Introduction
Islam: Submitting our will to the
will of Allah SWT
The Arabic word islam simply
means "surrender (to Allah)". The essence of our religion is this
surrender or submission. It requires trust on our part. Trust that Allah SWT
will be there for us, trust that He knows what is best for us.
Submission to Allah SWT requires
that we put Him before ourselves. That we put our desires second to His desire
for us. That we acknowledge that He knows better than we do what is right for
us.
Very often, such submission is
difficult. Sometimes it seems that everything that happens is bad, and we
wonder how Allah SWT could desire this for us. And sometimes the things He asks
of us are difficult to do, either because it seems too much to ask, or because
it seems pointless or out of date. In times like this, submission becomes a
struggle. We really have to work to find our trust in Allah SWT. We really have
to do battle with our souls to admit that what we want or what we think doesn't
seem to be what's right or best. Should we bother?
For me, the answer is yes, we should bother. Allah SWT tests us. He sends difficulties our way to see how we cope. He wants to see if we will keep trying even when it's a challenge. He wants to see if we will maintain our faith in Him, and trust in Him. If we do continue to have faith and to trust in Him, then He may reward us with Jannah for our sabr, inshallah. And Jannah is the everlasting reward. Any difficulty we face in the world will seem as fleeting as a nightmare when we look back from the Hereafter, and any ease we face in the world will also seem as fleeting as a dream. We shouldn't set these fleeting states as our goal; we should set the ultimate happiness as our goal. And the ultimate happiness is Jannah.
So if we have hope of Jannah, we
should persevere even when it's a struggle for us, and we should keep on trying
to perfect our submission to Allah SWT. This is what the religion is about:
sabr, jihad, and islam.
Quran and Sunnah: The way that Allah
SWT has commanded
I mentioned above that part of Islam
is trusting that Allah SWT knows what is best for us, and it is submitting to
His judgment even if we don't think we agree. If Allah SWT has commanded
something that we don't understand or don't like, we shouldn't reject that
thing. Instead, we should try to seek its wisdom for ourselves and to change
our own minds.
Now, the testimony of faith that we
make to become Muslims, or when we assume adult status in the deen, has two
parts: laa ilaha ill'Allah and Muhammadan rasul Allah. The first
of these, none has the right to be worshiped except Allah, is a
statement of our belief that Allah SWT is ruler of all, judge of all,
all-knowing, all-powerful. It is He who must be obeyed, and obedience to
anybody else is merely conditional and must not be done if they ask us to
disobey Allah SWT. And Allah SWT has given us everything we have, our
existence, our life, our capabilities, our goodness. If He took any of it away,
there is no power that could help us get it back. And we could never repay Him
to match what He has given us, or even begin to. However, in his infinite
mercy, Allah SWT asks of us only that we obey Him. Isn't it the least that we
can do for Him after all that He has done for us?
There is also the second testimony, Muhammad
is the messenger of Allah. The Prophet (saw) would not be a messenger if he
did not come with a message. And his message is the Quran. We are really also
testifying that the Quran is a message from Allah SWT, and therefore, obedience
to Allah SWT entails obedience to the Quran, because it is His word.
The Quran also tells us to obey the
Prophet (saw) as well as Allah SWT (see for example Surah an-Nisa ayah 59). It
tells us that if we have faith we will take the Prophet (saw) as the judge of
any dispute (Surah an-Nisa ayah 65). It tells us that when both Allah SWT and
the Prophet (saw) have decided a matter it is not for a Muslim or Muslimah to
have any further say in that matter (Surah al-Ahzab ayat 36). It tells us that
what the Prophet (saw) has given us, we should take and what he has prohibited
to us, we should refrain from (Surah al-Hashr ayat 7). And it tells us that the
Prophet (saw) has been sent not just to deliver the Quran but also to explain
it (Surah an-Nahl ayat 44).
* How do we determine what the
Prophet (sAas) has ordered, in order to obey it?
* How do we find out what he judged
in disputes so that we can abide by it?
* How do we know what he has decided
on matters, so that we can submit to it?
* How do we discover what he has
given, so that we can take it, or what he has prohibited, so we can abstain
from it?
* How do we learn how he has
explained the Quran, so that we can follow that explanation and not other
explanations?
