#075 Quran & Ramadhan
Salam there,
For today’s newsletter, I’m going to share with you a transcription of an interview between Productive Muslim brand (Mohammed Faris) and Ustadh Nouman Ali Khan.
The duration of the interview is 25 minutess, meaning the transcription is quite long.
So I’m going to give you some except from that transcription, and if you would like to read the whole transcription, you can download it here: https://productivemuslim.com/wp-content/uploads/2015/06/NAK-interview-transcript.pdf
p.s: Please take note this interview was conducted in 2015; some routines might have changed for Ustadh.
1. What is your definition of the purpose of Ramadan? What should we look out for and try to achieve in Ramadan?
My thoughts on Ramadan are inspired by the only passage in the Qur’an that deals with Ramadan [Chapter 2, Verse 185].
Allah did not describe it as a month of fasting nor a month of prayer. First and foremost, He described it as a month in which the Qur’an was revealed.
Moreover, He described the Qur’an as though it had never been introduced before.
Even though it’s a Madani surah, which means the Muslims had been receiving the Qur’an through the Prophet for over a decade, yet Allah talks about what the Qur’an is, as if for the first time.
That teaches me at least, and I hope other Muslims too, is that you have to renew your relationship with this Book almost as though you never knew it before.
You have to come at it anew.
It’s a month of rejuvenating your experience with the Qur’an so that you can experience it like that first generation was taught to experience it all over again. This month should be a celebration of revelation itself.
That’s what it should be.
2. Based on that, what would be your most important goal for you personally to achieve in Ramadan?
I study Qur’an throughout the year but I turn it up a few notches in Ramadan.
My memorization goes up.
I haven’t finished memorizing the Qur’an; I’m working on it part-time, slowly but surely. But it goes on an accelerator in the month of Ramadan.
I try to catch i’tikaf every year and in i’tikaf I do a lot of review of Qur’an.
For me personally, the act of memorizing Qur’an is not just the act of rote memorization. When you recite the ayat over and over again, it gives you a chance to reflect on the word of Allah, to think about the same thing over and over again, which also gives you opportunities for insights, which I really enjoy.
The other thing I really enjoy doing in Ramadan is the nightly taraweeh prayer.
But to be honest a lot of times I won’t join the entire taraweeh prayer or I’ll go to a masjid which actually takes it easier.
Some masajid unfortunately, their goal is to finish the recitation of the entire Qur’an and they rush through it. Other masajid in our area take it easy; they don’t recite a lot but what they recite they really enjoy reciting.
And this month should not be about quantity, it should be about quality.
There is no religious guideline that you have to finish the entire Qur’an – there’s no such thing. It wasn’t imposed; we imposed this on ourselves.
And you find people they pray the 8 rak’ah and there’s a mad rush outside of the masjid as if saying “I got it over with, let me get out of here”. Prayer is supposed to be this reflective, spiritual experience where you’re enjoying the word of Allah in every rak’ah and that’s really something I hope to restore every year for myself in Ramadan.
3. You just mentioned balancing your energy levels – trying not to do too much in the first days and leaving energy for the last ten days. Do you structure Ramadan that way, spreading out your energy so that you can maintain momentum throughout the month?
One of my teachers has interesting insights on how you should spend your time in Ramadan and I tend to agree with him. Ramadan is not supposed to be a time where you’re not productive at everything else. You should be as fruitful and as productive at your work as with business and education and everything else.
It’s not a time for vacation.
In some Muslim countries, people stay up until Fajr and then pass out until 4pm just in time for iftar then start all over again. They become creatures of the night. That’s silly.
That’s not the point of this month.
As a matter of fact, the nightly prayers are just really a manifestation of tahajjud. So if you’re praying your five prayers but you’re not good at tahajjud, this is the month to get into it.
Even the ayah about reciting the Qur’an in a slow, rhythmic tone is an ayah about the night prayer [Chapter 73, Verse 4].
