|
What does "Islam" mean?
The Arabic word "Islam" simply means "submission",
and drives from a word meaning "peace" and a life focused on peace, mercy, and
forgiveness. In a religious context it means complete submission to the will of
God. "Mohammedanism" is thus a misnomer because it suggests that
Muslims worship
Muhammad, peace be upon
him, rather than God. "Allah"
is the Arabic name for God, which is used by Arab Muslims
and Christians.
Evangelized by the Prophet
Muhammed in the 600's
AD, Islam is a religion celebrated by an estimated one billion people. One fifth
of the world's population from a vast range of cultures, nationalities, and
races embrace Islam as both a religion and a way of life. In
Turkey, approximately
ninety-eight percent of the citizens are Muslims.
Muhammed
was born in Mecca
in about 570 AD. He preached that there is only one God and that he,
Muhammed, was God's
messenger. Those that accept him as such are called Muslims,
which means "one who submits to God.". The
Koran (Kuran, Qur'an) is
the Islamic Bible, believed to be an exact record of the words revealed by God
through the Angel Gabriel to Prophet
Muhammed. Its basic
theme is the relationship between God and his creations, yet at the same time it
provides guidelines for a just society, proper human conduct, and an equitable
economic system.
The following are the "Five
Pillars" of Islam and are considered the framework of the
Muslim life. The first
pillar is faith in God and
Muhammed as his
messenger. The second pillar
is prayer, performed
five times a day. The
third is concern for the needy, given as a tithe estimated at two and a half
percent per annum. Next is self-purification. Every year in the month of
Ramadan, all able
Muslims fast from dawn till dusk, abstaining from food,
drink, and sexual relations. Finally, physically and financially able followers
are expected to make a once-in-a-lifetime
pilgrimage to
Mecca. About
two million Muslims accomplish this trip each year.
Turkey
adopted a secular
government when it
became a republic under the leadership of
Kemal Ataturk.
The Call to Prayer
Five times
a day the call to prayer
drifts over each Muslim village, town, and city. Even
though the Republic of Turkey
is a secular country,
ninety-eight percent of the population profess to be devout followers of the
Islamic faith. Thus it is no surprise that the evocative sound of what has been
called "Muslim music," the call to the faithful, is ubiquitous in the Middle
East.
Every
mosque, or prayer hall,
has at least one
minaret and a balcony where the
muezzin, or
crier, can fulfill his duty. He cries out to Muslims to
stop their worldly tasks, face toward
Mecca, and
pray. The
prayer, in essence,
declares that there is "no God but
Allah and
Muhammed is his Prophet."
Muslims
believe that by offering
prayers five times a
day they are strengthened and enlivened in their beliefs in
Allah, and
that they are inspired to a higher morality. This constant reminder of the
devout's place in the greater universe is believed to purify the heart and
prevent temptation towards wrong - doings and evil.
As far as Islam is concerned, faith without
action and practice is a dead end. The act of
prayer is one of the
fundamental five practices, or
Pillars of Islam, and is
required of all devout Muslims. Thus the call to
prayer plays an important
role in the day and the life of every pious Muslim.
Islam is very simple. As a
muslim one should believe that There Is No God but One [Allah].
Allah is the
only one whom a human should worship and thank, nothing else but
Allah is
worth glorifying. A companion statement to the first one is that
Muhammed Peace Be Upon
Him (PBUH) is the final
messenger of
Allah and he
is that last prophet, no one else after him can claim
prophecy. The
second shell in Islam after this is the Faith (Eman, Iman), that is to believe (undoubtedly)
In Allah, his
Angels, his holy books, his
prophets and
messengers, his fate whether it is bad or good and finally the believe in the
judgment day.
