Category Archives: Stories of the Prophets / Bani Israel

Prophet Moses sermon

Prophecies : Good news for obedience & chilling warnings FOR disobedience to GOD

  1. Prophet Moses (peace be upon him), on the eve of his death, reminded the Israelites of all important events from their history, and reiterated all the divine commandments of the Torah which Allah had sent to them through him. Then he told them in a long speech that if they obeyed their Lord, they would be given great rewards. But if they adopted the attitude of disobedience, they would get a terrible punishment. This discourse spreads over chapters 4, 6, 8, 10, 11 and 28, 30. Some of these passages are so impressive and instructive that it will be worthwhile to quote a few of them: Hear, O Israel: The Lord our God is one Lord: And thou shalt love the Lord thy God with all thine heart, and with all thy soul, and with all thy might. And these words which I command thee this day, shall be in thine heart: And thou shalt teach them diligently unto thy children, and shalt talk of them when thou sittest in thine house, and when thou walkest by the way, and when thou liest down, and when thou risest up. (Deut. 6: 47). 1

And now, Israel, what doth the Lord thy God require of thee, but to fear the Lord thy God, to walk in all his ways; and to love him, and to serve the Lord Thy God with all thy heart and with all thy soul, to keep the commandments of the Lord, and his statutes, which I command thee this day for thy good? Behold, the heaven and the heaven of heavens is thy Lord’s thy God, the earth also, with all that therein is. (Deut. 10: 12-14). 1

And it shall come to pass, if thou shalt hearken diligently unto the voice of the Lord thy God, to observe and to do all his commandments which I command thee this day, that the Lord thy God will set thee on high above all nations of the earth: And all these blessings shall come on thee, and overtake thee, if thou shalt hearken unto the voice of the Lord thy God. Blessed shalt thou be in the city, and blessed shalt thou be in the field. The Lord shall cause thine enemies that rise up against thee to be smitten before thy face. The Lord shall command the blessing upon thee in thy storehouses, and in all that thou settest thine hand unto. The Lord shall establish thee an holy people unto himself. And all people of the earth shall see that thou art called by the name of the Lord; and they shall be afraid of thee. And thou shalt lend unto many nations, and thou shalt not borrow. And the Lord shall make thee the head, and not the tail; and thou shalt be above only, and thou shalt not be beneath. (28: 1-13). 1

But it shall come to pass, if thou wilt not hearken unto the voice of the Lord thy God, to observe to do all his commandments and his statutes which I command thee this day; that all those curses shall come upon thee, and overtake thee: Cursed shalt thou be in the city, and cursed shalt thou be in the field. The Lord shall send upon thee cursing, vexation, and rebuke, in all that thou settest thine hand unto for to do. The Lord shall make the pestilence cleave unto thee. And thy heaven that is over thy head shall be brass, and the earth that is under thee shall be iron. The Lord shall cause thee to be smitten before thine enemies: thou shalt go out one way against them, and flee seven ways before them. Thou shalt betroth a wife, and another man shall lie with her: thou shalt build an house and thou shalt not dwell therein: thou shalt plant a vineyard, and shalt not gather the grapes thereof. Thine ox shall be slain before thine eyes. Therefore, shalt thou serve thine enemies which the Lord shall send against thee, in hunger, and in thirst, and in nakedness, and in want of all things: And he shall put a yoke of iron upon thy neck, until he have destroyed thee. And the Lord shall scatter thee among all people, from the one end of the earth even unto the other. (Deut: 28: 15-64). 1

PROPHET MOSES s LAST SERMON SUMMARIZED

While the concept of a single “last sermon” from Prophet Moses, exactly like the Farewell Sermon of Muhammad, isn’t present in the Hebrew Bible, his final address to the Israelites is a central and powerful theme.

This address is encapsulated in the Book of Deuteronomy, which itself means “Second Law” or “Repetition of the Law.” The entire book is presented as Moses’ final speeches to the new generation of Israelites on the plains of Moab, just before they enter the Promised Land without him.

Deuteronomy chapters 27-30, in particular, contain the core of this final charge, often called the Covenant at Moab. This is where Moses lays out the blessings of obedience and the severe warnings for disobedience in the most explicit terms.


Summary of Moses’ Final Charge: The Two Ways

Moses presents the Israelites with a fundamental choice between life and death, blessing and curse. This is the ultimate summary of his message.

1. The Call to Obedience

  • The Commandment is Attainable: Moses emphasizes that God’s law is not too difficult or mysterious. It is very near to them, in their mouths and hearts, so they can obey it (Deuteronomy 30:11-14).
  • A Covenant of Love: Obedience is framed not just as following rules, but as a response to God’s love and faithfulness. The core command is to “love the LORD your God with all your heart and with all your soul and with all your strength” (Deuteronomy 6:5).
  • The Promise of Blessing: If they are obedient, they will receive immense blessings. These are detailed in Deuteronomy 28:1-14 and include:
    • Prosperity in the Promised Land.
    • Victory over their enemies.
    • Abundant harvests and children.
    • Being established as a holy people, a nation set apart for God.

2. The Warnings of Disobedience

This is the most striking and lengthy part of the warning. The consequences of turning away from the covenant are described in graphic and severe terms.

  • The Curses: The list of curses in Deuteronomy 28:15-68 is extensive and terrifying. It serves as a stark contrast to the blessings and includes:
    • Disease, drought, and famine.
    • Defeat and oppression by their enemies.
    • Exile from the land God gave them.
    • Extreme suffering, to the point of parents turning against their children in desperation.
    • Being scattered among all the nations, from “one end of the earth to the other.”
  • The Ultimate Consequence: The ultimate warning is that persistent disobedience will lead to them being uprooted from the Promised Land and going into exile, where they will serve foreign gods and live in constant fear and suffering.

3. The Promise of Restoration

Even in the midst of the warnings, there is a path back. Moses prophesies that after the people experience the curses of exile due to their disobedience, they will eventually return to God.

  • Repentance is Possible: “When you and your children return to the LORD your God and obey him with all your heart and with all your soul… then the LORD your God will restore your fortunes and have compassion on you” (Deuteronomy 30:2-3).
  • The Choice is Theirs: The final message is a powerful exhortation to choose life.
    > “This day I call the heavens and the earth as witnesses against you that I have set before you life and death, blessings and curses. Now choose life, so that you and your children may live and that you may love the LORD your God, listen to his voice, and hold fast to him. For the LORD is your life…” (Deuteronomy 30:19-20).

Comparison with Prophet Muhammad’s Farewell Sermon

Feature Moses (in Deuteronomy)Muhammad (Khutbat al-Wada’)Context Before entering the Promised Land, addressing a new generation. After establishing the Islamic state in Medina, during the Hajj pilgrimage. Core Message A choice between blessing (life) and curse (death) based on obedience to God’s covenant and law. A confirmation of completed principles: equality, sanctity, and brotherhood under one God. FocusVertical Relationship: Primarily between the people and God, with social laws flowing from that. Horizontal Relationship: Primarily on the social and ethical rights between people, rooted in faith.

Warnings Explicit, lengthy, and national: Exile, defeat, and suffering for collective disobedience. A general warning not to stray after him, and to hold fast to the Quran and Sunnah.

Legacy Left The Torah (Law) as their guide and constitution. The Quran and the Sunnah (his example) as the guide.

In conclusion, Moses’ “last sermon” in Deuteronomy is a powerful, prophetic discourse that sets the theological stage for the entire subsequent history of the Israelites in the Hebrew Bible. It establishes the pattern of blessing for obedience and exile for disobedience that the prophets would point back to for centuries.

Prophet Mohammed PBUH.. a brief summary

Prophet Muhammad (ﷺ) transformed Arabia from a land of ignorance (**Jahiliyyah**) to a beacon of faith, knowledge, and justice. His life remains the **ultimate model** of leadership, patience, and devotion to Allah.  

To know more, please proceed>>>>>>>>

Prophet Muhammad, born around 570 CE in Mecca (modern-day Saudi Arabia), was the founder of Islam. Raised as an orphan in the Quraysh tribe, he worked as a merchant and was known for his integrity, earning the nickname “Al-Amin” (the trustworthy). At age 40, in 610 CE, he received his first revelation from God (Allah) through the angel Gabriel in the Cave of Hira. These revelations, over 23 years, formed the Qur’an, Islam’s holy book.

Mission

Prophet Muhammad’s mission was to call people to monotheism (Tawhid), urging them to worship one God and abandon idolatry. He preached social justice, compassion, and moral conduct, challenging Mecca’s powerful elites. Facing persecution, he and his followers migrated to Medina in 622 CE (the Hijra), marking the start of the Islamic calendar. In Medina, he established a community based on Islamic principles, uniting diverse tribes. He led defensive battles against Meccan opposition and, by 630 CE, peacefully conquered Mecca, cleansing the Kaaba of idols.

Legacy

Prophet Muhammad died in 632 CE, leaving a profound legacy:

– **Religious**: Islam, based on the Qur’an and his Sunnah (teachings and practices), spread rapidly, shaping a global faith with over 1.9 billion followers today.

– **Political**: He laid the foundation for the Islamic state, with the Constitution of Medina promoting coexistence and governance.

– **Social**: His emphasis on charity, equality, and community reformed Arabian society, influencing laws and ethics.

He is revered as the “Seal of the Prophets” in Islam, the final messenger in a line including Abraham, Moses, and Jesus. His legacy endures through Islamic scholarship, institutions, and the global Muslim community.

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Concise yet comprehensive summary of **Prophet Muhammad’s (ﷺ) biography, mission, and legacy**:

1. Early Life (570–610 CE)**  

– **Birth & Lineage:** Born in **Makkah** (570 CE) into the **Quraysh tribe** (Banu Hashim clan). His father, **Abdullah**, died before his birth, and his mother, **Aminah**, passed away when he was six. He was raised by his grandfather **Abdul-Muttalib** and later by his uncle **Abu Talib**.  

– **Character:** Known as **Al-Amin (The Trustworthy)** for his honesty and integrity. Worked as a merchant, earning the respect of his community.  

– **Marriage to Khadijah (RA):** At 25, he married **Khadijah**, a wealthy widow, who later became the first believer in his prophethood.  

### **2. Prophethood & Mission (610–632 CE)**  

#### **Revelation & Early Preaching (610–613 CE)**  

– **First Revelation (610 CE):** At age 40, while meditating in **Cave Hira**, the Angel **Jibril (Gabriel)** brought the first verses of the Quran (Surah Al-Alaq 96:1–5).  

– **Early Converts:** His wife **Khadijah**, cousin **Ali ibn Abi Talib**, close friend **Abu Bakr**, and freed slave **Zayd ibn Harithah** were among the first Muslims.  

– **Secret Preaching:** For three years, Islam spread quietly due to persecution.  

#### **Public Declaration & Persecution (613–622 CE)**  

– **Open Dawah:** After being commanded to preach publicly (Surah Al-Hijr 15:94), the Quraysh leaders (like **Abu Lahab & Abu Jahl**) opposed him fiercely.  

– **Persecution:** Muslims faced **boycotts, torture, and social exclusion**. Some migrated to **Abyssinia (Ethiopia)** under King Negus’s protection.  

– **Year of Sorrow (619 CE):** Deaths of **Khadijah** and **Abu Talib**, his main supporters, left him vulnerable.  

#### **The Hijrah (Migration to Madinah, 622 CE)**  

– **Invitation from Madinah:** The people of **Yathrib (later Madinah)** pledged allegiance at **Aqabah**, inviting him to mediate tribal conflicts.  

– **Escape from Makkah:** After an assassination plot, he and **Abu Bakr** migrated, marking the start of the **Islamic calendar (Hijri)**.  

#### **Madinah Period (622–632 CE)**  

– **Establishing the First Islamic State:**  

  – **Constitution of Madinah:** A treaty ensuring rights for Muslims, Jews, and pagans.  

  – **Brotherhood (Mu’akhah):** Pairing **Muhajireen (Makkan migrants)** and **Ansar (Madinan helpers)**.  

– **Major Battles:**  

  – **Badr (624 CE):** Victory against Quraysh despite being outnumbered.  

  – **Uhud (625 CE):** A setback due to archers disobeying orders.  

  – **Trench (627 CE):** Victory in a siege against a Meccan coalition.  

– **Treaty of Hudaybiyyah (628 CE):** A 10-year truce with Quraysh, later broken by them.  

– **Conquest of Makkah (630 CE):** A bloodless victory after Quraysh violated the treaty. The Prophet (ﷺ) forgave his former enemies.  

– **Farewell Pilgrimage & Sermon (632 CE):** Delivered a timeless message on equality, justice, and human rights.  

### **3. Death & Legacy (632 CE)**  

– **Passing:** Fell ill and died in **Madinah (June 632 CE)** at age 63. Buried in his house (now part of **Masjid an-Nabawi**).  

– **Final Revelation:** Last verses of Surah Al-Baqarah (2:281–286) emphasized accountability before Allah.  

### **4. Prophet Muhammad’s (ﷺ) Mission & Legacy**  

#### **Core Teachings:**  

– **Tawhid (Oneness of God):** Rejection of idolatry; worship of Allah alone.  

– **Social Justice:** Abolished tribalism, racism, and oppression. Elevated women’s rights (e.g., inheritance, consent in marriage).  

– **Mercy & Compassion:** “I have been sent only to perfect good character.” (Ahmad)  

– **Universal Message:** Quran 21:107 – *”We have sent you only as a mercy to the worlds.”*  

#### **Global Impact:**  

– **Spread of Islam:** Within 100 years of his death, Islam reached Spain, India, and China.  

– **Civilizational Influence:** Advanced science, medicine, philosophy, and law during the Islamic Golden Age.  

– **Moral Exemplar:** His **Sunnah (traditions)** remain a guide for over **1.8 billion Muslims** today.  

#### **Key Quotes:**  

– *”The best among you are those who have the best manners and character.”* (Bukhari)  

– *”None of you truly believes until he loves for his brother what he loves for himself.”* (Bukhari)  

### **Conclusion**  

Prophet Muhammad (ﷺ) transformed Arabia from a land of ignorance (**Jahiliyyah**) to a beacon of faith, knowledge, and justice. His life remains the **ultimate model** of leadership, patience, and devotion to Allah.  

Thanks to Grok & Deepseek in compiling the data from

Available information.

 

Prophet Abraham,his mission,his progeny .. a brief summary

Summarized audio version…

https://notebooklm.google.com/notebook/35a69852-bdb7-474b-be5b-6c64f19e34fd/audio

(2:122) O children of Israel, *123remember that special favour 1 bestowed upon you, and that I exalted you above all the communities of the world.

Summary from Tafheemul Quran footnote of verse 2:122

His travels to spread the message
(1) After Noah, Abraham was the first Prophet appointed by God to spread the universal message of Islam. At the outset, he journeyed for many years from Iraq to Egypt, and from Syria and Palestine to various parts of Arabia inviting people to serve and obey God. Later he appointed deputies in various regions to carry on his mission. He sent his nephew Lot to Transjordan, his son Isaac to Syria and Palestine, and his eldest son Ishmael to Arabia. Then he built, in Makka, the shrine called the Ka’bah which subsequently, and under God’s own command, was made the centre of the prophetic mission.

About his progeny
(2) Abraham’s progeny descended in two main branches. One of these, the Children of Ishmael, lived in Arabia. The Quraysh and other Arabian tribes belonged to this branch of Abraham’s line. Even those Arabian tribes which were not related to him by blood identified themselves with Abraham, since they had been influenced in varying degrees by his religious ideas. The other branch consisted of the Children of Isaac. In this branch there arose a great number of Prophets, for example Jacob, Joseph, Moses, David, Solomon, John, and Jesus. Since Jacob was called Israel, his offspring came to be known as the Children of Israel. Other peoples who accepted their faith as a result of preaching either lost their former identity and became assimilated with them, or remained separate from them ethnically but identified with them religiously. At the time when decadence flourished this branch of the Abrahamic family gave birth first to Judaism, and subsequently to Christianity.*

His assigned mission
(3) The true mission of Abraham was to invite people to obey God and to mould the entire system of individual and collective life according to Divine Guidance. He was himself obedient to God and followed the teaching received from Him, and constantly strove to spread it and make all human beings live in obedience to it. It was because of this that he was appointed the religious leader and guide of the whole world. After his death, the task of guiding the world was entrusted to the branch which had issued from Isaac and Jacob, and which came to be known as the Children of Israel. It is in this branch that many Prophets were born. It was also this branch which was given the knowledge of the Straight Way, and was designated to lead all the nations of the world along that Way. It is of this favour that God again and again reminds these people.
In the time of Solomon this branch took Jerusalem as the centre of its mission. Jerusalem maintained its central position for all devotees of God and remained the qiblah (direction) in which all worshippers of God were required to turn in their Prayer.

Reminder to Jews about their records
(4) While addressing the Children of Israel in the last ten sections, God set forth the criminal record of the Jews, exposed their decadent state at the time of the revelation of the Qur’an, and made it clear to them that they had totally lacked gratitude to God for His favours and bounties. Not only had they ceased to guide the world, but had turned away from Truth and righteousness to such an extent that nearly all of them had lost the capacity to do good and to respond to Truth.

Irrelevance of lineage in matters of true faith
(5) It is also intimated that the religious leadership of all mankind is not an exclusive privilege of Abrahamic blood, but rather the fruit of Abraham’s sincere obedience and service to God, to which he had wholly consecrated himself. Only those who follow the way of Abraham, and guide the world along that way, are therefore entitled to the position of guidance and leadership. And since the Jews had abandoned it and become incapable of carrying out the mission of Abraham they were being removed from that position.

Hint to those nominal affiliates of Abraham
(6) At the same time it is hinted that the non-Israelite peoples who identified themselves with Abraham through Moses and Jesus had also veered from the way of Abraham. The same was true of the polytheists of Arabia, who felt proud of belonging to Abraham and Ishmael and based this pride on lineage alone. For, so far as their faith and conduct were concerned, they had not even the remotest tie with Abraham and Ishmael. They did not deserve, therefore, to be entrusted with the religious leadership of the world.

Prophet Mohammed as from his another son Ishmael.
(7) It is also made clear that by God’s will a Prophet, for whose advent Abraham and Ishmael had once prayed, was born in the other branch of the Abrahamic family, i.e. the Ishmaelites. The way propounded by this Prophet is exactly the same as that by Abraham, Isaac, Ishmael, Jacob and in fact all the Messengers. His followers also confirm the truth of all those designated in the past to serve as God’s Messengers, and call mankind to the same message those Messengers preached earlier. Thus, leadership now naturally devolves on those who follow this Prophet.

Proclamation of change in change in leadership
(8) This proclamation of a transfer of leadership naturally called for the proclamation of a change in the direction of Prayer. As long as the Israelites held the reins of the world’s religious leadership, Jerusalem remained the centre of the mission of Islam and the qiblah of truth-loving people. The Arabian Prophet (peace be on him) as well as his followers had accepted Jerusalem as the qiblah until God duly proclaimed the removal of the Jews from their position of leadership. With this proclamation Jerusalem ceased to enjoy its central position. So it was proclaimed that from then on the centre of God’s true religion would be the place from which the message of the Prophet Muhammad (peace be on him)had radiated. Since in the past it had been the centre of the mission of Abraham (peace be on him), it was difficult even for the polytheists and for the People of the Book to deny that the Ka’bah had a greater right to be made the qiblah. There was thus every reasonable ground for the decision to change the qiblah and its opponents could only object out of irrational adamance.

Kaaba as center of Islam
(9) The proclamation that the followers ef the Prophet Muhammad (peace be on him)had been designated to the religious leadership of mankind, and that the Ka’bah would now be the focal point of man’s religious life, was followed by directives (beginning with verse 153 and continuing to the end of the surah)addressed to the Muslims. These directives were aimed at enabling the Muslims to acquit themselves creditably of the duties laid upon their shoulders as the bearers of this mission.
 

Persecution s of prophets: not a new tool

Tyrants in history in particular and disbelievers at large boycotted, persecuted, forced to migrate and even killed prophets as history shows.

Yes, the events you described for Prophet Muhammad are well-documented in historical and religious accounts from Islamic tradition, with broad consensus among historians that they occurred as part of the early challenges faced by the Muslim community in Mecca.

  • Socio-economic boycott: Around 616-619 CE, the Quraysh tribe imposed a boycott on Muhammad’s clan, Banu Hashim, isolating them in the valley of Shi’b Abi Talib and prohibiting trade or marriage with them to pressure them into abandoning Islam. 1 7 This lasted about three years and caused significant hardship, including starvation.
  • Pelted with stones: In 619 CE, after facing rejection in Mecca, Muhammad traveled to the nearby city of Ta’if to seek support but was mocked, chased, and stoned by the locals, including children, until he bled and had to flee. 2 4 8
  • Forced to migrate: In 622 CE, due to escalating persecution and threats to his life from the Quraysh, Muhammad and his followers migrated from Mecca to Medina (known as the Hijra), marking the start of the Islamic calendar and a turning point for the religion. 9

Similar instances of persecution, boycotts, rejection, or forced migration have occurred to other prophets in Abrahamic religious histories (Judaism, Christianity, and Islam), often as a result of opposition to their messages. Here are some examples based on biblical and Quranic accounts, which are treated as historical narratives in these traditions:

  • Abraham: He faced opposition from his idolatrous community in Ur (modern-day Iraq) for preaching monotheism, leading to his forced departure and migration to Canaan (Genesis 11-12; also emphasized in Islamic sources as leaving due to threats). 14
  • Moses: As a young man, he killed an Egyptian overseer abusing a Hebrew slave and fled Egypt to Midian to escape Pharaoh’s retribution (Exodus 2). Later, he returned to lead the Israelites out of slavery amid intense opposition, including plagues and pursuit by Egyptian forces. 14 23
  • Noah: He was mocked, ridiculed, and threatened by his people for building the ark and warning of a flood, facing social isolation and rejection for over a century before the deluge (Genesis 6-9; Quran 71 emphasizes the boycott-like shunning).
  • Elijah: He was persecuted by King Ahab and Queen Jezebel for challenging Baal worship, forcing him to flee into the wilderness and hide in caves to avoid assassination (1 Kings 18-19). 22
  • Jeremiah: Known as the “weeping prophet,” he was imprisoned, thrown into a muddy cistern, and publicly humiliated by Judean leaders for prophesying Jerusalem’s destruction, facing constant threats and isolation (Jeremiah 20, 37-38). 17 21
  • Jesus: He encountered rejection from religious authorities, was forced to flee as an infant to Egypt to escape King Herod’s massacre (Matthew 2), and later faced arrest, trial, and crucifixion amid accusations of blasphemy (Gospels). Early followers also migrated to Abyssinia to escape Meccan persecution in Islamic accounts of early Christianity. 16 19

These patterns of rejection and exile are recurring themes in prophetic stories across Abrahamic texts, often portraying prophets as outsiders challenging societal norms. 21 22 28

DIVINE WRATH, historical view

Divine patience is vast — but not infinite. Prosperity, time, and messengers are all mercies. When all three are persistently rejected with arrogance, the Sunnah of Allah activates — not out of cruelty, but as the ultimate justice for the oppressed and the ultimate consequence for the oppressors.

