[This is the second and final installment of the special video message
delivered by the Khalifatullah Hadhrat
Munir Ahmad Azim Sahib of Mauritius (atba) on the 10th
day of Ramadan, on July 30, 2012. The first part of the
essay was published here at the Sahih Al Islam Blog on August 02, 2012 and is available at: http://sahih-al-islam.blogspot.in/2012/08/a-ramadan-in-times-of-elect-of-allah.html
].
Unfortunately many Muslims today have
a bad conception of fasting and the activities of the faster. They stay as in a
state of hibernation and spend most of their time in bed. If they come to fear
Allah, they stand only for the hours of prayers (Salat) and then they go to sleep again. This sleep makes
them become lazy. And their (spiritual) activities decrease. Ramadan is a time of intense activity for the
true believers, who will gladly deny food and drink, and make enormous efforts
in the path of Allah.
Moreover,
a thing of concern for us today is the innovation in the Iftaar of the believer,
that is, the breaking of the Fast. Nowadays Muslims brothers and sisters are
making the Iftaar become a feast, a
moment of excessive rejoice and eating and drinking. The Iftaar of the faster should have been simple for the breaking of
the fast is an act of Ibaadat (worship).
This
practice to make a feast out of the Iftaar
in the month of Ramadan are known to occur nowadays in the Muslim Arab
countries, and it is most unfortunate that in a little island like Mauritius
this practice has become widespread among the other Jamaats.
Recently
on my Dawa mission, I have met Muslim brothers and it is sad to see that now
they are losing their valuable time in preparation of great “Iftaari” or Iftaar
party. It is a shame for the Muslims to have reached such a point that the
blessed norms of the month of Ramadan are not respected at all. Muslims
automatically fast and rejoice excessively at the breaking of the fast.
It
is known that our Nabi Kareem (saw) has
encouraged the believers to break the fast really quickly and to go to perform
their Maghrib prayer as soon as possible after the Iftaar, for it is a joy for the faster to break his fast and
meet with his Lord. But to make a feast out of it? This is indeed out of the
question!