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Introduction
to Islam
Allah
(God)
Islam is the
complete submission and obedience to Allah
(God).
The name Allah (God) in Islam never refers
to Muhammad (pbuh), as many Christians may
think; Allah is the personal name of God.
What do Muslims
believe about Allah?
1. He is
the one God, Who has no partner.
2. Nothing is like Him. He is the Creator,
not created, nor a part of His creation.
3. He is All-Powerful, absolutely Just.
4. There is no other entity in the entire
universe worthy of worship besides Him.
5. He is First, Last, and Everlasting; He
was when nothing was, and will be when nothing
else remains.
6. He is the All-Knowing, and All-Merciful,
the Supreme, the Sovereign.
7. It is only He Who is capable of granting
life to anything.
8. He sent His Messengers (peace be upon
them) to guide all of mankind.
9. He sent Muhammad (pbuh) as the last Prophet
and Messenger for all mankind.
10. His book is the Holy Qur'an, the only
authentic revealed book in the world that
has been kept without change.
11. Allah knows what is in our hearts.
These are
some of the basic guidelines Muslims follow
in their knowledge of God:
1. Eliminate
any anthropomorphism (human qualities) from
their conception of Allah. His attributes
are not like human attributes, despite similar
labels or appellations.
2. Have unwavering faith in exactly what
Allah and Prophet Muhammad (pbuh) described
Allah to be, no more, no less.
3. Eradicate any hope or desire of learning
or knowing the modality of His names and
attributes.
4. Belief totally in all the names and attributes
of Allah; one cannot believe in some and
disbelieve the others.
5. One cannot accept the names of Allah
without their associated attributes, i.e.
one cannot say He is Al-Hayy - 'The Living'
and then say that He is without life.
6. Similarity in names (or meanings) does
not imply similarity in what is being described
(referents). As a robotic arm differs from
a human arm, so the "hand" of
Allah is nothing like a human hand, His
speech is nothing like human speech, etc.
7. Certain words are ambiguous or vague
in their meanings, and thus may be susceptible
to misinterpretation. Only those meanings
that are in accordance with what is specified
by Allah and His Prophet (pbuh) are acceptable.
Cleanliness
Islam places
great emphasis on cleanliness, in both its
physical and spiritual aspects. On the physical
side, Islam requires the Muslim to clean his
body, his clothes, his house, and the whole
community, and he is rewarded by God for doing
so. Prophet Muhammad (pbuh) said, for example:
"Removing
any harm from the road is charity (that
will be rewarded by Allah)." [Bukhari]
While people
generally consider cleanliness a desirable
attribute, Islam insists on it , making it
an indispensable fundamental of the faith.
A muslim is required to to be pure morally
and spiritually as well as physically. Through
the Qur'an and Sunnah Islam requires the sincere
believer to sanitize and purify his entire
way of life.
In the Qur'an
Allah commends those who are accustomed to
cleanliness:
"Allah
loves those who turn to Him constantly and
He loves those who keep themselves pure
and clean." [2: 22]
In Islam the
Arabic term for purity is Taharah. Books of
Islamic jurisprudence often contain an entire
chapter with Taharah as a heading.
Allah orders
the believer to be tidy in appearance:
"Keep
your clothes clean." [74:4]
The Qur'an
insists that the believer maintain a constant
state of purity:
"Believers!
When you prepare for prayer wash your faces,
and your hands (and arms) to the elbows;
rub your heads (with water) and (wash) your
feet up to the ankles. If you are ritually
impure bathe your whole body." [5:
6]
Ritual impurity
refers to that resulting from sexual release,
menstruation and the first forty days after
childbirth. Muslims also use water, not paper
or anything else to after eliminating body
wastes.
Prophet Muhammad
)pbuh) advised the Muslims to appear neat
and tidy in private and in public. Once when
returning home from battle he advised his
army:
"You
are soon going to meet your brothers, so
tidy your saddles and clothes. Be distinguished
in the eyes of the people." [Abu Dawud]
On another
occasion he said:
"Don't
ever come with your hair and beard disheveled
like a devil." [Al-Tirmidhi]
And on another:
"Had
I not been afraid of overburdening my community,
I would have ordered them to brush their
teeth for every prayer." [Bukhari]
Moral hygeine
was not ignored, either, for the Prophet (pbuh)
encouraged the muslims to make a special prayer
upon seeing themselves in the mirror:
"Allah,
You have endowed me with a good form; likewise
bless me with an immaculate character and
forbid my face from touching the Hellfire."
[Ahmad]
And modesty
in dress, for men as well as for women, assists
one in maintaining purity of thought.
Being charitable
is a way of purifying one's wealth. A Muslim
who does not give charity (Sadaqah) and pay
the required annual Zakah, the 2.5% alms-tax,
has in effect contaminated his wealth by hoarding
that which rightfully belongs to others:
"Of
their wealth take alms so that you may purify
and sanctify them." [9: 103]
All the laws
and injunctions given by Allah and His Prophet
(pbuh) are pure; on the other hand, man-made
laws suffer from the impurities of human bias
and other imperfections. Thus any formal law
can only be truly just when it is purified
by divine guidance - as elucidated by the
Qur'an and the Sunnah - or if it is divinely
ordained to begin with - the Shari'ah.
Muslims
Contribution To Science
Astronomy:
Muslims have
always had a special interest in astronomy.
The moon and the sun are of vital importance
in the daily life of every Muslim. By the
moon, Muslims determine the beginning and
the end of the months in their lunar calendar.
