True Love
Love
- one of the strongest emotions known to mankind- a power that can
ruin or redeem a life- that can bring joy or painful heartbreak.
Today as the world celebrates this emotion on
Valentine’s Day, we see hearts of all sizes and shapes all around,
hearts of chocolate and satin. O Yes! It’s Valentines! The day of
hearts, red roses, poetry, candies and above all -
Love!
Where
did Valentine’s Day come from?
There are many traditions about its origin, but
the most authentic seems to be the one from Encyclopedia Britannica
that says that this day has nothing to do with Saint Valentine,
instead it is related to the Roman pagan festival of their god,
Lupercalia.
It was celebrated on 15th February
and in honour of the goddess Juno Februata, the names of girls were
placed in an urn and the men would draw out the name of a girl at
random who would then become their date for the remaining festival.
When Christianity came to Rome, they tried to
Christianize this obscene yet popular festival by replacing the
names of girls by those of saints. The men were then supposed to
emulate the saint, whose name they drew, for the rest of the year.
However this attempt proved unsuccessful and the use of girls’ names
returned.
Many associated it with Cupid (the virtually
naked god of love), who is the central character of Valentine’s Day
paraphernalia, who shoots people with his arrows to make them fall
in love. His mother is said to be Venus (goddess of love) and
apparently the rose was her favourite flower.
Another tradition speaks of a Saint Valentine
who was killed on 14th Feb. by Emperor Claudius for
secretly arranging the marriages of his soldiers whom he had banned
from marriage. The Bishop is said to have fallen in love with the
jailer’s daughter during his imprisonment and wrote her a letter
signed ‘Your Valentine’, which became a tradition for people to
come. In 496 Pope Gelasius officially replaced the pagan festival of
15th Feb with St Valentine’s Day on14th Feb.
Valentine’s Day Today
Whatever the origin of this day, today it seems
to have returned to its pagan, vulgar roots with the child-god cupid
and open dating being very much a part of it. It is celebrated in
many parts of the world in different ways. For instance, in France,
a girl befriends the first boy she sees in the morning and if this
relationship lasts for a year, they end up getting engaged on the
next Valentine’s Day. The Valentine lottery caused severe problems
in France and was banned completely in 1776. Later Italy, Hungary,
Austria and Germany also rid themselves of this obscene custom.
England remained safe until it was under Puritan rule but then
Charles II started it again and from there it entered America, where
it was first commercialized by A E Howland, who made 5000 dollars
from selling Valentine cards. In 1995 one billion valentine cards
were delivered in the US and the postal Dept. made an extra profit
of $ 30 million. Flowers began to be used in 1300.
Now people all over cash in on this opportunity
to kindle the fire in young hearts and instill in their minds the
necessity of having a ‘Special Someone’ to love. No wonder last
year’s newspaper carried news of a woman who sued her husband for
divorce for not giving her anything on Valentine’s. According to her
it was absolutely necessary to express one’s love on this day and
her husband did not give her anything which meant that he did not
love her.
Apparently Valentine’s Day made her feel
‘unloved’ rather than ‘loved’.
What kind of love depends upon gifts for
its survival? What kind of love is restricted to one day in the
whole year? What kind of love breeds hatred, jealousy and a sense of
deprivation in many?
Valentine’s Day also proves exceptionally painful for the
not-so-popular kids in school who don’t get as many Valentine cards
as their friends do.
In Pakistan, this day has come to mean getting
dressed in red, valentine cards, hearts, and chocolates. Through
these apparently innocent things the occasion promotes the culture
of free sex and male-female relations. Also becoming common are
public displays of emotions including advertising love messages in
newspapers, going out on romantic dates and attending valentine
balls and parties. Schools are not far behind in holding such
parties for their students. As a result, even young children are fed
new ideas of developing lusty feelings and expressing them boldly.
Closet romantics are given a chance to emerge. They imitate their
favourite movie love scenes in broad daylight. In all this ‘love’
fever Islam is given a backseat to sit and see how it’s teachings
are being ridiculed in public.
