1 / 75

Islam History, Customs and Religion Part Four

Islam History, Customs and Religion Part Four. Slide Presentation. Pre-Islamic Arabia And Its Socio-Religious Condition Muhammad Mohar Ali.

Download Presentation

Islam History, Customs and Religion Part Four

An Image/Link below is provided (as is) to download presentation Download Policy: Content on the Website is provided to you AS IS for your information and personal use and may not be sold / licensed / shared on other websites without getting consent from its author. Content is provided to you AS IS for your information and personal use only. Download presentation by click this link. While downloading, if for some reason you are not able to download a presentation, the publisher may have deleted the file from their server. During download, if you can't get a presentation, the file might be deleted by the publisher.

E N D

Presentation Transcript


  1. Islam History, Customs and ReligionPart Four Slide Presentation

  2. Pre-Islamic Arabia And Its Socio-Religious Condition Muhammad Mohar Ali In the article by the above title the author gives a lengthy essay of social and religious conditions in Arabia prior to the establishment of Islam. The full article may be read on the Internet at: http://bismikaallahuma.org/History/pre-islamic.htm. Some of the more pertinent points are: “Arab historians and traditions classify the inhabitants of Arabia into two broad divisions, their extinct ancestors and the surviving people. The extinct ancestors are called al- 'Arab al-Ba'idah (the extinct Arabs) who lived and flourished in dim antiquity but who have

  3. gone almost entirely out of existence. Examples of these extinct Arabs are the 'Ad, and the Thamud, the Tasm, the Jadis, the 'Amlaq and others of whom virtually no survivors are found. The Qur'an makes repeated references to those bygone peoples, particularly to the 'Ad and the Thamud.” “The surviving people are divided into two categories, al- 'Arab al- 'Aribah or the Aboriginal Arabs and al-'Arab al-Musta'ribah or the Naturalized Arabs. The first are the descendants of Ya'rub son of Yashjub, son of Qahtan (Joktan of the Old Testament). They are therefore more generally called Qahtanite Arabs. Their habitat was Yaman. The famous Sabaean and Himyarite kingdoms and their high degree of civilization were the work of these Qahtanite Arabs. The Qur'an makes special mention of the Sabaeans.”

  4. “The Naturalized Arabs, al-'Arab al-Musta'ribah, were the descendants of Prophet Ibrahim(P) through his eldest son Prophet Isma'il(P). It must not be supposed that they were later in coming to Arabia than the above mentioned Qahtanite tribes from the south. In fact Prophet Isma'il and his mother settled at Makka long before the dispersal of the above mentioned Qahtanite tribes in different parts of Arabia. It should also be noted that Prophet Ibrahim was no non-Arab or non-Semitic person. He descended from the same Semitic Arabs who had long previously migrated and settled in the Tigris-Euphrates valley (Babylonia). In that sense his coming to Makka and settling his son and wife there was a sort of return to the original home of his ancestors. The descendants of Isma'il are called "naturalized Arabs" not really because they were originally non-Semitic outsiders, but mainly because their ancestors had long before left the land.”

  5. “For a long time indeed the descendents of Isma'il continued to follow the faith and rites in their original forms as introduced by him and his father. With the passage of centuries, however, they gradually deviated from the original faith and succumbed to the natural tendency of the crude and unsophisticated mind to find an easily approachable god for support in times of distress and for redress of wrong, to the tendency to idolize a hero or ancestor, to the sense of helplessness in the face of the forces of nature and, above all, to the influence of the practice of those who were regarded as superior, intellectually, physically or materially.” Please keep in mind that these quotes are from an Islamic historian and they are presenting his viewpoint.