By the sun the Muslims calculate the times
for prayer and fasting. It is also by means
of astronomy that Muslims can determine the
precise direction of the Qiblah, to face the
Ka'bah in Makkah, during prayer. The most
precise solar calendar, superior to the Julian,
is the Jilali, devised under the supervision
of Umar Khayyam.
The Qur'an
contains many references to astronomy.
"The
heavens and the earth were ordered rightly,
and were made subservient to man, including
the sun, the moon, the stars, and day and
night. Every heavenly body moves in an orbit
assigned to it by God and never digresses,
making the universe an orderly cosmos whose
life and existence, diminution and expansion,
are totally determined by the Creator."
[Qur'an 30:22]
These references,
and the injunctions to learn, inspired the
early Muslim scholars to study the heavens.
They integrated the earlier works of the Indians,
Persians and Greeks into a new synthesis.
Ptolemy's Almagest (the title as we know it
is Arabic) was translated, studied and criticized.
Many new stars were discovered, as we see
in their Arabic names - Algol, Deneb, Betelgeuse,
Rigel, Aldebaran. Astronomical tables were
compiled, among them the Toledan tables, which
were used by Copernicus, Tycho Brahe and Kepler.
Also compiled were almanacs - another Arabic
term. Other terms from Arabic are zenith,
nadir, albedo, azimuth.
Muslim astronomers
were the first to establish observatories,
like the one built at Mugharah by Hulagu,
the son of Genghis Khan, in Persia, and they
invented instruments such as the quadrant
and astrolabe, which led to advances not only
in astronomy but in oceanic navigation, contributing
to the European age of exploration.
Geography:
Muslim scholars
paid great attention to geography. In fact,
the Muslims' great concern for geography originated
with their religion. The Qur'an encourages
people to travel throughout the earth to see
God's signs and patterns everywhere. Islam
also requires each Muslim to have at least
enough knowledge of geography to know the
direction of the Qiblah (the position of the
Ka'bah in Makkah) in order to pray five times
a day. Muslims were also used to taking long
journeys to conduct trade as well as to make
the Hajj and spread their religion. The far-flung
Islamic empire enabled scholar-explorers to
compile large amounts of geographical and
climatic information from the Atlantic to
the Pacific.
Among the most
famous names in the field of geography, even
in the West, are Ibn Khaldun and Ibn Batuta,
renowned for their written accounts of their
extensive explorations.
In 1166, Al-Idrisi,
the well-known Muslim scholar who served the
Sicilian court, produced very accurate maps,
including a world map with all the continents
and their mountains, rivers and famous cities.
Al-Muqdishi was the first geographer to produce
accurate maps in color.
It was, moreover,
with the help of Muslim navigators and their
inventions that Magellan was able to traverse
the Cape of Good Hope, and Da Gama and Columbus
had Muslim navigators on board their ships.
Humanity:
Seeking knowledge
is obligatory in Islam for every Muslim, man
and woman. The main sources of Islam, the
Qur'an and the Sunnah (Prophet Muhammad's
traditions), encourage Muslims to seek knowledge
and be scholars, since this is the best way
for people to know Allah (God), to appreciate
His wondrous creations and be thankful for
them. Muslims were therefore eager to seek
knowledge, both religious and secular, and
within a few years of Muhammad's mission,
a great civilization sprang up and flourished.
The outcome is shown in the spread of Islamic
universities; Al-Zaytunah in Tunis, and Al-Azhar
in Cairo go back more than 1,000 years and
are the oldest existing universities in the
world. Indeed, they were the models for the
first European universities, such as Bologna,
Heidelberg, and the Sorbonne. Even the familiar
academic cap and gown originated at Al-Azhar
University.
Muslims made
great advances in many different fields, such
as geography, physics, chemistry, mathematics,
medicine, pharmacology, architecture, linguistics
and astronomy. Algebra and the Arabic numerals
were introduced to the world by Muslim scholars.
The astrolabe, the quadrant, and other navigational
devices and maps were developed by Muslim
scholars and played an important role in world
progress, most notably in Europe's age of
exploration.
Muslim scholars
studied the ancient cavitations from Greece
and Rome to China and India. The works of
Aristotle, Ptolemy, Euclid and others were
translated into Arabic. Muslim scholars and
scientists then added their own creative ideas,
discoveries and inventions, and finally transmitted
this new knowledge to Europe, leading directly
to the Renaissance. Many scientific and medical
treatises, having been translated into Latin,
were standard text and reference books as
late as the 17th and 18th centuries.
Mathematics:
It is interesting
to note that Islam so strongly urges mankind
to study and explore the universe. For example,
the Holy Qur'an states:
"We
(Allah) will show you (mankind) Our signs/patterns
in the horizons/universe and in yourselves
until you are convinced that the revelation
is the truth." [Qur'an, 14:53]
This invitation
to explore and search made Muslims interested
in astronomy, mathematics, chemistry, and
the other sciences, and they had a very clear
and firm understanding of the correspondences
among geometry, mathematics, and astronomy.
The Muslims
invented the symbol for zero (The word "cipher"
comes from Arabic sifr), and they organized
the numbers into the decimal system - base
10. Additionally, they invented the symbol
to express an unkown quantity, i.e. variables
like x.
The first great
Muslim mathematician, Al-Khawarizmi, invented
the subject of algebra (al-Jabr), which was
further developed by others, most notably
Umar Khayyam. Al-Khawarizmi's work, in Latin
translation, brought the Arabic numerals along
with the mathematics to Europe, through Spain.
The word "algorithm" is derived
from his name.
Muslim mathematicians
excelled also in geometry, as can be seen
in their graphic arts, and it was the great
Al-Biruni (who excelled also in the fields
of natural history, even geology and mineralogy)
who established trigonometry as a distinct
branch of mathematics. Other Muslim mathematicians
made significant progress in number theory.
