For many, the pain is just too much. Day after day, witnessing dead children and wailing parents and feeling the guilt of not knowing what else to do, we can often spiral into emotional paralysis. But that guilt and that pain have to
move us forward, not hold us back. The latter is from Shaytan. We have to know that there will be an end, and our brothers and sisters who have passed are at
peace with their Lord. Every cry of pain, every drop of blood, every hungry stomach, and every tear that fell will be accounted for. We work for an end to the carnage today with certainty there will be justice, whether in this world or the next.
The ability to see beyond this world is a gift. To see Allah before we see anything else. To believe in the promise of Allah to His faithful servants and to be certain that every action is meaningful. Allah is the Rabb who owns all of creation, the One who sustains this world moment by moment, and the One who will hold us all to account on the Day of Judgment. He is the Master who governs the universe and the One who arranges all matters perfectly, even when we cannot see the full picture.
If you see your Rabb before all else, you will understand that every effort matters. You’ll know that Allah is above whatever prevails in this world and you will have certainty that Allah’s control is above their control. Our test is whether we will be materialists and only see the immediate, or whether we believe in and work towards the ideal that we want to establish.
So as Muslims, we cannot stop speaking and reminding. We must renew our resolve and continue to build and join movements for the liberation of our brothers and sisters. We must not belittle the boycott efforts.
We must support and stand side-by-side with those
brave individuals who are risking everything.
We must support and encourage each other through this. And we must wake up at night, every night, and
pray.
In the story of Saul and Goliath, the mention of Prophet Dawud (David) only appears at the end. Allah says, “and David killed Goliath” (Qur’an 2:251). It is as though Allah only chooses to mention David at the end so that our focus is less on his personality and more on the general characteristics of those few who persisted. While one would assume that it would be Saul who would defeat Goliath, since he appears as the protagonist of the story, it was actually a young David who assumed this honor and who was part of the small, steadfast group. If your determination is for Allah, you have a grand intention for His sake, and you persevere, Allah Al-Rabb will carry your intention, whether in this life or the next. Those “small” things you do are not small at all, but rather weigh heavy on Allah’s scale, helping to move the needle in this world, by the will of Allah.
So who will we be in the story of Saul and Goliath? Will we be of the people who dropped off when we experienced inconvenience, struggle, and even heartbreak, or will we persevere until the end?