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INT-244 Topic 3a Islam
1. Field Trips - Make-Ups
Fri. Oct 13 12:45— Islamic Center, 2515 W Orangewood.
Fri. Oct. 27 @ 6:30 PM — Sikh Temple, 2302 N 9th St.
Sun. Nov 12 @ 10 AM — Buddhist Temple, 4142 W Clarendon Ave
4. Dates
• Called Tam’r in Arabic
• Date palm mentioned throughout the
Quran
• Symbol of the Arab people
• Muhammad said, “Break your fast by
eating dates as its purifying”
• “Dates are from Paradise” (Hadith, Al-
Tirmidhi)
• “A date tree among other trees is like a
Muslim among others”
4
5. Dolmas
The name of the tradition originates
from the shortened Turkic word
‘doldurma’, meaning ‘stu
ff
ed’. The
meal is shared within families or
local communities, with di
ff
erent
m e t h o d s , t e c h n i q u e s a n d
ingredients used to prepare the
traditional meal by di
ff
erent
communities.
5
https://ich.unesco.org/
6. Dolmas
The Dolma making process is a
community tradition, bringing
together families. The
fi
nal product
symbolizes community.
6
https://ich.unesco.org/
8. Markook
Thin round Syrian bread
Cooked on a metal dome
Versatile bread sold by Beduins,
and in Syria for many di
ff
erent
fi
llings.
Symbolizes simplicity mobil bands
that wander in the desert and make
versatile breads to
fi
ll
8
https://ich.unesco.org/
10. Islam Essay
Write an essay on a branch, movement, or school of
thought of Islam. (Ex. Obaya, Su
fi
, Nation of Islam)
11. Islam Essay
Introduction (5 pts)
• One paragraph
• Introduce the branch, sect, or movement
• Write ONE comprehensive, boring, thesis statement
12. Islam Essay
Part 1 — Demography/Geography (10 pts)
• One paragraph
• How many members?
• Where are most of them?
• Give a chart or map
• cite an academic source for your facts with location
13. Islam Essay
Part 2 — History or Biography (10 pts)
• One paragraph
• Describe its history
• Short Bio of the founder if it has one
• Cite an academic source & location for the info
14. Islam Essay
Part 3 — Beliefs (15 pts)
• One paragraph
• Identify & describe 3 core beliefs or practices speci
fi
c to
movement
• Please do NOT review general Muslim beliefs
• Cite an academic source and location for this info.
15. Islam Essay
Part 4 — Organization or Mosque (15 pts)
• One paragraph
• Find a Mosque, School, or organization from this branch
of Islam. Some branches only have organizations.
• Identify it, and report where it is and what their mission
is, and who their leader is or CEO
• Cite the website of the Mosque, school, or organization.
16. Islam Essay
Part 5 — Re
fl
ect & Discuss (10 pts)
• One paragraph
• Compare and contrast the beliefs/practices from a Christian
Worldview point, and cite a Scripture
• Or, what do you agree with? What do you disagree with?
• Or, alternatively how would you sensitively engage a member
of this branch or movement?
17. Islam Essay
Conclusion (5 pts)
• One paragraph
• Tell the read what you just said.
• Do NOT introduce new facts, just re-summarize.
24. Islam Quiz
1. What are the religions of these women?
2. Which global region as the MOST number of Muslims?
3. What popular drink came from the Islamic world?
4. What percentage of Muslim Americans are US Citizens
24
39. Muslims in the World
1.9 Billion Muslims
24% of the global population in 2020
World Religion Database. (2020). https://worldreligiondatabase.org
40. World Religions
Christianity 2.5 billion 32%
Islam 1.9 billion 24%
Hinduism 1.1 billion 14%
Buddhism 533 million 7%
Chinese Folk 466 million 6%
World Religion Database. (2020). https://worldreligiondatabase.org
41. Muslims in the World
1.9 billion Muslims Worldwide
4.45 million Muslims in United States
50k - 60k Muslims in Arizona
2020 US Census Bureau
https://cronkitenews.azpbs.org/2016/08/15/arizona-muslims-one-perception-many-faces/
42. 50,000 - 60,000 in Arizona
https://cronkitenews.azpbs.org/2016/08/15/arizona-muslims-one-perception-many-faces/
43. Muslims in the World
20% in Middle East
62% in Asia-Paci
fi
c
10% in Europe making up 5% of population
https://worldreligiondatabase-org
44. Muslims in the United States
• 56% of American Muslims arrived after 2000
• 82% of American Muslims are US citizens
• 42% of American Muslims are US born
47. Country of Origin Percentage %
United States 42
South Asia 20
Mideast 14
Africa 5
Europe 2
Country of Origin
48. 6%
10%
19%
33%
26%
2%
1970 1980 1990 2000 2010 2020
1960
1950
1940
When did Muslims Immigrate to the United States
https://www.pewresearch.org/religion/2017/07/26/demographic-portrait-of-muslim-americans/
49.