  6. Introduction of Idols “Polytheism was introduced at Makka after its occupation by Banu Khuza'ah, particularly by their leader 'Amr ibn Luhayy. According to Ibn Hisham 'Amr once went to Syria where he observed the people worshipping idols. He enquired of them of the reasons for their doing so and they replied that they did so because those idols caused the 'rains to fall for them and victory to attend them as they prayed to the idols for these things. 'Amr was impressed and asked them whether they would give him one for his people to worship it. Accordingly they gave him the idol of Hubal which he brought to Makka, placed it near the Ka'ba and asked his people to worship it. As they considered him their leader and wise man they started worshipping the idol. According to Ibn al-Kalbi, 'Amr once fell seriously ill and was told by someone that if he took a bath in a special spring in Syria he would be cured. So he went there, took a bath in that spring and was cured. As he observed the people there worshipping idols he asked them the reason for their doing so, etc.”

  7. Semite god; a bull with man’s head, one type of idol to be found in early Mesopotamia. Babylonian sun god on a clay tablet. The worship of the sun in many cultures may have prompted Muhammad to look, instead of the sun, to the moon as a god.

  8. Some of the ancient gods were humanized by bodies or heads of animals, birds and men. Many of the gods were real or fictionalized animals. The Ka’ba at the time of Muhammad contained many different types of gods.

  9. “The story illustrates the fact that polytheism found its way among the descendants of Ismail from their neighbours and others.” “These gods were indeed worshipped by Prophet Nuh's people, as the Qur'an clearly states (Q. 71:23). They represented certain cults relating to astral worship or worship of the forces of nature or deification of some human qualities, prevalent in ancient Assyria and Babylonia, the land of Nuh's people.” “Ultimately each and every tribe and clan, in fact every family, had their special idol to worship. On the eve of the Prophet's emergence some 360 idols were placed in and around the Ka'ba. The most important of these was Hubal. It was a big statue in human form of which a hand having been broken the Quraysh had it remade with gold. Two of the idols in the Ka'ba compound were 'Isaf and Na'ila, placed originally on the spot of the Zamzam well but subsequently removed to a spot near the hills of Safa and Marwah.”

  10. The Pre-Islamic deity "Hubal" was derived from the red skinned Ba-Hubali, another name for Lord Hanuman “Muhammad’s attention then turned to the large statue of Hubal on the roof of the temple. Hubal is none other than Ba-Hubali, another name for Hanuman. The First Encyclopaedia of Islam relates that "Hubal was an idol, made of red carnelian, in the form of a man".

  11. “Anybody who is familiar with Hindu temples knows that BaHubali (Hanuman) is the great Monkey God, the son of the Wind-God. He is always represented in red, and adorns the roof of the temple pinnacle. This is because in the great Hindu epic Ramayana, BaHubali was rewarded for his great devotion to Lord Rama, by being accorded the privilege of always carrying the Hindu flag, which is poised on the pinnacle of temples. Thus the image of Hubal, was none other than the red colored image of BaHubali holding the saffron "Dhvaj" or flag of Hinduism on the roof of the Kaaba temple. “This image of BaHubali was dragged down from the roof, and the saffron flag that it held was trampled into the dirt by the "Holy Prophet". The icon itself was buried in the sand and used as a doorstep. This particular practice of the Prophet, of taking down the sacred idol of a temple and using it as a doorstep to trample, on set a precedent that would be extensively followed by the pious adherents of Islam in the future. One has a hard time believing in the "tolerant" nature of Islam, when the Prophet of Islam himself desecrated and insulted another religion in such a disrespectful fashion.”

  12. “Like a devouring fire, Muhammad's malevolence fed off the innumerable defilements and desecrations that he and the Muslims committed that day. All the other stones that were worshipped in the Temple were used as cornerstones of the Kaaba Mosque structure that was raised. The only idol that Muhammad spared was the black stone known today as "Sangey Aswad", which I have explained before as being the Shivling. The only reason this was spared is that, it was the family deity of Muhammad's clan. In addition, the Prophet was cunning enough to realize that in leaving the Shivling there, he would be guaranteed a sizeable and constant income, by charging pilgrims who would throng to worship the sacred stone. This act by itself invalidates all of Muhammad's pompous claims about idolatry and exposes the self-contradictory nature of Islam. If indeed his new religion was violently opposed to idolatry in any form, why did the founder of Islam decide to invest a mere Black stone with divinity? In fact, Muhammad is said to have circambulated the Shivling seven times and then to have kissed it, in an exact replication of the manner in which the Vedic Arabs used to pay homage to it.” Aditi Chaturvedi Vedic Past of Pre-Islamic Arabia - Part 5

