| In the desert of Arabia was Mohammad born, according to Muslim historians, on April 20, 571. 
                                The name means highly praised. He is to me the 
                                greatest mind among all the sons of Arabia. He means so much 
                                more than all the poets and kings that preceded him in that 
                                impenetrable desert of red sand.  When he appeared Arabia was a desert -- a 
                                  nothing. Out of nothing a new world was fashioned by the 
                                  mighty spirit of Mohammad -- a new life, a new 
                                  culture, a new civilization, a new kingdom which extended 
                                  from Morocco to Indies and influenced the thought and life 
                                  of three continents -- Asia, Africa and Europe.  When I thought of writing on Mohammad the prophet, I was a bit hesitant because it was to write 
                                  about a religion I do not profess and it is a delicate 
                                  matter to do so for there are many persons professing 
                                  various religions and belonging to diverse school of thought 
                                  and denominations even in same religion. Though it is 
                                  sometimes, claimed that religion is entirely personal yet it 
                                  can not be gain-said that it has a tendency to envelop the 
                                  whole universe seen as well unseen. It somehow permeates 
                                  something or other our hearts, our souls, our minds their 
                                  conscious as well as subconscious and unconscious levels 
                                  too. The problem assumes overwhelming importance when there 
                                  is a deep conviction that our past, present and future all 
                                  hang by the soft delicate, tender silked cord. If we further 
                                  happen to be highly sensitive, the center of gravity is very 
                                  likely to be always in a state of extreme tension. Looked at 
                                  from this point of view, the less said about other religion 
                                  the better. Let our religions be deeply hidden and embedded 
                                  in the resistance of our innermost hearts fortified by 
                                  unbroken seals on our lips.  But there is another aspect of this 
                                  problem. Man lives in society. Our lives are bound with the 
                                  lives of others willingly or unwillingly, directly or 
                                  indirectly. We eat the food grown in the same soil, drink 
                                  water, from the same the same spring and breathe the same 
                                  air. Even while staunchly holding our own views, it would be 
                                  helpful, if we try to adjust ourselves to our surroundings, 
                                  if we also know to some extent, how the mind our neighbor 
                                  moves and what the main springs of his actions are. From 
                                  this angle of vision it is highly desirable that one should 
                                  try to know all religions of the world, in the proper sprit, 
                                  to promote mutual understanding and better appreciation of 
                                  our neighborhood, immediate and remote.  Further, our thoughts are not scattered as 
                                  appear to be on the surface. They have got themselves 
                                  crystallized around a few nuclei in the form of great world 
                                  religions and living faiths that guide and motivate the 
                                  lives of millions that inhabit this earth of ours. It is our 
                                  duty, in one sense if we have the ideal of ever becoming a 
                                  citizen of the world before us, to make a little attempt to 
                                  know the great religions and system of philosophy that have 
                                  ruled mankind.  In spite of these preliminary remarks, the 
                                  ground in these field of religion, where there is often a 
                                  conflict between intellect and emotion is so slippery that 
                                  one is constantly reminded of fools that rush in where 
                                    angels fear to tread. It is also not so complex from 
                                  another point of view. The subject of my writing is about 
                                  the tenets of a religion which is historic and its prophet 
                                  who is also a historic personality. Even a hostile critic 
                                  like Sir William Muir speaking about the holy Quran says that. "There is probably in the world no other book 
                                    which has remained twelve centuries with so pure text." I may also add Prophet Mohammad is also a historic 
                                  personality, every event of whose life has been most 
                                  carefully recorded and even the minutest details preserved 
                                  intact for the posterity. His life and works are not wrapped 
                                  in mystery.  My work today is further lightened because 
                                  those days are fast disappearing when Islam was highly 
                                  misrepresented by some of its critics for reasons political 
                                  and otherwise. Prof. Bevan writes in Cambridge Medieval 
                                  History, "Those account of Mohammad and Islam which were 
                                    published in Europe before the beginning of 19th century are 
                                    now to be regarded as literary curiosities." My problem 
                                  is to write this monograph is easier because we are now 
                                  generally not fed on this kind of history and much time need 
                                  be spent on pointing out our misrepresentation of Islam.  The theory of Islam and Sword for instance 
                                  is not heard now frequently in any quarter worth the name. The principle of Islam that there is no compulsion in 
                                    religion is well known. Gibbon, a historian of world 
                                  repute says, "A pernicious tenet has been imputed to 
                                    Mohammadans, the duty of extirpating all the religions by 
                                    sword." This charge based on ignorance and bigotry, says 
                                  the eminent historian, is refuted by Quran, by 
                                  history of Musalman conquerors and by their public and legal 
                                  toleration of Christian worship. The great success of  Mohammad's life had been effected by sheer moral force, 
                                  without a stroke of sword.  But in pure self-defense, after repeated 
                                  efforts of conciliation had utterly failed, circumstances 
                                  dragged him into the battlefield. But the prophet of Islam 
                                  changed the whole strategy of the battlefield. The total 
                                  number of casualties in all the wars that took place during 
                                  his lifetime when the whole Arabian Peninsula came under his 
                                  banner, does not exceed a few hundreds in all. But even on 
                                  the battlefield he taught the Arab barbarians to pray, to 
                                  pray not individually, but in congregation to God the 