Medicine:
In Islam, the
human body is a source of appreciation, as
it is created by Almighty Allah (God). How
it functions, how to keep it clean and safe,
how to prevent diseases from attacking it
or cure those diseases, have been important
issues for Muslims.
Prophet Muhammad
himself urged people to "take medicines
for your diseases", as people at that
time were reluctant to do so. He also said,
"God
created no illness, but established for
it a cure, except for old age. When the
antidote is applied, the patient will recover
with the permission of God."
This was strong
motivation to encourage Muslim scientists
to explore, develop, and apply empirical laws.
Much attention was given to medicine and public
health care. The first hospital was built
in Baghdad in 706 AC. The Muslims also used
camel caravans as mobile hospitals, which
moved from place to place.
Since the religion
did not forbid it, Muslim scholars used human
cadavers to study anatomy and physiology and
to help their students understand how the
body functions. This empirical study enabled
surgery to develop very quickly.
Al-Razi, known
in the West as Rhazes, the famous physician
and scientist, (d. 932) was one of the greatest
physicians in the world in the Middle Ages.
He stressed empirical observation and clinical
medicine and was inrivalled as a diagnostician.
He also wrote a treatise on hygeine in hospitals.
Khalaf Abul-Qasim Al-Zahrawi was a very famous
surgeon in the eleventh century, known in
Europe for his work, Concessio (Kitab al-Tasrif).
Ibn Sina (d.
1037), better known to the West as Avicenna,
was perhaps the greatest physician until the
modern era. His famous book, Al-Qanun fi al-Tibb,
remained a standard textbook even in Europe,
for over 700 years. Ibn Sina's work is still
studied and built upon in the East.
Other
significant contributions were made in pharmacology,
such as Ibn Sina's Kitab al-Shifa' (Book of
Healing), and in public health. Every major
city in the Islamic world had a number of
excellent hospitals, some of them teaching
hospitals, and many of them were specialized
for particular diseases, including mental
and emotional. The Ottomans were particularly
noted for their building of hospitals and
for the high level of hygeine practiced in
them.
Definition
The word ISLAM
has a two-fold meaning: peace, and submission
to God. This submission requires a fully conscious
and willing effort to submit to the one Almighty
God. One must consciously and conscientiously
give oneself to the service of Allah. This
means to act on what Allah enjoins all of
us to do (in the Qur'an) and what His beloved
Prophet, Muhammad (pbuh) encouraged us to
do in his Sunnah (his lifestyle and sayings
personifying the Qur'an).
Once we humble
ourselves, rid ourselves of our egoism and
submit totally to Allah, and to Him exclusively,
in faith and in action, we will surely feel
peace in our hearts. Establishing peace in
our hearts will bring about peace in our external
conduct as well.
Islam is careful
to remind us that it not a religion to be
paid mere lip service; rather it is an all-encompassing
way of life that must be practiced continuously
for it to be Islam. The Muslim must practice
the five pillars of the religion: the declaration
of faith in the oneness of Allah and the prophethood
of Muhammad (pbuh), prayer, fasting the month
of Ramadan, alms-tax, and the pilgrimage to
Makkah; and believe in the six articles of
faith: belief in God, the Holy Books, the
prophets, the angels, the Day of Judgment
and God's decree, whether for good or ill.
There are other
injunctions and commandments which concern
virtually all facets of one's personal, family
and civic life. These include such matters
as diet, clothing, personal hygeine, interpersonal
relations, business ethics, responsibilities
towards parents, spouse and children, marriage,
divorce and inheritance, civil and criminal
law, fighting in defense of Islam, relations
with non-Muslims, and so much more.
Human
Rights
Islam has been
from its inception very concerned with issues
of human rights. Privacy, freedom, dignity
and equality are guaranteed in Islam. The
holy Qur'an states clearly:
"There
is no compulsion in religion."
And there are
no reliable reports to confirm the old accusations
that when the Muslim armies were expanding
into Asia, Africa and Europe the people were
put to the sword if they failed to convert
to Islam. The best proof is that not only
did the Christians, Jews, Zoroastrians and
Hindus in those areas not perish or otherwise
disappear, they actually flourished as protected
minority communities, and many individuals
rose to prominent positions in the arts, sciences,
even in government.
The lives,property
and privacy of all citizens in an Islamic
state are considered sacred, whether or not
the person is Muslim. Non-Muslims have freedom
of worship and the practice of their religions,
including their own family law and religious
courts. They are obliged to pay a different
tax (Jizyah) instead of the Zakah, and the
state is obligated to provide both protection
and government services. Before the modern
era it was extremely rare to find a state
or government anywhere in the world that was
as solicitous of its minorities and their
civil rights as the Islamic states.
In no other
religion did women receive such a degree of
legal and moral equality and personal respect.
Moreover, racism and tribalism are incompatible
with Islam, for the Qur'an speaks of human
equality in the following terms:
"Mankind!
We created you from a single soul, male
and female, and made you into nations and
tribes, that you may come to know one another.
Truly, the most honored of you in God's
sight is the greatest of you in piety."
Jesus
Islam honors
all the prophets who were sent to mankind.
Muslims respect all prophets in general, but
Jesus in particular, because he was one of
the prophets who foretold the coming of Muhammad.
Muslims, too, await the second coming of Jesus.
They consider him one of the greatest of Allah's
prophets to mankind. A Muslim does not refer
to him simply as "Jesus," but normally
adds the phrase "peace be upon him"
as a sign of respect.
