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Changing
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Religions-
Islam Islam is a monotheistic
Abrahamic
religion originating with the teachings of
Muhammad , a 7th
century Arab religious and
political figure. The word Islam
means "
submission ", or the
total surrender of oneself to God An
adherent of Islam is
known as a
Muslim ,
meaning "one who submits
(to God)".
There are
between 1.1
billion and 1.8 billion
Muslims ,
making Islam the second-largest religion in the world, after
Christianity.
Muslims believe that God
revealed the Qur'an to Muhammad, God's
final prophet, and regard the
Qur'an and the Sunnah (
words and deeds of Muhammad) as the
fundamental sources of Islam.They do not regard Muhammad as the
founder of a new religion, but as the restorer of the
original monotheistic
faith of
Abraham , Moses,
Jesus , and
other prophets.
Islamic
tradition holds that
Jews and
Christians distorted the
revelations God
gave to
these prophets by either
altering the text,
introducing a
false interpretation , or
both .
Islam includes many religious
practices . Adherents are generally
required to observe the
Five Pillars of Islam, which are five duties that unite Muslims into a
community. In addition to the Five Pillars, Islamic law (sharia) has
developed a tradition of rulings that
touch on virtually all aspects
of life and society. This tradition encompasses everything from
practical matters like dietary
laws and
banking to
warfare .
Almost all Muslims belong to
one of two
major denominations, the
Sunni and Shi'a. The schism
developed in the
late 7th century
following disagreements over the
religious and political leadership of the Muslim community. Roughly
85
percent of Muslims are Sunni and 15 percent are Shi'a. Islam is
the predominant religion
throughout the
Middle East , as well as in
parts of
Africa and
Asia . Large communities are also found in
China ,
the
Balkan Peninsula in
Eastern Europe and
Russia . There are also
large Muslim immigrant communities in other parts of the world
such as
Western Europe. About 20 percent of Muslims
live in Arab
countries.
Etymology and meaning
The word Islām, from the
triliteral root s-l-m, is derived from the Arabic verb
Aslama , which
means "to accept, surrender or submit." Thus, Islam means
acceptance of and submission to God, and believers must demonstrate
this by worshiping him, following his
commands , and avoiding
polytheism. The word is
given a number of meanings in the Qur'an. In
some verses (ayat), the
quality of Islam as an
internal conviction is
stressed: "Whomsoever God desires to guide, He expands his
breast to Islam." Other verses connect islām and dīn (
usually translated as "religion"): "
Today , I have perfected
your religion (dīn) for you; I have completed My blessing
upon you;
I have approved Islam for your religion."
Still others describe Islam as an
action of returning to God—more
than just a verbal
affirmation of faith.
Articles of faith
According to the Qur'an all
Muslims have to believe in God, his revelations, his
angels , his
messengers, and in the "Day of Judgment". Also, there are
other
beliefs that differ between
particular sects. The Sunni concept
of predestination is called divine decree,
while the Shi'a
version is
called divine justice.
Unique to the Shi'a is the doctrine of Imamah,
or the political and
spiritual leadership of the Imams.
Muslims believe that God
revealed his final
message to humanity
through the Islamic prophet
Muhammad via the
angel Gabriel. For
them , Muhammad was God's final
prophet and the Qur'an is the revelations he received over more than
two decades. In Islam, prophets are men selected by God to be his
messengers. Muslims believe that prophets are human and not divine,
though some are
able to perform miracles to prove their claim.
Islamic prophets are
considered to be the closest to perfection of
all
humans , and are uniquely the recipients of divine
revelation—either directly from God or through angels. The Qur'an
mentions the
names of numerous
figures considered prophets in Islam,
including Adam,
Noah , Abraham, Moses and Jesus,
among others. Islamic
theology says that all of God's messengers
since Adam preached the
message of Islam—submission to the will of the one God. Islam is
described in the Qur'an as "the primordial
nature upon which God
created mankind", and the Qur'an
states that the
proper name
Muslim was given by Abraham.
As a historical phenomenon,
Islam originated in
Arabia in the
early 7th century. Islamic texts
depict
Judaism and Christianity as prophetic successor
traditions to
the teachings of Abraham. The Qur'an calls Jews and Christians
"People of the Book" (ahl al-kitāb), and distinguishes
them from polytheists. Muslims believe that parts of the previously
revealed scriptures, the Tawrat (Torah) and the Injil (Gospels), had
become distorted—either in interpretation, in text, or both.
God
Islam's fundamental
theological concept is tawhīd—the
belief that there is only one
God. The Arabic term for God is Allāh; most scholars believe it was
derived from a contraction of the words al- (the) and ʾilāh
(deity, masculine form), meaning "the God" (al-ilāh), but
others trace its
origin to the Aramaic Alāhā. The
first of the Five
Pillars of Islam, tawhīd is expressed in the shahadah
(testification), which declares that there
is no god but God, and that Muhammad is God's messenger. In
traditional Islamic theology, God is
beyond all comprehension;
Muslims are not
expected to visualize God but to worship and
adore him as a protector.
