Further reading: Marshall G. S. Hodgson, The Venture of
Islam. Vol. 1, The Classical Age of Islam (Chicago: Uni-
versity of Chicago Press, 1974); Wilferd Madelung, The
Succession to Muhammad: A Study of the Early Caliph-
ate (Cambridge: Cambridge University Press, 1997);
Fatima Mernissi, The Veil and the Male Elite: A Feminist
Interpretation of Women’s Rights in Islam (Philadelphia:
Perseus Books, 1992).
Five Pillars
The Five Pillars are five ritual acts required of all
Muslims, based on injunctions in the q
Uran
and
elaborated in the
sUnna
of the Prophet m
Uham
-
mad
and in law (
fiqh
) developed by the principal
legal schools of Islam. The pillars nurture two
primary relationships for individual Muslims:
the relationship with God and with the entire
community of Muslim believers, the
umma
. The
first pillar, the
shahada
, is a verbal witnessing of
the unity of God and of Muhammad’s position in
Islam as the bearer of the final revelation, with
the words “There is no god but God, and Muham-
mad is the messenger of God.” Shia add, “and Ali
is the friend of God,” in reference to their first
imam
, a
li
ibn
a
bi
t
alib
(d. 661). Uttering the
shahada sincerely in the presence of two Muslim
witnesses is all that is necessary to become a Mus-
lim. The central and possibly most visible pillar
is salat, translated as
prayer
, but here referring
specifically to five daily cycles of prostrations
after sunset, during the evening, at dawn, at mid-
day, and at mid-afternoon. Prayer is performed
anywhere ritual purity can be maintained. Mus-
lim men are required to attend a congregational
mosqUe
(masjid) for Friday prayers. Friday prayer
in a mosque is not a required activity for Mus-
lim women or for Shia. The third pillar, zakat,
K 242
Five Pillars
usually translated as
almsgiving
, asks Muslims
to give as charity a percentage of their wealth
attained from profit on certain kinds of income
and represents part of a larger attitude of charity
(sadaqa) encouraged by the umma. Muslims who
are not ill, traveling, menstruating, or nursing
fast from dawn to dusk during r
amadan
, the
ninth month of the Islamic lunar
calendar
, to
fulfill the fourth pillar of Islam. The prohibition
on eating, drinking, smoking, and sexual activ-
ity during the day acts as a social leveler that is
enhanced by the communal activities and shar-
ing of
Food
and
drink
in the evening. Finally,
the fifth pillar, the
haJJ
, takes place as an annual
pilgrimage to m
ecca
and the surrounding area,
including a series of ritual acts required of every
Muslim one time during his or her lifetime if
physically and fiscally possible.
See also
adhan
;
Fasting
;
holidays
; s
hiism
.
Margaret Leeming
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