The Eleventh Hour
Our prophets are crying.
We have forsaken the
messages sent as gifts, words of mercy and warning from the One who knows us
best.
'Love your neighbour
as yourself.'
'Treat others with
justice.'
And 'men, treat
women well and kindly, for they are a trust from God.'
Yet we have grown
negligent, lulled by ego, blinded by our own self-importance.
We parade our faith
like medals, convinced we are more righteous, more believing, the chosen ... as
if others, also created by God, are somehow lesser.
We must stop.
Re-evaluate.
Fall silent.
Let the filth rise
to the surface, so it can be cleansed.
Be less human, and
more humane.
Check your
entitlement, your privilege, that quiet whisper that says I deserve more,
I am better than...
Ask yourself:
Do I even know that I think I am better than others?
Why Do I exalt those with wealth, status, or power, while ignoring the
suffering of the voiceless?
Do I tolerate injustice or unfairness in my small pond, my home, my
workplace, my community, because it’s easier to look away?
When ego is at the
wheel, we crash ... every time.
In his final sermon,
the Prophet Muhammad (peace be upon him) stood before the people and reminded
them:
“No Arab is superior to a non-Arab, nor a non-Arab to an Arab; no white
to black, nor black to white except by piety and good action.”
He preached against
tribalism, against division, against the poison of superiority.
He called us back to
unity, to equality.
But what does human
equality mean today?
In the 21st century,
do we still believe all humans are equal?
Or have we placed
conditions and clauses, hidden in the fine print of our hearts?
Equal, but not too
equal.
Equal, unless they
disagree with us.
Equal, unless they
look, pray, or love differently.
We do love
hierarchy, don’t we? The comfort of order, of knowing who stands above and who
falls below.
We have a manual, a
Book to show us how to live in light, balance, and stewardship.
Yet we exploit,
destroy, consume, forgetting that our intellect and free will were gifts meant
for stewardship, not greed. We are custodians of this planet, caretakers of one
another. And we must ask ourselves, each one of us ... Are we failing in this
duty?
I think we are. How
about you?
It is not too late,
but it is the eleventh hour.
So what can we do?
We can begin with
ourselves.
With silence. With
listening.
With humility, the
kind that bows the head not out of shame, but out of reverence.
We can choose to be better
at being human ... we have to...
And perhaps then, when we have quieted our egos, we might finally hear the prophets’ cries...not as condemnation, but as a call to come home.
The realist (or pessimist, depending on how others perceive it) in me thinks the feeling/culture of racial superiority will be never be eradicated fully from this temporary world.
ReplyDeleteVery perceptive, my friend, I pray we begin to appreciate the humanity in all xoxo
DeleteAnother Brilliant piece 💥💯🌹well written ❣️and So relevant ❣️and Oh So True💥💯🌹Thank you 💝🌻
ReplyDeleteThank you for reading and commenting, InshaAllah may we all be silent and reflect and make changes to impact broader society
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