World: The Rise and Fall of Islam’s Greatest Dynasty
(Cambridge, Mass.: Da Capo Press, 2005); Kanan
Makiya, Republic of Fear: The Politics of Modern Iraq
(Berkeley: University of California Press, 1998); Yitzhak
Nakash, The Shiis of Iraq (Princeton, N.J.: Princeton
University Press, 1994); Georges Roux, Ancient Iraq
(London: Penguin Books, 1992); Vali Nasr, The Shia
Revival: How Conflicts within Islam Will Shape the Future
(New York: W.W. Norton, 2006).
Isa
See j
esus
.
islah
See
renewal
and
reform
movements
.
Islam
The name for the second-largest religion in the
world after Christianity, Islam is a word formed
from the Arabic consonants s-l-m. It is related to
the Arabic word for “peace,” salam, which is one
of the 99 most beautiful
names
oF
g
od
and also
a cognate of the Hebrew word
shalom. One of
the names for
paradise
in Arabic is Dar al-Salam,
House of Peace. Using these consonants to form
the verbal noun islam creates the meaning “to
enter into a state of peace,” which is convention-
ally translated into English as “surrender” or
“submission.” The word muslim is an active par-
ticiple based on the same word; hence, a Muslim
is literally “one who enters a state of peace,” “one
who surrenders,” or “one who submits.” Islam,
therefore, is an action that brings two parties
into a peaceful relationship, the one who sur-
renders and the one to whom one surrenders. In
most contexts, it describes a relationship between
humans and one sovereign God, but it can also
describe a relationship between all creation and
the divine creator. According to Islamic teachings,
surrender to God leads to eternal salvation.
Unlike names of other major religions such
as Hinduism and Buddhism, which were coined
by Western scholars in the 18th and 19th centu-
ries, Islam has been used by Muslims as a name
for their own religion since the early centuries of
their history. The term occurs seven times in the
q
Uran
in passages usually dated to the Medinan
period of m
Uhammad
’s career (between 622 and
632), when he and his followers increasingly had
to differentiate their religious beliefs and practices
from those associated with others, especially Jews,
Christians, and polytheists. The most well-known
verse where Islam occurs in the Quran is Q 5:3:
Today those who have disbelieved in your reli-
gion [din] are miserable, so do not fear them.
Fear me. Today I have perfected your religion
for you, bestowed my grace upon you, and
chosen Islam for you as your religion.
These words were accompanied by com-
mandments concerning dietary laws,
haJJ
rituals,
and relations with people of other religions. They
indicate that toward the end of Muhammad’s life,
probably when he performed the farewell pil-
grimage (ca. 632), Islam was being represented
as a set of specific religious practices legislated
by God. These practices placed Muslims in jux-
taposition to those who practiced disbelief, the
kafirs.
The idea of submission to God through out-
ward actions was linked in the Quran not only to
fearing God but also having
Faith
(iman). Indeed,
the Arabic words for faith-belief (
iman) and
believer (mumin) and related terms occur much
more frequently in the Quran than the words
islam and muslim. Iman alone occurs 44 times, and
the term for believers (muminun-muminin) occurs
179 times. The meanings of these words some-
times overlap in quranic usage, but in the
hadith
they become more distinguishable. In the Hadith
of g
abriel
, for example,
islam was expressly iden-
tified with the F
ive
p
illars
(testimony of faith,
prayer
,
almsgiving
,
Fasting
, and hajj), while
iman
was identified with belief in God,
angel
s,
holy
books
, prophets, and J
Udgment
d
ay
. The specifics
of Islam as practice were subsequently developed
K 372
Isa
primarily in the contexts of religious law, the
sharia
, which sought to encompass all facets of
life in the Muslim community. The cornerstones
of Islamic belief were captured in the
shahada
:
“There is no god but God and Muhammad is his
messenger.” Other aspects of faith were expressed
in the Quran, the hadith, and later creedal state-
ments. The inward and experiential aspect of
Islam was explored in more depth by Sufi mystics.
theology
, however, never attained the promi-
nence in Islamic religion that it held in Christian-
ity. Muslims were held more answerable for their
wrongful acts than for unorthodox beliefs.
Although Muslims see Islam as a unique
monotheistic religion, they also believe that it is
one of a group of Abrahamic religions interlinked
through a common mythic lineage to the ancient
biblical patriarch and quranic prophet a
braham
.
The Quran, for example, mentions the millat
Ibrahim, the religion of Abraham, eight times. It
states, “Who is better in religion than he who
submits himself completely to God while doing
what is right and follows, as a believer in one God,
the religion of Abraham?” (Q 4:125). This verse
links Abraham’s religion with performing an act
of submission. Elsewhere in the Quran, Abraham
asks God to make him, his son, and their descen-
dants his submitters (or Muslims, Q 2:128).
Islam, therefore, is seen as the one true religion
proclaimed by Abraham and all the other prophets
until Muhammad. Jews and Christians are consid-
ered to be p
eople
oF
the
b
ook
who, like Muslims,
believe in one God and possess sacred scriptures
that came from the same heavenly source, the
“mother of the book” (Q 43:4).
One consequence of this belief concerning
other religions was that wherever Muslims ruled,
People of the Book were guaranteed “protected”
(
dhimmi
) status under the sharia, as long as they
paid their taxes, recognized the authority of the
Muslim ruler, and did not proselytize Muslims.
Muslim authorities in i
ndia
even recognized Hin-
dus as People of the Book with their own prophets
and scriptures. Of course, history has shown that
these protections were not always observed, how-
ever. Muslims understood that their religion could
not accept disbelief and
idolatry
, but they also
recognized that Islam obliged them to establish
relations with followers of other religions. This
outlook was also reflected in a concept the ulama
called the dar al-Islam (house of Islam), a desig-
nation for territories ruled by Muslims but that
included protected non-Muslim resident commu-
nities. This realm was opposed to the dar al-harb
(house of war), which was not under Muslim
rule and which under certain conditions could be
made a target for
Jihad
.
ISlAM IN WESTErN EyES
Understandings of Islam among Europeans and
Americans have been shaped by the historical
interactions of Muslims and non-Muslims through
the centuries. During the Middle Ages—the era
of the c
rUsades
and the Christian conquest
of Spain—many Europeans saw Islam as the
heretical or idolatrous religion of the enemy.
They regarded Muhammad as a demon named
Mahound, a false prophet or a magician and
charlatan. In his Divine Comedy, the famed Italian
poet Dante Alighieri (d. 1321) placed Muhammad
and his cousin Ali in the level of hell reserved for
people who caused religious division and dissent.
Other Christian writers called Muslims pagans,
gentiles, Saracens, or Moors, terms that usually
connoted the superiority of Christianity, which
they saw as the one true religion. Admittedly, a
handful of medieval scholars sought a deeper,
more accurate understanding of Islam, but others
studied it to refute its truth claims and to convert
Muslims. Negative European understandings of
Islam continued in the 15th and 16th centuries,
when Europe was confronted with the threat of
invasion by the Ottoman Empire. Turkish armies
seized Constantinople (i
stanbUl
) in 1453 and
soon gained control of much of eastern Europe
and the eastern Mediterranean. The words Turk
and Muslim became synonymous, usually with
negative connotations.
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