Although Muslims believe that Jesus was a
prophet, they reject the
Christian doctrine of the
Trinity , comparing
it to polytheism. In Islamic theology, Jesus was just a man and not
the son of God; God is described in a chapter (sura) of the Qur'an as
"…God, the One and Only; God, the Eternal, Absolute; He
begetteth not, nor is He begotten; And there is
none like unto Him."
Qur'an
The first sura in a Qur'anic
manuscript by Hattat Aziz EfendiMuslims
consider the Qur'an to be the
literal word of God; it is the central religious text of Islam.
Muslims believe that the verses of the Qur'an were revealed to
Muhammad by God through the angel Gabriel on many occasions between
610 and his
death on
July 6, 632. The Qur'an was written down by
Muhammad's companions (sahabah) while he was
alive , although the
prime method of transmission was orally. It was compiled in the time
of Abu
Bakr , the first caliph, and was standardized in the time of
Uthman, the third caliph. The Qur'an in its actual form is generally
considered by academic scholars to
record the words spoken by
Muhammad because the search for variants in Western academia has not
yielded any
differences of great significance and that historically
controversy over the content of the Qur'an has
never become a main
point.
The Qur'an is
divided into
114 suras, or chapters, which combined,
contain 6,236 āyāt, or
verses. The chronologically earlier suras, revealed at Mecca, are
primarily concerned with ethical and spiritual topics. The
later Medinan suras mostly
discuss social and moral
issues relevant to the
Muslim community. The Qur'an is more concerned with moral
guidance than
legal instruction, and is considered the "sourcebook of
Islamic principles and
values ". Muslim jurists consult the
hadith, or the written record of Muhammad's life, to both supplement
the Qur'an and
assist with its interpretation. The
science of
Qur'anic commentary and exegesis is known as tafsir.
The word Qur'an means
"recitation". When Muslims
speak in the
abstract about "the
Qur'an", they usually
mean the scripture as recited in Arabic
rather than the
printed work or any
translation of it. To Muslims,
the Qur'an is
perfect only as revealed in the original Arabic;
translations are necessarily deficient because of
language differences, the fallibility of translators, and the impossibility of
preserving the original's inspired style. Translations are
therefore regarded only as commentaries on the Qur'an, or "interpretations
of its meaning", not as the Qur'an itself.
Angels
Belief in angels is
crucial to the faith of Islam. The Arabic word for Angels (malak) means
"messenger", like its counterparts in Hebrew (malakh) and
Greek (angelos). According to the Qur'an, angels do not possess free
will, and worship God in perfect obedience. Angels' duties
include communicating revelations from God, glorifying God, recording every
person 's
actions , and
taking a person's
soul at the time of death.
They are also
thought to intercede on man's behalf. The Qur'an
describes angels as "messengers with
wings —two, or three, or
four (
pairs ): He [God] adds to
Creation as He pleases
Muhammad
Muhammad (c. 570 – July 6,
632) was an Arab religious, political, and
military leader who
founded the religion of Islam as a historical phenomenon. Muslims
view him not as the creator of a new religion, but as the restorer of
the original, uncorrupted monotheistic faith of Adam, Abraham and
others. In Muslim tradition, Muhammad is viewed as the last and the
greatest in a series of prophets—as the man closest to perfection,
the possessor of all virtues. For the last 23
years of his life,
beginning at age 40, Muhammad reported receiving revelations from
God. The content of these revelations, known as the Qur'an, was
memorized and recorded by his companions.
The Masjid al-Nabawi ("Mosque
of the Prophet") in Medina is the site of Muhammad's
tomb .
During this time, Muhammad preached to the people of Mecca, imploring them
to abandon polytheism. Although some converted to Islam, Muhammad and
his followers were persecuted by the
leading Meccan authorities.
After 13 years of preaching, Muhammad and the Muslims performed the
Hijra ("emigration") to the city of Medina (formerly known
as Yathrib) in 622. There, with the Medinan converts (Ansar) and the
Meccan migrants (Muhajirun), Muhammad
established his political and
religious
authority .
Within years, two
battles had been fought
against Meccan forces: the
Battle of Badr in 624, which was a Muslim
victory, and the Battle of Uhud in 625, which
ended inconclusively.
Conflict with Medinan Jewish clans who opposed the Muslims led to
their exile, enslavement or death, and the Jewish enclave of Khaybar
was subdued. At the
same time, Meccan trade routes were cut off as
Muhammad brought surrounding desert
tribes under his
control . By 629
Muhammad was victorious in the
nearly bloodless Conquest of Mecca,
and by the time of his death in 632 he ruled over the
Arabian peninsula.
In Islam, the "normative"
example of Muhammad's life is called the Sunnah (literally "trodden
path "). This example is preserved in traditions known as hadith
("reports"), which recount his words, his actions, and his
personal characteristics. The
classical Muslim
jurist ash-Shafi'i (d.
820) emphasized the
importance of the Sunnah in Islamic law, and
Muslims are encouraged to emulate Muhammad's actions in their
daily lives . The Sunnah is
seen as crucial to guiding interpretation of the
Qur'an.
