Topics
One
must not become ensnared in delusion (doubt), for it engenders psychological
instability and inner vacillation.
إ“Indeed, His command, when He wills a
thing, is only that He says to it, ‘Be,’ and it is.” (Qur’ān)
The
very moment a determination is made, the matter is actualized—such is the
ontological law ordained by Allah the Almighty. The ingress to delusion
must remain decisively closed. Should one place the hand upon an individual’s
head and recites:
“Indeed,
Allah is over all things fully capable” (Qur’ān)
—eleven
times, in three successive rounds—then the cognitive gate of delusion is
restrained and closed.
Proximity
to delusion must be scrupulously avoided, for it gives rise to epistemological
doubt, fosters uncertainty, and expands recursively like proliferating
branches. Its progression is unceasing and unchecked. Allah the Almighty
detests doubt, particularly that which emerges through the infiltration of
delusion.
Concerning delusion, the Prophet (P.B.U.H) stated that Satan circulates through the human being as blood flows through the veins. This implies that delusion is interwoven into the very fabric of human physiology. Satan traverses the bloodstream under the guise of delusion, permeating the inner currents of corporeal existence. Allah the Almighty declares that Satan is a manifest and unequivocal adversary to mankind.
The Space of All Mighty(Qudrat Ki Space)
Huzoor Qalandar Baba Aulia
Science
confines its inquiry to phenomena that are tangible and empirically verifiable,
whereas spirituality is concerned exclusively with inner, experiential
realities. Nonetheless, a profound relationship exists between the two, and the
evolution of each is, in many respects, contingent upon the other. This
interdependence has, until now, remained largely unarticulated.
At
times, a writer or thinker envisions a concept century in advance. This vision
arises in their consciousness spontaneously. When they articulate it before the
world, it is often met with ridicule; some dismiss it outright as the fantasy
of a deluded mind. Yet centuries later, when a scientist materializes that very
concept, the world is struck with astonishment. Not only that, but the
originator of the idea begins to be celebrated. Why is this so? Why is the one
who conceives the original thought unable to render it into material form
himself? The capacity to generate the initial vision lies with a person
dwelling in a distant corner of the world in a bygone age. Space and time—miles
and centuries—are these actual realities, or are they merely constructs,
illusions devoid of substantive essence?
In
sleep, within the domain of dreams, a person walks, sits, eats,
works—activities indistinguishable from those performed in waking life. What,
then, is the essential difference? Even in the absence of any environmental
stimuli, why does an unrelated thought or long-forgotten individual suddenly
come to mind—despite the passage of centuries?
All
such phenomena unfold within a framework of natural laws that remain, as yet,
unexplored. This modest book, concerned with an entirely novel and unfamiliar
subject, is akin to a pebble cast into a body of water; but when its ripples
reach the shore, they may awaken contemplation in the mind of a scholar,
scientist, or thinker—and thereby initiate a deeper engagement with its
contents.
Qalandar Hassan Ukhrah
Muhammad Azeem Barkhiya