April Fools Day
By Mufti Taqi Uthmani
April Fool's Day
By Mufti Taqi Usmani
The love of blindly following the west has given currency to several of
their customs in our society. One of them is the tradition of
celebrating April fool. To play a prank on another, or to poke fun at
him by deceiving him with a lie is not only considered acceptable on
the first of April, but is also admired as a commendable act and a mark
of excellence. He who deceives more people than others, and deceives
them with more flair and finesse and with more gall and grace has taken
full advantage of the custom of April fool. He is considered worthy of
praise for having done that.
This taste of trick playing, which can rightly be called a tasteless
fun seeking, has brought on financial and physical harm to many
unsuspecting victims. In fact, some have lost their precious lives as a
result. They were deliberately given false news about a tragic event
involving their near and dear ones; news that some frail and feeble
folks could not bear, and succumbed.
Based on a lie, a deception, and a desire to laugh at the innocence and
ignorance of unsuspecting folks, this custom is obviously quite low on
the scale of morality and ethics.
But even the historical basis of it is quite shameful and appalling at
least for those who hold the person of Prophet Essa (alaihis salaam)
sacred and holy in some way.
How did this tradition begin? Historians seem to have varying opinions
about it. Some say that before the dawn of the seventeenth century, the
New Year in France used to begin on the 1st of April instead of the 1st
of January. Romans worshipped a goddess called Venus and used to hold
the month of April holy because of its association with the Goddess
Venus. The Greeks translated the word Venus as Aphrodite in their
language. The month April is so named because of its association with
Aphrodite. (Britannica 15th edition page 292 v 8)
Some writers have concluded that the 1st of April being the first day
of the year according to their calendar, and also being considered holy
as a day associated with their idol goddess, was celebrated as a feast
of joy. The lighthearted amusement and poking fun at each other was
part of that feast, and it gradually progressed into the form of April
fool. Some historians say that on that feast of joy people were
accustomed to exchanging gifts. Perhaps on one such occasion someone
pulled a prank on another in the name of a gift. The practice caught on
and gradually became entrenched as their cultural tradition.
Britannica mentions one other reason for this custom. Seasons begin to
change on the 25th of March. These changes were interpreted by those
folks as pranks and jokes played by Mother Nature upon her helpless
subjects. (Ma’aaz Allah) Gods were fooling them, they thought.
Therefore people too began the custom of making fools of each other.
(Brittanica page 496 vol 1)
It is still unclear whether people started this tradition with the
purpose of emulating nature and its prank seeking power and prowess, or
was it their way of visiting revenge upon nature.
The famous Larousse Encyclopedia has narrated a third reason, and
declared it more authentic. According to the traditions narrated by the
Christians and the Jews, 1st of April was the day when Hazrat Essa
(alaihis Salaam) was made the butt of jokes and the victim of mockery
by the Romans and the Jews. The so called Gospels presently found with
the Christians provide the details of the incident. The following are
the words of Luke:
Now the men who were holding Jesus mocked him and beat him; they also
blindfolded him and asked him, "Prophesy! Who is it that struck you?"
And they spoke many other words against him, reviling him. Luke 22:63-65
The gospels also carry a narration of how Hazrat Masih (alaihis salaam)
was also harassed by being bounced around from court to court. He was
first charged and tried in the court of the Jewish elders and jurists,
the Sanhedrin. But it merely transferred his case to the court of the
Roman governor, Pilate, who sent the case back to the Jewish king
Herod. Finally from the court of King Herod, he was taken back to the
court of the Roman governor, Pilate, for decision.
The Larousse Encyclopedia opines that the very purpose of sending
Hazrat Masih (alaihis salaam) from one court to another was to
highlight his helplessness, to ridicule and deride him, and to subject
him to mental distress. That incident, they say, took place on the
first of April, and the tradition of April fool was in fact started in
memory of that very shameless incident.
The victim of the custom of April fool, the person who is tricked and
fooled is called ‘poisson d’avril’ in French. In
English, it would be ‘April Fish’. (Encyclopedia Brittanica
page 496 V1) So the person who has been tricked and made a fool of is
like the first catch of the season, the fist fish that has been netted
in the beginning of April, the New Year. In support of its opinion, the
Larousse Encyclopedia claims that the French word ‘poisson’
translated into English as ‘fish’ is actually a degenerated
form of another similar French word, ‘poison’ which means
to ‘cause distress’ and to ‘inflict torture’.
This tradition, they say, was actually selected to refresh the memory
of the incidences of insult and torture which according to the
Christian traditions Masih (alaihis salaam) had to endure on the 1st of
April.
According to another French writer the word is indeed
‘poisson’ but it is an acronym. It is a composite of the
first letters of five other French words that are when arranged
sequentially: Essa, Masih, Allah, son and ransom. According to that
writer, too, the origin of April fool is an attempt to memorialize the
ridicule and distress inflicted upon Hazrat Essa (alaihis salaam).
If true (and Larousse Encyclopedia seems confident that it is, and they
have many evidentiary proofs of it) it is more likely that the Jewish
community started that custom and gave it currency probably with the
intent and object of hurling ridicule upon Hazrat Essa (alaihis
salaam). Yet it is amazing that the custom which the Jews initiated to
disparage Hazrat Essa (alaihis salaam) was not only accepted by the
Christians with cold calmness, but they also joined in the celebration
and helped spread the custom. May be the Christian folks were unaware
of the origin of this custom, and may be they began celebrating it
without giving it much thought in a vacant absent-minded manner. Yet
the approach of the Christians and their mental outlook concerning such
matters is rather odd, to say the least. As a general rule, the cross
upon which Hazreet Essa was crucified in their opinion should have
acquired a hate-worthy status in their eyes, because it was employed as
a means of torturing and ridiculing Hazrat Masih (Alaihis Salam). But
amazingly, they declared it sacred and today it is the holiest symbol
of the Christian faith.
However, one thing emerges as a certainty from the above mentioned
details. Regardless of whether the custom is associated with the
goddess Venus, or began as a reaction to pranks playing prowess of
Nature, or in memory of hurling insults at Hazrat Masih (alaihis
salaam), its origin is despicable. It is rooted in idolatry,
superstition, or a rude and insolent concept of ridiculing a prophet of
God. According to the Muslims it consists of the following worst sins:
1) to lie
2) to deceive
3) to inflict pain upon others
4) to celebrate the memory of an incident the origin of which is
idolatry, or superstition, or an insulting and a`rude joke against a
messenger of God.
Now the Muslims must decide for themselves whether this custom is worth
celebrating in the Muslim society? Should it be adopted and given
prevalence here?
Thank Allah that in our society this custom of April fool is not
celebrated much. Yet we still hear about some incidences of people
celebrating it. Without thinking or being aware of its origin some
people participate in it. If they seriously reflect upon its reality,
its origins and its results, then surely, Insha allah, they will
realize the importance of avoiding it.
14 shawwal 1414 AH
27 March 1994
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