                                  Almighty. During the dust and storm of warfare whenever the 
                                  time for prayer came, and it comes five times a every day, 
                                  the congregation prayer had not to be postponed even on the 
                                  battlefield. A party had to be engaged in bowing their heads 
                                  before God while other was engaged with the enemy. After 
                                  finishing the prayers, the two parties had to exchange their 
                                  positions. To the Arabs, who would fight for forty years on 
                                  the slight provocation that a camel belonging to the guest 
                                  of one tribe had strayed into the grazing land belonging to 
                                  other tribe and both sides had fought till they lost 70,000 
                                  lives in all; threatening the extinction of both the tribes 
                                  to such furious Arabs, the Prophet of Islam taught 
                                  self-control and discipline to the extent of praying even on 
                                  the battlefield. In an aged of barbarism, the Battlefield 
                                  itself was humanized and strict instructions were issued not 
                                  to cheat, not to break trust, not to mutilate, not to kill a 
                                  child or woman or an old man, not to hew down date palm nor 
                                  burn it, not to cut a fruit tree, not to molest any person 
                                  engaged in worship. His own treatment with his bitterest 
                                  enemies is the noblest example for his followers. At the 
                                  conquest of Mecca, he stood at the zenith of his power. The 
                                  city which had refused to listen to his mission, which had 
                                  tortured him and his followers, which had driven him and his 
                                  people into exile and which had unrelentingly persecuted and 
                                  boycotted him even when he had taken refuge in a place more 
                                  than 200 miles away, that city now lay at his feet. By 
                                    the laws of war he could have justly avenged all the 
                                    cruelties inflicted on him and his people. But what 
                                    treatment did he accord to them? Mohammad's heart 
                                    flowed with affection and he declared, "This day, there 
                                      is no REPROOF against you and you are all free." "This day" he proclaimed, "I trample under my feet all distinctions 
                                        between man and man, all hatred between man and man."  This was one of the chief objects why 
                                  he permitted war in self defense, that is to unite human 
                                  beings. And when once this object was achieved, even his 
                                  worst enemies were pardoned. Even those who killed his 
                                  beloved uncle, Hamazah, mangled his body, ripped it open, 
                                  even chewed a piece of his liver. The principles of universal brotherhood 
                                  and doctrine of the equality of mankind which he proclaimed 
                                  represents one very great contribution of Mohammad to 
                                  the social uplift of humanity. All great religions have 
                                  preached the same doctrine but the prophet of Islam had put 
                                  this theory into actual practice and its value will be fully 
                                  recognized, perhaps centuries hence, when international 
                                  consciousness being awakened, racial prejudices may 
                                  disappear and greater brotherhood of humanity come into 
                                  existence.  Miss. Sarojini Naidu speaking about this 
                                  aspect of Islam says, "It was the first religion that 
                                    preached and practiced democracy; for in the mosque, when 
                                    the minaret is sounded and the worshipers are gathered 
                                    together, the democracy of Islam is embodied five times a 
                                    day when the peasant and the king kneel side by side and 
                                    proclaim, God alone is great." The great poetess 
                                  of India continues, "I have been struck over and over 
                                    again by this indivisible unity of Islam that makes a man 
                                    instinctively a brother. When you meet an Egyptian, an 
                                    Algerian and Indian and a Turk in London, it matters not 
                                    that Egypt is the motherland of one and India is the 
                                    motherland of another." Mahatma Gandhi, in his inimitable style, 
                                  says "Some one has said that Europeans in South Africa 
                                    dread the advent Islam -- Islam that civilized Spain, Islam 
                                    that took the torch light to Morocco and preached to the 
                                    world the Gospel of brotherhood. The Europeans of South 
                                    Africa dread the Advent of Islam. They may claim equality 
                                    with the white races. They may well dread it, if 
                                      brotherhood is a sin. If it is equality of colored races 
                                      then their dread is well founded." Every year, during the Haj, the world 
                                  witnesses the wonderful spectacle of this international 
                                  Exhibition of Islam in leveling all distinctions of race, 
                                  color and rank. Not only the Europeans, the African, the 
                                  Arabian, the Persian, the Indians, the Chinese all meet 
                                  together in Medina as members of one divine family, but they 
                                  are clad in one dress every person in two simple pieces of 
                                  white seamless cloth, one piece round the loin the other 
                                  piece over the shoulders, bare head without pomp or 
                                  ceremony, repeating "Here am I O God; at thy command; 
                                    thou art one and alone; Here am I." Thus there remains 
                                    nothing to differentiate the high from the low and every 
                                    pilgrim carries home the impression of the international 
                                    significance of Islam. In the opinion of Prof. Hurgronje "the 
                                  league of nations founded by prophet of Islam put the 
                                  principle of international unity of human brotherhood on 
                                  such Universal foundations as to show candle to other 
                                  nations." In the words of same Professor "the fact is 
                                    that no nation of the world can show a parallel to what 
                                    Islam has done the realization of the idea of the League of 
                                    Nations." The prophet of Islam brought the reign of 
                                  democracy in its best form. The Caliph Caliph Ali and the 
                                  son in-law of the prophet, the Caliph Mansur, Abbas, the son 
                                  of Caliph Mamun and many other caliphs and kings had to 
                                    appear before the judge as ordinary men in Islamic courts. 
