By
Asrar Hayder
23rd July
2020
The song is in the vernacular language, it is speaking to the people at the personal level, divorced from academic jargon. Theoretical studies of God, of course, have their place, but ultimately, God is there to have a relationship with; He is an Ultimate Truth with which one seeks to resonate, harmonize and synchronize one’s own life and actions…The arts – music, poetry, architecture, painting – have been essential in making God a lived experience across cultures. In fact, perhaps that is a good definition of spirituality: “to live theology.”
Singing
Your Way to God?
As I begin
to write this, the sound of a modern Pakistani worship song resonates in the
background. It is predominantly in Urdu, with a healthy sprinkling of Arabic,
and the odd high register phrase that wouldn’t go amiss in a Persian poem. The
producers, however, have kindly added English subtitles for the less
linguistically blessed among us. Hence, any attempts to render the song into
vaguely poetic English that follow are my own, but often heavily supported by
the provided subtitles.
“You are
the Lord of the one who was chosen! You are the Lord of the one who was
pleased!” Allusions are made to the personalities of Muhammad and his cousin
Ali, the spiritual inheritor of the Prophet in Sufi-Sunni tradition, as well as
his absolute successor in Shi’i Islam. “The Ark of Noah, I am able to see – I
am drowning in repentance’s sea.” A universal image of salvation is evoked, but
how do we get there? Keep listening and the song will take you on that journey.
“You are that very light, blind to which I became; Through witting and
unwitting sins, nothing did I gain.”
The video is of a live studio performance featuring a singer well-known for his pop music and another who is trained in the subcontinent’s classical music tradition. The set includes an acoustic guitar, cellos, violins, and a drummer who becomes less and less restrained as the piece unfolds. There is also a traditional subcontinental flute called a Bansuri and a two-hand drum known as Dholak. A supporting cohort of Sufi Qawwali singers are seated on the ground equipped with their masterful voices whilst a magnificent beard and two female singers come in as backing vocalists. Meanwhile, an electric guitarist dons oversized shades in poor indoor lighting. Some are dressed in traditional Pakistani clothes, some more elaborately embroidered than others, whilst others wear jeans and t-shirts. Welcome to Coke Studio Pakistan, a fusion of old and new, catering for contemporary spirituality in the age of the internet.
Did I
mention the keyboardist clad in a leather jacket with an intractably deep voice
who proclaims “Allahu Akbar” at regular intervals? God is the Greatest. Or, if
we want to be more precise, “God is greater than description.” Or, in the words
of a supplication by Zayn al-Abidin (as), great-grandson of the Prophet
Muhammad (saw), the reality of the divine is far beyond what descriptions can
describe. Perhaps that is why music in its various forms has always manifested
itself in virtually every devotional tradition: music is something that
possesses the power to rouse the dormant and transcendent which lies within all
of us, allowing us to experience something of that which we can’t fully grasp.
The University of Chicago/ YouTubeChannel
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The mystics
have held that the Supreme Reality cannot be comprehended through the
intellect, but it can begin to be perceived through the heart – although still ever
escaping the constraints of verbalisation. For example, God’s unfathomable
reality can be evoked through paradoxical language which, while confounding the
intellect, pierces the spiritual heart and gives the human being glimpses of
His essence, such as the saying of Imam Ali (as): “God is with everything but
not through conjunction [not as a second thing joined to it], and He is other
than everything but not through separation” (Reza Shah-Kazemi [Video], 2020).
Echoing
Biblical phraseology, the Quran too acknowledges God’s enigmatic attributes:
“He is the First and the Last, the Manifest and the Hidden,” the latter half
sometimes translated as “The Inward and the Outward” ” (Al-Hadid, 57:3
[Alternative Translations]). Beyond paradoxes, I have found that music and
melodious recitations are also something that can awaken in the human being
this ability to, as Zayn al-Abidin’s says in one of his whispered prayers,
“taste the sweetness” of divine love and experience the “intimacy of proximity”
with God.
During the
month of Ramadan (April-May 2020), I received a message on my tumblr poetry
blog from someone who was struggling with their personal faith. One of the
things they said to me was, “I’ve even resolved never to listen to music again…
but all my life, music and art have been something really really dear to me.”
Of course, this line could have been written by millions of Muslims around the
world; the impulse to suddenly drop music to rectify one’s faith comes off the
back of an Islamic culture of knowledge that has historically been cautious of
music and its permissibility – even suspicious of its potential perniciousness.
I advised this person, first, with caution in regard to going cold turkey and I
also shared the following:
“Music… has
played a part in my life. In fact, devotional music – in Urdu and English –
laid the road for me to eventually coming to find enjoyment in listening [to]
and reciting the Quran and Duas. I wouldn’t throw music out the boat
completely, not all of it is forbidden, and a good deal of it can benefit you
and raise your spirits and help fill your soul with the love of God. Especially
if you don’t understand Arabic, or even if you do, listening to ‘religious
music’ [in your own language] is often the first step I find people take and
it’s one that benefited me no doubt.”
