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An Overview of Islam
[Introduction] [The
Emergence and Early Expansion of Islam]
[Main Beliefs]
[Islamic Law] [The
Practices of Islam] [Sacred
Places] [The Islamic
Year and Festivals] [The
Main Groups of Islam] [Muslim
Mysticism] [Islam in
the Modern World]
[Islamic Fundamentalism]
[Islam as a World Religion]
I
Introduction
Islam, major world religion. The
Arabic word islam literally means
"surrender" or "submission". As the name
of the religion it is understood to mean
"surrender or submission to God". One
who has thus surrendered is a Muslim. In
theory, all that is necessary for one to
become a Muslim is to recite sincerely
the short statement of faith known as
the shahadah: I witness that there is no
god but God [Allah] and that Muhammad is
the Messenger of God.
Although in an historical sense
Muslims regard their religion as dating
from the time of Muhammad in the early
7th century ad, in a religious sense
they see it as identical with the true
monotheism which prophets before
Muhammad, such as Abraham (Ibrahim),
Moses (Musa), and Jesus (Isa), had
taught. In the Koran, Abraham is
referred to as a Muslim. The followers
of these and other prophets are held to
have corrupted their teachings, but God
in His mercy sent Muhammad to call
mankind yet again to the truth.
Traditionally, Islam has been
regarded by its followers as extending
over all areas of life, not merely those
(such as faith and worship) which are
commonly viewed as the sphere of
religion today. Thus many Muslims prefer
to call Islam a way of life rather than
a religion. It is for this reason too
that the word Islam, especially when
referring to the past, is often used to
refer to a society, culture or
civilization, as well as to a religion.
While a history of Christianity will
usually cover only matters relating to
religion in a narrow sense, a history of
Islam may discuss, for example,
political developments, literary and
artistic life, taxation and landholding,
tribal and ethnic migrations, etc. In
this wider sense Islam is the equivalent
not only of Christianity but also of
what is often called Christendom.
Adherents of a religion may differ
among themselves regarding what
constitutes the essence of the religion,
what is more important or less
important, what is right belief and what
heresy, etc. Modern students of
religions, when attempting to describe a
particular religion, may attempt to get
around this problem by accepting the
definitions given by some authoritative
body or individual such as a Church
council or the pope in Roman
Catholicism. Such an expedient is not
really possible for someone wishing to
discuss Islam, however, since, at least
before the modern period, there has been
no body claiming to be the central
authority for all Muslims. Instead,
religious authority and power has been
diffused at a local level among
countless scholars and religious
officials who lack a clearly defined
hierarchy or organization. An individual
obtains religious authority as a result
of a consensus regarding his learning
and piety. In theory, at least, most
positions of such authority are open to
all.
In modern times there have been
attempts to promote the idea that
particular bodies or individuals have a
special authority in Islam. In Sunni
Islam, for example, the council of the
Azhar university in Cairo is sometimes
regarded as having a special authority
while among the Shiites of Iran a
hierarchy of religious scholars has
developed and been recognized by the
state. Even so, no body or individual
has managed to establish itself as
authoritative for all Muslims, and
claims to be so are always contested.
It is not possible, therefore, to
make many general statements about what
Islam is or is not, without their being
open to contest by groups or individuals
with a different view of the religion.
Certain ideas and especially practices
have become so widely accepted among
Muslims in general that they might be
viewed as distinguishing features of
Islam but even then there will be groups
or individuals who reject them but still
regard themselves as Muslims. In
general, one should avoid terms like
"orthodoxy" and "heresy" when discussing
Islam.
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II The
Emergence and Early Expansion of Islam
Traditional accounts of the emergence
of Islam stress the role of Muhammad,
who lived in western Arabia (Al Hijaz)
at the beginning of the 7th century ad.