The question that comes to mind is why should
WE celebrate Valentine’s Day? Is it our national festival or
a religious one?
Festivals are part of a nation’s identity. They
symbolize any religion or culture.
ASK YOURSELF !
On this day that the world celebrates love and
we see hearts all around, ask yourself: “Have I ever thought of
loving the One Who created me, the One Who gave me a heart that can
feel love? Has this heart ever felt love for Him? How many times
have I cried for His love?
Have I ever spent any time, effort or money to
express my love to Him Who has given me all these things? Am I
confident enough to declare my love for Him? Do I ever miss Him in
solitude or amongst a crowd? Or am I wasting away a beautiful
emotion that was meant for eternity-not just momentary gratification
of our ego? Inspite of our ingratitude, The Merciful One continues
to love us .
Our love is a measure of our faith. Is our
love deep enough to recognize the One we cannot see but expressions
of His love are scattered all around us? Or is it so shallow that it
begins and ends only with humans who often abandon and hurt us in
this world when we need them the most, whose love brings heartbreak
and depression and who will be the first to leave us when we depart
from this world?
Ask yourself,
“ How much do I love Prophet Mohammad who had said: “By Him in Whose
Hands my life is, none of you will have faith till he loves me more
than his father and his children and all mankind” (Bukhari).
Did you ever wonder
how we can get Allah to love us too?
Ask yourself
why do I love the people I do? Are the motives all worldly like
their looks or money or is it something deeper like their piety or
good deeds?
Ask Yourself!
Ask yourself honestly, is Valentine’s Day
anything but obeying our baser desires and following our lusts?
Are we only like cattle following our passions and the trends
without knowing why, without understanding?
As a Muslim, a boy-girl friendship is totally
out of bounds. In Surah An-Nisa a woman’s qualities are described:
“Chaste, not lustful nor ones taking secret
friends”
Muslims have a beautiful institution of
marriage where romance is not a summer fling nor is it based on
superficial looks, but on a serene relationship of mutual affection,
kindness and responsibility.
T R U E L O V E
For a Muslim, TRUE LOVE happens only once and
eternally and that is with the Lord, The One Who exists from
eternity till forever. For Muslims, love for Him supersedes
everything and everyone else. Love for Allah is meaningful since it
then teaches loving all His creatures (and not just a ‘Special
Someone’).
Muslims already have a day for expressing love
and that is ‘Id-al-Azha when Muslims sacrifice a life to show Allah
that they can sacrifice anything for Him-even their own lives. They
relive the Sunnah of Sayidina Ibrahim -Allah’s friend-who readily
proceeded to sacrifice his most beloved possession, his teenaged
son, for Allah. Love demands sacrifice. Do we have that kind of
pure and intense love in our life? Who do we love the most-our own
selves and desires or Our Rabb? If we love Allah, how can we
celebrate a pagan custom when our Beloved Lord abhors paganism more
than anything else? Then how deeply do we feel on ‘Id-al-Azha and
how do we feel on Valentine’s?
A Muslim’s actions are not purposeless or
meaningless. Even his love is meaningful and the expression of love
is useful, since instead of spending thousands on flowers, on
‘Id-al-Azha meat is provided for the poor, jobs are created for
many, animal skin is used for leather and so on.
A Muslim doesn’t do something just because
the whole world is doing it. He doesn’t waste his life. Let us be
Muslims in heart, body and soul.
Let us then
find
True Love
True love seeks sacrifice and I’ve
given it all.
This, this is true love in it’s purest form.
I turn my face towards You now.
The Lord of my world and the Heavens above.
I am Yours and Yours, alone.
My prayer, my sacrifice are only for You.
My life and death are Yours to take.
A promise I make.
To lay my life for You.
An oath that I worship.
No-one but You.
(Inspired by dua of The Holy Prophet SAW to be
read at Qurbani time)
Back
|