No other religion
in the world respects and dignifies Jesus
as Islam does. The Qur'an confirms his virgin
birth (a chapter of the Qur'an is entitled
"Mary"), and Mary is considered
to have been one of the purest women in all
creation. The Qur'an describes Jesus' birth
as follows:
"Behold!'
the Angel said, God has chosen you, and
purified you, and chosen you above the women
of all nations. Mary, God gives you good
news of a word from Him, whose name shall
be the Messiah, Jesus son of Mary, honored
in this world and in the Hereafter, and
one of those brought near to God. He shall
speak to the people from his cradle and
in maturity, and he shall be of the righteous.
She said: "My Lord! How shall I have
a son when no man has touched me?' He said:
"Even so; God creates what He will.
When He decrees a thing, He says to it,
'Be!' and it is." [3:42-47]
Muslims believe
that Jesus was born immaculately, and through
the same power which had brought Eve to life
and Adam into being without a father or a
mother.
"Truly,
the likeness of Jesus with God is as the
likeness of Adam. He created him of dust,
and then said to him, 'Be!' and he was."
[3:59]
During his
prophetic mission, Jesus performed many miracles.
The Qur'an tells us that he said:
"I have
come to you with a sign from your Lord:
I make for you out of clay, as it were,
the figure of a bird, and breathe into it
and it becomes a bird by God's leave. And
I heal the blind, and the lepers, and I
raise the dead by God's leave." [3:49]
Muhammad and
Jesus, as well as the other prophets, were
sent to confirm the belief in one God. This
is referred to in the Qur'an where Jesus is
reported as saying that he came:
"To
attest the law which was before me, and
to make lawful to you part of what was forbidden
you; I have come to you with a sign from
your Lord, so fear God and obey me."
[3:50]
Prophet Muhammad
emphasized the importance of Jesus by saying:
"Whoever
believes there is no god but Allah, alone
without partner, that Muhammad is His messenger,
that Jesus is a servant and messenger of
God, His word breathed into Mary and a spirit
emanating from Him, and that Paradise and
Hell are true, shall be received by God
into Heaven. [Bukhari]
Knowledge
Islam urges
people to read and learn on every occasion.
The verses of the Qur'an command, advise,
warn, and encourage people to observe the
phenomena of nature, the succession of day
and night, the movements of stars, the sun,
moon, and other heavenly bodies. Muslims are
urged to look into everything in the universe,
to travel, investigate, explore and understand
them, the better to appreciate and be thankful
for all the wonders and beauty of God's creations.
The first revelation to Muhammad showed how
much Islam cares about knowledge.
"Read,
in the name of your Lord, Who created..."
[96:1]
Learning is
obligatory for both men and women. Moreover,
education is not restricted to religious issues;
it includes all fields of knowledge, including
biology, physics, and technology. Scholars
have the highest status in Islam, second only
to that accorded to prophets.
Almost
from the very beginnings of the Islamic state
Muslims began to study and to master a number
of fields of so-called secular learning, beginning
with linguistics and architecture, but very
quickly extending to mathematics, physics,
astronomy, geography, medicine, chemistry
and philosophy. They translated and synthesized
the known works of the ancient world, from
Greece, Persia, India, even China. Before
long they were criticizing, improving and
expanding on that knowledge. Centuries before
the European Rennaissance there were Muslim
³Rennaissance² men, men who were simultaneously
explorers, scientists, philosophers, physicians
and poets, like Ibn Sina (Avicenna), Umar
Khayyam, and others.
Main
Pillars
Shahadah:
The first pillar
of Islam is that a Muslim believe and declare
his faith by saying the Shahadah (lit. 'witness'),
also known as the Kalimah:
La ilaha
ila Allah; Muhammadur-rasul Allah. 'There
is no god but Allah; Muhammad is the Messenger
of Allah.'
This declaration
contains two parts. The first part refers
to God Almighty, the Creator of everything,
the Lord of the Worlds; the second part refers
to the Messenger, Muhammad (pbuh) a prophet
and a human being, who received the revelation
through the Archangel Gabriel, and taught
it to mankind.
By sincerely
uttering the Shahadah the Muslim acknowledges
Allah as the sole Creator of all, and the
Supreme Authority over everything and everyone
in the universe. Consequently the Muslim closes
his/her heart and mind to loyalty, devotion
and obedience to, trust in, reliance on, and
worship of anything or anyone other than Allah.
This rejection is not confined merely to pagan
gods and goddesses of wood and stone and created
by human hands and imaginations; this rejection
must extend to all other conceptions, superstitions,
ideologies, ways of life, and authority figures
that claim supreme devotion, loyalty, trust,
love, obedience or worship. This entails,
for example, the rejection of belief in such
common things as astrology, palm reading,
good luck charms, fortune-telling and psychic
readings, in addition to praying at shrines
or graves of "saints", asking the
dead souls to intercede for them with Allah.
There are no intercessors in Islam, nor any
class of clergy as such; a Muslim prays directly
and exclusively to Allah.
Belief in the
prophethood of Muhammad (pbuh) entails belief
in the guidance brought by him and contained
in his Sunnah (traditions of his sayings and
actions), and demands of the Muslim the intention
to follow his guidance faithfully. Muhammad
(pbuh) was also a human being, a man with
feelings and emotions, who ate, drank and
slept, and was born and died, like other men.
He had a pure and upright nature, extraordinary
righteousness, and an unwavering faith in
Allah and commitment to Islam, but he was
not divine. Muslims do not pray to him, not
even as an intercessor, and Muslims abhor
the terms "Mohamedan" and "Mohamedanism".