Muslims
must respect other religions and in no way harm any one who is practicing
his/her religion peacefully, especially when it comes to
Christianity and
Judaism
since these religions are from
Allah too. In
fact Islam always stresses the fact that Islam is nothing but the final reform
of the previous messages. The last thing Islam asks for is violence (the meaning
of Islam in English is Peace or Submission). The most valuable thing in a
Moslems life after Islam is the sole which
Allah have
pleased a human with it till he/she dies. A Muslim should
work in this life for his/her optimum goal which
The Prophet Muhammed
(Mecca
570 or 571 AD -
Madina 632)
The central messenger and prophet in
Islam; the receiver and
transmitter of Gods message to mankind, as recorded in the
Holy Koran, the principal
religious text for
Muslims. Muhammad has no or minimum religious importance in
Christianity and
Judaism,
and is considered not to be a prophet by these two, while Muhammad's position in
later religions, like Baha'i, resemble what is found in
Islam.
The Sources
The sources available to us on Muhammad are
Muslim, written in
Arabic. They are principally in the form of the hadiths, the traditions, which
are systematical efforts of choosing between good and not so good stories of
Muhammad's life, often collected in the shape of
suras. Bits
and pieces of Muhammad's life is also recorded in the
Koran. Little is known
from other sources. The
suras and
hadiths available are the result of work from about 100 years after Muhammad's
death, but are a continuation of a very accurate and living oral tradition. The
compilations where built on historical criticism not very unlike what is the
method in modern historical criticism. The oldest compilation now available, are
the ones of Ibn Ishaq (d. Baghdad 768).
The material is extensive, and the presentation
of Muhammad in the early texts is straight forward: Different versions of
stories are presented, and Muhammad himself is presented as a human being with
both his good and his bad sides (the latter have been used by opponents of
Islam to present Muhammad
as a false prophet). Except from certain passages, the material bears few traces
of being legendary, and was first told by people who knew Muhammad as a man, and
told to people of the same era and cultural environment. These are very good
reasons for us to treat the material on Muhammad's life as historical sources,
and even more, as good historical sources. Sadly, some Western historians have
under evaluated the efforts put down in the compilations available, but more
respect is paid by scientists of our time.
Muhammad as a Normal Man (570-610)
Muhammad's birth is said to have been in the "year
of the Elephant", which one believes is pointing to the invasion from Yemen,
where an elephant was brought along in order to smash the
Ka'ba, an event which is
dated to 570 AD (where Muhammad's recorded age at certain times, have been used
as the main source for the estimation). Muhammad's family belonged to the clan
of Hashim, a branch of the Quraysh tribe. While the Quraysh was dominating
Mecca, the
Hashimis had little but religious prestige connected to the, at that time pagan,
shrine of Ka'ba.
As Muhammad's father, Abdullah, died before the
birth of his son, and his mother, Amina, when he was 6, Muhammad was in the care
of his grandfather Abd al-Muttalib for two years, and then with his uncle Abu
Talib, until he reached mature age.
Muhammad is, by
Muslim theologists,
not believed to have received any education, and in young age he started working
with the caravans. It was while working as a trader, that Muhammad came to know
the widow (and divorcee) Khadija, who was the owner of a caravan company where
Muhammad was employed. At the age of 25 Muhammad married Khadija, then 40. Even
if Khadija had children from both of her former
marriages, she got 7
children with Muhammad.
Khadija died in 619, and soon Muhammad remarried.
Unlike in his marriage
with Khadija, he chose to have several wives, 9 is reported. Some of these wives
were ways of knotting closer relations with powerful people in the society, and
some were widows without economical support.
The
First Revelation (610)
Muhammad received his first revelation in 610,
on the mountain of Hira outside
Mecca. The
revelation came in a time when Muhammad searched for solitude. Muhammad received
the first fraction of the Holy
Koran from the angel Gabriel, and experienced first great pain, and feared
that he was going to die.
Muhammad was ordered to recite. The first
fraction Muhammad received is believed to be the beginning of
sura 96:
1 Recite in the name of your Lord, who created,
2 created mankind from clots of blood,
3 recite, and your Lord will be the bountiful,
4 he who have taught by the pen,
5 taught mankind what was not known.