Muhammad experienced a series of verbal
revelations from God. Among other
things, these revelations stressed the
oneness of God, called mankind to
worship Him, and promised that God would
reward or punish men according to their
behaviour in this world. Muhammad was to
proclaim God's message to the people
among whom he lived, most of whom
practised polytheism.
After an initial period in which he
was rejected in his home town of Mecca,
Muhammad was able to found a community
and a state with himself as its head in
the town which soon came to be called
Medina. By the time of his death in 632,
several of the Arab tribes and a number
of towns, including Mecca, had submitted
to Muhammad and accepted Islam.
Following his death the caliphate was
established to provide for succession to
Muhammad in his role as the head of the
community, although prophecy, in the
form of immediate verbal revelations
from God, ceased with Muhammad.
Shortly after his death the process
of collecting together all the
revelations which he had received in his
lifetime began. The tradition is not
unanimous, but it is widely accepted
that this work was completed under
Uthman (caliph 644-656) and that it was
in his time that the revelations were
put together to form the text of the
Koran as we know it.
The most important beliefs,
institutions, and ritual practices of
Islam are traditionally seen as
originating in the time of Muhammad, and
frequently they are understood to be the
result of divine revelation. Sometimes a
Koranic passage is seen as the source or
justification of a practice or belief.
Not all of them, however, can be
associated with a relevant Koranic text
and often they are seen to have
originated in the practice of the
prophet Muhammad himself. Since he was a
prophet, much of what he said and did is
understood not as merely the result of
personal and arbitrary decisions but as
a result of divine guidance. Thus the
practice of Muhammad, which came to be
known as the Sunna, serves as an example
and a source of guidance for Muslims
alongside the Koran, especially for
Sunnis.
Under the caliphs who governed the
community and state following Muhammad,
a period of territorial expansion began,
first in Arabia and then beyond its
borders. By about 650 Egypt, Syria,
Iraq, and the western parts of Persia
had been conquered by Arab forces which
acknowledged the leadership of the
caliphs in Medina. In about 660 the
caliphate passed into the control of the
Umayyad dynasty which was based in
Syria. Under the Umayyads a second wave
of expansion took place. By the time
that dynasty was overthrown in 750 it
controlled territories extending from
Spain and Morocco in the west to
Afghanistan and central Asia in the
east.
Modern scholarship has tended to show
the emergence and expansion of Islam as
a more gradual and complex process than
is apparent from the traditional
accounts. By emphasizing the relative
lateness of the Muslim accounts of the
early history of Islam (there is little
which can be dated in the form in which
we have it to before about 800), it has
raised the possibility that the
traditional accounts should be
understood as reflecting rather late
views. It has suggested that the period
when Islam was developing outside Arabia
following the Arab conquest of the
Middle East is of crucial importance. It
has emphasized, as is clear from the
traditional sources themselves, that the
Arab conquests may have expanded the
area under the control of the caliphs
but that the spread of Islam at a
personal level was much slower. The
conquerors did not force the people they
conquered to become Muslims and probably
did not even intend that they should do
so. The acceptance of Islam as a
religion by the non-Arab peoples under
the rule of the caliphs was a slow,
uneven, and never-completed process,
motivated by many things, some of which
are not properly understood. It is also
now better understood that these
non-Arab peoples, gradually accepting
Islam (and identifying themselves as
Arabs at the same time), had much to do
with the emergence of Islam as we know
it.
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III
Main Beliefs
Muslims believe that there is one
God, Allah; that Muhammad was a prophet
sent by God to mankind; and that the
Koran is the collection of the
revelations which God made to Muhammad.
The Koran thus contains the words of God
in a literal sense and is often referred
to as the Speech of God (kalam Allah).
The vast majority of Muslims accept
that Muhammad was the last in a series
of prophets sent by God and that there
can be no other after him. The Koranic
phrase "the seal of the prophets" is
understood by them in this sense. Some
groups have regarded themselves as
Muslims while recognizing prophets, or
something like prophets, after Muhammad,
but their status as Muslims has been
contested by the majority of the
community.
