Islam is the gift from Allah for Muhammad(P.B.U.H) - Easy Islam

Friday, December 09, 2005

Islam: The Next American Religion?

Islam: The Next American Religion?

The U.S. began as a haven for Christian outcasts. But what religion fits our current zeitgeist? The answer may be Islam.

by Michael Wolfe

Americans tend to think of their country as, at the very least, a nominally Christian nation. Didn't the Pilgrims come here for freedom to practice their Christian religion? Don't Christian values of righteousness under God, and freedom, reinforce America's democratic, capitalist ideals?

True enough. But there's a new religion on the block now, one that fits the current zeitgeist nicely. It's Islam.

Islam is the third-largest and fastest growing religious community in the United States. This is not just because of immigration. More than 50% of America's six million Muslims were born here. Statistics like these imply some basic agreement between core American values and the beliefs that Muslims hold. Americans who make the effort to look beyond popular stereotypes to learn the truth of Islam are surprised to find themselves on familiar ground.

Is America a Muslim nation? Here are seven reasons the answer may be yes.

Islam is monotheistic.

Muslims worship the same God as Jews and Christians. They also revere the same prophets as Judaism and Christianity, from Abraham, the first monotheist, to Moses, the law giver and messenger of God, to Jesus – not leaving out Noah, Job, or Isaiah along the way. The concept of a Judeo-Christian tradition only came to the fore in the 1940s in America. Now, as a nation, we may be transcending it, turning to a more inclusive "Abrahamic" view.

In January, President Bush grouped mosques with churches and synagogues in his inaugural address. A few days later, when he posed for photographers at a meeting of several dozen religious figures, the Shi'ite imam Muhammad Qazwini, of Orange County, Calif., stood directly behind Bush's chair like a presiding angel, dressed in the robes and turban of his south Iraqi youth.

Islam is democratic in spirit.

Islam advocates the right to vote and educate yourself and pursue a profession. The Qur'an, on which Islamic law is based, enjoins Muslims to govern themselves by discussion and consensus. In mosques, there is no particular priestly hierarchy. With Islam, each individual is responsible for the condition of her or his own soul. Everyone stands equal before God.

Americans, who mostly associate Islamic government with a handful of tyrants, may find this independent spirit surprising, supposing that Muslims are somehow predisposed to passive submission. Nothing could be further from the truth. The dictators reigning today in the Middle East are not the result of Islamic principles. They are more a result of global economics and the aftermath of European colonialism. Meanwhile, like everyone else, average Muslims the world over want a larger say in what goes on in the countries where they live. Those in America may actually succeed in it. In this way, America is closer in spirit to Islam than many Arab countries.

Islam contains an attractive mystical tradition.

Mysticism is grounded in the individual search for God. Where better to do that than in America, land of individualists and spiritual seekers? And who might better benefit than Americans from the centuries-long tradition of teachers and students that characterize Islam. Surprising as it may seem, America's best-selling poet du jour is a Muslim mystic named Rumi, the 800-year-old Persian bard and founder of the Mevlevi Path, known in the West as the Whirling Dervishes. Even book packagers are now rushing him into print to meet and profit from mainstream demand for this visionary. Translators as various as Robert Bly, Coleman Barks, and Kabir and Camille Helminski have produced dozens of books of Rumi's verse and have only begun to bring his enormous output before the English-speaking world. This is a concrete poetry of ecstasy, where physical reality and the longing for God are joined by flashes of metaphor and insight that continue to speak across the centuries.

Islam is egalitarian.

From New York to California, the only houses of worship that are routinely integrated today are the approximately 4,000 Muslim mosques. That is because Islam is predicated on a level playing field, especially when it comes to standing before God. The Pledge of Allegiance (one nation, "under God") and Lincoln's Gettysburg Address (all people are "created equal") express themes that are also basic to Islam.

Islam is often viewed as an aggressive faith because of the concept of jihad, but this is actually a misunderstood term. Because Muslims believe that God wants a just world, they tend to be activists, and they emphasize that people are equal before God. These are two reasons why African Americans have been drawn in such large numbers to Islam. They now comprise about one-third of all Muslims in America.

Meanwhile, this egalitarian streak also plays itself out in relations between the sexes. Muhammad (P.B.U.H), Islam's prophet, actually was a reformer in his day. Following the Qur'an, he limited the number of wives a man could have and strongly recommended against polygamy. The Qur'an laid out a set of marriage laws that guarantees married women their family names, their own possessions and capital, the right to agree upon whom they will marry, and the right to initiate divorce. In Islam's early period, women were professionals and property owners, as increasingly they are today. None of this may seem obvious to most Americans because of cultural overlays that at times make Islam appear to be a repressive faith toward women – but if you look more closely, you can see the egalitarian streak preserved in the Qur'an finding expression in contemporary terms. In today's Iran, for example, more women than men attend university, and in recent local elections there, 5,000 women ran for public office.

Islam shares America's new interest in food purity and diet.

Muslims conduct a monthlong fast during the holy month of Ramadan, a practice that many Americans admire and even seek to emulate. I happened to spend quite a bit of time with a non-Muslim friend during Ramadan this year. After a month of being exposed to a practice that brings some annual control to human consumption, my friend let me know, in January, that he was "doing a little Ramadan" of his own. I asked what he meant. "Well, I'm not drinking anything or smoking anything for at least a month, and I'm going off coffee." Given this friend's normal intake of coffee, I could not believe my ears.

