Patanjali's principle of self-inquiry through sacred study, where Islamic texts become mirrors revealing the scholar's own spiritual condition and need for transformation.
Svadhyaya, literally 'self-study,' appears in Patanjali's Yoga Sutras as one of the three pillars of yoga alongside tapas (discipline) and ishvara-pranidhana (surrender). Rather than distant, objective study, svadhyaya transforms learning into self-inquiry: the scholar studies not merely to accumulate information but to recognize themselves within the teachings. In Islamic tradition, this parallels the practice of tajdeed—renewal—where sacred knowledge becomes relevant through self-examination. As a scholar encounters Qur'anic verses or hadith, genuine learning requires asking: How does this teaching address my condition? What am I being called to change? This transforms study from intellectual exercise into spiritual mirror. The text reveals not only universal principles but the reader's own blindspots, resistances, and possibilities for growth. Svadhyaya elevates Islamic knowledge pursuit from passive reception to active self-recognition, making every encounter with wisdom a potential moment of transformation and self-knowledge.
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