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- Essay Name : 1042.txt
- Uploader : Nathan Johnson
- Email Address : nate@wingnet.net
- Language : English
- Subject : History
- Title : The Rise of Muhammad and Islam
- Grade : 96
- School System : College
- Country : USA
- Author Comments : A biography of Muhammad with several sources
- Teacher Comments : "Thanks for using a source other than the text"
- Date : October 16, 1996
- Site found at : a link from an unofficial Sex Pistols page
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- When Charles Martel defeated the Muslims in Spain and stopped their advance into greater
- Europe, he most likely did not know just how much of an effect his victory had on the history of not
- only Europe, but of the known world. The fact that Islam may have overtaken the rest of the world
- had it not been for that crucial battle attests to the strength of this relatively new religion. If the
- strength of the religion is dependent upon those who start it, then it is important to analyze the life of
- the one key character in history who began it all: Muhammad.
- Muhammad was born in 570 AD, and was soon an orphan without parents. He was raised by a
- family of modest means and was forced to work to support himself at an early age. He worked with a
- travelling caravan as a driver and at the age of twenty-five, married his employer, a woman by the
- name of Khadija, by which he had four daughters and no sons.
- In Mecca, the Ka'ba had long been a pagan pilgrimage site. A black stone which has fallen to the
- earth was kept in the cube which also held 360 idols representing different gods and prophets, one
- for each degree of the earth. The environment in which Muhammad was raised was a polytheistic
- society which had a strong emphasis on religion but not religious purity.
- This upset Muhammad greatly, and he began to speak out against the idolatry. By this time
- Muhammad had gained a large following. By the age of forty, Muhammad began to receive visits
- from the angel Gabriel, who recited God's word to him at irregular intervals. These recitations, known
- as the Qur'an, were compiled by Muhammad's followers around 650 or 651.
- The basic message Muhammad received was that of submission. Islam means "submission",
- and Muhammad's followers became known as Muslims ("submissives" or "those who submit").
- So when Muhammad and his followers began to speak out against the pagan and immoral
- practices in Mecca, they threatened the trade brought in by the pilgrims, which enraged the local
- merchants. Under serious persecution, Muhammad and his followers fled to the town of Medina, 240
- miles north of Mecca, in 622. This event has become known as the Hegira and marks the beginning
- of the Islamic calendar.
- While in Medina, Muhammad and his men trained not only in religious aspects, but also trained to
- be mighty warriors. They attacked caravans going to and from Mecca for supplies and new recruits.
- They gathered more support as the years went on and became a powerful force ready for battle. In
- 630, that battle came.
- Muhammad and his men attacked and seized Mecca in 630 and destroyed all of the 360 idols
- within the Ka'ba, with the exception of the sacred stone, which is still a revered Muslim artifact.
- It was during the Medina years that the basics of the Islamic beliefs came into focus. Firstly, all
- followers were to be fair and just in all that they did, including business actions. They were also
- expected to be completely loyal to the Muslim community of which they were a part and to Muslims
- everywhere. They were to abstain from pork and alcohol at all times. Men were allowed to have up to
- four wives (provided they loved and treated each one equally) and as many concubines as they
- wished. Women, on the other hand, were not allowed the right to polygamy, and could only show
- their faces to their husbands. Whereas men could divorce on demand, women had to prove
- wrongdoing before an elder on the part of the husband.
- In addition, Muslims were expected to wash and pray toward Mecca five times daily. Muslims
- were to contribute to the poor and needy as they may one day be in need themselves. Also, during
- the month of Ramadan, followers of Islam were to fast during daylight hours. They could eat during
- nighttime hours, however, and the month was followed by a feast for all who stayed true to the fast of
- the previous month.
- Another interesting requirement, which rounds out the Pillars of Faith (as they were to become
- called), requires all followers to make a pilgrimage to Mecca once in their lifetime. While in Mecca,
- Muslims reenact many scenes from the life of Muhammad, such as the long walk from the Ka'ba to a
- mountain, where they stand in the blistering sun before Allah for hours on end. They also walk
- around the Ka'ba (which has been closed since Muhammad purged the idols) seven times, kissing
- the sacred stone at each pass (after about 20 billion kisses the stone has become black). The
- pilgrimage is known as the hajj, and all those who make the hajj add "Haji" to the end of their names
- to signify they have fulfilled this important Pillar.
- The conquering of Mecca by force shows an interesting precedent: whereas Christianity sought to
- convert individuals, Islam began to "evangelize" by violently taking over area governments and purging
- any opposition to Muslim conversion. They invaded Spain in 711 and could have possibly drastically
- altered the history of the Judeo-Christian ethic in Western Europe under the rule of the Catholic
- Church had they not been defeated in Gaul.
- After Muhammad's death in 632, several caliphs took over control (because Muhammad had no
- sons), such as Abu Bakr, Muhammad's second-in-command from the time of Medina, but after the
- assassination of Ali, leadership broke down into three groups: the Kharijites, who wanted to limit Islam
- to only the most strict observers of the Pillars of Faith, the Sunnis, which followed tradition to
- determine the new caliph, and the Shiites, easily the most radical, who follow the descendants of Ali
- as the caliph. The Shiites most recently have hijacked airplanes and destroyed buildings, as well as
- publicly torture themselves annually to mourn for the lost control of the Islamic religion.
- Muhammad changed the world with roughly twenty-two years of leadership and service. He is
- considered the last and greatest prophet of God by more than a few, and it has been predicted that by
- the year 2000, one-fourth of the world's (by then) six billion people will call themselves Muslims.
-
-
-
- Works Cited
-
- 1. Gabrieli, Francesco. Muhammad and the Conquests of Islam. Officine Arnoldo Mondadori,
- Verona Italy, 1968.
-
- 2. Haddad, Yvonne Yazbeck, John Obert Voll and John L. Esposito. The Contemporary Islamic
- Revival. Greenwood Press, Westport, CT, 1991.
-
- 3. Kagan Donald, Stephen Ozment and Frank M. Turner. The Western Heritage Fifth Edition.
- Prentice-Hall, Inc., Englewood Cliffs, New Jersey, 1995.
-
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