Question:
what is islam?
cman
2006-03-18 10:34:42 UTC
what is islam?
Twenty answers:
♥ 3rabeezy_chica♥
2006-03-18 10:38:41 UTC
islam is where u follow one true god(Allah in arabic) and his messenger Mohammad(peace be upon him) it is the religon that says in war u shouldn't harm a women, child, elderly, the sick, or roots of a flower... it is the truthfuly peaceful religon(i put da peaceful part cuz every1 thinx itz so violent, wen itz really not) the followers of islam r called "muslims" (christianity - christians)

peace out:)
Doodlebug
2006-03-18 18:47:45 UTC
One of the three religions that stemmed from the Old Testament. The Prophet Mohammad was visited in a cave by the angle Gabriel who gave him instruction on how to live and he wrote this down in what is now called the Koran. Thus, Islam was born. This took place about 500 years after Jesus Christ.



Just as with Christianity, there are many, many, many sects of the religion. They all take what they want out of the Koran and use how they see fit. Just how sects of Christians interpret the bible differently Muslims interpret the Koran in one way while other sects translate it in another way. An example of this is the Baptists do not believe that baptism is required to go to heaven while the Lutherans believe it to be. Muslims also have differences such as this and that is why some Muslims think Jihad is ever present, while others do not.
leb_amoura21
2006-03-18 20:41:14 UTC
Its a religion of peace...If you want information on Islam, search the net, some people on here are very closed minded and do not know anything about Islam, they only like to criticize peoples beliefs. Please find another source of information other then yahoo answers. It breaks my heart to see people so nieve and uneducated, especially if they live in the western world where education is free.



These sites might be helpful.

http://www.islam.com/

http://www.truthnet.org/islam/whatisislam.html

http://www.islamicity.com/education/understandingislamandmuslims/
Omer
2006-03-18 18:56:34 UTC
Like every other religion or philosophy,ISLAM also claims to be the one & only true way to God.There are several arguments which may be advanced to support ISLAM's claim to be the true religion of God,and the most obvious of them are (1)The divine origin of the name & the comprehensiveness of its meaning. (2) The unique & uncomplecated teachigs concerning the relationship between God,man & creation. (3) the third argument derives from the fact that ISLAM is universally attainable by all men at all times.
helix
2006-03-18 18:49:31 UTC
Islam is the last massage from God to poeple by his massenger prophet Mohammed..



""Islam is the fastest growing religion in the world. Islam is the religion follwed by Muslims. Muslims believe that the universe and everything within is created by One, Single God, Allah, who is one and Omnipotent, Ominpresent.



Most of the non muslims, dont know much about Islam,which is a divine religion, and is the chosen way of life by God. Muslims believe in all prophets like Moses, Abraham, Jesus were actaully preaching the same religion. Prophet Muhmmad was the last in the chain of prophets, and his prophethood was forecasted in earlier divine books like Bible, and Torah/Talmud. Muslims not only respect all prophets, but they also think they were right and were pointing int the same direction, Islam. also islam is not named after a person as other religions..





To be a Muslim, one has to bear witness [or to confess with oneself]



1) that the creator of this universe is Allah [the only God , and the same God who sent Moses, Abraham, Ishmael, Isaac, Job , Joseph ,Jesus and other prophets] and

2) that Muhammad was his last Prophet.



Beleiving the above two fundamental beliefs makes you a Muslim.





At present more then 1 billion people are Muslim. They are found in Asia, Africa, southern europe, and minoroties in other countries..



Muslims has been accused in thier believes of being torrist and murders due to 11-9 just because of an individual action which caused a big mis-conception about islam since then to now.. but to judge a religion you have to find out which path this religion drive yuo in.. and how is your life will become with it and without it.. and when you read about islam history you will find out how tolarent it is and till now every muslim country has a good percentage of minoroties and were not just illiminated...



to overcome such mis-understanding muslims have to work harder to make people understand the logic of faith in islam and how islam makes your life with an aim in life and after life.. some efforts are done but not to the hoped aim yet.. ""



queted from a previous answer to similar quetion with editiing too..



http://islamonline.net/english/index.shtml

the above link is very useful if yu want to ask about muslim imams about islam..



http://amrkhaled.net/

try this too
Bengal Striker
2006-03-22 02:52:56 UTC
Most people dont understand the difference between Muslim and Islam. Islam is the name of the religion that Muslims follow.Islam is monotheistic, and God is Allah. Allah sent many prophets such as Ibrahim(Abraham)peace be upon him and Musa(Moses) peace be upon him to preach the truth. Muhammad (peace be upon him) was the last prophet of Islam.



Islam means submission to Allah. Another meaning of Islam is peace.
brmick1
2006-03-18 18:42:36 UTC
As I understand it, Islam is a religous belief, founded by a man who many claim was a prophet back around the last quarter of the first millenia. Actually, he (Muhamed) was nothing more than a tyrannical murdering theif who forced &/or coerced a grip of supportes into believing a set of beliefs that were conducive to his particular lifestyle. These beliefs have been overly interpreted by a group of ignorant & generally undereducated peoples who would follow anything other than Christianity, thanks largely to the practices of the Roman Catholic Church during that era, which tried many times over to eradicate, through genocide, any last vestiges of these ignorant, 'savage' tribes.