The concept of "prophet" in Islam
shares much with the idea as it had
developed in Judaism and Christianity by
the early centuries of the Christian
era. The Arabic word nabi, which is one
of the two most frequent words for
"prophet" in Islam, is related to the
Hebrew nebi, the most usual word for
"prophet" in the Old Testament. The
basic idea is of someone who is given a
message by God to deliver either to
mankind as a whole or to a specific
group. Muslim tradition recognizes
numerous prophets sent by God before
Muhammad, and most of them are known in
Jewish and Christian tradition from the
Bible and other writings.
In Muslim belief, it came to be
commonly held that some of the earlier
prophets had been entrusted with a
revelation just as Muhammad had been
sent with the Koran, and in essence
these revelations were identical with
one another. The revelation of Moses was
the Torah and that of Jesus the Gospel (injil
in Arabic, ultimately from Greek
evaggelion). According to this concept,
there is only one Gospel and it is the
book of revelation entrusted to Jesus.
It is not the same as any one of the
four gospels preserved in the New
Testament, which are different accounts
of the life of Jesus. In the Koran and
other writings Jesus is referred to as
the Messiah (Masih) and as the Word of
God. He was miraculously born of the
Virgin Mary and his life was asociated
with many miracles. Nevertheless he was
not the "Son of God", a concept which
Islam rejects as a physical and logical
impossibility. He did not die on the
Cross, even though it seemed so to those
who were present. Instead someone else
died in his place and God raised Jesus
up to Himself.
Some of the Muslim ideas about
prophets and prophethood, and about
Jesus, are similar to those associated
with Judaeo-Christian groups whose
existence is attested in the early
centuries of the Christian era. Some
scholars have suggested that descendants
of those groups had an influence on the
emergence of Islam.
In addition to the physical world,
God has also created angels and spirits.
The angels have various roles, among
them the conveyance of God's revelation
to the prophets. The spirits are usually
known as the jinni. They inhabit this
world and may affect human beings in
various ways. Some are good and capable
of obtaining salvation, others are evil
and sometimes known as satans. The chief
satan, the Devil, known as Satan or
Iblis, is sometimes thought of as a
disobedient angel, sometimes as a jinni.
He has been allowed by God to roam the
world and do evil deeds.
The world will end, and Islam has a
rich body of eschatological and
apocalyptic tradition. Before the world
ends the Mahdi, a sort of Messiah
figure, will appear to inaugurate a
short period in which the world will be
filled with justice and righteousness.
The idea of the Mahdi is more prominent
in Shiite Islam (see below) but is not
limited to the Shiite tradition. After
death, each human being will be judged
and will either achieve salvation or be
consigned to damnation according to his
or her beliefs and deeds while alive.
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IV
Islamic Law
Although the essence of Islam is
acceptance of the one God and of the
prophethood of Muhammad, in practice
adherence to Islam has traditionally
been manifested by living a life
according to Islamic law within an
Islamic community. The law is regarded
as of divine origin: although it is
administered and interpreted by human
beings (and, as in most religions, that
means men rather than women), it is
understood as the law of God. The law is
known as the Shari'ah. To obey the law
is to obey God. One should not
underestimate the importance of
questions of belief and dogma in Islam,
but generally speaking for Muslims,
Islam has been more a matter of right
behaviour than of concern with the
niceties of belief.
Traditionally, Muslims have held that
the law was revealed by God in the Koran
and in the Sunna. In addition to those
two theoretical sources, different
groups within Sunni and Shiite Islam
accept that law may be derived from
certain subsidiary sources such as the
consensus of the Muslims (usually called
ijmaa), the informed reasoning of
individual scholars (often called
ijtihad), and various more specific and
limited forms of these.
Many modern scholars have accepted
the views of Joseph Schacht, who argued
that the idea of the Sunna and the
theory of the sources of Islamic law did
not really develop until the 9th century
and that Islamic law is not really
derived from the Koran and the Sunna.
