Friday, February 22, 2013

We've Moved to the Country


Made in Damascus, purchased just outside a Palestinian refugee camp, and burning pressed olive tree wood--leftovers that would otherwise be thrown away after the trees are picked and trimmed, so as not to unnecessarily chop down trees in this tree scarce country--we are now heating our new home with this stove, which means we have moved to the country. 

After seven years near Second Circle in Amman, we have left the city for Marj al-Hammam--which in Arabic means "Meadow of Doves"--a small town of around 30,000 people, and about 15 minutes by car from the capital.  At our old apartment, we lived on the second floor in an incredibly densely populated area, with the buildings on either side of us so close we could hear our neighbors washing their dishes, blowing their noses and urinating. Yes, urinating. Now, we live in our own smallish house and have a huge yard ringed by various fruit trees, with no immediate neighbors and one street adjacent to the yard on which--as of 2:50 on this Friday afternoon--no car has been seen today. This will be quite a change.

Tuesday, February 12, 2013

Webcams Around Jordan

Jordan just installed 24/7 webcams at the Citadel--which we wrote about recently--and at Petra, the Dead Sea and the Red Sea coastal city of Aqaba, plus one of the Amman skyline. We don't know if the Amman view ever changes, but our apartment is just five minutes up the road from what is currently showing. Click this link for the article in the Jordan Times about the initiative, and click here to go right to the webcams. According to the Jordan Tourism Board (JTB), "Jordan is the first country in the Middle East to install tourism webcams."

Sunday, February 10, 2013

Jerash

The Roman ruins of Jerash are about a 30 minute drive north from our home in Amman. Widely considered the most extensive and best preserved Roman city in the region, remains there include a huge arched entrance, a long colonnaded street, a colonnaded oval forum, two big temples, a hippodrome and two amphitheaters where concerts take place still today. It is Jordan's second most popular tourist attraction, after Petra. Like the Citadel, which we wrote about a couple of weeks ago, it's also a great place to run around, which we did recently.











Tuesday, February 05, 2013

The Qur'an: Definition

Periodically we try to post about various aspects of the Islamic faith.  Several months ago during the month of Ramadan, for instance, we published three separate posts dealing with the the basic meaning of Ramadanmeritorious deeds Muslims can perform during Ramadan, and the importance of fasting for Muslims during Ramadan.  Below is the first of several posts dealing with how Muslims view their sacred book, the Qur'an.

Muslims believe that the Qur'an is the written record of revelations from God given orally to Muhammad by the angel Gabriel over a period of about 23 years.  Or, in the words of Seyyed Hossein Nasr, Iranian born Professor of Islamic Studies at George Washington University: “The Qur’an for the Muslim is the revelation of God and the book in which His message to man is contained.  It is the Word of God revealed to the Prophet through the archangel Gabriel.”

The word Qur’an comes from the root qara’a meaning to read or recite.  According to Muhammad Abdel Haleem, Professor of Islamic Studies at the School of Oriental and African Studies in London, “The word qur’an lexically means ‘reading’ and came to refer to ‘the text which is read.’”  While Abdel Haleem emphasizes the aspect of reading, others, however--such as Nasr--focus more on the aspect of recitation.  This may just be a difference of semantics, however, since the words were first received orally and this oral nature is still of prime importance.  I have many times seen neighbors, shop keepers, etc., reading the Qur’an—not silently—but quietly aloud, in a sense both reading and reciting it at the same time.  Also, taxi drivers will often listen to the recited Qur'an while they work.  There is also some evidence to suggest the word Qur’an may come from the root qarana, meaning to collect, although this definition has far fewer adherents.  Whatever the case, either definition—reading or reciting, and collecting—works.  “The book is so called both because it is a collection of the best religious teaching and because it is a book that is or should be read,” says Maulana Muhammad Ali, an early 20th century Pakistani scholar who is responsible for a well known English translation of the Qur'an..