                                  Even today we all know how the black Negroes were treated by 
                                  the civilized white races. Consider the state of BILAL, a 
                                  Negro Slave, in the days of the prophet of Islam nearly 14 
                                  centuries ago. The office of calling Muslims to prayer was 
                                  considered to be of status in the early days of Islam and it 
                                  was offered to this Negro slave. After the conquest of 
                                  Mecca, the Prophet ordered him to call for prayer and the 
                                  Negro slave, with his black color and his thick lips, stood 
                                  over the roof of the holy mosque at Mecca called the Ka'ba the most historic and the holiest mosque 
                                  in the Islamic world, when some proud Arabs painfully cried 
                                  loud, "Oh, this black Negro Slave, woe be to him. He stands 
                                  on the roof of holy Ka'ba to call for prayer." At that 
                                  moment, the prophet announced to the world, this verse of 
                                  the holy QURAN for the first time.  
                                  "O mankind, surely we have created you, families and 
                                    tribes, so you may know one another. Surely, the most honorable of you with God is MOST 
                                      RIGHTEOUS AMONG you.
 Surely, God is Knowing, Aware."
 
 And these words of the holy Quran 
                                  created such a mighty transformation that the Caliph of 
                                  Islam, the purest of Arabs by birth, offered their daughter 
                                  in marriage to this Negro Slave, and whenever, the second 
                                  Caliph of Islam, known to history as Umar the great, 
                                  the commander of faithful, saw this Negro slave, he 
                                  immediately stood in reverence and welcomed him by "Here 
                                    come our master; Here come our lord." What a tremendous 
                                  change was brought by Quran in the Arabs, the proudest 
                                  people at that time on the earth. This is the reason why 
                                  Goethe, the greatest of German poets, speaking about the 
                                  Holy Quran declared that, "This book will go on 
                                    exercising through all ages a most potent influence." This is also the reason why George Bernard Shaw says, "If 
                                      any religion has a chance or ruling over England, say, 
                                      Europe, within the next 100 years, it is Islam".  It is this same democratic spirit of Islam 
                                  that emancipated women from the bondage of man. Sir Charles 
                                  Edward Archibald Hamilton says "Islam teaches the 
                                    inherent sinlessness of man. It teaches that man and woman 
                                    and woman have come from the same essence, posses the same 
                                    soul and have been equipped with equal capabilities for 
                                    intellectual, spiritual and moral attainments." The Arabs had a very strong tradition that 
                                  one who can smite with the spear and can wield the sword 
                                  would inherit. But Islam came as the defender of the weaker 
                                  sex and entitled women to share the inheritance of their 
                                  parents. It gave women, centuries ago right of owning 
                                  property, yet it was only 12 centuries later , in 1881, that 
                                  England, supposed to be the cradle of democracy adopted this 
                                  institution of Islam and the act was called "the married 
                                  woman act", but centuries earlier, the Prophet of Islam had 
                                  proclaimed that "Woman are twin halves of men. The 
                                    rights of women are sacred. See that women maintained rights 
                                    granted to them." Islam is not directly concerned with 
                                  political and economic systems, but indirectly and in so far 
                                  as political and economic affairs influence man's conduct, 
                                  it does lay down some very important principles to govern 
                                  economic life. According to Prof. Massignon, it maintains 
                                  the balance between exaggerated opposites and has always in 
                                  view the building of character which is the basis of 
                                  civilization. This is secured by its law of inheritance, by 
                                  an organized system of charity known as Zakat, and by 
                                  regarding as illegal all anti-social practices in the 
                                  economic field like monopoly, usury, securing of 
                                  predetermined unearned income and increments, cornering 
                                  markets, creating monopolies, creating an artificial 
                                  scarcity of any commodity in order to force the prices to 
                                  rise. Gambling is illegal. Contribution to schools, to 
                                  places of worship, hospitals, digging of wells, opening of 
                                  orphanages are highest acts of virtue. Orphanages have 
                                  sprung for the first time, it is said, under the teaching of 
                                  the prophet of Islam. The world owes its orphanages to this 
                                  prophet born an orphan. "Good all this" says Carlyle 
                                  about Mohammad. "The natural voice of humanity, of 
                                    pity and equity, dwelling in the heart of this wild son of 
                                    nature, speaks." A historian once said a great man 
                                  should be judged by three tests: Was he found to be 
                                    of true metel by his contemporaries ? Was he great enough to 
                                    raise above the standards of his age ? Did he leave anything 
                                    as permanent legacy to the world at large ? This list 
                                  may be further extended but all these three tests of 
                                  greatness are eminently satisfied to the highest degree in 
                                  case of prophet Mohammad. Some illustrations of the 
                                  last two have already been mentioned.  The first is: Was the Prophet of Islam 
                                  found to be of true metel by his contemporaries? Historical records show that all the 
                                  contemporaries of Mohammad both friends foes, 
                                  acknowledged the sterling qualities, the spotless honesty, 
