Website: www.aaiil.uk
Humanity as one
Ummah
Friday
Khutba by Dr Zahid Aziz,
for Lahore
Ahmadiyya UK, 6 February 2026
|
Mankind is a single nation. So
Allah raised prophets as bearers of good news and as warners, and He revealed
with them the Book with truth, that it might judge between people in that in
which they differed. The Quran, ch. 2, Al-Baqarah, v. 213 |
کَانَ
النَّاسُ
اُمَّۃً
وَّاحِدَۃً ۟
فَبَعَثَ
اللّٰہُ
النَّبِیّٖنَ
مُبَشِّرِیۡنَ
وَ مُنۡذِرِیۡنَ
۪ وَ اَنۡزَلَ
مَعَہُمُ الۡکِتٰبَ
بِالۡحَقِّ
لِیَحۡکُمَ
بَیۡنَ
النَّاسِ فِیۡمَا
اخۡتَلَفُوۡا
فِیۡہِ ؕ |
I have read here the first part of
this whole verse. The term Ummah is extremely well-known, both to
Muslims and non-Muslims, as meaning the entire body of Muslims in the whole
world. In the Quran this word is applied to other groups as well. The opening
words of this verse, Mankind is a single nation (kāna-n-nāsu ummat-an wāḥidat-an) are
translated by almost every translator of the Holy Quran in the past tense as:
Mankind was a single nation . This is because of the occurrence here of
the word kāna, which usually means was . They then interpret this
verse to mean that, in very remote times in the distant past, the whole of
humanity was one small community. Then as it spread in the world, it no longer
remained a single nation. Its various sections started requiring guidance, and
thus Allah raised prophets among them. However, the Lahore Ahmadiyya translator
of the Quran, Maulana Muhammad Ali, writes that when the word kāna
is applied to something it does not necessarily mean that it was or it used to
be , but it can also mean it has always been . Therefore, this sentence means
that mankind has always been a single nation. He adds that the Quran
thus lays down the principle of the oneness of humanity in the clearest words .
Similar
words occur in ch. 10, v. 19: وَ مَا
کَانَ
النَّاسُ
اِلَّاۤ
اُمَّۃً
وَّاحِدَۃً And mankind is nothing
but a single nation , or as Maulana Muhammad Ali puts it: And (all) people are but
a single nation . Others again translate it in the past tense, that mankind was
once nothing but a single nation. The Maulana s interpretation comes from his
funda mental view, stressed in the modern age by the Founder of the Ahmadiyya
Movement, Hazrat Mirza Ghulam Ahmad, that humanity is becoming more and more
like one nation because different nations are coming closer together by modern
means of travel and communications.
Even if we take the traditional
interpretation, that humanity was a single nation only in the beginning of
human history, it can still mean that humanity will again become one
community. Hazrat Mirza Ghulam Ahmad has written that after human beings spread
around the earth they became separate nations, disconnected from one another.
So God raised different prophets in different nations with different books.
Then means of travel and communications started opening up, which made the
various nations aware of other nations and established connections between
them. He writes:
Each of the books before
the Quran was limited to one nation, that nation s books and prophets had
nothing to do with any other nation. But the Holy Quran, which came after them
all, is an inter national book, and is not for a particular people but for all
the nations. The Quran came for a group of beings who were going to become a
single nation gradually (Chashma-i Ma rifat, pp. 67
68).
So
according to Hazrat
Mirza Ghulam Ahmad, even taking these words to mean humanity was
a single nation , they still imply that it will again be a single nation
in the end, after having been divided into separate nations with their own
prophets.
Both the verses that I have mentioned
(2:213 and 10:19) then go on to say that human beings differ and disagree among
themselves. Moreover, there is a verse in the Quran which says to all humans:
And if Allah had pleased He would
have made you a single people [اُمَّۃً
وَّاحِدَۃً] (5:48).
Does this contradict our
interpretation that human ity is a single nation? No. All human beings are one
nation because the same laws of nature, and laws of God, apply to each one of
them. They all have the same needs and God fulfills their needs, whether
physical or spiritual. But still, they also have different physical appearances
from birth, they speak different languages, follow different ways and customs,
cook different things etc. The Quran says in this connec tion:
And of His signs is the creation of the
heavens and the earth and the diversity of your tongues and colours. Surely
there are signs in this for the learned (30:22).
Those who seek to gain knowledge, the
learned, study this diversity and learn from these differences.