After this first revelation, no new came for a
period. Then they came back, and continued for the rest of Muhammad's life. The
revelations changed the style during the 22 years of revelations, from more
poetic in the beginning to more prosaic later, and in the content, it changed
from warnings on what was to come to mankind from God if man didn't turn in
direction of God's will, to regulations on behavior and rules for the society.
These changes came parallel to changes in the position of
Islam in the society. In
the beginning when only a small group of people were
Muslims, the need
for spreading the message was prevailing. Later, from the time when Muhammad
moved to Madina,
and got a leading position in the town, the need for rules for a society was the
more important. The ordering of the elements of the revelation, is not
chronological to their disclosure to Muhammad, and elements from early times are
often arranged together with later elements.
Conversions
and Resistance (610-619)
The first person to be converted to
Islam, was a
woman, Khadija, Muhammad's
wife. What was the first, is disputed, as there are contradicting stories on
this. Khadija was all through the 9-10 years from the first revelation to her
death, a very important support and protection for her husband, especially
economically, but she appears to have had little importance beyond this.
Muhammad also enjoyed the protection of his
uncle and earlier guardian, Abu Talib. But Abu Talib and Khadija both died in
619, and from this time on, Muhammad's position was under strong threat. The
process of converting was slow in the early years, and he was strongly opposed
by other Meccans, who accused him of little respect for the religion of the
forefathers, which had some resemblance with
Islam, but was a
polytheistic religion. Muhammad once added one
ayat where
three former Meccan goddesses, Al-Lat, Al-'Uzza and Manat, were mentioned as
intermediaries, in
sura 53.
19 Have you though of Al-Lat and Al-'Uzza,
20 and Manat, the third of the?
21 These are intermediaries exalted whose intercession is to be hoped for.
22 Such as they do not forget
The
ayats 21-22
are not in our present Koran,
where this text now is found:
21 Is it the male for you, and female for him?
22 That would have been a crooked division!
There are two interpretations of this: Many
Muslim scholars
doubt the sources, yet they do not totally reject that there is something to the
story. Many other, among them Western scholars, believe that the first version
was an attempt, and a successful one, to entice the Meccans to join
Islam.
No matter how one interprets this, all scholars
seem to agree that the difficult conditions of the first few
Muslims are
reflected in this story.
The
Hijira (622)
A large part of Muhammad's followers had to seek
refuge in Abyssinia in 615, due to the resistance among the Meccans to the
message of Muhammad. This resistance continued, and was so fierce, that Muhammad
had to escape in 622, and arrived in Yathrib, 300 km north of
Mecca, on
September 20 (=6. Rabicu l-'awwal), we have no account telling which day
Muhammad and his flock escaped
Mecca itself.
About 15 years later this year was fixed as the first year of
Muslim era.
Muhammad is believed to have been invited to
Yathrib, as a "hakim", a judge, and here he could establish the first
Muslim community,
and Muhammad served as the head of the leaders of the other communities of
Yathrib. Soon after, Yathrib started to be called madinatu r-rasûl, 'the city of
the messenger'.
Madina
and the Rise to Power (622-630)
Many of the inhabitants of Yathrib converted to
Islam, but among the large
Jewish community that lived
here, only few converted. A large part of the converts are called hypocrites, by
the first Muslim
sources. After only two years, Muhammad's relationship with them had begun to
deteriorate, and the remaining
Jewish believers were later expelled for co-operating with Muhammad's
enemies.
Muhammad enforced his position in the region,
and in particular in Yathrib, through successful military campaigns, like the
one at Badr in 624, and the defense battles in Uhud (where the
Muslims faced a
slight defeat) in 625 and Ditsh in 627. Neighboring tribes started to enter into
agreements with Muhammad, and in 628, after Muhammad tried to perform the
pilgrimage, Hajj he
concluded a treaty with the Meccans, that allowed the
Muslims to enter
Mecca the
following year for performing. In 630 Muhammad managed to take control over
Mecca without
any resistance. A general amnesty was granted to all Qurayshis, Muhammad's
former enemies, even if they did not convert to
Islam.
