The
Inner Dimensions of Hajj:
excerpts from The Fundamentals of Islam
by Syed Abul Ala Maududi
Nature of journey for Hajj
The people of the world are usually aware of two
kinds of journey.
One journey is that which is made to earn
livelihood. The second one is that which is undertaken for pleasure
and sight-seeing.
In both [of] these journeys, a man is impelled to go
abroad by his need and desire. He leaves home for a purpose of his
own, he spends money or time for his own requirements, therefore, no
question of sacrifice arises in such a journey.
But the position of this particular journey which is
called Hajj is quite different from that of other journeys.
This journey is not meant to gain any personal end
or any desire of Nafs. It is intended solely for Allah, and for
fulfillment of the duty prescribed by Allah.
No person can prepare himself to undertake this
journey until and unless he has love of Allah in his heart as well as
fear of Him, and feels strongly that the Fard (obligation) ordained by
Allah is incumbent on him.
Therefore, whosoever sets out for Hajj parting from
his family and relatives for a long period, allowing his business to
suffer, spending money and bearing the rigors of the travel, he
furnishes by his act of devotion a proof of the fact that there is in
his heart fear of God and love for Him as also a sense of duty.
[It also indicates] that he possesses the strength
to leave his home, when called upon to do so, for the cause of God,
and that he can face hardships and willingly sacrifice his wealth and
comfort for the pleasure of God.
Inclination towards virtue and piety
When the pilgrim gets ready for the journey with
this holy intention, his disposition assumes a different color.
His heart, which is aflame with exuberance of the
love of God and which is pulsating with a longing to visit His House,
starts harboring only virtuous thoughts.
He does penance for past sins, seeks forgiveness
from people whom he might have wronged, tries to render his due to
others where necessary so as not to go to God's court trammeled with
the unfulfilled rights of his fellow beings, shuns vice and develops
fondness for virtue.
Then, as he steps out to begin the journey, the more
he proceeds toward the House of God, the more keen he becomes to do
good deeds. He is careful to see that nobody is harmed by him, while
he tries to render whatever service or help he can to others.
His own nature desists from abuse, indecency,
dishonesty, squabbles and bickerings because he is proceeding on the
path of God.
A man may be making [a] journey towards the Divine
Haram and yet indulging in bad habits? How can such a shameless thing
be possible [for] anybody?
Thus the entire journey of his constitutes a
complete Ibadah.
Oppression and vice can find no place in contrast to
all other types of journey. This is the one which continuously keeps
on purifying man's Nafs. It is like a great reformatory course to be
compulsorily gone through by every Muslim who sets out to perform
Hajj.
Blessings and effects of Hajj
From all the details you have heard you can judge
that during the period of two to three months, from the time of
deciding and preparing for Hajj to the time of returning home, what
great effects are produced in the heart and mind of man!
The process entails sacrifice of time, sacrifice of
money, sacrifice of comfort, sacrifice of several worldly relations
and sacrifice of many corporeal desires and pleasures.
And all this simply for the sake of Allah, with no
selfish end.
Then, together with piety and virtuousness, the
incessant remembrance of God and the longing and love of Him pervading
the mind of the pilgrim, all leave a firm impression on his mind which
lasts for years to come.
[On] reaching this sacred land he witnesses at every
step the relics of those who sacrificed everything [of] theirs in
servitude and obedience to Allah.
They fought against the pagan Arabs, suffered
tortures, became migrants, suffered unbearable hardships, but
ultimately did raise aloft the Word of God and did not rest content
till they subdued every such false power which wanted man to become
subservient to other entities than Allah.
A lesson in courage and determination, which a
devotee of God can draw from these clear signs and sacred relics, can
hardly be available from any other source.
If the attachment developed with his focal point of
Deen (religion) through the circumambulation of [the] Kaba [and] the
rehearsal of a Mujahid's life [through] the rites (Manasik) of Hajj
(such as running about, and repeated departures and halts) are
combined with Salah, fasting and Zakat, and they are all seen
conjointly, you will realize that these processes constitute a
training or some big task which Islam wants Muslims to execute.
For this reason, Hajj has been made compulsory for
those who are solvent enough and are capable to undertake the journey
[to and from the] Kaba so that, as far as possible, Muslims in the
largest possible number remain equipped in every period after having
fully gone through this training.
Hajj: a collective Ibadah
[You] will be unable to appreciate fully the
benefits of Hajj unless you keep in view the fact that each and every
Muslim does not perform Hajj individually but that only one single
period has been fixed for Hajj for the Muslims of the whole world,
and, therefore, [hundreds of thousands] of Muslims jointly perform it.
What I have stated before has only brought home to
you the effect produced by this Ibadah on every Haji individually.
Now I shall explain to you[...] how these benefits
have been enhanced 100,000-fold by appointing one single period of
Hajj for all the world.
The excellence of Islam lies in this very fact that
by one stroke it achieves not only two but 1,000 purposes.
The advantages of offering Salah singly are by no
means small but by making it conditional with congregation, enforcing
the system of Imamat in Salah and by enlarging the congregations of
the Friday and Eidain [the two Eid] prayers, its benefits have been
increased to a limitless extent.
The observance of fasting separately by each person
is also a very big source of reformation and training but by
appointing only one month of Ramadan for all Muslims, these benefits
have been increased so much that they cannot be counted.
Zakat too has many advantages even if dispensed
individually. But with the establishment of Bait-ul-mal (Public
Exchequer of the Islamic State) its usefulness has been increased to
such a great extent that you cannot estimate it till such time as an
Islamic government is formed and you witness with your eyes how much
goodness and plentifulness result from collecting the Zakat of all
Muslims at one place and distributing it among the deserving persons
in organized form.
Similar is the case of Hajj. If every [person] were
to perform Hajj singly, even then it will bring about a big revolution
in his life but by formulating the rules for all the Muslims of the
world to perform it together at one time, its benefits have been
increased to a limitless degree.
Growth of piety and virtuousness
When every intending Haji [decides] to perform Hajj
and immediately with this intent the virtues of fear of God, piety,
penance, Istighfar (seeking forgiveness from God) and good morals
begin to cast their influence on him; [when] he starts [saying]
farewell [to] his relatives, friends, professional and other
associates; and [when he] settles all his affairs as if he is no
longer the same man as before (his mind is now pure and clean because
of the newly-kindled spark of love of God), you can imagine the effect
of the changed condition of the Haji on so many people around [him].
And if every year in each of the different parts of
the world 100,000 Hajis at an average get prepared for Hajj in this
manner, their influence will improve the moral state of a vast number
of people.
Then the hearts of [a] large number of people [will
be] warmed at places through which the Hajis' caravans pass, by seeing
them, meeting them and by hearing from them the [sound] of Labbaik,
Labbaik.
There will be many whose attention will be diverted
towards Allah and Allah's House, and the eagerness for Hajj will
create a stir in their slumbering souls.
And when these people, filled with the thrill of
Hajj, return from the Center of their Deen to their cities and towns
spread over all parts of the world and [are] met by numerous persons,
then this [ interchange] and the accounts related by the former of
their Hajj experience enliven religious sentiments among countless
circles.
Taken from:
http://soundvision.com/info/hajj/inner.asp