50. What can you say about the Muslim
community in the United States?
51. What can you say about the Muslim
community in the United States?
• Muslim Americans are no longer foreign immigrants
• Muslim Americans are established Americans
• Muslim American Culture values learning and hard work
• Muslim Americans are upwardly mobile
55. [Isaac] grew and was weaned. And Abraham made a great feast on the
day that Isaac was weaned. But Sarah saw [Ishmael] the son of Hagar the
Egyptian, whom she had borne to Abraham, laughing. So she said to
Abraham, “Cast out this slave woman with her son, for the son of this
slave woman shall not be heir with my son Isaac.” (Gen 21:8-11 ESV)
55
56. And the thing was very displeasing to Abraham on account of his son. But
God said to Abraham, “Be not displeased because of [Ishmael] because
of your slave woman. Whatever Sarah says to you, do as she tells you, for
through Isaac shall your o
ff
spring be named. And I will make a nation of
[Ishmael] also because he is your o
ff
spring.” (Gen 21:11-13 ESV)
56
57. So Abraham rose early in the morning and took bread and a skin of water
and gave it to Hagar, putting it on her shoulder, along with [Ishmael] and
sent her away. And she departed and wandered in the wilderness of
Beersheba. (Gen 21:14 ESV)
57
58. When the water in the skin was gone, she put [Ishmael] under one of the
bushes. Then she went and sat down opposite him a good way o
ff
, about
the distance of a bowshot, for she said, “Let me not look on the death of
the child.” And as she sat opposite him, she lifted up her voice and wept.
(Gen 21:15-17 ESV)
58
59. And God heard the voice of the boy, and the angel of God called to
Hagar from heaven and said to her, “What troubles you, Hagar? Fear not,
for God has heard the voice of [Ishmael] where he is. Up! Lift up [Ishmael],
and hold him fast with your hand, for I will make him into a great nation.”
(Gen 21:17-18 ESV)
59
60. Then God opened her eyes, and she saw a well of water. And she went
and
fi
lled the skin with water and gave [Ishmael] a drink. And God was
with the boy, and he grew up. He lived in the wilderness and became an
expert with the bow. He lived in the wilderness of Paran, and his mother
took a wife for him from the land of Egypt. (Gen 21:19-21 ESV)
60
80. Muhammed’s Life
• Two Sons who died
• Four daughters were his heirs
• Became a camel driver in Mecca
• Watered camels for pilgrims to Ka’aba
• Became very religious (what religion?)
82. Muhammed’s Revelation 610 AD
• Prayed and meditated in Cave of Hira
• Received revelation from Angel Gavriel (Gabriel)
• Laylat al-Qadr (Night of Power)
• Angel commanded: “Recite!”