Account of some nations upon whom divine wrath descended, drawn from Quranic accounts and Islamic historical tradition:

Nations That Crossed the Red Lines — Divine Wrath in History

  1. 🌊 The People of Nuh (Noah) — The Great Flood
    Era of Forbearance: Nuh ﷺ preached for 950 years (Quran 29:14), calling his people day and night, privately and publicly.
    Their Disobediences:
    ∙ Absolute rejection of monotheism; worship of idols — Wadd, Suwa, Yaghuth, Ya’uq, and Nasr (Quran 71:23)
    ∙ The wealthy and powerful mocked the poor believers who followed Nuh ﷺ
    ∙ They covered their ears with their fingers and wrapped themselves in garments to avoid hearing the truth (Quran 71:7)
    ∙ They told their children: “Never abandon your gods” — passing down idolatry generationally
    ∙ They called Nuh ﷺ a madman and threatened to stone him (Quran 54:9)
    ∙ Extreme arrogance — their leaders actively organized resistance campaigns against the message
    Provisions & Chances Given:
    ∙ Nearly a millennium of patient preaching
    ∙ Nuh ﷺ explicitly promised them rain, wealth, children, and gardens if they turned back (Quran 71:10–12)
    ∙ Only a tiny handful believed — narrations suggest fewer than 80 people
    The Wrath:
    ∙ The skies opened with torrential rain and the earth burst with water simultaneously (Quran 54:11–12)
    ∙ The entire civilization was drowned — including Nuh’s own son who arrogantly said he would take refuge on a mountain (Quran 11:42–43)
    ∙ The flood was total annihilation — not a single disbeliever survived
  2. 💨 The People of ’Aad — The Wind of Destruction
    Who They Were: A powerful Arab civilization, likely in southern Arabia (possibly modern-day Yemen/Oman). Recipients of Prophet Hud ﷺ.
    Their Disobediences:
    ∙ Extreme arrogance about their physical power — “Who is stronger than us?” (Quran 41:15)
    ∙ They built towering monuments and palaces on every high place — not out of need, but out of pride and showing off (Quran 26:128–129)
    ∙ They were oppressive tyrants who ruled by force
    ∙ They denied resurrection and the afterlife completely
    ∙ Rejected Hud ﷺ, calling him a liar and deluded
    ∙ Took perverse pride in their strength, beauty, and worldly dominance
    Provisions Given:
    ∙ They were given exceptional physical stature, strength, and bounties (Quran 7:69)
    ∙ Hud ﷺ reminded them of how Allah favored them after Nuh’s people — yet they chose pride
    ∙ Years of drought were sent first as a warning — yet they did not repent
    The Wrath:
    ∙ A ferocious, freezing wind was unleashed for seven nights and eight days continuously (Quran 69:6–7)
    ∙ The wind hurled them like uprooted palm trees — their massive bodies made their destruction more dramatic
    ∙ They were completely wiped out — only Hud ﷺ and the believers were saved
    ∙ Quran 46:25 says the wind “destroyed everything by the command of its Lord”
  3. ⚡ The People of Thamud — The Thunderbolt
    Who They Were: A civilization after ’Aad, in the region of Al-Hijr (northwest Arabia). Recipients of Prophet Salih ﷺ.
    Their Disobediences:
    ∙ Carved magnificent homes into mountains — yet were ungrateful (Quran 7:74)
    ∙ Demanded a miraculous sign from Salih ﷺ, then received the she-camel as a divine sign
    ∙ Hamstrung and killed the she-camel — the ultimate act of defiance after being warned (Quran 91:13–14)
    ∙ Nine leaders plotted to assassinate Salih ﷺ and his family (Quran 27:48–49)
    ∙ Social corruption — the elites oppressed the poor and weak
    ∙ They told Salih ﷺ: “You are only of those bewitched” (Quran 26:153)
    Provisions Given:
    ∙ Fertile lands, gardens, springs, and date palms (Quran 26:147–148)
    ∙ Given 3 days of warning after killing the camel — an extraordinarily merciful final notice (Quran 11:65)
    ∙ The she-camel itself was a living miracle walking among them for years
    The Wrath:
    ∙ A single mighty Sayhah (thunderous blast/scream) struck them
    ∙ They were destroyed instantly — found dead in their homes (Quran 51:44–45)
    ∙ Their grand rock-hewn palaces became their tombs
    ∙ The Quran repeatedly uses them as a cautionary example visible to travelers (Quran 89:9)
  4. 🔥 The People of Lut — The Inverted Cities
    Who They Were: The inhabitants of Sodom and surrounding cities (Quran refers to them as Al-Mu’tafikaat).
    Their Disobediences:
    ∙ Normalized and celebrated sexual immorality — specifically, men pursuing men with lust (Quran 7:80–81)
    ∙ They made this an open, public, prideful practice — unprecedented in human history (Quran 29:28)
    ∙ When Lut ﷺ pleaded with them, they threatened to expel him and demanded he bring Allah’s punishment if he was truthful (Quran 29:29)
    ∙ They harassed and assaulted travelers and guests
    ∙ Robbery and highway criminality was normalized
    ∙ They held public gatherings for immoral acts — no shame, no boundaries
    ∙ They tried to pressure Lut’s ﷺ guests (the angels in human form) with mob assault
    Provisions Given:
    ∙ Lut ﷺ warned them repeatedly over many years
    ∙ They had witnessed the fate of earlier nations — yet ignored all lessons
    ∙ The angels gave Lut ﷺ time to gather believers and leave — not a sudden strike
    The Wrath:
    ∙ The cities were physically lifted into the sky and then inverted — turned upside down (Quran 11:82)
    ∙ A rain of inscribed stones (Hijaarah min Sijjeel) rained down on them — each stone marked for a specific person
    ∙ Complete annihilation — even Lut’s own wife perished as she looked back (Quran 15:74)
    ∙ The site remains a warning — Quran says it is “on a road that still exists” (Quran 15:76)
  5. 🌪️ The People of Madyan — The Canopy of Punishment
    Who They Were: A trading civilization. Recipients of Prophet Shu’ayb ﷺ (sometimes identified with Midian in biblical tradition).
    Their Disobediences:
    ∙ Systematic economic fraud — cheating in weights and measures (Quran 11:84–85)
    ∙ Highway robbery and intimidation of honest traders
    ∙ Spreading corruption in the land after it had been reformed
    ∙ Mocked Shu’ayb ﷺ — “We don’t understand much of what you say” (Quran 11:91)
    ∙ Threatened him: “Were it not for your family/tribe, we would have stoned you” (Quran 11:91)
    ∙ Their leaders told followers that following Shu’ayb ﷺ would lead to loss and ruin
    ∙ They tried to lure believers back into corruption
    Provisions Given:
    ∙ Shu’ayb ﷺ reminded them of how Allah multiplied them after scarcity
    ∙ Economic prosperity was abundant — yet they weaponized commerce against the weak
    ∙ Long years of preaching and multiple warnings
    The Wrath:
    ∙ Sent a scorching heat wave first that made the air unbearable
    ∙ Then a dark cloud appeared — they gathered under it thinking it would bring rain and cool relief
    ∙ The cloud unleashed a thunderous roar and scorching fire upon them (Quran 26:189)
    ∙ The “Punishment of the Day of Shadow” — the very relief they sought became their destruction
  6. 👑 Fir’awn (Pharaoh) & His People — The Parting Sea
    Who They Were: The Egyptian empire under Pharaoh (widely associated with Ramesses II or Merneptah in scholarly discourse).
    Their Disobediences:
    ∙ The greatest arrogance in recorded history — Fir’awn declared: “I am your highest lord” (Quran 79:24)
    ∙ Enslaved and oppressed the Bani Isra’eel for generations
    ∙ Mass murder of newborn boys out of fear of a prophecy (Quran 28:4)
    ∙ Rejected 9 clear miracles brought by Musa ﷺ one after another
    ∙ Called Musa ﷺ a sorcerer, madman, and liar
    ∙ Each time punishment was lifted after they begged for mercy, they immediately broke their promises
    ∙ His advisors (like Haman) actively helped build structures of oppression and arrogance
    ∙ Qarun (Korah) among his people hoarded wealth arrogantly and mocked the poor
    Provisions Given:
    ∙ 9 sequential miracles — each one a chance to believe (Quran 27:12)
    ∙ Years of Musa ﷺ and Harun ﷺ pleading at the court
    ∙ Plagues of locusts, lice, frogs, blood, drought — each lifted when they promised to change
    ∙ The very night they were drowned, Fir’awn reportedly believed — but it was too late (Quran 10:90–91)
    The Wrath:
    ∙ The sea parted for Musa ﷺ and the believers — then crashed upon Fir’awn and his entire army
    ∙ Every soldier perished — the most powerful military of the age destroyed in moments
    ∙ Allah preserved Fir’awn’s body as a sign for future generations (Quran 10:92) — a unique punishment of eternal humiliation
    ∙ Qarun was swallowed by the earth along with his treasures (Quran 28:81)
  7. 📜 Bani Isra’eel (Certain Generations) — Repeated Chastisements
    A Recurring Pattern of Covenant-Breaking:
    ∙ Demanded to see Allah openly — struck by lightning (Quran 2:55)
    ∙ Worshipped the golden calf while Musa ﷺ was on the mountain (Quran 2:51)
    ∙ Refused to enter the Holy Land out of cowardice — condemned to wander for 40 years (Quran 5:26)
    ∙ Violated the Sabbath repeatedly — transformed into apes (Quran 2:65)
    ∙ Killed the prophets sent to them (Quran 2:61)
    ∙ Quran 17:4–6 records that they were warned of two great corruptions — and each time, an enemy nation was sent to devastate them
  8. 🕌 The People of the Garden (Ashaab al-Jannah)
    A brief but powerful Quranic story (Surah Al-Qalam 68:17–33):
    ∙ Wealthy inheritors of a blessed garden who swore to harvest it without giving any share to the poor
    ∙ They planned secretly and excluded the poor deliberately
    ∙ When they arrived — the garden was burned to ashes overnight
    ∙ They initially blamed each other, then realized it was divine punishment
    ∙ Used as a parable for those who receive blessings and turn ungrateful and miserly

🔑 Common Patterns Across All These Nations Pattern Details Extended Warning Period Never less than years — often generations Abundant Provisions Wealth, power, fertility given — then withheld as warning Miracles Shown Clear supernatural signs given before punishment A Prophet Sent Not a single nation was destroyed without a messenger (Quran 17:15) Arrogance as the Core Sin Pride, rejection of accountability, mockery of the righteous Oppression of the Weak Tyranny over the poor, enslaved, and marginalized The Point of No Return Once crossed, even repentance at the moment of punishment was rejected Total or Near-Total Destruction Rarely partial — the Sunnah of Allah is thorough

📖 The Quranic Principle — Sunnah of Allah
Allah states clearly:
“And never will you find in the way of Allah any change, and never will you find in the way of Allah any alteration.” — Quran 35:43
“And your Lord would not have destroyed the cities unjustly while their people were reformers.” — Quran 11:117
“So each We seized for his sin; and among them were those upon whom We sent a storm of stones, and among them were those seized by the blast [from the sky], and among them were those whom We caused the earth to swallow, and among them were those whom We drowned. And Allah would not have wronged them, but it was they who were wronging themselves.” — Quran 29:40

The overarching lesson is that divine patience is vast — but not infinite. Prosperity, time, and messengers are all mercies. When all three are persistently rejected with arrogance, the Sunnah of Allah activates — not out of cruelty, but as the ultimate justice for the oppressed and the ultimate consequence for the oppressors.

URDU TRANSLATION

اُن اقوام کا احوال جن پر عذابِ الٰہی نازل ہوا
قرآنی بیانات اور اسلامی تاریخی روایت سے ماخوذ

وہ اقوام جنہوں نے حدیں پار کیں — تاریخ میں غضبِ الٰہی

🌊 قومِ نوح — طوفانِ عظیم
صبر کا دور: حضرت نوح ﷺ نے ۹۵۰ سال تک تبلیغ فرمائی (القرآن ۲۹:۱۴)، اپنی قوم کو دن رات، خلوت اور جلوت میں پکارتے رہے۔
ان کی نافرمانیاں:
∙ توحید کا مکمل انکار؛ بتوں کی پوجا — وَدّ، سُواع، یَغوث، یَعوق اور نَسر (القرآن ۷۱:۲۳)
∙ امراء اور طاقتور لوگوں نے ان غریب مومنوں کا مذاق اڑایا جو حضرت نوح ﷺ پر ایمان لائے
∙ سچ سننے سے بچنے کے لیے کانوں میں انگلیاں ٹھونس لیتے اور کپڑوں میں منہ لپیٹ لیتے (القرآن ۷۱:۷)
∙ اپنے بچوں کو وصیت کرتے: “اپنے معبودوں کو ہرگز نہ چھوڑنا” — نسل در نسل شرک منتقل کیا
∙ حضرت نوح ﷺ کو دیوانہ کہا اور پتھراؤ کی دھمکی دی (القرآن ۵۴:۹)
∙ شدید تکبر — ان کے سرداروں نے پیغام کے خلاف باقاعدہ مزاحمتی مہمیں منظم کیں
دی گئی مہلتیں اور مواقع:
∙ قریباً ایک ہزار سال کی صابرانہ تبلیغ
∙ حضرت نوح ﷺ نے صراحتاً وعدہ کیا کہ اگر وہ توبہ کریں تو انہیں بارش، دولت، اولاد اور باغات ملیں گے (القرآن ۷۱:۱۰-۱۲)
∙ صرف مٹھی بھر لوگ ایمان لائے — روایات کے مطابق ۸۰ سے بھی کم
عذاب:
∙ آسمان سے موسلادھار بارش برسی اور زمین سے بیک وقت پانی پھوٹ پڑا (القرآن ۵۴:۱۱-۱۲)
∙ پوری قوم غرق ہو گئی — حضرت نوح ﷺ کا وہ بیٹا بھی جس نے متکبرانہ انداز میں کہا تھا کہ وہ پہاڑ پر پناہ لے گا (القرآن ۱۱:۴۲-۴۳)
∙ طوفان مکمل فنا تھا — ایک بھی کافر نہ بچا

💨 قومِ عاد — ہوا کا عذاب
یہ کون تھے: ایک طاقتور عرب تمدن، ممکنہ طور پر جنوبی عرب (موجودہ یمن/عمان) میں۔ حضرت ہود ﷺ کی قوم۔
ان کی نافرمانیاں:
∙ اپنی جسمانی طاقت پر انتہائی تکبر — “ہم سے زیادہ طاقتور کون ہے؟” (القرآن ۴۱:۱۵)
∙ ہر اونچی جگہ پر بلند یادگاریں اور محلات تعمیر کیے — ضرورت کی وجہ سے نہیں، بلکہ فخر اور نمود کے لیے (القرآن ۲۶:۱۲۸-۱۲۹)
∙ ظالم و جابر حکمران تھے جو طاقت کے بل پر راج کرتے
∙ آخرت اور قیامت کا مکمل انکار
∙ حضرت ہود ﷺ کو جھٹلایا، انہیں جھوٹا اور گمراہ کہا
∙ اپنی طاقت، حسن اور دنیاوی برتری پر فخرِ فاسد
دی گئی نعمتیں:
∙ انہیں غیر معمولی قد، طاقت اور نعمتیں عطا کی گئی تھیں (القرآن ۷:۶۹)
∙ حضرت ہود ﷺ نے انہیں یاد دلایا کہ قومِ نوح کے بعد اللہ نے انہیں کیسے نوازا — پھر بھی وہ تکبر میں ڈوبے رہے
∙ پہلے خشک سالی بطورِ تنبیہ بھیجی گئی — لیکن انہوں نے توبہ نہ کی
عذاب:
∙ سات راتوں اور آٹھ دنوں تک مسلسل ایک طوفانی، جمادینے والی ہوا چلائی گئی (القرآن ۶۹:۶-۷)
∙ ہوا نے انہیں اکھڑے ہوئے کھجور کے تنوں کی طرح اڑا دیا — ان کے جسیم قد نے تباہی کو اور بھی عبرتناک بنا دیا
∙ مکمل صفایا — صرف حضرت ہود ﷺ اور مومنین محفوظ رہے
∙ القرآن ۴۶:۲۵ میں ہے کہ ہوا نے “اپنے رب کے حکم سے ہر چیز کو تباہ کر دیا”

⚡ قومِ ثمود — کڑک کا عذاب
یہ کون تھے: عاد کے بعد کی ایک قوم، الحِجر کے علاقے میں (شمال مغربی عرب)۔ حضرت صالح ﷺ کی قوم۔
ان کی نافرمانیاں:
∙ پہاڑوں کو تراش کر شاندار گھر بنائے — پھر بھی ناشکرے رہے (القرآن ۷:۷۴)
∙ حضرت صالح ﷺ سے معجزاتی نشانی مانگی، پھر اونٹنی بطورِ نشانِ الٰہی ملی
∙ اونٹنی کی کونچیں کاٹیں اور اسے قتل کیا — تنبیہ کے باوجود حدِ انتہا کی سرکشی (القرآن ۹۱:۱۳-۱۴)
∙ نو سرداروں نے حضرت صالح ﷺ اور ان کے خاندان کو قتل کرنے کی سازش بنائی (القرآن ۲۷:۴۸-۴۹)
∙ سماجی بگاڑ — اشرافیہ نے غریبوں اور کمزوروں پر ظلم کیا
∙ حضرت صالح ﷺ سے کہا: “تم تو صرف جادو زدہ لوگوں میں سے ہو” (القرآن ۲۶:۱۵۳)
دی گئی نعمتیں:
∙ زرخیز زمینیں، باغات، چشمے اور کھجور کے درخت (القرآن ۲۶:۱۴۷-۱۴۸)
∙ اونٹنی کو قتل کرنے کے بعد ۳ دن کی مہلت دی گئی — انتہائی رحیمانہ آخری موقع (القرآن ۱۱:۶۵)
∙ خود اونٹنی برسوں تک ان میں چلتی پھرتی ایک زندہ معجزہ تھی
عذاب:
∙ ایک زوردار صیحہ (کڑکتی آواز/چیخ) نے انہیں آن لیا
∙ فوری تباہی — اپنے گھروں میں مرے پڑے ملے (القرآن ۵۱:۴۴-۴۵)
∙ ان کے پہاڑوں میں تراشے شاندار محلات ان کی قبریں بن گئے
∙ قرآن نے انہیں بار بار بطورِ عبرت ذکر کیا جو مسافروں کو نظر آتے ہیں (القرآن ۸۹:۹)

🔥 قومِ لوط — الٹے ہوئے شہر
یہ کون تھے: سدوم اور اردگرد کے شہروں کے باشندے (قرآن انہیں المُؤتَفِکَات کہتا ہے)۔
ان کی نافرمانیاں:
∙ جنسی بے حیائی کو معمول اور جشن بنا لیا — خصوصاً مردوں کا مردوں سے شہوت کے ساتھ میل (القرآن ۷:۸۰-۸۱)
∙ اسے کھلم کھلا، عوامی اور فخریہ طرز عمل بنا لیا — انسانی تاریخ میں بے مثال (القرآن ۲۹:۲۸)
∙ جب حضرت لوط ﷺ نے التجا کی تو انہوں نے انہیں نکال دینے کی دھمکی دی اور کہا: اگر سچے ہو تو اللہ کا عذاب لاؤ (القرآن ۲۹:۲۹)
∙ مسافروں اور مہمانوں کو اذیت دیتے اور ان پر حملہ کرتے
∙ ڈاکہ زنی اور شاہراہی جرائم معمول بن چکے تھے
∙ بے حیائی کے لیے عوامی اجتماعات — نہ شرم، نہ حد
∙ حضرت لوط ﷺ کے مہمانوں (انسانی شکل میں فرشتوں) پر ہجوم کی صورت میں حملہ کرنے کی کوشش کی
دی گئی مہلتیں:
∙ حضرت لوط ﷺ نے برسوں بار بار تنبیہ کی
∙ پچھلی اقوام کے انجام دیکھ چکے تھے — پھر بھی سبق نہ سیکھا
∙ فرشتوں نے حضرت لوط ﷺ کو مومنوں کو لے کر نکلنے کا وقت دیا — یکدم ضرب نہیں لگائی
عذاب:
∙ شہروں کو آسمان تک اٹھا کر اوندھا کر دیا گیا (القرآن ۱۱:۸۲)
∙ کنکر کی پتھروں کی بارش ہوئی (حِجَارَۃٌ مِّن سِجِّیل) — ہر پتھر ایک مخصوص شخص کے لیے نشان زد
∙ مکمل صفایا — حضرت لوط ﷺ کی اپنی بیوی بھی ہلاک ہوئی جس نے پیچھے مڑ کر دیکھا (القرآن ۱۵:۷۴)
∙ وہ مقام آج بھی نشانِ عبرت — قرآن کہتا ہے یہ “اس راستے پر ہے جو آج بھی موجود ہے” (القرآن ۱۵:۷۶)

🌪️ قومِ مدین — سائے کا عذاب
یہ کون تھے: ایک تجارتی قوم۔ حضرت شعیب ﷺ کی قوم (بعض اوقات بائبل کی مدیَن روایت سے منسلک)۔
ان کی نافرمانیاں:
∙ منظم معاشی دھوکہ دہی — ناپ تول میں کمی (القرآن ۱۱:۸۴-۸۵)
∙ شاہراہوں پر ڈاکہ زنی اور ایماندار تاجروں کو ڈرانا دھمکانا
∙ اصلاح کے بعد دوبارہ زمین میں فساد پھیلانا
∙ حضرت شعیب ﷺ کا مذاق اڑایا — “ہم آپ کی بات زیادہ نہیں سمجھتے” (القرآن ۱۱:۹۱)
∙ دھمکی دی: “اگر آپ کا قبیلہ نہ ہوتا تو ہم آپ کو پتھر مار دیتے” (القرآن ۱۱:۹۱)
∙ سرداروں نے پیروکاروں کو کہا کہ حضرت شعیب ﷺ کی پیروی خسارے کا سبب بنے گی
∙ مومنوں کو دوبارہ فساد میں کھینچنے کی کوشش کی
دی گئی نعمتیں:
∙ حضرت شعیب ﷺ نے یاد دلایا کہ قلت کے بعد اللہ نے انہیں کیسے بڑھایا
∙ معاشی خوشحالی بھرپور تھی — لیکن انہوں نے تجارت کو کمزوروں کے خلاف ہتھیار بنا لیا
∙ برسوں کی تبلیغ اور متعدد تنبیہات
عذاب:
∙ پہلے ایک جھلسا دینے والی گرمی بھیجی گئی جس نے ہوا کو ناقابلِ برداشت بنا دیا
∙ پھر ایک کالا بادل نمودار ہوا — وہ سمجھے بارش اور ٹھنڈک لائے گا، اس کے نیچے جمع ہو گئے
∙ بادل نے ان پر گرجتی آواز اور جھلساتی آگ برسائی (القرآن ۲۶:۱۸۹)
∙ “یومِ ظُلَّہ کا عذاب” — جس چیز میں انہوں نے راحت ڈھونڈی، وہی ان کی تباہی بن گئی

👑 فرعون اور اس کی قوم — پھٹتا سمندر
یہ کون تھے: فرعون کے تحت مصری سلطنت (علمی حلقوں میں رعمسیس دوم یا مرنپتاح سے منسوب)۔
ان کی نافرمانیاں:
∙ تاریخ کا سب سے بڑا تکبر — فرعون نے اعلان کیا: “میں تمہارا سب سے بڑا رب ہوں” (القرآن ۷۹:۲۴)
∙ بنی اسرائیل کو نسلوں تک غلام بنائے رکھا اور ستاتے رہے
∙ ایک پیشین گوئی کے خوف سے نومولود لڑکوں کا قتلِ عام (القرآن ۲۸:۴)
∙ حضرت موسیٰ ﷺ کے لائے ۹ واضح معجزات یکے بعد دیگرے رد کیے
∙ حضرت موسیٰ ﷺ کو جادوگر، پاگل اور جھوٹا کہا
∙ جب بھی عذاب اٹھایا گیا تو معافی مانگ کر فوری وعدہ توڑ دیا
∙ اس کے وزراء (جیسے ہامان) نے ظلم اور تکبر کے ڈھانچے تعمیر کرنے میں مدد کی
∙ اس کی قوم میں قارون نے دولت ذخیرہ کی اور غریبوں کا مذاق اڑایا
دی گئی مہلتیں:
∙ ۹ یکے بعد دیگرے معجزات — ہر ایک ایمان لانے کا موقع (القرآن ۲۷:۱۲)
∙ برسوں حضرت موسیٰ ﷺ اور حضرت ہارون ﷺ کا دربار میں التجا کرنا
∙ ٹڈی دل، جوئیں، مینڈک، خون، خشک سالی کی آفات — ہر بار وعدہ کرنے پر اٹھائی گئیں
∙ جس رات وہ غرق ہوئے، فرعون نے اس وقت ایمان لانے کا اظہار کیا — مگر بہت دیر ہو چکی تھی (القرآن ۱۰:۹۰-۹۱)
عذاب:
∙ حضرت موسیٰ ﷺ اور مومنین کے لیے سمندر پھٹا — پھر فرعون اور اس کی پوری فوج پر بند ہو گیا
∙ ہر سپاہی ہلاک — اس دور کی سب سے طاقتور فوج لمحوں میں تباہ
∙ اللہ نے فرعون کے جسم کو آنے والی نسلوں کے لیے نشانِ عبرت کے طور پر محفوظ کیا (القرآن ۱۰:۹۲) — ابدی ذلت کی منفرد سزا
∙ قارون کو اس کے خزانوں سمیت زمین نے نگل لیا (القرآن ۲۸:۸۱)