Muslims also observe dietary laws that restrict the kind of meat they can eat. These laws require that the permitted, or halal, meat is prepared in a manner that emphasizes cleanliness and a humane treatment of animals. These laws ride on the same trends that have made organic foods so popular.

Islam is tolerant of other faiths.

Like America, Islam has a history of respecting other religions. In Muhammad's (P.B.U.H) day, Christians, Sabeans, and Jews in Muslim lands retained their own courts and enjoyed considerable autonomy. As Islam spread east toward India and China, it came to view Zoroastrianism, Hinduism, and Buddhism as valid paths to salvation. As Islam spread north and west, Judaism especially benefited. The return of the Jews to Jerusalem, after centuries as outcasts, only came about after Muslims took the city in 638. The first thing the Muslims did there was to rescue the Temple Mount, which by then had been turned into a garbage heap.

Today, of course, the long discord between Israel and Palestine has acquired harsh religious overtones. Yet the fact remains that this is a battle for real estate, not a war between two faiths. Islam and Judaism revere the same prophetic lineage, back to Abraham, and no amount of bullets or barbed wire can change that. As The New York Times recently reported, while Muslim/Jewish tensions sometimes flare on university campuses, lately these same students have found ways to forge common links. For one thing, the two religions share similar dietary laws, including ritual slaughter and a prohibition on pork. Joining forces at Dartmouth this fall, the first kosher/halal dining hall is scheduled to open its doors this autumn. That isn't all: They're already planning a joint Thanksgiving dinner, with birds dressed at a nearby farm by a rabbi and an imam. If the American Pilgrims were watching now, they'd be rubbing their eyes with amazement. And, because they came here fleeing religious persecution, they might also understand.

Islam encourages the pursuit of religious freedom.

The Pilgrims landing at Plymouth Rock is not the world's first story of religious emigration. Muhammad and his little band of 100 followers fled religious persecution, too, from Mecca in the year 622. They only survived by going to Madinah, an oasis a few hundred miles north, where they established a new community based on a religion they could only practice secretly back home. No wonder then that, in our own day, many Muslims have come here as pilgrims from oppression, leaving places like Kashmir, Bosnia, and Kosovo, where being a Muslim may radically shorten your life span. When the 20th century's list of emigrant exiles is added up, it will prove to be heavy with Muslims, that's for sure.

All in all, there seems to be a deep resonance between Islam and the United States. Although one is a world religion and the other is a sovereign nation, both are traditionally very strong on individual responsibility. Like New Hampshire's motto, "Live Free or Die," America is wedded to individual liberty and an ethic based on right action. For a Muslim, spiritual salvation depends on these. This is best expressed in a popular saying: Even when you think God isn't watching you, act as if he is.

Who knows? Perhaps it won't be long now before words like salat (Muslim prayer) and Ramadan join karma and Nirvana in Webster's Dictionary, and Muslims take their place in America's mainstream.

Michael Abdul Majeed Wolfe is the author of books of poetry, fiction, travel, and history. His most recent works are a pair of books from Grove Press on the pilgrimage to Mecca: "The Hajj" (1993), a first-person travel account, and "One Thousand Roads to Mecca" (1997), an anthology of 10 centuries of travelers writing about the Muslim pilgrimage. In April 1997, he hosted a televised account of the Hajj from Mecca for Ted Koppel's "Nightline" on ABC. He is currently at work on a four-hour television documentary on the life and times of the Prophet Muhammad (P.B.U.H.).

Extracted 12/09/2005 from http://www.beliefnet.com/story/69/story_6982.html

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Thursday, December 08, 2005

Bible Facts from the Encyclopedia

Bible


[Gr.,=the books], term used since the 4th
cent. to denote the Christian Scriptures and later, by extension, those
of various religious traditions. This article discusses the nature of
religious scripture generally and the Christian Scriptures specifically,
as well as the history of the translation of the Bible into English. For
the composition and the canon of the Hebrew and Christian Bible.



The Nature of Scripture


The sacred writings of the religions of the
world exhibit a variety of genres?prayers, visions, ritual, moral codes,
myths, historical narratives, legends, and revelatory discourses. Such works
have tended to be transmitted orally at first and committed to writing at
a later date. This is true of much of the content of the Christian Bible
as well as of the Hindu Vedas and the Jewish Mishnah.


The sacred character of such writings is
accorded them by communities that have come to value the traditions they
embody. Scripture is also perceived in some sense as heavenly in origin?the
Qur'an and the Book of Mormon are good examples of this. Religious communities
value highly those who interpret their scriptures at both the scholarly
and popular levels. Translation of scripture into the vernacular, though
resisted in some religious traditions, is a common phenomenon. However,
the original Arabic of the Qur'an is regarded as the actual words of God,
and therefore as sacrosanct, and is printed alongside its translation. Translations
can assume the status of inspired text, as did the Greek translation of
the Jewish Scriptures (the Septuagint) in Hellenistic Jewish
and Christian communities. The process of canonizing scripture has been
an extended one in many religious traditions, e.g., the Jewish, Christian,
and Buddhist faiths. Other traditions authorized their respective bodies
of scripture early, e.g., the Sikhs, Muslims, and Manichaeans. Inspiration
is an adjunct of the idea of the divine authority of scripture.


