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Islamic “Meditation”: A Hidden Cure for Anxiety and Addiction?

For 1,400 years, Muslims have turned to practices like dhikr (remembrance) and Quran recitation for spiritual peace. Now, cutting-edge science is proving what they always knew: these traditions are powerful medicines for the mind.

Imagine a treatment for anxiety that requires no pills, no expensive therapy sessions, and no special equipment. Just your ears, your breath, and a few minutes of your time. For over a billion Muslims worldwide, this has always been available through daily spiritual practices. But only recently has Western science begun to verify what Islamic tradition has known for centuries.

A scientific paper published in Frontiers in Psychology has reviewed decades of research and concluded that traditional Islamic spiritual meditative practices—collectively known as dhikr—are “powerful psychotherapies for mental wellbeing.”

The study, led by Dr. Farah R. Zahir from the Irfa’a Foundation in Canada and the University of British Columbia, presents compelling evidence that practices like listening to Quran recitation and performing dhikr can reduce anxiety, treat addiction, and build psychological resilience—regardless of whether the person is Muslim or not.

What Is Dhikr? The Hidden Meditation

The Arabic word “dhikr” (pronounced dhikr) means “remembrance.” In the Islamic spiritual tradition, it refers to all forms of practice that bring a person into a state of harmony with the Divine. Think of it as the Islamic equivalent of mindfulness or meditation in Buddhism.

But dhikr is not one single practice. It is an entire family of spiritual exercises that includes:

  • Listening to Quranic recitation – Even without understanding Arabic, the rhythmic chanting has measurable biological effects.
  • Repeating sacred phrases or names of God – Similar to mantra meditation in other traditions.
  • Breathing techniques combined with spiritual focus – Analogous to pranayama in yoga.
  • Salat (the five daily prayers) – A mind-body meditation ritual performed 5 times daily by devout Muslims.
  • Contemplation (fikr) – Deep reflective thinking.
  • Self-accountability practices (muhasaba) – Similar to cognitive behavioral therapy’s self-monitoring.

What makes Islamic spiritual meditative practices unique is their integration into daily life. A Muslim does not need to book a retreat or attend a weekly class. The practice is woven into the rhythm of every day—from the dawn prayer to the evening recitation before sleep.

Types of Islamic Spiritual Meditative Practices (SMPs) and Their Benefits

Practice NameWhat It InvolvesMental Health BenefitScientific Evidence
Listening to Quran RecitationPlaying recorded or live recitation of the Quran in ArabicReduces anxiety, stress, and depression; lowers cortisolMultiple randomized trials on dialysis patients, ICU patients, pregnant women, prisoners, and students
Dhikr (Remembrance)Repeating sacred names or phrases (e.g., “SubhanAllah,” “Alhamdulillah”)Reduces anxiety; increases self-control; lowers substance abuse cravingsStudies from Indonesia and Malaysia show reduced addiction and increased endorphin levels
Tamarkoz (Heart-focused meditation)Heart-focused meditation with movement, visualization, and deep breathingLowers stress; increases positive emotionsUC Berkeley study showed significant improvements vs. standard stress management
Salat (Five daily prayers)Ritualized mind-body worship with specific postures (standing, bowing, prostrating)Reduces stress; regulates cortisol; improves focusPrior studies show EEG alpha wave increase and heart rate variability improvements
Muraqaba (Self-awareness)Silent meditation focusing on self-observationEnhances self-control and emotional regulationUsed in Islamic psychotherapy for addiction treatment

What the Science Actually Found

The Frontiers in Psychology paper is not a single study but a perspective article that synthesizes evidence from dozens of rigorous scientific studies. Here is what the research shows, in plain language:

1. Listening to Quran Recitation Reduces Anxiety—For Anyone

One of the most striking findings is that simply listening to Quranic recitation reduces anxiety and stress biomarkers, regardless of the listener’s faith or religiosity.

A randomized clinical trial on dialysis patients found significant anxiety reduction after Quran recitation. Studies on patients in intensive care units, prisoners, athletes, students taking exams, and pregnant women all showed the same effect.

Why does this matter? Because it means this intervention is universal. If you are a non-Muslim struggling with anxiety, you do not need to convert or believe anything. You just need to listen. The effect appears to come from the rhythmic, melodic, and acoustic properties of the recitation itself—not from religious belief.

2. Dhikr Therapy Successfully Treats Addiction

In Indonesia and Malaysia, centers of traditional Islamic Sufi healing have been using dhikr regimens to treat substance abuse for decades. Recent scientific studies have documented these programs, and the results are encouraging.

Patients undergoing dhikr therapy for drug addiction reported:

  • Reduced substance dependency
  • Increased self-awareness and self-control
  • Higher endorphin levels (the body’s natural “feel-good” chemicals)
  • Better treatment compliance than standard programs

One study noted that dhikr therapy was often more acceptable to addicts than other forms of treatment because it felt less intimidating and more holistic.

3. The Science of Epigenetics Explains How It Works

The most fascinating part of the research involves epigenetics—how our environment and behaviors can turn genes on or off without changing the DNA sequence itself.

Multiple studies have shown that meditative practices (including Islamic ones) can:

  • Downregulate the NF-κB pathway – This is a stress response pathway. When it stays activated for too long, it contributes to anxiety, depression, obesity, type 2 diabetes, and even cancer.
  • Positively alter epigenetic markers for inflammation, stress response, DNA damage repair, and cellular aging (telomere length).
  • Change gene expression related to metabolism and immunity.

