Thursday, January 24, 2013

Prophet Muhammad and I on his birthday.


How do I relate with the prophet?  I don’t wear like him, eat like him or live like him. But when it comes to respecting fellow beings, nurturing goodwill, mitigating conflicts, forgiving others, and building cohesive societies, I relate with him.


Prophet Muhammad (pbuh) was born on 12th day of Rabi’ al-Awwal, the third month of the Islamic calendar, and the year was 571 AD. The birth celebrations will continue through this week, and if you wish to greet a Muslim, you can say, Milaad (birth) Greetings, Happy Maulood-an-Nabi, Maulood-an-Nabi Mubarak, happy Eid Milaad, and Milaad’s blessings to you.

First thing first, he took the larger view of the society and became a model of what it takes to be an exemplary citizen. The first requirement of any civil society is to trust each other in living their daily life safely and without fear of the other. He earned the trust of the society for being truthful, honest in his dealings, trustworthy and just. The Jews, Christians, pagans and others called him Amin, the trust worthy. That was indeed the first foundational Sunnah (prophet’s example).

Wherever he saw conflicts between people, he found a way to mitigate and nurture goodwill amongst them. Indeed, he was committed to building a cohesive society, where no one feared the other, and he continuously built upon creating balance and harmony in the society. Blessed are the peacemakers, said Jesus! Indeed, Prophet Muhammad is my mentor.
Muslims celebrate his birthday in a variety of ways, including cooking the simplest food as an expression of humility. They sing the likes of Christmas carols, called Milaad, Nasheed, even Milaad Carols and other names. I have found it peaceful to think about his work and reflect on how I could relate with him, the ultimate peace maker.

Do I forgive often?  Do I stand up for the rights of others? Am I a blessing to fellow humans? Do others feel secure and safe around me?  Today, I have concluded my day with a short prayer and a commitment and get on the road today. God willing, I will follow him to the best of my ability.

As a kid I learned things about him and did not relate with him at all, he was too divine and remote for me. All that changed when I read the book, “Muhammad” by Karen Armstrong. She narrates his life from a non-religious point of view, as a civic leader of the society, a dimension that I appreciated it very much. Karen Armstrong's book is one of the five reasons I chose to become a Muslim after a lapse of nearly three decades. He was a man that I can relate with, making decisions that create trust, mutual respect and a sense of fairness among his people at that time. That was indeed the role of every prophet and peacemaker of the time.

When someone hurts me, I think of the prophet, he advised against score keeping and piling revenge and aggravating each other, and I love the freedom it gives me, freedom from brooding and obsession to get even with the other.

When someone dialogues with me, prophet’s words jump at me, to respect the otherness of other, without having to agree but respectfully differ and move on. Indeed, it is a big lesson in conducting civil dialogue.

When I am frustrated, I think of prophet’s narration, God told him to do his work, and not worry if people don’t get his message, give them the room to make up their own minds, and let me guide them, and you respect everyone’s free will.

Every day, I think about the Prophet, how he would have found a solution to a given conflict, and all I see is the application of the principles of fairness and justice to every human, with goodness and inclusiveness.

My spiritual mentors are Muhammad (pbuh) and Jesus (pbuh), and my civic mentors are Mahatma Gandhi, Martin Luther King Jr., and Barack Obama.


When I think of getting even at someone, who maligns me, I think of the advice of Prophet Muhammad and Jesus - the best thing we can do is to forgive the other, it brings relief, and frees us from being possessed.

When I see injustice done to others, the prophets words ring again, the least you can do is to speak out against injustice. Injustice to one is injustice to the whole humanity.

When I see inequality in our society, our immortal declaration of independence kicks in for me, that all men are created equal.  I think of prophet's last sermon, where he said no man is superior to the other and that all are equal.

Whenever I think of the Liberation of women, I think of the prophet, he was perhaps the first women's libber; and he officially liberated women from the shackles of the bondages, he was a radical of his time, as Jesus was, and said women are free to marry or divorce, own their own business and property separate from their husbands, and introduced the idea of consent and free will in marriage.  Let's not judge America by the New Town, Denver and Oak Creek murderers, and let's not judge Muslims by the Misogynistic men among Muslims either.

Whenever I feel judgmental towards others, the prophet’s voice pulls me back, only God knows everything about the other, not me, then let me not judge anyone without the full knowledge. 

When I think of standing up for others, I think of Gandhi and MLK, if we don’t stand up for others, why should anyone stand up for us.

Whenever the idea of being better than others crosses my mind, I think of the prophet, who said, I am a human like you, and don’t make a God out of me or paint my pictures and put me on the pedestal. He even said to his daughter, you earn your paradise through your good deeds, the good you do to the fellow beings and not because you are the Prophet’s daughter.

