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KITAB, QURAN & ARABIC

CHAPTER 1     KITAB, QURAN & ARABIC –     IS THE WORD "ARABIC" MENTIONED IN THE CONTEXT OF THE BOOK QURAN, THE ...

Friday, 31 August 2018

AZAAB

 

AZAAB IS IN FACT IS A PUNISHMENT BUT PEOPLE DON'T REALIZE IT.

Azaab (عَذَاب) can be understood in a deeper, more reflective sense - not as an external punishment, but as an inner condition of suffering that develops quietly within human mind and affects their behavior.

It refers to those things we willingly indulge in because we feel pleasant, comforting, or satisfying in the moment, yet we remain largely unaware of their long-term harm. What begins as enjoyment gradually turns into repetition, and repetition hardens into habit. Over time, this habit can evolve into a form of dependency - something we feel unable to control or escape.

In this way, addiction - whether to substances, behaviors, or even patterns of thinking - becomes a living form of azaab. It is not imposed suddenly; rather, it grows slowly within us. The more we indulge, the stronger it becomes, until it begins to dominate our choices and weaken our inner freedom.

At that stage, azaab is no longer just a habit - it becomes a continuous state of suffering. A person may still seek pleasure in it, yet simultaneously feel its weight, its consequences, and its quiet destruction of well-being, clarity, and balance.

This understanding shifts the concept of punishment from something external to something deeply internal. The suffering is not inflicted by a distant, punitive force recognised as God, but emerges naturally from our own actions and patterns. It is self-created, self-sustained, and often self-ignored.

Thus, azaab can be seen as the consequence of unconscious careless living - when we repeatedly choose what feels easy over what is truly beneficial. It is the hidden cost of indulgence without awareness, where the sweetness of the beginning slowly transforms into the burden of the end.

In this light, liberation from azaab is not about fearing punishment, but about awakening—recognizing harmful patterns, reclaiming control, and realigning oneself with what nurtures inner peace and balance.

The linguistic meaning of azaab is which is easy, sweet, digestible, palatable but it becomes a habit - this easy and sweet habit becomes our punishment without we realizing it.

Azaab (عَذَاب) can be understood, at a deeper philosophical level, not merely as an imposed punishment, but as a condition we gradually enter - often willingly, even unconsciously.

It begins with something that feels easy, pleasing, and agreeable - something the self naturally inclines toward. It is attractive, comforting, even “sweet” in experience. There is no immediate sense of danger in it; in fact, it feels harmless, even desirable. But this is precisely where its subtlety lies.

What we repeatedly indulge in begins to shape us. A moment of pleasure becomes a pattern; a pattern becomes a habit; and a habit, over time, becomes a structure within the self. At this point, what once felt like freedom quietly turns into dependence. The person no longer simply chooses the act - the act begins to choose the person.

This is where azaab emerges - not as an external blow, but as an internal captivity.

Philosophically, azaab can be seen as the transformation of ease into bondage. That which was “light” and effortless becomes heavy and difficult to escape. The sweetness loses its innocence and reveals its cost: a gradual weakening of awareness, discipline, and inner clarity.

Any kind of addiction, in this sense, is a clear manifestation of azaab. Whether it is attachment to comfort, desire, status, approval, or physical indulgence, the pattern is the same: the self becomes entangled in what it once enjoyed. Improvement becomes difficult not because the path is unclear, but because the will has been compromised.

The tragedy of this state is that it often goes unrecognized. A person may continue to justify, normalize, or even defend what is quietly harming them. They may believe they are in control, while in reality, their capacity to choose freely has already been diminished.

Thus, azaab is not always something that comes to us - it is something we grow into. It is the suffering that arises when the human being loses mastery over the self and becomes subject to its own unchecked inclinations.

In this light, azaab is the lived experience of misalignment - when what feels good in the moment gradually distances us from what is true, balanced, and ultimately life-giving.

People generally think of punishment (azaab) as something that happens after death. They remain unaware that every person, in some way, is already caught in a state of suffering. At every moment, they are within it - whether they are rich or poor, happy or distressed, weak or powerful, religious or non-religious, intelligent or foolish, simple or cunning, pure or corrupt, a king or a beggar, whether they consider themselves important or insignificant.

The one who stays balanced - at a state of inner neutrality, a middle path - free from addictions and excessive attachments, is the one who remains محفوظ (protected) from this suffering.

In the entire Quran, the word azaab appears 373 times, and around 27 different forms of azaab are mentioned. We won't be discussing the type azaab here as the article will become too long.

Let us consider a few verses to better understand the meaning of azaab.