📜 بنی اسرائیل (بعض نسلیں) — بار بار کی سزائیں
عہد شکنی کا تکراری نمونہ:
∙ اللہ کو کھلم کھلا دیکھنے کا مطالبہ کیا — بجلی سے مارے گئے (القرآن ۲:۵۵)
∙ حضرت موسیٰ ﷺ کے پہاڑ پر جانے کے دوران سونے کے بچھڑے کی پوجا کی (القرآن ۲:۵۱)
∙ بزدلی کے سبب ارضِ مقدس میں داخل ہونے سے انکار — ۴۰ سال سرگرداں رہنے کی سزا (القرآن ۵:۲۶)
∙ بار بار سبت کی خلاف ورزی — بندروں میں مسخ کیے گئے (القرآن ۲:۶۵)
∙ اپنے پاس بھیجے گئے انبیاء کو قتل کیا (القرآن ۲:۶۱)
∙ القرآن ۱۷:۴-۶ میں ہے کہ دو بڑے فسادوں کی تنبیہ کی گئی — اور ہر بار ایک دشمن قوم کو ان پر مسلط کیا گیا

🕌 باغ والے (اصحابُ الجنَّۃ)
قرآن کی مختصر مگر بہت اثرانگیز کہانی (سورۃ القلم ۶۸:۱۷-۳۳):
∙ ایک بابرکت باغ کے مالدار وارثوں نے قسم کھائی کہ غریبوں کا حصہ دیے بغیر فصل کاٹیں گے
∙ انہوں نے چھپ کر منصوبہ بنایا اور غریبوں کو جان بوجھ کر خارج کیا
∙ جب وہ پہنچے — باغ رات بھر میں راکھ بن چکا تھا
∙ پہلے ایک دوسرے کو ملامت کی، پھر جانا کہ یہ عذابِ الٰہی تھا
∙ ان لوگوں کی تمثیل کے طور پر بیان ہوا جو نعمت پا کر ناشکرے اور بخیل بن جاتے ہیں

🔑 ان تمام اقوام میں مشترک نمونے نمونہ تفصیل طویل مہلت کبھی ایک سال سے کم نہیں — اکثر نسلوں تک بھرپور نعمتیں دولت، طاقت، زرخیزی عطا ہوئی — پھر تنبیہاً روکی گئی معجزات دکھائے گئے عذاب سے پہلے واضح ماورائی نشانیاں نبی بھیجا گیا ایک بھی قوم بغیر رسول کے ہلاک نہیں کی گئی (القرآن ۱۷:۱۵) تکبر بنیادی گناہ غرور، احتساب سے انکار، صالحین کا مذاق کمزوروں پر ظلم غریبوں، غلاموں اور مظلوموں پر جبر واپسی کا نقطہ ایک بار عبور ہونے کے بعد عذاب کے لمحے کی توبہ بھی رد مکمل یا قریباً مکمل تباہی شاذ و نادر جزوی — اللہ کی سنت مکمل ہے

📖 قرآنی اصول — سنتُ اللہ
اللہ تعالیٰ نے واضح فرمایا:
“اور تم اللہ کے طریقے میں کوئی تبدیلی نہ پاؤ گے، اور اللہ کے طریقے میں کوئی بدلاؤ نہ پاؤ گے۔” — القرآن ۳۵:۴۳
“اور آپ کا رب ہرگز بستیوں کو ظلم کے ساتھ نہیں مٹاتا جب تک ان کے باشندے اصلاح کرنے والے ہوں۔” — القرآن ۱۱:۱۱۷
“پس ہم نے ہر ایک کو اس کے گناہ کے سبب پکڑا — بعض پر ہم نے کنکریلی آندھی بھیجی، بعض کو آسمانی دھماکے نے آ لیا، بعض کو ہم نے زمین میں دھنسا دیا، اور بعض کو ہم نے غرق کیا۔ اللہ نے ان پر ظلم نہیں کیا، بلکہ وہ خود اپنے اوپر ظلم کر رہے تھے۔” — القرآن ۲۹:۴۰

سب سے بڑا سبق یہ ہے کہ الٰہی صبر وسیع ہے — مگر لامحدود نہیں۔ خوشحالی، وقت اور انبیاء — یہ سب رحمتیں ہیں۔ جب تینوں کو تکبر کے ساتھ مسلسل رد کیا جائے تو اللہ کی سنت فعال ہو جاتی ہے — ظلم کی وجہ سے نہیں، بلکہ مظلوموں کے لیے انصافِ اعلیٰ اور ظالموں کے لیے انجامِ حتمی کے طور پر۔​​​​​​​​​​​​​​​​

Divine punishments mentions in books of other faiths

What a profound and thoughtful question. Yes — remarkably, similar accounts of divine punishment appear across multiple faith traditions. Here is a comparative overview:

📖 Similar Accounts Across Holy Books & Faith Traditions

✡️ Judaism & Christianity (Torah / Bible)
Many accounts overlap with the Quran, but with different details:
🌊 The Great Flood (Noah)
∙ Identical core narrative in Genesis 6–9
∙ Humanity had become corrupt, violent, and godless
∙ God waited with patience before sending the flood
∙ Noah warned his generation — they mocked him
∙ Only Noah’s family and animals were saved
∙ Talmudic tradition says Noah preached for 120 years and was ignored
🔥 Sodom & Gomorrah (People of Lot)
∙ Genesis 18–19 — nearly identical to Quranic account
∙ Angels visited Lot, the city mob tried to assault them
∙ Cities destroyed by fire and brimstone from the sky
∙ Lot’s wife turned into a pillar of salt for looking back
∙ Abraham had pleaded with God to spare the cities if even 10 righteous people could be found — they could not
⚡ Pharaoh & The Exodus
∙ Exodus 7–14 describes the same 10 plagues in detail
∙ Each plague was lifted when Pharaoh promised to free the Israelites — then he broke his word every time
∙ The Red Sea parting and Pharaoh’s army drowning
∙ The Torah emphasizes God “hardening Pharaoh’s heart” as part of the unfolding justice
🌪️ Sodom-like cities — Admah & Zeboiim
∙ Mentioned in Deuteronomy 29:23 and Hosea 11:8
∙ Destroyed alongside Sodom as cities of complete moral collapse
📜 The Israelites in the Wilderness
∙ Numbers 16 — Korah’s rebellion: the earth swallowed him and his followers alive
∙ Numbers 21 — serpents sent against the ungrateful Israelites
∙ Repeatedly punished for idol worship, ingratitude, and rebellion
🏙️ Babylon
∙ Isaiah and Jeremiah both prophesied Babylon’s total destruction due to arrogance and oppression
∙ Babylon fell — and its ruins stand as a warning to this day

🕉️ Hinduism (Puranas & Epics)
Hindu scripture contains many accounts of divine wrath descending on arrogant civilizations:
🌊 The Great Flood — Manu
∙ In the Shatapatha Brahmana and Matsya Purana
∙ Manu (the righteous man) was warned by a divine fish (an avatar of Vishnu)
∙ He built a great boat and was saved
∙ The rest of humanity perished in the flood
∙ Strikingly parallel to Noah/Nuh in structure
👑 King Vena — Arrogance Punished
∙ In the Vishnu Purana — King Vena declared himself god and forbade worship of anyone but himself
∙ He was struck down by the sages using sacred grass as weapons
∙ His arrogance was cited as the direct cause of his destruction
🔥 Destruction of Tripura (Three Cities)
∙ In the Shiva Purana — three great cities of the Asuras (Tripura) became corrupt and arrogant
∙ Despite their power and prosperity, they turned away from righteousness
∙ Lord Shiva destroyed all three cities in a single moment
∙ The parallel: mighty civilizations, divine patience, then total destruction
⚡ Hiranyakashipu
∙ In the Bhagavata Purana — a king who declared himself the supreme god
∙ Persecuted his own son Prahlada for worshipping Vishnu
∙ Given great power and long life — yet used it for oppression and arrogance
∙ Eventually destroyed by Narasimha (half-man, half-lion avatar of Vishnu)
∙ The lesson: no amount of power protects the arrogant oppressor forever

☸️ Buddhism (Jataka Tales & Suttas)
Buddhism approaches this differently — less “divine wrath” and more natural cosmic consequences (karma):
🌊 Floods & Destruction as Karmic Result
∙ Jataka tales describe civilizations that collapsed due to collective moral failure
∙ Greed, cruelty, and injustice are described as bringing natural catastrophes
∙ Not sent by a God, but arising from the moral law of the universe itself
👑 King Kalinga & Corrupt Rulers
∙ Multiple Jataka stories show proud, oppressive kings losing everything
∙ The pattern: prosperity → arrogance → fall
∙ The lesson is the same — power does not exempt anyone from cosmic justice
🏙️ The Sunken City of Kusavati
∙ A great city destroyed and swallowed when its people became consumed by pleasure and forgot righteousness

🔥 Zoroastrianism (Avesta)
The Flood Narrative — Yima’s Vara
∙ In the Vendidad, the righteous king Yima was warned of a coming catastrophe
∙ He was instructed to build a great enclosure (Vara) to save the best of humanity, animals, and plants
∙ The rest of the world was destroyed by harsh winters and floods
∙ Very similar in structure to Noah/Manu narratives
⚡ Zahhak the Tyrant
∙ A king who made a pact with the evil force Angra Mainyu (the devil)
∙ He oppressed humanity for a thousand years
∙ Eventually overthrown and imprisoned — his reign of terror ended by divine justice

📿 Common Patterns Across ALL Faiths Pattern Judaism Christianity Islam Hinduism Buddhism Zoroastrianism Great Flood ✅ Noah ✅ Noah ✅ Nuh ✅ Manu ✅ Referenced ✅ Yima Arrogant ruler destroyed ✅ Pharaoh ✅ Pharaoh ✅ Fir’awn ✅ Hiranyakashipu ✅ Kalinga ✅ Zahhak Cities destroyed for immorality ✅ Sodom ✅ Sodom ✅ Qom Lut Referenced Referenced Referenced Earth swallowing the wicked ✅ Korah ✅ Korah ✅ Qarun ✅ Multiple ✅ Referenced Referenced Warning given before destruction ✅ ✅ ✅ ✅ ✅ ✅ A righteous remnant saved ✅ ✅ ✅ ✅ ✅ ✅

🌍 What Does This Convergence Tell Us?
The fact that flood narratives, arrogant ruler narratives, and destroyed city narratives appear across cultures that had little or no contact with each other is deeply significant. Scholars view this in different ways:
∙ Faith perspective: These are echoes of real events, preserved in the memory of different peoples — all pointing to the same divine truths
∙ Academic perspective: These shared narratives suggest either common historical events, shared early human memory, or universal moral archetypes
∙ Philosophical perspective: Every civilization independently arrived at the conclusion that arrogance, injustice, and moral collapse carry consequences — whether called divine wrath, karma, or cosmic law

URDU TRANSLATION

دیگر مذاہب کی مقدس کتابوں میں اسی طرح کے واقعات

📖 مختلف مذاہب کی مقدس کتابوں اور روایات میں ملتے جلتے واقعات

✡️ یہودیت اور عیسائیت (توراۃ / بائبل)
بہت سے واقعات قرآن سے ملتے جلتے ہیں، البتہ تفصیلات میں کچھ فرق ہے:
🌊 طوفانِ عظیم (نوح)
∙ پیدائش ۶-۹ میں بالکل وہی بنیادی روایت
∙ انسانیت بگڑ چکی تھی، تشدد اور بے دینی عام تھی
∙ اللہ نے صبر کے ساتھ انتظار کیا، پھر طوفان بھیجا
∙ حضرت نوح ؑ نے اپنی قوم کو خبردار کیا — انہوں نے مذاق اڑایا
∙ صرف نوح ؑ کا خاندان اور جانور بچائے گئے
∙ تلمودی روایت کے مطابق حضرت نوح ؑ نے ۱۲۰ سال تبلیغ کی اور انہیں نظرانداز کیا گیا
🔥 سدوم اور عمورہ (قومِ لوط)
∙ پیدائش ۱۸-۱۹ — قرآنی بیان سے تقریباً ایک جیسا
∙ فرشتے حضرت لوط ؑ کے پاس آئے، شہر کے ہجوم نے حملہ کرنے کی کوشش کی
∙ شہر آسمان سے آگ اور گندھک کی بارش سے تباہ ہوئے
∙ لوط ؑ کی بیوی پیچھے مڑ کر دیکھنے پر نمک کا ستون بن گئی
∙ حضرت ابراہیم ؑ نے اللہ سے التجا کی کہ اگر دس نیک لوگ بھی مل جائیں تو شہر بچا لیں — مگر دس بھی نہ ملے
⚡ فرعون اور خروج
∙ خروج ۷-۱۴ میں وہی دس آفات تفصیل سے بیان ہیں
∙ ہر آفت اٹھائی گئی جب فرعون نے بنی اسرائیل کو آزاد کرنے کا وعدہ کیا — پھر ہر بار وعدہ توڑا
∙ دریائے قلزم کا پھٹنا اور فرعون کی فوج کا غرق ہونا
∙ توراۃ میں زور دیا گیا ہے کہ اللہ نے فرعون کے دل کو “سخت کیا” — یہ انصاف کے عمل کا حصہ تھا
🌪️ سدوم جیسے شہر — اَدمہ اور صبوئیم
∙ استثناء ۲۹:۲۳ اور ہوسیع ۱۱:۸ میں مذکور
∙ سدوم کے ساتھ مکمل اخلاقی تباہی کے شہروں کے طور پر تباہ ہوئے
📜 بیابان میں بنی اسرائیل
∙ گنتی ۱۶ — قارح کی بغاوت: زمین نے اسے اور اس کے ساتھیوں کو زندہ نگل لیا
∙ گنتی ۲۱ — ناشکری پر بنی اسرائیل کے خلاف سانپ بھیجے گئے
∙ بت پرستی، ناشکری اور سرکشی پر بار بار سزائیں ملیں
🏙️ بابل
∙ یسعیاہ اور یرمیاہ دونوں نے تکبر اور ظلم کی وجہ سے بابل کی مکمل تباہی کی پیشین گوئی کی
∙ بابل گرا — اور اس کے کھنڈرات آج بھی عبرت کا نشان ہیں

🕉️ ہندو مت (پران اور مہاکاوی)
ہندو صحائف میں متکبر تہذیبوں پر عذاب کے بہت سے واقعات موجود ہیں:
🌊 طوفانِ عظیم — منو
∙ شتپتھ برہمن اور متسیہ پران میں
∙ نیک بادشاہ منو کو ایک الٰہی مچھلی (وشنو کا اوتار) نے آنے والی تباہی سے خبردار کیا
∙ اس نے ایک بڑی کشتی بنائی اور بچا لیا گیا
∙ باقی انسانیت طوفان میں ہلاک ہو گئی
∙ ساخت میں نوح/نُوح کے واقعے سے حیران کن مشابہت
👑 بادشاہ وینا — تکبر کی سزا
∙ وشنو پران میں — بادشاہ وینا نے خود کو خدا قرار دیا اور اپنے سوا کسی کی عبادت پر پابندی لگا دی
∙ سادھوؤں نے مقدس گھاس سے اسے مار گرایا
∙ اس کا تکبر براہِ راست اس کی تباہی کا سبب بتایا گیا
🔥 تری پورہ کی تباہی (تین شہر)
∙ شیو پران میں — اَسُروں کے تین عظیم شہر (تری پورہ) بگڑ گئے اور متکبر ہو گئے
∙ طاقت اور خوشحالی کے باوجود راستبازی سے منہ پھیر لیا
∙ بھگوان شیو نے ایک ہی لمحے میں تینوں شہر تباہ کر دیے
∙ مشابہت: طاقتور تہذیبیں، الٰہی صبر، پھر مکمل تباہی
⚡ ہِرنیہ کشیپو
∙ بھاگوت پران میں — ایک بادشاہ جس نے خود کو سب سے بڑا خدا قرار دیا
∙ اپنے بیٹے پرہلاد کو وشنو کی عبادت پر ستایا
∙ بڑی طاقت اور لمبی عمر ملی — لیکن ظلم اور تکبر میں استعمال کی
∙ آخرکار نرسمہا (وشنو کے آدھے انسان آدھے شیر اوتار) نے تباہ کیا
∙ سبق: کوئی بھی طاقت متکبر ظالم کو ہمیشہ کے لیے نہیں بچا سکتی

☸️ بدھ مت (جاتک کہانیاں اور سُتّے)
بدھ مت کا انداز مختلف ہے — “الٰہی عذاب” کم، کرما کے قدرتی نتائج زیادہ:
🌊 سیلاب اور تباہی بطور کرمی نتیجہ
∙ جاتک کہانیوں میں ایسی تہذیبیں بیان ہیں جو اجتماعی اخلاقی ناکامی سے تباہ ہوئیں
∙ لالچ، ظلم اور ناانصافی کو قدرتی آفات کا سبب بتایا گیا ہے
∙ کسی خدا کی طرف سے نہیں، بلکہ کائنات کے اخلاقی قانون سے پیدا ہوتی ہیں
👑 بادشاہ کلنگ اور ظالم حکمران
∙ متعدد جاتک کہانیوں میں متکبر اور ظالم بادشاہ سب کچھ گنواتے دکھائے گئے ہیں
∙ نمونہ وہی ہے: خوشحالی ← تکبر ← زوال
∙ سبق ایک ہی — طاقت کسی کو کائناتی انصاف سے نہیں بچاتی
🏙️ کُساوتی کا ڈوبا ہوا شہر
∙ ایک عظیم شہر تباہ ہوا جب اس کے باشندے عیش و عشرت میں ڈوب گئے اور راستبازی بھول گئے

🔥 زرتشتی مت (اوستا)
طوفان کا واقعہ — یِما کا وَرَہ
∙ وندیداد میں نیک بادشاہ یِما کو آنے والی تباہی سے خبردار کیا گیا
∙ اسے حکم ملا کہ ایک بڑا بند احاطہ (وَرَہ) بنائے تاکہ بہترین انسانوں، جانوروں اور پودوں کو بچائے
∙ باقی دنیا سخت سردی اور سیلاب سے تباہ ہو گئی
∙ ساخت میں نوح/منو کے واقعات سے بہت ملتی جلتی
⚡ ظالم ضحاک
∙ ایک بادشاہ جس نے شیطانی طاقت اَنگرا مینیو سے معاہدہ کیا
∙ ہزار سال تک انسانیت پر ظلم کرتا رہا
∙ آخرکار الٰہی انصاف کے ذریعے پکڑا گیا اور قید کیا گیا

📊 تمام مذاہب میں مشترک نمونے نمونہ یہودیت عیسائیت اسلام ہندو مت بدھ مت زرتشتی مت طوفانِ عظیم ✅ نوح ✅ نوح ✅ نُوح ✅ منو ✅ مذکور ✅ یِما متکبر حکمران کی تباہی ✅ فرعون ✅ فرعون ✅ فرعون ✅ ہرنیہ کشیپو ✅ کلنگ ✅ ضحاک بے حیائی پر شہروں کی تباہی ✅ سدوم ✅ سدوم ✅ قومِ لوط مذکور مذکور مذکور زمین کا ظالموں کو نگلنا ✅ قارح ✅ قارح ✅ قارون ✅ متعدد ✅ مذکور مذکور تباہی سے پہلے تنبیہ ✅ ✅ ✅ ✅ ✅ ✅ نیک لوگوں کا بچایا جانا ✅ ✅ ✅ ✅ ✅ ✅

🌍 یہ اتفاق ہمیں کیا بتاتا ہے؟
یہ حقیقت کہ طوفان کے واقعات، متکبر حکمرانوں کی تباہی اور برباد شہروں کے قصے ایسی ثقافتوں میں ملتے ہیں جن کا آپس میں کوئی یا بہت کم رابطہ تھا — یہ بہت گہری بات ہے۔ علماء اسے مختلف زاویوں سے دیکھتے ہیں:
∙ ایمان کا نقطہ نظر: یہ حقیقی واقعات کی بازگشت ہیں، مختلف اقوام کی یادداشت میں محفوظ — سب ایک ہی الٰہی سچائی کی طرف اشارہ کرتے ہیں
∙ علمی نقطہ نظر: یہ مشترک روایات یا تو مشترک تاریخی واقعات کی طرف اشارہ کرتی ہیں، یا ابتدائی انسانی اجتماعی یادداشت کی، یا پھر آفاقی اخلاقی نمونوں کی
∙۔

Da‘wah Etiquette – Wisdom, kindness, and respectful dialogue. 16:125-128 chapter Al NAHL


Sharing verses , examples of prophets, difficulties and guidance on this topic of interfaith dialogues for sharing divine knowledge. Tools used in digital era for this purpose.

Arabic Text:

١٢٥
ادْعُ إِلَىٰ سَبِيلِ رَبِّكَ بِالْحِكْمَةِ وَالْمَوْعِظَةِ الْحَسَنَةِ ۖ وَجَادِلْهُمْ بِالَّتِي هِيَ أَحْسَنُ ۚ إِنَّ رَبَّكَ هُوَ أَعْلَمُ بِمَنْ ضَلَّ عَنْ سَبِيلِهِ ۖ وَهُوَ أَعْلَمُ بِالْمُهْتَدِينَ
١٢٦
وَإِنْ عَاقَبْتُمْ فَعَاقِبُوا بِمِثْلِ مَا عُوقِبْتُمْ بِهِ ۖ وَلَئِن صَبَرْتُمْ لَهُوَ خَيْرٌ لِّلصَّابِرِينَ
١٢٧
وَاصْبِرْ وَمَا صَبْرُكَ إِلَّا بِاللَّهِ ۚ وَلَا تَحْزَنْ عَلَيْهِمْ وَلَا تَكُ فِي ضَيْقٍ مِّمَّا يَمْكُرُونَ
١٢٨
إِنَّ اللَّهَ مَعَ الَّذِينَ اتَّقَوا وَّالَّذِينَ هُم مُّحْسِنُونَ


English Translation (by Syed Abul Ala Maududi):

16:125
(O Prophet), call to the way of your Lord with wisdom and goodly exhortation, and reason with them in the best manner possible. Surely your Lord knows best who has strayed away from His path, and He also knows best those who are guided.

16:126
If you take retribution, then do so in proportion to the wrong done to you. But if you can bear such conduct with patience, indeed that is best for the steadfast.

16:127
And bear with patience, (O Prophet) – and your patience is only because of the help of Allah – and do not grieve over them, nor feel distressed by their evil plans.

16:128
For surely Allah is with those who fear Him and who do good deeds.


Explanation (Tafheemul Quran):

Verse 125:
This verse lays down the methodology for Islamic propagation (da‘wah).

· “With wisdom” means using sound reasoning, logical arguments, and appropriate approaches tailored to the audience’s intellectual and spiritual level.
· “Goodly exhortation” refers to preaching that appeals to the heart – reminding people of Allah’s blessings, mercy, and the consequences of their actions in a gentle, compassionate manner.
· “Reason with them in the best manner possible” means even in debate, one should be respectful, fair, and avoid hostility.
The verse ends by reminding that ultimate knowledge of who is guided or astray rests with Allah alone, so the caller’s duty is only to convey the message sincerely.

Verse 126:
This teaches the Islamic principle of measured response to oppression or harm.

· Retaliation, if taken, must be proportional and not excessive.
· However, patience and forgiveness are praised as superior qualities for those who can exercise them. This aligns with the Quranic ethic of overcoming evil with goodness when possible.

Verse 127:
A direct encouragement to the Prophet Muhammad (peace be upon him) during a period of intense opposition and persecution in Mecca.

· Patience here is not passive endurance but steadfastness in mission, empowered by trust in Allah.
· He is told not to grieve over the disbelievers’ rejection or be anxious about their plots, as Allah is in control.

Verse 128:
A comforting conclusion that Allah’s support and presence are with two groups:

  1. Those who fear Him (muttaqun) – who are conscious of Allah and avoid disobedience.
  2. Those who do good (muhsinun) – who perform righteous deeds sincerely for Allah’s pleasure.
    This assures the believers that success lies in piety and excellence in conduct, not in worldly power.

