Encyclopedia of Islam

(Jeff_L) #1
419

J:AF


Kaaba
The Kaaba, also known as “the sacred house”
(Q 5:2, 97) is the most holy place in Islam. A
large cube-shaped building (approximately 50
feet high, 40 feet long, and 33 feet wide) made of
cut stone, it is situated in the plaza of the Grand
Mosque in mecca. Its four corners point approxi-
mately to the four cardinal directions, with the
famous black stone inserted in its eastern corner.
The Kaaba is covered by a curtain and is empty
inside, except for lamps and inscriptions. A large,
ornately decorated door provides access to the
interior. Opposite the Kaaba’s northwest wall
is the Hijr, a detached semi-circular walled area
marking the place where hagar and Ishmael are
believed to be buried. Nearby, opposite the north-
east side, is the Station of abraham, and opposite
the eastern corner the sacred well of zamzam.
Every day Muslims around the world face toward
the Kaaba when they pray; it is their qibla, or
prayer direction. Pilgrims who go to Mecca for the
haJJ and the umra assemble around it in concentric
circles for prayer and must walk around it seven
times counterclockwise to fulfill the required rites
of pilgrimage. Muslim law also requires that an
animal should be turned toward the Kaaba when
it is slaughtered, and that a person should be laid
in the grave facing toward it.

The age of the Kaaba is disputed and its early
history shrouded by myths and legends. As is
often the case with living holy sites, archaeologi-
cal research is prohibited there. Based on Islamic
textual evidence, most scholars (Muslims and
non-Muslims) agree that the shrine was a place of
worship even before the historical appearance of
Islam in the seventh century. The qUran describes
it as “the first house established for humankind”
(Q 3:96) and as “the ancient house” (Q 22:29). In
the time of the Jahiliyya (the era before mUham-
mad), statues of gods and religious relics were
kept in it; sacrifices and pilgrimage rituals were
conducted there. Such evidence suggests that it
did not differ significantly from other temples that
had once been vital to the ancient civilizations of
the Middle East, including that of Yahweh-Elohim
in JerUsalem.
The Quran states that Abraham and Ishmael
first built it as a place for worship at God’s com-
mand (Q 2:125–128). However, Islamic literary
tradition embellished this brief quranic story by
saying that the original Kaaba had been created
at the beginning of time. According to one tra-
dition, it was a building made of sapphires that
God had sent down from paradise and placed on
earth directly under his throne. He had an angel
bring Adam from india, where he lived after being

K

Free download pdf