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Love of Allah (swt) - Walayah
By Sister Diana (Masooma) Beatty
One of the most central
and important concepts of Islam and of our very existence is
that of walayah. Walayah is one of the pillars or
foundations of Islam, and is in fact the most central of the
foundations.
Imam Muhammad Baqir (as) described the foundations of Islam
as follows:
“Islam is built upon five foundations: communion (salah),
pruning of wealth (zakah), fasting (sawm), pilgrimage (hajj)
and dynamic loving (walayah). And nothing has been called to
the way dynamic loving (walayah) has been called to.”
Most people are more familiar with another tradition that
relates the fifth foundation or pillar as the witnessing (shahada)
that there is no God but Allah, and that Muhammad (saw) is
His adorer-servant and messenger.
Of the five activities that form the foundation, walayah
(dynamic loving) is the first and foremost foundation. While
the more often heard hadith mentions the foremost as the
shahadah, there is not really a conflict between these two
traditions, but this shall be explained later.
First let us understand what walayah is. Walayah denotes the
activity of coming or working to be in the closest possible
proximity to something. If one has walayah with another,
then the two things are so close as to be almost
inseparable.
Walayah really denotes two activities that take place due to
this relationship of being so close. The first activity is
that of pure loving, affection, attachment and intimacy.
This kind of love can be between two people such as parent
and child or husband and wife. The second activity is that
of comforting – providing aid, assistance, guidance and
support. This activity can also be between two people, but
at an uneven level. For example, a parent may provide
comfort aid, assistance, guardianship and guidance as love
to a child, but the child can respond lovingly but not
equally, not with the same kind of activity. Instead the
child who responds positively does so with loyalty,
allegiance, devotion and obedience.
God gives walayah to those who would receive it. For
example, in the Qur’an it says, “Allah is the
Comforter (doer or giver of Walayah) of those who are
dynamically faithful (receivers and responders of walayah -
believers); He extracts them from all manner of darkness
into light….” (2:257)
Someone who does walayah is called a waliyy. “Waliyyu
Allah” is a phrase that describes a devotee, intimate
follower and lover of Allah. People who are such lovers of
God are mentioned in the Qur’an also: “ Indeed! The
devotees of Allah (Waliyyu Allah) will have no fear upon
them nor will they grieve.” (10:62)
So, the reason why there is no real conflict between the two
different forms of the tradition is that the Shahada is a
manifestation and application of walayah. When someone bears
witness that God is their waliyy, that person is
acknowledging his or her role in the relationship to respond
with allegiance and obedience. In the shahada we witness
that God is the ultimate source of love, comfort,
guardianship and authority and is deserving of allegiance,
service and adoration. He is the ultimate and true waliyy of
us all. At the same time, one is pledging
one’s love, allegiance, loyalty and obedience to this
ultimate source of true love. One also acknowledges that
Muhammad (saw) is the perfect waliyy (adorer/servant) of God
and pledging love, allegiance and loyalty to him (saw) as
well due to his relationship with God.
All love - all walayah - ultimately comes from and is due to
God. The Qur’an says: “Say O Prophet: My Comforter
(waliyy) is Allah, who gradually sent down the Book; he
receives the dynamic love (walayah) of the righteous.”
(7:196) God both gives and receives walayah, this
dynamic love. God loves us, and we respond, either positive
or negative. The positive response to the love of God, the
walayah of God, is the fundamental activity of Islam and the
distinguishing characteristic of a Believer. The positive
response is the return of love, obedience, loyalty,
allegiance, etc. It is what Islam is all about and what our
lives are ultimately all about. The one who becomes a true
waliyy or devotee of Allah (Waliyyu Allah) achieves a state
of righteousness. Allah loves as the Comforter, then the
righteous person responds with love as the Devotee, and then
Allah responds with a deepening of walayah toward the
Devotee and it can be an ever-deepening cycle. So it all
comes from Allah swt and continues to grow and deepen as far
as the recipient of God’s love responds. It is only the
limit of our response to God’s walayah that limits the
depth of return of God’s walayah, which is nevertheless
ever present.
