La ilaha ila Allah; Muhammadur-rasul Allah.
'There is no god but Allah; Muhammad is the Messenger of Allah.'
This declaration contains two parts. The
first part refers to God Almighty, the Creator of everything,
the Lord of the Worlds; the second part refers to the Messenger,
Muhammad a prophet and a human being, who received the revelation
through the Archangel Gabriel, and taught it to mankind.
By sincerely uttering the Shahadah the
Muslim acknowledges Allah as the sole Creator of all, and the
Supreme Authority over everything and everyone in the universe.
Consequently the Muslim closes his/her heart and mind to loyalty,
devotion and obedience to, trust in, reliance on, and worship
of anything or anyone other than Allah. This rejection is not
confined merely to pagan gods and goddesses of wood and stone
and created by human hands and imaginations; this rejection must
extend to all other conceptions, superstitions, ideologies, ways
of life, and authority figures that claim supreme devotion, loyalty,
trust, love, obedience or worship. This entails, for example,
the rejection of belief in such common things as astrology, palm
reading, good luck charms, fortune-telling and psychic readings,
in addition to praying at shrines or graves of "saints", asking
the dead souls to intercede for them with Allah. There are no
intercessors in Islam, nor any class of clergy as such; a Muslim
prays directly and exclusively to Allah.
Belief in the prophet hood of Muhammad
entails belief in the guidance brought by him and contained in
his Sunnah (traditions of his sayings and actions), and demands
of the Muslim the intention to follow his guidance faithfully.
Muhammad was also a human being, a man with feelings and emotions,
who ate, drank and slept, and was born and died, like other men.
He had a pure and upright nature, extraordinary righteousness,
and an unwavering faith in Allah and commitment to Islam, but
he was not divine. Muslims do not pray to him, not even as an
intercessor, and Muslims abhor the terms "Mohamedan" and "Mohamedanism".
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2. The Prayer, Salah
The Prayer (Salah), in the sense of worship,
is the second pillar of Islam. The Prayer is obligatory and must
be performed five times a day. These five times are dawn (Fajr),
immediately after noon (Dhuhr), mid-afternoon ('Asr), sunset (Maghrib),
and early night (Isha'). Ritual cleanliness and ablution are required
before prayer, as are clean clothes and location, and the removal
of shoes. One may pray individually or communally, at home, outside,
virtually any clean place, as well as in a mosque, though the
latter is preferred. Special is the Friday noon prayer, called
Jum'ah. It, too, is obligatory and is to be done in a mosque,
in congregation. It is accompanied by a sermon (Khutbah), and
it replaces the normal Dhuhr prayer.
There is no hierarchical clerical authority
in Islam, no priests or ministers. Prayers are led by any learned
person who knows the Qur'an and is chosen by the congregation.
He (or she, if the congregation is all women) is called the imam.
There is also no minimum number of congregates required to hold
communal prayers. Prayer consists of verses from the Qur'an and
other prayers, accompanied by various bodily postures - standing,
bowing, prostrating and sitting. They are said in Arabic, the
language of the revelation, though personal supplications (Du'ah)
can be offered in one's own language. Worshippers face the Qiblah,
the direction of the Ka'bah in the city of Makkah.
The significance of prayer lies in one's
maintaining a continuous link to God five times a day, which helps
the worshipper avoid misdeeds if he/she performs the prayers sincerely.
In addition it promotes discipline, God-consciousness and placing
one's trust in Allah alone, and the importance of striving for
the Hereafter. When performed in congregation it also provides
a strong sense of community, equality and brotherhood/sisterhood.
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3. The Fasting, Sawm
The fourth pillar of Islam is fasting.
Allah prescribes daily fasting for all able, adult Muslims during
the whole of the month of Ramadan, the ninth month of the lunar
calendar, beginning with the sighting of the new moon. Exempted
from the fast are the very old and the insane. On the physical
side, fasting is from first light of dawn until sundown, abstaining
from food, drink, and sexual relations. On the moral, behavioral
side, one must abstain from lying, malicious gossip, quarreling
and trivial nonsense.
Those who are sick, elderly, or on a journey,
and women who are menstruating, pregnant, or nursing are permitted
to break the fast, but must make up an equal number of days later
in the year. If physically unable to do so, they must feed a needy
person for each day missed. Children begin to fast (and to observe
the prayers) from puberty, although many start earlier.
Although fasting is beneficial to the health,
it is regarded principally as a method of self-purification. By
cutting oneself off from worldly pleasures and comforts, even
for a short time, the fasting person gains true sympathy for those
who go hungry regularly, and achieves growth in his spiritual
life, learning discipline, self-restraint, patience and flexibility.
In addition to the fast proper, one is
encouraged to read the entire Qur'an. In addition, special prayers,
called Tarawih, are held in the mosque every night of the month,
during which a whole section of the Qur'an is recited, so that
by the end of the month the entire Qur'an has been completed.
