Allah (pronounced: Allaah) is the Arabic word for God. It is
the same word used by Jewish and Christian Arabs to refer to
God. The most literal meaning of the declaration is not the
intended one, as there are many things human beings worship
instead of the One God. The true meaning is: “I
testify there is none worthy of worship but Allah.”
This statement combines negation and affirmation. It denies
the right of anything in creation to be worshipped, and it
affirms that right for the Creator. The concept of worship
is probably more comprehensive in Islam than in any other
religion. It includes devotional rituals, but it also
includes all transactions between individuals and groups. It
also includes emotional states and actions of the heart,
such as love, hate, hope, fear, etc. In fact, every action
that pleases God is considered an act of worship in Islam.
The second part of the declaration of faith is:
“I testify
that Muhammad is the [final] Messenger of God.”
Without it, implementing the first part of the declaration
of faith becomes very difficult. The Quran says, “You have indeed in the Messenger of Allah a beautiful
pattern (of conduct) for anyone whose hope is in Allah and
the Final Day and who remembers Allah profusely.”
Following the Messenger of Allah (pbuh) has been made a
litmus test for the love of God: “Say: ‘If you do love Allah, follow me:
Allah will love you and forgive you your sins; for Allah is
Oft-Forgiving, Most Merciful.’”
Accepting the rules revealed by God through Prophet Muhammad
(pbuh) has also been made a test of true faith; “But no, by your Lord, they can have no
(real) Faith, until they make you judge in all disputes
between them, and find in their souls no resistance against
your decisions, but accept them with the fullest conviction.”
Merits of the Declaration of Faith
Allah’s Messenger (pbuh) said, “Whoever bears witness
that none is worthy of worship but Allah, and that Muhammad
is His slave and Messenger, and that Jesus is the slave of
Allah and the son of a woman who was His slave, and His word
that He cast into Mary, and a soul from Him, and that
Paradise is real and that Hell is real, Allah will enter him
into Paradise by any of its eight doors he wishes [according
to his actions].”
On one occasion the Prophet (pbuh) was sitting in a garden.
He told one of his Companions, “Take these sandals of
mine. When you meet anyone outside this garden who testifies
that there is no god but Allah, being sure of it in his
heart, give him glad tidings of Paradise.”
On another occasion Allah’s Messenger (pbuh) said, “Allah
has prohibited from the Fire of Hell anyone who says, ‘There
is none worthy of worship except Allah,’ seeking thereby the
pleasure of Allah.”
The Necessity of Declaring One’s Faith
These and other statements of the Prophet (pbuh) have led
scholars to conclude that a person who believes that this
declaration is true must declare it in front of witnesses to
become a Muslim. Knowledge and acceptance in the heart are
conditions for the validity of the declaration, but
knowledge and acceptance without the declaration would not
save a person from Hell if there were no threat of physical
harm to prevent him from declaring it.
If a person would be endangered by making his or her faith
known, he/she has the option of keeping it a secret. One of
the Companions of Prophet Muhammad (pbuh) was
tortured and forced to denounce Muhammad and praise
the gods of the idol worshippers upon pain of death. When he
was released, he came to the Prophet crying. When he had
explained to him what had happened, the Prophet asked him,
“How did you find your heart while you were saying those
things?” He replied that his heart was content with Islam
and that he hated what he was forced to say. The Prophet
instructed him that if he were placed in the same situation
again that he should again say what his tormenters demanded
of him to save himself. It was about him that the following
verse of Qur’an was revealed: “Anyone who, after accepting faith in
Allah, utters disbelief - except one who does so under
compulsion, his heart remaining firm in Faith - but those
who open their hearts to disbelief, the wrath of Allah is on
them, and they will have a dreadful penalty.”
One of the prominent reasons that Islam requires a person to
declare his/her faith is that a new convert needs the
support and help of the community to help his faith grow and
stabilize. When a person is a very new Muslim, his/her
friends and family are likely to be displeased with the
change. They will raise questions and doubts about Islam in
the mind of the new convert to try to shake his/her faith.
They may even try to draw the convert into behavior
condemned by Islam just so that his faith will weaken
through sinning. Everyone also has a personal devil to raise
doubts and temptations. If the Muslim community knows that
the person is a new Muslim, they have a responsibility to
make him/her feel welcome and to help him/her through some
of the problems of transition.