The role of scripture in the life of the
community involves its public recitation or reading at worship, its veneration
as a cult object, and its citation in public prayer and in prescribing appropriate
rituals. In the private devotional life of the faithful, scripture is the
focus of meditation. The use of scripture to function as a charm to ward
off evil or to induce healing is also common. Scripture is also the inspiration
for cultural expression in art, music, and literature.


The Bible as Christian Scripture


The traditional Christian view of the Bible
is that it was written under the guidance of God and that it therefore conveys
truth, either literally or figuratively. In recent times the view of many
Christians has been influenced by the pronouncements of critics; this has
produced a counteraction in the form of fundamentalism,
whose chief emphasis has been on the literal inerrancy of the Bible. The
interpretation of the Bible is one of the traditional points of difference
between Protestants, who believe that the Scriptures speak for themselves,
and Roman Catholics, who hold that the church has ultimate authority in
the interpretation of the Scriptures.


English Translations of the Christian Bible


John Wyclif was one of the
first to project the publication and distribution of the Bible in the vernacular
among the English people, and two translations go by his name. In the 15th
cent. the Lollards did much to extend the use of the Wyclifite translation.
The next name in the history of the English Bible is that of William Tyndale,
whose translation was not from the Latin Vulgate, like Wyclif's, but from
the Hebrew and Greek. Its quality is attested by its use as a basis of the
Authorized Version. Tyndale's New Testament (1525?26) was the first English
translation to be printed. Contemporary with Tyndale was Miles Coverdale.
The second version of Coverdale and the translation of Thomas Matthew closely
followed Tyndale. In 1539 the English crown issued its first official version,
in the name of Henry VIII. This, the Great Bible, was done principally by
Coverdale. The Geneva Bible, or Breeches Bible, was a revision of the Great
Bible, financed and annotated by the Calvinists of Geneva. The Bishops'
Bible (1568) was a recasting of Tyndale.


The greatest of all English translations
was the Authorized Version (AV), or King James Version (KJV), of 1611, made
by a committee of churchmen led by Lancelot Andrewes and
composed of many of the finest scholars in England. The beautiful English
of this version has had great influence and is generally ranked in English
literature with the work of Shakespeare. The phraseology of much of it is
that of Tyndale. The Douay, or Rheims-Douay, Version was published by Roman
Catholic scholars at Reims (New Testament, 1582) and Douai, France (Old
Testament, 1610); it was extensively revised by Richard Challoner.
In the 19th cent. the project of revising the Authorized Version from the
original tongues was undertaken by the Church of England with the cooperation
of nonconformist churches. The results of this revision were the English
Revised Version and the American Revised Version (pub. 1880?90).


Many scholars, either cooperatively or independently,
have translated the Bible into English. In other literatures, also, the
translation of the Bible has had a formative effect on the literary language,
notably in the case of Martin Luther's German translation. Occasionally
translation of the Bible has been the first or the only notable work in
a language, e.g., the translation by Ulfilas into Gothic.


In the 20th cent., American biblical scholars
combined to produce the Revised Standard Version (RSV), published in 1952
and immediately adopted by many churches. A completely new translation,
the work of a joint committee of representatives of all Protestant denominations
in Great Britain, aided by Roman Catholic consultants, was begun in 1946.
The New Testament was first published in 1961, and the entire Bible, called
The New English Bible, appeared in 1970. New Roman Catholic translations
were also undertaken, the Westminster Version in England, and a complete
revision of the Rheims-Douay edition sponsored by the Confraternity of
Christian Doctrine in the United States. The latter, after undergoing
several major revisions and retranslations, was finally published as the
New American Bible (1970). In addition, an English translation of the
French Catholic Bible de Jerusalem (1961) appeared as the Jerusalem Bible
(1966). A revision of the RSV was published in 1989 as the New Revised
Standard Version.


Bibliography



See The Cambridge History of the Bible
(3 vol., 1963?70); F. F. Bruce and E. G. Rupp, ed., Holy Scripture
and Holy Tradition
(1968); F. M. Denny and R. L. Taylor, The Holy
Bible in Comparative Perspective
(1985); H. M. Orlinsky and R. M.
Bratcher, A History of Bible Translation and the North American Contribution
(1991); J. Miles, God: A Biography (1995); J. L. Kugel, The
Bible as It Was
(1997); R. E. Friedman, The Hidden Book of the
Bible
(1998); C. Murphy, The Word According to Eve (1998);
D. H. Akensen, Surpassing Wonder: The Invention of the Bible and the
Talmuds
(1999); A. Nicolson, God's Secretaries: The Making of the
King James Bible
(2003).


