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Title: ISLAM IN INDIA: AN OVERVIEW


1
ISLAM IN INDIA AN OVERVIEW
  • Dr. Doris Jakobsh

2
Adherents.comWORLD-WIDE MUSLIM POPULATIONS900
MILLION
Country Number of Muslims (approximate)
Indonesia 170 million
Pakistan 137 million
Bangladesh 106 million
India 103 million
Turkey 62 million
3
ISLAM
  • Meaning Submission/Surrender
  • To Allah (the God)
  • God alone is great

4
CONTEXT
  • 3 great super-powers
  • Byzantine Empire - Christian
  • Ethiopian Empire Christian
  • Persian Empire Zoroastrian, with Jewish and
    Christian minorities
  • Arabia of Muhammad - polytheistic

5
HANIFS
  • Already a movement towards monotheism, due to the
    belief that worldview of the super-powers was
    more progressive than that of polytheism
  • Movement that affirmed monotheism, but distinct
    from Christianity, Judaism, Zoroastsrianism

6
MUHAMMAD
  • 570-632 CE
  • Born in Mecca

7
MUHAMMAD
  • Merchant family
  • Part of Quraysh tribe (custodians of sacred
    places of Mecca)
  • 25 years old entered service of Khadija, a
    wealthy widow much older than Muhammad
  • Fatima their daughter

8
Muhammad leads a caravan
9
MUHAMMAD AND GABRIEL
  • 611 CE
  • Solitary meditations in caves
  • Archangel Gabriel

10
HIJRA
  • 611-621 Muhammad preaches to fellow Meccans about
    the oneness of God
  • 622 accepts an invitation to Yathrib (Medina)
  • This journey is called HIJRA
  • This is the date from which the Muslim calendar
    starts

11
MUHAMMAD IN MEDINA
12
MUHAMMAD RETURNS TO MECCA
13
  • USING MEDINA AS A BASE, ALL OF ARABIA IS BROUGHT
    UNDER MUHAMMADS CONTROL
  • HE WAS THE RELIGIOUS LEADER, POLITICAL RULER,
    MILITARY COMMANDER

14
  • HIS DIVINE REVELATIONS CONTINUE TO THE END OF HIS
    LIFE
  • THESE REVELATIONS TOGETHER MAKE UP THE TEXT OF
    THE QURAN, THE HOLY SCRIPTURES OF ISLAM

15
MUHAMMADS DEATH
In 632, he was suddenly taken ill. on June 8,
with his third wife Aishah beside him, the
Messenger of God "died with the heat of noon."
16
ISLAMS EXPANSION, 25 YEARS
17
MECCA TODAY
18
5 PILLARS OF ISLAM
  • SHAHADA - WITNESS
  • SALAAT - PRAYER 5 TIMES DAILY
  • ZAKAT - ALMSGIVING
  • SAWM OR SIYAM, FASTING, RAMADAN
  • HAJJ - PILGRIMAGE

19
1) SHAHADA CORNERSTONE OF ISLAM
There is no God but God, and Muhammad is his
messenger (Quran, 4829).
20
SHAHADA
  • In Arabic, the first part is la ilaha illa'Allah
    - 'there is no god except God' ilaha (god) can
    refer to anything which we may be tempted to put
    in place of God--wealth, power, and the like.
    Then comes illa'Allah 'except God', the source
    of all Creation. The second part of the Shahada
    is Muhammadun rasulu'Llah 'Muhammad is the
    messenger of God.' A message of guidance has come
    through a man like ourselves. It is taken
    directly from the Qur'an

21
QURAN 318, BEARING WITNESS
  • "God bears witness that there is no god but God
    and so do the angels and those possessed of
    knowledge. In justice, there is no god but Him,
    He is the exalted, the wise."

22
2) SALAAT PRAYER
  • dawn
  • noon
  • mid-afternoon
  • sunset
  • nightfall
  • Prayers determine the rhythm of the entire day
  • Prayers can be performed anywhere, but preferably
    in a mosque

23
SALAAT, POSTURES
  • The Salaat consists of standing, bowing,
    prostrating and sitting positions.
  • Before, during and after each of these positions,
    Muslims recite verses from the Holy Qur'an and
    glorify Allah as directed by Prophet Muhammad
    (pbuh) who was taught the details by Archangel
    Jibril (Gabriel, pbuh).

