Back in the day, [I
dare say in our days of Jaahiliyah] we celebrated our birthday. So much that I remember
how mom got us toffees to share with our colleagues in schools. Birthdays were
special for all it is and was worth.
We [as siblings] kept each other’s birthday and if I remotely remember even
exchanged gifts sometimes.
Today, social media is the perfect reminder of our birthdays. The
template is simple; you get as many friends as possible to shower best wishes
on you from the crisp ‘HBD’ to the lengthy notes of ‘blessings and grace’ and
of course all that lies in between these extremes.
Today happens to be my junior brother Sherif Haiman Shaban’s birthday, I
looked at the date and it dawned on me. I cheekily sent him a text message to
that effect, knowing very well that he did not care less.
Wondering why, facebook did not notify you, well it could be that he had
disabled that setting and or keeps flipping his dob.
That’s not the thrust of this piece anyway. Here is what; we had both concluded
that aside the Islamic injunctions of not celebrating birthdays, there was an
opposite side of birthdays that people failed to see. I put that in a poem
below
Our Beginning, Our End!
As the chronometer ticks, by passes time;
The irreclaimable asset, once lost
A total of sixty ticks, adds up to a minute,
Sixty minutes is equal to an hour
A sum of 24 hours amounting to a day,
An addition of one towards our graves
A subtraction of same of our lives on earth
Simple mathematics of every single DAY
Key point:
Allah may have
given us another year of life, but that certainly is past. SO how many more
years lie ahead of us, how well did we live the year we seek to celebrate or is
it the ‘year’ [unknown] ahead of us that we celebrate.
On days like
that, it should be a time to reflect on how far we have come and what
potentially lies ahead of us. If as a Muslim we make it a point to pray for
others on a constant basis, we don’t need one day to pray and to wish a brother
well.
It is this one
day celebration that avers Muslims towards accepting illicitly aberrant
kaafuric celebrations like ‘Mother’s Day, Valentine Day even Christmas’ and
other ‘neither-here-nor-there’ fitnavities [as in festivities]
I love my
brother and all Muslims for the sake of Allah and may Allah unite us in
jannah-tul Firdaws after allowing us entry through his rahmah. Ameen.
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