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Salafis, Yesterday and Today

Mowlana Rumi and Salafism
Mowlana Rumi and Salafism

Nasrollah Pourjavadi, who holds a Ph.D. in Philosophy, founded Iran University Press in 1980 and remained at the helm of the publishing institution until 2003. Iran University Press released hundreds of scientific and research titles in the 23-year period he was in charge.

Dr. Pourjavadi has corrected or compiled tens of philosophical, literary and mystical books. In the following article published in a 17th issue of Andisheh Pouya (Dynamic Thought) Monthly, out in July 2014, Pourjavadi explains why Salafis are called what they are called and draws a line between Salafism as an approach and Salafism as a procedure. The same two concepts have been touched upon in two famous books by Mowlana – Fihi Ma Fihi and Mathnawi which use the character of one of the closest disciples of Prophet Muhammad to portray opposing states such as violence and compassion, war and peace.

In conclusion, Pourjavadi has a message for modern-day Salafis through the words of Mowlana, a message which is in line with Hadith – a saying that is attributed to Prophet Muhammad (S.A.W.). The following is a translated version of the article in its entirety.

When humans get old, they rue the opportunities they have missed in earlier years, particularly in their prime. The same argument is valid about civilizations. When a civilization gets old enough to have its heyday in the past, people begin to envy the golden age. A similar feeling gripped Muslims three to four centuries after the emergence of Islam. Great men who were known as Friends of God suspected that the sun of Islam was setting and darkness was upon the Muslim faith. Abu Saeed Abul-Khair is said to have told a man of Zoroastrian faith one day, “There is nothing new in our faith today. What about your faith?” In other words, no more than 400 years into the dawn of the Islamic age, Abu Saeed thought the spirituality Prophet Muhammad (S.A.W.) had ushered in was on the decline. When a religion is already past its prime in 400 years or so, one which is 2,000 or 3,000 years old would definitely be on the brink.

After 400 years, people were already covetous of the time the Prophet was among them on the ground in Medina and gave everyone a chance to lay their eyes on him and savor the moment. Four centuries on, Muslims generally thought they were getting farther and farther from the reality of Islam. They would take great pleasure in seeing the Prophet and his infallible household in their dreams. There were vague ideas about those who had seen the Prophet and his infallible household in person and had tried to bring their words and deeds as close as possible to those of the messenger of God.

Different names such as the Companions, the Followers, and the Followers of the Followers were used to refer to individuals who had lived in the golden age of Islam. These individuals were truthful benefactors of the Islamic community and were described in Arabic as Salaf Saleh [competent predecessors].

That Muslims began to paint a picture of the so-called competent predecessors meant that the faith had its own history, a history in which some had developed an insight into the reality of Islam, a history that deserved to be coveted. In the fourth and fifth centuries AH (anno hegirae), there were a group of Muslims who were covetous of the past glory of the faith. These people who believed the sun of faith had already set or was sinking were called Salafis. They also believed that the golden age of Islam had come to an end and that truly faithful Muslims were part of history.

When the fighters returned home from the Battle of Badr and began to distribute the war spoils among themselves, Prophet Muhammad (S.A.W.) drew the attention of his followers to one of the most in-depth principles of faith. “We have just come from the Lesser Jihad to the Greater Jihad,” he said. When asked, the Prophet described the battle against the evil-provoking soul as the Greater Jihad.

Those first Salafis were pious, virtuous individuals who showed little interest in the material world. To them the world and whatever therein were worthless; in other words, the world was just a means to reach a loftier end: the afterlife. They likened the world into a farm and maintained that the crop of what was cultivated in it was to be reaped in the afterlife. They constantly dreamed of finding their way to the other world. For them the Companions of the Prophet were the ultimate role models. The Followers came next. The list of the most prominent Companions includes the Rashidun Caliphs including Imam Ali (Peace be upon him). To true Salafis, these four individuals were the closest to God after the Prophet. Their conduct was held up as a model of perfect behavior. Although Abu Bakr came ahead of Umar in rising to caliphate, the personality of the latter was far more appealing to the Salafis. Fihi Ma Fihi and Mathnawi by Mowlana bear testimony to such prominence in the eyes of Salafis.

