Monday, 15 December 2025

Frequently Asked Questions (From Kasana, Qutab, Anger sessions)

 

1.      Frequently Asked Questions (From Kasana, Qutab, Anger sessions)

 

Over the years, I have heard almost every manner of question about this method of healing, ranging from the weird to the wonderful. The most insightful and interesting of questions come from those who have undertaken the therapy and also passed it on to others. They have positioned themselves for real learning.

 

More generally though, I believe that the answers to our questions are inside us, and that they reveal themselves at the right time. There is no question inside us for which is the answer is not already present inside us too. In fact, it is on the basis of the answer being there that the question arises. This is how we are created. And it is only when the answer comes from inside you that you accept it. Otherwise you can listen to a lecture all you want, and it makes no difference. Nothing beats the self-practical. You have to have experienced a situation yourself and come out on the other side to be convinced of the answers. It is like someone never having had their hand burned asking what it feels like. How does one explain it to them? You can try to warn someone away from danger, but often, until they go through that danger themselves, they are not convinced it can harm them.

 

Despite this however, there are questions that consistently come up about this remedy, and so here are a set of FAQs that I hope are helpful in clarifying some basic principles to the reader.

 

        I.            Who can undertake this therapy?

 

It is a remedy for any adult having any sort of problem, whether that is financial, social, familial, physical, mental, psychological, political, or anything else. It is not for children to listen to though. Children are innocent. For those whose children are unwell, it is their parent or parents who should undertake this therapy. By children, I generally mean those under the age of 12 years.

 

      II.            Why Surah Rahman?

 

It is the chapter of a holy book in which every line talks of our Creator’s mercy and His love for us. And what better to remind ourselves of, when we are sick or stuck than the inherent goodness and the inherent mercy that surrounds us? After all, when we desperately need help, we appeal to that person’s goodness, their softness. We do not appeal to their sense of firmness or fairness. We appeal instead to their generosity, even though we may, in that moment, be undeserving of it. Through Surah Rahman we call on our Creator’s perpetual, unconditional love for us.

 

 

    III.            Why Qari Abdul Basit’s recitation specifically?

 

My teacher, Makhdoom Syed Safdar Ali Bokhari, or Baba Ji as I called him, recommended this specific recitation. He tried this remedy using other recitations of Surah Rahman, but he got the best results with the voice of the late Qari Abdul Basit of Egypt.

 

   IV.            So is there something special in Qari Abdul Basit’s voice, an energy or a radiation?

 

Whenever and wherever the Quran is recited with extreme love, its impact will also be extreme. Our Beloved Prophet, Peace Be Upon Him, had four muezzins, for example. The one we all know is Bilal. His name is instantly recognizable. For the other three muezzins, scholars would have to look in a book to tell you their names. Not that they were not passionate in their work, but Bilal clearly had something different about him. Even though he had a lisp in his speech and he was not Arab. In the same way, Qari Abdul Basit’s voice is special. The results we get with his voice are excellent. But ultimately, anyone can try any recitation of the Surah they want.

 

 

     V.            What is the significance of drinking water at the end?

 

Sound impacts water, and drinking water in the manner prescribed, as part of this remedy, is a healing for our bodies.

 

For those interested in studying this further, look at the work of the Japanese scientist Masaru Emoto. Emoto researched the effect of sound on water. In his experiments, Emoto exposed different glasses of water to pictures and sounds, including words and music. He then froze these glasses of water and studied the frozen particles under microscope. His conclusion was that the molecular structure of water changes in the presence of human consciousness. He subsequently published a New York Times best-selling book called The Hidden Messages in Water.[1] Mainstream science is quick to dismiss Emoto’s work today, but it is possible that Emoto has touched on a core, universal truth, one which mainstream science has not yet reached.

 

   VI.            What if someone is unwell or unconscious, and cannot drink water after listening to the recitation?

 

The part about drinking water does not apply to an unconscious patient. But their bodies will still have absorbed the sound and energy of Surah Rahman. Anyone who is hearing impaired, they too undertake this therapy. Again, it is the energy, or the frequency of the recitation that will be felt and absorbed by their bodies.

 

 VII.            What if someone, for whatever reason has an unusual routine, or don’t feel able to  listen to the Surah three times a day as prescribed?

 

Those people can listen to Surah Rahman once a day for seven days. That is enough for them.

 

VIII.            Are there special times in the day to listen to Surah Rahman during this therapy?

 

No. You can listen at times convenient for you. And even if you miss one of your set times on any given day, make sure you listen to the Surah at least once that day, even if you are only able to listen for a short while. The idea is to present oneself daily to the Divine via this particular sound, or frequency.

 

 

    IX.            Does one need to listen to the recitation sitting down, lying down, or in any particular way?

 

Listen in whichever way is convenient. Some patients cannot sit up while listening. Or they have not been able to bathe themselves. But they can still listen to the Quran. For reading the holy scripture, personal cleanliness is important. But this is a matter of listening. And God Himself says that when His book is being read out, we should listen carefully and with concentration, so that we may receive mercy. And He says that once the recitation has finished, we should call out to Him, either silently in our hearts, or out loud. Hence this sequence in Surah Rahman Therapy. First we listen to His words, then we call out to Him in our hearts with extreme love, and then we drink a half a glass of water in three sips. 