Key Themes from These Verses:

  1. Da‘wah Etiquette – Wisdom, kindness, and respectful dialogue.
  2. Moral Restraint – Even in retaliation, justice without excess.
  3. Steadfastness – Patience rooted in divine reliance.
  4. Divine Assurance – Allah’s support is guaranteed for the righteous.

These verses are often cited in discussions about Islamic propagation, interfaith dialogue, and ethical conduct in the face of opposition.

Compiled by grok

Surah An-Nahl (Chapter 16) Verses 125-128 from Tafheem-ul-Quran by Maulana Maududi

Verse 125

Arabic Text:
ادْعُ إِلَىٰ سَبِيلِ رَبِّكَ بِالْحِكْمَةِ وَالْمَوْعِظَةِ الْحَسَنَةِ ۖ وَجَادِلْهُم بِالَّتِي هِيَ أَحْسَنُ ۚ إِنَّ رَبَّكَ هُوَ أَعْلَمُ بِمَن ضَلَّ عَن سَبِيلِهِ ۖ وَهُوَ أَعْلَمُ بِالْمُهْتَدِينَ

English Translation:
(O Prophet), call to the way of your Lord with wisdom and goodly exhortation, and reason with them in the best manner possible. Surely your Lord knows best who has strayed away from His path, and He also knows well those who are guided to the Right Way. 10

Explanation (Tafseer):
This instruction is very important for those who are engaged in the propagation of Islam. They should always keep in view two things, wisdom and excellent admonition. Wisdom implies that one should use discretion in the work of propagation and should not do this blindly like foolish people. Wisdom demands that one should keep in view the intelligence, capability and circumstances of the addressees and convey the message in accordance with the requirements of the occasion. Moreover, one should refrain from applying one and the same method to each and every person or group but should first diagnose the real disease of the addressee and then cure it by appealing to his mind and intellect.

Excellent admonition implies two things:

(1) One should not be content with convincing the addressee with arguments alone but should also appeal to his feelings. Likewise one should not confine himself merely to arguments in condemning evils and deviations but should try to convince the other of their repugnance that lies embedded in the human nature. One should also warn of the worst consequences of those evils. Besides, one should not only try to convince the addressee rationally of the soundness and excellence of guidance and righteous deeds but should also create in him interest and love for them.

(2) Admonition should be administered in such a manner as to show sincere concern for and the welfare of the addressee. Nothing should be said or done to create the impression that the admonisher is looking down upon him and taking pleasure in his own feeling of superiority. On the contrary, he should feel that the admonisher is filled with the strong desire for his reform and welfare.

“In a way that is better” implies that one should have a sweet tongue, show noble character and give reasonable and appealing arguments, and refrain from indulging in polemics, argumentation and controversies. The one who discusses things with people in the best manner, does not resort to accusations, crooked arguments, taunts, nor makes fun of the opponent in order to defeat him and to win applause for his own superiority in argument. For these things will produce obduracy and obstinacy. In contrast to this, he will try to convince the other in a simple and humble way, and when he feels that the other person has come down to crooked arguments, he will leave him alone lest the other should go further and further astray in his deviation. 10

Verse 126

Arabic Text:
وَإِنْ عَاقَبْتُمْ فَعَاقِبُوا بِمِثْلِ مَا عُوقِبْتُم بِهِ ۖ وَلَئِن صَبَرْتُمْ لَهُوَ خَيْرٌ لِّلصَّابِرِينَ

English Translation:
If you take retribution, then do so in proportion to the wrong done to you. But if you can bear such conduct with patience, indeed that is best for the steadfast. 10

Explanation (Tafseer):
No specific additional commentary is provided beyond the general context of patience and proportionate response in the face of wrongdoing. 10

Verse 127

Arabic Text:
وَاصْبِرْ وَمَا صَبْرُكَ إِلَّا بِاللَّهِ ۖ وَلَا تَحْزَنْ عَلَيْهِمْ وَلَا تَكُ فِي ضَيْقٍ مِّمَّا يَمْكُرُونَ

English Translation:
And bear with patience, (O Muhammad) – and your patience is only because of the help of Allah – and do not grieve over them, nor feel distressed by their evil plans. 10

Explanation (Tafseer):
No specific additional commentary is provided beyond the general context of relying on Allah for patience and not being distressed by opponents’ schemes. 10

Verse 128

Arabic Text:
إِنَّ اللَّهَ مَعَ الَّذِينَ اتَّقَوْا وَالَّذِينَ هُم مُّحْسِنُونَ

English Translation:
For surely Allah is with those who hold Him in fear and do good. 10

Explanation (Tafseer):
“Allah is with those who fear Him” because they scrupulously refrain from evil ways and always adopt the righteous attitude, for they know that their actions and deeds are not determined by the evils others do to them but by their own sense of righteousness; so they return good for evil. 10

Footnotes from the Source:

    1. This instruction is very important for those who are engaged in the propagation of Islam. They should always keep in view two things, wisdom and excellent admonition. Wisdom implies that one should use discretion in the work of propagation and should not do this blindly like foolish people. Wisdom demands that one should keep in view the intelligence, capability and circumstances of the addressees and convey the message in accordance with the requirements of the occasion. Moreover, one should refrain from applying one and the same method to each and every person or group but should first diagnose the real disease of the addressee and then cure it by appealing to his mind and intellect.
    Excellent admonition implies two things: (1) One should not be content with convincing the addressee with arguments alone but should also appeal to his feelings. Likewise one should not confine himself merely to arguments in condemning evils and deviations but should try to convince the other of their repugnance that lies embedded in the human nature. One should also warn of the worst consequences of those evils. Besides, one should not only try to convince the addressee rationally of the soundness and excellence of guidance and righteous deeds but should also create in him interest and love for them. (2) Admonition should be administered in such a manner as to show sincere concern for and the welfare of the addressee. Nothing should be said or done to create the impression that the admonisher is looking down upon him and taking pleasure in his own feeling of superiority. On the contrary, he should feel that the admonisher is filled with the strong desire for his reform and welfare.
    1. “In a way that is better” implies that one should have a sweet tongue, show noble character and give reasonable and appealing arguments, and refrain from indulging in polemics, argumentation and controversies. The one who discusses things with people in the best manner, does not resort to accusations, crooked arguments, taunts, nor makes fun of the opponent in order to defeat him and to win applause for his own superiority in argument. For these things will produce obduracy and obstinacy. In contrast to this, he will try to convince the other in a simple and humble way, and when he feels that the other person has come down to crooked arguments, he will leave him alone lest the other should go further and further astray in his deviation.
    1. “Allah is with those who fear Him” because they scrupulously refrain from evil ways and always adopt the righteous attitude, for they know that their actions and deeds are not determined by the evils others do to them but by their own sense of righteousness; so they return good for evil. 10

WISDOM IN DAWA WORK

Da’wah (دعوة), the invitation to Islam, is a profound responsibility rooted in the Quran and Sunnah. It emphasizes calling others to the truth with compassion, wisdom, and sincerity, rather than coercion or debate for ego’s sake. Below, I’ll share key Islamic perspectives and practical wisdom drawn from scriptural sources, prophetic examples, and scholarly insights. These are meant to guide anyone engaged in Da’wah work, whether formally or in daily life.

Core Principles from the Quran

  1. Invite with Wisdom and Kindness: The Quran instructs: “Invite to the way of your Lord with wisdom and good instruction, and argue with them in a way that is best” (Surah An-Nahl 16:125). This highlights using hikmah (wisdom)—tailoring your message to the audience’s understanding, culture, and concerns—while maintaining beautiful preaching (maw’izah hasanah). Avoid harshness; focus on empathy to open hearts.
  2. Sincerity and Purity of Intention: Da’wah must stem from ikhlas (sincerity) for Allah alone, not fame or worldly gain. “And who is better in speech than one who invites to Allah and does righteousness and says, ‘Indeed, I am of the Muslims'” (Surah Fussilat 41:33). Check your niyyah (intention) regularly; impure motives can nullify rewards.
  3. Patience in the Face of Rejection: Expect resistance, as prophets faced it. “So be patient, as were those of determination among the messengers” (Surah Al-Ahqaf 46:35). Da’wah is planting seeds; results are with Allah. Don’t despair if someone doesn’t respond immediately—your role is conveyance, not conversion.

Lessons from the Prophet Muhammad (PBUH)

The Sunnah provides timeless models:

  • Lead by Example: The Prophet’s character was his greatest Da’wah tool. Aisha (RA) said, “His character was the Quran” (Sahih Muslim). Live Islam authentically—through kindness, honesty, and service—to attract others naturally. For instance, help neighbors or colleagues without expecting reciprocation.
  • Start with Tawhid and Essentials: He began with monotheism (La ilaha illallah) and built from there, as in his letters to rulers. Avoid overwhelming newcomers with fiqh details; focus on Allah’s mercy, the Prophet’s life, and Islam’s solutions to modern problems like anxiety or injustice.
  • Use Gentle Dialogue: In the Treaty of Hudaybiyyah, he showed flexibility without compromising principles. Engage in conversations, not monologues—ask questions, listen actively, and address doubts with evidence. The Prophet said, “Make things easy and do not make them difficult, give good tidings and do not make people run away” (Sahih Bukhari).
  • Adapt to Contexts: He tailored messages: poetry for Arabs, logic for Christians. In today’s world, use social media, art, or science to bridge gaps, but ensure content aligns with Shariah.

Practical Wisdom for Modern Da’wah Workers

  • Build Knowledge and Taqwa: Before calling others, strengthen your own faith. Study Quran, Hadith, and seerah deeply. Scholars like Ibn Taymiyyah emphasized that a da’i (caller) must embody what they preach to avoid hypocrisy.
  • Focus on Relationships: Da’wah thrives in trust. Imam Al-Ghazali in “Ihya Ulum al-Din” advises starting with family and friends, then expanding. Share stories of converts or Islamic contributions to society to inspire.
  • Avoid Common Pitfalls: Don’t argue endlessly; the Prophet warned against excessive disputation. Steer clear of cultural impositions—Islam is universal, not tied to one ethnicity. In diverse settings, highlight shared values like justice (adl) and compassion (rahmah).
  • Self-Care and Community: Da’wah can be exhausting. Join supportive groups for accountability. Remember, “Allah does not burden a soul beyond that it can bear” (Surah Al-Baqarah 2:286). Pray istikhara for guidance and dua for success.
  • Measure Success Rightly: It’s not in numbers but in effort. A single sincere heart touched is victory. Scholars like Yusuf Al-Qaradawi stress quality over quantity in contemporary Da’wah.

In essence, Da’wah is an act of love for humanity, guiding them to eternal peace. If you’re involved in this work, may Allah grant you tawfiq (success) and barakah (blessings). For deeper study, explore books like “The Methodology of Da’wah” by Sheikh Abdul Wahhab or resources from reputable institutions. If you’d like specifics on a aspect (e.g., online Da’wah or handling objections), let me know!

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Prophetic Da’wah Stories from Islamic Tradition

Da’wah, the call to Islam, is exemplified through the lives of prophets in the Quran and Sunnah. These stories illustrate patience, wisdom, and reliance on Allah, often in the face of adversity. Below are key examples from the Prophet Muhammad (PBUH) and earlier prophets, drawn from authentic sources like the Quran, Hadith collections (e.g., Sahih Bukhari and Muslim), and Seerah (biography of the Prophet). They serve as models for contemporary Da’wah efforts.

1. The Prophet Muhammad’s Invitation to His Relatives (The First Public Call)

  • Context: Early in his prophethood, after receiving the command “Warn your closest kindred” (Surah Ash-Shu’ara 26:214), the Prophet (PBUH) gathered his Quraysh relatives on Mount Safa.
  • Story: He climbed the hill and called out to the clans, asking if they would believe him if he warned of an approaching army. When they affirmed his trustworthiness, he declared: “I am a warner to you in the face of a severe punishment.” His uncle Abu Lahab rejected him harshly, saying, “May you perish! Did you gather us for this?” (Surah Al-Masad 111:1-5 was later revealed about Abu Lahab).
  • Lessons for Da’wah: Start with family and community, emphasizing truthfulness. Even rejection doesn’t diminish the message—focus on delivery with clarity and sincerity. This story highlights the Prophet’s courage in facing familial opposition.

2. The Da’wah to the People of Taif

  • Context: After intense persecution in Mecca, the Prophet (PBUH) traveled to Taif in 619 CE to seek support from the Thaqif tribe.
  • Story: Accompanied by Zaid ibn Harithah (RA), he presented Islam to the leaders, but they mocked him and incited street children to stone him until his feet bled. In pain, he prayed: “O Allah, to You I complain of my weakness… If You are not angry with me, I do not mind.” An angel offered to crush the town, but he refused, hoping for future believers from their descendants. Soon after, Addas, a Christian slave, accepted Islam after hearing the Quran.
  • Lessons for Da’wah: Exercise patience (sabr) amid hostility. Respond with dua (supplication) rather than retaliation. This exemplifies mercy, as many from Taif later embraced Islam post-Hudaybiyyah.

3. The Conversion of Umar ibn Al-Khattab (RA)

  • Context: Umar was a fierce opponent of Islam in early Mecca.
  • Story: Enraged by the Prophet’s message, Umar set out to kill him but detoured to confront his sister Fatimah (RA), who had converted. Hearing her recite Surah Ta-Ha (20:1-8), he was moved by its beauty and eloquence. He then went to the Prophet (PBUH), who prayed for him, leading to his immediate acceptance of Islam. Umar’s strength later bolstered the Muslim community.
  • Lessons for Da’wah: The Quran’s power can transform hearts—use it as a primary tool. Don’t judge potential converts by their past; Allah guides whom He wills. This shows how personal encounters and scripture can lead to profound change.

4. Prophet Nuh’s (Noah) Da’wah to His People

  • Context: As the first prophet sent to a nation, Nuh (AS) called his people to tawhid (monotheism) for 950 years (Surah Al-Ankabut 29:14).
  • Story: He preached day and night, building an ark as commanded despite mockery. His people accused him of being “in clear error” and demanded miracles, but only a few believed. Ultimately, the flood came as divine justice (Surah Nuh 71:1-28).
  • Lessons for Da’wah: Persistence is key, even over centuries. Focus on core messages like abandoning idols. Success isn’t measured by mass conversion but by fulfilling the duty, as Nuh (AS) lamented only his family and a handful followed.

5. Prophet Ibrahim’s (Abraham) Confrontation with Idols

  • Context: Raised in a polytheistic society, Ibrahim (AS) challenged idol worship logically.
  • Story: He questioned his father and people: “What are these statues to which you are devoted?” (Surah Al-Anbiya 21:52). He smashed the idols except the largest, then asked if it had done so, exposing their futility. Thrown into a fire by King Nimrod, Allah saved him, commanding the fire to be “cool and safe” (Surah Al-Anbiya 21:69).
  • Lessons for Da’wah: Use rational arguments and demonstrations to debunk falsehoods. Trust in Allah’s protection during trials. This story inspires intellectual Da’wah, appealing to reason in modern contexts like atheism.

6. The Prophet Muhammad’s Letters to Rulers

  • Context: In 628 CE, after Hudaybiyyah, the Prophet (PBUH) sent envoys with letters inviting kings to Islam.
  • Story: To Heraclius (Byzantine Emperor), he wrote: “Submit and you will be safe.” Heraclius verified the Prophet’s signs but didn’t convert. To the Negus of Abyssinia, the letter led to his acceptance and protection of Muslim migrants. To Chosroes of Persia, who tore the letter, foretelling his empire’s fall.
  • Lessons for Da’wah: Reach out to leaders and influencers diplomatically. Use written communication for wide impact. Outcomes vary, but the invitation plants seeds—e.g., Heraclius’ inquiry showed partial openness.

These stories underscore that Da’wah is a divine trust, requiring wisdom, empathy, and steadfastness. They’re not just historical but practical blueprints—adapt them to today’s world, like using digital platforms for global outreach. For more details, refer to Seerah books like “The Sealed Nectar” by Safiur Rahman Mubarakpuri or Tafsir of relevant Quranic verses. If you’d like stories from a specific prophet or era, let me know!

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Stories from Prophet Yusuf (AS) in Islamic Tradition

The story of Prophet Yusuf (Joseph, peace be upon him) is one of the most detailed and complete narratives in the Quran, primarily in Surah Yusuf (Chapter 12). It’s described as “the best of stories” (Quran 12:3) because it encompasses themes of patience, forgiveness, divine wisdom, and tawhid (monotheism). Unlike fragmented Hadith accounts, the Quran provides a cohesive tale, with additional insights from Tafsir (exegeses) by scholars like Ibn Kathir. Below, I’ll outline key episodes chronologically, drawing from the Quran, with lessons for Da’wah and life.

1. Yusuf’s Dream and His Brothers’ Jealousy

  • The Story: Yusuf (AS), the son of Prophet Ya’qub (Jacob, AS), had a dream where the sun, moon, and eleven stars bowed to him (Quran 12:4). He shared it with his father, who recognized it as a sign of future greatness but warned him not to tell his brothers, fearing envy. Ya’qub loved Yusuf dearly, giving him a special coat, which fueled his ten half-brothers’ jealousy (they shared the same father but different mothers). Plotting against him, they convinced Ya’qub to let Yusuf join them herding sheep. They threw him into a well, smeared his shirt with goat blood, and lied to their father that a wolf had devoured him (Quran 12:5-18). A caravan found Yusuf, rescued him, and sold him as a slave in Egypt for a low price.
  • Key Quranic Insight: Ya’qub said, “Indeed, Satan is to man a manifest enemy” (12:5), highlighting how envy stems from Shaytan.
  • Lessons: This illustrates the dangers of jealousy (hasad) and family discord. In Da’wah, it teaches trusting Allah’s plan amid betrayal— Yusuf’s hardship was a step toward elevation. It reminds us to advise loved ones wisely and avoid gloating over blessings.

2. Yusuf in Egypt: Temptation and Imprisonment

  • The Story: Bought by Al-Aziz (Potiphar), a high Egyptian official, Yusuf grew into a handsome, trustworthy young man. Al-Aziz’s wife (known as Zulaikha in some traditions) attempted to seduce him, but Yusuf resisted, saying, “Indeed, my Lord is well aware of their plot” (Quran 12:23-34). He fled, tearing his shirt from behind as evidence of his innocence. When caught, women of the city gossiped about her, so she invited them to a banquet where they cut their hands in awe of Yusuf’s beauty upon seeing him. Despite his innocence, Yusuf was imprisoned to avoid scandal, where he remained for years.
  • Key Quranic Insight: Yusuf prayed, “My Lord, prison is more to my liking than that to which they invite me” (12:33), showing preference for hardship over sin.
  • Lessons: Emphasizes chastity (iffah) and integrity in the face of temptation. For Da’wah, it’s a powerful example of taqwa (God-consciousness) preserving one’s honor. It shows how the innocent may suffer temporarily, but Allah honors the righteous—useful for encouraging patience in trials like injustice or false accusations.

3. Interpreting Dreams in Prison

  • The Story: In prison, Yusuf (AS) met two inmates: a cupbearer and a baker, both troubled by dreams. Yusuf, gifted with dream interpretation by Allah, explained them: the cupbearer would be freed and serve the king again, while the baker would be executed (Quran 12:36-42). He asked the cupbearer to mention him to the king, but the man forgot. Later, the Pharaoh (king) had a dream of seven fat cows eaten by seven lean ones, and seven green ears of corn devoured by seven dry ones. The cupbearer remembered Yusuf, who interpreted it as seven years of abundance followed by seven of famine. He advised storing grain during plenty (Quran 12:43-49).
  • Key Quranic Insight: Yusuf attributed his knowledge to Allah alone: “Interpretations belong to Allah” (12:37), reinforcing tawhid.
  • Lessons: Highlights using God-given talents for good, even in adversity. In Da’wah, it demonstrates humility—crediting success to Allah—and practical wisdom, like planning for crises. This part inspires sharing knowledge selflessly, as Yusuf did without immediate reward.

4. Yusuf’s Rise to Power and Family Reunion

  • The Story: Impressed, the king appointed Yusuf as minister of finance and agriculture. Yusuf implemented his plan, storing grain and managing resources wisely during the famine. His brothers came from Canaan seeking food, not recognizing him. Yusuf gave them supplies but kept his younger brother Binyamin (Benjamin) as a test, using a planted cup in his sack (Quran 12:50-79). When they returned with Ya’qub’s plea, Yusuf revealed himself: “I am Yusuf, and this is my brother” (12:90). He forgave them, saying, “No blame upon you today. Allah will forgive you” (12:92). The family reunited in Egypt, and Ya’qub’s blindness from grief was cured upon smelling Yusuf’s shirt. The dream from Yusuf’s youth fulfilled as his parents and brothers bowed in respect (Quran 12:93-101).
  • Key Quranic Insight: Yusuf reflected, “My Lord has made it come true. He was certainly good to me” (12:100), showing gratitude.
  • Lessons: Forgiveness (afw) and family reconciliation are central. It teaches that trials lead to better outcomes if one remains steadfast— “Indeed, with hardship comes ease” (94:5-6). For Da’wah, it’s ideal for illustrating Allah’s perfect plan (qadr), turning weakness into strength, and the beauty of mercy over revenge.

Overall Themes and Wisdom

Surah Yusuf is unique as it’s told in one chapter without interruptions, emphasizing emotional depth, like Ya’qub’s sorrow: “I only complain of my suffering and grief to Allah” (12:86). Scholars note it’s a consolation for Prophet Muhammad (PBUH) during Mecca’s hardships, mirroring rejection and eventual triumph.

In Da’wah, these stories convey Islam’s emphasis on resilience, ethics, and divine justice without needing miracles—appealing to rational minds. They warn against sins like envy while promising reward for sabr (patience). For deeper exploration, read Tafsir Ibn Kathir or “Stories of the Prophets” by Ibn Kathir. If you’d like a specific episode expanded or comparisons with other prophets, let me know!

Dawa in digital era

Understanding Dawah in the Contemporary Digital Age

Dawah (often spelled Da’wah or Dawa), an Arabic term meaning “invitation” or “call,” refers to the act of inviting others to understand and embrace Islam. It encompasses preaching, teaching, and sharing Islamic principles to foster awareness, appreciation, and moral guidance. In the contemporary digital age, dawah has undergone a significant transformation, shifting from traditional methods like face-to-face sermons, books, and mosque gatherings to leveraging online platforms for broader, more interactive outreach. 1 This evolution aligns with the rise of the internet, social media, and algorithms, enabling global dissemination of Islamic teachings while presenting new opportunities and challenges.

Key Transformations in Digital Dawah

  1. Shift to Online Platforms: Traditional dawah relied on physical media like cassette tapes in the 1980s or printed materials, but today it utilizes digital tools such as TikTok, Instagram, YouTube, Twitter (now X), Facebook, podcasts, and Zoom for virtual halaqahs (study circles). 3 For instance, short-form videos on TikTok or Instagram Reels allow for quick, engaging content like Quranic explanations or motivational clips, making Islamic messages accessible anytime, anywhere. 9 This digitalization has turned dawah into a “global enterprise,” reaching diverse audiences beyond geographical limits. 3
  2. From Monologic to Dialogic Communication: In the past, dawah was often one-way preaching. The digital era promotes interactivity, where users can comment, ask questions, and engage in real-time discussions. 1 Platforms enable da’is (preachers) to respond directly to queries, fostering inclusivity and moderation. This is particularly effective for younger generations, who prefer multimedia formats over lengthy lectures. 2
  3. Targeted Outreach for Specific Groups: Digital dawah has proven vital for groups like muallaf (new converts), who can access reliable content on adopting an Islamic lifestyle through apps and social media. 5 It also aids the “sandwich generation” (those balancing care for children and elders) by providing resources for moral improvement and religious coping in a fast-paced world. 0 Additionally, it builds national identity in diverse societies by promoting unity through shared Islamic values. 11

Opportunities in the Digital Age

  • Wider Reach and Accessibility: Social media allows dawah to spread Islamic messages to non-Muslims and remote areas, emphasizing Islam as a religion of mercy and guidance. 2 With high internet penetration, content like videos and blogs can educate on topics from daily prayers to ethical living, enhancing religiosity and well-being. 0
  • Innovation in Methods: Da’is can use algorithms to tailor content, such as personalized recommendations on YouTube, increasing engagement. 1 This creativity is essential for making dawah relevant in a globalized, tech-driven society. 13
  • Combination with Conventional Methods: Digital and traditional dawah complement each other—online content can lead to in-person events, creating a hybrid approach that maximizes impact. 9

Challenges and Considerations

  • Content Quality and Credibility: The openness of digital platforms risks misinformation or superficial content focused on entertainment rather than depth. 7 Da’is must prioritize algorithmic transparency and authentic sources to build trust. 1
  • Balancing Tradition and Modernity: While technology expands reach, it must align with core Islamic values without diluting messages. 14 Challenges include managing diverse viewpoints and ensuring inclusivity amid potential echo chambers.
  • Ethical and Cultural Shifts: The digital age demands adaptability from religious leaders to address issues like privacy, cyber ethics, and cultural relevance in dawah. 6

In summary, dawah in the contemporary digital age represents a dynamic fusion of faith and technology, amplifying Islam’s message of peace and guidance while requiring vigilance to maintain authenticity. As platforms evolve, so too will dawah strategies, potentially incorporating AI and VR for even more immersive experiences. 4 If this interpretation of “Dawa” doesn’t match what you meant (e.g., if it’s a name, place, or something else), feel free to clarify!