In simple terms: These practices change your biology at the molecular level. This is not “woo-woo” spirituality. This is hard science.

Key Scientific Findings on Islamic SMPs for Mental Health

Population StudiedInterventionKey FindingStatistical Significance
Hemodialysis patients (randomized trial)Listening to Quran recitationSignificant reduction in anxiety scoresp < 0.05
ICU patientsListening to Quran recitationImproved consciousness levels and vital signsPositive effect reported
Elective surgery patients (meta-analysis of multiple studies)Quran recitation before surgerySignificant anxiety reduction compared to control groupsConsistent across studies
UC Berkeley studentsTamarkoz dhikr (8-week program)Lower stress, higher positive emotionsSuperior to standard university stress management
Drug addicts at Sufi rehabilitation center (Indonesia)Dhikr regimen (salat, breathing, self-awareness practices)Reduced addiction severity; increased endorphin levelsPositive outcomes documented
Alcohol abusersAsmaul Husna (Names of God) dhikr therapyImproved self-controlSignificant improvement reported
Non-Muslim clients at Sufi shrine (India)Traditional Sufi healing practicesPositive outcomes for severe psychological conditionsObservational evidence

What Makes Islamic Spiritual Practices Different from Mindfulness?

You have probably heard of mindfulness. It is everywhere—from corporate wellness programs to school curricula. Mindfulness originated in Buddhist traditions but has been stripped of its religious context and repackaged as a secular intervention.

Islamic spiritual practices offer something different: a spirituality-integrated approach that does not require stripping away faith. For the 1.8 billion Muslims in the world (24% of the global population, projected to reach 31% by 2060), this is crucial. Many Muslims reject standard mindfulness as a “Western import” but embrace the same concepts when framed through Quran and Hadith.

But here is the surprising twist: you do not have to be Muslim to benefit.

The paper cites examples of Sufi healers in India successfully treating non-Muslim patients. The UC Berkeley study on Tamarkoz dhikr included students of various religious backgrounds. And the Quran recitation studies included participants who were not necessarily religious.

The Historical Context: What We Lost

Before the colonial era (18th–20th centuries), the Muslim world was home to advanced medical systems. The Unani Tibb traditional medicine system—recognized by the World Health Organization alongside Traditional Chinese Medicine and Ayurveda—integrated spiritual practices as core therapeutic tools.

The first hospitals specifically for the mentally ill were established in the Muslim world. Physicians understood that environment, music, and spiritual chants could be effective treatments.

But colonialism decimated these knowledge systems. Today, even many Muslims are unaware of the depth of their own spiritual-medical heritage.

The Frontiers paper calls for a revival: “This is a great loss not just for Muslims but all peoples.”

Practical Takeaways: How to Use This Information

For Individuals (Muslim or not)

  1. Try listening to Quranic recitation when anxious. You can find recordings on YouTube or Spotify. You do not need to understand Arabic. Focus on the rhythm and tone.
  2. Experiment with dhikr. Repeat a short phrase like “SubhanAllah” (Glory be to God) or simply focus on your breath with an attitude of gratitude. Start with 5 minutes daily.
  3. Do not replace medical treatment. These practices are complementary, not alternatives. Use them alongside—not instead of—professional medical care.

For Mental Health Professionals

The paper explicitly recommends integrating Islamic beliefs into therapy for Muslim patients. Asking about a patient’s faith and incorporating Quranic verses or dhikr into treatment can improve outcomes.

For non-Muslim patients, Islamic SMPs can still be offered as secularized interventions—similar to how mindfulness was adapted from Buddhism.

For Imams and Community Leaders

Religious leaders can serve as front-line mental health providers. Mosque-based health education and imams trained in psychological first aid could revolutionize community wellbeing.

What Still Needs to Be Studied

The authors are honest about the limitations. Most existing studies are small, lack control groups, or come from specific geographic regions (mainly Indonesia, Malaysia, and Iran). There is a “pressing need” for:

  • Large, randomized controlled trials comparing Islamic-accommodated therapy to standard secular therapy.
  • Longitudinal studies tracking how Islamic practices change wellbeing over time.
  • More research on whether and how these practices work for non-Muslims.

But the preliminary evidence is strong enough that the World Health Organization has already recognized Unani Tibb (which includes these practices) as a legitimate traditional medicine system.

The Bottom Line: A Call for “Heartfulness”

The paper ends with a beautiful suggestion. Just as Buddhist teachings were translated into the secular practice of “mindfulness,” Islamic teachings could be translated into the practice of “heartfulness” —centered on the Islamic concept of Rahma (compassion). Compassion is not just a nice idea; it is the foundation upon which all dhikr practices are built.

In a world where anxiety and depression are rising, where 1 in 5 adults will experience a mental illness in their lifetime, we need every tool available. Islamic spiritual practices—backed by a millennium and a half of historical evidence and now by cutting-edge epigenomics—deserve a place in that toolkit.

As the authors conclude: “These practices hold great promise as universally adoptable cogent modern psychotherapies.”

You do not need to become a Muslim to benefit. You do not need to believe in God. You just need to be a human being looking for peace.

And sometimes, peace sounds like an ancient recitation, a whispered prayer, or a single breath of remembrance.

Reference: here

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