
In a Seventh-Century Court, a Refugee’s Words Still Echo Across Continents
From Iranian role models to Argentine mental health, a shared ethical vocabulary drawn from the Quran is being re-examined.
In the court of the Negus of Abyssinia, a refugee named Ja‘far ibn Abi Talib stood before a Christian king and delivered a confession of his people’s former ignorance. “We were an unlettered folk, worshipping idols, eating carrion, severing ties of kinship, and the strong among us devoured the weak,” he said, according to a hadith cited by Bangladeshi commentators. Then he listed what the Prophet had commanded: truthfulness, fidelity to trusts, kindness to neighbours, protection of orphans, and an end to slander and bloodshed. The speech, made to secure asylum for the earliest Muslims, has become a touchstone for contemporary Muslim thinkers from Dhaka to Jakarta who see in it a compact of social ethics no less urgent today.
Iranian religious scholars, meanwhile, point to a quieter scene: the mother of Moses, her heart emptied of fear by a divine promise, placing her infant into the Nile. They lament that such figures have been eclipsed in the imagination of the young by Western superheroes, and argue that the Quran’s real-life exemplars—with their courage, trust, and moral clarity—must be reintroduced if a new generation is to find its bearings. This concern with models of inner calm resonates unexpectedly with mental health professionals in Buenos Aires, who contend that suffering cannot be reduced to individual pathology. They urge a shift from diagnosing disorders to intervening in the social, economic, and discursive conditions that produce distress, a perspective that, viewed from Tehran, finds an echo in the Quranic insistence that God first stills the heart before imposing a difficult duty.
In Indonesia, the vocabulary of akhlak—moral character—stretches across every relationship: to God, the Prophet, scripture, angels, parents, children, and even to oneself through the practice of muhasabah, a daily self-accounting. Muslim thinkers there present muhasabah not as a substitute for clinical care but as a spiritual resource for managing the anxieties of student life and the pressures of social media. Bangladeshi writers push the ethical framework further, proposing a “zero immorality” principle drawn from the Quranic portrait of the Prophet’s exalted character. In this reading, the declaration of faith itself is a simultaneous negation of all wrongdoing and an affirmation of every virtuous act, a formula they believe holds the key to both personal and social equilibrium. Nigerian analysts, reflecting on the Hijrah, add that the migration to Medina was not only a flight from persecution but a redefinition of intention: a man who emigrated solely to marry a woman became known as “the migrant of Umm Qays,” a gentle caution that even the most dramatic acts of devotion are hollow without a rightly oriented heart.
What threads these disparate reflections together is a conviction that ethical life cannot be privatised. The same surah that promises an unfailing reward for the Prophet’s character also insists that prayer restrains indecency and wrongdoing. The mother of Moses, in Iranian retellings, becomes a figure not of passive submission but of active trust, her emptied heart the condition for saving a child who would confront a tyrant. In a Jakarta dormitory, a student’s nightly muhasabah may look like solitude, but it is tethered to a community’s shared moral language. And in the Argentine clinic, the question of what a diagnosis cannot explain leads back to the public square, where hate speech and polarisation shape the very subjectivities that later arrive in the consulting room. The echo of Ja‘far’s words in the Axumite court—his insistence that faith is inseparable from the way one treats a neighbour, an orphan, a woman’s reputation—has not faded. It is being re-read, in five languages and across as many continents, as a quiet counterpoint to the noise of the age.
| Iranian & allied press | +0.90 | aligned |
|---|---|---|
| Indian & South Asian press | 0.00 | neutral |
The Supreme Leader has been martyred, but his guidance continues. We, the Iranian people and the faithful worldwide, do not bow: his legacy is immortal.
A tragic event is turned into a spiritual victory by personifying the nation in the leader and projecting his influence beyond death. International consensus is selectively cited as proof of legitimacy.
International criticism of Khamenei’s regime is omitted, nor is the context of his death (joint US-Israel attack) framed as an act of war; instead it is presented as inevitable martyrdom.
Khamenei's death is global news. Bangladesh attends ceremonies to maintain diplomatic relations. The region watches cautiously.
An informative and detached tone is adopted, listing facts and participants without judgment. Any comment on the Iranian regime is avoided, limiting to event chronicle.
No analysis of Iran's role in the region or the war context of the death; internal Iranian divisions and opposing reactions are omitted.
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