The word Qur’an occurs many times in the text, and it may be used to refer to the full text—the Qur’an as a whole—or just part of the text.  The following are some examples of its use:

“It is we who have sent down the Qu’ran to you by stages.” (76:23)
“Ramadan is the month in which was sent down the Qur’an…” (2:185)
“It is a Qur’an which we have divided (into parts from time to time), in order that you might recite it to men at intervals; we have revealed it by stages” (17:106)
“Be not in haste with the Qur’an before its revelation to you is completed…” (20:114)
“God has purchased of the believers their persons and their goods; for theirs (in return) is the garden (of paradise): they fight in His cause, and slay and are slain: a promise binding on Him in truth, through the law, the gospel, and the Qur’an.” (9:111)

As mentioned above, to Muslims, the Qur’an is the word of God.  By the word of God, however, it is not meant that Muslims believe that the words of the Qur’an are inspired by God, or that God inspired people to write the words.  It means, instead, that Muslims believe the Qur’an to be God’s very speech, the actual words of God.  “To Muslims, the Qur’an is the speech of God, revealed in word and meaning,” says Abdel Haleem, and “God speaks directly in the Qur’an.”  The Qur’an “is the transcendent Divine Word which became human speech,” says Mahmoud Ayoub, Lebanese born former Professor of Islamic Studies at Temple University.  And finally, according to contemporary South African scholar Farid Esack, Professor of Islamic Studies at the University of  Johannesburg, South Africa, “to invoke the Qur’an is to invoke God.  The Qur’an is God speaking, not merely to Muhammad in seventh-century Arabia, but from all eternity to all humankind.”

To Muslims the Qur’an is the word of God in every aspect.  From the shortest vowel sound to the concepts conveyed to the form of the book itself, it is all divine, all from God.  “Every letter in the Qur’an is the word of God, and every sound in it is the true echo of God’s voice,” says Hammudah Abdalati, author of a well known introduction to Islam.  “Both the spirit and the letter, the content and the form, are Divine,” says Nasr.  “Not only the content and meaning comes from God but also the container and form which are thus an integral aspect of the revelation.”

Muslims do not believe, though, that as the word of God, the Qur’an was conceived of or created by God at the moment of its revelation, or at any other time, for that matter.  Instead, Muslims believe the Qur’an to be eternal—always existing—and uncreated.  This was not always the case, as early on opinions differed as to the question of the createdness or uncreatedness of the Qur’an.  Also, for a time in the early to mid ninth century the createdness of the Qur’an was official doctrine of the Islamic state, and those holding the opposite view were sanctioned and the subject of persecution.  However, after this time, the view of the eternal uncreatedness of the Qur’an won out, along with the concomitant view that its recitation, reading, writing or hearing by humans was also the uncreated Word of God.  “The Qur’an is the speech of God, the revelation of what He spoke.  It is uncreated,” said the Palestinian scholar Ibn Qudama (1147-1223).  “Whatever is recited of it, or chanted or heard or written, in whatever form, is the uncreated speech of God.  This includes the surahs and the verses, the words and the letters…”  

This became the official and consensus view of the state and religious establishment, and became such an important part of Islamic beliefs that denying this uncreatedness became equated with unbelief.  According to the Iraqi Abu Hanifa, the 8th century founder of one of the four main schools of Sunni Islamic law, “the Qur’an is the speech of God—exalted be He—uncreated… Whoever says that the speech of God—exalted be He—is created is a disbeliever in God.”  The Egyptian scholar Al-Tahawi (843 or 853-935) in his well known creedal statement said that “[the Qur’an] is not something created such as the speech of mankind.  So whoever hears it and claims it is the speech of a human, then he has committed Unbelief.”  And finally, according to the 12th century Iraqi scholar Ibn al-Jawzi, “the word of God is not created… The repetition of the word of God by created beings does not make it created because that speech is in its essence still the speech of God and it is uncreated.  So, in every situation, repeated or memorized or written or heard, it remains that way.  Anybody who says it is created in any way is an unbeliever whose blood may be shed after he has been called on to repent [and refused].”

Muslims believe not only that the Qur’an is the uncreated speech of God, but also that the original copy of the Qur’an—the “original archetype” in the words of Ayoub—is with God in heaven in what is referred to in the Qur’an as “The Preserved Tablet” and the “Mother of the Book.”  This idea is found in the following places:

  • Surah 85, verses 21-22: "Nay, this is a glorious Qur’an, (inscribed) in a Tablet Preserved!"
  • Surah 43, verses 3-4: "We have made it a Qur’an in Arabic that you may be able to understand (and learn wisdom).  And verily, it is in the Mother of the Book, in Our Presence, high (in dignity), full of wisdom."
  • Surah 13, verse 39: "God blots out or confirms what He pleases: with Him is the Mother of the Book."
Some consider this book to consist exactly of what is found in the Qur’an.  It “is often regarded as the original copy of the Qur’an,” said Esack.  However, others believe it to be the repository of all the revelations that have ever come from God. 20th century Pakastani scholar Abul A’la Maududi, who was a great influence on contemporary Islam, for instance, calls the Mother of the Book “the Original Book which is the Source and Origin of all the revealed Books.”  Also, 12th century Persian scholar al-Zamakhshari, who wrote a famous commentary on the Qur'an, says “The original text is the tablet corresponding to the words of God: ‘No, it is a glorious Qur’an, in a well-preserved tablet’.  This writing is designated umm al-kitab because it represents the original in which the (individual) books are preserved.  They are taken from it for copying.”

Connected to the belief in the Qur’an being the strict, direct and actual words of God, it is important to understand that Muslims believe that it is entirely the words of God.  Muhammad had no part in their formation; he was simply the vehicle by which God made God’s words known to humans.  “The Prophet was purely passive in the face of the revelation he received from God.  He added nothing to this revelation himself,” says Nasr.  “He did not write a book but conveyed the Sacred Book to mankind.”  In the words of al-Tabari (838–923), an influential historian from modern day Iran, the Qur’an is a revelation that “God caused to descend upon” Muhammad and, in fact, the phrase “sent down” in a variety of forms is employed over 200 times in the Qur’an in reference to itself.  As a result, Muhammad is viewed to have been like an empty vessel or pitcher that, when filled up from on high, would pour out the words of the Qur’an for those around him.  However, he is not viewed to have been the originator of those words; he simply offered what was given to him by God.  Echoing Nasr, Abdel Haleem says of the Qur’an that “Muhammad is no more than its receptacle.  God is the one who speaks in this book.  The Prophet is the passive recipient of a revelation over which he has no control.”

So we have established what Muslims view the Qur’an to be, and have settled on a kind of basic definition of it.  In order to further define and understand its purpose for Muslims, though, it will be helpful to briefly look at the other common names by which it has been called over the years, names which are found in the Qur’an itself.  Maulana Muhammad Ali in the introduction to his English translation of the Qur’an has listed 21 such names—again, all found throughout the Qur’an—among them being the Admonition (10:57), the Judgment (13:37), the Goodness (3:103), the Clear Argument (4:175), the Revelation (26:192) and the Light (7:157).  These names all give additional clarification as to how Muslims view the Qur’an. 

However, in addition to al-Qur’an, three other names have commonly been used by Muslims as what could be called alternative names for the Qur’an, names which again are found in the Qur’an and which provide further detail regarding a definition, explanation or description of the Qur’an.  According to al-Tabari, along with Qur’an they make up the four names given by God for God’s revelation.  One of these is kitaab, which comes from the root kataba meaning to write.  According to Abdel Haleem, “The Muslim scripture often calls itself ‘kitaab’: lexically, this means ‘writing’ and came to refer to ‘the written book.’”  This appellation also occurs often in the Qur’an, a prime example being Surah 2:2: “This is the book, in it is guidance sure, without doubt, to those who fear God.”  After this are two more descriptive names used in the text: al-dhikr and al-furqaan.  Below are a few short explanations concerning the meaning of these names by some of the Muslim thinkers we have been referencing, along with a verse from the Qur’an in which the name is used.

Al-Dhikr/The Reminder
Surah 15:9: “Surely we have revealed the reminder, and surely we are its guardian.”
al-Tabari: “As for the interpretation of its name ‘Dhikr’, there are two possible meanings.  One is that it is a reminder from God by which he reminds His servants, and in which he informs them of His restrictions and impositions, as well as the other judgments He lays down.  The other meaning is that it is a citation, and ennoblement, and an honor, for whoever has faith in it and believes what is in it.”

Al-Furqaan/The Criterion
Surah 25:1: “Blessed is he who sent down the criterion to his servant, that it may be an admonition to all creatures.”
Ayoub: “The Qur’an has also been called al-furqaan (the criterion distinguishing truth from falsehood or error).”
al-Tabari: “Our opinion about the origin of furqaan is that it is a separation between two things, a disjunction between them.  This can be [effected] by a judgment, a deliverance, the manifestation of a proof, or a victory, as well as by any other means.  Thus clearly shows that the Qur’an is called the Furqaan because it separates the one who is right from the one who is wrong by its proofs, its evidence, its delimitation of religious obligations, and by its other meanings which judge between who is right and who is wrong.”
Nasr: “It is also a furqaan or discrimination in that it is the instrument by which man can come to discriminate between truth and falsehood, to discern between the real and the unreal, the absolute and the relative, the good and the evil, the beautiful and the ugly.”