Ref: http://education.yahoo.com/reference/encyclopedia/entry/Bible


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How to Offer Namaz (Prayer)









How
to Offer Namaz (Prayer)




    It is related by Hadhrat Abu hurairah (R.A.)
    that (once) the Apostle of Allah (Sallallaho alaiho wasallam) was sitting
    to one side in the mosque that a man came in and offered his Namaz (Prayer).
    Afterwards, he came to the holy Prophet (SAW) and paid his respects
    to him. The Holy Prophet (SAW) returned the salutation and remarked:
    "Go and offer the Namaz (Prayer) again. You have not said it properly."
    He went back and said the prayers again and returned to the Holy Prophet
    (SAW), and paid his respects. The Holy Prophet (SAW), returning the
    salutation, once again remarked: "Go and offer the Namaz (Prayer) again.
    You have not said it properly". After offering Namaz (Prayer) for the
    third (and the fourth) time, the man said to the Holy Prophet (SAW):
    "Sir, tell me how to offer Namaz (Prayer)". The Holy Prophet (SAW) replied:
    "When you decide to offer Namaz (Prayer), first perform Wadhu throughly
    and well, then turn to Qibla, then begin the Namaz (Prayer), after uttering
    Takbir-i-Tahrima. After it recite some part of the Holy Qur?aan which
    you know by heart and can recite easily. (In other Traditions relating
    to the same incident it is stated that the Apostle of Allah (SAW) told
    the questioner, specifically, to recite Surah-i-Fateha and whatever
    he liked, in addition to it). Then after the recital, perform Ruku till
    you are still and at ease in Ruku. Then, arise from Ruku till you stand
    erect. Then, perform the Sajadah till you are still and at ease in Sajadah.
    Then arise till you sit up comfortably. (According to another narrator,
    the Holy Prophet (SAW), instead of it, said: "Then arise till you stand
    erect). Then, do like that throughout the Namaz (Prayer) (i.e., in every
    Ruku, Sujud, Qauma and Jalsa in a calm and collected manner)." (Bukhari
    and Muslim)


    The incident mentioned above related to Hadhrat
    Khallad bin Rafay (RA), the brother of the well-known Sahabi, Hadhrat
    Rifa?ah bin Rafay (RA). According to Nassai, he had offered up two Raka?ah
    of Namaz (Prayer) in the Holy Prophet?s (SAW) mosque but some other
    commentators suggest that these Raka?ah were of Tahiyyat-ul-Masjid which
    Hadhrat Khallad (RA), had said rather hurriedly, and upon it, he was
    reproached by the Holy Prophet (SAW) and told to offer them up again.


    It shows that the Holy Prophet (SAW) did
    not plainly tell Hadhrat Khallad bin Rafay (RA), at the first time,
    what was wrong with his Namaz (Prayer) and how it was to be said correctly
    but at the third or fourth time, and, then, at his own request. It was,
    probably, for the simple reason that a lesson imparted in such a manner
    suffices for a lifetime and gets talked about among others as well.


    The paractical teaching imparted in the above
    Tradition is that Namaz (Prayer) should be offered up in a calm and
    composed manner and if it is offered hurriedly and wiithout making the
    necessary pauses and carrying out the various acts properly it be as
    good as unsaid.


    Namaz (Prayer) of Holy Prophet (SAW)


    Hadhrat Ayeshah (RA) narrated that the Apostle
    of Allah (SAW) commenced his Namaz (Prayer) with Takbir and the recital
    with Al-Hamdu-Lilaahi Rabbil ?Alameen, and while performing Ruku he
    neither raised his head upward nor bent it downwards but kept it in
    the middle position (i.e., in line with the waist) and when he from
    Rukuh he did not go into Sajadah till he had stood erect, and when he
    raised the head from Sajadah he did not perform the second Sajadah until
    he had sat upright and he recited At-Tahiyyatu after every two Rak?ah
    and at that time, he flattened the left foot under him and kept the
    right foot in the upright postion and he forbade Uqbatish Shaitan (sitting
    like the Devil), and he, also, forbade that a man sat (in Sajadah) with
    his forearms (i.e., parts of arms between elbow and wrist) placed on
    the ground like the animals, and he brought the Namaz (Prayer) to an
    end by saying Assalmu ?alaikum wa rahmatullah." ----Muslim


    Namaz (Prayer) is a worship of a very high
    order. For it such forms and postures of Qayam, Qaood, Ruku and Sujood
    have been prescribed as constitute the finest marks and expressions
    of adoration and humbleness, and all the unbecoming manners of holding
    the body that are indicative of vanity, awkwardness or indifference,
    or bear a resemblance with the lowly creatures have been, particularly,
    forbidden. The Holy Prophet (SAW) has, accordingly, ordered us not to
    sit in Sajadah with forearms spread on the ground as the dogs and wolves
    do or in the manner which, in this Tradition, has been described as
    Uqbatish Shaitan , and, in another, as Aq?aa-al-kalb.


    Commentators have differed in their explanation
    of the two terms. In our humble view, however, they denote sitting on
    the heels with the feet held upright on the toes and since this posture
    gives the impression of haste and exaggerated self-es-teem and only
    the knees touch the ground and it is the way dogs and wolves and other
    wild animals, generally, sit, the Holy Prophet (SAW) took special care
    to forbid against sitting like that in Namaz (Prayer).


    It is to be remmembered that such a manner
    of sitting is disallowed only when one is not constrained to do so owing
    to a disease or deformity.


    Special prayers and formulas of Allah-remembrance


    The inner feelling of earnestness and deep
    devotion that runs through the prayer-formulas through which the revere
    and adore the Lord during the various parts or acts of Namaz (Prayer)
    like Qayam, Ruku and Sujood, and the entreaties he made in them, form
    the essence of Namaz (Prayer). The sayings we are now going to discuss
    should be read from that point of view and the endeavour should be to
    produce the same emotional and spiritual state of feeling because it
    is the characteristic legacy of the Holy Prophet (SAW).


