Encyclopedia of Islam


free will and determinism



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free will and determinism


According to these texts, which are based on 

interpretations of the q

Uran



hadith



, and the con-

sensus of the 

Ulama

, funerary rites should include: 



1) pronouncing the testimony of faith (

shahada

prior to death and turning the dying person’s face 



toward Mecca; 2) ritually washing and shroud-

ing the corpse; 3) performing funeral prayers; 4) 

conducting the body to the 

cemetery


; 5) burial of 

the corpse on its right side, with the face turned 

to m

ecca


; 6) mourning; and 7) visiting the grave. 

The corpse may be dressed in ordinary but not 

expensive clothing. Burial should be performed at 

a nearby cemetery within 24 hours of death. Men 

usually preside in the funeral prayers and ceremo-

nies, but in many cultures 

Women

 also participate. 



The body is placed in the grave without a coffin, 

and extra room is left in the grave out of a belief 

that the deceased will be compelled to sit up and 

undergo an interrogation by two angels of death 

known as Munkar and Nakir. To prepare the dead 

for this interrogation, basic articles of faith are 

recited at the time of burial. This is called the 

talqin. People usually take turns throwing dirt 

into the grave, and they pronounce prayers on 

behalf of the deceased, especially the verse “From 

it [the earth] we created you, then we put you 

back into it, and from it we will bring you forth 

again” (Q 20:55). Other funerary prayers include 

the  F

atiha


 (Q 1) and the chapter “Ya Sin” (Q 

36) of the Quran as well as supplications drawn 

from the hadith and other religious texts. Once 

the grave is filled, it is leveled. The ulama have 

strongly disapproved of decorating the grave site 

or erecting a building over it. Nonetheless, many 

Muslim cemeteries have gravestones, mausole-

ums, 


mosqUe

s, and 


saint

 shrines. Indeed, some 

of the most impressive examples of Islamicate art 

and architecture are connected with housing and 

memorializing the dead.

Muslim jurists have also attempted to curb 

many lamentation and mourning practices because 

of their belief that too much grief for the dead is 

an affront to God, the giver of life and death. 

They are also wary of the assimilation of what 

they regard as un-Islamic innovations (

bidaa

); 


excessive grieving, public displays of emotion, 

singing, and dancing are considered to be repre-

hensible or forbidden. Despite such regulations, 

in actual practice people may mourn for up to 

40 days, or even a year, after death, especially 

for husbands, wives, or parents. Somber Quran 

recitations are conducted during the mourning 

period, during which families customarily keep 

a solemn public demeanor, wear black clothing, 

and avoid festive occasions such as weddings 

and parties. Relatives, friends, neighbors, and 

acquaintances are expected to visit, bring gifts of 

food, and offer their condolences as soon as they 

can after a death has occurred. Often, meals are 

shared in memory of the dead; in rural societies, 

such feasts may bring a whole village together. In 

many Muslim cultures, an animal is sacrificed, 

with the meat shared among the mourners and 

the poor. Each year, especially on major 

holidays


,

family members visit the graves of loved ones, 

and in some cultures they distribute food to chil-

dren, strangers, and the needy in remembrance 

of the dead.

Of course, prescribed and culturally deter-

mined funerary practices may be waived or 

circumvented in exceptional situations. Soldiers 

who die in battle can be interred in their blood-

soaked garments without ritual cleansing or 

funerary prayers. People who die on an ocean 

voyage may be buried at sea. Victims of wars 

or natural catastrophes—earthquakes and tidal 

waves, for example—may be buried in mass 

graves. In modern times, Muslims who have 

migrated to Western countries may be buried 

in coffins in accordance with local burial and 

sanitation ordinances. Some immigrant mosques 

have their own mortuary facilities and purchase 

plots of land in existing cemeteries for the burial 

of Muslims. Some Muslims, however, prefer to 

have their dead transported back to their native 

lands for burial.

See also 

ablUtion


aFterliFe

Food


 

and


 

drink


martyrdom

soUl


 

and


 

spirit


sUicide


.


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