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ISLAM

ISLAM. An Introduction to Islam تقديم إلى إسلام. America and the Contemporary World: Middle East Unit 2008-09. The Basics. What does Islam mean?. Arabic root word is SLM SLM= Salaam = Peace.

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ISLAM

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  1. ISLAM An Introduction to Islam تقديم إلى إسلام America and the Contemporary World: Middle East Unit 2008-09

  2. The Basics

  3. What does Islam mean? • Arabic root word is SLM • SLM= Salaam = Peace ISLAM = “Willful Surrender” “Willful Submission” MUSLIM = “One who submits to Allah”

  4. Islam “A Faith of Human Unity” • It calls all humankind regardless of their race and gender to unite in the worship of the One and Unique creator. • Islam considers all believers as brothers and sisters, and rejects discrimination on the basis of gender, color, race or ethnic background. • Humankind is one family, if one person suffers everyone should help alleviate that suffering

  5. The Five Pillars Of Islam( Forms Of Worship ) • Declaration of Faith (Shahadah) • Prayers (Salah) • Charity (Zakat) • Fasting (Ramadan) • Pilgrimage (Hajj)

  6. The Five Pillars of Islam

  7. Declaration of Faith (Shahadah) To say, believe and testify that… “La ilaha illa Allah” “There is no true deity, but Allah (God).” <Denial of other gods—affirmation of the one true God> لا إله إلا الله

  8. Prayers (Salah) • Five Daily Prayers from Dawn to Late Evening regulate a Muslim’s day: a dawn, noon, afternoon, sunset & night • Prayers involve ablution, standing, bowing, prostrating, sitting postures • Face Kabbah (in Mecca) a Mihrab • Prayers in Arabic. • Additional Prayers optional

  9. 2 3 4 5 1 6 7 8 9 10

  10. Charity (Zakat) • Required 2.5% charity on yearly savings • A Muslim must be a charitable person • Removing a stone from the road is charity • Greeting with a smile is a charity • Redistribution of wealth helps societies & people • Muslims are usually motivated to donate even more as optional charity • God rewards charity givers very generously in this life and in the hereafter.

  11. Fasting (Ramadan-Siyam) • Ramadan is 9th month in Islamic Lunar calendar • Daily dawn to sunset fast for 30 days (no food or drink) • Eidul-Fitr Holiday at the end • This abstention includes food, drink and sexual relations. • Muslims believe the fasting person develops a greater understanding of the plight of those who go hungry every day.

  12. Hajj (Pilgrimage) • Pilgrimage to Mecca (Makkah) once in life time for able Muslims • About 2-3 million Muslims perform Hajj each year from all over the world. • Eidul-Adha: the biggest Muslim Holiday

  13. Allah • Allah is the Arabic name for God used by Muslims of the world as well as Arab Christians. • “He is God, the One and Only;  God, the Eternal, Absolute;  He begets not, nor is He begotten; And there is none like unto Him.” (The Qur’an)

  14. Prophets and Scriptures • SOME PROPHETS:Adam, Noah, Abraham, Ishmael, Ishaq, Jacob (Israel), Joseph, Benjamin, Moses, Aaron, David, Solomon, Zakareya, John, Jesus, Muhammad • DIVINE BOOKS:Torah, Zabur (Psalms), Injeel (Gospel), Qur’an • Belief in ALL prophets of God • Source of All Books is God • Main Message of all Prophets: Islam

  15. Muslims Believe Muhammad Is: • The Last Messenger & Last Prophet • The Seal Of The Prophets • The Universal Prophet

  16. Islam maintains the integrity of original language (Arabic) Muslims of all language backgrounds recite Islamic verses in Arabic Qur’an القرآنThe Holy Book “The Recitation” • Original message is intact, as given by the Prophet in Arabic • 23 Years of Revelations (610 - 632 C.E.) • 114 Chapters (Suras) • Each begins with the phrase: “In the name of Allah, the Compassionate, the Merciful.” بسم الله الرحمن الرحيم

  17. Ethics

  18. Guidance from the Qur’an & Hadith • Food • Human Equality • Justice • Repel Evil with Goodness • Suicide and Jihad

  19. Sharia • Sharia • "the path leading to the watering place" • Islamic Law • covers all aspects of life (no separation of church and state) • politics, society, daily life

