One God, Three Faiths: Judaism, Christianity, and Islam

(Amelia) #1
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.


  1. 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.

  2. Women are not to circulate freely. In
    mosques: they must not pray next to men,
    only with women, children or in private.

  3. 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.

  4. Women’s obligations are limited, as they
    are in Judaism, by ritual impurity.
    D. Separation of Church and State

  5. 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.

  6. 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

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