2:6 - إِنَّ الَّذِينَ كَفَرُواْ سَوَآءٌ عَلَيْهِمْ أَأَنذَرْتَهُمْ أَمْ لَمْ تُنذِرْهُمْ لاَ يُؤْمِنُونَ

As for those who reject faith (kafru), it is the same to them whether you warn them or do not warn them; they will never believe in their own self -

2:7 -
خَتَمَ اللّهُ عَلَى قُلُوبِهمْ وَعَلَى سَمْعِهِمْ وَعَلَى أَبْصَارِهِمْ غِشَاوَةٌ وَّلَهُمْ عَذَابٌ عَظِيمٌ

The Allah - understood here as our own system of Conscience - has placed a seal, a kind of blockage, upon their hearts and minds, upon their ability to understand. Their insight is veiled by layers of covering, and as a result, they fall into a state of deep suffering (azaab).

In light of this, azaab is not a punishment after death; it is the condition of living when our perception is blocked and unclear because of lack of faith in our own conscience (Allah). Doubting self is doubting your own Allah. When we doubt our own conscience and give in to bad habits - we lose confidence in our own self and start believing in others which leads to confusion in our mind. Anyone - whether rich or poor, healthy or unwell - who lacks clarity about their own self and inner reality is, in fact, living in a state of azaab.

Self doubt, not believing in Conscience is kufr, due to that a seal; meaning a restriction - has been placed upon the hearts. They are unable to understand; it is as if they have lost the capacity to comprehend. They do not truly hear, and a veil has fallen over their eyes. For them, there is a severe state of suffering. 

Azaab is not able to realize right from wrong. It is as though God - Allah - Conscience, or the self - has allowed this seal to form over the intellect.

What is kufr? It is to know the truth, yet still refuse to accept it—to deny reality despite being aware of it - Hiding our own true self or nature - ignorance

This denial shows itself in many ways: arrogance, pride, stubbornness, remaining stuck in one’s comfort zone, or falling into laziness.

They live in false optimism, fully aware that without effort, success is impossible - yet they still do nothing

They fail to understand their own potential and instead imitate others blindly.

So where does azaab strike? It attacks the human capacity to think, to perceive, and to act rightly.

2:10 - فِي قُلُوبِهِم مَّرَضٌ فَزَادَهُمُ اللّهُ مَرَضاً وَلَهُم عَذَابٌ أَلِيمٌ بِمَا كَانُوا يَكْذِبُونَ

Azaab does not strike from the outside first - it strikes the heart (qalb).

It begins as a subtle disturbance within, then gradually deepens into a condition. Azaab feeds the illnesses of the heart - it nourishes confusion, strengthens inner contradictions, and amplifies the gap between what a person knows and what they actually live. In this way, the qalb becomes diseased - not in a physical sense, but in its ability to perceive truth clearly and respond to it sincerely.

As this condition grows, the heart loses its strength. Its natural clarity, courage, and balance begin to weaken. The person may still think, speak, and function outwardly, but inwardly they become fragmented. They know what is right, yet feel no power to act upon it. They recognize what is harmful, yet remain drawn toward it.

At this stage, azaab reveals one of its deepest dimensions: it turns habits into chains. A person becomes internally compelled - almost forced - by their own patterns. What once was a choice slowly becomes a dependency; what was once under control begins to control them. The self loses its freedom, not because of an external force, but because it has surrendered its inner authority.

Philosophically, azaab can be understood as the erosion of inner freedom. It is the state in which the human being is no longer aligned within - where knowledge, intention, and action are no longer in harmony. The heart, instead of being a center of awareness and balance, becomes a battlefield of impulses and contradictions.

And when the heart weakens in this way, a person does not merely suffer - they become unable to rise above their own suffering.

2:49  - The fear of Fir‘awn - understood as a force within us that enslaves our capacity to think - is itself a form of azaab. It is the state of living in constant fear and psychological pressure, where our basic freedom is suppressed even though our desires (نِسَاءَ) remain alive.

This fear pushes us into a kind of inner slavery. It makes us stop thinking, questioning, and reflecting. When a person shuts down their own mind like this, it becomes another form of azaab.

In such a state, a person is not physically chained, but mentally confined. And when reflection and understanding come to an end, one enters a state of inner darkness.

2:85-86 - Ignoring our own inner script (Al-Kitab) and copying others is azaab too. Because we chose the immediate gains of this lower life (dunyā, the nearer and quicker result) over the deeper, delayed consequences / results (ākhirah). This choice itself leads to azaab. When a person becomes fixated on quick rewards and ignores long-term truth and growth, they trap themselves in a cycle of shallow satisfaction and deeper inner loss.

71:1 - Nūḥ an application or a voice of our own consciousness that warns the mindset (الْقَوْمَ) of a painful azaab. This warning was not about a future punishment, but about the consequences of their present state - the path they were on was already leading them toward suffering, both inwardly and outwardly.

