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| Welcoming Muslim Humor |
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| Intellectual Sections - MACROPHONE | |
| Written by Rym Aoudia | |
| Saturday, 03 December 2005 | |
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We all enjoy a good hearty laugh now and then. A home with laughter is cheerful and happy. It is this friendly environment at home that makes it healthy and strong. A light-hearted Muslim is also enjoyable to be with, and joking with the people close to us is a bonding experience. Humour has the power of bringing people closer, lifting their spirits, and relieving them from the pressures of daily life. Being funny or laughing at something funny is part of human nature and creates a balance in our life. There are times when we are serious and times when we are humorous. When we are serious we should not go to extreme of being harsh, and when we are humorous we should not go to extreme of being foolish. Islaam is a way of life that is balanced and it permits and understands the need for laughter and humour. Yes, Islaam welcomes humour. The Prophet (P.B.U.H.) also used to joke with a child of one of the companions. As reported in “’Hayaat A’s’sa’haabah” (3/149), the young child was called Aboo ‘Umayr and he had a small bird that he used to play with. The Prophet noticed one day that Aboo ‘Umayr was sad and he questioned why. The companions told him, “The nu’gar [a small bird, like a sparrow] which he used to play with has died, O Messenger of Allaah.” The Prophet went to the child and gently started to joke with him saying, “O Aboo ‘Umayr, what happened to the nu’gayr?” [Nu’gayr is the diminutive of nu’gar. In Arabic, this is a play on words, because of the rhyme between the boy’s name and that of the bird.] The Prophet (P.B.U.H.) humorously used the technique of play on words to make the child smile. Another example is when an old woman came to the Prophet (P.B.U.H.) and she asked him to pray for her to enter Paradise. The Prophet (P.B.U.H.) joked with her and informed her that no old women will enter Paradise. Upon hearing this, the woman cried but she was then told that she will not enter Paradise as an old woman because the people of Paradise will be young and that is how she will enter Paradise (Reported by Attirmidh>y). The Prophet (P.B.U.H.) therefore joked and Aboo Hurayrah narrated that the Prophet was told, “O Messenger of Allaah, you are joking with us.” He said, “I only say what is true.” (Reported by Attirmidh>y). This indicates that while the Prophet joked his jokes were descent and truthful and this serves as a lesson for us. Since humour is a positive and necessary part of life and is seen in the life of the Prophet (P.B.U.H.), why hasn’t it been welcomed properly within the Muslim community? However, while the path of humour is a road that must be treaded carefully, many Muslims nowadays have taken up the challenge and are welcoming humour to the community. The humour that has been welcomed brings with it promising fruits as it either serves our faith or enlightens us. The talented American Muslim comedian Azhar Usman, in a Rising Star interview, said “it takes greater skill, more talent and craft to deliver clean material and get the same amount of laughs.” He adds, “I have a filtering process. I ask myself, ‘A - is it acceptable by Sharee‘ah (Islaamic law, ethics, and theology)?’ and, ‘B - is it appropriate and inoffensive?’ And I regularly consult with Islaamic scholars.” Azhar Usman is popularly known as part of the “Allah Made Me Funny” comedy tour with other exceptional American Muslim comedians, Preacher Moss and Azeem. In their “Allah Made Me Funny” website, Preacher Moss talks about their aim, saying “the concept of this tour is to make a comprehensive effort to provide effective, significant, and appropriate comedy with an Islaamic perspective, which is both mainstream and cross-cultural. The idea is to provide a venue whereby Muslims and non-Muslims can feel safe, relevant, and inclusive of an experience where humour is used to bridge gaps of bias, intolerance, and other social ills that are pre and post 9/11 relevant.” For others, it is visual images that create the necessary connection between information and learning…[and]s a good comic strip can get your message across. Prophet Mu’hammad (P.B.U.H.) had a wonderful sense of humour and his example shows us that cultivating one for ourselves is good and Islaamic. Good comic humour puts smiles on people’s faces and makes them feel good, and that makes me feel good, too!”
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