Rather, according to this view, it has
evolved gradually from a variety of
sources (such as earlier legal systems
and ad hoc decisions made by early Arab
rulers), and the classical Muslim theory
of the sources of Islamic law was
developed by the early Muslim scholars
(culminating in the work of al-Shafii)
in order to put the positive law which
had evolved in the first centuries of
Islam on a proper Islamic basis. These
scholars, it is argued, looked at the
law as it existed in their own day;
reformed, rejected or accepted it; and
then sought to portray it as deriving
from the Koran, the Sunna or one of the
other classical sources. Since there was
a limit to what could be attributed to
the Koran (which is relatively short and
only partly concerned with establishing
legal rules on a few questions), it was
the Sunna (as reported in the hadiths)
which was in practice most important.
Since there was virtually no limit to
the way in which hadiths could be
interpreted or reworded, and new ones
put into circulation, it was usually
easier to find a hadith to support a
particular legal rule than it was a
Koranic text.
After the classical theory of the
sources of law had come to be accepted,
many and voluminous law books and hadith
collections were produced, and law
became the predominant expression of
Islam. Islamic law concerns itself with
far wider areas of public and private
life than does a modern secular legal
system. Economics, politics, matters of
diet and dress, penal and civil law,
warfare, and many other aspects of
social and private life are, in theory
at least, regulated by Islamic law. To
live a life according to the law has
probably been the main religious ideal
for most Muslims, although one should
not conclude that Islam is merely a
legalistic religion.
Modern Islamic states have frequently
adopted legal codes based on those of
the West and have limited the sphere
governed by Islamic law to personal and
family matters: inheritance, marriage
and divorce, etc. Even in these areas
reforms have been made to traditional
Islamic law, but these reforms are
usually justified by reference to the
traditional doctrine of the sources.
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V The
Practices of Islam
Five duties have traditionally been
seen as obligatory for all Muslims,
although some mystics (Sufis) have
allegorized them and many Muslims
observe them only partially. These
duties are the so-called five pillars of
Islam: bearing witness to the unity and
uniqueness of God and to the prophethood
of Muhammad (shahadah); prayer at the
prescribed times each day (salat);
fasting during the month of Ramadan (sawm);
pilgrimage to Mecca, and the performance
of certain prescribed rituals in and
around Mecca at a specified time of the
year (hajj); and paying a certain amount
out of one's wealth as alms for the poor
and some other categories of Muslims (zakat).
The first of these pillars balances
external action (the recitation of the
shahadah) with internal conviction
(although different groups within Islam
have held different views about the
relative importance of recitation and
belief in the shahadah); the other four,
although they take belief for granted,
consist predominantly of external acts.
There are other duties and practices
regarded as obligatory. As in Judaism,
the eating of pork is prohibited and
male circumcision is the norm (the
latter is not mentioned in the Koran).
Consumption of alcohol is forbidden.
Meat must be slaughtered according to an
approved ritual or else it is not halal.
In some Muslim communities practices
which are essentially local customs have
come to be identified as Islamic: the
wearing of a sari, for example. There
are variant practices concerning the
covering of the head or face of a woman
in public. A Koranic text is interpreted
by some to mean that the entire head and
face of a woman should be covered, by
others as indicating that some sort of
veil or head scarf should be worn.
Others argue that the Koran does not
require any such covering.
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VI
Sacred Places
The centre of Muslim life, apart from
the home, is the mosque or masjid
(Arabic, "place of prostration in
prayer") where the prescribed prayers
are performed five times daily (in some
Shiite groups only three times daily).
The prayers are performed while facing
Mecca, the site of the Kaaba and the
birthplace of Muhammad, and the mosque
wall which is closest to Mecca has a
niche known as the mihrab built into it
to show the direction of the holy city.