  13. The Ka’ba at Mecca “Besides thus making the Ka'ba the principal dormitory of their numerous idols the Arabs had developed a number of subsidiary Ka'bas (tawaghit), so to say, at different places in the land, each with its presiding god or goddess.” “They used to visit those shrines at appointed times, circumambulate them and make sacrifices of animals there, besides performing other polytheistic rites.”

  14. “The pre-Islamic Arabs used to worship these idols or gods and goddesses in various ways. They used to make supplication to them, prostrated themselves before them, made offerings to them, beseeched their favour, sought to please or propitiate them in the belief that they were capable of doing good or harm to man, sacrificed animals on altars dedicated to them, made pilgrimages to their shrines, circumambulated them and drew arrows of divination by them or in their shrines. They also used to name themselves after these gods and goddesses….But though thus engrossed in extensive polytheism and idol-worship the pre-Islamic Arabs did not develop any elaborate mythology or involved theology around their gods and goddesses….No trace of such things can be found in the pre-Islamic poetry and traditions. This fact further indicates that polytheism and idol worship were not indigenous to the Isma'ilite Arabs but were grafted on to the Abrahamic tradition.”

  15. “Idols however were not the only abominations, that the Prophet had to destroy in the Kaaba. There were many holy paintings in the Kaaba as well. According to another Muslim historian's account,"Umar began to wash out the pictures with the water of the Zamzam well, when Muhammad placed his hand on a picture of Jesus and Mary and said: "Wash out all except what is below my hands". This is an absolute anomaly. “The Pre-Islamic Arabs were known for their abhorrence towards Christianity and in fact had even fought off the Christian Ruler of Yemen, an Abyssinian by the name Abraha. Abraha had massacred the Jews of Yemen and sold a third of them as slaves. He had sworn to destroy the Kaaba and in 570 AD, he attacked Mecca for this very reason. However a miracle which the Meccans attributed to their beloved Allah (Durga), is supposed to have turned away Abraha and his hordes. It is ludicrous to imagine that the Meccans would then proceed to put up a painting of the Christian icons, Mother Mary and Jesus, in their sacred precinct of the Kaaba. Muhammad's God himself admits as much in the Quran, where he says the disbelievers show great disrespect for (Jesus).”

  16. The only painting that was not destroyed in the Kaabaprobably depicted Goddess Parvati and the child-god KartikkeyaSource: Amar Chitra Katha “…we can safely conclude that the Painting described by Muslim historians couldn't possibly have depicted Jesus and Mary as claimed. This painting probably depicted the divine motherly representation of Durga(Allah) as Shiva's wife Parvati with the child Kartikkeya. Kartikkeya was named after the six Kritikkas, which are actually the six stars known as Pleiades.”

  17. “Since the Kaaba is based on an astronomical plan, it's quite possible that the Kritikkas and the son of God named after them, Kartikkeya would be depicted along with the Mother-goddess in a Temple paintings. The presence of a Shivling in the Kaaba which represents Lord Shiva, the father of Kartikkeya is also significant in this regard. Also one may remember that Muhammad's family were primarily Shiva worshippers and that his name "Muhammad" is derived from the word "Mahadev" which is another name for lord Shiva. Perhaps Muhammad could not dare to demolish this one last reminder of his family's polytheistic past.” “The initial destruction of all 360 images in the Kaaba, was only the beginning of Muhammad's horrendous rampage. Within a matter of days, he would attempt to destroy as much of Arabia's Vedic heritage as possible.” The Works "The Life & times of Muhammad" by Sir John Glubb, "An Introduction to the Hadith" by John Burton and "Hindu Temples: What Happened to Them?" by Sita Ram Goel