The means to achieving this ever-deepening cycle is also
explained to us in the Qur’an:
“Oh you who are dynamically faithful (doers of
walayah to God, or Believers)! Obey Allah and His Messenger.
And do not let yourselves be oriented to a walayah other
than this ( or be turned away from him….” (8:20)
“Whoever obeys the Prophet has definitely obeyed Allah.
And as for whoever lets himself be oriented towards another
walayah, then Allah has not made you (the Prophet (saw))
their keeper.” (4:80) Thus, the Qur’an tells us that the
method of obeying and doing walayah with Allah swt is
through following His Prophet (saw).
This is further explained in the traditions. Truly, Islam is
the way (deen) of love. Imam Muhammad Baqir(as) related a
tradition as follows: A man was traveling to visit the Imam
(as) and the travel caused his legs and feet to become
blistered and chapped. He told the Imam (as), “Nothing
brought me here from whence I came except the love of you,
the Family of the Prophet.” Imam Baqir (as) replied,
“By Allah! Even if a stone were to love us, He would
gather it up with us (on the Judgment Day). Is the Deen (of
Islam) anything but loving? Surely Allah says,
‘Say: If you have come to love Allah, then follow me! He
will love you.’” (3:31) Then Imam (as) said, “He
loves whomsoever migrates to them (Ahlulbayt (as)). Is the
Din anything but loving?” Thus, Islam is all about
the giving and receiving walayah relationship between Allah
and us, and we respond to His love by loving those who are
closest to Him, the Prophet (saw) and his family (as), and
in turn Allah swt responds with even deeper walayah.
Further, a positive response to God’s walayah for us is to
be just. “O you who are dynamically faithful! Be
those who stand for manifest justice, witnesses to Allah,
even if it be against yourselves, your parents, or those who
are close to you; even if it be against someone poor or
rich, for Allah has more walayah than anyone else with both
of them (the poor and rich). And do not follow your personal
whims and desires and let them prevent you from being just.
And if you deviate or turn away from justice, then surely
Allah is well-informed of all that you do.” (4:135)
In the Qur’an, Muslims are not addressed directly, but
believers who return walayah to God are, for the Qur’an
and God make distinctions between Muslims and Believers.
Believers are the “dynamically faithful”, the positive
responders of walayah. Muslims are those who submit in body
or word but not necessarily in this dynamic loving with God.
“The desert Arabs say: We believe (are doers or
positive receivers of walayah with God)! Say to them, “
You have not yet believed, but rather say, “We have
submitted (become Muslims)”, for faith has not yet entered
into your hearts. And if you obey Allah and His Messenger,
He will not let your good deeds go to waste. Truly Allah is
Ever Forgiving, Singularly Compassionate. The truly
believers are only those who believe (and are dynamically
loving with) Allah and His Messenger, then do not doubt, but
strive with their wealth and their beings in the Way of
Allah. Those are the truthful ones.” (49:14-15)
God
loves and is merciful to all of creation. The mercy He shows
to all creation is denoted by His name Rahman. He cares for
and provides for all. But there is a special mercy for those
who respond positively, and that special mercy is denoted in
His name Raheem. When we turn to God, God turns to us. The
means of developing an ever- closer relationship with God is
ultimately what Islam is all about. Every aspect of Islam is
to guide us as to how to achieve greater closeness, to
deepen our walayah relationship with God. The remaining four
foundations of Islam – the prayer, the fasting, the hajj,
and the zakat, are all means of deepening walayah with God,
as are all other aspects of the deen. But, as the Qur’an
has distinguished for us, it is possible to do all these
things in word and deed without the benefit of deepening
relationship with God. That is, we can be Muslims without
yet being Believers. The keys to being Believers are the
acceptance of God’s love and the response in heart with
devotion, obedience and love, not only to Allah swt but with
those closest in walayah to Him, the Prophet (saw) and
Ahlulbayt (as).
Reference: Islam Dynamic: The
Cosmology, Spirituality and Practice of Walayah by Idris
Samawi Hamid
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