Mr Ishaq Dar also had one additional quality or qualification which may have been the real cause for his success. I am not for one second suggesting that his homage to the great Sufi had nothing to do but I am mindful of the fact of his close association with the power magnets in Pakistani politics.
Let us call a spade a spade.
Kindly look around in Pakistan all the political leaders had performed Hajj and Umra, but how many of those have become different. Name me one.
As we all know, millions of Muslims around the world who go and pay homage in Medina. But look at most of them and you will find, that they have not changed. It is within your own self you change. It may be brought about in many ways, but it must always start from within not from without. Not from outside.
If we look at the teaching of Sufi masters, we would discover that they insist first and foremost in the discovery of self
Mr Ishaq Dar also had one additional quality or qualification which may have been the real cause for his success. I am not for one second suggesting that his homage to the great Sufi had nothing to do but I am mindful of the fact of his close association with the power magnets in Pakistani politics.
Let us call a spade a spade.
Kindly look around in Pakistan all the political leaders had performed Hajj and Umra, but how many of those have become different. Name me one.
As we all know, millions of Muslims around the world who go and pay homage in Medina. But look at most of them and you will find, that they have not changed. It is within your own self you change. It may be brought about in many ways, but it must always start from within not from without. Not from outside.
If we look at the teaching of Sufi masters, we would discover that they insist first and foremost in the discovery of self
@ Akram Malik…. Very well said!