Resurrection
and judgment
Belief in the "Day of
Resurrection", yawm al-Qiyāmah (also known as yawm ad-dīn,
"Day of Judgment" and as-sā`a, "the Last
Hour ")
is also crucial for Muslims. They believe that the time of Qiyāmah
is preordained by God but unknown to man. The trials and tribulations
preceding and during the Qiyāmah are described in the Qur'an and the
hadith, and also in the commentaries of Islamic scholars. The Qur'an
emphasizes bodily resurrection, a break from the pre-Islamic Arabian
understanding of death. It states that resurrection will be followed
by the
gathering of mankind, culminating in their judgment by God.
The Qur'an
lists several sins
that can condemn a person to
hell , such as disbelief, usury and
dishonesty. Muslims view paradise (jannah) as a
place of joy and
bliss , with Qur'anic references describing its
features and the
physical pleasures to
come . There are also references to a
greater joy—acceptance by God (ridwān). Mystical traditions in Islam place
these heavenly delights in the
context of an ecstatic awareness of
God.
Predestination
In
accordance with the
Islamic belief in predestination, or divine preordainment (al-qadā
wa'l-
qadar ), God has
full knowledge and control over all that occurs.
This is explained in Qur'anic verses such as "Say: '
Nothing will
happen to us except what Allah has decreed for us: He is our
protector'…For Muslims, everything in the world that occurs, good
or
evil , has been preordained and nothing can happen unless permitted
by God. In Islamic theology, divine preordainment does not suggest an
absence of God's indignation against evil, because any evils that do
occur are thought to
result in future benefits men may not be able to
see. According to Muslim theologians, although
events are
pre-ordained, man possesses free will in that he has the faculty to
choose between right and
wrong , and is thus responsible for his
actions. According to Islamic tradition, all that has been decreed by
God is written in al-Lawh al-Mahfūz, the "Preserved
Tablet ".
The Shi'a understanding of
predestination is called "divine justice" (Adalah). This
doctrine, originally developed by the Mu'tazila, stresses the
importance of man's responsibility for his own actions. In
contrast ,
the Sunni deemphasize the
role of individual free will in the context
of God's creation and foreknowledge of all things.
Duties
and practices
Five
Pillars
Islam's
basic creed (shahadah) written on a
plaque in the Great Mosque of Xi'an, China
Rituals of the Hajj
(pilgrimage) include
walking seven times around the
Kaaba in
Mecca.The Five Pillars of Islam are five practices
essential to Sunni
Islam. Shi'a Muslims subscribe to
eight ritual practices which
substantially overlap with the Five Pillars.They are:
- The shahadah, which is the basic creed or tenet of Islam: "'ašhadu 'al-lā ilāha illā-llāhu wa 'ašhadu 'anna muħammadan rasūlu-llāh", or "I testify that there is none worthy of worship except God and I testify that Muhammad is the Messenger of God." This testament is a foundation for all other beliefs and practices in Islam (although technically the Shi'a do not consider the shahadah to be a separate pillar, just a belief). Muslims must repeat the shahadah in prayer, and non-Muslims wishing to convert to Islam are required to recite the creed.
- Salah , or ritual prayer, which must be performed five times a day. ( However , the Shi'a are permitted to run together the noon with the afternoon prayers, and the evening with the night prayers). Each salah is done facing towards the Kaaba in Mecca. Salah is intended to focus the mind on God, and is seen as a personal communication with him that expresses gratitude and worship. Salah is compulsory but flexibility in the specifics is allowed depending on circumstances. In many Muslim countries, reminders called Adhan ( call to prayer) are broadcast publicly from local mosques at the appropriate times. The prayers are recited in the Arabic language, and consist of verses from the Qur'an.
- Zakat , or alms- giving . This is the practice of giving based on accumulated wealth , and is obligatory for all Muslims who can afford it. A fixed portion is spent to help the poor or needy, and also to assist the spread of Islam. The zakat is considered a religious obligation (as opposed to voluntary charity ) that the well-off owe to the needy because their wealth is seen as a "trust from God's bounty ". The Qur'an and the hadith also suggest a Muslim give even more as an act of voluntary alms-giving (sadaqah). Many Shi'ites are expected to pay an additional amount in the form of a khums tax, which they consider to be a separate ritual practice.
- Sawm, or fasting during the month of Ramadan . Muslims must not eat or drink (among other things) from dawn to dusk during this month, and must be mindful of other sins. The fast is to encourage a feeling of nearness to God, and during it Muslims should express their gratitude for and dependence on him, atone for their past sins, and think of the needy. Sawm is not obligatory for several groups for whom it would constitute an undue burden. For others, flexibility is allowed depending on circumstances, but missed fasts usually must be made up quickly.
