Muharram is not merely the first month of the Islamic calendar; it is a threshold into the soul of time itself. One of the four sacred months mentioned by Allah, it stands apart as a season of stillness, remembrance, and spiritual urgency. The Almighty declares: “Indeed, the number of months with Allah is twelve… of these, four are sacred” (9:36). Among them, Muharram holds a unique place, called by the Prophet (Peace Be Upon Him) “the month of Allah.” He said: “The best of fasting after Ramadan is fasting in the month of Allah, Muharram” (Sahih Muslim). This naming signals that the month belongs to the Divine in a way others do not. It is a time to pause, look inward, and measure the distance between who we are and who we long to become. The fast of Ashura, the 10th day, is a profound act of spiritual alignment—uniting the believer with the arc of prophetic history. When the Prophet learned that the Jews fasted on this day to commemorate the deliverance of Musa (Peace Be Upon Him) from Pharaoh, he said: “We are closer to Musa than you are” (Sahih al-Bukhari). And so he fasted, linking himself to the long chain of those who sought liberation through devotion. The Day of Ashura is layered with meaning. It is the day Allah parted the sea for Musa, offering freedom to the oppressed. It is also the day of Karbala, when Hazrat Hussain (RA), the Prophet’s beloved grandson, stood against the tyranny of Yazid. His martyrdom was not merely a historical event; it was a cosmic reminder that truth and falsehood cannot coexist in peace. Hazrat Hussain’s (RA) sacrifice was a refusal to bow to injustice, a declaration that faith is not passive but active, not comfortable but costly. Muharram is a month of mourning, but also of awakening. Karbala is not an invitation to despair but to defiance—a call to remember that sometimes the most powerful stand is the one that ends in apparent defeat. Hazrat Hussain’s (RA) blood became the ink in which the principle of resistance to tyranny was written for all time. As the month begins, let us use this sacred season to reflect on the fragility of life and the permanence of truth. The fast of Ashura offers a chance to seek forgiveness for the past year, and the remembrance of Karbala reminds us that faith is not a shield from pain but a strength to bear it. May this Muharram be for us a door into deeper awareness and a light that guides us toward the courage of Hazrat Hussain (RA) and the gratitude of Musa.
The Union Health Ministry's decision to amend the Drugs Rules, 1945, making it mandatory to produce a doctor's prescription for purchasing all syrups, is a welcome and long-overdue step. For years, cough...
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