INFORMATION SHEET ON ISLAM |
| |
|
Notes prepared for the Press in
1990 at the time of the Gulf War. |
 |
| |
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
1) Whats the correct name for this religion?
|
| |
ISLAM - its an Arabic word which means
PEACE (SALAM), like the Hebrew word SHALOM: literally it means - MAKING PEACE
by submitting to the will of God which is the source of PEACE.
MUSLIM - another Arabic word which means the person who
submits to God in order to have peace; MUSLIMA if youre a woman.
So ISLAM is the name of the religion: MUSLIM/MUSLIMA is
the name of the follower of the religion. Muslims
dont like their religions to be called MUHAMMEDANISM as often happens in
the west. It suggests that they worship Muhammad (which they dont) rather
than God (which they do).
|
| |
|
2) Where and when did Islam begin? |
| |
It began historically in
ARABIA (modern Saudi Arabia), in the towns of MECCA and MEDINA (near the west
coast inland from the Red Sea). This was where MUHAMMAD
lived (570-632 CE) and where he preached his message of Islam which he - and
all Muslims - believed was revealed by God. Muslims believe that Muhammad was
the last and the greatest PROPHET of God. The revelation
is recorded in the QURAN, the Holy Scripture of Muslims. Its
another Arabic word which means Recital: Muslims believe that it
was composed by God and recited by Muhammad. Arabic
is the language of Arabia. So the Quran was recited in Arabic, and
because Muslims believe that it contains Gods words, they regard Arabic
as their sacred language. |
| |
|
3) Are all Muslims Arabs? |
| |
Definitely not!
There are about 1 billion Muslims in the world, making
Islam the second largest of the world religions. There are about 150 million
Arabs, and not all of them are Muslims. So while Islam began among the Arabs,
the Arabs are a minority among Muslims who include peoples from many other
parts of the world. |
| |
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
4) When did Islam spread to so many parts of the world?
|
| |
It began soon after Muhammad died in 632 CE (7th
century). 7th century: Other parts of the MIDDLE EAST, NORTH
AFRICA, PERSIA; AFGHANISTAN 8th century: SPAIN (until 1492);
CENTRAL ASIA 10th-13th : TURKEY; AFRICA (south of the
Sahara);INDIA including modern PAKISTAN and BANGLADESH; MALAYSIA and
INDONESIA 14th-16th : CHINA; PHILIPPINES; EASTERN
EUROPE 20th century: WESTERN EUROPE and NORTH AMERICA
|
| |
Today Muslims are found in most parts of the
world; they belong to many different races and nationalities; they sneak many
different languages. Most generalizations about who Muslims are, what they
think, what they do are likely to be wrong! |
| |
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
5) What do Muslims believe? |
| |
The Quran tells Muslims that they must believe in 5
things: i) ALLAH - the Arabic word for God, meaning simply the one
to be worshiped and obeyed (like ELOHIM in Hebrew); the Quran gives
many Names of God, the most common being MERCIFUL and MERCY-GIVING;
ii) ANGELS - Gods servants in heaven; GABRIEL is the Angel of Revelation
who, Muslims believe, recited the Quran to Muhammad; iii)
SCRIPTURES - the QURAN, but also scriptures which were revealed before
it, especially the TORAH and the GOSPEL; iv) PR0PHETS - MUHAMMAD THE
SEAL OF THE PROPHETS but also the prophets who came before him,
especially ABRAHAM, MOSES, and JESUS; v) AFTERLIFE - Paradise (the Garden)
and Hell (the Fire) where human beings will go after the LAST DAY of JUDGEMENT.