On several issues, these two books are similar. Many of the things that appear in prose in Fihi Ma Fihi are mirrored in poetry in Mathnawi. As for Umar (579 – 644), the second Muslim caliph to take office after the demise of the Prophet, that is not the case, though. The things said about Umar in Fihi Ma Fihi are different from what is said about him in Mathnawi. Knowingly or unknowingly, Mowlana has painted two different pictures of Umar in these two books. In Fihi Ma Fihi, Umar is described as a non-Muslim who is forced into Islam by no other than Prophet Muhammad (S.A.W.), a person who sets out to kill infidels immediately after converting to Islam. Mowlana makes an unbelievable claim about Umar and says that after becoming a Muslim, Umar killed his own father and just like modern-day Salafis paraded his severed head on the streets of Medina.

The story in Mathnawi is different, though. In this book, Umar is not violent at all. His character inspires awe, but is far from belligerent. In Mathnawi, Umar is a representative of the Prophet who settles the problems of the public. Instead of setting out to kill infidels, he shares spiritual secrets with the messenger of the Roman Kaiser and reaches out to the old man who plays the harp. He listens to the tune of Truth. It seems that Mowlana has been aware of duality in the character of Umar. He contends that Umar sought to use his sword to help the Prophet right after embracing Islam, but when he became the Muslim caliph, he put aside the use of force and began to promote virtue and advise the public to opt for the right path.

In Mathnawi, before narrating the story of Umar, Mowlana uses a saying attributed to the Prophet in order to explain this. When the fighters returned home from the Battle of Badr and began to distribute the war spoils among themselves, Prophet Muhammad (S.A.W.) drew the attention of his followers to one of the most in-depth principles of faith. “We have just come from the Lesser Jihad to the Greater Jihad,” he said. When asked, the Prophet described the battle against the evil-provoking soul as the Greater Jihad. Jihad (holy war) is what Islam instructs the faithful to wage. But against who? When Prophet Muhammad (S.A.W) was still alive, he said that as part of Jihad Muslims should take on their evil-provoking soul, carnal desires and wrath, as well as immorality. Jihad is not about hunting down the followers of other faiths including Christians, Jews, Buddhists and Zoroastrians – or Shiites as it is practiced today – with sword and sever their heads in front of their wives and children.

Those who believe that commitment to the Lesser Jihad is what religion is all about and those who wish to be part of the infidel-killing movement that emerged immediately after the dawn of the Islamic age don’t know and don’t want to know that if the Prophet had been among us today, he would have advised us against carrying out suicide bombings, killing Shiites and insulting the Western civilization. Instead he would have urged us to take on the evil-provoking soul and focus our attention on becoming true Muslims.

In Fihi Ma Fihi, Mowlana narrates a fictitious story: When Umar learned that his soul was his biggest enemy, he decided to drink poison to get rid of the foe within. He drank the poisonous cocktail, but he didn’t die. What the author is implying here is that Umar had identified his biggest enemy, but that he didn’t know how to take it on. He wanted to wage the Greater Jihad, but he was actually walking down the path of the Lesser Jihad. One needs to adopt a different method in order to embark on each of these two Jihads. You cannot take on the evil-provoking soul with swords, spears or poison for that matter.

Mathnawi is a book Mowlana has written on the battle against the evil-provoking soul. To Mowlana, the competent predecessors are the best of the faithful. But who are the competent predecessors? Those who embark on patricide and suicide? Or those who embark on promoting virtue after emerging triumphant in the Lesser Jihad? When Mowlana painted two distinctly different images of the competent predecessors, he viewed one as a hero of the Lesser Jihad and the other as the hero of the Greater Jihad. He knew that if the heroes of the Lesser Jihad were to be seen as role models, deviation would emerge and threaten the essence of religiosity. That was why he tried to paint a compassionate picture of the competent predecessors in Mathnawi. No doubt, back then there were some Muslims whose role model was a violent, sword-toting Umar. But Mowlana was of the opinion that such Salafist mentality posed a threat to Islam, so in Mathnawi he narrated a history of which spirituality and humanity were the hallmarks.

The threat that the world of Islam faces today is the same threat the Muslim Prophet tried to defuse by elaborating on the Lesser and Greater Jihads; the same threat Mowlana thought sword-toting Salafis were posing to Islam, the same threat that prompted him to paint a totally different picture of Umar. Unfortunately, the same threat, one which is even worse, is still out there today. The threat posed by Jihadist Salafis today has taken on more horrific proportions. Today they do not threaten people with clubs or swords; rather, they are equipped with the most destructive weapons of war. The thing they have forgotten is the Greater Jihad in which the faithful should take on the evil-provoking soul.