The Kaaba at Mecca, a simple and
relatively small cubical building, is
often referred to as the "house of God",
although without any implication that He
is present there more than anywhere
else. It is explained as having been
built by Abraham at the command of God.
At the time when he built it, Abraham
called all peoples at all times to come
there and perform the ceremonies of the
hajj. In the south-east corner of the
Kaaba on the outside wall is fixed a
black stone which receives special
reverence and is often said to have
originated from Paradise. It was sent
down to comfort Adam in his grief when
he was expelled from there. By the time
of Muhammad the pure monotheism which,
according to Muslim belief, had been
instituted at Mecca by Abraham, had
become corrupted by idolatry and
polytheism, and it was the task of
Muhammad to restore the pure religion
and re-establish monotheistic worship at
the Kaaba. Around the Kaaba there has
grown up a huge mosque known as al-Masjid
al-Haram ("the sacred mosque").
In addition to Mecca various other
places have a special status in Islam.
At Medina, the town to which Muhammad
moved when his preaching in Mecca had
aroused opposition, the second holiest
mosque in Islam grew up around his tomb.
Jerusalem is the third most revered
sanctuary, in part because of its
association with prophets before
Muhammad, in part because of the
tradition that Muhammad was miraculously
taken there from Mecca by night. From
there he is said to have been taken up
to heaven before being returned on the
same night to the place where he had
been sleeping in Mecca. Above the huge
rock in Jerusalem which is regarded as
the very place from which Muhammad's
ascension began, the Dome of the Rock
was built. This is one of the earliest
and most beautiful buildings of Islam,
first constructed around 690 on the
orders of the caliph Abd al-Malik.
For Shiite Muslims other cities,
often associated with their Imams,
achieved a special status: An Najaf and
Karbal?' in Iraq, and Mashhad and Qom in
Iran, are the most important.
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VII The
Islamic Year and Festivals
The Islamic era is known as that of
that of the hijra (sometimes Latinized
and Anglicized as Hegira) since its
starting point is the year in which
Muhammad moved from Mecca to Medina (ad
622), an event known in Muslim tradition
as the hijra (variously translated as
"flight", "emigration" or "exodus"). The
calendar is based on the Moon rather
than the Sun, a year consisting of 12
months, each counted as the time between
the appearance of one new moon and that
of the next. The year thus lasts for
about 354 days, approximately 11 days
less than the solar year used in the
common calendar. Since intercalation is
forbidden in the law, the Islamic year
bears no fixed relationship to the
seasons. Relative to the solar year,
each day in the Muslim year falls 11
days earlier each year. Thus the
festivals and major events of the Muslim
year eventually circulate through all
the seasons.
The Hijri year begins with the month
of Muharram, but no special significance
is attached to the new year's day. The
ninth month of the year, Ramadan, is the
obligatory month of fasting, and every
Muslim who has the duty to fast (there
are some who are relieved of it because
of illness or another reason) should
abstain from food, drink, and sexual
pleasure during the hours of daylight.
The first day of the tenth month,
Shawwal, marks the end of the fast and
is a day of great rejoicing. It is the
major festival of the year and is
variously known as "the great festival",
"the festival of the breaking of the
fast" or simply "the festival" (al-eed).
The last month of the year is
Dhul-Hijjah, and the first half of it is
the time for the annual ceremonies
connected with the hajj at Mecca. The
core of the hajj, when all the pilgrims
take part together, occurs between the
eighth and tenth of the month. On the
tenth the pilgrims sacrifice a great
number of animals at Mina, close to
Mecca, and in many parts of the Islamic
world sacrifices are also performed on
this day. This is known as "the lesser
festival" (al-eed al-sagheer) or "the
festival of the sacrifice" (eed al-qurban
or eed al-adha).
The tenth day of the first month,
Muharram, is called Ashura (an Aramaic
word meaning "tenth"). This has a
special importance for Shiite Muslims.