- The Hajj, which is the pilgrimage during the Islamic month of Dhu al-Hijjah in the city of Mecca. Every able-bodied Muslim who can afford it must make the pilgrimage to Mecca at least once in his or her lifetime . When the pilgrim is about ten kilometers from Mecca, he must dress in Ihram clothing , which consists of two white seamless sheets. Rituals of the Hajj include walking seven times around the Kaaba, touching the Black Stone, running seven times between Mount Safa and Mount Marwah, and symbolically stoning the Devil in Mina. The pilgrim, or the hajji, is honored in his or her community, although Islamic teachers say that the Hajj should be an expression of devotion to God instead of a means to gain social standing.
In addition to the khums tax,
Shi'a Muslims consider three additional practices essential to the
religion of Islam. The first is
jihad , which is also
important to the
Sunni, but not considered a pillar. The second is Amr-Bil-Ma'rūf,
the "Enjoining to Do Good", which calls for every Muslim to
live a virtuous life and to encourage others to do the same. The
third is Nahi-Anil-Munkar, the "Exhortation to Desist from
Evil", which tells Muslims to refrain from vice and from evil
actions and to also encourage others to do the same.
Law
The Sharia (literally: "the
path leading to the watering place") is Islamic law
formed by
traditional Islamic scholarship. In Islam, Sharia is the expression
of the divine will, and "constitutes a system of duties that are
incumbent upon a Muslim by virtue of his religious belief".
Islamic law covers all
aspects of life, from matters of state, like governance and
foreign relations , to issues of daily
living . The Qur'an defines hudud as the
punishments for five specific crimes: unlawful intercourse, false
accusation of unlawful intercourse, consumption of
alcohol , theft,
and highway robbery. The Qur'an and Sunnah also contain laws of
inheritance, marriage, and restitution for
injuries and
murder , as
well as
rules for fasting, charity, and prayer. However, these
prescriptions and prohibitions may be
broad , so their
application in
practice varies. Islamic scholars (known as ulema) have elaborated
systems of law on the
basis of these rules and their interpretations.
Fiqh , or "jurisprudence",
is defined as the knowledge of the practical rules of the religion.
The method Islamic jurists use to derive rulings is known as usul
al-fiqh ("legal theory", or "principles of
jurisprudence"). According to Islamic legal theory, law has four
fundamental
roots , which are given precedence in this order: the
Qur'an, the Sunnah (actions and sayings of Muhammad), the
consensus of the Muslim jurists (ijma), and analogical reasoning (
qiyas ). For
early Islamic jurists, theory was less important than pragmatic
application of the law. In the 9th century, the jurist ash-Shafi'i
provided a theoretical basis for Islamic law by codifying the
principles of jurisprudence (including the four fundamental roots) in
his book ar-Risālah.
Religion
and state
Islamic law does not
distinguish between "matters of church" and "matters
of state"; the ulema function as both jurists and theologians.
In practice, Islamic rulers frequently bypassed the Sharia courts
with a parallel system of so-called "Grievance courts" over
which they had sole control. As the Muslim world
came into contact
with Western secular
ideals , Muslim societies responded in
different ways.
Turkey has been governed as a secular state ever since the
reforms of Mustafa
Kemal Atatürk. In contrast, the 1979 Iranian
Revolution replaced a mostly secular
regime with an Islamic republic
led by the Ayatollah Ruholla Khomeini.
Etiquette
and diet
Many practices
fall in the
category of adab, or Islamic etiquette. This includes greeting others
with "as-salamu `alaykum" ("peace be unto you"),
saying bismillah ("in the name of God")
before meals, and
using only the right hand for
eating and
drinking . Islamic hygienic
practices mainly fall into the category of personal cleanliness and
health, such as the circumcision of male offspring. Islamic
burial rituals include saying the
Salat al-Janazah ("funeral prayer")
over the bathed and enshrouded dead
body , and burying it in a grave.
Muslims, like Jews, are restricted in their
diet , and prohibited
foods include pig
products , blood, carrion, and alcohol. All
meat must come from a herbivorous animal
slaughtered in the name of God by
a Muslim, Jew, or Christian, with the exception of game that one has
hunted or fished for oneself. Food permissible for Muslims is known
as
halal food.
Jihad
Jihad means "to strive
or
struggle ," and is considered the "
sixth pillar of Islam"
by a minority of Muslim authorities. Jihad, in its broadest sense, is
classically defined as "exerting one's utmost
power , efforts,
endeavors, or
ability in contending with an
object of
disapprobation." Depending on the object being a
visible enemy,
the devil, and aspects of one's own self, different categories of
Jihad are defined.Jihad when used
without any qualifier is understood
in its military aspect. Jihad also refers to one's striving to attain
religious and moral perfection. Some Muslim authorities, especially
among the Shi'a and Sufis, distinguish between the "greater
jihad", which pertains to spiritual self-perfection, and the
"lesser jihad", defined as warfare.
Within Islamic jurisprudence,
jihad is usually taken to mean military exertion against non-Muslim
combatants in the
defense or expansion of the Islamic state, the
ultimate purpose of which is to establish the
universal domination of
Islam. Jihad, the only form of warfare permissible in Islamic law,
may be declared against states which
refuse to convert to Islam or
submit to the authority of Islam. Treaties (`ahd) may be established,
subject to
payment of the kharaj, although jurists differ over its
permitted longevity. Most Muslims today interpret Jihad as only a
defensive form of warfare: the
external Jihad includes a struggle to
make the Islamic societies conform to the Islamic norms of justice.