Hence, the U2 song,"In the name of Love" (how sad, hunh?)
aznkm91
2006-03-18 18:36:00 UTC
A religion
Onion?
2006-03-19 15:02:41 UTC
Peace.
Kiss my Putt!
2006-03-18 18:41:24 UTC
http://education.yahoo.com/reference/encyclopedia/entry/Islam
2006-03-18 18:37:45 UTC
the word islam means submission, you figure it out from there....
old_frog
2006-03-19 17:26:08 UTC
the last religion sent by GOD/ALLAH .



and as language the word of Islam means PEACE .



and thanks for all brothers and sisters thats tell what is islam as religion ..



GOD/ALLAH bless u all
khanza
2006-03-18 18:37:48 UTC
It is a religion that teaches peace, contrary to all of the propaganda.
Tcg_13
2006-03-18 18:36:07 UTC
It's a muslum religon they worship in mosques
tonton274
2006-03-18 18:58:11 UTC
its a religion. not like judaism where satan rules and hitler is their savior. hitler should be praised coz he brought 6 million jews to their paradise! allahu akhbar! death to all jews. p.s. im canadian so i h8 americans too. and im white
lgaree12
2006-03-18 18:38:51 UTC
I think its a religion similar to Muslim.
universal
2006-03-18 18:45:18 UTC
Prophet Mohamed was an exceptional man in everything. He told us: "None of you is a true believer until you love me more than you love yourselves." All Muslims love Prophet Mohamed more than we love ourselves. I understand that you will not get my point coz you don't know Mohamed's personality or achievements.



Mohamed was an orphan. His father died before he was born, and his mom died when he was six. He was raised by his grandfather, then by his uncle. Mohamed worked as a merchant, then he got married. At the age of forty he began to receive revelation from Allah.



Mohamed began to tell his peolpe that they should stop worshiping useless and helpless stones. He tried to tell them that it was inhumane to inherit your mother after you father dies. He tried to tell them that it was brutal to bury your daughter for fear of disgrace. He tried to tell them that a black slave can be better than a white master if he has high morals. In return his people told him how dare you compare our slaves to us? They harmed him and tortured his followers. They called him crazy, they called him an imposter, they called him a magician. They tried to kill him many times. But he never wanted to fight back. His neighbour used to put rubbish in front of his door and spill urine and stool in front of his house, but Mohamed never did him harm. When this neighbour was dying, Mohamed went to visit him and wished him a speedy recovery. The man was shocked!!! How could this man, after all the harm I've done to hime, come and wish me speeedy recovery.



Prophet Mohamed felt that his followers were not safe any more in Mecca and that they needed more support, so he decided to move to Madina.



Madina was inhibited by two tribes: Al-Aws and Al-Khazraj. The two tribes already had wars between each other, and between themselves and the jews. Add to this that he came with the Muslims who are strange to the environment, but he managed to settle all the disputes. He managed to conclude treaties betwee Al-Aws, Al-Khazraj, and the Jews. The Jews, however, didnt abide by the treaty. They even tried to persuade other tribes to fight Muslims, so they were expelled finally from the whole peninsula.



After Mohamed built a stable government in Madina, he never forgot about Mecca and the people who expelled him. He made an army of 10.000 soldiers and sieged Mecca.



When he entered Mecca, he asked Quraysh (his tribe which had expelled him with the Mslims before): "What do you think I would do to you now?" They said "You are a noble man and a son of a noble man." He said go, you are free."



Free???? Those people who tortured Muslims? Those people who killed the first Muslim woman by hitting an arrow in her vagina?? Those brutal people who torture the Muslim slaves by undressing them and making them lie in the hot desert and putting heavy rocks on their chests. Those people who sent forty men to kill the Prophet but failed to kill him? Those people who ordered a man to kill the Prophet's uncle and give his liver to a woman to chew it then spit it??



Yes, he set them free. Yes he entered Mecca without shedding a single drop of blood.



Prophet Mohamed was once sitting among his companions. He received a huge pesent consisting of huge herd of sheep that filled the space between two mountains. A man came to the Prophet and asked him: "Would you give me these sheep?" The Prophet said yes you can take them. The man said "all of them?' He said yes all of them. The man wondedered: "Are you mocking me????" The Prophet said no I'm serious. The man ran to the sheep, looking behind at the Prophet to see if he will change his mind. Who can beilieve that someone would give away such huge present to someone he doesn't know? Can that man be a terrorist?



Even if Mohamed was not a prophet, his teachings are all good for humanity, he should be respected rather than mocked.



Prophet Mohamed was the prophet of mercy. In wars, he always instructed Muslims never to cut a tree or destroy a house. Never to kill a woman, child, a religion man, or an old person.



In one of the wars, he told the prisoners of war that he will release them provided that each of them teaches some MUslims how to read and write.



After one of the wars, a man came to him, pulled him from his collar and said: "give me some of this money!! This is not your money or you father's money!!" One of the Prophet's companion wanted to hit that man, but the Prophet told him not to do, he even ordered him to pay the man more money because he was terrified when the Prophet's companion wanted to hit him.
askmuslims1
2006-03-20 01:47:26 UTC
can find your answer at



http://whyislam.org

http://askmuslims.com
2006-03-18 18:42:45 UTC
This is not the true religion!