In fact, I
mentioned later in my reply that it was remarkable that they had asked me about
music that very day because, “I’ve felt a bit emotionally distant from God
[recently] and things haven’t been clicking, I haven’t been connecting…
Yesterday between iftar and suhoor I ended up putting on an Urdu Song about
God… the song really struck me and I found that the gates of my heart just
flung open.” In fact, I found myself in quite a state that night, with tears streaming
down my face. It was indeed the very same song that I have been listening to
while writing this article.
Arts
grounded in theology
“The Day of
Gathering, I cannot begin to fathom,” the song continues, “I have not brought
the deeds to earn your pardon…! My plea is only, that you draw me to you
close…! Have mercy, have grace, the beggar is standing at your door…!” The song
is conversing with God while deeply aware of and thoroughly grounded in
profound theological ideas present in formal scholarship – ideas which I won’t
expand on for sake of brevity, but equally ideas that don’t need to be
elaborated here.
This song
is in the vernacular language, it is speaking to the people at the personal
level, divorced from academic jargon. Theoretical studies of God, of course,
have their place, but ultimately, God is there to have a relationship with; He
is an entity, an Ultimate Truth with which one seeks to resonate, harmonize and
synchronize one’s own life and actions (puns all intended). So, if music puts
you into tune with the divine reality, if it brings you back to God, then there
is surely good to be found in it. “When my plans fell apart, this I came to
know: In Your Kingdom, [my Lord,] only Your word goes.” My favourite line.
There has
been much discussion lately on the erasure of Rumi’s Islamic identity by
Western translators (The New Yorker, 2017; Persian Poetics Twitter Thread,
2020), but it should be remembered that his celebrated Masnavi was dubbed “The
Quran in Persian,” not because it was a translation, but because Rumi was, at
heart, a Muslim scholar. Rumi was deeply grounded in Islam’s theological and
jurisprudential traditions before he was a vague and badly translated oriental
mystic; his knowledge of the Quran and the Islamic Sciences formed and informed
the basis of his spirituality and, ultimately, those ideas became inextricably
interlaced with the poetry that the masses read.
The arts –
music, poetry, architecture, painting – have been essential in making God a
lived experience across cultures (Ogunnaike, The Silent Theology of Islamic
Art, 2017; Scruton, Music and Morality). In fact, perhaps that is a good
definition of spirituality: “to live theology.”
Islamic
music has been part of Muslim cultures across the world, manifesting under
different names and forms such as nasheed, hamd, and naat. Shi’i cultures,
furthermore, have also developed their own unique forms of poetic recitations
that both mourn and celebrate the family of the Prophet. I may be crucified for
labelling these “music,” so I will avoid doing so, but the similarities to the
foreign ear are clear.
Iranian
scholar Alireza Panahian and his team seem to have recognised the pre-eminence
of music in our era and, consequently, his English language social media has
promoted a Western-style of music that recounts the story of Karbala “in the
hope that it will be appealing to the youth in Europe, america, and distributed
to them with your help. but, it may not be to the taste of all Muslims.” It’s
very different to any noha that I’ve ever heard, but it still plucks at the
heartstrings. Moreover, unlike a lot of English language nohas, these songs
don’t feel forced as they don’t try to imitate Arabic, Urdu or Persian
structures and rhythms. They are in many ways like normal Western music in the
way they sound – even if the topic matters are nothing alike.
English is
its own language, vastly different from languages historically spoken by
Muslims, hence English poetry should be composed and English nohas written by
learning from the English poetic tradition. I want to say the same about
musical tradition, but there is obvious hesitance to learn from it. Music,
however, is a global language and, ultimately, an incomparably potent tool that
Muslims must learn to utilise effectively within the confines of Islamic law.
Acknowledging
dangers and looking to the future
The
reluctance to delve into musical tradition, of course, stems from both
perceived and real dangers of music: it has an incredible potential that can
and has been misused.
“In a manifesto
released to coincide with the [2011] atrocities, Anders Breivik [the Oslo
bomber] explains the crucial role that music played in developing and
reinforcing his extreme right-wing militancy. As well as listing songs which
inspired him, he emphasizes the importance of music as an aid to
self-indoctrination and motivational control” (James Garratt, Music and
Politics: A Critical Introduction, 2018).
And of
course, Islamic and other religious traditions aren’t wary of music simply
because of one mad or malevolent maniac in Norway, rather music can be
(mis)used to arouse and channel the most base and bestial aspects of the human
being – the qualities which religious traditions around the world encourage
their devotees to transcend (Should Christians listen to Secular Music [Video],
2018).