Another implication of the declaration of faith is that a
believer should have an open personality without hidden
agendas. People should know who you are and what you stand
for. Life is a struggle between good and evil. The struggle
goes on in each person’s heart, but it also goes on between
people who align themselves with good, more or less, and
people who align themselves with evil, more or less. Each of
us needs to try to identify the truth, struggle to live by
it and help others to find it and live by it. This doesn’t
mean that you shove your beliefs down other’s throats, but
one has a responsibility to share beneficial knowledge with
those who don’t know.
Prayer is probably the central practice that shapes the
daily routine and consciousness of a Muslim. There are two
words in Arabic that can be translated as ‘prayer’ in
English. The word ‘du'aa’ means supplication; you ask
God to fulfill a specific need of this life or the
hereafter. This action is such a fundamental part of the
relationship between the worshipper and his Creator and the
Prophet (pbuh) said, “Du'aa is worship.” The
Quran orders the Prophet to tell the disbelievers, “My Lord would not concern Himself with you but for your
prayer.”
The other word for prayer, ‘salaah’ originally meant
the same thing as du'aa. However, it came to have a
more specific meaning in Islam. It is a series of postures
in which Qur’an is recited and Allah is praised and
supplicated. The primary purpose of salaah is to
instill God-consciousness in the individual. Allah said in
the Qur’an: “Establish prayer for My remembrance.”
Remembrance of God nurtures the heart. It is the true means
of happiness. God said, “Verily, it is by the remembrance of Allah that hearts
find contentment.”
When the heart falls into neglect of God, Satan establishes
control over it. Sins become attractive and faith weakens.
Remembrance of God is the antidote. That is why the Quran
says, “Establish regular prayer: for prayer restrains from
shameful and unjust deeds; and remembrance of Allah is the
greatest (thing in life).”
Muslims pray five times a day. The prayers are scheduled at
times that people fulfill some physical need. Prayer at such
times prevents people from becoming overly focussed on their
immediate worldly needs. It is a reminder that God is the
Provider, the Sustainer and Fulfiller of all our needs. The
first prayer comes about an hour before sunrise. It is a
time when the body wants to keep sleeping. To overcome
inertia in order to stand and remember the Creator requires
a struggle against one’s self. To do so on a daily basis is
very effective training for the self to submit to the will
of God. The second prayer comes around the time one would
stop work to eat lunch. In addition to feeding one’s body,
one should also feed one’s soul. The third prayer comes
around the time people are taking tea or heading home from
work. The fourth prayer is at a time when most people are
eating dinner. The fifth prayer is at a time when one is
winding down, getting ready to sleep.
When I first started learning about Islam, the regular
prayer was one of the most attractive aspects of the
religion to me. I had had a feeling for some time that I
needed to do something to acknowledge my indebtedness to God
for giving me life and to express gratitude to Him for
sustaining me. The Islamic form of prayer immediately struck
me as an answer to this need.
Charity is an act common to all divinely revealed religions.
Even people with no religion at all recognize generosity as
an admirable quality. The desire to possess is a natural,
inborn urge. It is not in itself a bad thing. It is the
basis of self-preservation. It leads parents to provide
homes, food, clothing and other needs for their children. It
also leads people to provide goods and services for each
other. But the urge to possess needs to be controlled and
balanced with generosity; otherwise it becomes dangerous.
Prophet Muhammad (pbuh) pointed out this tendency when he
said, “If a descendant of Adam possessed a valley of
gold, he would crave another one. And nothing will fill his
mouth but the dust [of the grave]. But God will accept the
penance of one who repents.” Generosity requires a
struggle against the inborn tendency to be selfish. To
provide the setting where generosity can be exercised, God
created some people poor and some people rich. Not only
that, but He takes some people from lavish wealth to
grinding poverty and vice-versa. The realization that even
if you have money now, you may lose it all at any moment is
a great leverage by which Satan influences people to be
stingy. The Qur’an says, “Satan threatens you with poverty and enjoins you with
lewdness.”
God, on the other hand, has promised that wealth will never
be decreased by charity. “Whatever you spend [for good]
He replaces it, and He is the best of Providers.”