  20. Sharia law (examples) • Theft – punishment can include imprisonment or the amputation of feet or hands so long as there are two witnesses (there are exceptions to amputation if the theft was of nominal value, the person was insane, or they stole out of hunger.) • Adultery – punishment for married men and women is being stoned to death, but the act must be witnessed by four male (or 8 female) witnesses, for unmarried men and women is 100 lashes

  21. Sharia law (examples) • Converting from Islam to another religion is an apostasy and is punishable by death • freedom of speech does not extent to criticizing Muhammad • Homosexuality is criminal and in some countries carries the death sentence

  22. World Muslims • 1.7 billion Muslims worldwide (almost ¼ of the world’s population) • 57 countries with Muslims as a majority of the population, including 22 Arab countries. • Country with the largest Muslim population is Indonesia. • Only 18-25% of Muslims are Arabs

  23. Muslims in America • 2nd most common religion in America • One of the fastest growing religions in the USA • Estimated 7 to 8 million Muslims • Wide variety of ethnic backgrounds/national origins • Not all Muslims are Arabs…not all Arabs are Muslims

  24. Food Forbidden: • Meat of animals found dead • Blood • Flesh of swine • Alcoholic beverages (such as beer and wine) and intoxicants • Meat on which name of God is not invoked at time of slaughtering or meat on which some one else’s name is invoked Permitted: food of the People of the Book

  25. No Terrorism(Forbiddenin Islam) • Islamic Rulings (Fatwah’s) condemned attacks on September 11, 2001, the London bombings and others • Worldwide Islamic leaders signed on to these condemnations • Worldwide Islamic Organizations issued condemnations • Muslim anxiety over religious misinterpretations • Feel that Islam and Muslims are being held responsible unfairly for actions of “deviated people.”

  26. So what was the justification for the 9/11 attack ? • Nonbelievers (Christian armies) were defiling holy land -- Mecca • The combining of 1) the concept of struggle for justice (Jihad) 2) the idea of the infidel (or unbeliever) who must be overcome and 3) the belief that apostasy (those trying to convert from Islam) are deserving of death.

  27. Islamic Jihad • Linguistic meaning: “Striving” / “Struggling” • Islamic meaning: • Non-violent struggling within oneself for a life of virtue. • Fighting to establish justice, which is a supreme goal. • Rules of Engagement (Fighting) In Islam ~Commanded by Prophet Muhammad • Never Kill Innocent People • Never Injure Prisoners-of-War • NeverKill Animals • Never Destroy Crops or Infrastructures • Never Mutilate Bodies of Enemies--dead or alive • All Prisoners Should be Given Fair Treatment • Women & Children Should be Protected From Harm • Always Bury the Dead With Respect • Note: 1,400 Years BEFORE Geneva Convention

  28. Sects

  29. Sects within Islam • There are divisions within Islam • just as in Christianity, Judaism, Hinduism and Buddhism • Two primary sects: Sunni & Shi’a • Sunni: ~85-90% • Shi’a: ~10-15% • including parts of Iran, Iraq, Bahrain, Yemen, Lebanon, Syria, Afghanistan • Third (Minor) sect: Sufism • Mystical order • May include Sunni and Shi'a followers

  30. Sects within Islam • Sunni & Shi’a Muslims share the most fundamental Islamic beliefs and articles of faith. • Nature of the two divisions: • 1)Political • Succession of the Prophet(Political Leadership) • 2)Spiritual • Veneration/worship of Imams(Spiritual Leadership)

  31. Sects within Islam “Sunni” (“Sunnah” root): “one who follows the traditions of the Prophet” -- “well-trodden path” -- “tradition” 1) Successor to the Prophet should have been the most capable leader, NOT based upon bloodlines. • This is what occurred. 2) Spiritual leadership is NOT a birthright, born of community trust and respect Approximately 85-90% of Muslims are from the Sunni branch

  32. Sunni and Shi’a also differ in lesser ways: • Sunni believe the al-Mahdi (vice-regent of Allah) will arrive at/on Judgment Day • Shi’a believe al-Mahdi is on earth, “Hidden” and will emerge at/on Judgment Day • Subgroups/”schools” of Sunni: • Maliki, Shafi’i, Hanafi, Hanbali (most conservative) • Subgroups/”schools” of Shi’a: • Ithna ‘Ashariyah (“Twelvers”--the largest), Isma'iliyah and Zaydiyah Sects within Islam