24
  • Muslims performing Salaat facing toward Ka'bah.
    RIGHT Pilgrims in prostration.

25
CALL TO PRAYER
  • God is most Great. God is most Great.God is
    most Great. God is most Great.I testify that
    there is no God except Allah.I testify that
    there is no God except Allah.I testify that
    Muhammad is the messenger of Allah.I testify
    that Muhammad is the messenger of Allah.Come to
    prayer! Come to prayer!Come to success (in this
    life and the Here after)! Come to success!Allah
    is most great. Allah is most great.There is no
    God except Allah.
  • (heard in Muslim mosques)

26
MUSLIMS, CALCUTTA
27
3) ZAKAT ALMSGIVING
  • all things belong to God
  • wealth is therefore held by human beings in
    trust.
  • Zakat literally means grow (in goodness) or
    'increase', 'purifying' or 'making pure'.
  • So the act of giving zakat means purifying one's
    wealth to gain Allah's blessing to make it grow
    in goodness.

28
ZAKAT RELIGIOUS PAYMENT
  • Zakat is a religious payment made by Muslims
    from their wealth or income, or business, or
    crops,
  • In the form of money or crops or animals
    usually 2.5
  • Often Zakat committee set up, or, in Islamic
    countries, government

29
ZAKAT QURAN 9103
  • "Take from their wealth a portion for charity, in
    order to clean them thereby, and sanctify them."

30
4) SAWM OR SIYAM
  • Fasting
  • Every year in the month of Ramadan, all Muslims
    fast from first light until sundown, abstaining
    from food, drink, and sexual relations.

31
SAWM OR SIYAM
  • Those who are sick, elderly, or on a journey, and
    women who are pregnant or nursing are NOT
    required to complete the entire fast
  • They can break the fast and make up an equal
    number of days later in the year
  • They can also feed a needy person for every day
    missed.

32
RAMADAN
  • Ramadan is the ninth month of the Muslim calendar
  • The Month of Ramadan is also when it is believed
    the Holy Quran was sent down from heaven to
    guide humankind and offer the way of Salvation

33
RAMADAN
  • Ramadan is a time when Muslims concentrate on
    their faith and spend less time on the concerns
    of their everyday lives. It is a time of worship
    and contemplation

34
QURAN
  • One may eat and drink at any time during the
    night "until you can plainly distinguish a white
    thread from a black thread by the daylight then
    keep the fast until night."

35
ID/EID-AL-FITR
  • Begins with the sighting of the new moon
  • Fasting is forbidden on this day, as it marks the
    end of the month long fast of Ramadan

36
EID
  • One is encouraged to rise early and eat a light
    snack
  • Then bathe, as always, but with the remembrance
    that this is a special day.
  • Muslims are encouraged to dress in their best
    clothes, new if possible.

37
EID MUBARAK
EID GREETING CARDS
38
5) HAJJ PILGRIMAGE
  • a once-in-a-lifetime obligation upon male and
    female ADULTS whose health and means permit it
  • about two million people go to Makkah each year
    from every corner of the globe

39
HAJJ PREPARATIONS
  • Before setting out, a pilgrim should redress all
    wrongs, pay all debts, plan to have enough funds
    for his/her own journey and for the maintenance
    of the family while he/she is away, and prepare
    him/herself for good conduct throughout the Hajj.