And taraweeh is supposed to be an exercise for the night prayer.
So even if you don’t catch taraweeh but get up for tahajjud, that’s even better for you! We have to shift our mentality about how we make the most use of Ramadan.
The other recommendation I strongly have for people is if you didn’t catch taraweeh prayers but you went to pray Isha and a few rak'at at the masjid then you came back for Fajr at the masjid, that’s way better for you than staying up until midnight doing taraweeh then barely catching Fajr or not praying Fajr at the masjid.
You have to be realistic with yourself: what is a bigger priority?
The Prophet’s instructions are true and we should believe in them. He said if you catch Isha then Fajr at the masjid it’s as though you’ve prayed the entire night.
That is his promise.
Let’s believe in that promise and especially get into that habit in this month. I personally believe that if you can make a habit out of Fajr and Isha at the masjid, you’re going to have a productive life.
Allah is going to put some barakah in your life throughout your day, throughout your night.
A lot of good comes of it.
This is the month to get into that habit because you’re going to do it anyway. But don’t overdo it in a way that you totally can’t sustain it afterwards. You want to use this month as an opportunity to instill habits that you can sustain after this month is over.
4. You just touched on the word barakah and I want you just to touch on the link between barakah and productivity. How the barakah of fasting and being spiritual will sustain you. How does that boost your productivity?
It’s pretty amazing because fasting is tough.
If you try and fast tomorrow it will be hard. You’re going to be hazed, you’re not going to be able to focus at work, things are going to happen. But what Allah says about Ramadan is pretty awesome: "yureedu Allahu bikumu alyusr: Allah intends for you ease."
It’s not a universal statement; it’s actually intended within the month of Ramadan. Allah [swt] intends ease for you.
In other words, fasting in the month of Ramadan is actually easier than fasting any other time. And that’s something Allah instilled into this month. It’s special.
So nobody is going to be able to say genuinely that they’re having a hard time because of the fasting. You might even find yourself having more energy than you ever had.
If you don’t find yourself having energy, there are some other causes: overeating at iftar, going to town with suhoor time, you’re eating four times the breakfast you normally eat – no wonder you’re tipped over half the day because you’re dying over how much you ate and the other half you’re dying over your starvation.
A balanced diet is a big part of how productive you are.
A balanced sleep schedule is really important. Some people have messed up sleep schedules in Ramadan; you’re not supposed to have a messed up sleep schedule, you’re supposed to have a normal sleep schedule. So maintain these things, take care of these things and In sha Allah it’s not going to be a problem.
Speaking of the word barakah, the linguistic meaning of the word is of 'increase beyond expectations'.
So the blessing of this month is that you’re going to do work as you normally do, but you’re going to find it being more result-oriented.
It’s going to bear more fruit; it’s going to be more productive than you will expect it to be. People are trying to be productive anyway anywhere but the believer in Ramadan is expecting productivity above and beyond his capabilities.
There’s this divine intervention of layers and layers of productivity over and above your own capability that you enjoy the blessings of, just because you’re in this month
Alright, I shared only 4 questions and answers from the interview.
Here’s another 6 questions:
5. People talk about the difficulties that Ramadan is in the summer, it’s going to be hot during the day, Isha will be late, Fajr will be early. How do you psychologically overcome that mental challenge that it’s going to be difficult or you’re not going to be able to do it?
6. What’s your routine like during Ramadan?
7. You’ve heard of the mid-Ramadan slump. How do you overcome that?
8. What about the last ten nights? What is the most productive thing you could do in the last ten nights?
9. What’s the biggest positive change any particular Ramadan has brought to your life?
10. Now for the final question. You had a great month In sha Allah, you’ve done all the spiritual uplifting, then Ramadan ends and you go through that slump again after Ramadan. How do you overcome it and stay consistent after Ramadan?
Again, you can read the whole transcription here:
https://productivemuslim.com/wp-content/uploads/2015/06/NAK-interview-transcript.pdf