    Hadhrat Ayeshah (RA) related to us that ?when
    the Apostle of Allah (SAW) began (to offer up) Namaz (Prayer) he first
    glorified the Lord in these words: Subhaanakal-laa-humma wabihamdika
    wa tabarakasmuka wa ta?ala jadduka wa laa-ilaaha ghiruka (O Allah, with
    Thy glorification and Thy praise; blessed is Thy Name; and there is
    no Allah save thee). Tirmidhi, and Abu Dawood.


    Hadhrat Ibn-Taimiyah (RA) writes in Muntaqa
    about Hadhrat Abu Bakr (RA), on the authority of Hadhrat Sunnan-i-Saeed
    bin Mansur (RA), and about Hazrat Omer (RA) on the authority of Sahih
    Muslim, and about Hadhrat Osman (RA) and Hadhrat Abdullah bin Masud
    (RA), on the authority of Qutni, that they began their Namaz (Prayer)
    with Subhaanakallahumma wa bihamdika... and, then, goes on to observe
    that it appears from it that the Holy Prophet (SAW), usually, recited
    this short prayer after Takbir in Namaz (Prayer). It, therefore, enjoys
    preference over all the other prayers of adoration mentioned in the
    traditions with relation to the commencement of the service though there
    is no harm in reciting the other proven hymns, as for instance, the
    one occurring in the next Tradition related on the authority of Hadhrat
    Ali (RA).


    Hadhrat Ali (R.A.) related that "when the
    Apostle of Allah (SAW) stood up to offer Namaz (Prayer) he recited the
    following prayer after Takbir: Waj-jahtu Waj-hil-lazi fataras samawati
    wal-arz hanifan wa maana minal-mushrikeena in-nasalaati wa nusuki wa
    mahya-yawa ma-matillahii rabbil ?Aalimeena Laa Shareeka Lauhu Wa bizaalika
    omirtu wa ana minal muslimeena allahumma antal maliku laa ilaaha anta
    anta rabbi wa ana abduka azlamtu mafsi wa-?ataraftu bizanbi faghfirli
    zunubi jamee?an in-nahu laayaghfiruzzunuba illa anta wahdin li-absaril
    akhlaq laa yahdi liahsaniha illa anta was-rif? annisaiyyi-aha laa yahsnifu
    ?an-nisajyyi-aha illa anta, labbaika wa sa?adaika was-sharru laisa ilaika
    anabika wa ilaika tabarkta wa ta?a-laita astghfiruka wa atoobuilaika
    (I have turned away from every direction and set the Creator of the
    heavens and the earth, and I am not of those who associate anyone with
    Him in allegiance. My worship, and my every religious act, and my life
    and my death are for Allah alone, the Lord of the Worlds. To this I
    have been commanded and I am of those who obey. O Allah Thou art the
    Sovereign and Master. No one is worthy of obedience save Thee. Thou
    art my Lord and Owner, and I am Thy slave. I have wronged my soul, and
    ruined myself, and I confess my inquities. O Lord! Forgive me my sins;
    no one can forgive sins expect Thee. And remove all bad manners and
    deplorable morals from my side, and take them away from me. This, too,
    no one aside of Thee can do. I am in THY presence the service and Thy
    victory. Here I am, O Lord! All the good things, and every kind of piety
    and virtue are in Thy hands, and evil has no access towards Thee. Thou
    art the Blessed, the Most High, then art my only hope and my face is
    turned towards Thee. I beg The forgiveness and unto the do I turn penitent).


    This prayer the holy Prophet (SAW) recited
    after Takbir and before the commencement (of recitation from the Holy
    Qur?aan. Then, as he perform the Ruku?, (after completing the recital),
    he used to say: Allahumma laka rak?atu wa bika aamantu wa laka aslamtu
    khash?a laka sam?anini wa basari wa mukhkhi wa?azmi wa ?asbi (O Allah!
    I am bowed low before Thee and I have believed in Thee and placed myself
    I Thy charge. My earns, and my eyes, and my marrow and my bones, and
    my muscles, and my nerves are all bent in submission to Thee). Later,
    as the Holy Prophet (SAW) raised his head from Rukuo? and stood erect,
    he said: "Allahhumma rabbana lakal-hamdu mila-a-as- samawaati wal-arzi
    wa ma bainahuma wa mila-a ma shiata min shaiyyan b?adu" (O Allah! Praise
    is for Thee alone, such boundless praise as my cover the extensiveness
    of the heavens and the earth and fill all the empty space between them).
    After it when the Holy Prophet (SAW) performed Sajadah, he used to say
    (placing his forehead on the ground): Allahumma laka sajad-tu wa bika
    aamantu wa laka aslamtu sajada waj-hiyyallazi khalaqa-hu wa sawwar-tuhwa
    shaq-qa sam-?ahu wa basarahu tabarak-allahu ahsanul khaliqeen (O Allah!
    I am prostrating myself for Thy sake, and in Thy presence, amd I have
    believe in Thee, and I have placed myself in Thy charge. My face is
    carrying out genuflexion before the Creator who created it, and gave
    it its shape, and its ear, and its eyes out of nothing. \Blessed, indeed,
    is the Best of Creators).