                                  the noble virtues, the absolute sincerity and every 
                                  trustworthiness of the apostle of Islam in all walks of life 
                                  and in every sphere of human activity. Even the Jews and 
                                  those who did not believe in his message, adopted him as the 
                                  arbiter in their personal disputes by virtue of his perfect 
                                  impartiality. Even those who did not believe in his 
                                    message were forced to say "O Mohammad, we do not call 
                                      you a liar, but we deny him who has given you a book and 
                                      inspired you with a message." They thought he was 
                                  one possessed. They tried violence to cure him. But the best 
                                  of them saw that a new light had dawned on him and they 
                                  hastened him to seek the enlightenment. It is a notable 
                                  feature in the history of prophet of Islam that his nearest 
                                  relation, his beloved cousin and his bosom friends, who know 
                                  him most intimately, were not thoroughly imbued with the 
                                  truth of his mission and were convinced of the genuineness 
                                  of his divine inspiration. If these men and women, noble, 
                                  intelligent, educated and intimately acquainted with his 
                                  private life had perceived the slightest signs of deception, 
                                  fraud, earthliness, or lack of faith in him, Mohammad's 
                                  moral hope of regeneration, spiritual awakening, and social 
                                  reform would all have been foredoomed to a failure and whole 
                                  edifice would have crumbled to pieces in a moment. On the 
                                  contrary, we find that devotion of his followers was such 
                                  that he was voluntarily acknowledged as dictator of their 
                                  lives. They braved for him persecutions and danger; they 
                                  trusted, obeyed and honored him even in the most 
                                  excruciating torture and severest mental agony caused by 
                                  excommunication even unto death. Would this have been so, 
                                  had they noticed the slightest backsliding in their master?  Read the history of the early converts 
                                  to Islam, and every heart would melt at the sight of the 
                                  brutal treatment of innocent Muslim men and women. Sumayya, an innocent women, is 
                                  cruelly torn into pieces with spears. An example is made of 
                                  "Yassir whose legs are tied to two camels and the 
                                  beast were are driven in opposite directions", Khabbab 
                                    bin Arth is made lie down on the bed of burning coal 
                                  with the brutal legs of their merciless tyrant on his breast 
                                  so that he may not move and this makes even the fat beneath 
                                  his skin melt. "Khabban bin Adi is put to death in a 
                                  cruel manner by mutilation and cutting off his flesh 
                                  piece-meal." In the midst of his tortures, being asked 
                                  weather he did not wish Mohammad in his place while 
                                  he was in his house with his family, the sufferer cried out 
                                  that he was gladly prepared to sacrifice himself his family 
                                  and children and why was it that these sons and daughters of 
                                  Islam not only surrendered to their prophet their allegiance 
                                  but also made a gift of their hearts and souls to their 
                                  master? Is not the intense faith and conviction on part of 
                                  immediate followers of Mohammad, the noblest 
                                  testimony to his sincerity and to his utter self-absorption 
                                  in his appointed task?  And these men were not of low station or 
                                  inferior mental caliber. Around him in quite early days, 
                                  gathered what was best and noblest in Mecca, its flower and 
                                  cream, men of position, rank, wealth and culture, and from 
                                  his own kith and kin, those who knew all about his life.  All the first four Caliphs, with their towering 
                                    personalities, were converts of this period. The Encyclopedia Brittanica says that "Mohammad is the most successful of all Prophets and 
                                  religious personalities". But the success was not the result of mere 
                                  accident. It was not a hit of fortune. It was a recognition 
                                  of fact that he was found to be true metal by his 
                                  contemporaries. It was the result of his admirable and all 
                                  compelling personality.  The personality of Mohammad! It is most 
                                  difficult to get into the truth of it. Only a glimpse of it 
                                  I can catch. What a dramatic succession of picturesque 
                                  scenes. There is Mohammad the Prophet, there is Mohammad the 
                                  General; Mohammad the King; Mohammad the Warrior; Mohammad 
                                  the Businessman; Mohammad the Preacher; Mohammad the 
                                  Philosopher; Mohammad the Statesman; Mohammad the Orator; 
                                  Mohammad the reformer; Mohammad the Refuge of orphans; 
                                  Mohammad the Protector of slaves; Mohammad the Emancipator 
                                  of women; Mohammad the Law-giver; Mohammad the Judge; 
                                  Mohammad the Saint. And in all these magnificent roles, in all 
                                  these departments of human activities, he is like, a hero..  Orphanhood is extreme of helplessness and 
                                  his life upon this earth began with it; Kingship is the 
                                  height of the material power and it ended with it. From an 
                                  orphan boy to a persecuted refugee and then to an overlord, 
                                  spiritual as well as temporal, of a whole nation and Arbiter 
                                  of its destinies, with all its trials and temptations, with 
                                  all its vicissitudes and changes, its lights and shades, its 
                                  up and downs, its terror and splendor, he has stood the fire 
                                  of the world and came out unscathed to serve as a model in 