 

      X.            If my problem disappears after undertaking this remedy, is it Surah Rahman that healed me?

 

Surah Rahman itself does not heal you, but the source behind Surah Rahman can and does heal us.  

 

We often read the Verse of the Throne [in the Quran]. But it is not the Verse of the Throne itself that has any power to help us, it is the One who occupies that Throne. He is the one we need to focus on. Verses of the Quran are just hints for us. And the first line of Surah Rahman is simply ‘The All-Merciful.’ Its very start is with this statement.  

 

The preamble of the chapter too, like many other chapters in the Quran, speaks of mercy and benevolence. So its starting introduction is that of mercy. He wants us to know that we can always turn back to Him. We can always say that we are lost and that we need Him. And like a mother He will make us clean again, new again.

 

 

    XI.            How is forgiveness linked to healing?

 

Forgiveness is a shortcut to healing. Sometimes people come to me and say that they listened to Surah Rahman for seven days but nothing changed for them. And I say to them that they have not forgiven fully, that they are still holding a grudge. Forgiveness is the shortcut to healing.

 

  XII.            But it is hard to forgive, the hardest thing even?

 

I understand that forgiveness is hard, at first. But anger and hatred, these are the real illnesses.  Anger is an intoxicant for our bodies. Just like alcohol. Many of us are proud to announce that we do not drink,  but we do not know that anger has the same effect on our body as alcohol does. Intoxicants cloud judgement. And the loss of this is ours to carry. If we speed on the highway, how does it harm the highway police? It does not. We are the ones at risk, risk of our own making.  

 

And anger is within our power to control. Our task is to control it, to stay away from it. To not indulge it. Not doing should be easy right? Still, we slip. But our Maker is kind to us. The moment we turn back to Him, and call to Him for mercy, He responds and resets us.

 

XIII.            You say hurting others is risky business. Why?

 

It goes back to forgiveness. There are people who are unable or unwilling to forgive. They cannot let go even though they know it will help them. In those instances, I feel sorry for the people who have hurt them. They must be stuck somewhere in their lives too. It’s a vicious cycle. So try not to hurt other people. Try not to break people’s hearts. The karmic impact of doing so can follow you and your generations to come.

 

A simple formula is to respect those that the Lord has designated as worthy of respect. Your parents, your elder siblings, and also your spiritual elders  – whoever has, in any way, looked after you when you were unable to look after yourself. Looking the other way after having benefited from someone’s care and consideration, this lack of gratitude, it is not liked by our karma.

 

 

 

XIV.            Some people carry on listening to Surah Rahman beyond the seven prescribed days. Is that okay?

 

No, that is what I would call an overdose. What these people need to do instead is that after their seven days of sound therapy, they need to try to embody the words of Surah Rahman. They need to act merciful themselves, to everyone and everything around them. They can do this by sharing this remedy with others. This is an important part of the remedy’s after-care,  that you do not hold on to this healing just for yourself, but that you give it to others too. The other thing people should continue doing every day is the water part of the therapy, that is calling out to Allahand drinking water in three sips. They should do this three times a day, every day.

 

 XV.            Has this therapy ever not succeeded?

 

What I have seen is that some patients do not recover, or they take a long time to recover. These are mostly very pious people, people who very aware of their own good deeds. On the other hand, those willing to accept their mistakes and the idea that they could have made mistakes, such people do very well out of this remedy.

 

XVI.            Explain this a bit further, that pious people struggle with this remedy the most?

 

Such people either do not get better or it takes them a long time. Because if I tell them to forgive someone, they insist that revenge is allowed, that ‘an eye for an eye is allowed.’ So I say, okay, take your revenge. And when they do, they inevitably take revenge out of proportion. And this lack of proportionality in their response flips their role from victim to aggressor. But because their initial position is that of victimhood, they struggle to understand how it could be that they might be to blame. So they remain stuck in an unhelpful cycle.

 

Also to note that no Prophet in history came for the pious, ever. They came for the wicked, the unholy, the lost, the cruel. So to be overly stubborn about your own flawlessness is to reject help and healing.

 

XVII.            You are known to not recommend Surah Rahman therapy for certain people. Why?

 

It is true that some people cannot handle listening to the Surah. They cannot close their eyes or cannot keep still. For them to listen to Surah Rahman or to be made to listen to it is like keeping the heat on under boiling milk.

 

And so I play music for these people, to help bring them into balance. Music is a way of bringing such people out of living too much in their inner world. It is to help them balance their inner experiences with the experience of living in this physical, material world.