  18. The Gods of the Quraysh The Quraysh tribe into which Muhammad was born was particularly devoted to Allah, the moon god, and especially to Allah's three daughters who were viewed as intercessors between the people and Allah. The worship of the three goddesses, Al-Lat, Al-Uzza, and Manat, played a significant role in the worship at the Kabah in Mecca. The first two daughters Allah had names which were feminine forms of Allah. The literal Arabic name of Muhammad's father was Abd-Allah. His uncle's name was Obied-Allah. These names reveal the personal devotion that Muhammad's pagan family had to the worship of Allah, the moon god.

  19. Crescent Moon: Symbol of Islam? The crescent moon and star is an internationally-recognized symbol of the faith of Islam.  The symbol is featured on the flags of several Muslim countries, and is even part of the official emblem for the International Federation of Red Cross and Red Crescent Societies.   The Christians have the cross, the Jews have the star of David, and the Muslims have the crescent moon. What is the history behind the crescent moon symbol?  What does it symbolize or mean?  How and when did it become associated with the faith of Islam? 

  20. The Crescent Moon Symbol The symbol of the worship of the moon god in Arabian culture and elsewhere throughout the Middle East was the crescent moon. Archaeologists have dug up numerous statues and hieroglyphic inscriptions in which a crescent moon was seated on top of the head of the deity to symbolize the worship of the moon god. In the same fashion as the sun is pictured above the Egyptian deity. While the moon was generally worshiped as a female deity in the Ancient Near East, the Arabs viewed it as a male deity.

  21. The Maqam Ibrahim is located in front of the only door of the Ka’ba. Inside the building is a boulder about 2 x 3 feet in size and that claims to have the footprint of Abraham which was imbedded when his foot miraculously sank into the rock when he stood on it. Muslims believe (without proof) that this is the spot where Abraham used to perform prayers near the Ka’ba. They also believe he used it as a stepping stone to build the Ka’ba. Tradition says the Ka’ba was built first by Adam and restored by Abraham and Ishmael, thus the reference to “build the Ka’ba”.

  22. The Crescent Moon Used Today You can see the symbol of the crescent moon on top of the Maqam Ibrahim beside the Ka’ba, as well as nearly every mosque in the world. The historical connection with pagan moon worship is thus obvious.

  23. The Islamic Center In Nashville on 12th Avenue South. Notice the Crescent Moon and Star on the top of the Center, a symbol appearing on most mosques. 

  24. The Black Stone "Before Muhammad appeared, the Kaaba was surrounded by 360 idols, and every Arab house had its god. Arabs also believed in jinn (subtle spirit beings), and some vague divinity with many offspring. Among the major deities of the pre-Islamic era were al-Lat ("the Goddess"), worshiped in the shape of a square stone; al-Uzzah ("the Mighty"), a goddess identified with the morning star and worshiped as a thigh-bone-shaped slab of granite between al Talf and Mecca; Manat, the goddess of destiny, worshiped as a black stone on the road between Mecca and Medina; and the moon god, Hubal, whose worship was connected with the Black Stone of the Kaaba. The stones were said to have fallen from the sun, moon, stars, and planets and to represent cosmic forces. The so-called Black Stone (actually the color of burnt umber) that Muslims revere today is the same one that their forebears had worshiped well before Muhammad and that they believed had come from the moon. (No scientific investigation

  25. The Black Stone has ever been performed on the stone. In 930, the stone was removed and shattered by an Iraqi sect of Qarmatians, but the pieces were later returned. The pieces, sealed in pitch and held in place by silver wire, measure about 10 inches in diameter altogether and several feet high; they are venerated today in patched-together form.)" (Peter Occhigrosso, 1996 The Joy of Sects)

  26. Muslims believe (without proof) that the revered "black stone" (Alhajar Al-Aswad) is a special divine meteorite, that pre-dates creation that fell at the foot of Adam and Eve. It is presently embedded in the southeastern corner of the Ka’ba. Muslims touch and kiss the black stone during Hajj but non-Muslims are strictly forbidden to even touch it. The stone has been attacked many times and is now composed of several pieces and fragments, bound together by a silver ligature. It is semicircular and measures about ten inches horizontally and twelve inches vertically.