On it they commemorate what in their
view was the martyrdom of their third
Imam, Husain, the son of Ali ibn Abi
Talib. He was killed on Ashura day in
680 at Karbal?' in Iraq, fighting
against a Muslim ruler whom the Shiites
regard as a usurper and tyrant. For
Shiites the day is a sad one, marked in
some places by processions, public
weeping, and even sometimes
self-flagellation.
Other events and festivals occur at
various times during the year but do not
have the official religious significance
of those just mentioned. For example,
the birthday of the Prophet Muhammad (mawlid
al-nabee) is widely celebrated in the
fifth month of the year and in some
places is marked by the recitation of
poems in his honour. This festival,
however, seems to be quite late in
origin. Since the precise date of
Muhammad's birth is not known, the month
was probably chosen because it is the
most widely accepted date for his death
and a symmetry between birth and death
was assumed. For the Shiites the
birthdays of Ali and his wife Fatima are
also celebrated.
One of the odd-numbered days towards
the end of Ramadan (the precise day is
disputed) is marked with reverence as
the "night of power" (lailat al-qadr)
when, it is widely believed, God makes
His decrees concerning everything which
is to occur in the following year.
Friday is sometimes referred to as
the Muslim sabbath, like Saturday for
Jews and Sunday for Christians. It is
not officially a day of rest, but the
midday prayer service on Friday is the
most important of the week, should be
observed, if possible, in a large
congregational mosque, and has a more
elaborate form than that of the normal
prayer service. The ritual contains a
special sermon (khutba) delivered by a
preacher who stands on a minbar, a sort
of pulpit which is a prominent part of
the furniture of a mosque.
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VIII
The Main Groups of Islam
In the period of its early
development Islam developed three main
divisions: Sunni, Shiite, and Kharijii.
Historically, the division between them
is said to go back to a civil war
between the Arabs between ad 656 and
661, following their conquest of the
heartlands of the Middle East. As
religious groups in the form in which we
know them, however, the three traditions
took considerably longer than that to
emerge. The two most important of them,
the Sunni and the Shiite, did not really
crystallize before the 3rd to 9th
centuries. The fundamental issue which
divides the three groups is that of
authority-who should be the source of
authority in Islam and what sort of
authority they should have.
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IX
Muslim Mysticism
From an early period in the
development of Islam some individuals
and groups began to feel that it was not
enough simply to live according to the
law and hope to achieve salvation in
that way. They desired a stronger
religious experience and sought to
become closer to God through a variety
of devotional and meditational
practices, and sometimes through an
austere ascetic way of life. Those who
engaged in such practices came to be
called Sufis. The characteristic aim of
Sufism was to obtain a direct experience
of God. This is a form of spirituality
which has similarities in religions
other than Islam and is usually referred
to as mysticism. It has often been
viewed with suspicion by non-mystical
religious authorities who see it as a
threat to institutional religion. The
practices and beliefs of the Sufis came
to be feared as possible rivals to those
followed by the majority of ordinary
Muslims.
In 922 a leading Muslim mystic, al-Hallaj,
was executed by the ruling authorities
for claiming, so it was alleged, that
his experience of God had been so
immediate that he had become completely
united with the divinity. This was
described as a form of polytheism by his
opponents. Nevertheless, Sufi ideas
remained attractive to many. It is al-Ghazali,
one of the pivotal figures in the
history of Sunni Islam, who is credited
with bringing about the compromise which
made it possible henceforth for Sufism
to be regarded as a legitimate and
important expression of Islam. Al-Ghazali
argued that it is important to
understand the deeper meaning of the law
and not just to adhere to it blindly.
In the centuries following al-Ghazali
the influence of Sufism in Islam became
more widespread as various orders or
"paths" (tariqas) came into existence.
