Aljumuah Magazine

Whose Environmental Crisis? What Islam offers the Earth

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The story we call the environmental crisis is nothing more than a human crisis. If we pay attention, we will hear in it our own story, echoing back to us from a deep horizon. Learning to listen is so important now because, in a way, we have all recently been blinded. Everyone learns to see the world through the lens of culture. For tens of thousands of years, those countless cultures all of them cultivated the natural curiousness of children about creation into knowledgeable adulthood.At their root, they taught people to see the environment as enchanted, brought to life by a Creator. Creation was not called ‘nature,’ or the ‘natural world,’ then. Nor was the immense knowledge of the world people acquired and passed on named ‘the natural sciences.’ Most importantly, cultures accumulated a continuous treasure of beneficial knowledge piled generation upon generation as a whole and recognized the living connection between everything on earth beneath its soils, above its skies, and in its sweet and salty waters. They further connected this with the spirit of life that ran through it all from a Living Source beyond in the realm of the Unseen. Never would they flatten the multi-spherical cycle of creation into a one dimensional chronological line. Never would they sever worldly creation from its otherworldly origin, splitting life in two, calling this part “sensible,” and therefore real, and that part “insensible,” and therefore irrelevant.

Because of their holistic understanding of the world themselves in creation and creation in them, come to them from a Life-Source apart they understood that they were to live in it, work from, with, and on the portion of it in their immediate grasp, and take care of it so that it would remain there for them and their children, grandchildren, and furthest descendents.They also knew that their offenses against creation were violations against the Creator and would inevitably be met with creational disaster directly affecting their vicinity, if left uncorrected.They called this Divine Judgment, or the Judgment of Heaven.

Such was the wisdom of man. In only the last few centuries, however, this most basic intelligence and outlook has been lost to us. Steadily, but abruptly, we have accepted to wear lenses that cut life from its Source and ourselves from our own environments. And because of this, we have generation-by-generation killed-off the native curiosity of our children and forgotten how even to live in our own localities. In the place of the continuum of human knowledge bequeathed to us by our predecessors, we have assumed an incapacitating reliance on mechanized world-spanning control systems…forthe very bread we put into our mouths, the water we drink, the fire we kindle, the land we live on, the shelter we repose in, even for the cloth to cover our own nakedness.This humiliating dependence on collectivized, dehumanized enterprise has disabled our still-human hearts. For even if we claim belief in the Creator, we can no longer see the Provider as actually providing.We look on these interlocking control structures—what modern people have accurately called for short, “the system” as giving us our provision. This has proven a most fatal error, for it forfeits our prime human birthright: Freedom to verify the single thread of truth running through all reality: Tawheed, Oneness:That Godis One apart, the sole Creator, who is Beauty; that all else is one fellowship of creation, serving, willingly or unwillingly, His purpose by design; and that God has made creation, including man, changeable so that he can make of himself, his society, and his environment a living witness to the commandments of the One.This is ‘ibadah, man’s totality of worship, which thus encompasses all of his earthly activities, which in the end must cycle back into a continuous esthetic of beauty, reflecting the infinite splendor of the sublime Creator. Herein reside the two qualities upholding the delicate interlace of our earthly and heavenly human architecture: Dignity and rectitude.To replace in our hearts faith in God, the All-Living, with a dead matrix is surely the ill-fated exchange which the Surah of Al-Kahf decries: “Now, behold! We [God] said to the angels: Bow [your faces] down to [receive] Adam [into life and honor him]! So they [all] bowed down, except Iblees [Satan], who was of the jinn.Thus he rebelled against the command of his Lord.Will you [human beings] then take him and his seed as patrons apart from Me [God] while they are an enemy to you? [How] woeful a substitute [this is] for the wrongdoers [who are godless in heart]!” [18:50]. What a devilish transaction, indeed? It strips men of their mutual khilafah, or responsible vicegerency of God on the Earth in their turn, making lords of a few and slaves of the many, reducing us to the base exploiters and ravenous bloodletters the angels saw in us, perhaps on the pattern of the unknown, divinely destroyed vicegerents of the earth our kind may have succeeded, “Now, behold! Your Lord said to the angels: I am placing upon the earth a [human] successor [to steward it].They said:Will You place thereupon one who will spread corruption therein, and who, [moreover,] will shed blood, while we ever exalt You with all praise and hallow You?” [2:30].

Believing that the system provides instead of God causes man to abandon his amanah, his divine trust, to care for all creatures. It renders him unconscious that all beings on the earth—the animals, plants, elements, and minerals—the earth, mountains, and sky themselves—are consciously alive by the touch of the Divine, communicating and complying with the momentary command of the One Sublime, though we may perceive their discourse and actions not. “Indeed,We did offer the trust [of volitional faith] to the heavens and the earth and the mountains. But they refused to bear it and were fearful of it.Yet the human being bore it, [but could not uphold it]. Indeed, he was most unjust [concerning his own trust] and most ignorant [of the outcome]!” [33:72] It tricks man into substituting mere crumbs falling from the lowly table of market-interest for the opulent grace of the divine, and thereby to upset the Heavenly mizan, the delicate balance of creation, that God originally set and then bequeathed to our care. “Thus it is He alone who has set the balance of all things, so that you might not transgress the just balance” [55:7-8].

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written by Muhammad Zafar-Us-Suboor, February 24, 2010
God is one, the sole creator. God has made creation, including man.

Today Satan (jinn), who refused the Almighty God, and did not bow himself before Adam is misguiding man.

It is a fact that offences by man against creation are violations against the creator, which are inevitably met with creational disaster, directly affecting their viciinty, if left uncorrected.
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written by Ameera, August 19, 2009
How true these words are and how applicable to each and every one of us although before reading these, I never really thought about it in this way ever. What is it that blinds us so? Greed and subservience to our own Nafs? More and more, I have begun to understand the relevance of the Hadith where the Prophet(pbuh) told Muslims a time would come when our Imaan would be in such danger that we should flee to the mountains (distant places) to escape fitna. This is just the gist of what the Hadith really says but you understand it is so relevant today. May Allah forgive us and may He guide us!
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written by mohammad raza ajmeri, July 29, 2009
nice magazine we make our education great in the topic of islam.

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