Islam (Arabic: الإسلام; al-islām (listen (help·info)), "submission (to the will of God)") is a monotheistic faith, considered one of the Abrahamic religions, and the world's second-largest religion. Followers of Islam are known as Muslims. Muslims believe that God revealed his divine word directly to mankind through many prophets and that Muhammad was the final prophet of Islam.



Contents [hide]

1 Etymology

2 Beliefs

2.1 Seven articles of belief

2.2 The tenets of Islam

2.3 God

2.4 The Qur'an

3 Organization

3.1 Religious authority

3.2 Islamic Law

3.2.1 Apostasy and Blasphemy

3.3 Islamic calendar

4 Schools (denominations)

4.1 Sunni

4.2 Shi'ite

4.3 Sufism

4.4 Others

5 Religions based on Islam

6 Islam and other religions

7 History

7.1 Contemporary Islam

7.2 The demographics of Islam today

8 Symbols of Islam

9 See also

10 References

11 External links

11.1 Academic sources

11.2 Directories

11.3 Islam and the arts, sciences, & philosophy

11.4 Islamic Sites Dealing with Misconceptions







[edit]

Etymology

Arabic islām derives from the triconsonantal root Sīn-Lām-Mīm, with a basic meaning of "to surrender; to obey". Islām is a verbal abstract to this root, and literally means "submission/obedience," referring to submission to Allah (God). Salām, meaning "peace", is from the same root, compare the cognate word in Hebrew, shalom, which derives from the cognate root meaning "completeness, fulfillment, wellbeing", a concept usually encapsulated by translation in the word "peace".



Other Arabic words derived from the same root:



Salām is also part of a common salutation, As-Salāmu alaykum (Peace be upon you), and as-Salām (The Peace) is one of the 99 names of God found in the Qur'an.

Muslim, a follower of Islam, an agentive noun meaning "one who surrenders" or "submits" to God.

Salāmah, meaning "safety," which is used in saying "goodbye" with ma' as-salāmah ([go] with safety).

[edit]

Beliefs

The basic tenet of Islam is found in the shahādatān ("two testimonies"): lā ilāhā illā-llāhu; muhammadu-r-rasÅ«lu-llāhi — "There is no god but God and Muhammad is the messenger of God." A person who truly believes in the meaning of these words is a Muslim. However, for practical reasons one may need to recite the words in the presence of witnesses to be considered Muslim by other members of their society.



Muslims believe that God (or, in Arabic, Allāh; also in Aramaic Alaha) revealed his direct word for mankind to Muhammad (c. 570–632) and other prophets, including Adam, Noah, Abraham, Moses, and Jesus. Muslims believe that Muhammad is the Last or the seal of the prophets. Thus, his preachings for humankind will last until Qiyamah (The Day of the Resurrection). Muslims assert that the main written record of revelation to humankind is the Qur'an (see below), which they believe to be flawless, immutable, and the final revelation of God to humanity. Muslims believe that parts of the Gospels, Torah and Jewish prophetic books have been forgotten, misinterpreted, incorrectly edited by humans, or distorted by their followers and thus their original message has been corrupted over time (tahrif). With that perspective, Muslims view the Qur'an as a correction of Jewish and Christian scriptures, and a final revelation.



Muslims hold that Islam is essentially the same belief as that of all the messengers sent by God to mankind since Adam, with the Qur'an (the text used by all sects of the Muslim faith) codifying the final revelation of God. Islamic texts depict Judaism and Christianity as derivations of the teachings of the prophet Abraham and thus acknowledge common Abrahamic roots. The Qur'an calls Jews and Christians (and sometimes people of other faiths) "People of the Book." Historically, the second Caliph Umar ibn Khattab created what came to be known as "the Pact of Umar" in establishing that any people of the book who submitted to Muslim authority as dhimmis during the wars of Muslim expansion retained their freedom of religion and their existing churches.



Islām is described as a dīn, meaning "way of life" and/or "guidance".





Kaaba , the holiest site in Islam[edit]

Seven articles of belief

There are seven basic beliefs shared by all Muslims:



Belief in God (Allah), the one and only one worthy of all worship (tawhid).

Belief in the Angels (mala'ika).

Belief in the books (kutub) sent by God:

The Suhuf-i-Ibrahim (Scrolls of Abraham).

The Tawrat sent to Musa (Moses).

The Zabur sent to Daud (David).

The Injil sent to Isa (Jesus).

The Qur'an sent to Muhammad.

Belief in all the prophets (nabi) and messengers (rasul) sent by God (see Prophets of Islam).

Belief in the Day of Judgement (qiyama).

Belief in Fate (qadar).

Belief in life after death - heaven (jannah) and hell (jahannam).

The Muslim creed in English:



"I testify that there is no god but Allah Almighty, Who is One (and only One) and there is no associate with Him; and I testify that Muhammad (peace and blessings of Allah be upon him), is His Messenger."

"I believe in Allah; and in His Angels; and in His Scriptures; and in His Messengers; and in The Final Day; and in Fate, that All things are from Allah, and Resurrection after death be Truth."

[edit]

The tenets of Islam

Main articles: Five Pillars of Islam, Branches of Religion, Roots of Religion





The Pilgrimage (Hajj) to Kaaba, Masjid al Haram, Mecca, is one of the five pillars of Islam or one of the roots of religion (for the Shi'a).The two largest subgroups of the Muslims are the Sunni and the Shi'a. Sunni Muslims make up a large percentage of the Muslim world, although one can find large majorities of Shi'a Muslims in Middle Eastern countries such as Iran and Iraq. However, in countries such as Saudi Arabia, Indonesia, and Pakistan, Sunni Muslims are the majority.