40
HAJJ LUNAR CALENDAR
  • Although Makkah is always filled with visitors,
    the annual Hajj begins in the twelfth month of
    the Islamic year
  • so Hajj and Ramadan are at times celebrated in
    the fall or winter

41
QURAN, 2226-30
  • Behold! We gave the site to Abraham of the
    (Sacred) House (saying) "Associate not any thing
    (in worship) with Me and sanctify My House for
    those who compass it round or stand up or bow or
    prostrate themselves (therein in prayer)."And
    proclaim the Pilgrimage among men they will come
    to thee on foot and (mounted) on every kind of
    camel lean on account of journeys through deep
    and distant mountain highways"That they may
    witness the benefits (provided) for them and
    celebrate the name of Allah through the Days
    appointed over the cattle which He has provided
    for them (for sacrifice) then eat ye thereof and
    feed the distressed ones in want."Then let them
    complete the rites prescribed for them perform
    their vows and (again) circumambulate the Ancient
    House."Such (is the Pilgrimage) whoever honors
    the sacred rites of Allah for him it is good in
    the sight of his Lord. Lawful to you (for food in
    pilgrimage) are cattle except those mentioned to
    you (as exceptions) but shun the abomination of
    idols and shun the word that is false.

42
MINA
  • On the first day of the Hajj, pilgrims sweep out
    of Mecca towards Mina, a small uninhabited
    village east of the city.
  • Pilgrims generally spend their time meditating
    and praying, as the Prophet did on his
    pilgrimage.

43
HAJJ CLOTHING
  • Pilgrims wear simple but special white clothes
    simple because no distinctions of class and
    culture are to be shown
  • Ihram', a garment made of two seamless white
    sheets or towels symbolising purity and equality
    that must be worn by men
  • all are equal before God

44
HAJJ RITES
  • Ablutions (as before prayer times)
  • Abstention from any killing, sexual activity,
    cutting hair or nails

45
TOUCH KAABA
  • The Ka'aba is a stone building located near the
    center of the quadrangle of the Grand Mosque in
    the Holy City of Makkah. Set in a silver
    surround in the east corner of the Ka'aba, some
    four feet above ground level, is the Black Stone.
    This sacred Stone, the focal point of the Hajj,
    is the only remnant of the shrine which Abraham
    built when it was given to Abraham by the angel
    Gabriel.
  • Kiss or touch KAABA
  • Circumambulate 7 times (Tawaaf)

46
KAABA, DRAWING
Each year an Arab nation provides the beautiful
drapes which cover the Kabah for the Hajj.
47
REFLECTIONS AT KAABA
  • To touch and kiss the stone is to travel back in
    time and follow in the footsteps of all those
    pious and noble greats in history who have
    touched it. It is not easy to do that, though. It
    seems there are always too many people ahead who
    are trying to do the same. The closest we came to
    it was about ten feet and there we raised our
    hands in salutation and to say that 'God is
    great.

Reflections of a devotee at the
Haj, http//users.erols.com/ameen/hajjexp.htm j
48
HAJJ KAABA
49
KAABA
  • Islam's holiest place was not built by its last
    Prophet Muhammad
  • tradition has it that the Ka'bah was originally
    built by Prophet Adam and was rebuilt by Prophet
    Ibrahim (Abraham) and his eldest son Prophet
    Isma'il (Ishmael), nearly four thousand five
    hundred years ago.

50
TALBIAH (prayer during Tawaaf circumambulation)
  • Here I am O Allah, at Thy Command. Here I am, at
    Thy Command.There is no partner unto Thee. Here
    I am, at Thy Command.Verily Thine is the praise,
    the blessings and the sovereignty of the
    universe.There is no partner unto Thee.

51
ZAMZAM
  • Zamzam well
  • Where the water sprang up under Ismaels feet
  • Now enclosed in a marble chamber in the Ka'bah

52
REFLECTIONS, ZAMZAM
  • As we drink from Zamzam, we know it is the same
    well that sprang up in the middle of the desert
    so Hagar and Ishmael could drink from it.

http//users.erols.com/ameen/hajjexp.htm
53
SAY RUNNING
  • Run 7 times up and down a colonnade between 2
    hills (450 yards apart) SAY - Hagar searching
    for water for Ishmael
  • Hagar, is said to have run back and forth seven
    times between two rocky hillocks, al-Safa and
    al-Marwah and then found the sacred water known
    as Zamzam

54
Reflections at Hajj
  • As we walk and run between Safa and Marwah, the
    two hillocks in the northeast of Ka'bah, we know
    these are the same hills where Hajerah (Hagar)
    ran to search for water for infant Ishmael.

