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"description": "Two profound traditions—one rooted in the Nishnaabeg wisdom of this land and the other in the timeless guidance of the Qur’an—offer us a shared map for these turbulent times. By viewing water not as a commodity but as a sacred teacher, we find a \"sacred current\" that can guide us through the storm.",
"path": "/2026/water-as-a-teacher-shared-lessons-from-indigenous-and-islamic-traditions/",
"publishedAt": "2026-04-15T15:00:25.000Z",
"site": "https://www.iqra.ca",
"tags": [
"Theory of Water"
],
"textContent": "_By Muneeb Nasir_\n\nIn a time when many feel the world is unravelling, we often find ourselves searching for a solid foundation to stand on.\n\nFrom the escalating climate crisis to the fractures in our social and political systems, the \"old normal\" seems to be vanishing.\n\nYet, perhaps the answer isn't to look for solid ground, but to learn how to move with the water.\n\nTwo profound traditions—one rooted in the Nishnaabeg wisdom of this land and the other in the timeless guidance of the Qur’an—offer us a shared map for these turbulent times.\n\nBy viewing water not as a commodity but as a sacred teacher, we find a \"sacred current\" that can guide us through the storm.\n\n### **Water as a Teacher**\n\nNishnaabeg scholar Leanne Betasamosake Simpson explored the concepts in her work, Theory of Water.\n\nShe suggests that \"listening very carefully to water\" allows us to see beyond the immediate crises of the present.\n\nFor Indigenous peoples, \"unmaking\" and \"remaking\" the world is a familiar cycle of resilience.\n\nThis perspective finds a beautiful mirror in the Islamic tradition.\n\nThe Qur’an identifies the natural world as a series of _Ayaat_ —signs—that require our active reflection.\n\nWater is the primary sign of life and divine mercy:\n\n_\"It is God who sends water down from the sky and with it revives the earth when it is dead. There truly is**a sign in this for people who listen.** \" _(Qur’an, 16:65).\n\nBoth traditions challenge us to move from being passive consumers of water to active students of its logic.\n\nTo \"listen\" to water is to recognize its persistence, its humility, and its role as the source of all existence.\n\n### **The Strength of Sintering**\n\nSimpson introduces a powerful metaphor for community called **sintering**.\n\nThis is the physical process where snowflakes bond together to form a stronger whole without losing their individual identity.\n\nIt is a model of interdependence—building collective strength without extraction or erasure.\n\nFor the Muslim community, this resonates with the ethic of the _Ummah_ and our role as _Khalifah_ (stewards).\n\nOur strength lies in our ability to bond together for the common good.\n\nThe Quran describes this movement toward truth: _\"He sends water from the sky that fills riverbeds to overflowing... in this way God illustrates truth and falsehood—the froth disappears, but what is of benefit to man stays behind...\"_(13:17).\n\nJust as water carries away the \"froth\" of falsehood, our community efforts must focus on what is truly beneficial: justice, mercy, and the protection of our shared environment.\n\n### **Navigating via Relationship**\n\nModern maps are often about boundaries and ownership—lines that tell us where we _don't_ belong.\n\nIn contrast, \"Nishnaabe maps\" and the guidance of the Qur’an are maps of relationship.\n\nThey show us how we are connected to the Creator, to each other, and to the living world.\n\nIf we are to remake our world, we must adopt these sacred currents.\n\nWe cannot act as stewards of the earth while treating its most vital element as a mere resource.\n\n\"_...We made every living thing from water? Will they not believe?_ \" (Qur’an, 21:30).\n\nThis verse is a call to profound ecological humility.\n\nIf every living thing is made of water, then our relationship with water is a relationship with life itself.\n\n### **A Shared Path Forward**\n\nAs we navigate the \"unravelling\" of the present, we are invited to join these two streams of wisdom.\n\nBy \"thinking alongside water,\" we learn that even when things seem to be falling apart, there is a path toward renewal.\n\nLet us be like the snowflake in the process of sintering—finding strength in our neighbours and building a resilient future together.\n\nThe wisdom of the current is clear: when we listen to the water, we learn how to live.",
"title": "Water as a Teacher: Shared Lessons from Indigenous and Islamic Traditions",
"updatedAt": "2026-04-15T15:00:26.474Z"
}