|
| |
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
6) How do Muslims worship God? |
| |
The Quran sets out the basic duties of worship, and
Muhammad shows Muslims how to put them into practice. Accordingly Islamic
worship divides into 2 parts: |
| |
A) The Pillars |
| |
|
i) TESTIMONY I bear witness that there is no God
but God (ALLAH); I bear witness that Muhammad is the Messenger/Prophet of
God. ii) PRAYER - 5 times a day iii) CHARITY - giving alms (2.5%
of your wealth) iv) FASTING - during the month of RAMADAN v)
PILGRIMAGE - in MECCA in the month of Pilgrimage |
| |
B) The Law
(SHARIAH) |
| |
|
A system of laws, based on the Quran and Muhammads
example, but extended by legal reasoning to cover all aspects of individual and
social life. For example: it tells Muslims how to put the pillars of
worship into practice, how to organize their family life (marriage, divorce,
upbringing of children, inheritance), relations between the sexes, how to eat
(dietary laws), how to deal with money and commercial affairs, how to organize
political life. The fundamental principle of the Law is JUSTICE. On
this principle the Law instructs Muslims about what is PERMITTED (HALLAL) and
what is PROHIBITED (HARAM). |
| |
On the basis of these two aspects of worship,
Muslims believe that Islam is a total way of life, not just a set of religious
doctrines and rituals for one day of the week (N.B.: Friday is the
Muslim equivalent to the Jewish Sabbath, or the Christian Sunday).
|
| |
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
7) Whats the difference between SUNNI
and SHII Muslims? |
| |
SUNNIS (often in English Sunnites) make up
about 90% of the world Muslim community. They believe all that has been set out
above, and try to put it into practice through the principle of CONSENSUS -
i.e., Muslims should try find agreement among themselves about matters
of religion, by studying the Quran together and following the example of
the Prophet Muhammad. SHIIs (often in English Shiites) - a
relatively small minority of Muslims, mainly living in Iran and Lebanon, also
believe in everything weve said so far. But they also believe one thing
which Sunnis do not: they believe that Muhammad appointed his close relative, a
man called ALI, to be the spiritual leader of the Muslim community after his
death in 632 CE. Shiis call Ali and his descendants their IMAMs, and
believe that they continue to have a religious authority which is greater than
the consensus of ordinary believers. The AYATOLLAHs in Shii Iran are
believed to be representatives of the Imam. This is a very important
difference within Islam, somewhat like the difference between Protestants and
Catholics in Christianity. |
| |
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
8) What is JIHAD all about? |
| |
Its another Arabic word, meaning
STRIVING. Islam teaches Muslims that they must strive or work
hard to make their religion real in their lives and in their societies. This
should be done by JIHAD on 4 levels: |
| |
|
JIHAD of the TONGUE: speaking about their
faith; JIHAD of the HAND: putting their faith into action by good
works; JIHAD of the HEART: making their faith real as a spiritual force in
their lives; JIHAD of the SWORD: defending their faith when they fear it to
be under attack. |
| |
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
9) Why is Islam a religion of violence? |
| |
It isnt! This is one
of the generalizations which we should be careful of avoid.
There are some Muslims today - a small minority - who
want to use the JIHAD of the SWORD as a means of Islamic revolution against
what they see as the evils of the modern world, especially western materialism
and secularism which they relate to western political and economic power.
Iran mounted such a revolution in the late 1970s against
the former Shah who many regarded as a puppet of the U.S. Revolutionary Islam
has won many followers in other parts of the Middle East where Arabs find
themselves in political conflict with the west, particularly in Israel.
This creates many problems - hostages, terrorism, -etc.
But it is still incorrect to say that all Muslims are
terrorists, or to think that all Muslims are revolutionaries who are ready to
give religious justification for violence. |
| |
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
10) How man Muslims are there in the United States?
|
| |
About 5 million (in the
1990s). Most Muslims in the US have come here by
immigration since the 1950s. They have settled here, most have taken US
citizenship, and their children are born in this country. Most1y they
are professional people (doctors, lawyers, business-people) and they want to
live in this-country like any other religious community.
About one third of the Muslims in the U.S. are African-Americans, people who
have converted to Islam partly in search of their roots (Islam is one of the
main religions in West Africa), partly because Christianity has for so long
been identified with white people. |
| |
|
|
|
|
|
|
| |
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
Notes for the press prepared by: Dr. David A. Kerr,
Director Duncan Black Macdonald Center for the Study of Islam and
Christian-Muslim Relations, Hartford Seminary, 77 Sherman Street, Hartford, CT
06105 9/27/90 |
| |
|
|
|
|
|
|
| |
|
|
|
|
|
|