No god but God: The Origins, Evolution, and Future of Islam

(Sean Pound) #1
108; and Hijra, 50–52; Muhammad’s
early days in, 32–49; Muhammad’s
march on, 105–6; Muhammad’s pil-
grimages to, 104–6, 112; Muhammad’s
withdrawal from, 48–49; neutrality of,
26; and Ottoman Empire, 240; during
pilgrimage season, 23; poverty in,
33–34, 40–41; praying in direction of,
146; pre-Islamic, 23–49; and Quranic
exegesis, 160–61; Quraysh domination
in, 24–32; and Quraysh-Muhammad
conflict, 81–92; religio-economic sys-
tem in, 26–32, 33, 34, 44, 46–47, 60,
82–92; “reverse migration” from Me-
dina to, 88–89; Sharif of, 240, 243, 244;
and Shi‘atu Ali, 174; and successors to
Muhammad, 112, 129, 130, 134; tolls
for entering, 25–26; and trade, 26–28,
83; and Uthman revolt, 129; and Wah-
habism, 243, 244; and Yazid rebellion,


  1. See also pilgrimages
    Medina: archeological evidence in, 97; birth
    of Muslim community in, 52–53;
    defense of, 91–92; description of, 51;
    economy of, 54; first mosque at, 52;
    Hanifism in, 14; Husayn as Caliph in,
    176; as Islamic archetype, 52–53, 257,
    258, 263, 264; and Islamic Reforma-
    tion, 257, 258, 263, 264; Jews in,
    56–57, 89–94, 96–97, 102; and Malike
    School, 165; Muhammad’s emigration
    to, 48–49, 50–52; Muhammad’s return
    to, after defeat of Quraysh, 108; pagan-
    ism in, 56–57, 97; pilgrimages to, 82; in
    pre-Islamic Arabia, 14, 53–66; and
    Quranic exegesis, 161; and Quraysh-
    Muhammad conflict, 75–81, 91–92;
    and “reverse migration” from Medina
    to Mecca, 88–89; and Riddah Wars,
    119; as sanctuary city, 82; and Shi‘atu
    Ali, 174; as soul of Islam, 108; and
    spread of Islam, 52–53; and successors
    to Muhammad, 134; as trading center,
    82; tribal conflict in, 55; Ummah at,
    57; and Wahhabism, 243, 244; wealth
    of, 122; Yathrib renamed, 52, 74, 88;
    and Yazid-Husayn conflict, 176–77;
    and Yazid rebellion, 178. See also Con-
    stitution of Medina
    meditation, 202, 217
    Menocal, Maria, 95
    Mernissi, Fatima, 68
    Mevlevi Order, 217
    militancy, Islamic: Medina as archetype for,
    52–53


Index 303

Mina: three pillars of, 149
Mir, Mustansir, 84
miracles, 156–57
Modarressi, Hossein, 185
Modernism: and colonialism, 225–28; and
democracy, 258; in Egypt, 229–32; in
India, 225–28; Medina as archetype
for, 52–53; in Saudi Arabia, 240–48.
See also Pan-Arabism; Pan-Islamism;
Salafiyyah movement; specific person
Momen, Moojan, 116
monasticism, 199, 200
monism, 214
Monophysites, 11
monotheism, 5, 10, 12–13, 16, 17, 40, 43,
46, 266
morality: and colonialism, 225; and commu-
nal character of Islam, 264; and
democracy, 261, 264, 265; and early
verses revealed by Muhammad, 41; and
Hanifism, 15; and Islam as nascent reli-
gion, 59; and Islamic Reformation,
257–58, 261, 264; of Muhammad, 5;
and pre-Islamic warfare, 83, 84; and
Shariah, 163; and tribal ethics, 30; of
Wahhabism, 246
Morocco, 217, 255, 257, 260
Moses, 9, 17, 34, 64, 102, 109, 117, 156,
179, 182
mosque: first, 52; and Five Pillars, 146;
Umar’s destruction of Damascus, 94
Mount Arafat, 149
Mount Hira: Muhammad’s Revelation on,
34–39
Mu‘awiyah, 131, 132, 134–35, 136, 142,
173–75, 176
Mughal Empire, 218, 222, 224
Muhajirun. See Companions
Muhammad (Aisha’s brother), 130
Muhammad: appearance of, 32; assassination
attempts on, 90, 155; authority of,
55–56, 57–58; birth of, 18–19; character
and personality of, 32, 33, 38; childhood
and youth of, 17–18, 19–21, 32; clan of,
24; death of, 66, 108–9, 111; early days
in Mecca of, 32–43; early followers of,
41–42; final sermon of, 149; God’s rela-
tionship with, 216; as Hakam, 32,
55–57; and Hanifism, 15; health of,
107–9; historical information about,
21–22, 27–28; and human rights,
263–64; imitators of, 110; impact on
Mecca of, 5; Jesus compared with,
21, 98, 216; Karbala revealed to, 179;
as Keeper of the Keys, 108;
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