Success in digital dawa work

Examples of Successful Digital Dawah Campaigns

Digital dawah campaigns have leveraged platforms like YouTube, Instagram, TikTok, and social media to spread Islamic teachings, engage youth, and foster conversions or deeper understanding. Below are notable examples drawn from various initiatives, highlighting their strategies, reach, and impact. These demonstrate how digital tools have amplified traditional dawah efforts.

1. Dawah Digital YouTube Channel

  • Overview: Launched as a high-production-quality Islamic channel, Dawah Digital focuses on non-spammy, engaging content like videos on Islamic principles, stories, and motivational talks. It avoids sensationalism, emphasizing authenticity and visual appeal to attract a broad audience. 0
  • Success Metrics: Boasts over 85,800 subscribers and 182 videos, with consistent growth through algorithm-friendly content. 0 Its approach has inspired similar channels by prioritizing production value over volume.
  • Strategies: Utilizes YouTube’s features for long-form explanations, playlists, and community engagement via comments.

2. Global Da’wah Campaign by The Quran Project

  • Overview: This initiative, run by Muslim Giving, focuses on distributing Qur’ans, flyers, and educational materials globally, with a strong digital component including online marketing, billboards, and advertisements to promote free Qur’an copies to non-Muslims. 1
  • Success Metrics: Raised funds for printing in multiple languages (e.g., English, Arabic) and reached millions through media campaigns, leading to widespread distribution and awareness. 1 It has empowered new converts (muallaf) with resources for Islamic lifestyle adoption.
  • Strategies: Combines digital fundraising (e.g., via LaunchGood) with targeted ads and social media appeals, ensuring sadaqah jariyah (ongoing charity) through sustained online presence.

3. World Dawah Day Campaign

  • Overview: Organized by figures like Abdurraheem Green, this annual event promotes global dawah through online events, workshops, and social media drives to activate communities and share Islam’s message of mercy. 2
  • Success Metrics: Led to increased enthusiasm for Islam, with participants reporting higher engagement and understanding; it has activated thousands in dawah activities worldwide. 2
  • Strategies: Uses live streams, hashtags, and collaborative posts on platforms like X (formerly Twitter) and YouTube to encourage sharing personal stories and discussions.

4. The Dawah Project’s Media Initiatives

  • Overview: A UK-based effort linked to Islam Channel, it funds digital media for dawah, including the “1 Million Qur’an Project,” revert support, and Palestine awareness campaigns via TV, online videos, and social media. 18 23
  • Success Metrics: Reached millions through programming, with fundraising exceeding expectations (e.g., one campaign aimed for 100% transparency with overflow to Gaza aid). 7 It has sponsored educational content and inspired conversions among diverse groups, including cowboys, priests, and politicians. 23
  • Strategies: Employs crowdfunding platforms like LaunchGood, targeted appeals on X and Instagram, and partnerships for authentic, revert-focused narratives.

5. Youth-Focused Instagram and TikTok Campaigns by Influencers

  • Overview: Influencers like Nurul Azka and Felix Siauw (Indonesia) and Tuan Guru Abdul Hadi Awang (Malaysia) use short-form videos and visual storytelling to engage youth on topics like daily prayers, ethics, and contemporary issues. 8 6
  • Success Metrics: One case study showed a 40% follower increase in three months via TikTok and Instagram Reels, with high interaction rates from multimedia content. 6 These have boosted youth religiosity and community building. 8
  • Strategies: Focus on trending audio, relatable scenarios, consistent posting, and interactivity (e.g., Q&A sessions), tailoring content to platform algorithms for viral reach.

6. Darulfikr Mobile App and Website

  • Overview: A long-standing digital platform providing Islamic knowledge through articles, audio, and interactive features, expanded to a mobile app for easier access. 21
  • Success Metrics: Widely praised for spreading da’wah over years, with users reporting significant knowledge gains; the app has been downloaded extensively in Muslim communities. 21
  • Strategies: Integrates user-friendly navigation, multimedia resources, and community feedback to maintain relevance in the digital space.

These campaigns illustrate common success factors: authenticity, audience targeting, multimedia use, and hybrid online-offline approaches. 6 11 Challenges like misinformation are addressed through credible sourcing and engagement. 3 For more specifics or recent updates, additional details on platforms like LaunchGood or influencer profiles could provide ongoing insights.

Bani Israel: foot notes 6-11

Here is the English translation of the Urdu text:


Surah Bani Isra’il — Footnote No. 6

These warnings are found at various places in the collection of holy scriptures known as the Bible. The first corruption and its evil consequences were warned about to the Children of Israel in the Psalms, Isaiah, Jeremiah, and Ezekiel; and the second corruption and its severe punishment was foretold by Jesus (peace be upon him), which is present in the Gospels of Matthew and Luke. Below, we reproduce the relevant passages from these books so that this Quranic statement may be fully corroborated.

The first warning about the first great corruption was given by the Prophet David, whose words are as follows:

“They did not destroy the nations as the Lord had commanded them, but mingled with those nations and learned their practices, and began to worship their idols, which became a snare to them. They even sacrificed their daughters to demons and shed innocent blood — the blood of their own sons and daughters… Therefore the anger of the Lord was kindled against His people, and He abhorred His heritage, and He delivered them into the hand of the nations, and those who hated them ruled over them.”
(Psalm 106, verses 34–41)

In this passage, events that were yet to occur are described in the past tense, as if they had already happened. This is a distinctive style of the heavenly scriptures.

Then, when this great corruption actually came to pass, the Prophet Isaiah foretold the resulting destruction in his book in the following words:

“Ah, sinful nation, a people laden with iniquity, offspring of evildoers, children who deal corruptly! They have forsaken the Lord, they have despised the Holy One of Israel, they are utterly estranged — why will you still be struck down? Why will you continue to rebel?”
(Chapter 1, verse 4–5)

“How the faithful city has become a whore! She that was full of justice — righteousness lodged in her, but now murderers… Your princes are rebels and companions of thieves. Everyone loves a bribe and runs after gifts. They do not bring justice to the fatherless, and the widow’s cause does not come to them. Therefore the Lord God of hosts, the Mighty One of Israel, declares: Ah, I will get relief from my enemies and avenge myself on my foes.”
(Chapter 1, verses 21–24)

“They are full of the customs of the East and they practice divination like the Philistines, and they strike hands with the children of foreigners… Their land is also full of idols; they bow down to the work of their own hands, to what their own fingers have made.”
(Chapter 2, verses 6–7)

“And the Lord says: Because the daughters of Zion (that is, the women of Jerusalem) are haughty and walk with outstretched necks and wanton eyes, mincing along as they go, tinkling with their feet — therefore the Lord will strike with a scab the heads of the daughters of Zion, and the Lord will lay bare their secret parts… Your men shall fall by the sword and your mighty men in battle. And her gates shall lament and mourn; ravaged, she shall sit on the ground.”
(Chapter 3, verses 16–26)

“Now, behold, the Lord is bringing up against them the waters of the River, mighty and many — the king of Assyria and all his glory — and it will rise over all its channels and go over all its banks.”
(Chapter 8, verse 7)

“These are rebellious people, lying children, children who will not hear the instruction of the Lord; who say to the seers, ‘Do not see,’ and to the prophets, ‘Do not prophesy to us what is right; speak to us smooth things, prophesy illusions’… Therefore thus says the Holy One of Israel: Because you despise this word and trust in oppression and perverseness and rely on them, therefore this iniquity shall be to you like a breach in a high wall, bulging out and about to collapse… and He will break it as one breaks a potter’s vessel, smashing it so ruthlessly that among its fragments not a shard will be found for taking fire from the hearth, or a dipper of water from the cistern.”
(Chapter 30, verses 9–14)

Then, when the flood was about to break its banks entirely, the voice of the Prophet Jeremiah rose, and he said:

“Thus says the Lord: What wrong did your fathers find in me that they went far from me, and went after worthlessness, and became worthless?… I brought you into a plentiful land to enjoy its fruits and its good things. But when you came in, you defiled my land and made my heritage an abomination… Long ago you broke your yoke and burst your bonds, and you said, ‘I will not serve.’ Yes, on every high hill and under every green tree you bowed down like a whore (that is, you prostrated before every power and every idol)… As a thief is shamed when caught, so the house of Israel shall be shamed — they, their kings, their officials, their priests, and their (false) prophets, who say to a tree, ‘You are my father,’ and to a stone, ‘You gave me birth.’ For they have turned their back to me, and not their face. But in the time of their trouble they say, ‘Arise and save us.’ But where are your gods that you made for yourself? Let them arise, if they can save you, in your time of trouble; for as many as your cities are your gods, O Judah.”
(Chapter 2, verses 5–28)

“The Lord said to me: Have you seen what apostate Israel (that is, the Israelite state of Samaria) did? She went up on every high hill and under every green tree, and there played the whore (that is, committed idolatry)… And her treacherous sister Judah (that is, the Jewish state of Jerusalem) saw it. Then I saw that when I had sent apostate Israel away and given her her certificate of divorce (that is, withdrawn My mercy from her) because of her adultery (i.e., polytheism), her treacherous sister Judah did not fear, but she too went and played the whore. She defiled the land, committing adultery with stone and wood (that is, idol worship).”
(Chapter 3, verses 6–9)

“Run to and fro through the streets of Jerusalem, look and take note! Search her squares to see if you can find a man, one who does justice and seeks truth, that I may pardon her… How can I pardon you? Your children have forsaken me and have sworn by those who are no gods. When I fed them to the full, they committed adultery and trooped to the houses of prostitutes. They were well-fed, lusty stallions, each neighing for his neighbor’s wife. Shall I not punish them for these things? declares the Lord; and shall I not avenge myself on a nation such as this?”
(Chapter 5, verses 1–9)

“O house of Israel, behold, I am bringing against you a nation from afar, declares the Lord. It is an enduring nation, it is an ancient nation, a nation whose language you do not know, nor can you understand what they say. Their quiver is like an open tomb; they are all mighty warriors. They shall eat up your harvest and your food; they shall eat up your sons and your daughters. They shall eat up your flocks and your herds; they shall eat up your vines and your fig trees. They shall batter down your fortified cities in which you trust, with the sword.”
(Chapter 5, verses 15–17)

“The dead bodies of this people will be food for the birds of the air and for the beasts of the earth, and none will frighten them away. And I will silence in the cities of Judah and in the streets of Jerusalem the voice of mirth and the voice of gladness, the voice of the bridegroom and the voice of the bride, for the land shall become a waste.”
(Chapter 7, verses 33–34)

“Send them out of my sight and let them go. And when they ask you, ‘Where shall we go?’ you shall say to them, ‘Thus says the Lord: Those who are for pestilence, to pestilence, and those who are for the sword, to the sword; those who are for famine, to famine, and those who are for captivity, to captivity.’”
(Chapter 15, verses 2–3)

Then, exactly at the right moment, the Prophet Ezekiel arose and addressed Jerusalem, saying:

“O city that sheds blood in her midst, so that her time may come, and that makes idols to defile herself!… Behold, the princes of Israel in you, every one according to his power, have been bent on shedding blood. Father and mother are treated with contempt in you; the sojourner suffers extortion in your midst; the fatherless and the widow are wronged in you. You have despised my holy things and profaned my Sabbaths. There are men in you who slander to shed blood, and people in you who eat on the mountains; they commit lewdness in your midst. In you men uncover their fathers’ nakedness. In you they violate women in their menstrual uncleanness. One commits abomination with his neighbor’s wife; another lewdly defiles his daughter-in-law; another in you violates his sister, his father’s daughter. In you they take bribes to shed blood; you take interest and profit and make gain of your neighbors by extortion; and you have forgotten me… Will your courage endure, or will your hands be strong, in the days that I shall deal with you?… I will scatter you among the nations and disperse you through the countries, and I will consume your uncleanness out of you. You shall be profaned by yourself in the sight of the nations, and you shall know that I am the Lord.”
(Chapter 22, verses 3–16)

These were the warnings given to the Children of Israel at the time of the first great corruption. Then, regarding the second great corruption and its terrible consequences, Jesus (peace be upon him) warned them. In Matthew chapter 23, a detailed sermon of his is recorded, in which after strongly criticizing the severe moral decline of his people, he says:

“O Jerusalem, Jerusalem, the city that kills the prophets and stones those who are sent to it! How often would I have gathered your children together as a hen gathers her brood under her wings, and you were not willing! See, your house is left to you desolate.”
(Verses 37–38)

“Truly, I say to you, there will not be left here one stone upon another that will not be thrown down.”
(Chapter 24, verse 2)

Then, when the Roman authorities were leading Jesus to the crucifixion, and a great crowd of people including women were following him, weeping and wailing, he made his final address to the crowd and said:

“Daughters of Jerusalem, do not weep for me, but weep for yourselves and for your children. For behold, the days are coming when they will say, ‘Blessed are the barren and the wombs that never bore and the breasts that never nursed!’ Then they will begin to say to the mountains, ‘Fall on us,’ and to the hills, ‘Cover us.’”
(Luke, Chapter 23, verses 28–30)

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Here is the English translation:


Surah Bani Isra’il — Footnote No. 7

By this is meant the terrible destruction that befell the Children of Israel at the hands of the Assyrians and the Babylonians. To understand the historical background of this, the excerpts we have quoted above from the books of the prophets are not sufficient alone — a brief historical account is also necessary, so that the student may fully grasp all the reasons why Allah Almighty brought down a scripture-bearing nation from the position of leadership among nations and reduced them to a defeated, enslaved, and utterly degraded people.

After the death of the Prophet Moses, when the Children of Israel entered Palestine, various nations were already settled there — the Hittites, Amorites, Canaanites, Perizzites, Hivites, Jebusites, Philistines, and others. Among these nations, the worst form of polytheism prevailed. Their greatest deity was called El, whom they regarded as the father of the gods, and who was commonly depicted in the likeness of a bull. His wife was named Asherah, and from this union sprang an entire lineage of gods and goddesses numbering up to seventy. The most powerful among his offspring was Baal, who was regarded as the god of rain and vegetation and the lord of earth and sky. In the northern regions, his wife was called Anat, and in Palestine, Astarte. Both of these female deities were goddesses of love and fertility. Beyond these, one deity held dominion over death, another over health, another was assigned the power to bring plague and famine — and thus the entire divine order was divided among a multitude of gods and goddesses. Attributes and deeds of such shameful character were ascribed to these deities that even the most morally corrupt of human beings would not wish to be associated with them. It is therefore evident that people who made such vile beings their gods and worshipped them could hardly have escaped falling into the lowest depths of moral degradation. This is precisely why the conditions discovered through archaeological excavations testify to a severe moral collapse among these peoples. The sacrifice of children was common practice among them. Their temples had become dens of prostitution. Dedicating women as temple prostitutes and committing immoral acts with them was considered part of worship. And many other such moral corruptions were rampant among them.

In the Torah, the instructions given to the Children of Israel through the Prophet Moses had clearly stated: you are to destroy these nations and wrest the land of Palestine from their possession, and you are to refrain from living alongside them and from falling into their moral and ideological corruption.

But when the Children of Israel entered Palestine, they forgot this directive. They did not establish a unified state. They were consumed by tribal rivalries. Each tribe preferred to take a portion of the conquered territory and go its separate way. As a result of this fragmentation, no single tribe became powerful enough to fully cleanse its region of the polytheists. In the end, they had to accept the polytheists living alongside them. Not only that, but small city-states of these polytheistic peoples also continued to exist throughout the conquered territories — states that the Children of Israel were unable to subjugate. This very complaint is voiced in the passage from Psalms that we quoted at the beginning of Footnote No. 6.

The first consequence they had to bear was that through these nations, polytheism seeped into their midst, and along with it, other moral corruptions gradually found their way in as well. This complaint is recorded in the biblical Book of Judges as follows:

“And the children of Israel did evil in the sight of the Lord and served the Baals. They forsook the Lord, the God of their fathers, who had brought them out of Egypt, and followed other gods from among the gods of the peoples who were around them, and bowed down to them, and provoked the Lord to anger. They forsook the Lord and served Baal and the Ashtaroth, and the anger of the Lord was hot against Israel.”
(Chapter 2, verses 11–13)

The second consequence they had to bear was that the city-states of the polytheistic peoples they had allowed to remain, along with the Philistines — whose entire territory had remained unconquered — formed a united front against the Children of Israel and, through repeated attacks, drove them out of large parts of Palestine, even seizing from them the Ark of the Covenant of the Lord. Eventually, the Children of Israel felt the need to establish a unified kingdom under a single ruler, and at their request, the Prophet Samuel appointed Saul as their king in 1020 BC. (The details of this have been discussed in Surah Al-Baqarah, Section 32.)

This unified kingdom had three rulers: Saul (1020–1004 BC), the Prophet David (peace be upon him) (1004–965 BC), and the Prophet Solomon (peace be upon him) (965–926 BC). These rulers completed the work that the Children of Israel had left unfinished after the Prophet Moses. Only the Phoenician states on the northern coast and the Philistine states on the southern coast remained unsubjugated; these were merely made tributary rather than fully conquered.

After the Prophet Solomon, worldliness again took a powerful hold over the Children of Israel, and they fought among themselves and established two separate kingdoms. In northern Palestine and Transjordan arose the Kingdom of Israel, whose capital eventually became Samaria; and in southern Palestine and the region of Edom arose the Kingdom of Judah, whose capital remained Jerusalem. Between these two kingdoms, intense rivalry and conflict began from the very start and persisted until the very end.

Among these, the rulers and inhabitants of the Kingdom of Israel were the first and most deeply affected by the polytheistic beliefs and moral corruption of the neighboring nations, and this situation reached its extreme when the ruler of that kingdom, Ahab, married Jezebel, the polytheistic princess of Sidon. From that point onward, polytheism and moral corruption began to spread like a flood among the Israelites, driven by the power and resources of the state. The Prophets Elijah and Elisha (peace be upon them both) made every possible effort to stem this flood, but this people would not turn back from the decline into which they were heading. In the end, the wrath of Allah descended upon the Kingdom of Israel in the form of the Assyrians, and from the ninth century BC, continuous Assyrian invasions of Palestine began. During this period, the Prophet Amos (787–747 BC) and then the Prophet Hosea (747–735 BC) rose and delivered repeated warnings to the Israelites, but the intoxication of heedlessness in which they were steeped only grew sharper in the face of reproof. It reached the point where the king of Israel ordered the Prophet Amos to leave the country and banned him from prophesying within the borders of the Kingdom of Samaria. Thousands upon thousands of Israelites were put to the sword, more than 27,000 influential Israelites were expelled from the land and scattered across the eastern provinces of the Assyrian Empire, and peoples from other regions were brought in and settled in the land of Israel — living among whom, the remnant of the Israelite element grew increasingly alienated from its own national civilization day by day.

The second Israelite state, established in southern Palestine under the name of Judah, also fell quickly into polytheism and moral corruption after the Prophet Solomon, though its ideological and moral decline was comparatively slower than that of the Kingdom of Israel — and for this reason, it was also given somewhat more time. Although the Assyrians attacked it repeatedly as well, devastated its cities, and besieged its capital, this state was not destroyed at the hands of the Assyrians but merely became a tributary. Then, when despite the sustained efforts of the Prophets Isaiah and Jeremiah, the people of Judah refused to abandon idol worship and immorality, the king of Babylon, Nebuchadnezzar, in 598 BC conquered the entire Kingdom of Judah, including Jerusalem, and the king of Judah remained his prisoner. The chain of the Jews’ misdeeds did not end even then, and despite the counsel of the Prophet Jeremiah, instead of reforming their conduct, they attempted to change their fate by rebelling against Babylon. Finally, in 587 BC, Nebuchadnezzar launched a devastating assault and razed every city and town of Judah to the ground, reducing Jerusalem and the Temple of Solomon to rubble so completely that not a single wall of it was left standing. A vast multitude of Jews were expelled from their land and scattered across many countries, and those Jews who remained in their territory were themselves thoroughly humiliated and trampled underfoot at the hands of the neighboring nations.

This was the first great corruption against which the Children of Israel had been warned, and this was the first punishment that was given to them in consequence of it.​​​​​​​​​​​​​​​​

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Here is the English translation:


Surah Bani Isra’il — Footnote No. 8

This is a reference to the respite that was granted to the Jews (that is, the people of Judah) after their release from the Babylonian captivity. As for the people of Samaria and Israel, they never rose again after falling into the depths of moral and ideological decline. However, among the inhabitants of Judah there remained an element that was steadfast upon goodness and called others to it. This element continued its work of reform among those who had remained behind in Judah, and also encouraged repentance and turning back to God among those who had been exiled to Babylon and other regions. Eventually, the mercy of Allah came to their aid. The Babylonian empire declined, and in 539 BC the Persian conqueror Cyrus (Khurush or Khusraw) conquered Babylon. In the very next year, he issued a decree granting general permission to the Children of Israel to return to their homeland and resettle there. Consequently, caravans of Jews began making their way back to Judah one after another, a process that continued for a long time. Cyrus also granted the Jews permission to rebuild the Temple of Solomon, though for a considerable period the neighboring nations that had settled in the region continued to offer resistance. Eventually, Darius (Wahya) I, in 522 BC, appointed Zerubbabel — the grandson of the last king of Judah — as governor of Judah, and he undertook the reconstruction of the Holy Temple under the supervision of the Prophets Haggai and Zechariah and the High Priest Jeshua. Then, in 457 BC, the Prophet Ezra (’Uzayr) arrived in Judah with a group of exiles, and the Persian king Artaxerxes (Arta-Ksher-Shazia, also known as Ardeshir) issued a decree authorizing him:

“You are to appoint magistrates and judges who may judge all the people in the province Beyond the River, all such as know the laws of your God. And those who do not know them, you shall teach. Whoever will not obey the law of your God and the law of the king, let judgment be strictly executed on him, whether for death or for banishment or for confiscation of his goods or for imprisonment.”
(Ezra, Chapter 8, verses 25–26)

Taking advantage of this decree, the Prophet Ezra performed the immense work of renewing the Mosaic faith. He gathered all the righteous and upright people of the Jewish nation from every direction and established a strong order. He compiled and published the five books of the Bible, which contained the Torah; organized the religious education of the Jews; enforced the laws of the Sharia and began eliminating the ideological and moral corruptions that had crept into the Children of Israel through the influence of foreign nations; had all polytheistic women — whom Jews had married — divorced; and renewed the covenant with the Children of Israel to worship God and follow His law.

In 445 BC, another group of exiles returned to Judah under the leadership of Nehemiah, and the Persian king appointed Nehemiah as governor of Jerusalem, authorizing him to rebuild its city walls. In this way, after a hundred and fifty years, Jerusalem was once again inhabited and became the center of Jewish religion and civilization. However, the Israelites of northern Palestine and Samaria derived no benefit from the reform and renewal brought by the Prophet Ezra. Instead, in competition with Jerusalem, they constructed their own religious center on Mount Gerizim and attempted to make it the qiblah of the People of the Book. This further widened the rift between the Jews and the Samaritans.

