Despite its huge following around the world and the growing Muslim communities in the
United States, Islam is foreign to most Americans who are familiar with Christianity or
Judaism. Because most Americans know little or nothing about Islam, they have many
misconceptions about Muslim beliefs and rituals. The negative image many people in the
United States and Europe have of Islam and the Muslim world has a long history. Many
have judged Islam without making an effort to consider this religious tradition on its
own terms, without bothering to become acquainted with its teaching and the ways in which
Muslims practice their faith.
Like Judaism and Christianity, Islam is a monotheistic religion, based on the belief in
one God.. This religion was proclaimed by the Prophet Muhammad in Arabia, in the 7th
century A.D. The term Islam virtually means "surrender". Within Islam the believer
(called a Muslim) use the Arabic word for God, Allah, to refer to the creator of the
world and of all life within it. Allah is viewed as the sole God----creator, sustained,
and restorer of the world. The will of Allah, to which man must submit, is made known
through the sacred scriptures, the Qur'an (Koran). Allah revealed the Qur'an to his
messenger, Muhammad. According to Islamic beliefs, Muhammad is the last of a series of
prophets (including Adam, Noah, Jesus, and others). Muhammad's message concurrently
perfect and do away with the "revelations" attributed to earlier prophets.
Islam More Than A Religion
From the very beginning of Islam, Muhammad had indoctrinated a sense of brotherhood and
a bond of faith among his followers. The Prophet Muhammad fled to Medina in AD 622, it
was during this time that his preaching was accepted and the community-state of Islam
emerged. During this early period, Islam acquired its characteristics as a religion
uniting in itself both the spiritual and temporal aspects of life. Islam also seeks to
regulate not only the individual's relationship to God (through his conscience) but human
relationship in a social setting as well. Thus, there is not only an Islamic religious
institution but also an Islamic law, state, and other institutions governing society.
During the earliest decades after the death of the Prophet, certain basic features of
the religio-social organizations of Islam were singled out. The features are to serve
as anchoring points of the community's life and fashioning as the "Pillars of Islam."
There are five pillars. To these five, the Khawarij sect added a sixth pillar, the
jihad, which, however, was not accepted by the general community. Jihad means "holy
war" or "holy struggle". The first pillar is the profession of faith which states,
"There is no god but God; Muhammad is the prophet of God." The profession must be
recited at least once in one's lifetime, aloud, correctly, and purposively, with an
understanding of its meaning and with a covenant from the heart. The second pillar
consists of five daily congregational prayers, which may, however be offered individually
if one is unable to go to the mosque. The first prayer is performed in the morning
before sunrise. The second prayer is performed
Islam More Than A Religion
just after noon, the third in the later afternoon, the fourth immediately after sunset,
and the fifth before retiring to bed. However, only three prayers are mentioned in the
Qur'an: morning, evening, and middle prayer in the afternoon. In strict doctrine, the
five daily prayers cannot be waived even for the sick, who may pray in bed and, if
necessary lying down.
The third pillar is the obligatory tax called zakat which means "purification." Zakat
indicts that such a payment makes the rest of one's wealth religiously and legally pure.
In today's society the payment of zakat has become a matter of voluntary charity
dependent on individual conscience.
The fourth pillar of the faith is fasting during the month of Ramadan (ninth month of
the Muslim lunar calendar). Fasting begins at daybreak and ends at sunset, and during
the day eating, drinking, and smoking are forbidden. The Qu'ran (2:185) states that it
was during the month of Ramadan that the Qu'ran was revealed.
The fifth pillar is the annual pilgrimage (hajj) to Mecca prescribed for every Muslim
once in a lifetime -- "provided one can afford it" and provided a person has enough
provisions to leave for his family in his absence.
By the eighteenth century Black Muslims begin to arrive in North America; coming by the
thousands, working as slaves on plantations. As slaves these early communities were cut
off from their heritage, families, and inevitable their Islamic identity. During the
nineteenth century America experienced an influx of Arab
Islam More Than A Religion
Muslims arriving from Europe, settling in major industrial cities. The Arab Muslims were
generally able to form their communities and to practice their religion freely. The
early Twentieth Century witnessed the arrival of several hundred thousand Muslims from
Eastern Europe; whom opened a mosque in Maine in 1915 and other mosque soon followed.
After World War II an Islamic movement emerged among blacks in the US; members called
themselves the Nation of Islam, but they were popularly known as Black Muslims. Although
they adopted some Islamic social practices, the group was in large a black separatist and
social-protest movement. Their leader, Elijah Muhammad, who claimed to be an inspired
prophet, interpreted the doctrine of Resurrection in an unorthodox sense as the revival
of oppressed ("dead") people. The popular leader and advocate Malcolm X (el-Hajj Malik
el-Shabazz) broke with Elijah Muhammad and adopted more orthodox Islamic views. After
the death of Malcolm X in 1965 and the death of Elijah Muhammad in 1975, many blacks
turned to Sunni Islam. While most Muslim blacks identify with the traditional Sunni
Islam practiced worldwide, the black community's history is entwined with the Nation of
Islam, founded about 1930. Malcom X was among the first black Muslims to turn to Sunni
Islam through the Nation of Islam. Most Muslims are known as Sunni Muslims; and all
other Muslims belong to the Shi'i sect and are known as the Shi'ah.
Islam More Than A Religion
Today many blacks point to the Islamic faith of their slave ancestors. Scholars
estimate that as many as 20 percent of slaves brought to America were Muslims. In the
early part of this century black communities started to take hold to the Islamic faith.
In the Islamic faith the family is the foundation of the Muslim society. The peace and
security offered by a stable family unit is greatly valued and seen as essential for the
spiritual growth of its members. A friendly social order is created by the existence of
external families; the children are treasured and rarely leave home until the time they
marry. Also, Muslim women are seen as an individual in her own right, with the right too
own and dispose of her property and earnings. Both men and women are expected to dress
in a manner that is modest and dignified; the traditions of female dress found in some
Muslim countries are often the expression of local custom. The code in which Muslims eat
and drink forbids the consumption of pork meat and any kind of intoxicating drink. The
Prophet Muhammad teachings stated that one's body has rights and the consumption of
wholesome food and the leading of a healthy lifestyle is seen as a religious obligation
and a way of life.
In todays society many have come to believe that we live in a secular age, meaning, in
effect, that religion is not an especially important issue for most people. But there is
much evidence to suggest that this is not true. In many societies, including the United
States, religion and religious values shape the lives of millions of individuals and play
a key role in culture.
Islam More Than A Religion
REFERENCES
Dawood, N.J. The Koran. Harmondsworth, England: Penguin Classics,
1974
Gordon, S. Matthew., Islam World Religions, New York: Brown Publishing, 1991
Hiro, Dilip., Holy Wars: The Rise of Islamic Fundamentalism, New York: Routledge,
Chapman and Hall Inc. 1989
The New Encyclopaedia Britannica, Chicago: 15th Edition: 1987
Islam More Than A Religion
I. Introduction
A. Historical Origins
B. Source of Islamic Doctrine
II. Fundamental Practices
A. The Five Pillars
B. Sacred Places and Days
III. American Experience
A. History of Migration
B. Black Muslims
IV. Cultural/Racial Appreciation
A. Traditions
B. General Culture - Family, Food, Music, etc....
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