Ruler
of Hijaz and the Muslims (630-632)
This increased Muhammad's importance even more,
and in 632 he was able to perform the
hajj. Soon after his return
to Madina,
he died in the presence of his favorite wife, 'A'isha (Ayse) and her father Abu
Bakr, and Muhammad was buried in his own house, which had already served as a
mosque for some years.
The mosque still lies
there, and is counted as the second most important mosque in
Islam, and
Madina the
second most holy city.
Muhammad is equally considered a manifestation
of God in Baha'i and Babism, two religions that has grown out of
Islam. Both of these
religions revere Muhammad highly, but has their focus on the later revelations
of Bab and Baha'ullah, both of the 19th century.
Mohammed's Ascension
In the year 621, at the age of 51 years old, He
flew on the magical Winged-Horse of Fire which he called Burak, which literally
means White Horse but seen as "Thunder-Lightning". The full version of this most
memorable moment has been preserved in "The Bokhari" (Vol.15, p.3615) one of the
Holy Islamic Scriptures. The beauty of the
Muslim Scriptures
resides in the fact that they still remain in the language in which they have
originally written.
The story of the Ascension of Mohammed, known as
"Miraj", or "Stairway to Heaven" began when Mohammed fell asleep on a
carpet at his cousin's
place and became the inspirational source of different "Stories of the 1001
Nights of Arabia" involving "Magic Carpet Rides". The following is a resume of
this fabulous dream....
"Mohammad had gone to rest at dusk. He slept
deeply on the carpet of
his cousin, Mutem ibn Adi. Suddenly, the silence was broken and a voice as clear
as a trumpet called :
"Awake, thou sleeper, awake!" And Mohammed saw
in front of him, dazzling in darkness the shining Archangel Gabriel who was
inviting him to follow him outside. Before the door stood a Horse as dazzling as
Gabriel. It had wings, glittering wings of an immense eagle. Gabriel presented
the Horse to Mohammed, saying that it was "Burak" the Horse of Abraham. Burak
whinnied and allowed Mohammed to vault on its back.
Then, drinking the wind, it galloped to the
street and as it came to the walls of the sleeping city, it spread its wings and
soared into the starry night.
First of all, they went to the summit of Mount
Sinai, at the very place where Jehovah had given the stone tables to Moses. Then,
they flew on and went to Bethlehem at the exact place where Jesus was born. And
finally, depending on the different versions, they went to Heaven, or into a
Holy Temple in Heaven, where Mohammed met with many of the Holy Land's previous
Horsemen... Adam, Noah, Enoch (apparently, known by them as Idris), Moses, Isaac,
Elijah, Jesus and a few others!! (A most interesting case of Transfiguration).
And these guys spoke and told him : " We salute
you, you the first and the last, O Gatherer of men." ...and Gabriel added : " We
salute you, O you the first, because you will be the first person who, on
Resurrection Day, will come out of his grave ; and the last, because you are the
Seal and the last prophet. You are a gatherer of men in the
meaning that it belongs to you gather everyone for the resurrection and as such
the whole community will resurrect."
So, this is basically, the dream...Some parts
were taken from "The Messenger, the Life of Mohammed" by R.V.C. Bodley,
Greenwood press, N.Y., 1946 while the last paragraph comes from "Apocalypses et
Voyages dans L'Au-Delà" by Angelo Piemontese.
Anyway, Mohammed was a very intelligent guy who
loved discussing about dreams and interpreting them and became very frustrated
about the Christian
Church's strange attitude in regards to dreams and was able to condense his
whole knowledge in only a few lines.....
