Monday, May 25, 2009

An Islamic Games Thought - 2 things I like about competitive sports

One should reflect on almost everything. I was thinking of the benefits of being in the Islamic Games this past weekend and the answer list was big. The Islamic Games make you see many, say Salam to many, smile in the faces of many, feel the warmth of a community; that is a lot of reward if you have a clear intention.

But there is something unique about it containing competitive games and not just a gathering of Muslims. I am even talking in particular about games where the competition happens real time when two team compete against each other and not that where the competition is against time or score (like gymnastics for example :-) )

The 2 things I like the most are:

I - Competitive games show the reality of people. It puts all of us under the pressure of competition which shows our real personality and push some buttons rarely pushed in real life. I can see myself and my teammates as well as other team members behaving in a way that is a little different than that when they are relaxed. When we yell at the ref., when we yell at each others, when we yell at the other team, when we even yell at ourselves and our performance we show an example of us when we are challenged in real life. When we yell at the ref it shows our tendency to blame "unfairness" taking place beyond our hands without focusing on what we should do to overcome this "unfairness" if it really exisits. When we yell at each others it shows how much of a team we are. When we yell at the other team, and sometimes become a little physical or angry at them, it shows how much competing for worldly matters is more important to us than genuine issues such as brotherhood and love for the sake of Allah.

II - Competitive games sets a clear example of who will be able to win and when victory will take place. You can find the pillars of success in life while playing competitive games. When you see clear team work in the field, when you see clear leadership and full compliance to this leadership especially in crucial time during the game, when you see support from team members, when you see a spirit of winning, when you see patience in overcoming our tiredness and  our temptations to take jobs other than ours, when you experience our ability not to give up when we lose partially in the middle of the game, when you see support from people who are not playing yet would like the team to win, when you see the subs under the temptation of wanting to play prefer to sit out to give a chance for those who can do a better job, when you see us passing the ball to people even if they are not fully skillful and cheering them up when they make mistakes, you know that we are about to win. When you see otherwise, you will expect otherwise.

I really enjoyed the Islamic games and I really enjoyed reflecting on our team and other teams as well. I was very happy not only with the number of gold medals we got but with the attitude of winning that we demonstrated. I am upset from some of the mistakes some of us did but the overall spirit was a spirit of victory. Since competitive games is a very pressuring moment, I expect this spirit to hold when we carry on with our real endeavor.

Monday, May 18, 2009

There is an App for that

Inspired by my new phone and the ad campaign "there is an App for that," my kids showed me, I was extremely excited by the "movement" iPhone created. "35,000 applications and the it keeps coming," their website says. If you want to play, there is an App for that; if you want to work, there is an App for that; if you want to dream, there is an App for that. Isn't it a nice campaign?

I was thinking about the many local and national Muslim organization that are trying their best to offer a value and a service to the society in general and the Muslim community in particular. If you want to learn, there is an Org for that; if you want to advocate, there is an Org for that.; if you want to have fun, there is an Org for that; if you want to gather, there is an Org for that. Even if you want to vent, there is an Org for that :-)

However, all these iPhone applications gained value and created such a large movement because of the platform, the iPhone. The iPhone is what made them valuable and the iPhone is what gave them the chance. The iPhone is what created the movement where everyone became part of.

In order for all this effort on the analogous side of the Muslim organizations to create real value, in order for it to be a movement of khair (good) where everyone can benefit and benefit others, there should be the platform. I ask Allah to enable MAS to be this platform where everyone can participate and everyone can bring about value.

The iPhone is:
- a cool platform
- suitable for many
- very well known
- an open platform where not only iPhone can develop applications
but
- somehow expensive
- available only for AT&T customers

MAS should be
- a cool platform
- suitable for all
- very well known
- an open platform where all and not only MAS can participate
and
- inexpensive
- available for all customers