                                  every face of life. His achievements are not limited to one 
                                  aspect of life, but cover the whole field of human 
                                  conditions.  If for instance, greatness consist in the 
                                  purification of a nation, steeped in barbarism and immersed 
                                  in absolute moral darkness, that dynamic personality who has 
                                  transformed, refined and uplifted an entire nation, sunk low 
                                  as the Arabs were, and made them the torch-bearer of 
                                  civilization and learning, has every claim to greatness. If 
                                  greatness lies in unifying the discordant elements of 
                                  society by ties of brotherhood and charity, the prophet of 
                                  the desert has got every title to this distinction. If 
                                  greatness consists in reforming those warped in degrading 
                                  and blind superstition and pernicious practices of every 
                                  kind, the prophet of Islam has wiped out superstitions and 
                                  irrational fear from the hearts of millions. If it lies in 
                                  displaying high morals, Mohammad has been admitted by 
                                  friend and foe as Al Amin, or the faithful. If 
                                  a conqueror is a great man, here is a person who rose from 
                                  helpless orphan and an humble creature to be the ruler of 
                                  Arabia, the equal to Chosroes and Caesars, one who founded 
                                  great empire that has survived all these 14 centuries. If 
                                  the devotion that a leader commands is the criterion of 
                                  greatness, the prophet's name even today exerts a magic 
                                  charm over millions of souls, spread all over the world.  He had not studied philosophy in the 
                                  school of Athens of Rome, Persia, India, or China. Yet, He 
                                  could proclaim the highest truths of eternal value to 
                                  mankind. Illiterate himself, he could yet speak with an 
                                  eloquence and fervor which moved men to tears, to tears of 
                                  ecstasy. Born an orphan blessed with no worldly goods, he 
                                  was loved by all. He had studied at no military academy; yet 
                                  he could organize his forces against tremendous odds and 
                                  gained victories through the moral forces which he marshaled. 
                                  Gifted men with genius for preaching are rare. Descartes 
                                  included the perfect preacher among the rarest kind in the 
                                  world. Hitler in his Mein Kamp has expressed a similar view. 
                                  He says "A great theorist is seldom a great leader. An 
                                    Agitator is more likely to posses these qualities. He will 
                                    always be a great leader. For leadership means ability to 
                                    move masses of men. The talents to produce ideas has nothing 
                                    in common with capacity for leadership." "But", he says, "The Union of theorists, organizer and leader in one man, 
                                      is the rarest phenomenon on this earth; Therein consists 
                                      greatness." In the person of the Prophet of Islam the 
                                  world has seen this rarest phenomenon walking on the earth, 
                                  walking in flesh and blood.  And more wonderful still is what the 
                                  reverend Bosworth Smith remarks, "Head of the state as 
                                    well as the Church, he was Caesar and Pope in one; but, he 
                                    was pope without the pope's claims, and Caesar without the 
                                    legions of Caesar, without an standing army, without a 
                                    bodyguard, without a palace, without a fixed revenue. If 
                                    ever any man had the right to say that he ruled by a right 
                                    divine It was Mohammad, for he had all the power without 
                                    instruments and without its support. He cared not for 
                                    dressing of power. The simplicity of his private life was in 
                                    keeping with his public life." After the fall of Mecca, more than one 
                                  million square miles of land lay at his feet, Lord of 
                                  Arabia, he mended his own shoes and coarse woolen garments, 
                                  milked the goats, swept the hearth, kindled the fire and 
                                  attended the other menial offices of the family. The entire 
                                  town of Medina where he lived grew wealthy in the later days 
                                  of his life. Everywhere there was gold and silver in plenty 
                                  and yet in those days of prosperity many weeks would elapse 
                                  without a fire being kindled in the hearth of the king of 
                                  Arabia, His food being dates and water. His family would go 
                                  hungry many nights successively because they could not get 
                                  anything to eat in the evening. He slept on no soften bed 
                                  but on a palm mat, after a long busy day to spend most of 
                                  his night in prayer, often bursting with tears before his 
                                  creator to grant him strength to discharge his duties. As 
                                  the reports go, his voice would get choked with weeping and 
                                  it would appear as if a cooking pot was on fire and boiling 
                                  had commenced. On the very day of his death his only assets 
                                  were few coins a part of which went to satisfy a debt and 
                                  rest was given to a needy person who came to his house for 
                                  charity. The clothes in which he breathed his last had many 
                                  patches. The house from where light had spread to the world 
                                  was in darkness because there was no oil in the lamp.  Circumstances changed, but the prophet of 
                                  God did not. In victory or in defeat, in power or in 
                                  adversity, in affluence or in indigence, he is the same man, 
                                  disclosed the same character. Like all the ways and laws of 
                                  God, Prophets of God are unchangeable.  An honest man, as the saying goes, is the 
                                  noblest work of God, Mohammad was more than honest. 