One who gives charity affirms his faith in God’s promise.
That is why charity is called sadaqah in
Arabic. It is related to the word for ‘truthfulness’ and the
word for ‘belief.’
The Islamic concept of charity is based on the Islamic
concept of wealth. Wealth is considered a trust placed in
one’s hands by God. A person who believes he owns more money
than another because he is smarter or worked harder than him
has a deficient understanding. How many people are hard
working and smart yet poor? And how many people of mediocre
ability and energy are rich? God is the ultimate provider of
wealth and he is its actual owner. Prophet Muhammad
observed, “The son of Adam claims, ‘My wealth, my
wealth.’ But, O son of Adam, was any of your property really
yours, except what you consumed and destroyed, or wore until
it wore out, or gave as charity and sent ahead [for
yourself]?”
Because wealth ultimately belongs to God, its temporary
possessor does not have a blanket right to do whatever he or
she wants with it. It is unlawful to waste wealth. It is
also unlawful to use wealth to buy substances prohibited in
Islam. Also, the poor have a due right on a portion of the
wealth placed in one’s possession. Giving them their due
right is not doing them a favor, because that portion of
one’s wealth is actually for them. A person who doesn’t give
it has, in reality, confiscated something that does not
belong to him.
Zakaah is an obligatory form of charity on savings.
It is not an income tax, but a savings tax. Its major
recipients are the working poor, who cannot meet all of
their needs without some additional help, and the destitute,
who cannot even meet their basic needs. It is also used to
pay off the debts of those who are unable to pay off their
own debts, to free slaves and ransom prisoners of war and to
reconcile the hearts of new Muslims who may not yet have a
firm foundation of faith. Other lawful recipients are
stranded travelers, those engaged in jihad and employees of
the state working to collect and distribute zakaah.
Their wages come from it.
Zakaah
is due on the following
forms of wealth:
Gold and
silver (this
includes paper money)
The amount due is 2.5% of
savings when it reaches the equivalent value of 85 grams
(approximately three ounces) of gold. This minimum amount
on which zakaah is due is called the nisaab.
Although some scholars say that money should be pegged to
the nisaab of silver, i.e., 595 grams, the
majority considers gold to be a more reasonable peg for
developed economies. Consider the difference in value
between the two nisaabs: If gold is worth
$300 per ounce, the nisaab is equal to $900.
If silver is worth $8 an ounce, the nisaab
is equal to approximately $167. In most cities of the
Western world, $167 would not be enough to rent a room for
a month, much less an apartment. The principle behind
zakaah is that the rich should pay it to the poor. A
person with only $167 in savings would be more likely to
need zakaah than be in a position to pay it.
Zakaah is due on savings of gold and silver one year
after the nisaab has been reached.
Business
inventory
This includes all goods
acquired or held with the intent of selling them. It would
include store merchandise, land bought for resale, stocks
bought for resale, etc. Zakaah is not due on
factories, machinery being used to produce goods, or
property being held for rental income. However, zakaah
would be due on the income generated by such
properties if it is saved for a year. The retail value of
business inventory is calculated then added to the savings
of gold, silver, and currency. 2.5% of the total is due.
Livestock
Suchas cows, sheep
and camels. There is a different nisaab for
each type of animal and a rather detailed and complicated
table of how much is due for different amounts of each
type. Any fiqh book can be consulted for the
details. Fiqh as-Sunnah is one of the better books
available in English.
Agricultural produce
The nisaab is
five wasqs, which is equivalent to 825 liters. 10%
of the harvest is due if the land is watered by rainfall.
5% is due on land irrigated by wells, canals or mechanical
systems.
Buried
treasure
According to some scholars,
this applies to all mineral wealth extracted from land.
This is more relevant than the explanation that it refers
only to valuables buried by non-Muslims before Islam.
One-fifth is due as zakaah..
Fasting is a practice common to many religious traditions.
The Quran alludes to that fact in the verse that prescribed
fasting upon the Muslims: “O you who believe, fasting is prescribed for you as it
was prescribed for those before you, that you might achieve
piety.”