    In the end, between Attahyyaatu (Also known
    as Tashahhud) and Salutation,he would pray: Allahummaghfirli ma qaddamtu
    wa ma akhkhartu wa ma anta a?alamu bihi minni antalmuqqdimu wa ant-al
    muwakhkhartu la ilaaha illa anta (O Allah! Forgive me all the sins I
    have committed earlier or later, and secretly or openly) and whatever
    in equity I have been guilty of, and of which Thou art better informed
    than me.


    "Thou it is who raises to higher rank and
    reduces to lower position. Verily, there is no deity save Thee)."--Muslim


    From the narratives relating to the Namaz
    (Prayer) of the Holy Prophet (SAW) is it clear that it was not the Prophet?s
    (SAW) regular practice to recite in Namaz (Prayer) the prayers mentioned
    by Hadhrat Ali (RA) in the above report. Perhaps, he did so occasionally,
    and most probably,in Tahajjud. Infact, Imam Muslim (RA) has quoted this
    Tradition in connection with the traditions appertaining Tahajjud.


    Many other prayers were, also, recited by
    the Holy Prophet (SAW) in Namaz (Prayer), particularly in Tahajjud which
    will be taken up at the approbate time. These possess a special significance
    and are charged with rare feeling. The Imam can read them in Fardh Namaz
    (Prayer) as well if he is satisfied that it will not go hard with the
    Muqtadis, and as far as supererogatory services are concerned, there
    is no reason why one should not avail oneself of this marvellous bequest
    in them.


    Recital of Holy Qur?aan in Namaz (Prayer)


    Like Qyam Rukuo? and Sujud, recital of the
    Holy Qur?aan, also, is a principal part of Namaz (Prayer), and it is
    done during Qayam. It is common knowledge that after Takbir some prayers
    in the nature of a hymn are recited. We have just mentioned two of them
    from the Traditions. It is followed by the recital of the first surah
    or opening chapter of the Holy Qur?aan, i.e., Surah-i-Fateha, which
    is a priceless gem of adoration and constains a most inspiring and comprehensive
    description of the Attributes of Allah. Along with the rejection and
    repudiation of every form of Polytheism there is, in it, an emphatic
    affirmation of Divine Oneness and an earnest prayer for the Straight
    Path, i.e., for guidance towards Faith and the Shari?ah. Anyhow, first
    of all, this Surah is recited without which there can be no Namaz (Prayer).
    After it the worshipper is required to recite any other Surah or a part
    of it. Whatever passage of the Holy Qur?aan he recites will, invariably,
    impart a message of guidance to him.


    Either it will be way of glorification of
    the Lord and exposition of His Immaculate attributes or dealing with
    the Last Day, Heaven and Hell, and Divine reward and punishment or conveying
    a command for practical life or narrating an event that has a religious
    or moral significance. It will thus, be a ready answer to the worship?s
    entreaty for guidance. In the second Rak?aah, too, another Surah or
    some verses of it will be recited after Surah-i-Fateha but if the service
    consists of three of four Rak?ah, but it is not necessary to recite
    some other Surah with it.


    Now, the Traditons:


    It is relatedd by Hadhrat Abu Huraira (RA)
    that the Apostle of Allah (SAW) said: "There can be no Namaz (Prayer)
    without the recital of the Holy Qur?aan," Proceeding, Hadhrat Abu Huraira
    remarks on his own that "we recited the Holy Qur?aan." with a loud voice
    in the prayer service in which the Holy Prophet (SAW) recited it with
    a loud voice and silently in the prayer-services in which the Holy Prophet
    )SAW) recited it sliently." Muslim


    It is recited by Hadhrat Abadah bin Samit
    (SAW) that the Apostle of Allah (SAW) said: "Whoever did not recite
    Surah-i-Fateha in Namaz (Prayer) did not offer Namaz (Prayer) at all."
    --Bukhari and Muslim


    In another version of the above Tradition,
    quoted, also, in Sahih Muslim, it is stated that "whoever did not recite
    Surah-i-Fateha and something else after it did not offer Namaz (Prayer)
    at all." (Bukhari and Muslim)


    It shows that while Surah-Fateha is an essential
    constituent to Namaz (Prayer) it is, also, necessary to recite something
    else from the Holy Qur?aan after it, although one is at liberty to make
    one?s choice.


    Points of views of legist Doctors


    Hadhrat Imam Shafa?i (Rahmatullahe alaih)
    and some other leading legist-doctors have inferred from the foregoing
    and few other similar Traditions that it is obligatory to recite Surah-i-Fateha
    in Namaz (Prayer), on matter whether one is offering it alone or in
    congregation leading the service or participating in it as a Muqtadi,
    and saying it with a loud voice or silently. Imam Maalke (Rahmatullahe
    alaih) and Imam Ahmed Hambali (Rahmatullahe alaih), on the other hand,
    hold that if the worshippers be a Muqtadi and Namaz (Prayer) is celebrated
    along, the recital of Surah-i-Fateha by the Imam will suffice for the
    Muqtadis. In this case the Muqtadi should abstain from doing the recitation.
    But in all other circumstances one must recite Surah-i-Fateha in Namaz
    (Prayer).


    The same view is supported by Hadhrat Imam
    Abu Hanifa (Rahmatullah alaih) who, further, believes that the recital
    by the Imam will do for the Muqtadis as well in Raka?at that are offered
    up sliently.