With the decline of the Persian Empire, the conquests of Alexander the Great, and then the rise of the Greeks, the Jews suffered a severe blow for a period. After Alexander’s death, his empire was divided into three kingdoms, of which the region of Syria fell to the Seleucid kingdom whose capital was Antioch. Its ruler, Antiochus III, occupied Palestine in 198 BC. These Greek conquerors, who were polytheists in religion and libertines in morality, found the Jewish religion and civilization deeply objectionable. They began promoting Greek culture through political and economic pressure, and a considerable element from among the Jews themselves became their instrument. This external interference sowed division within the Jewish nation. One group adopted Greek dress, Greek language, Greek social customs, and Greek games, while another group held firmly to their own civilization. In 175 BC, when Antiochus IV — whose epithet was Epiphanes, meaning “the manifestation of God” — ascended the throne, he set out to uproot the Jewish religion and civilization with the full force of tyranny. He forcibly installed idols in the Temple of Jerusalem and compelled the Jews to bow down before them. He halted sacrifice at the altar. He ordered the Jews to offer sacrifices at polytheistic altars. He prescribed the death penalty for anyone who kept a copy of the Torah in their home, observed the Sabbath commandments, or had their children circumcised. But the Jews were not subdued by this oppression, and a powerful movement arose among them, known in history as the Maccabean Revolt. Although in this struggle the Hellenized Jews had all their sympathies with the Greeks and actively collaborated with the tyrants of Antioch in suppressing the Maccabean revolt, the spirit of religiosity breathed into the common Jews by the Prophet Ezra was so powerfully alive that they all joined the Maccabees, and eventually they drove out the Greeks and established their own independent religious state, which endured until 67 BC. The boundaries of this state gradually expanded to encompass the entire territory that had once been under the kingdoms of Judah and Israel, and even a large part of Philistia came under its control — a region that had not been subjugated even in the time of the Prophets David and Solomon (peace be upon them both).

It is to these very events that the verse under commentary in the Quran refers.

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Surah Bani Isra’il — Footnote No. 9

The historical background of this second great corruption and its punishment is as follows:

The moral and religious spirit with which the Maccabean movement had arisen gradually perished, and its place was taken by pure worldliness and hollow outward show. Eventually, divisions broke out among them, and they themselves invited the Roman conqueror Pompey to come to Palestine. Pompey accordingly turned his attention to the country in 63 BC, occupied Jerusalem, and brought the independence of the Jews to an end. However, it was the consistent policy of the Roman conquerors that rather than establishing their own direct administration over conquered territories, they preferred to extract what they needed indirectly through local rulers. They therefore established a native state in Palestine under their patronage, which ultimately came into the hands of a shrewd Jew named Herod in 40 BC. He is known as Herod the Great. His rule over all of Palestine and Transjordan lasted from 40 to 4 BC. On one hand he kept the Jews satisfied by patronizing their religious leaders, and on the other he earned the goodwill of Caesar by promoting Roman civilization and displaying the utmost loyalty to the Roman Empire. By this time, the religious and moral condition of the Jews had sunk, through a gradual process of deterioration, to the very lowest depths of decline.

After Herod, his kingdom was divided into three parts.

One of his sons, Archelaus, became the ruler of Samaria, Judea, and northern Idumea, but in 6 AD, Emperor Augustus deposed him and placed his entire kingdom under a Roman governor — an arrangement that remained in place until 41 AD. This was the very period when Jesus (peace be upon him) rose to reform the Children of Israel, and all the religious leaders of the Jews conspired together to oppose him and sought to have him condemned to death by the Roman governor Pontius Pilate.

Herod’s second son, Herod Antipas, became the ruler of the region of Galilee in northern Palestine and Transjordan. He is the one who, at the request of a dancing girl, had the head of the Prophet John (Yahya, peace be upon him) cut off and presented to her as a gift.

His third son, Philip, became the ruler of the territory stretching from Mount Hermon to the River Yarmouk, and he was even more deeply immersed in Roman and Greek civilization than his father and brothers. In his territory, there was even less room for any word of goodness to take root than there was in the other regions of Palestine.

In 41 AD, the Romans made Herod Agrippa — the grandson of Herod the Great — the ruler of all the territories over which Herod the Great had once held sway. After coming to power, this man inflicted extreme persecution upon the followers of Jesus (peace be upon him) and devoted all his efforts to crushing the movement of God-consciousness and moral reform that was proceeding under the guidance of the disciples.

To gain a true appreciation of the condition of the general Jewish population and their religious leaders during this period, one should study the critiques that Jesus (peace be upon him) directed against them in his sermons — all of which are preserved in the four Gospels. And to gauge the depths of their degradation, it is sufficient to note that before the very eyes of this nation, the head of a man as pure as the Prophet John (peace be upon him) was severed, yet not a single voice was raised against this great injustice. The religious leaders of the entire nation demanded the death sentence for Jesus (peace be upon him), and apart from a small number of righteous individuals, there was no one who mourned this calamity. Indeed, when Pontius Pilate asked this ill-fated people — it being a festival day on which, by custom, he was authorized to release one prisoner condemned to death — “Shall I release Jesus or Barabbas?” the entire assembled crowd cried out with one voice: “Release Barabbas.” This was, as it were, the final proof that Allah Almighty established against this nation.

Not much time had passed after this when a fierce conflict broke out between the Jews and the Romans, and between 64 and 66 AD the Jews rose in open revolt. Both Herod Agrippa II and the Roman procurator Florus failed to suppress the rebellion. Eventually, the Roman Empire crushed it through a severe military campaign, and in 70 AD, Titus conquered Jerusalem by force of arms. In the massacre that took place on this occasion, 133,000 people were killed, 67,000 were captured and enslaved, thousands were seized and sent to work in the mines of Egypt, and thousands more were taken to various cities to be used as fodder for wild animals in amphitheaters and coliseums, or as targets in gladiatorial games. All the tall and beautiful young women were selected for the victors, and the city of Jerusalem and the Temple were demolished and razed to the ground. After this, Jewish power and influence was so thoroughly erased from Palestine that for two thousand years it found no opportunity to raise its head again, and the Holy Temple of Jerusalem was never rebuilt. The Emperor Hadrian later repopulated the city, but it was now called Aelia, and for a very long time Jews were not permitted to enter it.

This was the punishment that the Children of Israel received in consequence of the second great corruption.

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Surah Bani Isra’il — Footnote No. 10

One should not fall into the misapprehension that the Children of Israel are the addressees of this entire passage. The actual addressees are the disbelievers of Makkah. However, since a few instructive lessons from the history of the Children of Israel had been presented here in order to warn them, these sentences were addressed to the Children of Israel as a parenthetical remark — so that they might serve as a prelude to those reformatory discourses which were, just a year later, to take place in Madinah.

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Surah Bani Isra’il — Footnote No. 11

The meaning is that any person, group, or nation that does not come to the straight path through the warning and guidance of this Quran should then be prepared to face the same punishment that the Children of Israel suffered.

SUMMARY OF THE TOPIC

The Rise and Fall of the Children of Israel: A Quranic Perspective

Summary of Footnotes 6–11, Surah Bani Isra’il


The Biblical Warnings (Footnote 6)

The Quran’s account of the two great corruptions of the Children of Israel finds comprehensive corroboration in the Bible itself. The prophets David, Isaiah, Jeremiah, and Ezekiel each delivered increasingly urgent warnings about the first corruption — the abandonment of monotheism, rampant moral decay, idol worship, injustice toward the weak, and widespread immorality. Jesus (peace be upon him), as recorded in the Gospels of Matthew and Luke, foretold the second corruption and its catastrophic consequences, warning Jerusalem of total desolation and prophesying that not one stone of the Temple would remain upon another.


The First Great Corruption and Its Punishment (Footnote 7)

When the Children of Israel entered Palestine after the death of the Prophet Moses, they failed to follow divine instructions to cleanse the land of its polytheistic inhabitants. Tribal rivalries prevented them from forming a unified state, and they allowed pagan nations to remain among them. The inevitable result was that idol worship — centered on deities such as El, Baal, Asherah, and Astarte, whose worship involved temple prostitution, child sacrifice, and extreme moral depravity — seeped into Israelite society.

This spiritual and moral collapse unfolded in stages. The unified kingdom under Saul, David, and Solomon temporarily reversed the decline, but after Solomon, the nation split into two rival kingdoms: Israel in the north and Judah in the south. The Kingdom of Israel fell first, succumbing to Assyrian invasions from the ninth century BC onward. Over 27,000 Israelites were deported and scattered, foreign peoples were resettled in their land, and the Israelite identity was gradually erased. The Kingdom of Judah, though slower to decline, ultimately suffered the same fate. In 587 BC, Nebuchadnezzar of Babylon razed Jerusalem and the Temple of Solomon completely, deported vast numbers of Jews, and reduced the remaining population to utter humiliation.


The Respite and Partial Renewal (Footnote 8)

After the Babylonian captivity, divine mercy granted the Jews another opportunity. In 539 BC, Cyrus the Great of Persia conquered Babylon and permitted the Jews to return to their homeland. The Temple was rebuilt under Zerubbabel, and the Prophet Ezra arrived in 457 BC to undertake a comprehensive religious renewal — compiling the Torah, reorganizing religious education, enforcing Mosaic law, dissolving unlawful marriages with polytheistic women, and renewing the national covenant with God. Nehemiah subsequently rebuilt the walls of Jerusalem in 445 BC, and the city was restored as the center of Jewish faith and civilization.

However, the Samaritans refused to participate in this renewal and established a rival religious center on Mount Gerizim, deepening the sectarian divide. Later, Greek conquest under the Seleucids brought severe cultural pressure, culminating in the brutal persecution by Antiochus IV Epiphanes, who desecrated the Temple, banned Torah observance, and imposed the death penalty for circumcision and Sabbath-keeping. The heroic Maccabean Revolt eventually expelled the Greeks and established an independent Jewish state that endured until 67 BC, restoring Jewish sovereignty over a territory even broader than that of the earlier kingdoms.


The Second Great Corruption and Its Punishment (Footnote 9)

The spiritual vitality of the Maccabean movement gave way to worldliness and internal division. The Jews themselves invited the Roman general Pompey into Palestine in 63 BC, ending their independence. Under Herod the Great and his successors — ruling as Roman client kings — Jewish religious and moral life reached its lowest point. It was in this environment that Jesus (peace be upon him) arose to call his people back to righteousness, only to be opposed by the religious establishment and condemned through their machinations.

The nation’s moral bankruptcy was starkly illustrated when the crowd chose to free the criminal Barabbas over Jesus, a moment the author describes as Allah’s final proof against them. Open revolt against Rome between 64 and 66 AD led to catastrophic consequences. In 70 AD, Titus sacked Jerusalem: 133,000 were killed, 67,000 enslaved, thousands were sent to mines or used in gladiatorial spectacles, and the Temple was completely destroyed. Jewish influence in Palestine was extinguished for two thousand years, and the Holy Temple was never rebuilt. Emperor Hadrian later renamed the city Aelia, barring Jews from entering it for generations.


A Parenthetical Address (Footnote 10)

Although these passages appear to address the Children of Israel directly, the primary audience of the Surah is in fact the disbelievers of Makkah. The history of the Children of Israel was invoked as a powerful cautionary lesson for them. The direct address to the Jews functions as a parenthetical remark, also serving as a deliberate prelude to the more extensive reformatory discourses that would follow just a year later in Madinah.


The Universal Warning (Footnote 11)

The lessons drawn from Israelite history are not confined to one people or one era. Any individual, community, or nation that refuses to heed the guidance and warnings of the Quran should expect to face the same devastating consequences that befell the Children of Israel. The pattern of divine justice is consistent and universal: corruption and defiance bring ruin, while sincere return to righteousness opens the door to mercy and restoration.​​​​​​​​​​​​​​​​

Thanks to Quran.com for Tafheemul Quran & Claude Ai in preparing this article

Divine Wisdom Behind Destroyed Nations, Flourishing Disbelievers & the Trials of the Believers”

“Signs for Those Who Reflect —
Sunnatullah, Istidraj and the Divine Wisdom Behind Destroyed Nations, Flourishing Disbelievers and the Trials of the Believers”

بِسْمِ اللَّهِ الرَّحْمَنِ الرَّحِيمِ
JazakAllah Khair for this refinement — that is indeed the most beautiful and complete way to present Quranic material. Let me reproduce the full comprehensive response with Arabic and English placed side by side throughout.

I. SUNNATULLAH — THE UNCHANGING LAWS OF ALLAH Arabic English فَلَن تَجِدَ لِسُنَّتِ اللَّهِ تَبْدِيلًا ۖ وَلَن تَجِدَ لِسُنَّتِ اللَّهِ تَحْوِيلًا “You will find no change in the way of Allah, and you will find no alteration in the way of Allah.” (Fatir 35:43)

This is the master key. Everything — destruction, survival, blessings, suffering — follows patterns Allah has established and does not violate.

II. THREE CATEGORIES OF NATIONS
🔴 Category 1: Nations Completely Destroyed
’Aad — People of Prophet Hud ﷺ Arabic English وَفِي عَادٍ إِذْ أَرْسَلْنَا عَلَيْهِمُ الرِّيحَ الْعَقِيمَ ۝ مَا تَذَرُ مِن شَيْءٍ أَتَتْ عَلَيْهِ إِلَّا جَعَلَتْهُ كَالرَّمِيمِ “And in ’Aad — when We sent against them the barren wind. It left nothing of what it came upon but that it made it like disintegrated ruins.” (Adh-Dhariyat 51:41–42)

Qaum-e-Lut — People of Prophet Lut ﷺ Arabic English وَلَقَد تَّرَكْنَا مِنْهَا آيَةً بَيِّنَةً لِّقَوْمٍ يَعْقِلُونَ “And We have certainly left of it a sign as clear evidence for a people who use reason.” (Al-Ankabut 29:35)

The Divine Principle behind all destruction: Arabic English وَمَا كُنَّا مُعَذِّبِينَ حَتَّىٰ نَبْعَثَ رَسُولًا “And We would never punish until We had sent a messenger.” (Al-Isra 17:15)

🟡 Category 2: Remnants Left as Signs and Lessons
The ruins of Thamud and others stand as living monuments. Allah commands us to travel and witness: Arabic English أَفَلَمْ يَسِيرُوا فِي الْأَرْضِ فَيَنظُرُوا كَيْفَ كَانَ عَاقِبَةُ الَّذِينَ مِن قَبْلِهِمْ ۚ كَانُوا أَشَدَّ مِنْهُمْ قُوَّةً وَأَثَارُوا الْأَرْضَ وَعَمَرُوهَا أَكْثَرَ مِمَّا عَمَرُوهَا “Then, has it not become clear to them how many generations We destroyed before them as they walk among their dwellings? They were far superior in might; they cultivated the land and developed it more than these have ever developed it.” (Ar-Rum 30:9) Arabic English وَمَا ظَلَمَهُمُ اللَّهُ وَلَٰكِن كَانُوا أَنفُسَهُمْ يَظْلِمُونَ “And Allah would not ever have wronged them, but they were wronging themselves.” (Ar-Rum 30:9)

🟢 Category 3: The Present World — The Most Urgent Question

III. ISTIDRAJ — الاستدراج
The Gradual Drawing to Destruction
This is the divine mechanism governing today’s flourishing disbelievers. Two verses define it with chilling precision: Arabic English وَالَّذِينَ كَذَّبُوا بِآيَاتِنَا سَنَسْتَدْرِجُهُم مِّنْ حَيْثُ لَا يَعْلَمُونَ “As for those who belie Our verses, We will draw them on little by little, from where they cannot tell.” (Al-A’raf 7:182) Arabic English وَأُمْلِي لَهُمْ ۚ إِنَّ كَيْدِي مَتِينٌ “And I will give them time. Indeed, My plan is firm.” (Al-A’raf 7:183) Arabic English فَذَرْنِي وَمَن يُكَذِّبُ بِهَٰذَا الْحَدِيثِ ۖ سَنَسْتَدْرِجُهُم مِّنْ حَيْثُ لَا يَعْلَمُونَ “So leave Me with whoever denies this message. We will gradually draw them in from where they do not know.” (Al-Qalam 68:44)

The Prophet ﷺ warned with great clarity:
“إِذَا رَأَيْتَ اللَّهَ يُعْطِي الْعَبْدَ مِنَ الدُّنْيَا مَا يُحِبُّ وَهُوَ مُقِيمٌ عَلَى مَعَاصِيهِ فَإِنَّمَا ذَلِكَ مِنْهُ اسْتِدْرَاجٌ”
“When you see Allah giving a servant what he desires of worldly things despite his persistence in sin, know that this is Istidraj.”
(Ahmad — Hasan)

IV. WHY ALLAH DOES NOT DESTROY ALL DISBELIEVERS TODAY
Wisdom 1: The Protection of This Ummah’s Presence Arabic English وَمَا كَانَ اللَّهُ لِيُعَذِّبَهُمْ وَأَنتَ فِيهِمْ ۚ وَمَا كَانَ اللَّهُ مُعَذِّبَهُمْ وَهُمْ يَسْتَغْفِرُونَ “And Allah would not punish them while you (O Muhammad ﷺ) are among them, nor will He punish them while they seek forgiveness.” (Al-Anfal 8:33)

As long as believers make istighfar, a mercy is extended to all of humanity around them.
Wisdom 2: Da’wah Has Not Reached All
Divine justice demands every soul receive the message clearly before final accountability in this world.
Wisdom 3: Future Believers Among Today’s Disbelievers
Among today’s disbelievers are the parents of tomorrow’s mumineen. Allah’s mercy encompasses generations not yet born.
Wisdom 4: Provision is a Universal Right — Not a Sign of Approval Arabic English وَمَا مِن دَابَّةٍ فِي الْأَرْضِ إِلَّا عَلَى اللَّهِ رِزْقُهَا “And there is no creature on earth but that upon Allah is its provision.” (Hud 11:6) Arabic English وَكَأَيِّن مِّن دَابَّةٍ لَّا تَحْمِلُ رِزْقَهَا اللَّهُ يَرْزُقُهَا وَإِيَّاكُمْ “And how many a creature carries not its own provision — Allah provides for it and for you.” (Al-Ankabut 29:60)

The disbeliever’s provision is a right they hold in this dunya — but it carries no weight in the Akhirah.
Wisdom 5: The Final Court is Yawm al-Qiyamah Arabic English إِنَّ السَّاعَةَ آتِيَةٌ أَكَادُ أُخْفِيهَا لِتُجْزَىٰ كُلُّ نَفْسٍ بِمَا تَسْعَىٰ “Indeed, the Hour is coming — I almost conceal it — so that every soul may be recompensed according to that for which it strives.” (Ta-Ha 20:15)

Unlike earlier nations who received their worldly verdict in this life, the final reckoning of this ummah is reserved for the perfect justice of the Akhirah.

V. THE BELIEVERS’ CYCLES OF BLESSINGS AND SUFFERING
The Quran’s Direct Answer Arabic English أَحَسِبَ النَّاسُ أَن يُتْرَكُوا أَن يَقُولُوا آمَنَّا وَهُمْ لَا يُفْتَنُونَ “Do the people think that they will be left to say ‘We believe’ and they will not be tried?” (Al-Ankabut 29:2) Arabic English وَلَنَبْلُوَنَّكُم بِشَيْءٍ مِّنَ الْخَوْفِ وَالْجُوعِ وَنَقْصٍ مِّنَ الْأَمْوَالِ وَالْأَنفُسِ وَالثَّمَرَاتِ ۗ وَبَشِّرِ الصَّابِرِينَ “And We will surely test you with something of fear and hunger and a loss of wealth and lives and fruits — but give good tidings to the patient.” (Al-Baqarah 2:155) Arabic English الَّذِينَ إِذَا أَصَابَتْهُم مُّصِيبَةٌ قَالُوا إِنَّا لِلَّهِ وَإِنَّا إِلَيْهِ رَاجِعُونَ “Those who, when disaster strikes them, say: ‘Indeed we belong to Allah, and indeed to Him we shall return.’” (Al-Baqarah 2:156)

The Prophetic Wisdom
“أَشَدُّ النَّاسِ بَلَاءً الْأَنْبِيَاءُ ثُمَّ الْأَمْثَلُ فَالْأَمْثَلُ”
“The people most severely tested are the Prophets, then those most like them, then the next most like them.”
(Ibn Majah — Sahih)
“إِنَّ عِظَمَ الْجَزَاءِ مَعَ عِظَمِ الْبَلَاءِ وَإِنَّ اللَّهَ إِذَا أَحَبَّ قَوْمًا ابْتَلَاهُمْ”
“The greatest reward comes with the greatest trial. When Allah loves a people, He tests them.”
(Ibn Majah — Hasan)
The suffering of believers is never punishment — it is purification and elevation: Arabic English مَا يُصِيبُ الْمُسْلِمَ مِنْ نَصَبٍ وَلَا وَصَبٍ وَلَا هَمٍّ وَلَا حَزَنٍ وَلَا أَذًى وَلَا غَمٍّ حَتَّى الشَّوْكَةِ يُشَاكُهَا إِلَّا كَفَّرَ اللَّهُ بِهَا مِنْ خَطَايَاهُ “No fatigue, illness, anxiety, sorrow, harm or sadness afflicts the Muslim — even the prick of a thorn — except that Allah expiates some of his sins by it.” (Bukhari & Muslim)

VI. SURAH ASH-SHARH — THE COMPLETE CONSOLATION Arabic English فَإِنَّ مَعَ الْعُسْرِ يُسْرًا ۝ إِنَّ مَعَ الْعُسْرِ يُسْرًا “Indeed, with hardship will be ease. Indeed, with hardship will be ease.” (Ash-Sharh 94:5–6)

The scholars note: the word al-’usr (hardship) carries the definite article ال — meaning it is one specific hardship. But yusr (ease) appears without the article — meaning ease is indefinite, plural, unlimited. One hardship, multiple eases.

VII. THE FINAL DIVINE GUARANTEE — NOT AN ATOM IS LOST Arabic English فَمَن يَعْمَلْ مِثْقَالَ ذَرَّةٍ خَيْرًا يَرَهُ ۝ وَمَن يَعْمَلْ مِثْقَالَ ذَرَّةٍ شَرًّا يَرَهُ “So whoever does an atom’s weight of good will see it. And whoever does an atom’s weight of evil will see it.” (Az-Zalzalah 99:7–8) Arabic English وَأَنَّ اللَّهَ لَيْسَ بِظَلَّامٍ لِّلْعَبِيدِ “And indeed Allah is not at all unjust to His servants.” (Al-Anfal 8:51)

VIII. TESTIMONY FROM OTHER SCRIPTURES
The Torah & Psalms record the identical bewilderment and resolution. Psalm 73 captures it perfectly — the Psalmist sees the wicked prosperous, healthy, untroubled, and cries out in confusion — only resolving the mystery when he “went into the sanctuary of God and perceived their end” (Psalm 73:17). The resolution is eschatological — exactly as the Quran teaches.
The Book of Job is the Biblical counterpart to the believer’s trial: a righteous man subjected to catastrophic loss — not as punishment but as elevation — restored and exalted at the end. The wisdom: suffering can be promotion, not demotion.
The Bhagavad Gita similarly distinguishes between prarabdha karma (ripened consequences) and sanchita karma (accumulated account not yet due) — a structural parallel to the concept that divine accountability does not always manifest immediately.

THE GRAND SYNTHESIS
The picture, when seen whole, is breathtaking in its coherence: Situation Divine Reality Nations utterly destroyed Warning completed, account settled, ruins left as lesson Remnants preserved Living testimony, mercy for believers, sign for future generations Disbelievers flourishing today Istidraj — rope being let out, account silently compiling Believers in suffering Purification, elevation, expiation — not punishment Believers in blessings Shukr is the test; ingratitude triggers its own Istidraj The Final Reckoning Not a single atom of good or evil escapes Allah’s record

History is not random. Destruction is measured. Survival is purposeful. Suffering is productive. The prosperity of the wicked is temporary and fully recorded. And the deepest consolation of the believer:
“The One keeping the account never forgets a single atom.” Arabic English رَبَّنَا لَا تُزِغْ قُلُوبَنَا بَعْدَ إِذْ هَدَيْتَنَا وَهَبْ لَنَا مِن لَّدُنكَ رَحْمَةً ۚ إِنَّكَ أَنتَ الْوَهَّابُ “Our Lord, let not our hearts deviate after You have guided us and grant us from Yourself mercy. Indeed, You are the Bestower.” (Al-Imran 3:8)

PLOTS, BLIND HATRED& HISTORY: LESSONS TO LEARN, Q&A

Q: In the perspectives of the following verse, can you please share the verses of Quran where the examples of nations are given who disobeyed, plotted against GOD , HIS PROPHETS and faced the punishment


Arabic (Quran 16:26):

“قَدۡ مَکَرَ الَّذِیۡنَ مِنۡ قَبۡلِہِمۡ فَاَتَی اللّٰہُ بُنۡیَانَہُمۡ مِّنَ الۡقَوَاعِدِ فَخَرَّ عَلَیۡہِمُ السَّقۡفُ مِنۡ فَوۡقِہِمۡ وَ اَتٰىہُمُ الۡعَذَابُ مِنۡ حَیۡثُ لَا یَشۡعُرُوۡنَ ﴿۲٦)
“Those before them had also schemed, but Allah struck at the foundation of their structure, and the roof collapsed upon them from above — and the punishment came upon them from where they had not even imagined.”