" Now
Allah has
created the dream not only as a means of guidance and instruction, I refer to
the true dream, but he has made it as a window on the World of the Unseen."...which
is basically the repetition of Job 33,15 plus a few details.
" He who does not believe in the True Dream does
not believe in
Allah and in the Day of Reckoning." ....which is basically Numbers 12,6.
"There are above you Watchers." Noble
Koran 82:10
"Glory be to Him, who carried his Servant by
Night from the sacred temple of
Mecca to the
Temple that is more remote, whose precinct we have blessed, that we might show
him of our signs, for He is the Hearer and the Seer" (Qur'an
17,1)
This is very interesting, because he clearly
states here that all the Glory goes to Him, the Winged-Horse, who carried his
Servant, and truly that is the case the Rider must serve the Horse which is
truly the Hearer and the Seer, which is
Allah, the
Creator. And finally in the stories concerning his return, his future
resurrection which should occur at a time will be a real wasteland, he will be
told as he will come out of his grave.
" It is the Day of Rising, and the Day of
Anguish and Repentance.
This is the Day of Burak!
This is the of Reckoning and Recompense.
This is the Day of Parting ;
This is the Day of Encounter! "
So, the Day of Rising is the Day of the Winged-Horse,
which no one will ride except the Prophet.
" You will see every nation hobbling on their
knees, every nation being summoned to its (own) book - today you shall be
recompensed for what you were doing!" (Qur'an
45,28)
Actually, Mohammed could have resumed his few
lines in only one, something like this..
" He who does not believe in the true dream of
the Winged-Horse, does not believe in the Holy Spirit of God, does not believe
in God, nor in any of his Horsemen, whether Buddha, Mohammed, Moses, Jesus and
all others, nor in the Day of Resurrection and Recognition, nor in the existence
of the everlasting spiritual Kingdom of God, and will be left alone."
Anyway, if you get an opportunity to see the
beautiful and most famous painting of the Ascension of Mohammed on the Horse of
Fire from the manuscript "Khamset al-Nizami", British Museum Orient Ms.# 2265,
you will note that Mohammed is shown faceless and along with the following words....
" Glory be to Him who carried his Servant by
Night from the sacred temple of
Mecca to the
Temple that is more remote, whose precinct we have blessed, that we might show
him of our signs, for He is the Hearer and the Seer" (Qur'an
17,1)
....which shows that it fits to all the Riders
of the Divine Winged-Horse go along with the
Surah 70, 1 -
4
"The Ascending Stairways, revealed at
Mecca, in the
name of Allah,
the Beneficent , the Merciful."
1. A questioner questioned about the doom to fall
2. Upon the disbelievers, which none can repel,
3. From Allah
the Lord of the Ascending Stairways
4. The Angel and the Spirit ascend unto Him in a Day whereof the span is fifty
thousand years.
There is also something about the Return of
Mohammed as the Imam Mahdi, and in regards to the Resurrection of Mohammed it is
written that when Mohammed, (who flew a magical Winged-Horse in a dream in the
year 621 of this era), will come again, that
Allah will
revive the Winged-Horse and that this Flying Horse, along with 4 or 5 Archangels,
will be charged of finding him on Earth which will be like a Waste-Land and they
will not know where he will be.
So, they say that the Light of the Resurrected
Mohammed, peace be upon him, will appear like a shaft from his grave to the "Clouds
of the Sky!"
Then it will call out...
"O Pleasing Soul! Stand up for rendering the
Decree and the Reckoning and the Presentation before the Merciful!"
So, the grave will spit open and Gabriel will
give him a Robe of Honor (Spiritual Ghost Body) and give him "Burak", the Winged-Horse,
and will say...
"This is the Day of Rising, the Day of
Resurrection, the Day of Encounter, the Day of Burak, the Day of the Winged-Horse"!!!
And so, Burak, the Winged-Horse, who has 2 wings
and flies between Heaven and Earth at speed of lightning will be very agitated
and will say...