    It is related by Hadhrat Abu Hurairah (RA)
    that the Apostle of Allah (SAW) said: "The Imam has been appointed for
    no other reason than that the Muqtadis follow him. Thus, say Allah-o-Akbar,
    and listen in silence when he does the recitation." Abu Dawood, Nassai
    and Ibn-i-Maja


    Some other Ashat too have related in the
    same words, the advice of the Holy Prophet (SAW) about listening quietly
    when the Imam does the recitation. For instance, in the course of a
    long Tradition, quoted in Sahih Muslim, on the authority of Hadhrat
    Abu Musa Ash?ari (RA), the aforementioned instruction is given in identical
    words. The Holy Prophet?s (SAW) exhortation, evidently, is based upon
    the Qur?aanic injunction that when the have faith in their sincerity
    and to believe that whatever conclusion they have arrived at in the
    light of the Holy Qur?aan and the Sunnah and the coduct of the Ashab,
    are in good faith and none of them is guilty of falsehood or distortion.
    It is not, at all, opposed or antithetical to aligning oneself with
    a particular school of jurisprudence. The path of justice and moderation
    pursued by Hadhrat Shah Waliullah (Rahmatullah alih) in Hujjatullah
    -i-Baligha is, in our view, the best and the wisest course in the current
    circumstance through which unity can be brought back into the disintegrated
    ranks of the Muslim.)


    Recital of Holy Qur?aan by the Holy Prophet (SAW)
    during Fajr


    Hadhrat Jabir bin Samura (RA) narrated that
    the Apostle of Allah (SAW) recited Surah-i-Kaaf and other Surahs like
    it in the Namaz (Prayer) used to be light. --Muslim


    Commentators have interprated the concluding
    part of the above Tradition in two ways: one that the Holy Prophet?s
    (SAW) prayers, i.e., those of Zuhr, Asr, Maghrib and Isha used to be
    lighter, and in them, he recited less of the Holy Qura?an compared Fajr,
    and the other that the Holy Prophet?s (SAW) prayers were usually long
    in the earlier days of Islam when the Ashab were few in number and those
    who formed the congregation behind him were Muslims of the highest caliber,
    but letter when the number of worshipers had increased and they included
    Believers of the second and third grades as well, the Holy Prophet (SAW)
    began to celebrate comparatively shorter services and the more the worshipers,
    the greater was the possibility of there being among them some weak
    sick and faint-hearted people for whom a long service could be tiresome.


    Both the interpretations are correct from
    the factual point of view, but, to us, the latter apperars to be more
    convincing.


    It is related on the authority of Hadhrat
    ?Amr bin Hurais (RA) that he heard the Apostle of Allah (SAW) reciting
    Wal-ley-i-Iza-? as-asa (i.e., Surah-i-Takvir) in the Namaz (Prayer)
    of Fajr. --Muslim


    Hadhrat Ma?az bin Abdullah elJuhani (RA)
    related that a member of the tribe of Juhama told him that once he heard
    the Apostle of Allah (SAW) reciting Iza zulzilat in both the Raka?at
    of the morning service. (The narrator, then added that) he did not know
    whether the Holy Prophet (SAW) did so deliberately or inadvertently.
    --Abu Dawood


    The usual pration of the Holy Prophet (SAW)
    was to recite different Surahs in the two Raka?at of a service. So when
    he, once recited the Surah of Iza zulzilat in both the Raka?at, the
    Sahabi, on whose authority the above Traditon has been related, felt
    uncertain If the Holy Prophet (SAW) had done so unintentionally or intentionally
    in order to indicate that it, too, was permissible.


    Hadhrat Ibn-i-Abbas (RA) related that hte
    Apostle of Allah (SAW) used to recite the verses, Qooloo aamanna billahi
    wa ma unzila ilaina.. of Surah-i-Baqara, and the verses, Qul yaa aiyyuhal
    Kitaabi ta? aloo ilaa Kalimatin Sawaa-in baina-nana wa bainakum... of
    Surah-i-Imraan (respectively) in the two Raka?at of Fajr. ?Muslim It
    is related by Hadhrat Uqba bin Aamir (RA) that "in a journey I was going
    along on foot, holding the reins of the Holy Prophet?s (SAW) camel in
    hand. During the gonrny of the Holy Prophet?s (SAW) said to me: ?Uqba,
    may I teach you two of the best Surahs of the Holy Qur?aan?? After it,
    he taught (me) the Surahs of Qul aoozn be rabble falaga and Qul ?aoozu
    be rabbin naas. He, then felt that I had not been very happy with the
    choice of the two Surahs. So, when the Holy Propeht (SAW) dismounted
    for the Fajr service, he let the prayers by recitig both the surahs.
    At the end of the Service he turned towards me and said: Uqba! What
    did you see and how did you feel??? --Musnadi-i-Ahmad, Abu Dawood and
    Nassai.




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Thursday, December 01, 2005

Chronology of Events in the Life of Muhammad (P.B.U.H)

Chronology of Events in the Life of Muhammad (P.B.U.H)

Brief Description of the Event Approximate Date
Age of the Holy Prophet according
to Lunar Calendar
Approximate Gregorian and Hijra dates BH=Before Hijra AH=After Hijra

The Holy Prophet of Islam, Muhammad, peace be upon him, born an orphan His father Abdullah, may Allah be pleased with him, had died a few months before the birth of his son.
 
