind of adrenaline rush that people get
used to. It burns out the body and makes it difficult to think clearly—making
the situation worse1.
In
addition, Dr. Luskin says, when the body releases certain enzymes during anger
and stress, cholesterol and blood pressure levels go up—not a good long-term
disposition to maintain the body in2.
Emotional
Balance
An
article called “Forgiveness,” published in the September-October 1996
edition of Healing Currents Magazine, stated that anger towards an
individual or an event led to negative emotions in people, and harmed their
emotional balance and even their physical health3. The article also states that
people realise after a while that the anger is a nuisance to them, and wish to
repair the damage to the relationship. So, they take steps to forgive. It is
also stated that, despite all they endure, people do not want to waste the
precious moments of their life in anger and anxiety, and prefer to forgive
themselves and others4.
In
another study involving 1,500 people depression, stress and mental illness were
observed to be less frequent in religious people. Dr. Herbert Benson, who
conducted the research, linked this to the way religions encourage
“forgiveness”, and went on to say:
There’s
a physiology of forgiveness… When you do not forgive, it will chew you up5.
According
to an article titled, “Anger is Hostile To Your Heart,” published in the Harvard
Gazette, anger is extremely harmful to the heart. Ichiro Kawachi, an
assistant professor of medicine, and his team scientifically demonstrated this
with various tests and measurements. As a result of their research, they
established that grumpy old men had three times the risk of heart disease than
their more tempered peers. "The tripling of risk," Kawachi says,
"involves high levels of anger, explosive anger that includes smashing
things and wanting to hurt someone in a fight6."
Researchers
believe that release of stress hormones, increased oxygen demand by the
heart’s muscle cells, and added stickiness of blood platelets, which leads to
clots explain how anger increases the chance of a heart attack7. Furthermore, at
times of anger, the pulse rises above its normal level, and leads to increased
blood pressure in the arteries, and thus to a greater risk of heart attack.
Psychosomatic
Disorders
According
to researchers, anger and hostility can also trigger the production of proteins
linked to inflammation in the blood. The journal Psychosomatic Medicine suggested
that the emotion triggers the production of inflammatory proteins, which may in
turn be causing the hardening of the arteries, causing heart disease and stroke8.
According to Associate Professor Edward Suarez of the Duke University Medical
Centre in North Carolina, the protein interleukin 6 (or IL-6) is much higher in
men who are angry and depressed. High blood levels of IL-6 lead to
atherosclerosis, the build-up of fatty deposits in the lining of the walls of
arteries9. According to Suarez, as well as factors such as smoking, high blood
pressure, obesity and high cholesterol, heart disease is also linked to
psychological states such as depression, anger and hostility10.
Another
article, titled “Anger Raises Risk of Heart Attack,” published in The
Times, stated that a short temper might be a short cut to a heart attack,
and that young men who reacted to stress by becoming angry were three times more
likely to develop premature heart disease, and were five times more likely to
have an early heart attack11. Scientists at John Hopkins University in Baltimore,
Maryland, found that quick-tempered men are at risk of heart attack even if
there is no family history of heart disease12.
All
the available research shows that anger is a state of mind that seriously
damages human health. Forgiveness, on the other hand, even if it comes hard to
people, is pleasing, an aspect of superior morals, that eliminates all the
harmful effects of anger, and helps the individual to enjoy a healthy life, both
psychologically and physically. Forgiveness, of course, is one of a form of
behaviour by which a person can stay healthy, and a positive virtue everyone
should live by. However, the true aim of forgiveness—as in all else—must be
to please Allah. The fact that the features of this sort of morality, and that
the benefits of which have been scientifically identified, have been revealed in
many verses of the Qur’an, is just one of the many sources of wisdom it
contains.
1-
Jennifer
Desai, “Stanford Forgiveness Project's Dr. Frederic Luskin studies why
learning to forgive might be good for the body as well as the soul,” Almanac,
9 June 1999, www.almanacnews.com/morgue/1999/1999_06_09.forgive.html.
2-
Ibid.
3-
Frederic
Luskin, Ph.D., "Forgiveness," Healing Currents Magazine,
September-October 1996, www.stanford.edu/~alexsox/4_steps_to_forgiveness.htm.
4-
Ibid.
5-
Claudia
Kalb, “Faith & Healing,” Newsweek, 10 November 2003,
http://msnbc.msn.com/id/3339654/site/newsweek.
6-
William
J. Cromie, "Anger is Hostile to Your Heart," Harvard Gazette,
www.news.harvard.edu/gazette/1996/11.07/AngerisHostileT.html.
7-
Ibid.
8-
Peter
Lavelle, “Anger trigger to heart disease found?," ABC Science Online, 5
August 2003, www.abc.net.au/science/news/stories/s915243.htm.
9-
Ibid.
10-
Ibid.
11-
Mark
Henderson, "Anger Raises Risk of Heart Attack," The Times,
London, 24 April 2002,