Transcript Islam
Islam
Islam = a state of peace achieved through
surrender to God/Allah.
Muslim = one who has achieved this state.
Qur’an
Qur’an = Quran = Koran
Muslim Scripture
Last and complete revelation of God’s will.
Words of God dictated to Muhammad by an
angel.
Any translation is no longer “Koran”
114 chapters (surahs)
Origins
Muslims believe Islam has always existed,
that God has provided a true path for
humans since the beginning of time.
There has never been a people who did not
have a prophet who spoke to them in their
own language.
Pre-Islamic Arabia
Bedouin Arabs, nomadic tribes
Animists: believed in a number of spirits,
powers and demons. Spirits associated with
rocks, trees, springs especially important.
The Kaaba was already an important
religious focal point. Many clans had
different shrines to their own gods in
Mecca.
Transition to Monotheism
Influence from Semitic peoples introducing
deities associated with heavenly bodies.
Allah was a superior deity, but with vague
function.
Arabs already practiced many “Islamic”
traditions and duties.
Prophets
(rasul)
Abraham: epitomized condition of
obedience to the divine will.
Moses, David, Jesus: especially sacred
because of revelations of the divine in texts
associated with them.
Muhammad: functioned to renew and
restore guidance given by those before him.
Muhammad the Man
Born circa 570-580 CE
Member of Quraysh tribe
Merchant known for integrity and justice
Married to Khadijah, with no sons
Moved to Medina in 622 CE to help resolve
issues between tribes
Died 632 CE
Muhammed the Prophet
At age 40 (610 CE) began to receive verses
of the Quran in a cave above Mecca.
Continued “receiving” the Quran over the
course of 22 years.
623 CE entered Mecca and returned Kaaba
to the worship of one God
At time of his death, Islam provided unity to
tribes of Arabs that had traditionally fought.
Kaaba/Mecca
Muslims believe the Kaaba is a stone placed on its site (in
Mecca) by Abraham as an altar to worship God.
Expansion of Islam
First 4 Caliphs
A successor or representative.
Abu Bakr
Umar ibn ulKhattab
Uthman
Ali ibn Abi Talib
Sunni’ism
Largest group within Islam
Majority of Islamic populations in most
nations except Iraq and Iran
Historically, acknowledged first four caliphs
as leaders of Muslim community
“sunna” = “the path”
Refers to exemplary practices, customs, and
traditions of Muhammed written in the Hadith.
Shi’ism
“Part of Ali”
Historically, recognized Ali, son-in-law of
Muhammad, and Imams as the legitimate
leaders of Muslim community
Imams = Muhammad’s direct family
members and descendents
Today led by ayatollahs who represent the
Imams
Druze and Bahai were Shi’a, are now
independent
Iraq Ethnic and Religious Groups
Sunni groups largely
in the North.
Shi’a groups largely in
the South.
Within their religion,
Shi’a reject the idea of
leadership by election,
believe in divine right
of leadership.
Islamic Law
Fiqh = human efforts to understand and
translate will of God into rules.
Shariah = the pathway in which people
should walk to please God.
Religion provides guidance for life above
all else.
i.e. Right ways of acting.
Shariah, All human action:
Fard: obligatory
Mandub: recommended
Mubah: neutral, neither good nor bad
Makruh: subject to punishment
Haram: forbidden
Duties owed to both God and people.
5 Pillars
1.
2.
3.
4.
5.
Confession of Faith
Worship
Wealth Sharing
Fasting
Pilgrimage
Shahadah
Declaration of faith
“There is no God but Allah, and
Muhammad is his prophet.”
Salat
Worship
Formalized prayer
Recited 5 times a day at given intervals
Done facing Kaaba (Mecca)
Preceded by ablutions
Zakat
“sweetening”
Wealth sharing
All wealth belongs to God
Moral considerations in wealth gathering
Institutionalized charity:
Levy, not just a recommended tithe or voluntary
donation.
Siyam
Fasting
Ritual from dawn to sunset during month of
Ramadan (9th month of lunar year
according to Muslim calendar)
Time for spiritual stock-taking
Self discipline
Hajj
Pilgrimage
Only a duty for those who have the wealth,
have paid the Zakat, an can provide for their
dependents during absence.
Journey to Mecca to worship, meet the
Creator, and pay respects to the Prophet.
Understanding Osama
The four primary
ethnic groups in
Afghanistan are the
Pashtuns, the Hazara,
the Uzbeks, and the
Tajiks. The Pashtuns
are Sunni Muslims.
Do This:
Write an essay comparing “Male and
Female in Islamic Perspective” (Eastman
pp. 435-444) with the gender relationships
portrayed in Osama. What similarities and
differences do you see between Islamic
philosophy and Taliban rule?