Salah:
(namaz,
monz)
Prayer (Salah),
in the sense of worship, is the second pillar
of Islam. Prayer is obligatory and must be
performed five times a day. These five times
are dawn (Fajr), immediately after noon (Dhuhr),
mid-afternoon ('Asr), sunset (Maghrib), and
early night (Isha'). Ritual cleanliness and
ablution are required before prayer, as are
clean clothes and location, and the removal
of shoes. One may pray individually or communally,
at home, outside, virtually any clean place,
as well as in a mosque, though the latter
is preferred. Special is the Friday noon prayer,
called Jum'ah. It, too, is obligatory and
is to be done in a mosque, in congregation.
It is accompanied by a sermon (Khutbah), and
it replaces the normal Dhuhr prayer.
There is no
hierarchical clerical authority in Islam,
no priests or ministers. Prayers are led by
any learned person who knows the Qur'an and
is chosen by the congregation. He (or she,
if the congregation is all women) is called
the imam. There is also no minimum number
of congregants required to hold communal prayers.
Prayer consists of verses from the Qur'an
and other prayers, accompanied by various
bodily postures - standing, bowing, prostrating
and sitting. They are said in Arabic, the
language of the revelation, though personal
supplications (Du'ah) can be offered in one's
own language. Worshippers face the Qiblah,
the direction of the Ka'bah in the city of
Makkah.
The significance
of prayer lies in one's maintaining a continuous
link to God five times a day, which helps
the worshipper avoid misdeeds if he/she performs
the prayers sincerely. In addition it promotes
discipline, God-consciousness and placing
one's trust in Allah alone, and the importance
of striving for the Hereafter. When performed
in congregation it also provides a strong
sense of community, equality and brotherhood/sisterhood.
Sawm:
The fourth
pillar of Islam is fasting. Allah prescribes
daily fasting for all able, adult Muslims
during the whole of the month of Ramadan,
the ninth month of the lunar calendar, beginning
with the sighting of the new moon. Exempted
from the fast are the very old and the insane.
On the physical side, fasting is from first
light of dawn until sundown, abstaining from
food, drink, and sexual relations. On the
moral, behavioral side, one must abstain from
lying, malicious gossip, quarreling and trivial
nonsense.
Those who are
sick, elderly, or on a journey, and women
who are menstruating, pregnant, or nursing
are permitted to break the fast, but must
make up an equal number of days later in the
year. If physically unable to do so, they
must feed a needy person for each day missed.
Children begin to fast (and to observe the
prayers) from puberty, although many start
earlier.
Although fasting
is beneficial to the health, it is regarded
principally as a method of self-purification.
By cutting oneself off from worldly pleasures
and comforts, even for a short time, the fasting
person gains true sympathy for those who go
hungry regularly, and achieves growth in his
spiritual life, learning discipline, self-restraint,
patience and flexibility.
In addition
to the fast proper, one is encouraged to read
the entire Qur'an. In addition, special prayers,
called Tarawih, are held in the mosque every
night of the month, during which a whole section
of the Qur'an (Juz') is recited, so that by
the end of the month the entire Qur'an has
been completed. These are done in remembrance
of the fact that the revelation of the Qur'an
to Prophet Muhammad (pbuh) was begun during
Ramadan.
During the
last ten days - though the exact day is never
known and may not even be the same every year
- occurs the Night of Power (Laylat al-Qadr).
To spend that night in worship is equivalent
to a thousand months of worship, i.e. Allah's
reward for it is very great.
On the first
day of the following month, after another
new moon has been sighted, a special celebration
is made, called 'Id al-Fitr. A quantity of
staple food is donated to the poor (Zakat
al-Fitr), everyone has bathed and put on their
best, preferably new, clothes, and communal
prayers are held in the early morning, followed
by feasting and visiting relatives and friends.
There are other
fast days throughout the year. Muslims are
encouraged to fast six days in Shawwal, the
month following Ramadan, Mondays and Thursdays,
and the ninth and tenth, or tenth and eleventh
of Muharram, the first month of the year.
The tenth day, called Ashurah, is also a fast
day for the Jews (Yom Kippur), and Allah commanded
the Muslims to fast two days to distinguish
themselves from the People of the Book.
While
fasting per se is encouraged, constant fasting,
as well as monasticism, celibacy, and otherwise
retreating from the real world, are condemned
in Islam. Fasting on the two festival days,
'Id al-Fitr and 'Id al-Adha, the feast of
the Hajj, is strictly forbidden.
Zakah:
The third pillar
of Islam is the alms-tax (Zakah). It is a
tax on wealth, payable on various categories
of property, notably savings and investments,
produce, inventory of goods, salable crops
and cattle, and precious metals, and is to
be used for the various categories of distribution
specified by Islamic law. It is also an act
of purification through sharing what one has
with others.
The rationale
behind this is that Muslims believe that everything
belongs to God, and wealth is held by man
as a trust. This trust must be discharged,
moreover, as instructed by God, as that portion
of our wealth legally belongs to other people
and must be given to them. If we refuse and
hoard this wealth, it is considered impure
and unclean. If, for example one were to use
that wealth for charity or to finance one's
pilgrimage to Makkah, those acts would also
be impure, invalid, and of course unrewarded.
Allah says:
"Of
their wealth, take alms so you may purify
and sanctify them." [9:103]
The word Zakah
means purification and growth. Our possessions
are purified by setting aside that portion
of it for those in need. Each Muslim calculates
his or her own Zakah individually.
For most purposes
this involves the payment each year of 2.5%
of one's capital, provided that this capital
reaches a certain minimum amount that which
is not consumed by its owner. A generous person
can pay more than this amount, though it is
treated and rewarded as voluntary charity
(Sadaqah). This amount of money is provided
to bridge the gap between the rich and the
poor, and can be used in many useful projects
for the welfare of the community.