                                  He was human to the marrow of his bones. Human sympathy, 
                                  human love was the music of his soul. To serve man, to 
                                  elevate man, to purify man, to educate man, in a word to 
                                  humanize man-this was the object of his mission, the be-all 
                                  and end all of his life. In thought, in word, in action he 
                                  had the good of humanity as his sole inspiration, his sole 
                                  guiding principle.  He was most unostentatious and selfless to 
                                  the core. What were the titles he assumed? Only true servant 
                                  of God and His Messenger. Servant first, and then a 
                                  messenger. A Messenger and prophet like many other prophets 
                                  in every part of the world, some known to you, many not 
                                  known you. If one does not believe in any of these truths 
                                  one ceases to be a Muslim. It is an article of faith.  "Looking at the circumstances of the 
                                  time and unbounded reverence of his followers" says a 
                                  western writer "the most miraculous thing about Mohammad 
                                    is, that he never claimed the power of working miracles." Miracles were performed but not to propagate his faith and 
                                  were attributed entirely to God and his inscrutable ways. He 
                                  would plainly say that he was a man like others. He had no 
                                  treasures of earth or heaven. Nor did he claim to know the 
                                  secrets of that lie in womb of future. All this was in an 
                                  age when miracles were supposed to be ordinary occurrences, 
                                  at the back and call of the commonest saint, when the whole 
                                  atmosphere was surcharged with supernaturalism in Arabia and 
                                  outside Arabia.  He turned the attention of his followers 
                                  towards the study of nature and its laws, to understand them 
                                  and appreciate the Glory of God. The Quran says,  
                                  "God did not create the heavens and the earth and 
                                    all that is between them in play. He did not create them 
                                    all but with the truth. But most men do not know." The world is not illusion, nor 
                                  without purpose. It has been created with the truth. The 
                                  number of verses inviting close observation of nature are 
                                  several times more than those that relate to prayer, 
                                  fasting, pilgrimage etc. all put together. The Muslim under 
                                  its influence began to observe nature closely and this give 
                                  birth to the scientific spirit of the observation and 
                                  experiment which was unknown to the Greeks. While the Muslim 
                                  Botanist Ibn Baitar wrote on Botany after collecting plants 
                                  from all parts of the world, described by Myer in his Gesch. 
                                  der Botanikaa-s, a monument of industry, while Al Byruni 
                                  traveled for forty years to collect mineralogical specimens, 
                                  and Muslim Astronomers made some observations extending even 
                                  over twelve years. Aristotle wrote on Physics without 
                                  performing a single experiment, wrote on natural history, 
                                  carelessly stating without taking the trouble to ascertain 
                                  the most verifiable fact that men have more teeth than 
                                  animal. Galen, the greatest authority on classical anatomy 
                                  informed that the lower jaw consists of two bones, a 
                                  statement which is accepted unchallenged for centuries till 
                                  Abdul Lateef takes the trouble to examine a human skeleton. 
