e. Hajj. Once in a lifetime pilgrimage to
Mecca. This ritual is performed at a
specific time, at specific places in the
vicinity of Mecca.
C. The Role of Women in Islam relating to
the pillars of faith.
- Women are bound by the same obliga-
tions as men, but they must observe
modesty. Hence women can make the
pilgrimage but must do so in the compa-
ny of men. - Women are not to circulate freely. In
mosques: they must not pray next to men,
only with women, children or in private. - Women are exempt from certain other
obligations since they are responsible for
the home and raising the children until
ages 6 or 7 when the father takes over
the raising of the male children. Tithing is
part of the male tradition. - Women’s obligations are limited, as they
are in Judaism, by ritual impurity.
D. Separation of Church and State - Though the notion of separation of
church and state is a modern one,
Jesus did not involve himself in poli-
tics, while Muhammad freely mixed
religion and politics. - The use of force for religious ends is
commonplace in the monotheistic tradi-
tion, at least until the separation of
church and state. Its sanction by
Muhammad persists in Islam to this day.
THEPACTOFUMAR
AND DHIMMA
In 628, Muhammad and his
supporters led a raid on
Khaybar, an oasis with a Jewish
population. When the Jews sur-
rendered, Muhammad offered
them a treaty (dhimma). It was a
contract of sorts that offered the
Jews freedom to live as Jews if
they adhered to a few of his
demands including 1/2 their an-
nual harvest as a tax.
The Khaybar arrangement
became institutionalized as the
Dhimma, sometimes called “the
Pact of Umar” after the second
Caliph of Islam.
Dhimma is a contract between
conqueror and conquered. It
stipulates that the Christians
and Jews, the “People of the
Book,” will be allowed to live a
peaceful existence under the
Umma’s protection providing
they also adhere to strict guide-
lines. It maintains that no
Christian or Jew would build a
new church or synagogue; they
would not make public display
of their religion or proselytize
among Muslims; they would
dress dissimilarly to Muslims;
they would shave the front of
their heads and that they would
never strike a Muslim.
Since it is divine law, the con-
cept of Dhimma still remains in
force today.
LECTURE SEVEN