The Greater Jihad is not something passive or negative. It does not simply require you to lay down your arms. Rather, the Greater Jihad is proactive and affirmative in nature. If a religion did nothing to promote edification and human morality in order to bring its followers closer to God, it is not a religion at all. Those who believe that commitment to the Lesser Jihad is what religion is all about and those who wish to be part of the infidel-killing movement that emerged immediately after the dawn of the Islamic age don’t know and don’t want to know that if the Prophet had been among us today, he would have advised us against carrying out suicide bombings, killing Shiites and insulting the Western civilization. Instead he would have urged us to take on the evil-provoking soul and focus our attention on becoming true Muslims. That is what Mowlana talks about in Mathnawi. If he had been among us today, he would have urged the kind of Salafism he has talked about in Mathnawi, not the one that is portrayed in Fihi Ma Fihi.

Why is Pou so popular?

pou
pou

These days Pou, a big-eyed triangular character of a name-sake game app, reigns supreme on tablet computers and smart phones. The popularity of this character, which has an innocent look in its eyes, knows no bounds as far as age or gender is concerned.

Why is Pou so lovable? That is the question Dr. Behnam Shariati, a psychiatrist and member of faculty at Iran University of Medical Sciences, has answered in a 165th issue of Zendegi Mosbat (Positive Living) Weekly. The following is an excerpt of the article:

You may have never heard the name of game app Pou. But you have definitely seen many people playing the game on their tablet computers or on their smart phones and at times letting out expressions of love and endearment for the triangular character which appears on your screen and looks you in the eye as it searches for a new parent.

When you adopt Pou, you have to assume all parental responsibilities. Like human babies, the character should be fed, cleaned, exercised, and put to sleep. If you fail to feed Pou in a timely fashion or if you forget other parental responsibilities, Pou protests and reminds you of what should have been done. As you progress, coins can be earned to purchase Pou costumes and decorations and meet its overall needs. You do most of the things a parent should do to satisfy the needs of his/her child.

Why is Pou so lovable?

At first glance, Pou looks like a game which is too slow-motion to create any excitement, a game in which you deal with a small, quiet creature. In fact though, the game is meant to satisfy your emotional needs. This cute creature – whose big eyes elicit everyone’s sympathy and produce good feelings inside them – the innocent look on its face and the smile it wears are all designed to meet part of the gamer’s emotional needs. In other words, by adopting Pou we seek to satisfy the emotional needs that are normally dealt with in our personal relationships. This game has intelligently tapped into the human character and has been able, even though artificially, to meet the emotional needs of the gamers.

It gives you parental responsibilities.

As part of this game, you are supposed to bring up a small creature, feed it, cleanse it, and do other things real parents do. These things evoke a feeling of parenthood in you. At a time when humans are less willing than before to reproduce, the feeling of parenthood is somehow ignored. So this small creature inspires parental feelings in individuals and superficially fills their void. […]

Pou’s popularity knows no age bounds

[…] The feeling of wanting to be a parent is not limited to a certain age. Most probably it is shaped when a child interacts with his/her parents. For instance, from a young age girls like to act as mothers to their dolls. […] Older people too enjoy playing the game, and spend some time daily attending to Pou. The need to act as a parent exists in everyone; when it is not satisfied naturally, individuals opts for alternatives, even if they are digital or electronic.

Why is it that parents love Pou too?

When face-to-face contacts among humans decline, individuals opt for apps such as Viber, WhatsApp, WeChat, etc. When the need for face-to-face contacts is not met, individuals choose digitized games such as Pou to satisfy their needs. That is why you see a stay-home mom develop a liking for this cute creature.

Farabi does not draw a line between music and math

Farabi book of music
Dr. Reza Davari Ardakani, the president of the Academy of Sciences of Iran

A new translation of Al-Musiqa al-Kabir has been launched in Tehran. The book, which is known in the West as the Book of Music, was written in Arabic by prominent Iranian philosopher Abu Nasr Farabi almost a millennium ago. It has been translated and annotated by late Mehdi Barkeshli. The keynote speaker at the ceremony, which was held at the Conference Center of Sorush Publishing House, was Dr. Reza Davari Ardakani, the president of the Academy of Sciences of Iran, who has hailed Farabi as the founder of Islamic philosophy. The following is an excerpt of a report a 99 issue (July 2014) of Etelaat Hekmat va Marefat Monthly published on the ceremony:

A ceremony was held on June 17 at the Conference Center of Sorush Publishing House to launch a translation by late Mehdi Barkeshli of Al-Musiqa al-Kabir penned by Abu Nasr Farabi. Dr. Reza Davari Ardakani, the president of the Academy of Sciences of Iran, was on hand for the ceremony. […]

In a keynote speech, Dr. Davari Ardakani recalled the importance Farabi attached to music and said, “Almost five decades ago, after years-long research I wrote in a book that Farabi was the founder of Islamic philosophy. Many Orientalists took issue with what I had said, suggesting instead that Islamic philosophy was an imitation of Greek philosophy and thus had no founders. What stands out about Farabi is that he was a well-rounded scientist. Definitely, a person who is good at several branches of science is a successful individual. In the past, scientists would not limit themselves to a branch of knowledge. Specialization of science is a rather new phenomenon. […]

He went on to say that Farabi masterly brought together Greek philosophy, Islamic wisdom and other branches of science which were prevalent at the time. “Whenever he touched on , he would not draw a line between politics and philosophy. That is indicative of his thorough knowledge of Greek philosophy. After all, politics and philosophy were always inter-related.”

Dr. Davari said that nothing walls off music from other branches of science, adding, “In the eyes of Farabi too there is no separation line between music and other sciences. Rather, Farabi places music in the same column as mathematics. To him, music falls into three distinct categories: music that entertains the audience, music that touches the audience, and music that helps the audience fantasize. The third category has been dubbed the most difficult.”

Campaign to Save Freedom Tower Launched

Iran-Tehran Freedom Tower
Iran-Tehran Freedom Tower

A number of cultural heritage advocates and media activists have launched a campaign to prevent Tehran’s Freedom Tower, a landmark of the capital, from falling into disrepair. A statement issued by the group has called on appropriate officials to renovate the huge structure, declare the area under its arch off-limits to cars and eventually order the formation of a board to manage and safeguard the landmark. The following is a report the Cultural Heritage News Agency released on the story on July 16, 2014:

A statement signed by a number of cultural heritage advocates said, “As a landmark known around the world, Tehran’s Freedom Tower requires more official attention these days. Over the years, this monumental building has eroded and previous renovations seem to have been unable to prevent further damage.”

[…] The statement went on to say, “Freedom Square which is unique in structure and vast in area does have the potential to be used as a venue for cultural interactions. But inaccessibility, penetration of water into parts of the square and the fact that it has turned into a heavily-trafficked rotary of the capital are a source of concern for activists bent on protecting the country’s cultural heritage.”

The signatories called for “additional attention to this precious landmark by the City Council, Tehran Municipality and the Cultural Heritage Organization” and said, “Renovation of the tower under the supervision of veteran experts is the most urgent need of the landmark at the moment.”

The statement also appealed to Tehran Municipality to put a second phase of the square’s gentrification project on fast track. Earlier the municipality had been tasked with renovating the tower and widening the streets around it to keep vehicular traffic as far away as possible from the tower.

 

ISIL bomb attack in Baghdad kills 31 people

ISIL in Iraq
ISIL in Iraq

Another 58 people were wounded in the attack, which took place in the central Kazimiyah district, AP reported.

Police officials confirmed the toll, speaking on condition of anonymity because they were not authorized to talk to reporters.

In a statement posted online late Tuesday, the terrorist [ISIL] group, which seized vast swaths of northern and western Iraq last month, claimed the attack and said it was “in response to the hostility of the government” of Prime Minister Nouri al-Maliki and his “criminal militias, who spare no effort in fighting Islam and Muslims.” The authenticity of the statement could not be independently verified, but it was posted on a militant website frequently used by the group.

The terrorists capture of large areas of Iraq last month, including the second largest city Mosul, plunged the country into its worst crisis since US troops withdrew at the end of 2011 and has led to widespread calls for new leadership that can unite the country.

But despite the crisis, lawmakers have struggled to agree on a new government following April elections – in which al-Maliki’s bloc secured the most seats.

After several delays, lawmakers elected a moderate Sunni as parliament speaker on July 15, the first step in the process.

The next is to replace President Jalal Talabani, whose term is set to expire. At least 95 candidates are in the running, Shia lawmaker Adel Shershab told state television on Wednesday. Two names have emerged as front-runners to succeed Talabani — former deputy prime minister Barham Saleh and the Kirkuk provincial governor Najimaldin Karim.