  27. “The Arabs' polytheism and worship of idols together with their mistaken notions about Allah determined their whole attitude toward life and society. They considered life in this world to be the be-all and end-all of human existence. They worshipped and propitiated the gods and goddesses and recognized Allah for that purpose alone. They did not believe in resurrection, reward and punishment and life after death. ‘There is nothing but our life in this world; we shall die and live but shall never be raised up again’, so they believed and declared.” “This attitude led to a sense of ultimate unaccountability and a desire to enjoy the worldly life in all possible ways and without any restrictions. Licentiousness, prostitution, adultery, fornication and unbridled indulgence in wine, women and gambling were thus widely prevalent. Unlimited polygamy was in

  28. vogue and a sort of polyandry, in which a particular woman was used as wife by a number of men (less than 10), was not uncommon. If a child was born in such a case, it was to be accepted by the person whom the woman declared to be its father. Sometimes a person allowed his wife to go to other persons for the sake of having a son.” “The woman's position in society was indeed unenviable, though she participated in many a social and economic activity and though we sometimes find glowing tributes paid to sweethearts in pre-Islamic poetry. In general, women were treated as chattels. There was no limit to a man's taking as many wives as he liked. Similarly he divorced his wives at will and quite frequently.”

  29. Arabian Peninsula. The area occupied by the descendants of Abraham and the origin of the religion of Islam.

  30. Arabian Peninsula as seen from space. The lighter area is desert.

  31. “While this was the general socio-religious scene, other religious systems like Christianity, Judaism, Mazdaism (Zoroastrianism) and Sabaism (or Sabianism) had made their way into the peninsula in a limited way. Christianity was introduced in some northern tribes, particularly among the Ghassanid and in Hira mainly at the instance and initiative of the Byzantine authorities. Some princes of Hira had embraced it. In the south it was introduced in Yaman mainly after the first Abyssinian occupation of that land (340-378 A.C.). In its neighbouring region of Najran Christianity of the Monophysite type was introduced by a missionary from Syria named Faymiyun. A number of people of the area embraced that faith. There was also a sprinkling of Christian immigrants and converts at Makka at the time of the Prophet's rise.”

  32. “So far as Judaism was concerned it found its place in the peninsula not so much by conversion as by immigration of the Jews into it. This immigration took place mainly at two periods - one after the Babylonian occupation of Palestine in 587 B.C. and for a second time after the Roman conquest of the land and the destruction of Jerusalem by Titus in 70 A.C. A number of Jewish tribes migrated into Arabia and were settled at places like Yathrib (Madina)…Not that they remained completely inactive in the matter of propagation of their faith. According to tradition they made a convert of the Himyarite king (Tubba') Abu Karib As'ad Kamil (385-420 A.C) when he visited Madina in the course of a northern expedition and sent with him two rabbis to propagate Judaism in Yaman. The extent of the success of these Jewish missionaries in Yaman is not clear; but a descendant of As'ad Kamil's, Dhui Nuwas,

  33. proved to be a vigorous champion of Judaism. He persecuted the Christians not only of Yaman but even massacred the Christian community of Najran, throwing a large number of them in a deep ditch full of fire. His intolerance brought about a joint Byzantine-Abyssinian intervention in Yaman leading to the end of Dhu Nuwas's rule and the beginning of the second Abyssinian occupation of the land under Abrahah. As noted earlier, Abrahah determined to Christianize the whole land, built a gigantic cathedral at San'a' and led a campaign against Makka in 570-7 1 A.C. to destroy the Ka'ba.” These were the general conditions which led to the opportunity of Muhammad to establish a new religion which became Islam.

