A
Wise Young Muslim Boy
Many years ago, during the time of the Tābi'īn (the
generation of Muslims after the Sahābah), Baghdād was a great
city of Islam. In fact, it was the capital of the Islamic
Empire and, because of the great number of scholars who lived
there, it was the center of Islamic knowledge.
One day, the ruler of Rome at the time sent an envoy to
Baghdad with three challenges for the Muslims. When the
messenger reached the city, he informed the khalīfah that he
had three questions which he challenged the Muslims to answer.
The khalīfah gathered together all the scholars of the city
and the Roman messenger climbed upon a high platform and said,
"I have come with three questions. If you answer them, then I
will leave with you a great amount of wealth which I have
brought from the king of Rome." As for the questions, they
were: "What was there before Allāh?" "In which direction does
Allāh face?" "What is Allāh engaged in at this moment?"
The great assembly of people were silent. (Can you think of
answers to these questions?) In the midst of these brilliant
scholars and students of Islam was a man looking on with his
young son. "O my dear father! I will answer him and silence
him!" said the youth. So the boy sought the permission of the
khalīfah to give the answers and he was given the permission to
do so.
The Roman addressed the young Muslim and repeated his first
question, "What was there before Allāh?"
The boy asked, "Do you know how to count?"
"Yes," said the man.
"Then count down from ten!" So the Roman counted down, "ten,
nine, eight, ..." until he reached "one" and he stopped
counting
"But what comes before 'one'?" asked the boy.
"There is nothing before one- that is it!" said the man.
"Well then, if there obviously is nothing before the
arithmetic 'one', then how do you expect that there should be
anything before the 'One' who is Absolute Truth, All-Eternal,
Everlasting the First, the Last, the Manifest, the Hidden?"
Now the man was surprised by this direct answer which he
could not dispute. So he asked, "Then tell me, in which
direction is Allāh facing?"
"Bring a candle and light it," said the boy, "and tell me in
which direction the flame is facing."
"But the flame is just light- it spreads in each of the four
directions,
North, South, East and West. It does not face any one
direction only," said the man in wonderment.
The boy cried, "Then if this physical light spreads in all
four directions such that you cannot tell me which way it
faces, then what do you expect of the Nūr-us-Samāwāti-wal-'Ard:
Allāh - the Light of the Heavens and the Earth!? Light upon
Light, Allāh faces all directions at all times."
The Roman was stupified and astounded that here was a young
child answering his challenges in such a way that he could not
argue against the proofs. So, he desperately wanted to try his
final question. But before doing so, the boy said,
"Wait! You are the one who is asking the questions and I am
the one who is giving the answer to these challenges. It is
only fair that you should come down to where I am standing and
that I should go up where you are right now, in order that the
answers may be heard as clearly as the questions."
This seemed reasonable to the Roman, so he came down from
where he was standing and the boy ascended the platform. Then
the man repeated his final challenge, "Tell me, what is Allāh
doing at this moment?"
The boy proudly answered, "At this moment, when Allāh found
upon this high platform a liar and mocker of Islam, He caused
him to descend and brought him low. And as for the one who
believed in the Oneness of Allāh, He raised him up and
established the Truth. Every day He exercises (universal)
power (Surah 55 ar-Rahmān, Verse 29)."
The Roman had nothing to say except to leave and return back
to his country, defeated. Meanwhile, this young boy grew up to
become one of the most famous scholars of Islam. Allāh, the
Exalted, blessed him with special wisdom and knowledge of the
deen. His name was Abu Hanīfah (rahmatullāh 'alayhi- Allāh have
mercy on him) and he is known today as Imām-e-A'dham, the Great
Imām and scholar of Islam.
[Adapted into English from "Manāqib Abī Hanīfah" written by
Imām Muwaffaq Ibn Ahmad al-Makki (d. 568 Hijri). Dar al - Kitāb
al-'Arabiy, Beirut, 1981/1401H.]