Further reading: Bernard Lewis, The Emergence of Mod-
ern Turkey (New York: Oxford University Press, 1968);
Niyazi Berkes, The Development of Secularism in Turkey
(Montreal: McGill University Press, 1964); Roderic
H. Davison, Reform in the Ottoman Empire 1856–1876
(Princeton, N.J.: Princeton University Press, 1963).
taqiyya
See s
hiism
.
taqlid
See a
khbari
s
chool
;
ijtihad
;
renewal
and
reform
movements
;
sharia
.
taqwa
Taqwa is an Arabic term that describes attitudes
of piety, reverence, and good judgment in Islam
that are related to worshipping and obeying God.
Muslims believe taqwa is a characteristic that
God bestows upon Muslims who desire to submit
themselves to God, “Those who are rightly guided
will be given greater guidance by him and he will
provide them with taqwa” (Quran 47:17). Taqwa
entails that Muslims strictly observe i
slam
’
s
legal
codes, showing beneficence toward other people,
while respecting peace and the sanctity of human
life. At times, the meanings of taqwa and iman
(
Faith
) overlap. For example, Quran 2:197 reflects,
in part, the relationship between taqwa, iman, and
the
haJJ
, “Make provisions for the journey, and the
best provision is taqwa.” In this sense, reverence to
God is equated with faith, meaning that if a Muslim
believes in God as she or he makes the hajj, that
person’s physical and spiritual needs will be met
through God’s steadfastness. Muslims also interpret
this passage as suggesting that God will provide for
them consistently as they pursue life’s journey.
Taqwa is also the capacity of good judgment
that God instills in faithful Muslims, “When the
disbelievers fostered a sense of honor in their
hearts, a sense of pagan honor, God sent down
tranquility on his apostle and the believers, and
imposed on them the command to act in accor-
dance with taqwa for they were deserving and
worthy of it” (Quran 48:26). Muslims believe that
taqwa enables them (1) to properly understand
the meanings of the q
Uran
,
hadith
, and
sharia
without misconstruing or misapplying them and
(2) to make the correct moral judgments both
as individuals and as a community. Muslims are
obliged to fulfill all their ritual duties (such as the
K 662
taqiyya
F
ive
p
illars
of Islam) with a sense of iman and
taqwa, since without these spiritual and psycho-
logical characteristics, the performance of these
duties are meaningless.
Jon Armajani
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