Jews fast on Yom Kippur, one day a year. They also have
other scattered fasts of less importance. Although Jesus
fasted (And he fasted forty days and forty nights and
afterward he was hungry;),fastingis no
longer a part of the religious practice of most Christians.Restricting food intake is also a part of many secular
ways of life, but the goal of such practices is very
different from the goal of fasting in Islam. Some people,
who are concerned with "natural living" and holistic health,
fast to purify the body of toxins. In these fasts, solid
foods are eliminated, but the person may drink water or
juice. The most widespread Western form of restricting food
intake is dieting. The only real goal of this practice to
reduce weight. Most dieters are women. Their motive is to
look as much as possible like models and actresses held up
as the ideals of beauty in a steady barrage of movies, TV
shows and advertisements. The more extreme forms of this
state of mind are anorexia and bulemia. This obsession with
outer appearance is the very opposite of the Islamic goal in
fasting.
The above-mentioned verse has made clear the goal of Islamic
fasting: “…that you might achieve piety.” The word
taqwaa, translated as piety, is derived from a
word meaning “protective shield.” The Qur’an repeatedly
promises that those who achieve taqwaa will gain the
good of this life and the Hereafter. When the Prophet’s
companion 'Umar was asked to explain the meaning of
taqwaa,he illustrated it with a metaphor: A man
trying to walk through a field of thickly planted thorn
bushes holds his clothes close to his body and maneuvers
carefully to avoid tearing his clothes and skin. A person
who achieves taqwaa is in a state of constant
awareness of God. He thinks about how to please God by doing
good and guarding against evil.
In Islamic fasting, no food, drink or intercourse is allowed
from the first light of dawn until sunset during the entire
lunar month of Ramadaan. These actions are permitted
during the night. People who are temporarily sick or
traveling may break their fasts, but they must make up the
days they missed. Menstruating women and women bleeding
after childbirth are not permitted to fast, and they must
make up the days they missed. People with chronic illnesses
should feed a poor person for each day they miss, and they
do not have to make the missed days. Scholars agree that
pregnant women and breastfeeding women who fear for their
own health or the health of their children may forego
fasting as long as their conditions persist. Scholars differ
whether they must make up the missed days or feed a poor
person; in other words: are they to be considered like
someone with a temporary or a chronic condition? Two of the
major scholars among the Companions of Prophet Muhammad
(pbuh) considered them to be like people with chronic
conditions, who need only feed the poor.
Fasting reduces one’s desires. It trains a person in
self-restraint. He becomes accustomed to keeping a watch on
himself. If one can forgo what is normally lawful for a
limited amount of time, one should be able to forgo what is
always unlawful. It shifts the focus of one’s attention from
bodily needs to spiritual needs. This focus is complemented
in Ramadaan by the exhortation to spend more time
reading Quran and praying extra prayers. For the fast to be
rewarded, refraining from food and drink must also be
accompanied by refraining from unlawful acts. Prophet Muhammad
said, “Whoever does not abandon falsehood in word and
deed, Allah has no need for him to leave his food and drink.”Proper
fasting causes the stomach to shrink. When one breaks the
fast at sunset, one cannot eat as much food as one normally
would in a meal during the rest of the year. A light meal
should also be taken toward the end of the night to prevent
fasting from becoming very difficult. When these guidelines
are followed, fasting cleanses the body and the soul. Some
weight is lost. One frequently experiences a great feeling
of serenity while fasting. Feeling the pangs of hunger
should also make a person empathize with those who feel
hungry not as a matter of choice but because they can’t find
enough to eat. Thus Ramadaan becomes a month of
giving charity as well as fasting.
Many Muslims fast in a way that technically qualifies as
fasting, but in reality achieves none of the goals of
fasting. They gorge themselves at sunset on delicacies that
no one bothers to prepare the rest of the year. Instead of
praying extra prayers they play cards or engage in less
wholesome diversions and snack and drink throughout the
night before gorging themselves once again just before the
dawn. Then they crawl into their beds like a python that has
just swallowed a whole sheep. They may or may not pray the
dawn prayer. They may wake up at noon. Some of them only
wake shortly before sunset, just in time to prepare
themselves for another night of festivities.
Fasting is obligatory on healthy, adult Muslims only in Ramadaan.
However, there are a number of other days when it is
recommended, such as three days at the middle of each month
and every Monday and Thursday. Regular fasting helps to
maintain the state of mind achieved in Ramadaan.