61:8–11 - These verses point toward how one can be saved from azaab: by striving in the path through the light of Allah (our pure Conscience) with both one’s resources and inlination (amwāl - that to which one is inclined or attached) and one’s self (nafs). This striving (jihād) is not external struggle, but an inner effort - to realign one’s attachments, discipline the self, and live in accordance with truth.

Here are some everyday, philosophical examples: - examples actually make this idea of azaab much clearer, because they show how something “sweet” gradually turns into suffering.

1. Pleasure → Dependence (Food & Health)

A person enjoys sugary or oily food. It feels good, comforting, harmless.
Over time, it becomes a habit. Then the body weakens - diabetes, fatigue, heaviness.

Now the same “sweetness” becomes azaab:

  • They want to stop, but cannot easily.
  • Their body suffers, yet the craving remains.

What began as pleasure becomes a form of azaab - a quiet, continuous suffering.

2. Comfort Zone → Stagnation

A person avoids difficulty and chooses comfort - no effort, no struggle, no growth.
It feels easy and stress-free.

But gradually:

  • Confidence decreases (faith in self)
  • Fear of challenge increases
  • Opportunities are lost

Now the person feels stuck, incapable of change.

Comfort, which felt like relief, becomes a prison - this is azaab.

3. Ego → Isolation

A person indulges in pride, superiority, always wanting to be right.
It feels powerful and satisfying.

But over time:

  • Relationships weaken
  • People distance themselves
  • The person becomes internally rigid and lonely

The ego that felt “strong” but becomes a source of inner emptiness - this too is azaab.

4. Laziness → Loss of Potential

A person delays effort, avoids discipline, and chooses ease repeatedly.
It feels light and effortless.

Years later:

  • They see others progress
  • Regret builds
  • Self-worth declines

The ease of laziness transforms into long-term regret - azaab in a psychological form.

5. False Hope → Self-Deception

A person keeps believing “everything will work out” without taking action.
This illusion feels comforting.

But:

  • Reality does not change
  • Failure repeats
  • Inner frustration grows

Living in delusion becomes its own suffering—azaab of the mind.

6. Social Validation → Inner Emptiness

A person becomes addicted to approval - likes, praise, recognition.
It feels rewarding and validating.

But gradually:

  • Their self-worth depends on others
  • Anxiety increases
  • They lose connection with their true self

What felt like acceptance becomes insecurity - another form of azaab.

Philosophical Insight

In all these examples, the pattern is the same:

What is easy, sweet, and pleasurable in the beginning -
if left unchecked - turns into limitation, dependence, and suffering.

This is the deeper meaning of azaab:

  • Not always a sudden punishment
  • But a slow consequence of unconscious living

It is not imposed from outside - it grows from within, through repetition, attachment, and neglect of awareness.


7. Gambling → Illusion of Gain, Reality of Loss

A person begins gambling for excitement or the hope of quick money.
At first, it feels thrilling - there is anticipation, adrenaline, and occasional reward.

But gradually:

  • Losses increase, yet the person keeps chasing recovery
  • Rational thinking weakens under emotional highs and lows
  • Financial stress, anxiety, and desperation take over

Even when they know the harm, they continue.

The “hope of winning” becomes a trap. What felt like opportunity turns into compulsion and loss. This is azaab - a suffering created by attachment to uncertainty and illusion.

8. Alcohol → Temporary Escape, Lasting Damage

A person turns to alcohol for relaxation, escape, or social comfort.
At first, it feels relieving - stress fades, the mind becomes light.

But over time:

  • Dependence develops
  • Health deteriorates
  • Emotional control weakens
  • Relationships and responsibilities suffer

The person may want to stop, yet feels unable to.

What once felt like relief becomes a need. The escape becomes a cage. This is azaab—where the self loses control over what it once used for comfort.

Deeper Reflection

Both gambling and alcohol reveal a profound truth:

Azaab often disguises itself as relief, excitement, or pleasure.

  • Gambling feeds on the illusion of control over chance
  • Alcohol feeds on the illusion of escape from reality

But neither resolves anything - they only deepen dependency and distance a person from clarity, balance, and inner freedom.

Philosophical Conclusion

In these cases, azaab is not a distant punishment - it is a lived condition:

  • When desire overrides awareness
  • When repetition weakens will
  • When a person knows, yet cannot act according to that knowledge

It is the state where the self becomes divided - wanting freedom, yet remaining bound.

And that inner contradiction itself is one of the deepest forms of azaab.

In this way, azaab is not an external event - it is deeply connected to how a person thinks, chooses, and lives.

And that is why the most dangerous azaab is the one a person does not even recognize





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