Finally, we will add one more piece to our definition and understanding of the Qur’an.  The Qur’an is many things and covers many topics, as its contents include issues relating to the various practices, doctrines and beliefs of Islam.  It is probably safe to say, however, that the number one goal of the Qur’an—and of everything in the Qur’an having to do with practices, doctrines and beliefs—is guidance, guidance that leads to God. “God has made everything in the Qur’an… a guide for His servants towards His pleasure, that which will lead them to the Garden,” says al-Tabari, and Ayoub says the Qur’an’s “primary function” is “to guide people to God.”  Al-Tabari also says of the Qur’an:

“[God] made this Revelation a brilliant light in the obscurity of ignorance, a lustrous star in the twilight of uncertainty, a sure guide against wandering in the ways of confusion, and a leader on the paths to salvation and truth… Its pillars will [never] crumble, its way-marks will [never] be obliterated by the span of time; he who follows it will not deviate from the goal of the path, he who journeys with it will not wander from the way of guidance; he who complies with its direction will attain success and will be well directed, but he who strays will take the wrong turning and lose his way.  [This Revelation] is the refuge to which [those who are guided by it] repair in case of differences; it is the stronghold to which they resort in times of adversity, the fortress in which they entrench themselves against the whisperings of Satan, the wisdom of their Lord in which they seek arbitration, the [binding] decision of His judgment between them to which they ultimately have recourse and in accordance with which they act; [it is] His cable by clinging to which they are saved from destruction.”

There are a plethora of passages in the Qur’an that refer to it as a guide, parts of some of which are written below:

Surah 31:2-3: “These are the verses of the wise book, a guide and a mercy to the doers of good.”
Surah 27:1-2: “These are verses of the Qur’an, a book that makes things clear; a guide, and glad tidings for the believers.”
Surah 61:9: “It is he who has sent his messenger with guidance and the religion of truth…”

Ayoub also bases his judgment on the fact that the Qur’an opens with a prayer for guidance in Surah 1; then, this surah is followed by the aforementioned Surah 2:2, with another reference to guidance: “This is the Book: in it is guidance sure, without doubt, to those who fear God.”  Maududi in his commentary of the Qur’an points out this prayer or request for guidance in Surah 1 and—since it is the first Surah in the Qur’an—calls the rest of the Qur’an the response to it.  Below is the whole of this first Surah, followed by Maududi’s explanation of it, with a very clear explication of what he believes the Qur’an to be, based on his analysis of the surah that opens it.

In the name of God, Most Gracious. Most Merciful.
Praise be to God, the cherisher and sustainer of the worlds;
Most gracious, most merciful;
Master of the Day of Judgment.
You do we worship, and your aid do we seek.
Show us the straight way.
The way of those on whom you have bestowed your grace, those whose (portion) is not wrath, and who do not go astray.

This Surah is named Al-Fatihah because of its subject-matter.  Fatihah is that which opens a subject or a book or any other thing.  In other words, Al-Fatihah is a sort of preface. 

This Surah is in fact a prayer which Allah has taught to all those who want to make a study of His book.  It has been placed at the very beginning of the book to teach this lesson to the reader: if you sincerely want to benefit from the Quran, you should offer this prayer to the Lord of the Universe.

This preface is meant to create a strong desire in the heart of the reader to seek guidance from the Lord of the Universe, Who alone can grant it.  Thus Al-Fatihah indirectly teaches that the best thing for a man is to pray for guidance to the straight path, to study the Quran with the mental attitude of a seeker-after-truth and to recognize the fact that the Lord of the Universe is the source of all knowledge.  He should, therefore, begin the study of the Quran with a prayer to him for guidance.

From this theme, it becomes clear that the real relation between Al-Fatihah and the Quran is not that of an introduction to a book but that of a prayer and its answer.  Al-Fatihah is the prayer from the servant and the Quran is the answer from the Master to his prayer.  The servant prays to Allah to show him guidance and the Master places the whole of the Quran before him in answer to his prayer, as if to say, "This is the Guidance you begged from Me."