These are brotherhoods of Sufis which
are distinguished by the allegiance they
owe to a particular Sufi master. They
involve a process of initiation and they
appeal to various social classes. Some
of them have a local basis, others cover
large areas of the Islamic world. They
provide not only an important means for
the expression of spirituality in Islam
but also a focus of loyalty within a
universalist religion.
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X
Islam in the Modern World
From the end of the 18th century
onwards the Islamic world began to
experience the increasing pressure of
the military and political power and
technological advances of the modern
West. After centuries of Islamic
political and cultural strength and
self-confidence, it became clear that at
the economic and technical level at
least the world of Islam had fallen
behind. Part of the shock came from the
fact that the Western countries were at
least nominally Christian, and yet
Muslims regarded Islam as the final
revelation which had supplanted
Christianity.
In the 20th century the creation of
the state of Israel in an area which was
regarded as one of the heartlands of
Islam strengthened the feeling of many
Muslims that there was a crisis facing
them which involved their religion.
One response was to argue that Islam
needed to be modernized and reformed.
This point of view has been held by a
number of intellectuals, and various
proposals for reforming the religion in
what is understood as a modernist
direction have been made.
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XI
Islamic Fundamentalism
The second half of the 20th century
has seen the rise and domination of what
may be seen as the opposite approach to
discovering a solution to the perceived
"crisis of Islam". It has been argued by
many that the crisis facing the Muslims
was a result of the willingness of many
Muslims to follow the false ideas and
values of the modern secular West. What
is needed, it is argued, is a
reassertion of traditional values. From
this point of view, the crisis of Islam
is seen as the result of the corruption
of nominally Muslim governments and the
creeping growth of secularism and
Western influence in the Muslim world.
Frequently, but not always, those who
argue in this way espouse the use of
violence in the cause of overthrowing
unjust and corrupt governments. This
approach is often referred to as Islamic
fundamentalism.
The validity of this expression is
open to question and is frequently
rejected by Muslims themselves. The
ideas of religious "fundamentalism"
seems to have originated in discussions
of Christianity, where it is usually
used with reference to those groups of
Christians who insist that the Bible is
literally the word of God and that it
alone should be regarded as
authoritative by Christians. In this
context "tradition" is usually regarded
negatively as something which has
corrupted the original true form of
Christianity taught by Jesus.
Many Muslims do not like the use of
the expression with regard to Islam
since, they say, all Muslims accept that
the Koran is the word of God in a very
literal sense and so all Muslims are
fundamentalist. Furthermore, although
some "fundamentalists" try to argue that
only the Koran is the true source of
Islam, most accept many parts of non-Koranic
tradition even though they may reject
other parts. Muslim groups which are
often lumped together under the heading
of "fundamentalist" in fact have many
differences between them.
Modern proponents of this style of
Islam can find their precursors in
earlier centuries. Ibn Taymiyya is often
cited by them since he argued for a
purification of Islam from what he
considered to be accretions and
corruptions which had entered it by his
own day. Ibn Taymiyya influenced later
figures such as Muhammad Ibn Abd al-Wahhab,
the father of Wahhabi, and it is perhaps
ironic that the Saudi kingdom which came
to power as a result of the strength of
Wahhabi in Arabia is now one of the most
prominent targets of the charge of
corruption and of serving as a vehicle
for Western influence in the Islamic
world.
Among the Sunni Muslims one of the
oldest of the modern "fundamentalist"
movements is that of the Muslim
Brothers, which was founded in 1929. Its
most influential theorist was Sayyid
Qutb who was executed by the Egyptian
government in 1966. More recently groups
such as Hamas in Gaza and Palestine,
Gamaat al-Islamiyya in Egypt, and the
Fronte Islamique de Salvation (FIS) in
Algeria have emerged with individual
local aims but with the common objective
of installing what they see as a proper
Islamic government, running a state
based on Islamic law, in the country
where they are active. In Europe the
Hizb ut-Tahrir has attracted some
following, and in Malaysia the Arqam
movement.