Under most circumstances and
for most Muslims, jihad is a collective
duty (fard kifaya): its
performance by some individuals exempts the others. Only for those
vested with authority, especially the sovereign (
imam ), does jihad
become an individual duty. For the
rest of the populace, this happens
only in the
case of a general mobilization. For most Shias, offensive
jihad can only be declared by a divinely appointed leader of the
Muslim community, and as such is suspended since Muhammad al-Mahdi's
occultation in 868 AD.
Community
Demographics
Commonly cited estimates of
the Muslim population in 2007 range from 1.1 billion to 1.8 billion.
Approximately 85% are Sunni and 15% are Shi'a, with a small minority
belonging to other sects. Some 30–40 countries are Muslim-
majority ,
and Arabs account for around 20% of all Muslims worldwide.
South Asia
and Southeast Asia contain the most populous Muslim countries, with
Indonesia, India,
Pakistan , and
Bangladesh having more than 100
million adherents each. According to U.S.
government figures, in 2006
there were 20 million Muslims in China. In the Middle East, the
non-Arab countries of Turkey and
Iran are the largest Muslim-majority
countries; in Africa,
Egypt and Nigeria have the most populous Muslim
communities. Islam is the second largest religion after Christianity
in many European countries.
Mosques
Eid prayers on the
holiday of
Eid al-Fitr at the Badshahi Mosque, Pakistan. The
days of Eid are
important occasions on the Islamic
calendar .A mosque is a place of
worship for Muslims, who often refer to it by its Arabic name,
masjid. The word mosque in
English refers to all
types of buildings
dedicated to Islamic worship, although there is a distinction in
Arabic between the smaller, privately
owned mosque and the larger,
"collective" mosque (masjid jāmi`). Although the
primary purpose of the mosque is to serve as a place of prayer, it is also
important to the Muslim community as a place to meet and
study .
Modern mosques have evolved greatly from the early designs of the 7th
century, and contain a variety of architectural
elements such as
minarets.
Family
life
The basic unit of Islamic
society is the family, and Islam defines the obligations and legal
rights of family
members . The
father is seen as
financially responsible for his family, and is obliged to cater for their
well-being. The
division of inheritance is specified in the Qur'an,
which states that most of it is to
pass to the immediate family,
while a portion is set aside for the payment of debts and the making
of bequests. The
woman 's
share of inheritance is generally
half of
that of a man with the same rights of succession. Marriage in Islam
is a
civil contract which consists of an offer and acceptance between
two qualified parties in the presence of two witnesses. The groom is
required to pay a dowry (mahr) to the bride, as stipulated in the
contract.
A man may
marry up to four
wives if he believes he can
treat them equally, while a woman may
marry one man only. In most Muslim countries, the
process of divorce
in Islam is known as talaq, which the
husband initiates by
pronouncing the word "divorce". Scholars disagree whether
Islamic holy texts justify traditional Islamic practices such as
veiling and seclusion (purdah). Starting in the
20th century, Muslim
social reformers argued against these and other practices such as
polygamy, with varying
success . At the same time, many Muslim
women have attempted to reconcile tradition with modernity by combining an
active life with outward modesty. Certain Islamist groups like the
Taliban have sought to continue traditional law as applied to women.
Calendar
The
formal beginning of the
Muslim era was chosen to be the Hijra in 622 CE, which was an
important turning point in Muhammad's fortunes. The assignment of
this
year as the year 1 AH (Anno Hegirae) in the Islamic calendar was
reportedly made by Caliph Umar. It is a lunar calendar, with nineteen
ordinary years of 354 days and
eleven leap years of 355 days in a
thirty-year
cycle . Islamic
dates cannot be converted to CE/AD dates
simply by adding 622 years: allowance must also be made for the
fact that each Hijri century corresponds to only 97 years in the Christian
calendar. The year 1428 AH coincides almost
completely with 2007 CE.
Islamic holy days fall on
fixed dates of the lunar calendar, which means that they occur in
different seasons in different years in the Gregorian calendar. The
most important Islamic festivals are Eid al-Fitr on the 1st of
Shawwal, marking the end of the fasting month Ramadan, and Eid
al-Adha on the
10th of Dhu al-Hijjah, coinciding with the pilgrimage
to Mecca.
History
Islam's historical
development resulted in major political,
economic , and military
effects inside and
outside the Islamic world. Within a century of
Muhammad's first recitations of the Qur'an, an Islamic
empire stretched from the
Atlantic Ocean in the
west to Central Asia in the
east. This new
polity soon broke into civil war, and successor states
fought each other and outside forces. However, Islam continued to
spread into regions like Africa, the
Indian subcontinent, and
Southeast Asia. The Islamic civilization was one of the most
advanced in the world during the Middle Ages, but was surpassed by Europe with
the economic and military growth of the West. During the
18th and
19th centuries , Islamic dynasties such as the Ottomans and Mughals
fell under the
sway of European
imperial powers. In the 20th century
new religious and political movements and newfound wealth in the
Islamic world led to both rebirth and conflict.