                                  After enumerating several such instances, Robert Priffault 
                                  concludes in his well known book The making of humanity, "The debt of our science to the Arabs does not consist in 
                                    starting discovers or revolutionary theories. Science owes a 
                                    great more to Arabs culture; it owes is existence." The 
                                  same writer says "The Greeks systematized, generalized 
                                    and theorized but patient ways of investigation, the 
                                    accumulation of positive knowledge, the minute methods of 
                                    science, detailed and prolonged observation, experimental 
                                    inquiry, were altogether alien to Greek temperament. What we 
                                    call science arose in Europe as result of new methods of 
                                    investigation, of the method of experiment, observation, 
                                    measurement, of the development of Mathematics in form 
                                    unknown to the Greeks. That spirit and these methods, 
                                    concludes the same author, were introduced into the European 
                                    world by Arabs." It is the same practical character of the 
                                  teaching of Prophet Mohammad that gave birth to the 
                                  scientific spirit, that has also sanctified the daily labors 
                                  and the so called mundane affairs. The Quran says that  God has created man to worship him but the word worship has 
                                    a connotation of its own. Gods worship is not confined 
                                  to prayer alone, but every act that is done with the 
                                    purpose of winning approval of God and is for the 
                                  benefit of the humanity comes under its purview. Islam 
                                  sanctifies life and all its pursuits provided they are 
                                  performed with honesty, justice and pure intents. It 
                                  obliterates the age-long distinction between the sacred and 
                                  profane. The Quran says if you eat clean things and thank 
                                    God for it, it is an act of worship. It is saying of the 
                                  prophet of Islam that Morsel of food that one places in the 
                                  mouth of his wife is an act of virtue to be rewarded by God. 
                                  Another tradition of the Prophet says "He who is 
                                    satisfying the desire of his heart will be rewarded by God 
                                    provided the methods adopted are permissible." A person 
                                  was listening to him exclaimed 'O Prophet of God, he is 
                                  answering the calls of passions, is only satisfying the 
                                  craving of his heart. Forthwith came the reply, "Had he 
                                    adopted an awful method for the satisfaction of his urge, he 
                                    would have been punished; then why should he not be rewarded 
                                    for following the right course." This new conception of religion that it 
                                  should also devote itself to the betterment of this life 
                                  rather than concern itself exclusively with super mundane 
                                  affairs, has led to a new orientation of moral values. Its 
                                  abiding influence on the common relations of mankind in the 
                                  affairs of every day life, its deep power over the masses, 
                                  its regulation of their conception of rights and duty, its 
                                  suitability and adaptability to the ignorant savage and the 
                                  wise philosopher are characteristic features of the teaching 
                                  of the Prophet of Islam.  But it should be most carefully born in 
                                  mind this stress on good actions is not the sacrifice 
                                  correctness of faith. While there are various school of 
                                  thought, one praising faith at the expense of deeds, another 
                                  exhausting various acts to the detriment of correct belief, 
                                  Islam is based on correct faith and righteous actions. Means 
                                  are important as the end and ends are as important as the 
                                  means. It is an organic Unity. Together they live and 
                                  thrive. Separate them and both decay and die. In Islam faith 
                                  can not be divorced from the action. Right knowledge should 
                                  be transferred into right action to produce the right 
                                  results. How often the words came in Quran -- Those who 
                                  believe and do good thing, they alone shall enter paradise. 
                                  Again and again, not less than fifty times these words are 
                                  repeated as if too much stress can not be laid on them. 
                                  Contemplation is encouraged but mere contemplation is not 
                                  the goal. Those who believe and do nothing can not exist in 
                                  Islam. These who believe and do wrong are inconceivable. 
                                  Divine law is the law of effort and not of ideals. It chalks 
                                  out for the men the path of eternal progress from knowledge 
                                  to action and from action to satisfaction.  But what is the correct faith from which 
                                  right action spontaneously proceeds resulting in complete 
                                  satisfaction. Here the central doctrine of Islam is the 
                                  Unity of God. There is no God but God is the pivot from 
                                  which hangs the whole teaching and practice of Islam. He is 
                                  unique not only as regards his divine being but also as 
                                  regards his divine attributes.  As regards the attributes of God, Islam 
                                  adopts here as in other things too, the law of golden mean. 