“The parliament is meeting again in order to select the president of the republic in accordance with the constitutional and legal procedures that allow any citizen to run,” al-Maliki said in his weekly address to parliament. “We hope that the parliament will succeed in choosing the president of the republic in accordance with the constitution and the law.”

Talabani, who suffered a stroke in late 2012, returned to the country on Saturday after more than 18 months abroad for medical treatment. Since 2003, Iraq’s political parties have agreed to assign the position of president to a Kurd, prime minister to a Shia and speaker of parliament to a Sunni.

The next president will task someone with forming a new government, and whoever can assemble a majority coalition will become the next prime minister.

Artists commemorate Hamid Samandarian

Hamid Samandarian
Hamid Samandarian

Iranian theater and cinema artists commemorated the death anniversary of the late theater director Hamid Samandarian on July 13.

Veteran actor Jamshid Mashayekhi, who proudly introduced himself as one of Samandarian’s students, said, “I collaborated with him in two works: ‘The Dead Without Ceremonies’ and ‘Andorra’. I still remember how excited he was during rehearsals. We always favored his notes and advice. I learned a lot from him and I always mention that Samandarian was my teacher in theater.”

Reza Kianian also said, “Samandarian is the second Noushin of Iranian theater.”, “While Abdolhossein Noushin was the first who brought Western theater to Iran, Samandarian was the one who presented theater and mise-en-scene education, trained many theater artists and translated Western theater texts according to scientific and academic standards.”

Samandarian died at the age of 81 in Tehran in July 2012 after prolonged illness.

Samandarian learned the basics of theater under the supervision of some of Germany’s greatest masters.

Upon returning to Iran, he started teaching theater and trained many talented stage actors.

The Iranian artist staged numerous dramas during his lifetime, including ‘No Exit’ by Jean Paul Sartre, ‘Ghosts’ by Henrik Ibsen, ‘The Glass Menagerie’ by Tennessee Williams and ‘Marriage of Mr. Mississippi’ by Friedrich Durrenmatt.

The production of Durrenmatt’s ‘Old Lady’s Visit’ in Tehran about five years ago, was Samandarian’s last dramatic experience.

Rouhani decries Israel’s genocidal war on Gaza

Rouhani at Quds Day 2014
Rouhani at Quds Day 2014

Rouhani who joined International Quds Day rallies in the Iranian capital Tehran on Friday condemned Israel’s war on Gaza as “inhumane and genocidal” and said all Muslims should show their rage and resentment, unity and resistance against Israel.

The Iranian president said that Israel must realize that it cannot continue with its occupation by using weapons and that it needs to heed international demands.

The international community calls for the lifting of the Gaza blockade, release of prisoners, opening of Rafah border crossing and an end to bloodshed and war, Rouhani said.

He said that all Muslims should rise up against Israel, saying there is no way to confront Israel except through unity and resistance.

Iranians in millions took to the streets on Friday to hold rallies to mark International Quds Day and show support for the Palestinian nation in the face of Israeli occupation and atrocities.

The ralliers carrying placards and chanting anti-Israel slogans denounced the Zionist regime’s fresh bloody offensive against the besieged Gaza Strip.

Iranian artists express regret over Gaza massacre

karimi-ebtehaj

Gaza war Eminent Iranian contemporary poet, Houshang Ebtehaj, expressed deep sorrow over the children’s massacre in Gaza Strip.

However, talking about these bloodsheds will not solve anything. In this battle, one side is armed to the teeth and the other side is almost defenseless. This is while the international society shows total indifference to Gaza’s bloodbath – Houshang Ebtehaj

Commenting on the Zionist regime’s crimes in the occupied territory, the poet said, “I feel great grief over the violence used against the innocent Palestinian children. However, talking about these bloodsheds will not solve anything. In this battle, one side is armed to the teeth and the other side is almost defenseless. This is while the international society shows total indifference to Gaza’s bloodbath,”.

Some of the world’s politicians only seek to maximize the benefits of their national and trade companies and do not show any willingness to stop the mass murder, he said.

Ebtehaj noted that throughout the history, whenever humanity wanted to do or achieve something substantial to do away with crime and war, those who only seek their own interests have caused problems.

Meanwhile, Iranian movie star, Niki Karimi, also expressed regret over the relentless slaughter of Palestinian people by Israeli forces.