Among Shiite Muslims this form of
Islam achieved its greatest success with
the overthrow of the ruling dynasty in
Iran (Persia) and the establishment of
the Islamic Republic of Iran in 1979.
The Islamic Republic governed by
Ayatollah Khomeini and his successors
then offered support to groups such as
Hizbollah in Lebanon as well as to Sunni
movements like Hamas and Islamic Jihad.
The ability of such groups to capture
the headlines, and the difficulties they
have posed for governments, Muslim and
non-Muslim, in many parts of the world,
has sometimes led to the claim that
Islam is of its very nature
fundamentalist (which in this context
usually means aggressive and
expansionist). This claim is sometimes
supported by reference to the importance
of the doctrine of jihad (holy war) in
traditional Islam and the importance of
the Arab conquests in the earliest
stages of the emergence of Islam.
In reality, however, Muslims, like
followers of other religions, have
behaved in a variety of ways and
presented various images of their
religion according to differing
historical contexts. While it would be
wrong to underestimate the strength of
movements such as those named above, or
their ability to attract the sympathy of
other Muslims, it would equally be wrong
to overestimate the degree of unity
between the various manifestations of
"Islamic fundamentalism" or to fall into
the trap of thinking that each religion
is characterized by a particular spirit
or quality which is unchanging and
always dominant.
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XII
Islam as a World Religion
There are no exact figures for the
number of Muslims in the world today. It
seems clear, however, that in terms of
numbers Islam at least matches those of
Christianity, the other most widespread
religion today.
From its heartlands in the Middle
East and North Africa the religion
spread before the modern period to many
parts of sub-Saharan Africa, to central
Asia, to the Indian subcontinent, and to
East and South East Asia. In Europe,
Sicily and most of Spain were part of
the Islamic world during the Middle
Ages, and most of the Balkans came to be
ruled by the Muslim Ottoman Empire, with
its capital at Istanbul, at various
times between about 1300 and the end of
World War I. In modern times Islam has
spread as a result of emigration so that
there are now large Muslim communities
in parts of western Europe, North
America, South Africa, and Australia.
The Sunni form of the religion is
dominant in most countries apart from
Iran, but there are large Shiite
populations in Iraq and Lebanon, in
Bahrain and eastern Saudi Arabia, and,
to a lesser extent, in Central and South
Asia.
It is a mistake to think that Islam
has always been spread by warfare.
Although, as has been noted above, its
birth was associated with the Arab
conquest of the Middle East and North
Africa in the 7th century, and although
it entered the Balkans as a result of
the Ottoman expansion from 1300 onwards
and spread in west Africa following a
jihad in the 18th century, the religion
of Islam has not generally been forced
upon people by the sword. Periods of
military conquest have usually been
aimed at expanding the territories under
Muslim rule rather than at forcing the
conversion of non-Muslims to Islam.
Conversion to Islam has usually
followed quite slowly, sometimes against
the wishes of the Muslim rulers, after a
territory has come under Muslim rule.
The adoption of Islam as their religion
has usually resulted from the wishes and
actions of people wanting to become
Muslim, not because it was forced upon
them against their will. Why some people
have been attracted to Islam and others
not is a complex question involving many
different religious, social, political,
and economic factors. In some parts of
the world, trade and the cultural
attraction of Islamic civilization have
been as important as preaching in the
spread of the religion. Sufi
brotherhoods have also done much to
spread the religion in particular areas.
Like Christianity (and like Buddhism)
Islam is a universal religion open to
all irrespective of nationality, gender
or social status. Of course, normal
ethnic and social divisions exist among
Muslims, but one of the attractions of
Islam is its insistence on the
fundamental equality of all Muslims
before God. One of its greatest
strengths has been the way in which
various peoples have been able to find a
sense of their own identity in Islam.
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Source :
"Islam" Microsoft®
Encarta® Online Encyclopedia 2003 © 1997-2003 Microsoft
Corporation.
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