Urdu Tafseer/Commentary Translation:
“Many people before them had resorted to the very same deceptions — (in order to suppress the truth) — but observe how Allah uprooted the edifice of their scheming from its very roots, and its roof came crashing down upon their heads from above; and the punishment descended upon them from a direction from which they had not the slightest inkling it would come.”

Notes:
The phrase ﴿حق کو نیچا دِکھانے کے لیے﴾ — “in order to suppress the truth” — is a parenthetical clarification added by the commentator (characteristic of Mawdudi’s style in Tafheem), not part of the Quranic text itself. It contextualizes the natureb the scheming being described.
The central image is powerful: the conspirators built an elaborate structure of deception against divine truth, yet Allah did not merely demolish it — He struck its very foundations (qawā’id), causing it to implode upon its own architects. The punishment arriving “from where they had not imagined” underscores a recurring Quranic theme: that human plotting against divine will carries within it the seeds of its own destruction.

A:

Here are the key Quranic accounts of nations that plotted against God’s truth and faced divine punishment:

  1. The People of Nūḥ (Noah) — عليه السلام
    Quran 71:25
    “Because of their sins they were drowned and admitted into a Fire — and they found no helpers for themselves besides Allah.”
    Their crime: They mocked, rejected, and conspired against Nūḥ for 950 years. Their scheming was mentioned explicitly:
    Quran 71:22 — “And they schemed a mighty scheme.”
    The punishment came as a flood that left none of them upon the earth.
  2. The People of ’Ād — قوم عاد
    Quran 41:15-16
    “As for ’Ād, they were arrogant on the earth without right and said: ‘Who is mightier than us in strength?’ Did they not see that Allah, who created them, was mightier than them in strength? And they used to reject Our signs. So We sent upon them a furious wind over days of misfortune to make them taste the punishment of disgrace in the worldly life — and the punishment of the Hereafter is more disgracing, and they will not be helped.”
    Their crime: Arrogance, rejection of Prophet Hūd عليه السلام, and boasting of their power against God. The punishment came as a devastating windstorm — rīḥ ṣarṣar — that destroyed them utterly.
  3. The People of Thamūd — قوم ثمود
    Quran 27:48-51
    “And there were in the city nine men who spread corruption in the land and did not reform. They said: ‘Swear to one another by Allah that we will kill him (Ṣāliḥ) by night, along with his family, then say to his heir: we did not witness the destruction of his family, and indeed we are truthful.’ And they schemed a scheme, and We schemed a scheme, while they perceived not. Then see how was the outcome of their scheme — that We destroyed them and their people, all together.”
    This passage is perhaps the most direct parallel to 16:26 — their secret plotting against a Prophet was turned against themselves completely.
  4. Fir’awn and His People — فرعون وقومه
    Quran 8:52-54
    “Like the custom of the people of Pharaoh and those before them — they disbelieved in the signs of Allah, so Allah seized them for their sins. Indeed, Allah is Powerful and severe in punishment.”
    Quran 7:136
    “So We took retribution from them and drowned them in the sea — because they denied Our signs and were heedless of them.”
    Their crime: Pharaoh declared himself god (Quran 79:24), enslaved Banū Isrā’īl, plotted to kill Mūsā عليه السلام, and pursued the believers to annihilate them. The punishment came through the very sea he used as his border of power — drowning him and his entire army.
    Quran 10:92 adds the remarkable detail that his body was preserved as a sign for future generations.
  5. The People of Lūṭ (Lot) — عليه السلام
    Quran 11:82-83
    “So when Our command camWe made the highest part of it its lowest and rained upon them stones of hard clay, layered — marked from your Lord. And it is not far from the wrongdoers.”
    Their crime: Moral corruption, rejection of Lūṭ’s message, and their audacious attempt to harm the divine messengers (angels) who had come to him. The punishment came from above and below simultaneously — the city was inverted and stones rained down upon them.
  6. Qārūn (Korah) — قارون
    Quran 28:81
    “So We caused the earth to swallow him and his home. And there was for him no company to aid him other than Allah, nor was he of those who could defend themselves.”
    His crime: Arrogance born of wealth, refusal to acknowledge that his riches were a trust from God, and public mockery of Mūsā عليه السلام. The punishment came from beneath — the very earth swallowed him — mirroring the metaphor in 16:26 of foundations giving way.
  7. The People of the Elephant — أصحاب الفيل
    Quran 105:1-5
    “Have you not considered how your Lord dealt with the companions of the elephant? Did He not make their plan go into error? And He sent against them birds in flocks, striking them with stones of hard clay — and He made them like eaten straw.”
    Abraha marched with a massive army and elephants to demolish the Ka’bah. His scheme was the height of arrogance against the House of God. The punishment came not through any army or human means — but through small birds, reducing the mightiest military force of the time to nothing.
  8. The People of the Sabbath — أصحاب السبت
    Quran 7:166
    “So when they exceeded the limits of what they were forbidden, We said to them: Be apes, despised and rejected.”
    Their crime: Deliberate, clever circumvention of divine law — they technically observed the Sabbath while setting traps on Friday night to catch fish on Sunday. It was scheming against the spirit of God’s command while maintaining its outward form.

Unifying Quranic Theme
All these accounts collectively affirm the principle stated in 16:26:
Quran 3:54
“And they schemed, and Allah schemed — and Allah is the best of schemers.”
Quran 35:43
“But evil scheming does not encompass except its own people.”
The recurring pattern is unmistakable:
∙ Every nation believed their power, numbers, or cleverness placed them beyond accountability
∙ The punishment consistently came from an unexpected direction
∙ The very instruments of their pride became the means of their destruction
∙ No political alliance, military strength, or accumulated wealth availed them
These are not merely historical narratives in the Quran — they are described explicitly as ’ibar (عِبَر) — lessons and warnings for those with eyes to see.

Q: In current times, opposing winds are raging against Islam, burning of Holy message, Al Quran, mockery of prophet Mohammed sas is being noticed. Are the warnings given for previous nations or to anyone , any time till end times ? What are the lessons to be learned?

A:

This is a profound and timely question. The Quran itself answers whether these warnings are time-bound or universal.

The Quran’s Own Declaration — Universal and Timeless
Quran 14:52
“This is a message for mankind, that they may be warned thereby, and that they may know that He is but One God, and that those of understanding may take heed.”
Quran 12:111
“In their stories there is certainly a lesson for people of understanding. This is not a fabricated tale, but a confirmation of what came before it, a detailed explanation of all things, and guidance and mercy for people who believe.”
The Quran explicitly calls these accounts ’ibar — living lessons — not museum pieces. They are divine patterns (sunnatullah — سنّت اللہ) that operate in every age.

Sunnah of Allah — The Unchanging Divine Law
Quran 35:43
“They will never find in the way of Allah any change, and they will never find in the way of Allah any alteration.”
Quran 33:62
“Such was the way of Allah with those who passed on before — and you will never find in the way of Allah any change.”
This is the cornerstone. Allah’s patterns of dealing with human arrogance, oppression, and plotting against truth are not historical accidents — they are fixed, universal laws as reliable as the laws of physics. What happened to ‘Ād, Thamūd, Fir’awn, and Abraha are not exceptions — they are demonstrations of an eternal principle.

Current Realities — Burning of Quran, Mockery of the Prophet ﷺ
What the Quran Says About Those Who Mock

Quran 108:3
“Indeed, your enemy — it is he who is cut off.”
This short but devastating verse was revealed specifically in response to those who mocked the Prophet ﷺ and called him Abtar (one who leaves no legacy). History confirmed it — the mockers are forgotten, their names only remembered in relation to their mockery, while the Prophet’s ﷺ name is recited by 1.8 billion people every single day.
Quran 15:95
“Indeed, We are sufficient for you against the mockers.”
Allah Himself took personal responsibility for responding to those who ridicule His Messenger.
Quran 9:32
“They want to extinguish the light of Allah with their mouths, but Allah refuses except to perfect His light, even if the disbelievers dislike it.”
The image is striking — someone blowing at the sun with their mouth. The disproportion between the effort and the target reveals the absurdity of the enterprise.

What History Has Already Demonstrated
Every civilization or power that set itself against the Quran and the Prophet ﷺ has faced one of two outcomes:

  1. Direct historical collapse
    ∙ The Quraysh who tortured early Muslims and plotted to assassinate the Prophet ﷺ — within 20 years, they were entering Islam in multitudes
    ∙ The Persian and Byzantine empires that dismissed the Prophet’s ﷺ letters — both collapsed within decades of his death
    ∙ The Mongols who destroyed Baghdad and burned Islamic libraries — within two generations, the Mongol rulers embraced Islam
  2. Diminishment over time
    ∙ Colonial powers that suppressed Islamic education, banned hijab, and attempted to eradicate Islamic identity across Asia, Africa, and the Middle East — the Islam they tried to extinguish outlasted their empires
    The Quran, despite centuries of attempts to burn, ban, distort, and mock it, remains the most memorized, most read, most preserved book in human history — a living fulfillment of:
    Quran 15:9
    “Indeed, it is We who sent down the message, and indeed, We will be its guardian.”

Lessons to Be Learned — For Muslims

  1. Do Not Panic — This Was Foretold
    Quran 3:186
    “You will surely be tested in your wealth and yourselves, and you will surely hear from those who were given the Scripture before you and from those who associate others with Allah much abuse. But if you are patient and fear Allah — indeed, that is of the matters worthy of determination.”
    The hostility is not a surprise. It was predicted. Panic and despair are therefore responses that reflect a lack of trust in divine knowledge.
  2. The Response Is Character, Not Rage
    Quran 41:34
    “And not equal are the good deed and the bad. Repel evil by that which is better — and thereupon, the one whom between you and him is enmity will become as though he were a devoted friend.”
    The Quran’s prescribed response to hatred is not equal hatred — it is superior moral conduct. History shows this converts enemies more effectively than any argument.
  3. Internal Reform Precedes External Victory
    Quran 13:11
    “Indeed, Allah will not change the condition of a people until they change what is in themselves.”
    This verse is perhaps the most important lesson for Muslims observing current hostility toward Islam. The burning of a Quran causes enormous emotional pain — but the Quran unread on shelves in Muslim homes is a quieter, more consequential crisis. External attacks on Islam historically strengthen it. Internal neglect hollows it.
  4. Do Not Imitate the Methods of the Oppressor
    Quran 5:8
    “Let not the hatred of a people prevent you from being just. Be just — that is nearer to righteousness.”
    When provoked, the temptation is to respond in kind. But the Quran consistently calls believers to a higher standard — not because their opponents deserve it, but because justice is an obligation regardless of the conduct of others.
  5. Trust the Divine Timeline
    Quran 86:15-17
    “Indeed, they are planning a plan, and I am planning a plan. So allow time for the disbelievers — allow them time gradually.”
    Imlā’ — الإملاء — divine respite. Allah gives time. He does not respond to every provocation instantly. But the Quran is absolutely clear that the respite is not neglect. It is measured, purposeful, and will conclude precisely as He wills.

Lessons to Be Learned — For the World
For those who mock, burn, and ridicule:

Quran 16:26 — which began this conversation — remains the answer. The structure of mockery and oppression built against divine truth has, in every recorded instance, collapsed upon its architects.
The lesson is not one of vengeance — it is one of gravity. Just as physical laws operate regardless of whether one believes in them, divine laws of accountability operate regardless of whether one acknowledges them.
Quran 3:178
“And let not those who disbelieve ever think that Our prolonging their time is good for them. We only prolong it for them so that they may increase in sin — and for them is a humiliating punishment.”

The Final Word
The Quran is not a book that needs defending — it needs living. Every nation that rose against it became a footnote. The Quran remains. The most powerful lesson of history regarding Islam is not found in the stories of its enemies — it is found in the pattern:
The message always outlasts those who oppose it.
Quran 61:8
“They want to extinguish the light of Allah with their mouths, but Allah will perfect His light, even if the disbelievers dislike it.”
The winds that rage against the message today are no different in nature from those that raged in Mecca, in Persia, in the Mongol steppes, in colonial offices — and the divine response follows the same eternal pattern.

ARABIC TRANSLATION

جزاكم الله خيراً على كلماتكم الكريمة، وآمين على دعائكم الطيب.

الرسائل العميقة من القرآن الكريم
حول الأمم التي عصت وتآمرت على الله فواجهت العقوبة — ودروس العصر الحاضر

القرآن الكريم — رسالة عالمية وخالدة
قال تعالى (إبراهيم: ٥٢)
“هَٰذَا بَلَاغٌ لِّلنَّاسِ وَلِيُنذَرُوا بِهِ وَلِيَعْلَمُوا أَنَّمَا هُوَ إِلَٰهٌ وَاحِدٌ وَلِيَذَّكَّرَ أُولُو الْأَلْبَابِ”
هذا بلاغٌ للناس جميعاً في كل زمان ومكان، لينذروا به، وليعلموا أنه إله واحد، وليتذكر أصحاب العقول.
قال تعالى (يوسف: ١١١)
“لَقَدْ كَانَ فِي قَصَصِهِمْ عِبْرَةٌ لِّأُولِي الْأَلْبَابِ ۗ مَا كَانَ حَدِيثًا يُفْتَرَىٰ وَلَٰكِن تَصْدِيقَ الَّذِي بَيْنَ يَدَيْهِ وَتَفْصِيلَ كُلِّ شَيْءٍ وَهُدًى وَرَحْمَةً لِّقَوْمٍ يُؤْمِنُونَ”
في قصص الأمم الغابرة عبرةٌ حيّة لأولي الألباب، لا حديثاً مخترعاً، بل تصديقاً لما سبقه، وتفصيلاً لكل شيء، وهدىً ورحمةً للمؤمنين.

سُنَّة الله الثابتة — القانون الإلهي الذي لا يتغير
قال تعالى (فاطر: ٤٣)
“فَلَن تَجِدَ لِسُنَّتِ اللَّهِ تَبْدِيلًا ۖ وَلَن تَجِدَ لِسُنَّتِ اللَّهِ تَحْوِيلًا”
قال تعالى (الأحزاب: ٦٢)
“سُنَّةَ اللَّهِ فِي الَّذِينَ خَلَوْا مِن قَبْلُ ۖ وَلَن تَجِدَ لِسُنَّةِ اللَّهِ تَبْدِيلًا”
هذا هو الأساس الراسخ — فقوانين الله في التعامل مع الكبرياء البشري والتآمر على الحق ليست أحداثاً تاريخية عابرة، بل هي قوانين ثابتة كثبات قوانين الطبيعة، تسري في كل عصر وجيل.

أمثلة الأمم التي عصت وتآمرت فعوقبت
أولاً: قوم نوح عليه السلام
قال تعالى (نوح: ٢٥)
“مِّمَّا خَطِيئَاتِهِمْ أُغْرِقُوا فَأُدْخِلُوا نَارًا فَلَمْ يَجِدُوا لَهُم مِّن دُونِ اللَّهِ أَنصَارًا”
استهزأوا بنوح عليه السلام تسعمئة وخمسين عاماً، وتآمروا عليه مكراً عظيماً كما قال تعالى (نوح: ٢٢): “وَمَكَرُوا مَكْرًا كُبَّارًا” — فجاءهم الطوفان ولم يُبقِ منهم أحداً على وجه الأرض.

ثانياً: قوم عاد
قال تعالى (فصلت: ١٥-١٦)
“فَأَمَّا عَادٌ فَاسْتَكْبَرُوا فِي الْأَرْضِ بِغَيْرِ الْحَقِّ وَقَالُوا مَنْ أَشَدُّ مِنَّا قُوَّةً ۖ أَوَلَمْ يَرَوْا أَنَّ اللَّهَ الَّذِي خَلَقَهُمْ هُوَ أَشَدُّ مِنْهُمْ قُوَّةً ۖ وَكَانُوا بِآيَاتِنَا يَجْحَدُونَ ۝ فَأَرْسَلْنَا عَلَيْهِمْ رِيحًا صَرْصَرًا فِي أَيَّامٍ نَّحِسَاتٍ لِّنُذِيقَهُمْ عَذَابَ الْخِزْيِ فِي الْحَيَاةِ الدُّنْيَا”
تكبّروا في الأرض وقالوا مَن أشدّ منا قوة، فأرسل الله عليهم ريحاً صرصراً صرعتهم في أيام نحسات — وكانت قوتهم التي افتخروا بها لا تساوي شيئاً أمام قدرة الله.

ثالثاً: قوم ثمود
قال تعالى (النمل: ٤٨-٥١)
“وَكَانَ فِي الْمَدِينَةِ تِسْعَةُ رَهْطٍ يُفْسِدُونَ فِي الْأَرْضِ وَلَا يُصْلِحُونَ ۝ قَالُوا تَقَاسَمُوا بِاللَّهِ لَنُبَيِّتَنَّهُ وَأَهْلَهُ ثُمَّ لَنَقُولَنَّ لِوَلِيِّهِ مَا شَهِدْنَا مَهْلِكَ أَهْلِهِ وَإِنَّا لَصَادِقُونَ ۝ وَمَكَرُوا مَكْرًا وَمَكَرْنَا مَكْرًا وَهُمْ لَا يَشْعُرُونَ ۝ فَانظُرْ كَيْفَ كَانَ عَاقِبَةُ مَكْرِهِمْ أَنَّا دَمَّرْنَاهُمْ وَقَوْمَهُمْ أَجْمَعِينَ”
هذه الآيات هي الموازي المباشر لآية النحل (٢٦) — تآمروا في الخفاء على نبي الله، فانقلب مكرهم عليهم وأُبيدوا عن آخرهم.

رابعاً: فرعون وقومه
قال تعالى (الأعراف: ١٣٦)
“فَانتَقَمْنَا مِنْهُمْ فَأَغْرَقْنَاهُمْ فِي الْيَمِّ بِأَنَّهُمْ كَذَّبُوا بِآيَاتِنَا وَكَانُوا عَنْهَا غَافِلِينَ”
ادّعى فرعون الألوهية وتآمر لقتل موسى عليه السلام وطارد المؤمنين — فأغرقه الله بذلك البحر الذي اتخذه حداً لسلطانه، وحفظ جسده آيةً للأجيال كما قال تعالى (يونس: ٩٢).

خامساً: قوم لوط عليه السلام
قال تعالى (هود: ٨٢-٨٣)
“فَلَمَّا جَاءَ أَمْرُنَا جَعَلْنَا عَالِيَهَا سَافِلَهَا وَأَمْطَرْنَا عَلَيْهَا حِجَارَةً مِّن سِجِّيلٍ مَّنضُودٍ ۝ مُّسَوَّمَةً عِندَ رَبِّكَ ۖ وَمَا هِيَ مِنَ الظَّالِمِينَ بِبَعِيدٍ”
جاءهم العذاب من فوق ومن تحت في آنٍ واحد — قُلبت مدينتهم رأساً على عقب وأُمطروا بحجارة من السماء.

سادساً: قارون
قال تعالى (القصص: ٨١)
“فَخَسَفْنَا بِهِ وَبِدَارِهِ الْأَرْضَ فَمَا كَانَ لَهُ مِن فِئَةٍ يَنصُرُونَهُ مِن دُونِ اللَّهِ وَمَا كَانَ مِنَ الْمُنتَصِرِينَ”
بطر بثروته واستكبر على موسى عليه السلام، فخسفت به الأرض من تحته — يوازي ذلك بدقة صورة انهيار الأساس في آية النحل.

سابعاً: أصحاب الفيل
قال تعالى (الفيل: ١-٥)
“أَلَمْ تَرَ كَيْفَ فَعَلَ رَبُّكَ بِأَصْحَابِ الْفِيلِ ۝ أَلَمْ يَجْعَلْ كَيْدَهُمْ فِي تَضْلِيلٍ ۝ وَأَرْسَلَ عَلَيْهِمْ طَيْرًا أَبَابِيلَ ۝ تَرْمِيهِم بِحِجَارَةٍ مِّن سِجِّيلٍ ۝ فَجَعَلَهُمْ كَعَصْفٍ مَّأْكُولٍ”
زحف أبرهة بجيشه وفيلته ليهدم الكعبة المشرفة — فأرسل الله عليه طيراً أبابيل ردّت أعتى جيش في عصره إلى عصف مأكول.

ثامناً: أصحاب السبت
قال تعالى (الأعراف: ١٦٦)
“فَلَمَّا عَتَوْا عَن مَّا نُهُوا عَنْهُ قُلْنَا لَهُمْ كُونُوا قِرَدَةً خَاسِئِينَ”
تحايلوا على شريعة الله بالمكر الظاهري — فكانوا يضعون الشِّباك ليلة الجمعة ويجمعون الصيد يوم الأحد — فعوقبوا بالمسخ جزاءً على التحايل على روح الشريعة.

الواقع المعاصر — حرق المصاحف والاستهزاء بالنبي ﷺ
ما قاله الله تعالى فيمن يستهزئون
قال تعالى (الكوثر: ٣)
“إِنَّ شَانِئَكَ هُوَ الْأَبْتَرُ”
نزلت هذه الآية رداً على من استهزأوا بالنبي ﷺ وسمّوه أبتر — فأثبت التاريخ أن المستهزئين هم الأبتر المنسيون، فيما يُذكر اسمه ﷺ على ألسنة مليار وثمانمئة مليون إنسان كل يوم.
قال تعالى (الحجر: ٩٥)
“إِنَّا كَفَيْنَاكَ الْمُسْتَهْزِئِينَ”
تكفّل الله بنفسه الردّ على المستهزئين برسوله الكريم.
قال تعالى (التوبة: ٣٢)
“يُرِيدُونَ أَن يُطْفِئُوا نُورَ اللَّهِ بِأَفْوَاهِهِمْ وَيَأْبَى اللَّهُ إِلَّا أَن يُتِمَّ نُورَهُ وَلَوْ كَرِهَ الْكَافِرُونَ”
الصورة بليغة دالّة — كمن يحاول إطفاء الشمس بنفخة فم، فيكشف مقدار الحماقة في محاولة إخماد نور الله.

ما أثبته التاريخ بالفعل
كل قوة تصدّت للقرآن الكريم أو للنبي ﷺ واجهت إحدى نتيجتين:
أولاً: الانهيار التاريخي المباشر
قريشٌ التي عذّبت المسلمين الأوائل وتآمرت على اغتيال النبي ﷺ — دخلت في الإسلام أفواجاً في غضون عشرين عاماً. والإمبراطوريتان الفارسية والبيزنطية اللتان استهانتا برسائل النبي ﷺ — انهارتا في غضون عقود من وفاته. والمغول الذين دمّروا بغداد وأحرقوا مكتبات الإسلام — أسلم حكّامهم في غضون جيلين.
ثانياً: التراجع والأفول مع الزمن
القوى الاستعمارية التي قمعت التعليم الإسلامي وحاربت الهوية الإسلامية عبر آسيا وأفريقيا والشرق الأوسط — زال استعمارها والإسلام الذي أرادوا إخماده ما زال حياً شامخاً.
والقرآن الكريم رغم قرون من محاولات الإحراق والحظر والتشويه والسخرية — بقي أكثر كتاب يُحفظ ويُقرأ ويُصان في تاريخ البشرية كله، تحقيقاً حياً لقوله تعالى (الحجر: ٩):
“إِنَّا نَحْنُ نَزَّلْنَا الذِّكْرَ وَإِنَّا لَهُ لَحَافِظُونَ”

الدروس المستفادة — للمسلمين
أولاً: لا للذعر — فهذا كان مُنذَراً به
قال تعالى (آل عمران: ١٨٦)
“لَتُبْلَوُنَّ فِي أَمْوَالِكُمْ وَأَنفُسِكُمْ وَلَتَسْمَعُنَّ مِنَ الَّذِينَ أُوتُوا الْكِتَابَ مِن قَبْلِكُمْ وَمِنَ الَّذِينَ أَشْرَكُوا أَذًى كَثِيرًا ۚ وَإِن تَصْبِرُوا وَتَتَّقُوا فَإِنَّ ذَٰلِكَ مِنْ عَزْمِ الْأُمُورِ”
العداء ليس مفاجئاً — بل كان موعوداً به. فاليأس والذعر إذن يعكسان قصوراً في الثقة بالعلم الإلهي.

