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Wa `alaykum As-Salamu wa Rahmatullahi wa
Barakatuh.
In the Name of Allah, Most Gracious, Most
Merciful.
All praise and thanks are due to Allah, and
peace and blessings be upon His Messenger.
Dear questioner, we are greatly pleased to receive
your question which shows the confidence you place in us. May Allah
reward you abundantly for your interest in knowing the teachings of
Islam.
As regards your question, we’d like to make it clear to you that
Islam urges its followers to have great concern for everything
created by Allah, for it is part and parcel of “submission to Allah”
to show reverence to all what the Almighty Allah created.
Elaborating more on this, we cite the following:
The Islamic attitude towards the environment
that surrounds humanity is not merely restricted to the presence
of Allah everywhere but also to the following dimensions:
By submitting to Allah, Islam establishes the bedrock of the
relationship between finite, mortal human beings and the infinite
Divine, the secular and the sacred. This relationship cannot be
understood without first realising the meaning of the “submission”
that the “created” should concede in his relationship with the
Creator.
Humans have to accept that they are created beings who act as the
“agents” of Allah on earth. These agents are creative in their own
way but they are not Allah. Humans, however, will become closer to
the sacred by operating according to Allah's instructions. The
Prophet (peace and blessings be upon him) in a Hadith Qudsi
(Divine Hadith), quotes Allah as saying: "When a worshipper
moves closer to me by good virtues and voluntary acts of worship (nawafil),
I will be his hearing by which he can hear, I will be his eyes by
which he can see, I will be his hand by which he can act, and his
feet by which he can walk. If he asks Me [to give him] I will give
him what he wants, and if he asks for protection I will protect
him." (Al-`Asqalani, 1959: 11, 341)
Islam, as a way of life, expects human beings to conserve the
environment for several reasons which may be summarized as
follows:
1- The environment, is Allah's creation. The creation of
this earth and all its natural resources is a sign of His wisdom,
mercy, power and His other attributes and therefore serves to
develop human awareness and understanding of this creator. (Ar-Ra`d,
13: 2-4; 21:79)
2- Muslims should seek to protect and preserve the
environment because by so doing they protect Allah's creatures
which pray to Him and praise Him. Humankind might not be able to
understand how these creatures praise Allah but this does not mean
that they do not do so, Allah says:
(The seven heavens and the earth, and
all beings therein, declare His glory: There is not a thing but
celebrates His praise, and yet ye understand not how they declare
His Glory!) (Al-Isra’
17: 44)
3- The environment contains Allah's creatures which the
Muslim scholars consider to also deserve protection.
4- Also among the reasons why Islam seeks to protect and
preserve the environment is that Islam, as a way of life, is
established on the concept of good (khayr). Therefore it is
expected that Islam will protect the environment once it is
understood that such protection is good by itself. The Quran
statest: (He
whoso do good an atom's weight will see it. And whoso do ill an
atom's weight will see it.)
(Az-Zalzalah 99: 7-8)
In Islam, humans are expected to protect the environment since no
other creature is able to perform this task. Humans are the only
being that Allah has "entrusted" with the responsibility of
looking after the earth. This trusteeship is seen by Islam to be
so onerous and burdensome that no other creature would 'accept'
it. Allah says: (Lo!
We offered the trust unto the heavens and the earth and the hills,
but they shrank from bearing it and were afraid of it and man
assumed it Lo! he is a tyrant and fool.)
(Al-Ahzab 33: 72)
In Islam the relationship between humankind and the environment is
part of social existence, an existence based on the fact that
everything on earth worships the same God. This worship is not
merely ritual practice, since rituals are simply the symbolic
human manifestation of submission to Allah. The actual devotions
are actions, which can be practiced by all the creatures of earth
sharing the planet with the human race. Moreover humans are
responsible for the welfare and sustenance of the other citizens
of this global environment. The Qur’an contains many verses that
can be referred to for guidance in this respect. The following
verse 21 of the second surah of the Qur'an, is one example:
(O
people! Worship your Lord, Who hath created you and those before
you, so that you may ward off (evil). Who hath appointed the earth
a resting-place for you, and the sky a canopy; and causeth water
to pour down from the sky, thereby producing fruits as food for
you. And do not set up rivals to Allah when ye know (better).)
(Al-Baqarah 2: 21-22)
The word in this verse which is translated as "may ward off evil"
is in Arabic tattaqun. It enjoins piety and awareness which
is accompanied by an appreciation of the surrounding environment.
In this verse, the Qur’an speaks directly to all groups of people,
whether believers, or not. It attempts to mobilize people to the
importance of "worshipping Allah" as a symbol and a way of life
that enjoins justice and equity in handling the system created by
Him.
This system has been placed under human responsibility, to be
cared for and not misused as can be concluded by returning to
verse 22 of surat al-Baqarah. The word lakum (for
you) in the phrase "created for you" contains the message that the
earth is not for one generation but for every generation, past,
present and future and that would include humans as well as other
creatures on this earth. Accordingly, rivers, minerals are the
property of all. This should be distributed fairly and justly
especially when it happens to be owned collectively like the
Rivers Tigris and Euphrates.
Excerpted, with slight modifications, from
www.lamp.ac.uk/trs/staffgallery/mawil_paper.html
Read also:
How Islam Cares about the Environment
Towards an Islamic Jurisprudence of the Environment
Prophet Mohammed: A Pioneer of the Environment
The Quran and the Environment
The Environment As A Weapon
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