Rise
of the caliphate (632–750)
Muhammad began preaching
Islam at Mecca before migrating to Medina, from where he united the
tribes of Arabia into a singular Arab Muslim religious polity. With
Muhammad's death in 632, disagreement broke out over who would
succeed him as leader of the Muslim community. Umar ibn al-Khattab, a
prominent companion of Muhammad, nominated Abu Bakr, who was
Muhammad's intimate
friend and collaborator. Others added their
support and Abu Bakr was made the first caliph. This choice was
disputed by some of Muhammad's companions, who
held that Ali ibn Abi
Talib, his cousin and son-in-law, had been designated his successor.
Abu Bakr's immediate
task was to
avenge a
recent defeat by Byzantine
(or Eastern Roman Empire) forces, although he first had to put down a
rebellion by Arab tribes in an
episode known as the Ridda
wars , or
"Wars of Apostasy".
The territory of the
Caliphate in 750His death in 634 resulted in the succession of Umar
as the caliph, followed by Uthman ibn al-Affan and Ali ibn Abi Talib.
These four are known as al-khulafā' ar-rāshidūn ("Rightly
Guided Caliphs"). Under them, the territory under Muslim
rule expanded deeply into Persian and Byzantine territories.
When Umar was assassinated in
644, the election of Uthman as successor was met with increasing
opposition. In 656, Uthman was also
killed , and Ali assumed the
position of caliph. After fighting off opposition in the first civil
war (the "First Fitna"), Ali was assassinated by Kharijites
in 661. Following this, Mu'awiyah, who was governor of Levant, seized
power and began the Umayyad dynasty.
These disputes over religious
and political leadership would give
rise to schism in the Muslim
community. The majority accepted the legitimacy of the three rulers
prior to Ali, and
became known as Sunnis. A minority disagreed, and
believed that Ali was the only rightful successor; they became known
as the Shi'a. After Mu'awiyah's death in 680, conflict over
succession broke out
again in a civil war known as the "Second
Fitna". Afterward, the Umayyad dynasty
prevailed for
seventy years, and was able to conquer the Maghrib and Al-Andalus (the
Iberian Peninsula,
former Visigothic Hispania) and the Narbonnese
Gaul} in the west as well as expand Muslim territory into Sindh and
the fringes of Central Asia. While the Muslim-Arab elite engaged in
conquest, some devout Muslims began to question the piety of
indulgence in a worldly life, emphasizing rather
poverty , humility
and avoidance of sin based on renunciation of bodily desires. Devout
Muslim ascetic exemplars such as Hasan al-Basri would
inspire a
movement that would evolve into
Sufism .
For the Umayyad aristocracy,
Islam was viewed as a religion for Arabs only; the
economy of the
Umayyad empire was based on the assumption that a majority of
non-Muslims (Dhimmis) would pay
taxes to the minority of Muslim
Arabs. A non-Arab who
wanted to convert to Islam was
supposed to
first become a
client of an Arab tribe. Even after conversion, these
new Muslims (mawali) did not achieve social and economic equality
with the Arabs. The descendants of Muhammad's
uncle Abbas ibn Abd
al-Muttalib rallied discontented mawali, poor Arabs, and some Shi'a
against the Umayyads and overthrew them with the help of their
propagandist and general Abu Muslim, inaugurating the Abbasid dynasty
in 750. Under the Abbasids, Islamic civilization flourished in the
"Islamic
Golden Age", with its capital at the cosmopolitan
city of Baghdad.
Golden
Age (750–1258)
Artistic depiction of the
Battle of Hattin in 1187, where Jerusalem was recaptured by Saladin's
Ayyubid forcesBy the late 9th century, the Abbasid caliphate began to
fracture as various regions gained increasing levels of autonomy.
Across North Africa,
Persia , and Central Asia emirates formed as
provinces broke
away . The monolithic Arab empire gave way to a more
religiously homogenized Muslim world where the Shia Fatimids
contested even the religious authority of the caliphate. By 1055 the
Seljuq Turks had eliminated the Abbasids as a military power,
nevertheless they continued to
respect the caliph's titular
authority. During this time expansion of the Muslim world continued,
by both conquest and peaceful proselytism even as both Islam and
Muslim trade
networks were extending into sub-Saharan West Africa,
Central Asia, Volga
Bulgaria and the Malay archipelago.
The Golden Age saw new legal,
philosophical , and religious developments. The major hadith
collections were compiled and the four modern Sunni Madh'habs were
established. Islamic law was advanced greatly by the efforts of the
early 9th century jurist al-Shafi'i; he codified a method to
establish the
reliability of hadith, a topic which had been a locus
of dispute among Islamic scholars.Philosophers Ibn Sina (Avicenna)
and Al-Farabi sought to
incorporate Greek principles into Islamic
theology, while others like the
11th century theologian Abu Hamid
al-Ghazzali argued against them and ultimately prevailed.
