All of Tazkiyah

The 365 · Tazkiyah · Day 171 · Envy

Shamatah · Joy at Others' Misfortune


The disease

الشَّمَاتة

al-Shamătah

HeartHeart Disease

Why it's named first

Shamătah is the structural opposite of mubărakah (Day 170): joy at another's misfortune rather than at his blessing. The disease often follows envy; the envier who could not have what the envied had now rejoices when the envied loses it. The Prophet ﷺ explicitly warned against it: 'Do not rejoice at your brother's misfortune (lă tuẓhir al-shamătata li-akhīk), for Allah may show him mercy and afflict you with it' (Tirmidhī 2506). The structural reciprocity is severe: the heart that rejoices at others' misfortune may have the same misfortune transferred to it.

In the Qur'an

Allah named the structural disease of Mūsā's people who rejoiced at others' difficulty: 'Many of you do not love admonition' (paraphrasing the broader Qurʾanic frame on the diseased-heart's responses). And the verse on Pharaoh's people: 'How many gardens and fountains they left behind; and crops, and fine dwellings, and comforts in which they had enjoyed... thus We caused other peoples to inherit it; and the heaven and earth did not weep for them' (al-Dukhăn 44:25-29). The structural principle: Allah grants and removes; the believer does not rejoice at the removal but submits to the Distributor.

In the Sunnah

The Prophet ﷺ: 'lă tuẓhir al-shamătata li-akhīka, fa-yarḥamahu Allăhu wa-yabtaliyaka' (Tirmidhī 2506, with discussion on chain). Do not show rejoicing at your brother's misfortune, for Allah may have mercy on him and afflict you with it. The structural reciprocity-warning is explicit.

The cure

(1) When you hear of another's misfortune (a colleague's setback, a competitor's failure, a rival's loss, a public figure's downfall), immediately make duʿā for them: 'May Allah ease their difficulty; may Allah replace what they lost with something better; may Allah have mercy on them'. The duʿā cannot coexist with shamătah. (2) Recognize the structural reciprocity warning: rejoicing at misfortune may bring the same misfortune to you. The self-preservation alone should motivate the refusal. (3) Reframe their misfortune as Allah's qadar that you do not understand; the wisdom is hidden; the response is mercy, not joy.

What is at stake

Shamătah transfers the misfortune. The Prophet ﷺ's warning is structural: the heart that rejoices at another's misfortune may have the same misfortune transferred to it. And on the akhirah level: the believer who rejoiced at brothers' setbacks finds his own setbacks weighed against him on the Day, with the shamătah-record adding to the weight.

A du'a for this day

Allāhumma anqiّ qalbī min al-shamătati bi-al-muʿ-ṣăbīn, wa-arzuqnī al-farīḥa li-sarawăti al-muʾminīn. O Allah, cleanse my heart of rejoicing at the misfortunes of the afflicted, and grant me joy at the easings of the believers.

A reflection to carry

Shamătah is the structural opposite of mubărakah (Day 170): joy at another's misfortune rather than at his blessing. The disease often follows envy; the envier who could not have what the envied had now rejoices when the envied loses it. The Prophet ﷺ explicitly warned: 'Do not show rejoicing at your brother's misfortune, for Allah may have mercy on him and afflict you with it' (Tirmidhī 2506). Read the structural reciprocity-warning. The heart that rejoices at another's misfortune may have the misfortune transferred to it. The warning is severe and direct. Today, when you hear of another's setback (a colleague's failure, a competitor's loss, a rival's misfortune, a public figure's downfall), immediately convert: make duʿā for them; ask Allah's mercy on them; ask Allah's replacement of what they lost. The duʿā cannot coexist with shamătah; the conversion is the structural cure. The reciprocity-warning alone (the misfortune may transfer to you) should motivate the refusal; the structural-mercy-disposition is the higher motivation.

Read the longer reflection

Shamătah is one of the most subtle and corrosive envy-derivatives. Where envy proper (Day 156) is the wish that another lose what they have, shamătah is the joy that another did lose what they had. The disease is often downstream of envy: the envier could not have the envied's blessing; the envied has now lost the blessing; the envier's heart, instead of grieving for him as a brother would grieve, rejoices. The Prophet ﷺ diagnosed this disease and attached a chilling structural warning. He said: 'lă tuẓhir al-shamătata li-akhīka, fa-yarḥamahu Allăhu wa-yabtaliyaka' (Tirmidhī 2506; the chain has some discussion among muhaddithun, but the meaning is supported in multiple narrations). Do not show rejoicing at your brother's misfortune, for Allah may have mercy on him and afflict you with it. Read the structural reciprocity-warning. The verb yabtaliyaka means 'will test/afflict you' with the same affliction the brother experienced. The structural mechanism: Allah's mercy moves toward the afflicted brother (because affliction is structurally a moment when Allah's mercy approaches), and the affliction itself may be transferred to the shamătah-rejoicer. The believer who rejoices at his brother's loss-of-job may himself lose his job; the believer who rejoices at his rival's marriage-difficulty may face the same difficulty in his own marriage; the believer who rejoices at his competitor's reputation-fall may experience the same fall. The structural arithmetic is severe. Now consider how shamătah lives in modern Muslim life. The colleague's failure (the rival who got the promotion above you fails publicly in his new role; your heart rejoices). The competitor's setback (a business-rival's company suffers a public scandal; your heart rejoices). The public figure's downfall (a celebrity, a politician, a scholar you disagreed with; he loses his platform; your heart rejoices). The estranged family member's misfortune (the cousin who slighted you years ago goes through a divorce; your heart rejoices). In each case, the shamătah-disease operates. The cure has three motions. First, the immediate duʿā-conversion. When you hear of another's misfortune (even of one you have legitimate reason to be cold toward), immediately make duʿā for them: 'May Allah ease their difficulty; may Allah replace what they lost with something better; may Allah have mercy on them'. The duʿā cannot coexist with shamătah; the recitation forces the conversion. Even if the heart initially resists, the verbal-discipline retrains the heart over time. Second, internalize the structural reciprocity-warning. The Prophet's ﷺ direct warning: Allah's mercy may move to the afflicted, and the affliction may be transferred to the rejoicer. The self-preservation alone should motivate the refusal; the rejoicing at another's loss may structurally produce your own. Third, reframe the misfortune as Allah's qadar. The brother's setback is not random; it is Allah's wisdom you cannot see. Your appropriate response is the response of one who submits: mercy, not joy. The brother's misfortune may carry hidden good for him (Day 162's parallel: Allah's hidden-good in apparent loss); your rejoicing presumes you understand what Allah is doing; you do not. Pray today: Allāhumma anqiّ qalbī min al-shamătati bi-al-muʿ-ṣăbīn, wa-arzuqnī al-răḥmati lahum wa-l-duʿāʾa. O Allah, cleanse my heart of rejoicing at the afflicted, and grant me mercy for them and duʿā for them. The shamătah is the structural inverse of mubărakah; the cleansed heart rejoices at others' blessings and grieves at their losses; the diseased heart inverts both responses; refuse the disease in both directions.

Sources: Quran, Tirmidhi. The Qur'an and its translation are verified; the scholarship is retold faithfully in our own words and credited to its sources, never reproduced verbatim.

A verse, a healing, and a Sunnah, every morning.

Subscribe, free