From
the Desk of: Abdul Rasheed Popo CEO of The Islamic Association
of St Lucia, Inc
Indeed,
In The Messenger Of Allah You Have A Good Example To Follow,
Al-Ahzab-V 21
By Harun
Yahya,
Turkish
Muslim Thinker
Life slips away second by second. Are you aware that
every day brings you closer to death or that death is as close
to you as it is to other people?
As we are told in the verse
Think of a baby who has just opened its eyes to the world
and a man who is about to take in his last breath. Neither
had influence on their birth or death whatsoever. Only God
possesses the power to inspire the breath of life or to take
it away.
All human beings will live until a certain day and then die.
In the Qur’an, God gives an account of the attitude
commonly shown towards death in the following verse. (Al-Jumu’ah
(62:8)
The majority of people avoid thinking about death. In the
rapid flow of daily events, people usually occupy themselves
with totally different subjects: what college to enroll in,
which company to work for, what color of clothing to wear
next morning, what to cook for supper, etc. These are the
kinds of major issues that we usually consider. Life is perceived
as a routine process of such minor matters. Attempts to talk
about death are always interrupted by those who do not feel
comfortable hearing about it. Assuming death will come only
when people grow older, they do not want to concern themselves
with such an unpleasant subject. Yet it should be kept in
mind that living for even one further hour is never guaranteed.
Everyday, people witness the deaths of other people around
them but think about the day when others will witness their
own death. People never suppose that such an end is awaiting
them!
Nevertheless, when death comes to man, all the “realities”
of life suddenly vanish. No reminder of the “good old
days” endures in this world. Think of everything that
you are able to do right now: you can blink your eyes, move
your body, speak, laugh; all these are functions of your body.
Now think about the state and shape your body will assume
after your death.
From the moment you breathe for the last time, you will become
nothing but a “heap of flesh”. Your body, silent
and motionless, will be carried to the morgue. There, it will
be washed for the last time. Wrapped in a shroud, your corpse
will be carried in a coffin to the graveyard. Once your remains
are in the grave, soil will cover you. This is the end of
your story. From now on, you are simply one of the names represented
in the graveyard by a marble stone.
During the first months or years, your grave will be visited
frequently. As time passes, fewer people will come. Decades
later, there will be no one.
Meanwhile, your immediate family members will experience a
different aspect of your death. At home, your room and bed
will be empty. After the funeral, little of what belongs to
you will be kept at home: Most of your clothes, shoes, etc,
will be given to those who need them. Your file at the public
registration office will be deleted or archived. During the
first years, some will mourn you. Yet, time will work against
the memories you left behind. Four or five decades later,
there will remain only a few who remember you. Before long,
new generations will come and none of your generation will
exist any longer on earth. Whether you are remembered or not
will be worthless to you.
While all this is taking place in the world, the corpse under
the soil will go through a rapid process of decay. Soon after
you are placed in the grave, the bacteria and insects proliferating
in the corpse due to the absence of oxygen will start to function.
The gasses released from these organisms will inflate the
body, starting from the abdomen, altering its shape and appearance.
Bloody froth will pop out the mouth and nose due to the pressure
of gasses on the diaphragm. as corruption proceeds, body hair,
nails, soles, and palms will fall off. Accompanying this outer
alteration in the body, internal organs such as the lungs,
heart, and liver will also decay.
In
the meantime, the most horrible scene takes place in the abdomen,
where the skin can no longer bear the pressure of gasses and
suddenly bursts, spreading an unendurable disgusting smell.
Starting from the skull, muscles will detach from their particular
places. Skin and soft tissues will completely disintegrate.
The brain will decay and start looking like clay. This process
will go on until the whole body is reduced to a skeleton.
There is no chance of going back to the old life again. Gathering
around the supper table with family members, socializing,
or having an honourable job will never again be possible.
In short, the “heap of flesh and bones” to which
we assign an identity faces quite a nasty end. On the other
hand, you or rather, your soul will leave this body as soon
as you breathe your last. The remainder of you, your body
will become part of the soil. Yes, but what is the reason
for these things happening?
The tremendous end awaiting man should make him acknowledge
that he is not a body himself, but a soul “encased”
within a body. In other words, man has to acknowledge that
he has an existence beyond his body. Furthermore, man should
understand the death of his body which he tries to possess
as if he is to remain eternally in this temporal world. However,
this body, which he deems so important, will decay and become
worm-eaten one day and finally be reduced to a skeleton. That
day might be very soon.
Despite all these facts, people are inclined to disregard
what they do not like or want. They are even inclined to deny
the existence of things they avoid confronting. This tendency
seems to be most apparent when death is the issue.
Only a funeral or the sudden death of an immediate family
member brings this reality to mind. Almost all of us see death
far from ourselves. The assumption is that those who die while
sleeping or in an accident are different people, and what
they face will never befall us! Everybody thinks it is too
early to die and that there are always years ahead to live.
Yet most probably, people who die on the way to school or
hurrying to attend a business meeting shared the same thought.
They probably never thought that the next day’s newspapers
would publish news of their deaths. It is entirely possible
that, as you read these lines, you still do not expect to
die soon after you have finished them or even entertain the
possibility that it might happen. Probably you feel that it
is too early to die because there are many things to accomplish.
However, this is just an avoidance of death and these are
only vain endeavors to escape it:
Say: “Running away will not profit you if you are running
away from death or slaughter; and even if (you do escape),
no more than a brief (respite) will you be allowed to enjoy!
(Al-Ahzab 33:16)
Man who is created alone should be aware that he will also
die alone. Yet during his life, he lives almost addicted to
possessions. His sole purpose in life becomes to possess more.
Yet people cannot take their goods with them to the grave.
The body is buried, wrapped in a shroud made from the cheapest
of fabrics. The body comes into this world alone and departs
from it in the same way.
|