  34. The Development of Islam After the church had been in existence for 500 years, a period in which people were drawn both toward and away from the New Testament pattern, and a period during which the early “church fathers” began organizing into what developed as the Catholic church, a man by the name of Muhammad was born on August 20 in the city of Mecca in 570 A.D. Muhammad was a part of one of the dominant Arab tribes, the Qu’raish (people) and was a part of the trading society of Mecca. Mecca had become a great trading city and was a stopping place for merchants and businessmen of all races, religions, and countries. It was an open city, open to the world. It was a period of many leaders, none able to control the area for a long period of time.

  35. Muhammad’s father , Abdullah, died before his was born and his mother, Amina, died when he was six years old. His grandfather, Abdul-Muttalib, took him to raise, but he died two years later. An uncle, Abdul-Talib, took him in where he helped run the camel caravan business taking goods to and from Syria and other places.

  36. Muhammad was hired by a widow named Kadijah to help with the caravan she inherited from her deceased husband. At age 25 he married the rich widow (who was 39) whose money allowed him to rise from a lowly position in life. They had three sons (who died in infancy) and four daughters; one Fatima, who became the wife of a great warrior, a Caliph, and eventually a successor to Muhammad. He is believe to have spent a great deal of time in a cave named Hira located on a hill near Mecca (photo). Beginning around 610 A.D., Muhammad claimed that one night in the month of Ramadan he thought he heard a voice speaking to him twice. Through meditating in the desert cave he claimed God revealed to him through the angel Gabriel certain revelations.

  37. The voice commanded him to read, to which he replied, “I cannot read.” The voice continued until he asked “What shall I read?” The response was: “Read in the name of your Lord Who created. He created man from a clot. Read again and your Lord is most Honorable. Who taught (to write) with the pen. Taught man what he knew not.” (Surah 96:1-5) It is claimed that this is the first revelation of the Qur’an brought from heaven by the angel Gabriel. Muhammad never personally wrote down any of these revelations that were received over a period of 23 years. They were written shortly after his death and they are now called the Qur’an. After the experiences in the desert, Muhammad claimed to be a prophet of God with the commission to guide others by God’s message revealed to him. Around 617 A.D. he began to preach to anyone who would listen to him.

  38. His message at first was a simple one: that Allah (God) is one, and is lord of everything. The people of Mecca at this time had a religion called Ka’aba. They literally worship a black stone (a cube). The basis of the religion was the belief that many objects possessed spirits (called jinn) and power, and the black stone was one of these objects. Obviously, the message claiming Allah was Lord was not well received in a society that already had hundreds of gods. The people called Muhammad a sorcerer and a false prophet. They claimed he was possessed, and eventually ran him out of Mecca. His fleeing , or escape, is now called the year of Hijra (Flight, immigration) and marks the first year on the Muslim calendar. Muhammad fled to Medina, a city situated c.110 mi inland from the Red Sea in a well-watered oasis where fruit, dates, vegetables, and grain are raised. Before the flight from Mecca to the city in 622, Medina was called Yathrib. Muhammad quickly gained control of Medina, successfully defended it against attacks

  39. from Mecca, and used it as the base for converting and conquering Arabia. He used the city as a base for a Holy War (Jihad) against Mecca, which, after eight years he conquered and became its ruler.

  40. The first mosque was built which became a place for the homeless and travelers as well as a place for public discussion and worship. Muhammad used the supposed revelations to govern the community by “divine law.” This system inaugurated the way of life now known as Islam. A way that controls not only the religious life, but also the political and social life as well. It is the way that Islam continues to advocate today. The early visions of Muhammad suggests he was a prophet to everyone in Arabia, whether pagan, Jewish or Christian, and all of them were to be included in the community life. But when the Jews rejected him as a prophet and his accounts of sacred history he severely denounced them in the Qur’an. In some parts of the Qur’an the Jews are called “people of the book” and were to be tolerated, and in some they are dealt with harshly.