The answer to all these questions is
that we look at the Sunnah. The Sunnah is the Quran put into action by the
Prophet (saw). It shows what he ordered, judged, and decided. It shows what he
has given us and what he has prohibited to us. It shows how he explained the
Quran.
If we do not obey what the Prophet
(saw) has ordered, or abide by what he has judged, or submit to what he has
decided, or take what he has given, or refrain from what he has prohibited, or
follow his explanation of the Quran - then we have disobeyed Allah SWT.
That is why, if we are sincere about
obeying Allah SWT and following His commandments, we should follow both the
Quran and the Sunna.
Hijab: A commandment of the Quran
and Sunnah
In the first part of this article, I
have argued that part of our commitment to Allah SWT is to trust that He knows
what is best for us and that what He has commanded is what is right. I said
that if we find ourselves disliking the way that He has set for us, our
challenge is not to ignore or to try to change His command, but rather it is to
seek for ourselves the wisdom in the command and to surrender to His will. If
we don't like what He has commanded, we should try to change ourselves not Him.
We should try to find reasons why His command is right and will be beneficial
for us, and we should try to motivate ourselves through this to obey the
command.
In the second part of the article, I
have established why the Quran and Sunna are where we look to find what Allah
SWT has commanded. Neither one can be taken alone but they both go together.
So, what do the Quran and Sunnah say
about hijab? There are two ayat of the Quran that deal with hijab. These are Surah an-Nur Ayah 31 and Surah Al Ahzab Ayah 59. Let's look at what
these ayat say, and how the Prophet (sAas) has explained them.
Surah an-Nur ayat 31 says:
"And say to the faithful women to lower their gazes, and to
guard their private parts, and not to display their beauty except what is
apparent of it, and to extend their headcoverings (khimars) to cover their
bosoms (jaybs), and not to display their beauty except to their husbands, or
their fathers, or their husband's fathers, or their sons, or their husband's
sons, or their brothers, or their brothers' sons, or their sisters' sons, or
their womenfolk, or what their right hands rule (slaves), or the followers from
the men who do not feel sexual desire, or the small children to whom the
nakedness of women is not apparent, and not to strike their feet (on the
ground) so as to make known what they hide of their adornments. And turn in
repentance to Allah together, O you the faithful, in order that you are
successful"
Surah al-Ahzab ayat 59 says:
"O Prophet! Say to your wives and your daughters and the
women of the faithful to draw their outergarments (jilbabs) close around
themselves; that is better that they will be recognized and not annoyed. And
God is ever Forgiving, Gentle."
Together, these two ayat lay out
seven commandments for Muslim sisters:
1.
"to lower their gazes"
2.
"to guard their private parts"
3.
"not to display their beauty except what is apparent of it"
4.
"to extend their headcoverings to cover their bosoms"
5.
"not to display their beauty except to their husbands or their
fathers..."
6.
"not to strike their feet (on the ground) so as to make known what they
hide"
7.
"to draw their outergarments close around themselves"
It can be seen that three of these
commandments relate to behavior. These are:
- lowering the gaze
- guarding the private parts
- not striking the feet on the ground so as to give knowledge of what is hidden
Lowering the gaze means not looking
at what is forbidden to be seen of others. Guarding the private parts means
that only the husband is allowed to see or touch them. Not giving knowledge of
what is hidden means not posturing or strutting around so as to jangle hidden
jewelry or make men think about hidden body parts. All of these are part of
what Allah SWT has commanded in regard to hijab.
The other four commandments relate
to dress, and can really be expressed as three rules:
- not displaying the beauty beyond "what is apparent of it" except to the people listed in Surah an-Nur ayat 31
- extending the headcovering to cover the bosom
- drawing the outergarment close around
What exactly is the meaning of each
of these rules? For this, we need to look to the Sunna, because the Sunna shows
us how the Prophet (saw) explained the Quran.
