Sura
# 1:Surat
alHumazah
(The Slanderer)
In the Name of Allah, the Beneficent, the Most Merciful
These particularayats
were addressed
specifically to the people, several names of whom have been suggested, who were against the Prophet,salla‑llahu
`alayhi
wa
alihi
wa
sallam
. They were all people of great wealth and supposed strength who constantly bragged about their might and wealth and mocked the Muslims.
1
Woe to every slanderer and backbiter!
Wayl
means "affliction, distress," and is translated as the exclamation, "Woe
!" It evokes one of the rivers of the Fire. "Woe to every slanderer or defamer! "
In humannature
there exists the tendency to seek reassurance, and therefore we seek only those companions who reinforce the validity of our actions.
Humazah
means "a slanderer," or "back‑biter
." In the Arabiclanguage
thehamzah
is a glottal stop, and thehamazat
ash‑shayatin
are the evil suggestions of the devil, the subtle whispers that we find within us.
Lumazah
means "a fault‑finder
," and comes from the verblamaza
, whichmeans
"to give someone a wink, to speak ill of someone, criticize, censure, backbite, defame." The person who defames reveals his own weakness and announces his insecurity in the same way that the haughtiness of a man declares his deep uncertainty about himself. If he wastotally
certain that he was on the right path, if he acknowledged his dependence on Allah and realized that everyone would come to know the truth fully and absolutely, he would not give in to these subtle enticements to slander others. The truth of it is that his slander and arrogance reveal his sickness and disease, hence the warning of woe to him, the warning that hewill be destroyed
.
2 Who amasses wealth and counts it (as a provision);
This ayah refers to those who collect wealth and take refuge and reinforcement in constantly counting it. Persistently accumulating and looking at what one has is another form of looking for security. The men of Allah say, "He who loves wealth is a hypocrite, and he who keeps wealth is ignorant." The proof ofnifaq
(hypocrisy) andjahl
(ignorance) is in the collection and retention of mal (wealth).
3 He thinks that his wealth will make him immortal.
Hasaba
means "to calculate, to reckon." He imagines that he moves closer tokhuld
(eternity) by counting and watching over what he wrongly imagines will give him longevity and permanency. His is a perverted worship. The Eternal is another attribute of Allah: Al‑Khalid
. We all want to know the Eternal because only in that way will we be secure in the knowledge that only eternity exists.It is he who
has completely slipped off the path who believes that what he has accumulated gives him security.
4
Nay! Hewill certainly be hurled
into the crushing Hell.
Nabadha
means
"to hurl, throw away, to reject, cast out, abandon." By casting out what is useless or dangerous, weare protected
from the evil in them.
Hutamah
is another name for Hell, means "a crushing disaster," and comes fromhatama
, "to shatter, crush,destroy
." Most certainly, a person who takes refuge in his health, in his wealth, or in anything of the visible world, does not trust that the hand of The Invisible is behind the visible. Hewill be cast out
into that which causes nothing but destruction.
5 And
what will make you comprehend what the crushing Hell is?
And
what do you know of it? Another connotation ofhatamah
comes from the verb in its second form, where itmeans
"to break," implying that the object involved in the breaking, or crushing, is solid to begin with.
6 The fire of Allah, ignited,
The crushing disaster is the Fire of Allah thatis forever lit
.
7 Which rises up to thehearts.
8
Certainly it will be shut tightly around them.
And
that Fire of Allah is locked within the heart of man. It is thefire which
causes him to be at a loss, to try to take refuge in material security, wealth and power. We see this in the present state of our culture, in that we have completely taken refuge in our imaginations and calculations. In this culture we imagine that what is of greatest importance is what is tangible or visible, but the visible is not the sum of what there is in this world; it is only one aspect of it, one manifestation of reality. There are other forces or powers behind the scenes.
9
In outstretched columns.
The Fire will tightly encircle the heart in extended columns, and form a burning wall created by the heart itself through its own ignorance. Some men of Allah talk about two types of fire: the fire that burns and inflicts pain, causing nothing but destruction, and the fire of knowledge. One normally interprets thissurah
, however, asbeing addressed
to the people who are at a loss. Their heartsare locked up
in the fire of the final, revealed knowledge.
Just as thissurah
is about those who take refuge in thediscernable
and material world and believe that there is nothing beyond it, the nextsurah
explains by example the falseness of their beliefs.