Ordinary citizens are being killed in Gaza everyday. I wonder what the United Nations is doing on the ground? And where the human rights advocates are? – Niki Karimi

She said, “I wonder how such disasters can occur in telecommunication era when most of the people have access to the internet and know how to use it. How is it possible that the Zionist regime does whatever it wants, while the international society shows no strong reaction?.”

What is currently going on in Gaza is an international disaster, she warned. “Ordinary citizens are being killed in Gaza everyday. I wonder what the United Nations is doing on the ground? And where the human rights advocates are?”

Karimi recalled that, “After the World War II came to an end, those who collaborated with Adolf Hitler to commit all those bloody and brutal crimes were executed. People still talk about Nazi party’s slaughter. However, at present, in 2014, despite the current unprecedented universal media coverage, we still see that such a brutal mass murder goes unnoticed which is very regrettable.”

Hushang Ebtehaj, (born 1928 in Rasht-Iran) with the pen name of H. E. Sayeh (lit. Shade) is an eminent Iranian poet of the 20th century, whose life and work spans many of Iran’s political, cultural and literary upheavals.
In 1987, he moved to Cologne-Germany, with his family and lives there.

Niki Karimi, (born 1971 in Tehran) is an Iranian actress, director, and screenwriter.
Niki has won many awards nationally and internationally such as San Sebastian film festival award for best actress. She has also recently been on the jury for renowned film festivals, including the Locarno International Film Festival and Thessaloniki International Film Festival and Berlin Film Festival and also the 60th Cannes Film Festival.

Millions observe International Quds Day across Iran

Quds Day in Tehran 2014
Quds Day in Tehran 2014

Iranians from all walks of life numbering in the millions have taken to the streets in the capital Tehran and more than 770 other towns and cities throughout the country to once again vent their anger at the Israeli regime’s brutal oppression of Palestinians over the past decades.

The ralliers are also carrying placards and chanting anti-Israel slogans, condemning the Zionist regime’s fresh bloody offensive against the besieged Gaza Strip amid the silence of the international community.

Thousands of local and foreign journalists are covering the anti-Israeli rallies across Iran.

Meanwhile, millions of people in different countries the world over will also be holding massive rallies on Friday to express their support for the Palestinian resistance against Israel and voice their outrage at the policies of the Tel Aviv regime and its allies.

This year’s anti-Israel rallies are being held as Israeli warplanes and tanks have been pounding numerous sites inside the Gaza Strip and killing innocent residents of the impoverished Palestinian enclave over the past 18 days.

More than 816 Palestinians have so far been killed and over 5,200 wounded since the Israeli military first launched its onslaught on the Palestinian enclave on July 8.

In 1979, Imam Khomeini, the late founder of the Islamic Republic, designated the last Friday of the lunar fasting month of Ramadan as International Quds Day, during which Muslims across the world hold rallies in solidarity with Palestinians.

Iranian finds interruption wipes out short-term memory

memory-brain

A study conducted by an Iranian scientist Cyrus Foroughi and his colleagues at George Mason University, Virginia, has found that if you are bothered for 60 seconds while trying to focus on something then you will have to start afresh because you can’t recall what you were doing.

The researchers said that their findings should be a warning to anyone with a smartphone as users check the devices around 125 times a day. It shows that humans are more similar to goldfish than they might think as the animals have a memory that lasts just three seconds.

The researchers asked test participants to outline an answer to an exam and then write their response under three conditions. Firstly they had to write uninterrupted, secondly they were disrupted three times whilst writing the outline and thirdly they were interrupted three times whilst writing the answer.

During each of the one-minute interruptions, the test subjects had to do maths problems. The findings showed that the breaks caused 95 percent of people taking part to write poorer quality answers. They also wrote less. For those planning to write a paragraph with five points, they only managed to include three even if they did not realize it.

The study has been hailed as ‘breaking new ground’ as it is the first to show the impact that distractions have on the quality of work somebody is trying to carry out.

Foroughi, a doctoral student at George Mason University, Virginia, who led the research, said: “One minute is more than enough to wipe your short-term memory. Most interruptions in the real world can last from 10 to 15 minutes to 10 to 15 seconds.”

Dr. Gary Small, a professor of psychiatry at UCLA Semel Institute for Neuroscience and Human Behavior, who did not take part in the research, likened our brains to a computer and said that you have to ‘boot it up’ if you flit between tasks. He said, “Our brains are hardwired to like things that are new. The new electronic devices offer us this opportunity for novelty.”