Historically
the pillar of Zakah became mandatory on Muslims
form the second year after the Hijrah, 622
C.E. It is mentioned more than thirty times
in the Qur'an, usually in the same breath
as Salah. So important is this pillar that
one is not considered a part of the Islamic
brotherhood if one ignores this obligation.
Hajj:
The fifth pillar
of Islam is to make a pilgrimage (Hajj) to
Makkah, in Saudi Arabia, at least once in
one's lifetime. This pillar is obligatory
for every Muslim, male or female, provided
that he/she is physically and financially
able to do so. Prerequisites for performing
the Hajj are to be a Muslim, to be free, to
be an adult or mature enough, to be of sound
mind, and to have the ability to afford the
journey and maintain one's dependents back
home for the duration. The reward for the
Hajj is nothing less than Paradise.
The Hajj is
the ultimate form of worship, as it involves
the spirit of all the other rituals and demands
of the believer great sacrifice. On this unique
occasion, nearly two million Muslims from
all over the globe meet one another in a given
year. Regardless of the season, pilgrims wear
special clothes (Ihram) - two, very simple,
unsewn white garments - which strips away
all distinctions of wealth, status, class
and culture; all stand together and equal
before Allah (God).
The rites of
Hajj, which go back to the time of Prophet
Abraham who built the Ka'bah, are observed
over five or six days, beginning on the eighth
day of the last month of the year, named Dhul-Hijjah
(pilgrimage). These rites include circumambulating
the Ka'bah (Tawwaf), and going between the
mountains of Safa and Marwah, as Hajjar (Abraham's
wife) did during her search for water for
her son Isma'il. Then the pilgrims stand together
on the wide plain of Arafah and join in prayers
for God's forgiveness, in what is often thought
of as a preview of the Last Judgment. The
pilgrims also cast stones at a stone pillar
which represents Satan. The pilgrimage ends
with a festival, called 'Id al-Adha, which
is celebrated with prayers, the sacrifice
of an animal, and the exchange of greetings
and gifts in Muslim communities everywhere.
Muhammad
Muhammad (pbuh)
was an illiterate but wise and well-respected
man who was born in Makkah in the year 570
C.E., at a time when Christianity was not
yet fully established in Europe. His first
years were marked by the deaths of his parents.
Since his father died before his birth, his
uncle, Abu Talib, from the respected tribe
of Quraysh, raised him. As Muhammad (pbuh)
grew up, he became known for his truthfulness,
generosity and sincerity, so that he was sought
after for his ability to arbitrate in disputes.
His reputation and personal qualities also
led to his marriage, at the age of twenty-five,
to Khadijah, a widow whom he had assisted
in business. Thenceforth, he became an important
and trusted citizen of Makkah. Historians
describe him as calm and meditative.
Muhammad (pbuh)
never felt fully content to be part of a society
whose values he considered to be devoid of
true religious significance. It became his
habit to retreat from time to time to the
cave of Hira', to meditate near the summit
of Jabal al-Nur, the "Mountain of Light",
near Makkah.
At the age
of 40, while engaged in one such meditative
retreat, Muhammad (pbuh) received his first
revelation from God through the Angel Gabriel.
This revelation, which continued for twenty-three
years, is known as the Qur'an, the faithful
recording of the entire revelation of God.
The first revelation read:
"Recite:
In the name of your Lord Who created man
from a clot (of blood). Recite: Your Lord
is Most Noble, Who taught by the pen, taught
man what he did not know." [96:1-5]
It was this
reality that he gradually and steadily came
to learn and believe, until he fully realized
that it is the truth.
His first convert
was Khadijah, whose support and companionship
provided necessary reassurance and strength.
He also won the support of some of his relatives
and friends. Three basic themes of the early
message were the majesty of the one, unique
God, the futility of idol worship, the threat
of judgment, and the necessity of faith, compassion
and morality in human affairs. All these themes
represented an attack on the crass materialism
and idolatry prevalent in Makkah at the time.
So when he began to proclaim the message to
others the Makkans rejected him. He and his
small group of followers suffered bitter persecution,
which grew so fierce that in the year 622
C.E., God gave them the command to emigrate.
This event, the Hijrah (migration), in which
they left Makkah for the city of Madinah,
some 260 miles to the north, marked the beginning
of a new era and thus the beginning of the
Muslim calendar. During his suffering, Muhammad
(pbuh) drew comfort from the knowledge revealed
to him about other prophets, such as Abraham,
Joseph, and Moses, each of whom had also been
persecuted and tested.
After several
years and some significant battles, the Prophet
and his followers were able to return to Makkah,
where they forgave their enemies and established
Islam definitively. By the time the Prophet
died, at the age of 63, the greater part of
Arabia had accepted Islam, and within a century
of his death, Islam had spread as far west
as Spain and as far east as China. It was
clear that the message was not limited to
Arabs; it was for the whole of humanity.
The Prophet's
sayings (Hadith), are also believed to be
revelation. The number of sayings collected
by his followers and scholars is about 10,000.
Some typical examples of his sayings are as
follows:
"To
pursue knowledge is obligatory on every
believing (man and woman)." [Ibn Majah]
"Removing
a harmful thing from the road is charity."
[Bukhari, Muslim]
"Those who do not show tenderness and
love cannot expect to have tenderness shown
to them." [Bukhari]
"Adore
Allah (God) as though you see Him; even
if you do not see Him, He nonetheless sees
you." {Bukhari, Muslim]
Although
Muhammad is deeply loved, revered and emulated
by Muslims as God's final messenger, he is
not an object of worship.