Reflections of a devotee at the
Hajj http//users.erols.com/ameen/hajjexp.htm
55
(No Transcript)
56
RETURN TO MINA
  • Before daybreak on the third day, pilgrims move
    back to Mina. There they throw white pebbles that
    have been collected earlier.
  • According to some traditions, this practice is
    associated with Prophet Ibrahim.
  • As pilgrims throw seven pebbles at each of these
    pillars, they remember the story of Satan's
    attempt to persuade Ibrahim to disregard God's
    command to sacrifice his son.

57
REFLECTIONS AT MINA
  • As we gather pebbles at Muzdalfah to throw at
    the pillars designated as the place where Satan
    tempted Prophet Abraham, we realize that some of
    the very pebbles may have been touched by the
    Prophet and his companions. At this place, we are
    in the grip of history. We can see it, hear it,
    feel it, touch it and drink from it. It is in
    Mina where Satan tempted Prophet Abraham and he
    threw pebbles at Satan to keep him at bay. In the
    memory of that incident, we also throw pebbles at
    the symbolic Satan reminding ourselves the satan
    within us exploiting our weaknesses and tempting
    us with riches, pleasures, and non-productive
    activities.

http//users.erols.com/ameen/hajjexp.htm
58
FESTIVAL OF SACRIFICE
  • Following the casting of the pebbles, most
    pilgrims sacrifice a goat, sheep or some other
    animal. They give the meat to the poor after, in
    some cases, keeping a small portion for
    themselves.

59
CAMELS, FOR FESTIVAL OF SACRIFICE
60
END OF HAJJ
  • Men either shave their heads or clip their hair,
    and women cut off a symbolic lock, to mark their
    partial deconsecration. This is done as a symbol
    of humility. All proscriptions, save the one of
    conjugal relations, are now lifted.

61
REFLECTION END OF HAJJ
  • The most difficult time comes when leaving the
    House of Allah. One is never completely satisfied
    with the time spent here. There is always a
    desire for visiting it again and to enjoy the
    peace and tranquility of this holy place of the
    Prophets. We make the farewell Tawaaf and pray
    that we come back here soon.

http//users.erols.com/ameen/hajjexp.htm
62
HAJJ, REFLECTION
  • "It would require a master pen to describe the
    scene, poignant in its intensity, of that great
    concourse of humanity of which I was one small
    unit, completely lost to their surroundings in a
    fervor of religious enthusiasm. Many of the
    pilgrims had tears streaming down their cheeks
    others raised their faces to the starlit sky that
    had witnessed this drama so often in the past
    centuries. The shining eyes, the passionate
    appeals, the pitiful hands outstretched in prayer
    moved me in a way that nothing had ever done
    before, and I felt caught up in a strong wave of
    spiritual exaltation. I was one with the rest of
    the pilgrims in a sublime act of complete
    surrender to the Supreme Will which is Islam."

Lady Evelyn Cobbold, 1934 http//www.islam.org/Mos
que/jlthajj/hajj.htm
63
  • ISLAM IN INDIA

64
FIRST MUSLIMS 711
  • Caliphate of Damscus

65
MAHMUD OF GHAZNI
  • Afghanistan
  • 1001 1026 CE
  • 17 invasions
  • The Idol Breaker

GHAZNI VICTORY TOWER, GHAZNI, AFGHANISTAN
66
ANANDPAL, RAJA OF PUNJAB
  • 1008 CE
  • Peshawar
  • Runaway
  • Elephant

67
TIMUR
Tamerlane 1398, India
"I am the scourge of God appointed to chastise
you, since no one knows the remedy for your
iniquity except me. You are wicked, but I am more
wicked than you, so be silent!"
68
BABUR
1526-1530
69
PURANA QILA, DELHI
Babur's Purana Qila, Delhi
70
HUMANYUN
  • 1530-1556

71
AKBAR
  • 1556-1605
  • Son of Humayun
  • Greatest of Mughal
  • line

72
Jahangir's birth, Rejoicing, Mughal, c. 1590.
73
JAHANGIR
  • 1605-1627
  • Muslim emperor in power when first Europeans came
    to India
  • Built Sikandra, Akbars tomb

