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ISLAM ON BACKGROUND Prof. Waleed el-Ansary University of South Carolina Department of Religious Studies

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Page 1: ISLAM ON BACKGROUND Prof. Waleed el-Ansary University of South Carolina Department of Religious Studies

ISLAM ON BACKGROUND

Prof. Waleed el-AnsaryUniversity of South Carolina

Department of Religious Studies

Page 2: ISLAM ON BACKGROUND Prof. Waleed el-Ansary University of South Carolina Department of Religious Studies

GABRIEL

• Hadith of Gabriel – Link to pdf file

Page 3: ISLAM ON BACKGROUND Prof. Waleed el-Ansary University of South Carolina Department of Religious Studies

3 ASPECTS

Page 4: ISLAM ON BACKGROUND Prof. Waleed el-Ansary University of South Carolina Department of Religious Studies

TAWHID

• Tawhid as doctrine of unity (also sometimes transliterated Tauhid)

Page 5: ISLAM ON BACKGROUND Prof. Waleed el-Ansary University of South Carolina Department of Religious Studies

RELIGIONS

• Aspects of religions & profession of faith– Theistic– Non-Theistic– Atheistic

Page 6: ISLAM ON BACKGROUND Prof. Waleed el-Ansary University of South Carolina Department of Religious Studies

PROPHETS

• Islamic concepts of prophets somewhat broader than in Christianity:

• Rasul or prophet bringing tawhid and sacred law

• Nabi as messenger of news

Page 7: ISLAM ON BACKGROUND Prof. Waleed el-Ansary University of South Carolina Department of Religious Studies

ALLAH

• Islamic Concept of God– Personal divinity (referred to in masculine) – Impersonal divinity (referred to in feminine)

Page 8: ISLAM ON BACKGROUND Prof. Waleed el-Ansary University of South Carolina Department of Religious Studies

MESSAGE[R]

• Islamic as theocentric

• Christianity as logocentric

Page 9: ISLAM ON BACKGROUND Prof. Waleed el-Ansary University of South Carolina Department of Religious Studies

KNOWING GOD

• Problems of knowing God– Divine names versus essence– Formula of transcendence

Page 10: ISLAM ON BACKGROUND Prof. Waleed el-Ansary University of South Carolina Department of Religious Studies

GOD’S WILL

• What does God will?

• Insha’Allah

Page 11: ISLAM ON BACKGROUND Prof. Waleed el-Ansary University of South Carolina Department of Religious Studies

5 PILLARS

• The five pillars of Islam:– 1. Profession of faith (shahadah)– 2. Prayer (shalat)– 3. Fasting (sawm, at Ramadhan)– 4. Alms (zakat)– 5. Pilgrimage (hajj & umroh)

Page 12: ISLAM ON BACKGROUND Prof. Waleed el-Ansary University of South Carolina Department of Religious Studies

I: WITNESS

• Shahadah as profession of faith

• Normally translated along the lines of “[t]here is no God but Allah, and Mohammed is his prophet.”

Page 13: ISLAM ON BACKGROUND Prof. Waleed el-Ansary University of South Carolina Department of Religious Studies

II: PRAYER

• Shalat (prayer), remembering & attachment to God– Morning (midpoint dawn & sunrise)– Noon (midpoint sunrise & sunset)– Afternoon (midpoint noon & sunset)– Sunset– Night

• Astronomical observation as reflection of necessity of fixing prayer times, beginning of Ramadhan, etc.