"No one rides me except the Prophet and
Possessor of the Koran"
... to the new Incarnation of Mohammed who will
reply...
"Now my heart is pleased and I am happy."
And the story says that he will be given a crown
and will ride Burak and will go to Heaven, and that a cry will be heard...
"Raise your head, Rider of the Winged-Horse, as
it is the Day of Reckoning and of Recompense. Raise your head and ask, and it
will be given!"
"Your Lord shall give you, and you will be
satisfied." (Koran 93,5)
However, this Winged-Horse, which manifests in
dreams, is not confined to
Islam only as it very well known by all faiths, religions and mythologies of
all major civilizations; and Mohammed was very well aware that many flew on this
Magical Horse in dreams:
-
Bellerophon,
a kind of weird heroic personage of Greco-Roman Mythology who flew on the
Winged-Horse in a dream and subsequently killed the
Chimaera.
Apparently, question of apparitions,
Athena appeared
to
Bellerophon in a dream and gave him a gold bridle thanks to which he was
able to tame the Horse
Pegasus,
which he rode to victory against the forces of darkness.
- Marduk, one of the guys of Babylonian
Mythology. The references come from "The Origins and History of Consciousness"
by Neumann from the top of p.165 to 167...
"But the son (Marduk) has dreamt that his Father
appeared to him, like "a man having a Sun for his head", and in the dream he
rode the Sun Steed of his Future that his Father gave him. Already this horse
named "Herzorn", which "has the wind in his belly" and "snuffs the Sun", stands
in the stable and gladdens the boy's heart". It is stated here that " the whole
conflict sways round the existence and non-existence of this Horse". They say,
on p.167, that Marduk began to understand...
"Perhaps the life we live is also the life of
the Gods"
But his physical mother which represents the
establishment of the old age who don't want to believe in the existence of the
Magical Horse and then comes the Dead Day when his mother tells him that he
is...
"Just a little boy born of the night, a new born
thing without light or consciousness."
And in despair he says: "But nobody can be
anybody else; nobody else can be what I am - nobody but me"
But he was brought up being told that he could
not: "live by the bread that is baked in dreams."
And he replies: " You bed-wetter, my father's
dreams would have shown me my heritage, without my father's example. The body
does not help it must cleave to the Spirit."
So, Burak, these old, yet very important
testimonies clearly indicate that this Winged-Horse manifest itself in dreams,
to a unique individual being, because this Magical Horse would be his own
individual Spirit or Angel.
List of Prophets
In
Islam it's believed that
there were a total of 25 Prophets instructed by
Allah (God)
to warn their community against evil and urge them to follow God. However, only
some have been sent holy books such as the Tawrat, Zabur, Bible and
Qur'an, and these prophets
are considered as Messengers of God.
The first prophet is Adam, and the last one is
Muhammad, thus He's considered as the Seal of the Prophets.
Jesus is the result of a virgin birth in
Islam as in
Christianity, and is
regarded as a prophet (24th one) like the others, and as the Messiah as well.
Five prophets are regarded as especially major: Nuh (Noah), Ibrahim (Abraham),
Musa (Moses), Isa (Jesus), and Muhammad. Here is a complete
list of Prophets:
- Adam
- Idris (Enoch)
- Nuh (Noah)
- Hud (Heber)
- Saleh (Shelah)
- Ibrahim (Abraham)
- Lut (Lot)
- Ismail (Ishmael)
- Ishaq (Isaac)
- Yaqub (Jacob)
- Yusuf (Joseph)
- Shoaib (Jethro)
- Musa (Moses)
- Harun (Aaron)
- Davud (David)
- Suleyman (Solomon)
- Ayub (Job)
- Ilyas (Elias)
- Zulkifl (Ezekiel)
- Al-Yasa (Elisha)
- Yunus (Jonah)
- Zakariya (Zechariah)
- Yahya (John the Baptist)
- Isa (Jesus)
- Muhammad
|