74
SHAHJAHAN
  • 1627-1658
  • Shahjahan
  • Mumtaz

75
TAJ MAHAL
76
AURANGZEB
  • 1658 to 1707

77
BRIDGES ISLAM AND HINDUISM
  • Kabir
  • Nanak
  • Akbar

78
KABIR, THE WEAVER
79
KABIR
  • Are you looking for me? I am in the next seat.
  • My shoulder is against yours.
  • You will not find me in stupas, not in shrine
    rooms, nor in temples
  • Not in masses, nor kirtan, not in eating nothing
    but vegetables.
  • When you really look for me, you will see me
    instantly
  • You will find me in the tiniest house of time.
  • Kabir says Student, tell me, what is God?
  • He is the breath inside the breath.

80
KABIR
  • Swan, tell me your story.
  • What country have you come from, swan, what
    shores are you flying to?
  • Where do you rest at night, and what are you
    looking for?
  • Its dawn, swan, wake up, soar to the air, follow
    me!
  • There is a land not governed by sadness and
    doubt, where the fear of death is unknown.
  • Spring forests bloom there and the wind is sweet
    with the flower He-Is-Myself.
  • The bee if the heart dives into it and wants no
    other joy.

81
KABIR
  • 1440 1518 CE
  • Weaver caste in Varanasi
  • (At an earlier time weaver caste of Varanasi had
    converted to Islam)
  • Advantageous to do so
  • Kabir raised as Muslim

82
KABIRS CRITIQUE OF ISLAM
  • Im asking you, Mr. Muslim
  • With your red and yellow
  • Rags and robes.
  • Now you, Mr. Qazi religious administrator
  • What kind of work is that,
  • Going from house to house
  • Chopping heads?
  • Who gave you the order for chickens and goats?
  • Who told you to swing the knife?
  • Arent you afraid to be called a sage
  • As you read your verses
  • And dupe the world?
  • Kabir says, this high class Muslim
  • Wants to force this way on the world.
  • Fast all day
  • Kill cows at night,
  • Here prayers, there blood
  • Does this please God?

83
- KABIR URGED PEOPLE OF ALL FAITHS TO FIND
SALVATION IN TOTAL SURRENDER TO GOD - THIS ALONE
IS THE TRUE PATH
84
KABIR
  • O servant, where does thou seek me?
  • Lo! I am beside thee.
  • I am neither in temple nor in mosque.
  • I am neither in Kaaba nor in Kailash.
  • Neither am I in rites and ceremonies,
  • Nor in yoga and renunciation.
  • If thou are a true seeker,
  • Thou shalt at once see me.
  • Thou shalt meet me in a moment of time.
  • Kabir says, O Sadhu
  • God is in the breath of all.

85
AKBAR
  • Conquest is not what he is known for
  • Unification and consolidation
  • Policy of conciliation

86
AKBAR
  • Abolished jizya special tax on non-Muslims
  • Sought out Hindu holy men
  • Employed Hindus

87
GENUINE CULTURAL SYNTHESIS
  • Began as a policy of conciliation
  • Evolved into something much bigger
  • CULTURAL SYNTENSIS OF THE FINEST ELEMENTS OF ALL
    THE WORLDS RELIGIONS

88
AKBAR LEADS BY EXAMPLE
  • Married 4 wives Muslim, Buddhist, Christian,
    Hindu

89
FATEHPUR SIKRI
  • Visible model of policy of cultural fusion
  • Combined elements of both Muslim and Hindu
    traditions

90
Diwan-i-kas - Akbar's audiences
91
(No Transcript)
92
Buland gate, entrance to Masjid
93
Din-i-Ilahi
  • divine faith
  • New religion
  • One that would incorporate both the common and
    the BEST elements of the worlds religions
  • Religious syncretism

94
FATEHPUR SIKRI A DREAM?
  • YET, IN A LITTLE MORE THAN 20 YEARS, FATEHPUR
    SIKRI WAS ABANDONED
  • POSSIBLY BECAUSE OF A SHORTAGE OF WATER
  • TODAY, IT IS QUIET AND DESERTED PLACE
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