Finally ,
Sufism and Shi'ism both underwent major changes in the 9th century.
Sufism became a full-fledged movement that had moved towards
mysticism and away from its ascetic roots, while Shi'ism
split due to
disagreements over the succession of Imams.
The spread of the Islamic
dominion induced hostility among
medieval ecclesiastical Christian
authors who saw Islam as an adversary in the
light of the large
numbers of new Muslim converts. This opposition resulted in polemical
treatises which depicted Islam as the religion of the antichrist and
of Muslims as libidinous and subhuman. In the medieval period, a few
Arab philosophers like the
poet Al-Ma'
arri adopted a
critical approach to Islam, and the Jewish philosopher Maimonides contrasted
Islamic
views of
morality to Jewish views that he
himself elaborated.
Starting in the 9th century,
Muslim conquests in the West began to be reversed. The
Reconquista was launched against Muslim principalities in Iberia, and Muslim
Italian possessions were
lost to the Normans. From the 11th century
onwards alliances of European Christian kingdoms mobilized to
launch a series of wars known as the
Crusades , bringing the Muslim world
into conflict with Christendom. Initially successful in their goal of
taking the Holy
land , and establishing the Crusader states, Crusader
gains in the Holy Land were later reversed by subsequent Muslim
generals such as Saladin; who recaptured Jerusalem during the Second
Crusade. In the east the
Mongol Empire put an end to the Abbassid
dynasty at the Battle of Baghdad in 1258, as they overran in Muslim
lands in a series of
invasions . Meanwhile in Egypt, the slave-soldier
Mamluks
took control in an uprising in
1250 and in
alliance with the
Golden Horde were able halt the Mongol armies at the Battle of Ain
Jalut. Mongol rule extended across the breadth of almost all Muslim
lands in Asia and Islam was temporarily replaced by Buddhism as the
official religion of the land. Over the next century the Mongol
Khanates converted to Islam and this religious and
cultural absorption ushered in a new age of Mongol-Islamic synthesis that
shaped the
further spread of Islam in central Asia and the Indian
subcontinent.
Ottomans
and Islamic empires in India (1258–1918)
The Seljuk Turks conquered
Abbassid lands and adopted Islam and become the de
facto rulers of
the caliphate. They captured Anatolia by defeating the Byzantines at
the Battle of Manzikert, thereby precipitating the call for Crusades.
They however fell apart rapidly in the second half of the 12th
century giving rise to various semi-autonomous Turkic dynasties. In
the
13th and
14th centuries the Ottoman empire (
named after
Osman I)
emerged from among these "Ghazi emirates" and established
itself after a string of conquests that included the Balkans, parts
of
Greece , and western Anatolia. In 1453 under
Mehmed II the Ottomans
laid
siege to Constantinople, the capital of Byzantium. The Byzantine
fortress succumbed shortly thereafter, having been battered by
superior Ottoman cannonry.
Beginning in the 13th
century, Sufism underwent a transformation, largely as a result of
the efforts of al-Ghazzali to legitimize and reorganize the movement.
He developed the model of the
Sufi order—a community of spiritual
teachers and
students . Also of importance to Sufism was the creation
of the Masnavi, a collection of mystical poetry by the 13th century
Persian poet Rumi. The Masnavi had a
profound influence on the
development of Sufi religious thought; to many Sufis it is second in
importance only to the Qur'an.
The Taj
Mahal is a mausoleum
located in Agra, India, that was
built under Mughal[86]In the early
16th century, the Shi'ite Safavid dynasty assumed control in Persia
and established Shi'a Islam as an official religion there, and
despite periodic setbacks, the Safavids remained
powerful for two
centuries. Meanwhile, Mamluk Egypt fell to the Ottomans in 1517, who
then launched a European campaign which reached as far as the
gates of Vienna in 1529.After the invasion of Persia, and
sack of Baghdad
by the Mongols in 1258,
Delhi became the most important cultural
centre of the Muslim east. Many Islamic dynasties ruled parts of the
Indian subcontinent starting from the 12th century. The prominent
ones include the Delhi Sultanate (
1206 –1526) and the Mughal empire
(1526–1857). These empires helped in the spread of Islam in South
Asia. but by the mid-18th century the
British empire had ended the
Mughal dynasty.[89] In the 18th century the Wahhabi movement took
hold in Saudi Arabia. Founded by the
preacher Ibn Abd al-Wahhab,
Wahhabism is a fundamentalist ideology that condemns practices like
Sufism and the veneration of saints as un-Islamic.
By the
17th and 18th
centuries, despite
attempts at modernization, the Ottoman empire had
begun to feel threatened by European economic and military
advantages. In the 19th century, the rise of nationalism resulted in
Greece declaring and
winning independence in 1829, with several
Balkan states following
suit after the Ottomans suffered defeat in
the Russo-Turkish War of
1877 –1878. The Ottoman era came to a close
at the end of World War I.
In the 19th century, the
Salafi, Deobandi and Barelwi movements were initiated.