Daniel
Levitin cites a study that showed that the intense emotions evoked in subjects
from listening to music (“thrills and chills”) affected the same areas of the
brains as gambling and drug usage and activated “brain regions thought to be
involved in reward, motivation, and arousal” (Your Brain on Music, 2009). Music
is not to be trifled with, and this is no modern realisation: we have known
about music’s power for millennia, but only now we are beginning to understand
the psychological effects and neurochemical changes that music produces. So,
when a Muslim scholar says music, be it lyrical or instrumental, is effectively
“a drug,” they are not simply being a conservative killjoy. They are standing
on solid ground. Music has a profound effect on us; precaution is not unwise.
Given I
have spent most of this article discussing the benefits of music, it should be
clear that I am not of the camp that totally rejects it. But on the other hand,
I make it clear that I am very meticulous (and possibly excessively selective)
about the sort of music to which I do allow myself to listen. Moreover, as the
years have gone by and as I have learned Arabic and developed my relationship
with the Quran, devotional “halal music” has come to feature less and less in
my life.
Nonetheless,
Shi’i Muslim scholars have issued rulings that permit the sort of music that
does not distract from the remembrance of God (Ayatullah Khamenei) and so long
as it is not music that is suitable for “gatherings of amusement and
entertainment” (Ayatullah Sistani). The application of these rules however, and
judging what is and isn’t suitable for entertainment, and what does and doesn’t
distract from God, is left to the individual believer (for non-Shi’i stances
see: Rashid, n.d.. for a short summary; Nasr, 1976 for a short academic
overview that incorporates Sufi understandings as well as purely legal
opinions; Dar al-Ifta al Misriyya, n.d. for an Egyptian advisory council’s
fatwa and discussion vis-à-vis rulings on music; and, of course, IslamQA, 2000
for a more conservative opinion).
As a
result, there is an extent of cultural and individual relativity that can be
invoked; detractors may call it a grey area and some Muslims may go the extra
mile and avoid it all out of voluntary supplementary precaution. Ultimately,
however, it is down to the sincerity of the individual believer who knows best
whether or not a particular piece of music is distracting them from God or
helping them draw closer to Him.
The late
Lebanese Ayatullah Fadlallah, whose English language website contains a more
extended dialogue on music, humbly responded to a question about the
permissibility of classical music by saying, “I do not have the required
knowledge to distinguish the different genres of music. However, it is
generally acknowledged that Classical music is the music that inspires
sentimentality rather than lewdness and rapture. If so, then Classical music is
permissible” (Bayynat, 2012). I consider it admirable that such a high-ranking scholar
admits shortcoming in his personal knowledge of music, but it does point to the
potential for developing more specialised understandings within the scholarly
class, such as Morteza Motahari’s suggestion for specialisation of different
scholars in different disciplines and taqlid (emulation) of a group rather than
just one individual (Afshar, Iran: A Revolution in Turmoil, 1985).
Therefore,
I believe a great deal more research on music is needed in the fields of
psychology, neurology, and sociology as starting points and then combining this
learning with formal Islamic Jurisprudence. My own undergraduate dissertation
studied devotional music as a tool of political resistance, but to diversify
and deepen our collective knowledge it is necessary to study music from a
scientific perspective as well. We need to learn a lot more about short-term
and long-term effects of all different types of music on the psyche. If that
information already exists, it needs to be better publicly circulated and
widely understood because our world is drowned in music; it is saturated with
sounds that are, effectively, drugs. They affect our moods, they affect our
psychological and spiritual states, and they have just been given open welcome
and unchecked rein to infiltrate and permeate our every public and private
moment.
When
non-Muslims hear Quran or Dua being melodiously recited for the first time, I
have often heard them refer to it as “singing.” Out of respect for their
sanctity of course, Muslims usually referred to these as “recitations” in
English; correspondingly, terms that differentiate them from potentially
irreverent and impious music are utilised in Arabic and other languages. But
simply knowing that the Quran is melodiously recited, that religions across
time and space have incorporated music into their worship and devotion, that
you can feel different by listening to music (is that not why many of us always
have our earphones plugged in?) – is that not enough reason to be at least
somewhat wary and seek to learn more about music just as we do about every type
of food and drink that we consume?
The Quran
states: “Then let the human being look to his food” (‘Abasa, 80:24).
In what
appears to be a subtle reference to this verse, Hasan (as), the eldest grandson
of Muhammad (saw), is reported to have said: “I am amazed at the people who are
meticulous about what they feed their bodies, how they do not take care about
what they feed their minds: They protect their stomachs from harmful food, but
feed their minds that which brings them to destruction” (Safinatul Bihar).
Original
Headline: Modern Muslims, Music, Mysticism: From Demonic Melodies to Divine
Music
Source: The
Muslim vibe
URL: https://newageislam.com/islamic-culture/islamic-music-been-part-muslim/d/122465
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