The Prophet (saw) explained to Asma
bint Abu Bakr (ra) that the phrase "what is apparent of it"
refers to the face and hands. This is narrated by Aisha Umm al-Muminin
(ra), Qatada (ra), and Asma bint Umais (ra). This has been confirmed as the
explanation of the phrase by the following scholars:
Sahaba: Aishah Umm al-Muminin (ra),
ibn Abbas (ra), Anas ibn Malik (ra), and Miswar ibn Makhrama (ra)
Tabi'un: Ata (ra), Qatada (ra),
Sa'id ibn Jubayr (ra), Mujahid (ra), al-Hasan (ra), and al-Dahhak (ra)
Commentators on the Quran: Imam
Tabari, Imam Zamakhshari, Imam Razi, and Imam Qurtubi
In fact, the majority of scholars
have agreed that the phrase "what is apparent of it" refers to
the face and hands. For further information,
Therefore, the first rule can really
be phrased as "do not display the beauty except for the face and hands
around non-mahram men". This is the basic rule of hijab. You must
recognize it. This is where it comes from. It is nothing other than the
Prophet's (saw) explanation of the Quran.
The second rule is to extend the
headcovering (khimar) to cover the bosom. The commentators on the Quran have
explained exactly what this command entails:
Imam Abu Abdullah Qurtubi: "Women in those days used to cover their heads with
the khimar, throwing its ends upon their backs. This left the neck and the
upper part of the chest bare, along with the ears, in the manner of the
Christians. Then Allah commanded them to cover those parts with the
khimar."
Imam Abu'l-Fida ibn Kathir: "'Extend their khimars to cover their bosoms' means
that they should wear the khimar in such a way that they cover their chests so
that they will be different from the women of the jahiliyyah who did not do
that but would pass in front of men with their chests uncovered and with their
necks, forelocks, and earrings uncovered."
From this we can see that the jahili
women wore their khimars kaffiyah-style, with the ends tossed over their backs.
This covered most of the hair, but left the forelock (front of the hair), the
ears, the neck, and the upper chest uncovered. Then when the commandment, "Extend
their khimars to cover their bosoms," was revealed, the women secured
their khimars around the circles of their faces, fastened them at the chin, and
let the ends drape down toward their bosoms. This would cover the forelock, the
ears, the neck, and the upper chest, just as Imam Qurtubi and Imam ibn Kathir
have indicated. And the end result is clearly a headscarf.
So what we have is that all of the
body except the face and hands is commanded to be covered around non-mahram men
(by the clause "not to display their beauty except what is apparent of
it"), and the covering of the hair, ears, neck, and upper chest is
specifically to be accomplished by the khimar (headscarf).
These are the two rules indicated by
Surah an-Nur ayah 31, and once we understand how the Prophet (saw) explained
the meaning of the ayah, we can see that it clearly and explicitly sets out the
dress of the Muslim sister around non-mahram men: a headscarf and conservative
clothing that together cover everything but the face and the hands.
There is also the commandment in
Surah al-Ahzab ayah 59 to wear a jilbab (outergarment). According to the
majority of the scholars, this commandment applies when a sister is outdoors or
in open public places (like the market or the masjid). The jilbab is thus the
modest Islamic coat that goes over our modest Islamic clothes whenever we would
wear a coat.
To summarize the information in that
document, the jilbab is any garment that meets the following conditions:
- it is an outergarment, an extra layer, something worn over the clothes
- it is thick and opaque and loosely cut so that it conceals what is underneath it
- if it is worn with a khimar and with socks and shoes, it should cover from the shoulders to the ankles; if it is worn without these, it must cover everything but the face and hands, like a cloak
Again, the jilbab is to be worn
outdoors and in open public places. The purpose of wearing the jilbab is to assert
our Islamic identity and to provide protection from harassment for us. It is
part of our hijab for these locations.
Summary
According to the Quran and Sunnah, hijab consists of modest behavior in lowering the gaze, guarding the private parts, and avoiding showing off, and of modest dress. The modest dress includes a headscarf and must cover all of the body except the face and the hands. Outdoors and in open public places, a long coat (jilbab) should be worn in addition to the modest dress commanded by Surah an-Nur ayat 31. Each of these obligations is clearly set out in the Quran and has been explained by the Prophet (saw).
According to the Quran and Sunnah, hijab consists of modest behavior in lowering the gaze, guarding the private parts, and avoiding showing off, and of modest dress. The modest dress includes a headscarf and must cover all of the body except the face and the hands. Outdoors and in open public places, a long coat (jilbab) should be worn in addition to the modest dress commanded by Surah an-Nur ayat 31. Each of these obligations is clearly set out in the Quran and has been explained by the Prophet (saw).
JazakaAllaahu Khair.
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