Sunni Islam's fundamental tenets are referred to as the Five Pillars of Islam2, while Shia Islam has a slightly different terminology, encompassing five core beliefs, the Roots of Religion and ten core practices, the Branches of Religion. All Muslims agree on the following five basic obligations of believers, which Sunnis term the Five Pillars of Islam, and which Shia would consider to be elements of the Roots of Religion and the Branches of Religion.



Shahādah: Testifying that there is none worthy of worship except God (Tawheed) and that Muhammad is his servant and messenger (Nubuwwah).

Salah: Performing the five daily prayers.

Sawm: Fasting from dawn to dusk in the month of Ramadan.

Zakāt: Giving Zakaah (charity).

Hajj: The Pilgrimage to Mecca during the month of Dhul Hijjah, which is compulsory once in a lifetime for one who has the ability to do it.

Shi'a and Sunni also agree on the following beliefs, although they classify them differently:



Adl: The justice of God.

Qiyamah: The Day of Resurrection.

Amr-Bil-Ma'rūf: Commanding what is good.

Nahi-Anil-Munkar: Forbidding what is evil.

Al Jihad fi sabilillah: Striving to seek God's approval.

Distinctive Shi'a beliefs, not held by the Sunni, include:



Imamah: Leadership. The belief in the divinely appointed and guided imamate of Ali and some of his descendants.

Tawalla: To love the Ahl al-Bayt and their followers.

Tabarra: To disassociate from the enemies of the Ahl al-Bayt.

Khums: Paying the tax on profit.

Many Muslims, however, do not fall into any of the denominations listed above. These Muslims believe that the following extract from the Qu'ran bans the formation of sects within Islam, and therefore classify themselves as simply 'Muslims'.



As for those who divide their religion and break up into sects, thou hast no part in them in the least: their affair is with Allah. He will in the end tell them the truth of all that they did. (6:159)

[edit]

God

Main articles: Allah / God



The fundamental concept in Islam is the oneness of God (tawhid). This monotheism is absolute, not relative or pluralistic in any sense of the word. God is described in Sura al-Ikhlas, (chapter 112) as follows:



Say "He is God, the one and only. Allah, the Eternal, Absolute the Self-Sufficient master. He begetteth not, nor is he begotten. And there is none like unto Him."

In Arabic, God is called Allāh. The word is etymologically connected to ʾilāh "deity", Allāh is also the word used by Christian and Jewish Arabs, translating ho theos of the New Testament and Septuagint; it predates Muhammad and in its origin does not specify a "God" different from the one worshipped by Judaism and Christianity, the other Abrahamic religions.



The name "Allah" shows no plural or gender, unlike the word "God" that may take plural sense "Gods" and feminine form "Goddesses". In Islam "Allah" Almighty as the Qur’an says:



"(He is) the Creator of the heavens and the earth: He has made for you pairs from among yourselves, and pairs among cattle: by this means does He multiply you: there is nothing whatever like unto Him, and He is the One that hears and sees (all things)" (42:11).

The implicit usage of the definite article in Allah linguistically indicates the divine unity. Muslims believe that the God they worship is the same as the Judeo-Christian God, i.e. the God of Abraham. However, Muslims reject the Christian theology concerning the trinity of God (the doctrine of the Trinity which regards Jesus as the eternal Son of God), seeing it as akin to polytheism. Quoting from the Qur'an, sura An-Nisa(4) :171:



"O People of the Scripture! Do not transgress the limits of your religion, and do not say about God except the truth. The Messiah, Jesus the son of Mary, was only a messenger of God, and His word that He had sent to Mary, and a revelation from Him. Therefore, you shall believe in GOD and His messengers. You shall not say, "Trinity". You shall refrain from this for your own good. God is only one God. Be He glorified; He is much too glorious to have a son. To Him belongs everything in the heavens and everything on earth. God suffices as Lord and Master."

No Muslim visual images or depictions of God are meant to exist because such artistic depictions may lead to idolatry and are thus disdained. Such aniconism can also be found in Judeo-Christian theology. Moreover, most Muslims believe that God is incorporeal, making any two- or three- dimensional depictions impossible. Instead, Muslims describe God by the many divine attributes mentioned in the Qur'an. All but one Sura (chapter) of the Qur'an begins with the phrase "In the name of Allah, the Beneficent, the Merciful". These are regarded as the most important divine attributes, at least in the sense that Muslims repeat them most frequently during their prayers (salat) and throughout their daily lives.



[edit]

The Qur'an



The first surah in a handwritten copy of the Qur'an.Main article: Qur'an

The Qur'an is the sacred book of Islam. It has also been called, in English, "the Koran" and (archaically) "the Alcoran". Qur'an is the currently preferred English transliteration of the Arabic original (قرآن); it means “recitation”. Although the Qur'an is referred to as a "book", when a Muslim refers to the Qur'an, they are referring to the actual text, the words, rather than the printed work itself.



Muslims believe that the Qur'an was revealed to the prophet Muhammad by God through the Angel Gabriel on numerous occasions between the years 610 and up till his death in 632. In addition to memorizing his revelations, his followers are said to have written them down on parchments, stones, and leaves.