Whenever arrogance attempts to creep in me, I hear the words of the prophet, “treat all prophets the same, no human is above the other” instead of saying I am the greatest prophet and listen to me. Feeling and practicing equality is the way for creating peaceful societies.

I will be writing a full chapter on the Prophet in my upcoming book, as to how I relate with him in my daily life, and I have learned to give a 20 minutes motivations talk on “Prophet the Peacemaker” and that is rejoicing.

The Peacemaker:  http://theghousediary.blogspot.com/2012/02/prophet-muhammad-pbuh-peace-maker.html

Criticism of Islam:  http://theghousediary.blogspot.com/2012/11/criticism-of-islam-prophet-muhammad.html

Milaad Mubarak!

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Mike Ghouse is a speaker, thinker and a writer on pluralism, politics, peace, Islam, Israel, India, interfaith, and cohesion at work place and standing up for others as an activist. He is committed to building a Cohesive America and offers pluralistic solutions on issues of the day at www.TheGhousediary.com. Mike has a strong presence on national and local TV, Radio and Print Media. He is a frequent guest on Sean Hannity show on Fox TV, and a commentator on national radio networks, he contributes weekly to the Texas Faith Column at Dallas Morning News, fortnightly at Huffington post, and several other periodicals across the world. His personal site www.MikeGhouse.net indexes everything you want to know about him.

1 comment:

  1. Thank you Mike - here is how I relate to Prophet Muhammad -

    Mountain of Knowledge
    Long Wait

    I grew up in the bosom of Middle England but the one piece of Muslim philosophy that my mother imparted to me was if the mountain would not come to Muhammad, Muhammad would go the mountain.

    Seminal Statement

    It was one of those seminal statements that has been a guiding force in my life. If things won’t come to me then I must go towards what I want.

    Guiding Force

    I may not have been born Muslim, but that Muslim philosophy has been a guiding force in my life and because of this statement I have wanted to know about the man who is so revered by millions of people around the world.

    Inspiration

    Now with the internet, writers on Wikipedia opine that Muhammad did not say this but perhaps English writers in earlier times felt he would say it and the proverb is so valuable that Prophet Muhammad could have said it. Certainly this proverb is inspired by Prophet Muhammad at the very least.

    Seeking Knowledge

    We are reminded to be seekers – to seek knowledge and to seek everything we need in this life.

    Key to Life

    This proverb is how I relate to Prophet Muhammad – a life-long quest for knowledge and working towards the key things of life.

    English Mountain

    This proverb which is part of English culture teaches us that we have to go out if things don’t come to us, and let us be honest that mountain is never going to get legs and come to us. So we have to be the seeker.

    Climbing Mountains

    Thanks totally to the internet I came across Mike Ghouse through a friend.

    Mike Ghouse is an American and a Muslim. He is tireless in his pursuit of teaching the Oneness of Religion, and spreads knowledge about Islam and how many of the concepts are similar to Christianity, Judaism and other religions. He has asked the question: “How do we relate the prophet?” and my answer is here - Prophet Muhammad taught me through the mountain proverb that we must seek out everything.

    Mountains of Questions

    Muslims are supposed to follow a way of life called the Sunnah. That includes emulating the way of life of Prophet Muhammad – wearing similar clothes, eating like him, living like him.

    Cohesive Mountain

    According to Mike Ghouse, Prophet Muhammad believed in building cohesive societies. This included earning the respect of people of other faiths – Jews and Christians. We also build cohesion when we are truthful, trustworthy and just.

    Peaceful Mountain

    There may not be as much peace in this world as we would like; nevertheless, we can do much to spread peace and harmony in the world we operate in. Our peace may just be a pebble but many pebbles make a mountain. Nurturing goodwill and mitigating conflicts adds up. Forgiveness is part of the peace equation and a cardinal principle of both Islam and Christianity.

    Mountain of Hurt

    Mike Ghouse thinks of the Prophet when someone hurts him because the Prophet advised against score keeping, revenge and aggravating each other. “I love the freedom it gives me, freedom from brooding and obsession to get even with the other,” he explains.

    Every Mountain

    Prophet Muhammad’s last sermon was certainly ahead of its time when he declared that no man is superior to the other and that all are equal. Even in the 21st century this is a principle that not all men have embraced but there certainly has been progress in many nations.

    Last Mountain

    An idiom my mother also frequently used: the pot calling the kettle black. This idiom means that in some way we are the same as what we are judging about others. There are many natural emotions we need to curb including the tendency to be judgmental. When we have those times, we should remember either our Christian or Muslim heritage. Christians are told: Judge not lest you be judged too, while Prophet Muhammad said: God knows every thing about the other, not me. Let me not judge without knowing it all.

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