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Hajj - Symbol of Unity and Manifestation
Of all the rites of religion,
Ĥajj is
the greatest in its manifestation of unity and tawĥīd.
This is because the concept of unity, as expressed in creation, essentially
involves the idea of universality. Just as God, the One, is eternal, ubiquitous,
and the sustaining Creator of mankind, His last word and final religion must
rightfully be universal. Hence, Islam – the universal religion – is for all
times, all places, and for all peoples. The
Ĥajj
clearly portrays this truth and the Ka’bah, its focal point, poignantly
symbolises the same. Islam is for all times, past, present and future. For is
not the Ka’bah the first place of worship?
Indeed the first house to be set up for mankind is the one at
Bakkah, blessed and a guidance for all nations. In it are manifest signs [and]
Abraham’s Station, and whoever enters it shall be secure. And it is the duty of
mankind toward God to make pilgrimage to the House - for those who can afford
the journey to it -and should anyone renege [on his obligation], God isindeed
without need of the creatures.
The word “Bakkah” means the place of confluence and
congregation of throngs and it refers to the ground upon which the Ka’bah is
built. God says that the structure there was the first house to be set up for
mankind and hence is as old as man himself. It is also the last point of
convergence that man will have available to rally around during his spiritual
epic and sojourn on this planet. The great-grandson of the Prophet (ş),
Im ām
J’afar al-Şādiq
(‘a) said:Religion will withstand so long as the
Ka’bah stands.
Islam is for all places. This is graphically symbolised in
the Ĥajj
by the influx of people from all different places on the earth towards Makkah.
As such the Ka’bah is the centre whose circumference encompasses the entire
world. When We settled for Abraham the site of the House [saying], Do not
ascribe any partners to Me, and purify My House for those who go around it, and
those who stand [in it for prayer], and those who bow and prostrate. And
proclaim the hajj to people: they shall come to you on foot and on lean camels
coming from distant places Islam, the perennial religion practised by all
prophets from Adam to Muĥammad,
was present in all times and all places because it was meant for all people. For
God, the eternal and omnipresent Creator, created mankind and He alone knows
best how to guide them - sending prophets to every people, at all points of
human history. Man for his part, in his imperfect and fallen state, is always in
need of God’s guidance and is the perfect receptacle of this Divine guidance and
grace. But man in his fallen and earthly nature can not immediately conceive of
Divine realities, whether it be this supreme guidance or man’s own essence and
spirit. He needs help and support from the outside, so to speak. He needs
tangible things to aid him and guide him towards guidance and the Guide. The
Ka’bah serves as this external symbol and is God’s House not because God needs a
house, but because man in his weakness needs a solid point of reference to turn
to. The Ka’bah is as a lighthouse which guides sailors lost at sea back to the
shore and back to their home and origin. The first verse quoted above speaks to
this role of the House of God being a source of guidance for all nations and
peoples.
But it also mentions the House being “blessed”; meaning that
there is really and truly grace flowing from this place and that it is a point
that has been providentially chosen to be an “opening” up to the heavens. In
addition to being for all people a source of guidance, the House of God – and
the symbol of Islam – is also a refuge and sanctuary for people. And [remember]
when We made the House a resort for mankind and a sanctuary, [declaring], ‘Take
the venue of prayer from Abraham’s Station.’ We charged Abraham and Ishmael
[with its upkeep, saying], ‘Purify My House for those who go around it, for
those who make it a retreat and for those who bow and prostrate.
It is a “resort” or “place of return” because man, who came
from the Divine presence, needs to return to God by centering himself on Him by
way of His signs – the House being the central-most and manifest of them. It is
a sanctuary, morally speaking, because it is a channel of grace and those that
take refuge in it are openly showing that they no longer want to be renegades
and fugitives from God. By so doing they accept the grace and receive mercy –
entering the flock of God; and God protects his flock.
It is also a sanctuary, intellectually speaking, because it
centers man, providing him refuge from the vicissitudes of the material realm
and the multiplicities of the ephemeral world. For Divine grace treats man in
his totality and in all his dimensions – heart and mind, spirit, soul and body.
The Ka’bah is the life-line and beating heart for all people in the world. It
lives and breathes. As a refuge, sanctuary, and guiding light shining in the
dark, it attracts and draws the people to itself. It then graces and blesses the
worthy from amongst them and releases them, raising them in spirit and body –
giving new life and vigour to their spiritual being as well as enriching their
material livelihood. It gives them a sustenance which at once increases their
intellectual rapture, moral uprightness, and physical worship. For in God’s
Sacred House and the Divine Presence, man rises in respect and awe, realizing
all the while that it is not really he who is “doing” the rising – as he is
nothing in himself – but that it is his Origin and Source which is raising him.
Seeing himself in this new and novel way, man begins to see everything as being
connected to the Origin; casting aside the eyeglasses that made him see things
as separate and independent entities, he now sees the all-pervasive unity that
resides and resounds in creation. His empathy and sympathy with created beings
grows; and as he rises in rank and station, he is able to see more of the
created order below him for what it is. He longs to reach out and raise with
himself all those around and below him.
God has made the Ka‘bah, the Sacred House, sustentation for
mankind - and [also] the sacred month, the offering and the garlands - so that
you may know that God knows whatever there is in the heavens and whatever there
is in the earth, and that God has knowledge of all things.The word qiy āman
or “sustentation” in this verse has been
interpreted by the exegetes in many of the ways alluded to
above. From the personal rapture and ascent of the individual believer to the
mass revival of the Muslim Ummah; from the progress in d īn
or religion to the increase in livelihood; from the physical exertions of the
believers around the Ka’bah as they rise to the occasion of the
Ĥajj to
the attempts of Muslim communities for the establishment of justice and the rule
of God on earth. The Ka’bah was seen to be for all times (the first and the
last) and for all places (as it is the centre) and for all people (as it is a
guide, refuge, and sustainer or elevator for them). Indeed those who are
faithless and who bar from the way of God and the Sacred Mosque, which We have
assigned for all the people, the native and the visitor being equal therein -
whoever seeks to commit therein sacrilege with the intent of wrongdoing, We
shall make him taste a painful punishment.
That the Ka’bah is for all people, the first and the last,
can be seen from the following sermon of Im ām
‘Alī
(‘a).
ا Do you not see how God, most Holy,
has tried the first of men from the time of Adam to the last of men from this
world by means of stones [i.e. the Ka’bah] which neither harm them nor benefit
them; and which neither see nor hear; and He has made them His Sacred House, the
one which He has made to be a sustentation for people.
Not only does the temporal extent of the Ka’bah’s
influence span the extent of human history, it transcends it, making its
presence felt even after death and in the afterlife. There is a tradition which
says:
Al-Şādiq
(‘a) said: He who is in the grave wishes that he could give the world and all
that is in it for just one Ĥajj
for himself.
Source
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