how to become a human

W.E.B Dubois (in Black reconstruction) “In December, 1863, Morgan led Negro troops in the battle of Nashville. He declared a new chapter in the history of liberty had been written. “It had been shown that marching under a flag of freedom, animated by a love of liberty, even the slave becomes a man and a hero.” Between eight and ten thousand Negro troops took part in the battles around Nashville, all of them from slave states. When General Thomas rode over the battlefield, and saw the bodies of colored men side by side with the foremost on the very works of the enemy, he turned to his staff, saying: “Gentlemen, the question is settled: Negroes will fight.” How extraordinary, and what a tribute to ignorance and religious hypocrisy, is the fact that in the minds of most people, even those of liberals, only murder makes men. The slave pleaded; he was humble; he protected the women of the South, and the world ignored him. “The problem is solved. The Negro is a man, a soldier, a hero.”

praise

According to a tradition once the people heard the pebbles in the Holy Prophet’s hand praising Allah. They could understand the praise of the pebbles, but the praise was such that the human ears were quite unfamiliar with. It was in the pebble’s own language, not in any human language. – Imam Khomeini

May Allah make this Eid safe and bring Muslims together in peace.

 

Sahifah Al-Sajjadiyah – by Dr Rebecca Masterton

An excellent review of the history of Islamic spirituality/mysticism and its relationship to the prayer manual Shaifah Al-Sajjadiyah (translated in English as the Psalms of Islam) of Imam Zain al-Abideen (AS)

Below are links to some of the works mentioned in the talk by Dr. Masterton:

Shaifah Al-Sajjadiyah (trans. William Chittick)

A Comparative Exploration of the Authority of the Awliya’ in the Shi’i and Sufi Traditions by Dr. Masterton

The Concept of Sainthood in Early Islamic Mysticism: Two Works by Al-Hakim al-Tirmidhi – An Annotated Translation with Introduction