Muslims hold that the Qur'an available today is the same as that revealed to the Prophet Muhammad and by him to his followers, who memorized and wrote down his words. Scholars generally accept that the version of the Qur'an used today was first compiled in writing by the third Caliph, Uthman ibn Affan, sometime between 650 and 656. He sent copies of his version to the various provinces of the new Muslim empire, and directed that all variant copies be destroyed. However, some skeptics doubt the recorded oral traditions (hadith) on which this account is based, and will concede only that the Qur'an must have been compiled before 750.



There are numerous traditions, and many conflicting academic theories, as to the provenance of the Qur'anic verses that were eventually assembled into a single volume. (This is covered in greater detail in Qur'an). Most Muslims accept the account recorded in several hadith, which state that Abu Bakr, The First Caliph, ordered his personal secretary Zayd ibn Thabit to collect and record all the authentic verses of the Qur'an, as preserved in written form or oral tradition. Zayd's written collection, privately treasured by Prophet Muhammad's wife Hafsa bint Umar, was, according to Muslim sources, later used by Uthman and is thus the basis of today's Qur'an.



Uthman's version, organized the suras roughly in order of length (excepting the brief opening surah Al-Fatiha), with the longest suras at the start of the Qur'an and the shortest ones at the end. More conservative views state that the order of most suras was divinely set. Later scholars have struggled to put the suras in chronological order, and among Muslim commentators, at least, there is a rough consensus as to which suras were revealed in Mecca and which at Medina, with distinctive characteristics observed within these two subgroups. Some suras (e.g. surat Iqra) are thought to have been revealed in parts at separate times.



To understand the notion of "variants" within the received Qur'anic text, one must understand that Arabic had not yet fully developed as a written language. The Qur'an was first recorded in written form (date uncertain) in the Hijazi, Mashq, Ma'il, and Kufic scripts; these scripts write consonants only and do not supply vowels. (Imagine an English text that wrote the word 'bed' as "BD," and required the reader to infer, from context, that the reference was to "bed" - and not to 'bad" or "bide.") Because there were differing oral traditions of recitation as non-native Arabic speakers converted to Islam, there was some disagreement as to the exact reading of many (vowel-free) verses. Eventually, scripts were developed that used diacritical markings (known as points) to indicate the vowels. For hundreds of years after Uthman's recension, Muslim scholars argued as to the correct pointing and reading of Uthman's (unpointed) official text.[citation needed] Eventually, most commentators accepted seven variant readings (qira'at) of the Qur'an as canonical, while agreeing that the differences among the seven are minor and do not affect the meaning of the text.



The Qur'an early became a focus of Muslim devotion and eventually a subject of theological controversy among skeptics. In the 8th century, the Mu'tazilis claimed that the Qur'an was created in time and was not eternal. Their opponents, of various schools, claimed that the Qur'an was eternal and perfect, existing in heaven before it was revealed to Muhammad. The Ashari theology (which ultimately became predominant) held that the Qur'an was uncreated.



Most Muslims regard paper copies of the Qur'an with extreme veneration, wrapping them in a clean cloth, keeping them on a high shelf, and washing as for prayers before reading the Qur'an. Old Qur'ans are not destroyed as wastepaper, but burned.



Most Muslims memorize for personal contact at least some portion of the Qur'an in the original language. Those who have memorized the entire Qur'an are known as hafiz (plural huffaz). This is not a rare achievement; it is believed that there are millions of huffaz alive today.



From the beginning of the faith, most Muslims believed that the Qur'an was perfect only as revealed in Arabic. Translations were the result of human effort and human fallibility, as well as lacking the inspired poetry believers find in the Qur'an. Translations are therefore only commentaries on the Qur'an, or "translations of its meaning", not the Qur'an itself. Many modern, printed versions of the Qur'an feature the Arabic text on one page, and a vernacular translation on the facing page.



[edit]

Organization

[edit]

Religious authority

There is no official authority who decides whether a person is accepted into, or dismissed from, the community of believers, known as the Ummah ("family" or "nation"). Islam is open to all, regardless of race, age, gender, or previous beliefs. It is enough to believe in the central beliefs of Islam. This is formally done by reciting the shahada, which should be made sincerely from the heart, the statement of belief of Islam, without which a person cannot be classed a Muslim. It is enough to believe and say that one is a Muslim, and behave in a manner befitting a Muslim to be accepted into the community of Islam.



[edit]

Islamic Law

Main article: Sharia

The Sharia (Arabic for "well-trodden path") is Islamic law, as elaborated by traditional Islamic scholarship. The Qur'an is the foremost source of Islamic jurisprudence. The second is the sunnah of Muhammad and the early Muslim community. The sunnah is not itself a text like the Qur'an, but is extracted by analysis of the hadith (Arabic for "report"), or recorded oral traditions, which contain narrations of the Muhammad's sayings, deeds, and actions. Ijma (consensus of the community of Muslims) and qiyas (analogical reasoning) are the third and fourth sources of Sharia.



In its classical forms, Islamic law covers all aspects of life, from the broad topics of governance and foreign relations all the way down to issues of daily living. Islamic laws which were covered expressly in the Qur'an were referred to as hudud laws. This covered the prohibition of murder, extra-marital sex, drinking of alcohol and gambling. The Qur'an also details laws of inheritance, marriage, restitution for injuries and murder, as well as rules for fasting, charity, and prayer. However, the prescriptions and prohibitions may be broad, so how they are applied in practice varies. Islamic scholars, the ulema, have elaborated systems of law on the basis of these broad rules, supplemented by the hadith reports of how Muhammad and his companions interpreted them. See Sin for further discussion about the concept of sin and its atonement according to the Islamic law.