There is no contradiction between
saying that humanity is one and that its sections are different. There is one
international body known as the United Nations, meeting in one building. Yet
its members differ with one another so much so that one might be at war with
another. Differences may be a cause of friction and war between nations, but
this does not mean that they are a bad thing and must be eliminated. This
applies not only to political or physical differences but also religious
differences. Someone from a religion different from ours might be doing
something which we ought to be doing but which we have neglected or given up.
The problem arises when the followers of a religion fail to act on the basic
principles of their own religion, yet they feel superior that they have the
correct teachings and that followers of other religions are in error.
It says in the Quran:
O messengers, eat of the good things and do good.
Surely I am Knower of what you do. And surely this your community is one
community, and I am your Lord, so keep your duty to Me. But they split apart
their unity into sects, each faction rejoicing in what it had. (23:51 53)
The question arises: How could Allah
address all His messengers simultaneously as if they were standing together in
a group, and say to them: you messengers are one community (ummat-an wāḥidat-an)? The
meaning of course is that the mission and work of all the prophets of God was
so similar that it is as if God had addressed them all together, like a teacher
addressing one class, and sent them on the same mission to different places.
Then it says about their followers
that they split apart their unity into sects, with each faction rejoicing in
what it had. This means that the followers of the various prophets stopped
giving prece dence to the primary message of their prophet, the message which
was essentially the same for all prophets. Instead, they gave the highest
importance to certain secondary matters, which were different across different
religions, and began to believe these differences to be the key to a person s
salvation and to his being accepted by God as being on the right path. Each
faction rejoiced in its particular differences with others, and each believed
that God would be pleased with its members and would be displeased with all
others. The words of the Quran, each faction rejoicing in what it had , very
well portray the picture of people of various religions, and of different sects
within religions, shouting and proclaiming to others: we are right, you are
wrong .
The problem is not that there are
different religions but that the followers of each of them are rejoicing that
it is their differences with others which will make them enter heaven. Each is
forgetting that its prophet and the prophet of another religion belonged to the
same community of teachers. To deny and abuse the prophet of another religion
is to deny and abuse all of them, including your own prophet.
There are many religions, but Islam
tells us to look at what unites them. Similarly, there are many sects among
Muslims. Their fundamental beliefs and practices unite them. But they declare
each other as unbelievers, bound for hell, and punishable by Allah on some
point of difference. But the fact is that no one sect is completely right on
each and every point of difference it has with others. They can all learn from
one another, instead of each one rejoicing that it, and only it, is bound for
heaven. Some people, annoyed by this sectarianism, say that there should be no
sects. This is just shallow and wishful thinking. It is simply impractical and
an unattainable fantasy. These people cannot say how sects can be abolished.
They do not realise that most sects came into being originally for the reform
of Muslims, when they found that Muslims generally were deviating from some
teaching of Islam. But often, a sect which came to reform others went to an
extreme of its own. So the approach should be for sects to learn from the good
works of other sects and avoid their mistakes.
The verses from
chapter 23 that I have just been discussing occur in another place in the Quran
as well. In the chapter entitled The Prophets (al-anbiya), after
mention ing several prophets, it says at the end of their stories:
Surely this your community (ummah) is a single
community (ummat-an wāḥidat-an),
and I am your Lord, so serve Me. And they split apart their unity: to Us will
all return. (21:92 93)
I have said
earlier that the words, addressing the prophets as Surely this your comm unity
is a single community اِنَّ ہٰذِہٖۤ
اُمَّتُکُمۡ
اُمَّۃً
وَّاحِدَۃً mean that
the prophets themselves are one community. Hazrat Mirza Ghulam Ahmad has given
an interesting, different interpretation of this. He writes:
What this says is: O you prophets who were sent to
different parts of the world, the Muslims who have arisen in the world from
different nations, they are your Ummah, the Ummah of all of you,
because they believe in all of you. (Chashma-i Ma rifat, p. 137)
Allah is saying to all the prophets,
be it Abraham, Moses, David, Solomon or Jesus, all of you have one and the same
Ummah, and that is these Muslims because they believe in all of you and
they have come from the various nations who call themselves your followers.
That is to say, Muslims have not come from anywhere else but from the nations
such as the Jews and the Christians. Usually we say that the Jews are the ummah
of Moses, the Christians are the ummah of Jesus, and Muslims are the ummah
of the Holy Prophet Muhammad. The Quran here says that Muslims are the ummah
of all the prophets.
May Allah bring
the realisation that اِنَّ ہٰذِہٖۤ
اُمَّتُکُمۡ
اُمَّۃً
وَّاحِدَۃً Surely this your comm
unity is a single community to the minds of all sections of humanity, and also
to the various groups and sects of the Muslims, Ameen.
Website:
www.aaiil.uk