Other
Religions
Islam is the
religion of all prophets. Muslims believe
that all the prophets were sent to their respective
peoples from God (Allah). They all had the
same mission and message - guiding people
to the right path.
The three revealed,
monotheistic religions, Islam, Christianity,
and Judaism, go back to Abraham. The prophets
of these religions were directly descended
from him - Moses, Jesus and others from Isaac,
but Muhammad from IsmaŒil. It was Prophet
Abraham who had established the settlement
which today is the city of Makkah, and with
his son IsmaŒil built the KaŒbah, which Muslims
all over the world face when they pray.
Christians
and Jews hold a special place in Islam. They
are called the People of the Book (Ahl al-Kitab),
since the original Torah and Gospel were also
divinely revealed and they shared in the prophetic
tradition. Islamic states have nearly always
shown their religious minorities tolerance
and respect and those communities flourished
under Islamic rule. God says:
"...[T]hose
who believe (in the message of Islam), and
the Jews, the Sabaeans, and the Christians
- all those who believe in Allah and the
Last Day, and act righteously - no fear
shall come upon them..." [5:69]
Setting up
the Islamic state in Madinah, Prophet Muhammad
(pbuh) further warned:
"Whoever
oppresses any Dhimmi (non-Muslim citizen
of the Islamic state), I shall be his prosecutor
on the Day of Judgment."
In setting
up the Islamic state, Prophet Muhammad made
it inclusive of the Arabian Jews and Christians.
Their persons, properties, churches and synagogues
were protected, freedom of worship was guaranteed,
and they controlled their own community affairs
with their own civil and religious laws and
courts. For most of the first century of the
Islamic state, in fact, the majority of the
citizens were Christians, enjoying peace and
liberty such as they had not had even under
Christian Rome or Byzantium.
The Jews, from
the very beginning in Madinah, and later everywhere
else, were lifted from the burden of being
clients of individual Arab tribes to being
citizens of the state, thus freeing them to
focus on their Jewishness. When the Islamic
state expanded outside Arabia the Jews of
other lands were treated for the first time
as liberated citizens. Judaism flourished
as never before, with Jews even serving in
Muslim armies and administrations while their
culture bloomed in the arts, sciences, medicine
and philosophy. This knowledge they transmitted
to their brethren in the hostile climate of
Christian Europe. Even Jewish mysticism originated
under the influence of sufism and spread to
northern Europe.
When Islam
reached Persia the concept of People of the
Book was extended to the Zoroastrians as well.
Later, when the Muslims conquered parts of
India and encountered Buddhists and Hindus,
who appeared to worship idols, the question
was referred to the ulema (council of scholars),
who judged that even they could have the same
protected status as the Jews and Christians,
so long as they did not fight Islam and they
paid the Jizyah tax.
Peace
"Peace"
is the most common word on a Muslim's tongue.
Whenever two people meet, they exchange greetings,
wishing each other peace: "Peace be upon
you." But peace cannot prevail except
through justice. Since the concept of justice
may differ from one man to another, or from
one society to another, Muslims believe that
real justice is that which is specified by
Allah (God).
Islam permits
fighting in self-defense, in defense of the
religion, or by those who have been expelled
forcibly from their homes. At the same time,
Islam requires one to treat one's enemy mercifully.
It lays down strict rules of combat which
include prohibitions against harming civilians
and against destroying crops, trees, and livestock.
Islam also requires that if an enemy declares
his desire to end hostilities and seek peace,
the Muslims must do the same.
The concept
of Jihad (struggling in the cause of Allah)
is stated in the Qur'an. Allah said: "Fight
in the cause of God those who fight you, but
do not transgress limits. God does not love
transgressors." [2:19] Jihad is never
to be waged to force anybody to choose a particular
religion. On the contrary, it is to waged
to protect his right to choose freely. Therefore,
if there is a force in the world that tries
to prevent a person from practicing this right,
Jihad may lead to fighting the force that
is trying to prevent him from exercising free
will.
Relevance
Since Islam
is the last religion revealed by Allah, it
possesses some elements that make it unique.
One of these is its relevance for human beings
regardless of place and time.
This means
that Islam - submission to God - is a comprehensive
institution which includes all the guidelines
necessary for all aspects of life. Therefore,
the best way to understand Islam is to look
at it as more than a religion - as a complete
way of life. In other words, it is a system
which regulates every aspect of life, dealing
with all issues - social, economic, educational,
judicial, health, and even military. Thus,
it is suitable for all human beings and for
all times, since it is the final religion.
Islamic law aims to achieve five goals for
human beings in life: protecting the religion,
protecting one's self, protecting one's possessions,
protecting one's mind, and protecting one's
offspring.
Therefore,
God (Allah) decided on two main domains of
law:
1. If the
domain always requires change and progress,
Allah legislated comprehensive yet flexible
rules and gave people the chance to create
and develop the necessary laws to satisfy
the specific needs of a certain period of
time. For example, in the rule of consultation
(Shura), Allah decided that it should be
the general rule for any government; however,
its form and style are left open for people
to choose and decide according to their
needs.
2. If the
domain does not require or lend itself to
change or progress, Allah legislated fixed
and detailed laws that govern all issues
related to a specific area. Thus, there
is no way for man to change or develop those
laws, which were made for the welfare of
all mankind. For example, the area of worshipping
God contains fixed details which cannot
be changed at all. These regard prayer,
fasting, making pilgrimage, etc. Another
example is in family matters, such as the
laws of marriage, divorce, and inheritance.
