By:
Sheikh Abdul Fattah Abu Ghudda
If a person starts
telling you, whether in private or public, something that
you already knew very well, you should pretend as if you do
not know it. Do not rush to reveal your knowledge or to
interfere with the speech.
Instead, show
your attention and concentration. The honorable tab'i Imam
Ata ibn Abi Rabah said:
"A young man would tell me something that I
may have heard before he was born. Nevertheless, I would
listen to him as if I had never heard it before."
Khalid ibn Safwan al-Tamimi,
who frequented the courts of two Khalifahs: Umar ibn Abdul
Aziz and Hisham ibn Abdul Malik, said:
"If a person tells you something you have heard before, or
news that you already learned, do not interrupt him to
exhibit your knowledge to those present. This is rude and
ill mannered." The honorable Imam Abdullah ibn Wahab
al-Qurashi al-Masri, a companion of Imam Malik, Al-Laith ibn
Sad and Al-Thawri, said:
"Sometimes a person would tell me a story
that I have heard before his parents had wed. Yet, I
listened as if I have never heard it before."
Ibrahim ibn al-Junaid said: "A wise man
said to his son: 'Learn the art of listening as you learn
the art of speaking.'" Listening well means
maintaining eye contact, allowing the speaker to finish the
spech, and restraining your urge to interrupt his speech.
Al-Hafiz al-Khatib
al-Baghdadi said in a poem:
Never interrupt a talk
Though you know it inside out
© 2001 Awakening
Publications
Ma'salaam
Nazia Shaheen
Those whom Allah (in His Plan) willeth to guide He
openeth their breast to Islam(Al An’am:125)
Allah is the Guide of those who believe to the Straight
Way.(Al Hajj: 54)