                                  It avoids on the one hand, the view of God which divests 
                                    the divine being of every attribute and rejects, on the 
                                  other, the view which likens him to things material. The Quran says, On the one hand, there is nothing which 
                                    is like him, on the other , it affirms that he is 
                                      Seeing, Hearing, Knowing. He is the King who is without 
                                  a stain of fault or deficiency, the mighty ship of His power 
                                  floats upon the ocean of justice and equity. He is the 
                                  Beneficent, the Merciful. He is the Guardian over all. Islam 
                                  does not stop with this positive statement. It adds further 
                                  which is its most special characteristic, the negative 
                                  aspects of problem. There is also no one else who is 
                                  guardian over everything. He is the meander of every 
                                  breakage, and no one else is the meander of any breakage. He 
                                  is the restorer of every loss and no one else is the 
                                  restorer of any loss what-so-over. There is no God but one 
                                  God, above any need, the maker of bodies, creator of souls, 
                                  the Lord of the day of judgment, and in short, in the words 
                                  of Quran, to him belong all excellent qualities.  Regarding the position of man in relation 
                                  to the Universe, the Quran says:  
                                  "God has made subservient to you whatever is on the 
                                    earth or in universe. You are destined to rule over the 
                                    Universe." But in relation to God, the Quran 
                                  says:  
                                  "O man God has bestowed on you excellent faculties 
                                    and has created life and death to put you to test in order 
                                    to see whose actions are good and who has deviated from 
                                    the right path." In spite of free will which he 
                                  enjoys, to some extent, every man is born under certain 
                                  circumstances and continues to live under certain 
                                  circumstances beyond his control. With regard to this God 
                                    says, according to Islam, it is my will to create any 
                                  man under condition that seem best to me. cosmic plans 
                                  finite mortals can not fully comprehend. But I will 
                                  certainly test you in prosperity as well in adversity, in 
                                  health as well as in sickness, in heights as well as in 
                                  depths. My ways of testing differ from man to man, from hour 
                                  to hour. In adversity do not despair and do resort to 
                                  unlawful means. It is but a passing phase. In prosperity do 
                                  not forget God. God-gifts are given only as trusts. You are 
                                  always on trial, every moment on test. In this sphere of 
                                  life there is not to reason why, there is but to do and die. 
                                  If you live in accordance with God; and if you die, die in 
                                  the path of God. You may call it fatalism. but this type of 
                                  fatalism is a condition of vigorous increasing effort, 
                                  keeping you ever on the alert. Do not consider this temporal 
                                  life on earth as the end of human existence. There is a life 
                                  after death and it is eternal. Life after death is only a 
                                  connection link, a door that opens up hidden reality of 
                                  life. Every action in life however insignificant, produces a 
                                  lasting effect. It is correctly recorded somehow. Some of 
                                  the ways of God are known to you, but many of his ways are 
                                  hidden from you. What is hidden in you and from you in this 
                                  world will be unrolled and laid open before you in the next. 
                                  the virtuous will enjoy the blessing of God which the eye 
                                  has not seen, nor has the ear heard, nor has it entered into 
                                  the hearts of men to conceive of they will march onward 
                                  reaching higher and higher stages of evolution. Those who 
                                  have wasted opportunity in this life shall under the 
                                  inevitable law, which makes every man taste of what he has 
                                  done, be subjugated to a course of treatment of the 
                                  spiritual diseases which they have brought about with their 
                                  own hands. Beware, it is terrible ordeal. Bodily pain is 
                                  torture, you can bear somehow. Spiritual pain is hell, you 
                                  will find it almost unbearable. Fight in this life itself 
                                  the tendencies of the spirit prone to evil, tempting to lead 
                                  you into iniquities ways. Reach the next stage when the 
                                  self-accusing sprit in your conscience is awakened and the 
                                  soul is anxious to attain moral excellence and revolt 
                                  against disobedience. This will lead you to the final stage 
                                  of the soul at rest, contented with God, finding its 
                                  happiness and delight in him alone. The soul no more 
                                  stumbles. The stage of struggle passes away. Truth is 
                                  victorious and falsehood lays down its arms. All complexes 
                                  will then be resolved. Your house will not be divided 
                                  against itself. Your personality will get integrated round 
                                  the central core of submission to the will of God and 
                                  complete surrender to his divine purpose. All hidden 
                                  energies will then be released. The soul then will have 
                                  peace. God will then address you:  
                                  "O thou soul that art at rest, 
                                    and restest fully contented with thy Lord return to thy 
                                    Lord. He pleased with thee and thou pleased with him; So 
                                    enter among my servants and enter into my paradise." This is the final goal for man; to 
                                  become, on the, one hand, the master of the universe and on 
                                  the other, to see that his soul finds rest in his Lord, that 
                                  not only his Lord will be pleased with him but that he is 
                                  also pleased with his Lord. Contentment, complete 
                                  contentment, satisfaction, complete satisfaction, peace, 
                                  complete peace. The love of God is his food at this stage 
                                  and he drinks deep at the fountain of life. Sorrow and 
                                  defeat do not overwhelm him and success does not find him in 
                                  vain and exulting.  The western 
                                  nations are only trying to become the master of the 
                                  Universe. But their souls have not found peace and rest.  Thomas Carlyle, struck by this 
                                  philosophy of life writes "and then also Islam-that we 
                                    must submit to God; that our whole strength lies in resigned 
                                    submission to Him, whatsoever he does to us, the thing he 
                                    sends to us, even if death and worse than death, shall be 
                                    good, shall be best; we resign ourselves to God." The 
                                  same author continues "If this be Islam, says Goethe, do 
                                    we not all live in Islam?" Carlyle himself answers this 
                                  question of Goethe and says "Yes, all of us that have any 
                                    moral life, we all live so. This is yet the highest wisdom 
                                    that heaven has revealed to our earth." |