In current times, not all Muslims understand the Qur'an in its original Arabic. Thus, when Muslims are divided in how to handle situations, they seek the assistance of a mufti (Islamic judge) who can advise them based on Islamic Sharia and hadith.



[edit]

Apostasy and Blasphemy

Main article: Apostasy in Islam

Local Islamic communities may exclude those they regard as apostates and blasphemers. In Islamic law states, apostasy and blasphemy are considered crimes against the state and punished, sometimes with death.



[edit]

Islamic calendar

Main article: Islamic calendar

Islam dates from the Hijra, or migration from Mecca to Medina. This is year 1, AH (Anno Hegira)—which corresponds to AD 622 or 622 CE, depending on the notation preferred (see Common era). It is a lunar calendar, but differs from other such calendars (e.g. the Celtic calendar) in that it omits intercalary months, being synchronized only with lunations, but not with the solar year, resulting in years of either 354 or 355 days. Therefore, Islamic dates cannot be converted to the usual CE/AD dates simply by adding 622 years. 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.



[edit]

Schools (denominations)

Main article: Divisions of Islam



Masjid al-Nabawi (Mosque of the Prophet), Medina.There are a number of Islamic religious denominations, each of which has significant theological and legal differences from each other but possess identical essential belief. The major schools of thought are Sunni and Shi'a, with Sufism considered as a mystical inflection of Islam.



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Sunni

The Sunni are the largest group in Islam. In Arabic, as-Sunnah literally means principle or path. Sunnis and Shi'ites believe that Muhammad was a perfect human being, and that they must imitate the words and acts of Muhammad as accurately as possible. In fact, the Qur'an states that the character of the Prophet Muhammad was a good example to follow. Because of this reason, the Hadith in which those words and acts are described are the main pillar of Sunni doctrine. It should be also noted that the understanding that Muhammad (and in general the Prophets) did commit sins does exist among Sunnis. However, the doctrine of sinlessness of Muhammad is also more or less incorporated into the Sunnis beliefs. Some scholars believe that the doctrine of the sinlessness of the Prophets seems to find its origin with the Shi'a, specifically in connection with the Imamate, and was transmitted to the Sunnis via the Sufis and Mu'tazila. [1]. Shia scholars disagree [2]. Both Shia and Sunni scholars believe that Muhammad was sinless in the sense of transmitting the revelation.



Sunnis recognize four legal traditions (madhhabs): Maliki, Shafi'i, Hanafi, and Hanbali. All four accept the validity of the others and Muslims choose any one that he/she finds agreeable to his/her ideas. There are also several orthodox theological or philosophical traditions (kalam).



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Shi'ite



A view of the Dome of the Rock on the Temple Mount in Jerusalem, a holy site in IslamShi'a Muslims, the second-largest branch, differ from the Sunni in rejecting the authority of the first three caliphs. They honor different traditions (hadith) and have their own legal traditions. Shi'a scholars have a larger authority than Sunni scholars and have greater room for interpretation. The Imams play a central role in Shi'a doctrine. Shi'a Muslims hold that Muhammad, his daughter Fatima and the twelve descendants of Muhammad, the Imams, were all sinless and pure. This is based on Qur'anic verses (such as 33:33) and Hadith narrations such as the Event of the Cloak.



The Arabic word Shi'a literally translates into the word 'group' or 'sect'. Originally known as Shi'at Ali (the sect of Ali), the group formed shortly after the death of Ali, in Iraq. Ali ibn Abi Talib was the cousin of prophet Muhammad, and after marriage to Fatima, he also became Muhammad's son-in-law.



The Shi'a consist of one major school of thought known as the Ithna 'ashariyah or the "Twelvers", and a few minor schools of thought, as the "Seveners" or the "Fivers" referring to the number of infallible leaders they recognize after the death of prophet Muhammad. The term Shi'a, when used without qualification, is usually taken to be synonymous with the Ithna Ashariyya or Twelvers. Most Shi'a live in Iran, Iraq (the country where Ali passed away), Bahrain, Lebanon, India, Azerbaijan, Yemen and Pakistan. A minority group (about 4 million) of Shi'a is known as Ismaili. The Shia Ismaili branch is subdivided into Nizari Ismaili and Mustaali Bohra subsects. The Nizari Ismaili or are led by the Aga Khan and are found mainly in Pakistan, Tajikistan, Bangladesh, India, Canada and United States, although the modern day practices of this sect are very different from that of the mainstream Twelvers. The Mustaali Bohra sect is further subdivded into Dawoodi and Sulaimanis subsects. The Dawoodi Bohras are concentrated in Pakistan and India. The Sulaimani Bohras are concentrated in Yemen and Najran province of Saudi Arabia.



See also: Historic background of the Sunni-Shi'a split

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Sufism

Sufism is a spiritual practice followed by both Sunni and Shi'a. Sufis generally feel that following Islamic law or jurisprudence (or fiqh) is only the first step on the path to perfect submission; they focus on the internal or more spiritual aspects of Islam, such as perfecting one's faith and fighting one's own ego (nafs). Most Sufi orders, or tariqa, can be classified as either Sunni or Shi'a. However, there are some that are not easily categorized as either Sunni or Shi'a, such as the Bektashi. Sufis are found throughout the Islamic world, from Senegal to Indonesia.