  41. The Black Stone of Islam Upon the defeat of the Meccan army, Muhammad tore down the 360 idols of the Ka’ba and destroyed them, but kept the Black Stone as a sacred part of Islam. The prayers that formally were directed toward Jerusalem must now be said facing Mecca. The Black Stone

  42. Pilgrims to Mecca, after circumambulating the Ka’ba, enter the Ka’ba to see, and if possible, to kiss the Black Stone. “Remember We made the House a place of assembly for men and a place of safety; and take ye the Station of Abraham as a place of prayer; and We covenanted with Abraham and Isma’il, that they should sanctify My House for those who compass it round, or use it as a retreat, or bow, or prostrate themselves (therein in prayer)." (Qur’an 2:125)

  43. Muhammad established the divine orders he thought he was called to carry out and made a pilgrimage to Mecca a part of his religious reorganization. Islam spread very rapidly during the first 100 years of its existence. With the majority of the Arabian Peninsula under Islam, Muhammad died on June 8, 632 A.D. During his lifetime he did not claim to be an innovator or a revolutionary, only that he was commissioned to complete the work of the Jewish and Christian prophets. In less than 100 years from the advent of Islam, the Islamic Empire extended from Spain to areas of India and China. Islam at that time made no distinction based on race, class, or background, and the Muslim world was considered a worldwide community, the ummah.

  44. “This day have I perfected your religion for you and completed my favor upon you, and have chosen for you Islam as your religion.” Sura 5:4. Muhammad rose to become lawgiver, administrator and judge. He brought peace and reconciliation to tribes and families who had long been at war. Abu Bakr said, “If you worshipped Muhammad, he is indeed dead; but if you worship God, He is alive and can never die.” This statement is the reason why his followers do not wish to be called “Mohammedans”, rather they want to be called “Muslims”.

  45. Some Tenants of Islam Visit to Mecca to worship at the Ka’ba The Ka’ba is a small, cubed building in Mecca towards which Muslims face five times a day, everyday, in prayer. This has been the case since the time of Prophet Muhammad. The current height of the Ka’ba is 39 feet, 6 inches and total size comes to 627 square feet. The walls are all made of stone. The stones inside are unpolished, while the ones outside are polished. This small building has been constructed, it is claimed, by Adam, and reconstructed by, Abraham, Ishmael and Muhammad. Literally, Ka’ba in Arabic means a high place with respect and prestige. The word Ka’ba may also be derivative of a word meaning a cube. It is sometimes associated with the Black Stone which is housed in the Ka’ba.

  46. Worshippers march slowly around the Ka’ba seven times.

  47. The Ka’ba originally held the black stone worshipped as a god along with some 360 other idols housed within the walls. Current belief states that the tribe, the one to which Muhammad belonged, was given the responsibility for the care of the building and abused their power for money which led to the idolatrous use of the building. The square structure is said to represent the unity in Islam. Muhammad adopted the building as a convenient symbol and had the Qur’an to state: “Remember We made the House (Ka’ba) a place of assembly for people and a place of safety; and take ye the Station of Abraham as a place of prayer; and We covenanted with Abraham and Ishmael, that they should sanctify My House for those who compass it round, or use it as a retreat, or bow, or prostrate themselves (therein in prayer).” –Surah 2:125

  48. Muslims are supposed to make at least one journey to Mecca during their lifetime in order to worship at the Ka’ba. Worshippers move around the Ka’ba in a circular motion, gradually getting closer to the building as they bow and pray on schedule. The black stone has been adopted as the platform Abraham and Ishmael used to stand on to lay the stone for the base of the building. The Ka’ba and is said to be a symbol of unity. The Five Pillars of Islam Five requirements of all faithful Muslims

  49. 1. Faith • There is no god worthy of worship except God and Muhammad is His messenger. The declaration of faith is called the Shahada, a simple formula which all the faithful pronounce. In Arabic, the first part is la ilaha illa'Llah- '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'Llah: '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.

More Related