Page 14: ISLAM ON BACKGROUND Prof. Waleed el-Ansary University of South Carolina Department of Religious Studies

MOSQUE

• Mosque from mesjid meaning place of prostration, as opposed to sanctified place as such

• World as mosque, and nature as a place of worship

Page 15: ISLAM ON BACKGROUND Prof. Waleed el-Ansary University of South Carolina Department of Religious Studies

LANGUAGE

• al Quran (aka Koran) as sacred word• Arabic as direct language of revelation is

sacred• Thus, prayers are supposed to be in

Arabic• Embarassment currently with airport

cases, etc.• Concept of canonical prayer largely lost in

West, still alive in Islamic world

Page 16: ISLAM ON BACKGROUND Prof. Waleed el-Ansary University of South Carolina Department of Religious Studies

III: FASTING

• Fasting (sawm) normally but not exclusively during Ramadhan is intended as third pillar and to separate one from one’s body

Page 17: ISLAM ON BACKGROUND Prof. Waleed el-Ansary University of South Carolina Department of Religious Studies

IV: ALMS

• Alms (zakat as tax) to achieve detachment from goods

• Perhaps 2.5% wealth tax as tradition, but modern variation

Page 18: ISLAM ON BACKGROUND Prof. Waleed el-Ansary University of South Carolina Department of Religious Studies

V: HAJJ

• Pilgrimage or hajj to Mecca as Abrahamic exercise, so pre-islamic practice reconstituted

• Umroh or minor pilgrimage (often times thought desireable, but not required as pillar)

Page 19: ISLAM ON BACKGROUND Prof. Waleed el-Ansary University of South Carolina Department of Religious Studies

SUNNI & SHIA

• Sunni versus Shiite thought• Most striking differences on political side in

ruler’s qualifications– Sunni-> caliph as prophet’s representative

consults with religious scholars, but need not be a technical expert on religion himself

– Shia->imam as religious expert necessary to be political leader, and so religious expert dimension makes popular selection problematic

Page 20: ISLAM ON BACKGROUND Prof. Waleed el-Ansary University of South Carolina Department of Religious Studies

JIHAD

• Typical jihad as Holy War translation & concept wrong• Correct interpretation is rather inner battle against

passions (actual battle or fighting is different concept)• Hierarchy of Jihad

– Inner battle– Moral applications– Actual battle ( justified under Islamic thought if

• (1) Islamic borderlands threatened,• (2) Moslems being slaughtered, or • (3) fighting & threates within the Islamic world (Napoleon earlier,

later colonialism)

Page 21: ISLAM ON BACKGROUND Prof. Waleed el-Ansary University of South Carolina Department of Religious Studies

ISLAMIC WORLD

• What is the Islamic world?

• Spread of Islam requires distinguishing between Islam’s political versus religious expansion (debate within Islamic law over political expansion)

• Arabian zone, Persian zone, Turkic zone, South Asia & Malay & Indonesian zones

Page 22: ISLAM ON BACKGROUND Prof. Waleed el-Ansary University of South Carolina Department of Religious Studies

ANTI ELEMENTS

• Much of what is called jihad is simply opposition to western influences within the Islamic world

• But distinguish jihad (struggle) vs heraba (impermissible terrorism)

• In Islamic law, much of what is referred to in the West as Islamic terrorism is actually extremism as arbitrary interpretations leading to deviation judged as heraba

Page 23: ISLAM ON BACKGROUND Prof. Waleed el-Ansary University of South Carolina Department of Religious Studies

ISLAMIC LAW

• Spectrum really, interpreted locally in terms of Quran & haddiths, concept of fiqh as Islamic jurisprudence

• Some elements very specific (e.g., just war doctrine)

• Some matters more interpretation locally (e.g., veiling or hijab, not literally required under Quran or traditional practice, not to mention cultural influences like burkas as full body cover except eye slit, etc.)

Page 24: ISLAM ON BACKGROUND Prof. Waleed el-Ansary University of South Carolina Department of Religious Studies

GOD & CAESAR

• Religion and the State different concepts in part as result of differing Sunni and Shia political philosophies re ruler’s qualifications– Sunni-> caliph as prophet’s representative

consults with religious scholars, but need not be a technical expert on religion himself

– Shia->imam as religious expert necessary to be political leader, and so religious expert dimension makes popular selection problematic

Page 25: ISLAM ON BACKGROUND Prof. Waleed el-Ansary University of South Carolina Department of Religious Studies

SHARIAH

• Islamic law as embodiment of divine will, but issues then of secular law in Islamic countries, who controls law (government vs clergy), and many more complication visible later in the course