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Others

Wahhabis, as they are known by non-Wahhabis, are a smaller, more recent Sunni group. They prefer to be called Salafis. Wahhabism is a movement founded by Muhammad ibn Abd al Wahhab in the 18th century in what is present-day Saudi Arabia. They classify themselves as Sunni and some claim to follow the Hanbali legal tradition. The major trend, however, is the abolition of these "schools of thoughts" (legal traditions), and the following of a more literalist interpretation. Some even regard other Sunni as heretics. The Hanbali legal tradition is the recognized official school of Islamic law in Saudi Arabia and they have had a great deal of influence on the Islamic world because of Saudi control of Mecca and Medina, the Islamic holy places, and because of Saudi funding for mosques and schools in other countries. The majority of Saudi Islamic scholars are considered as Wahhabis by other parts of the Islamic world.



Sunni and Shi'a have often clashed. Some Sunni believe that Shi'a are heretics while other Sunni recognize Shi'a as fellow Muslims. According to Shaikh Mahmood Shaltoot, head of the al-Azhar University in the middle part of the 20th century, "the Ja'fari school of thought, which is also known as "al-Shi'a al- Imamiyyah al-Ithna Ashariyyah" (i.e. The Twelver Imami Shi'ites) is a school of thought that is religiously correct to follow in worship as are other Sunni schools of thought". Al-Azhar later distanced itself from this position.



Another sect which dates back to the early days of Islam is that of the Kharijites. The only surviving branch of the Kharijites are the Ibadhi Muslims. Ibadhism is distinguished from Shiism by its belief that the Imam (Leader) should be chosen solely on the basis of his faith, not on the basis of descent, and from Sunnism in its rejection of Uthman and Ali and strong emphasis on the need to depose unjust rulers. Ibadhi Islam is noted for its strictness, but, unlike the Kharijites proper, Ibadhis do not regard major sins as automatically making a Muslim an unbeliever. Most Ibadhi Muslims live in Oman.



Another trend in modern Islam is that which is sometimes called progressive. Followers may be called Ijtihadists. They may be either Sunni or Shi'ite, and generally favor the development of personal interpretations of Qur'an and Hadith. See: Liberal Islam



One very small group, based primarily in the United States, follows the teachings of Rashad Khalifa and calls itself the "Submitters". They reject the Hadith and Fiqh, and say that they follow the Qur'an alone. They also consider Khalifa the next prophet after Muhammad (Rashad Khalifa self-proclaimed himself as a prophet). Most Muslims of both the Sunni and the Shia branches consider this group to be heretical. Some Muslims, however, will reject Khalifa's prophet status but will also reject both the Fiqh and the Hadith.



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Religions based on Islam

The following groups consider themselves Muslims, but are not considered Islamic by the majority of Muslims or Muslim authorities:



The Nation of Islam (based in the United States)

The Zikris

The Ahmadiyya Movement (also called Qadiani)

The Al-Ahbash (also called Habashies / AICP)

The following consider themselves Muslims but acceptance by the larger Muslim community varies:



The Druze

The Alawites (Alnusairiya)

The following religions are said by some to have evolved or borrowed from Islam, in almost all cases influenced by traditional beliefs in the regions where they emerged, but consider themselves independent religions with distinct laws and institutions:



Yazidi

Bábísm (now called Bayanis)

Bahá'í Faith

The claim of the adherents of the Bahá'í Faith that it represents an independent religion was upheld by the Muslim ecclesiastical courts in Egypt during the 1920s. As of January 1926, their final ruling on the matter of the origins of the Bahá'í Faith and its relationship to Islam was that the Bahá'í Faith was neither a sect of Islam, nor a religion based on Islam, but a clearly defined, independently founded faith. This was seen as a considerate act on the part of the ecclesiastical court and in favor of followers of Bahá'í Faith since the majority of Muslims regard a religion based on Islam as a heresy.



Some see Sikhism as a syncretic mix of Islam and Hinduism, although it is often considered a Dharmic faith rather than an Abrahamic one. It arose in the context of the interaction between Hindu and Muslim communities in North India.



The following religions might have been said to have evolved from Islam, but are not considered part of Islam, and no longer exist:



The religion of the medieval Berghouata

The religion of Ha-Mim

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Islam and other religions

Main article: Islam and other religions

The Qur'an contains injunctions to respect other religions. It also asks the followers to fight and subdue unbelievers in times of war and "evict them whence they evicted you" (Al-Qur'an 2:191). Some Muslims have respected Jews and Christians as fellow "peoples of the book" (monotheists following Abrahamic religions), while others have reviled them as having abandoned monotheism and corrupted their scriptures. At different times and places, Islamic communities have been both intolerant and tolerant.



The classical Islamic solution was a limited tolerance — Jews and Christians were to be allowed to privately practice their faith and follow their own family law. They were called Dhimmis, and they had fewer though similar legal rights and obligations than Muslims. According to the Holy Qur'an (Sura 9:29), dhimmis were to pay a special tax called Jizya, to their Islamic rulers, in exchange for protection and tolerance.