0 years 9 or 12 Rabi-ul-Awwal 52 or 53 BH April 570 or 571 AD


 
Hadrat Halima Sadiyya, may Allah be pleased with her, appointed wet nurse. 8 days  


 
Return to Mecca under the care of his mother 6 Years 46 BH 577 AD


 
Mother, Hadrat Amina, may Allah be pleased with her, passes away 6 Years 46 BH 577 AD


 
Grandfather, Hadrat Abdul-Muttalib, may Allah be pleased with him, died 8 Years 44 BH 579 AD


 
First visit to Syria with a trading caravan 12 years 40 BH, 583 AD 12 Years 40 BH 583 AD


 
Pledge of Fudul to help the needy and the oppressed 15 Years 37 BH 586 AD


 
Second journey to Syria for trade as an agent of Hadrat Khadija, may Allah be pleased with her 25 Years 28 BH 595 AD


 
Marriage with Hadrat Khadija, may Allah be pleased with her 25 Years 28 BH 595 AD


 
Birth of a son, Hadrat Qasim (may Allah be pleased with him) 28 Years 25 BH 598 AD


 
Birth of his daughter, Hadrat Zainab, may Allah be pleased with her 30 Years 23 BH 600 AD


 
Birth of his daughter, Hadrat Ruqayya, may Allah be pleased with her 33 Years 20 BH 603 AD


 
Birth of his daughter, Hadrat Um-e-Kalthum, may Allah be pleased with her 34 years 19 BH 604 AD


 
Renovation of Ka'aba and the placement of Hajr-e-Aswad (Black Stone) 35 years 18 BH 605 AD


 
Birth of his daughter, Hadrat Fatima, may Allah be pleased with her 35 years 18 BH605 AD


 
Hadrat Jibrail bought the First Revelation in the Cave of Hira 40 Year 12 BH 610 AD


 
Revelation of the Holy Quran continues, Ministry of the Holy Prophet Muhammad (peace be upon him) is established. Hadrat Khadija (the wife), Hadrat Abu Bakr (the best friend), Hadrat Ali (the dearest cousin) and
Hadrat Zaid (a freed slave and adopted son), may Allah be pleased with
them all, accept Islam
40 Years 6 months Friday18 Ramadan 12 BH 14 August 610 AD


 
Open invitation to the people of Mecca to join Islam under Allah's command 43 Years 9 BH 614 AD


 
A group of Muslims emigrates to Abyssinia 46 Years 7 BH 615 AD


 
Blockade of Shi'b Abi-Talib 46 Years 7 BH 30 September 615 AD


 
Hadrat Hamza (paternal uncle) and Hadrat Umar, may Allah be pleased
with them, accept Islam
46 Years 6 BH 616 AD


 
Hadrat Abu Talib, (beloved uncle and guardian) and only a few days later, Hadrat Khadija, the most beloved wife, may Allah be pleased with them, passed away 49 Years Ramadan 3 BH January 619 AD


 
Marriage with Hadrat Sau'da, may Allah be pleased with her 49 Years 3 BH 619 AD


 
Marriage with Hadrat Aisha, may Allah be pleased with her 49 Years 3 BH 619 AD


 
Journey to Ta'if, about 40 miles from Mecca, for calling the citizens of Ta'if
to Islam
49 Years 3 BH 619 AD


 
Journey of Mi'raj. Five daily prayers made obligatory for Muslims 50 Years 27 Rajab 2 BH 8 March 620 AD


 
Deputation from Medina accepts Islam 50 Years 2 BH 620 AD


 
First Pledge of 'Aq'ba' 52 Years Dhul Haj, 1 BH 621 AD


 
Second Pledge of 'Aq'ba 52 Years 3 months BH June 622 AD


 
Hijra (migration) from Mecca to the cave of Thaur 52 Years Friday 27 Safar 10 September 622


 
Emigration to Medina begins 52 Years Monday 1 Rabi-ul-Awwal 13 September 622 AD


 
Arrival at Medina after the first Friday Prayer at Quba's Mosque 53 Years 12 Rabi-ul-Awwal 1st year AH 24 September 622 AD


 
Construction of the Holy Prophet's Mosque at Medina. Hadrat Bilal's call
for Prayer (Adhan)
53 Years 1st year AH 622 AD


 
Brotherhood pacts between Ansar (Muslims from Medina) and Muhajirin (immigrants from Mecca) 53 Years 1st year AH 622 AD


 
Treaty with Jews of Medina 53 Years 1st year AH


 
Permission to fight in self-defense is granted by Allah 53 Years 12 Safar 2 AH 14 August 623 AD


 
Ghazwa (Battle) of Waddan 53 Years 29 Safar 2 AH 31 August 623


 
Ghazwa (Battle) of Safwan 54 Years 2 AH 623 AD


 
Ghazwa (Battle) Dul-'Ashir 54 Years 2 AH 623 AD


 
Hadrat Salman Farsi, may Allah be pleased with him, accepts Islam 54 Years 2 AH 624 AD


 
Revelation and change of Qibla (direction to face for Formal Prayers, Salat) towards Ka'ba Fasting in the month of Ramadan becomes obligatory 54 Years Sha'abn 2 AH February 624 A


 
Ghazwa (Battle) of Badr 54 Years 12-17 Ramadan 2 AH March 8-13, 624 AD


 
Ghazwa (Battle) of Bani Salim 54 Years 25 Ramadan 2 AH 21 March 524 AD
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