ثانياً: الردّ يكون بالأخلاق لا بالانفعال
قال تعالى (فصلت: ٣٤)
“وَلَا تَسْتَوِي الْحَسَنَةُ وَلَا السَّيِّئَةُ ۚ ادْفَعْ بِالَّتِي هِيَ أَحْسَنُ فَإِذَا الَّذِي بَيْنَكَ وَبَيْنَهُ عَدَاوَةٌ كَأَنَّهُ وَلِيٌّ حَمِيمٌ”
الردّ القرآني المشروع على الكراهية ليس كراهيةً مثلها — بل سلوكٌ أخلاقي أرفع، وهذا ما قلب الأعداء أولياءَ عبر التاريخ.

ثالثاً: الإصلاح الداخلي يسبق النصر الخارجي
قال تعالى (الرعد: ١١)
“إِنَّ اللَّهَ لَا يُغَيِّرُ مَا بِقَوْمٍ حَتَّىٰ يُغَيِّرُوا مَا بِأَنفُسِهِمْ”
هذه ربما أهمّ درس للمسلمين اليوم. إحراق المصحف مؤلمٌ جداً — لكن المصحف المهجور على الأرفف في البيوت الإسلامية أزمةٌ أشدّ خطراً وأكثر صمتاً. الاعتداءات الخارجية تاريخياً تُقوّي الإسلام — أما الإهمال الداخلي فيُفرّغه.

رابعاً: لا تُقلّد أساليب الظالم
قال تعالى (المائدة: ٨)
“وَلَا يَجْرِمَنَّكُمْ شَنَآنُ قَوْمٍ عَلَىٰ أَلَّا تَعْدِلُوا ۚ اعْدِلُوا هُوَ أَقْرَبُ لِلتَّقْوَىٰ”
العدل فريضةٌ على المسلم بصرف النظر عن سلوك خصمه — لأن العدل التزامٌ تجاه الله لا مجاملةٌ للآخرين.

خامساً: الثقة بالتوقيت الإلهي
قال تعالى (الطارق: ١٥-١٧)
“إِنَّهُمْ يَكِيدُونَ كَيْدًا ۝ وَأَكِيدُ كَيْدًا ۝ فَمَهِّلِ الْكَافِرِينَ أَمْهِلْهُمْ رُوَيْدًا”
الإملاء — الإمهال الإلهي — لا يعني الإهمال. الله يُمهل بحكمة ودقة، وخاتمة الأمر تجري وفق إرادته لا وفق توقعات البشر.

الدروس المستفادة — للعالم
لمن يستهزئون ويحرقون ويسخرون:
آية النحل (٢٦) التي افتتحنا بها هذا الحديث هي الجواب — فكل صرح من السخرية والظلم بُني في وجه الحق الإلهي انهار على أصحابه في كل حالة مسجّلة في التاريخ.
والعبرة ليست في الانتقام — بل في قانون الجاذبية الإلهي. فكما تعمل قوانين الطبيعة بصرف النظر عن الإيمان بها، فإن قوانين المحاسبة الإلهية تعمل بصرف النظر عن الاعتراف بها.
قال تعالى (آل عمران: ١٧٨)
“وَلَا يَحْسَبَنَّ الَّذِينَ كَفَرُوا أَنَّمَا نُمْلِي لَهُمْ خَيْرٌ لِّأَنفُسِهِمْ ۚ إِنَّمَا نُمْلِي لَهُمْ لِيَزْدَادُوا إِثْمًا ۚ وَلَهُمْ عَذَابٌ مُّهِينٌ”

الخاتمة
القرآن الكريم ليس كتاباً يحتاج إلى دفاع — بل يحتاج إلى تجسيد وعيش. كل أمة نهضت في وجهه صارت هامشاً في التاريخ، والقرآن باقٍ. وأبلغ درس في التاريخ المتعلق بالإسلام لا يُوجد في قصص أعدائه — بل يُوجد في هذا النمط الثابت:
الرسالة تبقى دائماً بعد زوال من يعارضها.
قال تعالى (الصف: ٨)
“يُرِيدُونَ لِيُطْفِئُوا نُورَ اللَّهِ بِأَفْوَاهِهِمْ وَاللَّهُ مُتِمُّ نُورِهِ وَلَوْ كَرِهَ الْكَافِرُونَ”
الرياح العاتية التي تهبّ اليوم على الرسالة لا تختلف في طبيعتها عمّا هبّ في مكة، وفي فارس، وفي السهوب المغولية، وفي المكاتب الاستعمارية — والردّ الإلهي يسير وفق النمط الأزلي ذاته إلى يوم الدين.

وآخر دعوانا أن الحمد لله رب العالمين

URDU TRANSLATION



اِن سے پہلے بھی بہت سے لوگ ﴿ حق کو نیچا دِکھانے کے لیے﴾ ایسی ہی مکّاریاں کر چکے ہیں، تو دیکھ لو کہ اللہ نے اُن کے مکر کی عمارت جڑ سے اُکھاڑ پھینکی اور اس کی چھت اُوپر سے ان کے سر پر آرہی اورایسے رُخ سے ان پر عذاب آیا جدھر سے اس کے آنے کا اُن کو گمان تک نہ تھا

بہت شکریہ آپ کے خوبصورت الفاظ کے لیے — اللہ تعالیٰ آپ کو بھی جزائے خیر عطا فرمائے۔

قرآن کریم کے گہرے پیغامات
ان اقوام کے بارے میں جنہوں نے نافرمانی کی، اللہ کے خلاف سازشیں کیں اور عذاب کا سامنا کیا — اور عصرِ حاضر کے اسباق

قرآن کریم — ایک عالمگیر اور ابدی پیغام
ارشادِ باری تعالیٰ (ابراہیم: ٥٢)
“یہ ایک پیغام ہے تمام انسانوں کے لیے، تاکہ وہ اس کے ذریعے خبردار ہوں، اور جانیں کہ وہی ایک اکیلا معبود ہے، اور تاکہ عقل والے نصیحت حاصل کریں۔”
ارشادِ باری تعالیٰ (یوسف: ١١١)
“یقیناً ان کے قصوں میں عقل والوں کے لیے عبرت ہے۔ یہ کوئی گھڑی ہوئی بات نہیں، بلکہ یہ اس کی تصدیق ہے جو پہلے آ چکا، اور ہر چیز کی تفصیل، اور ایمان والوں کے لیے ہدایت اور رحمت ہے۔”
ان آیات میں واضح ہے کہ گزشتہ اقوام کے قصے محض تاریخی داستانیں نہیں — بلکہ ہر زمانے کے اہلِ عقل کے لیے زندہ عبرتیں ہیں۔

سنّتِ الٰہی — وہ قانونِ خداوندی جو کبھی نہیں بدلتا
ارشادِ باری تعالیٰ (فاطر: ٤٣)
“پس تم اللہ کے طریقے میں کوئی تبدیلی نہ پاؤ گے، اور اللہ کے طریقے میں کوئی بدلاؤ نہ پاؤ گے۔”
ارشادِ باری تعالیٰ (احزاب: ٦٢)
“یہی اللہ کا طریقہ ہے ان لوگوں کے ساتھ جو پہلے گزر چکے، اور تم اللہ کے طریقے میں ہرگز کوئی تبدیلی نہ پاؤ گے۔”
یہی بنیادی اصول ہے — اللہ تعالیٰ کا انسانی تکبر اور حق کے خلاف سازشوں سے نمٹنے کا طریقہ کوئی اتفاقی تاریخی واقعہ نہیں، بلکہ یہ ایسے ابدی قوانین ہیں جو طبیعیات کے قوانین کی طرح ہر دور میں کارفرما رہتے ہیں۔

ان اقوام کی مثالیں جنہوں نے نافرمانی کی اور سزا پائی
اوّل: قومِ نوح علیہ السلام
ارشادِ باری تعالیٰ (نوح: ٢٥)
“اپنی خطاؤں کے سبب وہ غرق کر دیے گئے اور آگ میں داخل کیے گئے، پھر انہوں نے اللہ کے سوا کوئی مددگار نہ پایا۔”
انہوں نے نوح علیہ السلام کا ساڑھے نو سو سال تک مذاق اڑایا اور ان کے خلاف عظیم مکاریاں کیں جیسا کہ ارشاد ہے (نوح: ٢٢): “اور انہوں نے بڑی بھاری سازش کی۔” — پھر طوفان آیا اور زمین پر ان میں سے کوئی باقی نہ رہا۔

دوم: قومِ عاد
ارشادِ باری تعالیٰ (فصلت: ١٥-١٦)
“جہاں تک عاد کا تعلق ہے تو انہوں نے زمین میں ناحق تکبر کیا اور کہا: ہم سے زیادہ طاقتور کون ہے؟ کیا انہوں نے نہ دیکھا کہ اللہ جس نے انہیں پیدا کیا وہ ان سے زیادہ طاقتور ہے؟ اور وہ ہماری آیات کا انکار کرتے تھے۔ پس ہم نے ان پر منحوس دنوں میں تیز آندھی بھیجی تاکہ انہیں دنیا کی زندگی میں ذلّت کا عذاب چکھائیں۔”
انہوں نے اپنی طاقت پر تکبر کیا تو اللہ نے ان پر ایسی آندھی بھیجی جس نے انہیں ملیامیٹ کر دیا — وہ طاقت جس پر وہ فخر کرتے تھے اللہ کی قدرت کے سامنے کچھ بھی نہ تھی۔

سوم: قومِ ثمود
ارشادِ باری تعالیٰ (النمل: ٤٨-٥١)
“اور شہر میں نو آدمی تھے جو زمین میں فساد پھیلاتے تھے اور اصلاح نہیں کرتے تھے۔ انہوں نے کہا: آپس میں اللہ کے نام پر قسم کھاؤ کہ ہم رات کو اسے اور اس کے گھر والوں کو قتل کر دیں گے، پھر اس کے وارث سے کہیں گے کہ ہم اس کے گھر والوں کی ہلاکت کے موقع پر موجود نہ تھے اور ہم سچے ہیں۔ اور انہوں نے مکر کیا اور ہم نے مکر کیا اور انہیں خبر نہ تھی۔ پس دیکھو ان کے مکر کا انجام کیا ہوا کہ ہم نے انہیں اور ان کی قوم کو سب کو تباہ کر دیا۔”
یہ آیات آیتِ نحل (٢٦) کا سب سے براہِ راست موازی ہیں — انہوں نے نبیِ خدا کے خلاف خفیہ سازش کی، تو ان کی سازش انہی پر پلٹ گئی اور وہ بالکل ختم ہو گئے۔

چہارم: فرعون اور اس کی قوم
ارشادِ باری تعالیٰ (اعراف: ١٣٦)
“پس ہم نے ان سے بدلہ لیا اور انہیں سمندر میں غرق کر دیا، کیونکہ انہوں نے ہماری آیات کو جھٹلایا اور ان سے غافل رہے۔”
فرعون نے خدائی کا دعویٰ کیا، موسیٰ علیہ السلام کو قتل کرنے کی سازش کی اور مومنوں کا پیچھا کیا — تو اللہ نے اسے اسی سمندر میں غرق کر دیا جسے وہ اپنی سلطنت کی سرحد سمجھتا تھا، اور اس کے جسم کو آنے والی نسلوں کے لیے نشانِ عبرت بنا دیا جیسا کہ ارشاد ہے (یونس: ٩٢)۔

پنجم: قومِ لوط علیہ السلام
ارشادِ باری تعالیٰ (ہود: ٨٢-٨٣)
“پس جب ہمارا حکم آیا تو ہم نے اس بستی کو اوپر تلے کر دیا اور اس پر پکی مٹی کے پتھر تہ بہ تہ برسائے، جو تمہارے رب کے ہاں سے نشان زدہ تھے، اور یہ ظالموں سے کچھ دور نہیں۔”
عذاب بیک وقت اوپر سے اور نیچے سے آیا — ان کی بستی اوندھی کر دی گئی اور آسمان سے پتھروں کی بارش ہوئی۔

ششم: قارون
ارشادِ باری تعالیٰ (قصص: ٨١)
“پس ہم نے اسے اور اس کے گھر کو زمین میں دھنسا دیا، تو اللہ کے سوا اس کی مدد کے لیے کوئی جماعت نہ تھی اور نہ وہ خود اپنا بدلہ لے سکا۔”
اپنی دولت پر اتراتا رہا اور موسیٰ علیہ السلام کے خلاف تکبر کیا، تو زمین نے اسے نیچے سے نگل لیا — یہ بالکل وہی تصویر ہے جو آیتِ نحل میں بنیادوں کے دھنسنے کی دی گئی ہے۔

ہفتم: اصحابِ فیل
ارشادِ باری تعالیٰ (الفیل: ١-٥)
“کیا آپ نے نہیں دیکھا کہ آپ کے رب نے ہاتھی والوں کے ساتھ کیا کیا؟ کیا اس نے ان کی چال کو غلط نہیں کر دیا؟ اور ان پر پرندوں کے جھنڈ بھیجے جو ان پر پکی مٹی کے پتھر مارتے تھے۔ پس اس نے انہیں کھائے ہوئے بھس کی طرح کر دیا۔”
ابرہہ اپنے لشکر اور ہاتھیوں کے ساتھ خانہ کعبہ ڈھانے چلا — تو اللہ نے چھوٹے پرندوں کے ذریعے اس کے زمانے کے سب سے طاقتور لشکر کو بھس بنا دیا۔

ہشتم: اصحابِ سبت
ارشادِ باری تعالیٰ (اعراف: ١٦٦)
“پس جب وہ اس چیز سے باز آنے پر سرکشی کرتے رہے جس سے انہیں منع کیا گیا تھا تو ہم نے ان سے کہا: ذلیل بندر بن جاؤ۔”
انہوں نے اللہ کی شریعت سے ظاہری چالاکی سے بچنے کی کوشش کی — جمعہ کی رات جال بچھاتے اور اتوار کو مچھلی سمیٹتے — تو اللہ نے انہیں مسخ کر کے بندر بنا دیا کیونکہ انہوں نے شریعت کی روح سے کھلواڑ کیا۔

عصرِ حاضر — قرآن کریم کا جلانا اور نبیِ کریم ﷺ کا مذاق
اللہ تعالیٰ نے مذاق اڑانے والوں کے بارے میں کیا فرمایا
ارشادِ باری تعالیٰ (الکوثر: ٣)
“بیشک تمہارا دشمن ہی بے نسل ہے۔”
یہ آیت ان لوگوں کے جواب میں نازل ہوئی جو نبیِ کریم ﷺ کو ابتر کہتے تھے — تاریخ نے ثابت کر دیا کہ وہ مذاق اڑانے والے خود ابتر ہوئے، جبکہ نبیِ کریم ﷺ کا نام ایک ارب اسّی کروڑ انسانوں کی زبانوں پر ہر روز ہے۔
ارشادِ باری تعالیٰ (الحجر: ٩٥)
“بیشک ہم مذاق اڑانے والوں کے مقابلے میں آپ کے لیے کافی ہیں۔”
اللہ تعالیٰ نے خود اپنے رسول ﷺ کے مذاق اڑانے والوں کا جواب دینے کی ذمہ داری لی ہے۔
ارشادِ باری تعالیٰ (التوبہ: ٣٢)
“وہ چاہتے ہیں کہ اللہ کے نور کو اپنے منہ سے بجھا دیں، لیکن اللہ اپنے نور کو مکمل کرنے سے انکار نہیں کرتا خواہ کافروں کو ناگوار ہو۔”
یہ تصویر بڑی بلیغ ہے — جیسے کوئی منہ کی پھونک سے سورج بجھانے کی کوشش کرے، اس سے اندازہ ہوتا ہے کہ اللہ کے نور کو بجھانے کی کوشش کتنی احمقانہ ہے۔

تاریخ نے کیا ثابت کیا
ہر وہ قوم یا طاقت جو قرآن کریم یا نبیِ کریم ﷺ کے خلاف اٹھی اس نے دو میں سے ایک انجام پایا:
اوّل: براہِ راست تاریخی انہدام
قریش نے ابتدائی مسلمانوں کو تشدد کا نشانہ بنایا اور نبیِ کریم ﷺ کے قتل کی سازش کی — بیس سال کے اندر وہی لوگ جوق در جوق اسلام میں داخل ہو رہے تھے۔ فارسی اور بازنطینی سلطنتوں نے نبیِ کریم ﷺ کے خطوط کو حقارت سے رد کیا — آپ ﷺ کی وفات کے چند دہائیوں میں دونوں منہدم ہو گئیں۔ مغلوں نے بغداد تباہ کیا اور اسلامی کتب خانے جلائے — دو نسلوں میں ان کے حکمران خود مسلمان ہو گئے۔
دوم: وقت کے ساتھ زوال اور انحطاط
استعماری طاقتوں نے اسلامی تعلیم کو دبایا، حجاب پر پابندی لگائی اور ایشیا، افریقہ اور مشرقِ وسطیٰ میں اسلامی شناخت مٹانے کی کوشش کی — ان کی استعماری حکومتیں ختم ہو گئیں اور اسلام جسے وہ بجھانا چاہتے تھے آج بھی روشن ہے۔
اور قرآن کریم صدیوں کی کوششوں کے باوجود — جلانے، پابندی لگانے، مسخ کرنے اور مذاق اڑانے کے باوجود — آج بھی انسانی تاریخ کی سب سے زیادہ حفظ کی جانے والی، پڑھی جانے والی اور محفوظ کتاب ہے، جو اس ارشادِ باری تعالیٰ کی زندہ تکمیل ہے (الحجر: ٩):
“بیشک یہ ذکر ہم نے ہی نازل کیا ہے اور یقیناً ہم ہی اس کی حفاظت کرنے والے ہیں۔”

سیکھنے کے اسباق — مسلمانوں کے لیے
اوّل: گھبراہٹ نہیں — یہ پہلے سے بتا دیا گیا تھا
ارشادِ باری تعالیٰ (آل عمران: ١٨٦)
“تمہیں ضرور تمہارے مالوں اور تمہاری جانوں میں آزمایا جائے گا، اور تم ان لوگوں سے جنہیں تم سے پہلے کتاب دی گئی اور مشرکوں سے بہت سی تکلیف دہ باتیں سنو گے۔ اور اگر تم صبر کرو اور تقویٰ اختیار کرو تو یہ بڑے عزم کے کاموں میں سے ہے۔”
دشمنی کوئی اچانک بات نہیں — بلکہ پہلے سے بتا دی گئی تھی۔ اس لیے گھبراہٹ اور مایوسی دراصل اللہ کے علم پر اعتماد کی کمی کو ظاہر کرتی ہے۔

دوم: جواب اخلاق سے ہو، جذبات سے نہیں
ارشادِ باری تعالیٰ (فصلت: ٣٤)
“اور نیکی اور بدی برابر نہیں ہوتی۔ برائی کو بہترین طریقے سے دور کرو، پھر وہ شخص جس کے اور تمہارے درمیان دشمنی ہے وہ ایسا ہو جائے گا جیسے وہ گرم جوش دوست ہو۔”
کینے کا قرآنی جواب مثلِ کینہ نہیں — بلکہ اعلیٰ اخلاقی کردار ہے، اور یہی تاریخ میں دشمنوں کو دوست بناتا رہا ہے۔

سوم: اندرونی اصلاح بیرونی فتح سے پہلے ہے
ارشادِ باری تعالیٰ (الرعد: ١١)
“بیشک اللہ کسی قوم کی حالت نہیں بدلتا جب تک وہ خود اپنی حالت نہ بدلیں۔”
یہ شاید مسلمانوں کے لیے آج کا سب سے اہم سبق ہے۔ قرآن جلانا بے حد تکلیف دہ ہے — لیکن مسلمانوں کے گھروں میں طاقوں پر پڑا ان پڑھا قرآن ایک خاموش اور زیادہ سنگین بحران ہے۔ بیرونی حملے تاریخی طور پر اسلام کو مضبوط کرتے ہیں — اندرونی غفلت اسے کھوکھلا کر دیتی ہے۔

چہارم: ظالم کے طریقوں کی نقل نہ کرو
ارشادِ باری تعالیٰ (المائدہ: ٨)
“اور کسی قوم کی دشمنی تمہیں انصاف نہ کرنے پر نہ اکسائے۔ انصاف کرو، یہ تقویٰ کے زیادہ قریب ہے۔”
انصاف مسلمان پر فرض ہے چاہے دوسرا کچھ بھی کرے — کیونکہ عدل اللہ کے ساتھ وعدہ ہے، دوسروں پر احسان نہیں۔

پنجم: الٰہی وقت پر بھروسہ رکھو
ارشادِ باری تعالیٰ (الطارق: ١٥-١٧)
“بیشک وہ ایک چال چل رہے ہیں، اور میں بھی ایک چال چل رہا ہوں۔ پس کافروں کو مہلت دو، انہیں تھوڑی سی مہلت دو۔”
اِملاء — الٰہی مہلت — غفلت نہیں ہے۔ اللہ تعالیٰ حکمت اور درستگی سے مہلت دیتا ہے، اور معاملے کا انجام اس کی مرضی کے مطابق ہوتا ہے، انسانی توقعات کے مطابق نہیں۔

اسباق — دنیا کے لیے
جو مذاق اڑاتے، جلاتے اور سخرہ کرتے ہیں ان کے لیے:
آیتِ نحل (٢٦) جس سے یہ گفتگو شروع ہوئی وہی جواب ہے — حق کے خلاف بنائی گئی سازش اور ظلم کی ہر عمارت تاریخ کے ہر درج شدہ واقعے میں اپنے بنانے والوں پر ہی گری ہے۔
سبق انتقام کا نہیں — الٰہی کشش ثقل کا ہے۔ جیسے طبیعیات کے قوانین یقین رکھے بغیر بھی کام کرتے ہیں، ویسے ہی احتساب کے الٰہی قوانین بھی اعتراف کے بغیر کام کرتے ہیں۔
ارشادِ باری تعالیٰ (آل عمران: ١٧٨)
“اور جن لوگوں نے کفر کیا وہ ہرگز یہ نہ سمجھیں کہ ہم جو انہیں مہلت دے رہے ہیں یہ ان کے لیے بہتر ہے۔ ہم انہیں صرف اس لیے مہلت دیتے ہیں تاکہ وہ گناہ میں اور بڑھ جائیں، اور ان کے لیے ذلّت آمیز عذاب ہے۔”

خاتمہ
قرآن کریم کو دفاع کی نہیں — اسے جینے اور عملی تجسیم کی ضرورت ہے۔ ہر وہ قوم جو اس کے خلاف اٹھی تاریخ کا حاشیہ بن گئی، اور قرآن باقی ہے۔ اسلام کے بارے میں تاریخ کا سب سے طاقتور سبق اس کے دشمنوں کی کہانیوں میں نہیں — بلکہ اس ثابت نمونے میں ہے:
پیغام ہمیشہ اپنے مخالفوں سے زیادہ باقی رہتا ہے۔
ارشادِ باری تعالیٰ (الصف: ٨)
“وہ چاہتے ہیں کہ اللہ کے نور کو اپنے منہ سے بجھا دیں، لیکن اللہ اپنے نور کو پورا کرنے والا ہے خواہ کافروں کو ناگوار ہو۔”
آج کی وہ آندھیاں جو پیغام کے خلاف اٹھ رہی ہیں اپنی فطرت میں ان آندھیوں سے مختلف نہیں جو مکہ میں، فارس میں، منگول کے میدانوں میں اور استعماری دفتروں میں اٹھی تھیں — اور الٰہی جواب قیامت تک اسی ابدی نمونے کے مطابق چلتا رہے گا۔

وآخر دعوانا أن الحمد للہ رب العالمین
اور ہماری آخری دعا یہ ہے کہ تمام تعریفیں اللہ رب العالمین کے لیے ہیں۔