  33. Women in Islam

  34. Islamic Teaching About Women • The keys to heaven lay at the feet of the Mother. • Your Mother deserves “3” times the respect, honor, devotion & admiration over the Father • The Prophet said: He who is best to his wife is best in the sight of Allah (God). • The Prophet taught all to be Kind, Gentle & Loving With Women

  35. Pre-Islamic Status Of Women570 A.D. • Not equal to men • Given away by husband • Exchanged for goods & services • Traded, bought & sold Meanwhile… • Other nations doing the same • Some Christian Councils still argued whether women had souls • Very male chauvinistic society • No Rights - No Status • No Inheritance • No say in marriage • Considered property of husbands • Lost her name • Burden on society • Her money, property, belonged to the husband

  36. Post-Islamic Status Of Women623 A.D. • Right to… • Own property • Work • Be educated • Be protected by men • Be respected, loved, admired • Can NOT be traded, bought, sold • All her money is hers • All her property is hers • Men required to give dowry in marriage • Asset to society • Honored in society • Integral part of all societal affairs • Women = Men • Equal… • In the sight of God • In belief, prayer, fasting, charity, pilgrimage • Rewards & punishments • Rights & status • Right to… • Inheritance • Initiate Marriage • Initiate Divorce (maybe) • Choose In Marriage • Keep Her Name • Refuse marriage proposals

  37. Modern Sharia law (marriage) • Marriage – Muslims cannot marry non-muslims – if a spouse is declared a non-muslim then the marriage is annulled (wife receives a marriage gift that is part of a nuptial contract • Men are discouraged from beating their wives unless he senses feelings of “disobedience and rebelliousness” if gentle persuasion does not work then he can strike her, but not with a weapon

  38. Modern Sharia law (Divorce) • Divorce – women cannot divorce their husbands without the husband’s consent unless she can prove the husband is impotent, men can divorce their wives unilaterally and can do so simply by telling his wife three times that he wants a divorce (a Malaysian court has ruled that this can occur via text message) • Men get custody of the children after they are weaned – wife gets spousal support for three months but gets to keep her marriage dowry

  39. Modern Sharia law (Gender) • Inheritance – women can own property and inheritance, daughters get half the inheritance of sons • Suport – the male relatives of a woman are required to support her, though she can forgive that obligation • Witnesses: 1 man = 2 women in terms of reliability of witnesses

  40. Hijab حجاب • Based upon a passage that women “not display their ornaments” – interpretation varies • In some cases women are expected to cover all parts of their bodies except their hands and face (though sometimes the face as well), • men are supposed to covered from their knee to their waist and avoid looking at women in a libidinous way The Burqa: most extreme--not even a woman's eyes are visible

  41. History

  42. Muhammed • Begins to preach at 43 (613 AD) in Mecca, an epicenter of trade and pilgrimage • Flees to Medina in 622 AD but unites warring Arab tribes and gathers an army of up to 10,000 -- returns to capture Mecca in 630 • This process of uniting the Arabian Peninsula under Muhammed creates a legacy/justification of war against infidels, or unbelievers

  43. Islamic expansion • Following Muhammad's death in 632, Islamic armies continued to expand • By 661, Islamic armies had gone as far as Modern-day Libya in the West , Iran to the East, and the Black Sea • By 750, all of North Africa and Spain are controlled by Islamic armies, with further Northern advances stopped at the battle of Tours in France. To the East Islamic armies capture much of India.

  44. Crusades • A series of invasions into the Middle East by Christian armies (often with the goal of capturing Jerusalem and other religious sites) • The first crusade was led by the Franks and led to the capture and pillage of Jerusalem in 1099 • The last crusade is in 1272, with the last Crusader-established city destroyed in the Middle East destroyed in 1291

  45. Ottoman Empire • This Turkish, Islamic empire grew from 1300 to 1683

  46. For 500 to 1000 YearsMuslims Were The World Leaders in Science Chemistry Physics Biology Astronomy Anatomy Botany Poetry Mathematics Algebra Arabic Numbers Geometry Engineering Architecture Arts & Crafts Calligraphy Social Services Hospitals Medicine Law & Justice Human Rights Civil Rights Commerce Industry Education Universities Learning Knowledge Exploration Hygiene Ethics Etiquettes

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