To show how
Islam cares for the environment, one can cite
the many laws that protect the environment.
About fourteen hundred years ago. Prophet
Muhammad (pbuh) said:
"The
world is green and beautiful, and Allah
has appointed you as His stewards over it.
He sees how you acquit yourselves."
Muhammad showed
how important plants and trees are by saying:
"Whoever
plants a tree and looks after it with care
until it matures and becomes productive will
be rewarded in the Hereafter."
Even in the
territory of an enemy, Islam's care for plants,
animals, and trees is profound. Abu Bakr,
the first Caliph, or successor, to Muhammad
(pbuh), instructed his troops that he was
sending into battle not to cut down any trees
or kill any animals except for food.
These are but
a few examples of how Islam remains relevant
in the modern world.
Sources
The ultimate
manifestation of God's grace for man, the
ultimate wisdom, and the ultimate beauty of
expression: in short, the word of God. This
is how the German scholar, Muhammad Asad,
once described the Qur'an. If one were to
ask any Muslim to depict it, most likely they
would offer similar words. The Qur'an, to
the Muslim, is the irrefutable, inimitable
Word of God. It was revealed by God Almighty,
through the instrument of Prophet Muhammad
(pbuh). The Prophet (pbuh) himself had no
role in authoring the Qur'an, he was merely
a human secretary, repeating the dictates
of the Divine Creator:
"He
(Muhammad) does not speak of his own desire.
It is no less than an Inspiration sent down
to him." [53:3-4]
The Qur'an
was revealed in Arabic, to Prophet Muhammad
(pbuh), over a period of twenty-three years.
It is composed in a style so unique, that
it cannot be deemed either poetry or prose,
but somehow a mixture of both. The Qur'an
is imimitable; it cannot be simulated or copied,
and God Almighty challenges mankind to pursue
such an endeavor if he thinks he can:
"Or
do they say he forged it? Say: Bring then
a chapter like unto it, and call (to your
aid) anyone you can, beside God, if it be
you speak the truth." [10:38].
The Qur'an's
language is indeed sublime, its recitation
moving, as one non-Muslim scholar noted, it
was like ³the cadence of my heartbeat². Due
to its unique style of language, the Qur'an
is not only highly readable, but also relatively
easy to remember. This latter aspect has played
an important role not only in the Qur'an's
preservation, but in the spiritual life of
Muslims as well. God Himself declares,
"And
We have indeed made the Qur'an easy to understand
and remember; then is there anyone that
will receive admonition?" [54:17]
One of the
most important characteristics of the Qur'an
is that it remains today, the only holy book
which has never changed; it has remained free
from any and all adulterations. Sir William
Muir noted, "There is probably in the
world no other book which has remained (fourteen)
centuries with so pure a text." The Qur'an
was written down during the lifetime and under
the supervision of the Prophet, who himself
was illiterate, and it was canonized shortly
after his death by a rigorous method which
scrutinized both written and oral traditions.
Thus its authenticity is unblemished, and
is its preservation is seen as the fulfillment
of God's promise:
"We
have, without doubt, sent down the Message,
and We will assuredly guard it from corruption."
[15:9]
The Qur'an
is a book which provides the human being the
spiritual and intellectual nourishment he/she
craves. Its major themes include the oneness
of God, the purpose of human existence, faith
and God-consciousness, the Hereafter and its
significance. The Qur'an also lays a heavy
emphasis upon reason and understanding. In
these spheres of human understanding, the
Qur'an goes beyond just satisfying the human
intellect; it causes one to reflect on implications.
There are Qur'anic challenges and prophecies.
One of the most exciting fields in recent
years has been the discovery that, of the
significant amount of scientific information
in the Qur'an, including the event of the
Big Bang, embryological data, and other information
concerning astronomy biology, etc., there
is not a single statement that has not been
borne out by modern discoveries In short,
the Qur'an fulfills the heart, the soul, and
the mind.
Perhaps the
best description of the Qur'an was given by
Ali, the cousin of Prophet Muhammad (pbuh)
when he expounded upon it as,
"The
Book of God. In it is the record of what
was before you, the judgment of what is
among you, and the prophecies of what will
come after you. It is decisive, not a case
for levity. Whoever is a tryant and ignores
the Qur'an will be destroyed by God. Whoever
seeks guidance from other than it will be
misguided. The Qur'an is the unbreakable
bond of connection with God; it is the remembrance
full of wisdom and the straight path. The
Qur'an does not become distorted by tongues.
nor can it be deviated by caprices; it never
dulls from repeated study; scholars will
always want more of it. The wonders of the
Qur'an are never ending. Whoever speaks
from it will speak the truth, whoever rules
with it will be just, and whoever holds
fast to it will be guided to the straight
path." [Al-Tirmidhi]
Sunnah
The term Sunnah
comes from the root word sanna, which means
to pave the way or make a path easily passable,
such that it becomes a commonly followed way
by everyone afterwards. Thus sunnah can be
used to describe a street or road or path
on which people, animals, and cars travel.
Additionally, it can apply to a prophetic
way, i.e. the law that they brought and taught
as an explanation or further clarification
of a divinely revealed book. Normally, the
prophetic way includes references to his sayings,
actions, physical features and character traits.
From the Islamic
standpoint, Sunnah refers to anything narrated
or related about the Prophet Muhammad (pbuh),
authentically traced to him regarding his
speech, actions, traits, and silent approvals,
before and after the revelation.
Each
narration is composed of two parts: the isnad
and the matn. The isnad refers to a chain
of people who narrated a paricular narration.
The matn is the actual text of the narration.
The isnad must comprise upright and sincere
individuals whose integrity is unquestionable.
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