These are done in remembrance of the fact that the revelation
of the Qur'an to Prophet Muhammad was begun during Ramadan.
During the last ten days - though the exact
day is never known and may not even be the same every year - occurs
the Night of Power (Laylat al-Qadr). To spend that night in worship
is equivalent to a thousand months of worship, i.e. Allah's reward
for it is very great.
On the first day of the following month,
after another new moon has been sighted, a special celebration
is made, called 'Id al-Fitr. A quantity of staple food is donated
to the poor (Zakat al-Fitr), everyone has bathed and put on their
best, preferably new, clothes, and communal prayers are held in
the early morning, followed by feasting and visiting relatives
and friends.
There are other fast days throughout the
year. Muslims are encouraged to fast six days in Shawwal, the
month following Ramadan, Mondays and Thursdays, and the ninth
and tenth, or tenth and eleventh of Muharram, the first month
of the year. The tenth day, called Ashurah, is also a fast day
for the Jews (Yom Kippur), and Allah commanded the Muslims to
fast two days to distinguish themselves from the People of the
Book.
While fasting per se is encouraged, constant
fasting, as well as monasticism, celibacy, and otherwise retreating
from the real world, are condemned in Islam. Fasting on the two
festival days, 'Id al-Fitr and 'Id al-Adha, the feast of the Hajj,
is strictly forbidden.
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4. The Charity, Zakah
The third pillar of Islam is the alms-tax.
It is a tax on wealth, payable on various categories of property,
notably savings and investments, produce, inventory of goods,
salable crops and cattle, and precious metals, and is to be used
for the various categories of distribution specified by Islamic
law. It is also an act of purification through sharing what one
has with others.
The rationale behind this is that Muslims
believe that everything belongs to God, and wealth is held by
man as a trust. This trust must be discharged, moreover, as instructed
by God, as that portion of our wealth legally belongs to other
people and must be given to them. If we refuse and hoard this
wealth, it is considered impure and unclean. If, for example one
were to use that wealth for charity or to finance one's pilgrimage
to Makkah, those acts would also be impure, invalid, and of course
unrewarded. Allah says:
"Of their wealth, take alms so
you may purify and sanctify them." [ 9:103]
The word Zakah means purification and growth.
Our possessions are purified by setting aside that portion of
it for those in need. Each Muslim calculates his or her own Zakah
individually.
For most purposes this involves the payment
each year of 2.5% of one's capital, provided that this capital
reaches a certain minimum amount that which is not consumed by
its owner. A generous person can pay more than this amount, though
it is treated and rewarded as voluntary charity (Sadaqah). This
amount of money is provided to bridge the gap between the rich
and the poor, and can be used in many useful projects for the
welfare of the community.
Historically the pillar of Zakah became
mandatory on Muslims form the second year after the Hijrah, 622
C.E. It is mentioned more than thirty times in the Qur'an, usually
in the same breath as Salah. So important is this pillar that
one is not considered a part of the Islamic brotherhood if one
ignores this obligation.
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5. The Pilgrimage,
Hajj
The fifth pillar of Islam is to make a
pilgrimage to Mecca, in Saudi Arabia, at least once in one's lifetime.
This pillar is obligatory for every Muslim, male or female, provided
that he/she is physically and financially able to do so. Prerequisites
for performing the Pilgrimage are to be a Muslim, to be free,
to be an adult or mature enough, to be of sound mind, and to have
the ability to afford the journey and maintain one's dependents
back home for the duration. The reward for the Pilgrimage is nothing
less than Paradise.
The Pilgrimage is the ultimate form of
worship, as it involves the spirit of all the other rituals and
demands of the believer great sacrifice. On this unique occasion,
nearly two million Muslims from all over the globe meet one another
in a given year. Regardless of the season, pilgrims wear special
clothes (Ihram) - two, very simple, unsewn white garments - which
strips away all distinctions of wealth, status, class and culture;
all stand together and equal before Allah (God).
The rites of the Pilgrimage, which go back
to the time of Prophet Abraham who built the Ka'bah, are observed
over five or six days, beginning on the eighth day of the last
month of the year, named Dhul-Hijjah (pilgrimage). These rites
include circumambulating the Ka'bah (Tawwaf), and going between
the mountains of Safa and Marwah, as Hajjar (Abraham's wife) did
during her search for water for her son Isma'il. Then the pilgrims
stand together on the wide plain of Arafah and join in prayers
for God's forgiveness, in what is often thought of as a preview
of the Last Judgment. The pilgrims also cast stones at a stone
pillar which represents Satan. The pilgrimage ends with a festival,
called 'Id al-Adha, which is celebrated with prayers, the sacrifice
of an animal, and the exchange of greetings and gifts in Muslim
communities everywhere.
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What are the pillars of Islamic faith?