The classic Islamic state was often more tolerant than many other states of the time, which insisted on complete conformity to a state religion. The record of contemporary Muslim-majority states is mixed. Some are generally regarded as tolerant, while others have been accused of intolerance and human rights violations. See the main article, Islam and other religions, for further discussion.



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History

Main article: History of Islam

Modern Islamic history begins in Arabia in the 7th century with the emergence of the prophet Muhammad. Within a century of his death, an Islamic state stretched from the Atlantic ocean in the west to central Asia in the east, which, however, was soon torn by civil wars (fitnas). After this, there would always be rival dynasties claiming the caliphate, or leadership of the Muslim world, and many Islamic states or empires offering only token obedience to an increasingly powerless caliph.



Nonetheless, the later empires of the Abbasid caliphs and the Seljuk Turks were among the largest and most powerful in the world. After the disastrous defeat of the Byzantines at the Battle of Manzikert in 1071, Christian Europe launched a series of Crusades and for a time captured Jerusalem. Saladin, however, restored unity and defeated the Shiite Fatimids.



From the 14th to the 17th centuries, one of the most important Muslim territories was the Mali Empire, whose capital was Timbuktu.



In the 18th century, there were three great Muslim empires: the Ottoman in Turkey, the Middle East, and the Mediterranean; the Safavid in Iran; and the Mogul in India. By the 19th century, these realms had fallen under the sway of European political and economic power. Following WWI, the remnants of the Ottoman empire were parceled out as European protectorates or spheres of influence. Islam and Islamic political power have revived in the 20th century. However, the relationship between the West and the Islamic world remains uneasy.



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Contemporary Islam



Countries with Muslim populations over 10% of total (source - CIA World Factbook, 2004). The darker green represents a Sunni majority and the light green represents a Shia majority.Although the most prominent movement in Islam in recent times has been fundamentalist Islamism, there are a number of liberal movements within Islam, which seek alternative ways to align the Islamic faith with contemporary questions.



Early Sharia had a much more flexible character than is currently associated with Islamic jurisprudence, and many modern Muslim scholars believe that it should be renewed, and the classical jurists should lose their special status. This would require formulating a new fiqh suitable for the modern world, e.g. as proposed by advocates of the Islamization of knowledge, and would deal with the modern context. One vehicle proposed for such a change has been the revival of the principle of ijtihad, or independent reasoning by a qualified Islamic scholar, which has lain dormant for centuries.



This movement does not aim to challenge the fundamentals of Islam; rather, it seeks to clear away misinterpretations and to free the way for the renewal of the previous status of the Islamic world as a centre of modern thought and freedom. (See Modern Islamic philosophy for more on this subject.)



Many Muslims counter the claim that only "liberalization" of the Islamic Sharia law can lead to distinguishing between tradition and true Islam by saying that meaningful "fundamentalism", by definition, will eject non-Islamic cultural inventions — for instance, acknowledging and implementing Muhammad's insistence that women have God-given rights that no human being may legally infringe upon. Proponents of modern Islamic philosophy sometimes respond to this by arguing that, as a practical matter, "fundamentalism" in popular discourse about Islam may actually refer, not to core precepts of the faith, but to various systems of cultural traditionalism.



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The demographics of Islam today

Main articles: Islam by country and Demographics of Islam



Based on the percentages published in the 2005 CIA World Factbook ("World"), Islam is the second largest religion in the world. According to the World Network of Religious Futurists, the U.S. Center for World Mission, and the controversial Samuel Huntington, Islam is growing faster numerically than any of the other major world religions. Ontario Consultants on Religious Tolerance estimate that it is growing at about 2.9% annually, as opposed to 2.3% per year global population growth. Non-Muslim observers attribute this growth to the higher birth rates in many Islamic countries (six out of the top-ten countries in the world with the highest birth rates are majority Muslim[3]). A recent demographic study, however, has determined that the birth rates of some Muslim countries are plummeting to the levels of western countries [4].



Commonly cited estimates of the Muslim population today range between 900 million and 1.4 billion people (cf. Adherents.com); estimates of Islam by country based on U.S. State Department figures yield a total of 1.48 billion, while the Muslim delegation at the United Nations quoted 1.2 billion as the global Muslim population in September 2005.



Only 18% of Muslims live in the Arab world; 20% are found in Sub-Saharan Africa, about 30% in the South Asian region of Pakistan, India and Bangladesh, and the world's largest single Muslim community (within the bounds of one nation) is in Indonesia. There are also significant Muslim populations in China, Europe, Central Asia, and Russia.



France has the highest Muslim population of any nation in Western Europe, with up to 6 million Muslims (10% of the population [5]). Albania is said to have the highest proportion of Muslims as part of its population in Europe (70%), although this figure is only an estimate (see Islam in Albania). The number of Muslims in North America is variously estimated as anywhere from 1.8 to 7 million.



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Symbols of Islam

Main article: Islamic symbols

Muslims do not accept any icon or color as sacred to Islam, as worshipping symbolic or material things is against the spirit of monotheism. Many people assume that the star and crescent symbolize Islam, but these were actually the insignia of the Ottoman Empire, not of Islam as a whole. The color green is often associated with Islam as well; this is custom and not prescribed by religious scholars. However, Muslims will often use elaborately calligraphed verses from the Qur'an and pictures of the Ka'bah as decorations in mosques, homes, and public places. The Quranic verses are believed to be sacred.
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