Modern
times (1918–present)
After World War I
losses , the
remnants of the empire were parceled out as European protectorates or
spheres of influence. Since then most Muslim societies have become
independent nations, and new issues such as oil wealth and relations
with the State of Israel have assumed prominence.
The 20th century saw the
creation of many new Islamic "revivalist" movements. Groups
such as the Muslim Brotherhood in Egypt and Jamaat-e-Islami in
Pakistan advocate a totalistic and theocratic alternative to secular
political ideologies. Sometimes called Islamist, they see Western
cultural values as a threat, and promote Islam as a comprehensive
solution to every public and private question of importance. In
countries like Iran and Afghanistan (under the Taliban),
revolutionary movements replaced secular regimes with Islamist
states, while transnational groups like Osama bin
Laden 's al-Qaeda
engage in terrorism to further their
goals . In contrast, Liberal
Islam is a movement that attempts to reconcile religious tradition
with modern norms of secular governance and human rights. Its
supporters say that there are multiple ways to read Islam's
sacred texts, and
stress the need to leave
room for "independent
thought on religious matters".
In modern times Islam has
come under criticism from idealogues such as Ibn Warraq who criticize
Islamic law and question the morality of the Qur'an; for example,
they say that its contents justify mistreatment of women and
encourage antisemitic
remarks by Muslim theologians;such claims are
disputed by Muslim scholars. Montgomery
Watt , Norman
Daniel , and
Edward Said dismiss many of the criticisms as the product of old
myths and medieval European polemics. The rise of Islamophobia,
according to Carl Ernst, had contributed to the
negative views about
Islam and Muslims in the West.
Denominations
Islam consists of a number of
religious denominations that are essentially similar in belief but
which have significant theological and legal differences. The primary
division is between the Sunni and the Shi'a, with Sufism generally
considered to be a mystical inflection of Islam rather than a
distinct school. According to most sources, approximately 85% of the
world's Muslims are Sunni and approximately 15% are Shi'a, with a
small minority who are members of other Islamic sects.
Sunni
Divisions of IslamSunni
Muslims are the largest group in Islam. In Arabic, as-Sunnah
literally means "principle" or "path". The Sunnah
(the example of Muhammad's life) as recorded in the Qur'an and the
hadith is the main pillar of Sunni doctrine. Sunnis believe that the
first four caliphs were the rightful successors to Muhammad; since
God did not
specify any particular leaders to succeed him, those
leaders had to be elected. Sunnis recognize four major legal
traditions, or madhhabs: Hanafi, Maliki, Shafi'i and Hanbali. All
four accept the
validity of the others and a Muslim might choose any
one that he or she
finds agreeable, but other Islamic sects are
believed to have
departed from the majority by introducing
innovations (bidah). There are also several
orthodox theological or
philosophical traditions within Sunnism. For example, the recent
Salafi movement sees itself as restorationist and claims to derive
its teachings from the original sources of Islam.
Shi'a
The Shi'a, who constitute the
second-largest
branch of Islam, believe in the political and
religious leadership of infallible Imams from the progeny of Ali ibn
Abi Talib. They believe that he, as the cousin and son-in-law of
Muhammad, was his rightful successor, and they call him the first
Imam (leader), rejecting the legitimacy of the
previous Muslim
caliphs. To them, an Imam rules by right of divine appointment and
holds "absolute spiritual authority" among Muslims, having
final say in matters of doctrine and revelation. Although the Shi'a
share many
core practices with the Sunni, the two branches disagree
over the proper importance and validity of specific collections of
hadith. The Shi'a
follow a legal tradition called Ja'fari
jurisprudence. Shi'a Islam has several branches, the largest of which
is the Twelvers, while
the others are the Ismaili, the Seveners, and the Zaidiyyah.
Sufism
Not strictly a denomination,
Sufism is a mystical-ascetic form of Islam. By focusing on the more
spiritual aspects of religion, Sufis strive to obtain
direct experience of God by making use of "intuitive and emotional
faculties" that one must be trained to use. Sufism and Islamic
law are usually considered to be complementary, although Sufism has
been criticized by some Muslims for being an unjustified religious
innovation. Most Sufi
orders , or tariqas, can be classified as either
Sunni or Shi'a.
Others
The Kharijites are a sect
that dates back to the early days of Islam. The only surviving branch
of the Kharijites is Ibadism. Unlike most Kharijite groups, Ibadism
does not regard sinful Muslims as unbelievers. The Imamate is an
important topic in Ibadi legal literature, which stipulates that the
leader should be chosen solely on the basis of his knowledge and
piety, and is to be deposed if he acts unjustly. Most Ibadi Muslims
live in Oman.
The Alevi, Yazidi, Druze,
Ahmadiyya, Bábí, Bahá'í, Berghouata and Ha-Mim movements either
emerged out of Islam or came to share certain beliefs with Islam.
Some consider themselves separate while others still sects of Islam
though controversial in certain beliefs with mainstream Muslims.
Sikhism, founded by Guru Nanak in late fifteenth century Punjab,
incorporates aspects of both Islam and
Hinduism .
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