 

XVIII.            Why don’t you recommend listening to Surah Rahman for neurological conditions?

 

It is only for neurological conditions such as a stroke, that I recommend patients listen to Qaseeda Burda Shareef.[2] This is because Baba Ji said that the brain is very sensitive. It often cannot handle the strong frequency generated by the sound of Surah Rahman. This method of healing is premised on the idea of frequencies and wave lengths and gamma rays, and how the body responds to these.

 

XIX.            Why don’t you recommend that children under the age of 12 years undergo this therapy?

 

For any child under 12 years of age who is unwell, it is not the child, but the parent or parents who should listen to Surah Rahman. The principle behind this is that pre-adolescent children are not the ones who are unwell. It is in fact their parents who are unwell, and their children simply absorb and project their energy.

 

 XX.            Why hasn’t western medical science discovered sound healing yet?

 

They are slowly coming round to this. The Sound Health Institute[3] in America, which is a collaboration between the National Institutes of Healisth and the John F. Kennedy Center for the Performing Arts, is studying the impact of sound on health. Labs have also had success killing off in vitro cancer cells using Beethoven’s music. Slot Surah Rahman and Qaseeda Burda Shareef straight into this theory.  The frequency generated by their sounds has the power to heal us on the inside, whether body or mind. 

 

XXI.            Where can we find Qari Abdul Basit’s recitation of Surah Rahman?

 

These days the easiest way is to download the app. It is called The Ultimate Remedy. There is also a website: https://www.alrehman.com. Both the app and the website have recordings of Surah Rahman (and of Qaseeda Burda Shareef). The app and the website also have all the instructions. Both are 100% free resources.

 

You can also listen to Qari Abdul Basit’s recitation of Surah Rahman on YouTube, but those versions are often interrupted by ads. The app I mention has a calendar function too, and you can track when you started and how many days you have left.

 

By the way, this is not to say that we should close down hospitals or stop following science. This remedy is cost free and side-effect free. What is the harm in trying, especially for those who have come to the end of the road with allopathic treatment.

 

 

XXII.            What if you struggle to focus during the sound therapy, if your mind bounces around from one place to another and you are unable to concentrate?

 

It does not matter. Concentration takes time. So just try your best. The effort will count. Your body will still be listening to and absorbing the sound. It goes back to what Masaru Emoto said, that positive words and positive energy affects environments positively, and negative sounds and negative energy affects environments and matter negatively. So try to submit yourself fully to the sound. Don’t worry about the meaning of the words you are hearing. Focus on the origin of the words. Somewhere along the way, at some point during the seven days of the sound therapy, something, somewhere will click.

 

 

XXIII.            You say that many conditions have been cured by this sound healing. What about infertility? For an infertile couple, do both partners need to listen to Surah Rahman?

 

Yes, both partners should undertake the therapy. They do not necessarily need to listen to Surah Rahman together. And some people cannot, due to the nature of their jobs, make time three times a day for this. That is fine. They should listen at least once a day and they should listen for seven consecutive days. If they skip a day in the seven days, they should start all over again.

 

XXIV.            What about for Type II diabetes?

 

The sound therapy is the same for people with diabetes. The one additional thing a diabetes patient should do is that while chewing their first three bites of food, or slurping or sipping their first three mouthfuls, they should, in their heart, say the name of their Lord with love. If they do this, high blood sugar will not affect them at all. Many patients of mine with uncontrollable blood sugar have managed to control their situation with this.

 

XXV.            What about those with multiple illnesses? Can they undertake this sound therapy in one go, for everything?

 

Yes, they should undertake the remedy once, for all of their problems. When you send your car to a mechanic and it has multiple problems, does the mechanic just fix one of those problems and send it back, or does he look after everything? Or when you return a faulty product to its manufacturer, they do a full overhaul of it for you, do they not?

 

 

 

 

XXVI.            Beyond continuing with drinking water in three sips in the way suggested, and beyond telling those in need about this sound therapy, what else should one be doing after the seven days of sound therapy finishes?

 

Rahman means merciful, unconditional. Once your seven days of Surah Rahman Therapy are over, start being merciful and unconditional yourself. Start loving all of creation. Be Rahman. Be kind to everyone, so that the universe may be kind to you.

 

XXVII.            When I tell people about this therapy, they do not believe me, or they question the basis of it. What should I do?

 

Your job is only to tell them. Do not try to convince them, or argue with them, or  make it into a religious debate of some sort. This is a method of healing, that is it. And it is free of cost. Do not accept or expect even a thank you in exchange for telling someone about it. And once you have told them, the rest is up to that person, what they do or do not do with it.

 

 



[2] A hymn in praise of the Prophet Muhammad, Peace Be Upon Him. It was composed in the 11th century by Imam al-Busiri, during the partial paralysis of his body. The hymn served as an intercessor for Imam al-Busiri, as having composed and recited it to himself during his illness, in his sleep one night he saw the Prophet wipe his face and throw on him his blessed cloak. After this dream, Imam al-Busiri’s body made a full recovery.

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Frequently Asked Questions (From Kasana, Qutab, Anger sessions)

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