• But Muhammed was illiterate
87. Medina
622 - 632 AD
King of Medina protected him
Converted to Islam
Islam grew
Islamic Law developed Mosque of the Prophet
88. Sharia Law
Established in Medina Sharia Law
"the clear, well-trodden path to water”
Religious Civil Laws
Mosque of the Prophet
89. Different Origins
Judaism — developed as a religion of exiles
Christianity — developed as counter-culture religion
Islam — developed as a State Religion
90. Different Origins
Judaism — Practices as refugees in exile
Christianity — Beliefs of those in opposition to the State
Islam — State Religion with civil and religious laws
104. Pact of Omar (644 AD)
1. Protects Dhimmis (non-Muslims)
2. Prohibits rebuilding churches/synagogues
3. Prohibits Churches/Synagogues higher than mosques
4. Requires Dhimmis to pay Jizya
5. Prohibits evangelism
6. Prohibits public religious celebrations
105. Pact of Omar (644 AD)
7. Prohibits public displays of crosses
8. Prohibits loud sounds (ex. Call to worship)
9. Prohibits stopping someone from converting to Islam
10. Prohibits imitating Muslims
11. Requires Dhimmis rise in presence of Muslim
106. Pact of Omar (644 AD)
12. Requires Christians wear blue belts or
turbins
13. Requires Jews to wear yellow belts or
yellow hats
116. How did Islam Spread (632 - 750)
Christians, Zoroastrians, and Jews CHOICE
1. Submit to the Pact of Omar
2. Become Dhimmis (subjects) and pay the Jizya (tax) or
3. Convert to Islam or
4. Be Killed
132. Westernization of the Islamic World
• Women’s rights
• Modern movies, radio, and TV
• Rock and Popular Music
• Democratic, Secular Government
• Western Dress and culture
133. Rise of Modern Arab Nationalism
• Secular National Identities that was not religious
• Secular Governments
• Political alliances with Soviet Union or America
• Dictatorships repressing Islamic extremism
141. Rise of Islamic Extremism
1. Reaction to Western Culture
2. Reaction to Secular Governments
3. Reaction to Political Pressure from the Super Powers
142. Rise of Islamic Extremism
• Reaction to the State of Israel
• Perceived as a Western beach head in Islamic World
143. Palestinian Liberation Organization (PLO)
• 1967 Six-Day War, Israel captured E Jerusalem, West Bank, and Gaza Strip
• Led to a Palestinian refugee crisis
• Yasir Arafat organized the refugees naming them Palestinians
• Palestinian refugees moved from West Bank, Jordan, Lebanon
• Arafat was a moderate Arab
• Palestinians were moderates, secular, and even Eastern Christians
143
144. Palestinian Liberation Organization (PLO)
• Arafat was seen as a modern dictator among many.
• Shi’a Islam spread among Palestinians
• Israel granted Palestinians autonomy allowing self-government
• West Bank Palestinian Authority
• Gaza Strip Palestinian Authority
• Israel withdrew from Gaza Strip in 2005
• Hamas through a coup took over Gaza and began the war still going on.
144
145. Results
1. Religious extremist governments
2. Flood of refugees to the West escaping extremism
3. Rise of extremist groups
4. Media and Popular culture’s portrayal of Islam
166. Six Articles of Faith
1. Belief in One God
2. Belief in Angels
3. Belief in the Prophets
4. Belief in the Resurrection and Final Judgment
5. Belief in the Holy Books
6. Belief in Divine Decree
167. 1. Belief in One God
Allah, who is indivisible, incomparable
to men or women, not begotten, and
not a trinity
168. 2. Belief in Angels
• Angels created from light
• Angels have no free will
• Angels created for task or purpose
• Jin created from
fi
re
• Jin have free will
• Bad Jin follow Satan
• Good Jin operate in the world
169. 3. Belief in the Prophets
God sent men & women prophets
including Abraham, Moses, Isa (Jesus),
and His last prophet, Muhammad.
170. 4. Belief in Resurrection
and Final Judgement
All men & women will die, and rise
again in the resurrection after which
they will face judgement
171. 5. Belief in the Holy Books
1. Old Testament
2. New Testament
3. Quran “recitation”
OT & NT were corrupted
Quran only was preserved
172. 6. Belief in the Divine Decree
Allah ordained certain things in life
All things happen according to the Will
of Allah. Men and women’s duty is to
accept His will.
180. Adhan (Call to worship)
Allahu akbar Allah is great
Ashadu an la ilaha illa llah I bear witness there is no god but Allah
Ashadu ‘Anna Muhmmadan rasulu illah I bear witness that Muhammad is Allah’s prophet
Chayya ‘ala s-salah Hasten to prayer!
Chayya ‘ala I-falah Hasten to salvation
As-salatu khayrun mina n’nawa prayer is better than sleep
Allahu ‘akbar Allah is great
la ilaha illa llah. There is no god but Allah
184. Ramadan
• Eve. Wed. March 22 - Eve. Fri. April 21, 2023
• When ‘Allah gave Muhammad 1st Chapter of Qu’ran
• Fast, and Restraint (ex. No movies, dance, intimacy)
192. Quran
114 Surahs (Chapters)
Each chapter has Ayat (Verses)
Begins with Bismillah
“In the name of Allah”
Ordered in size, not chronology
193. 1. In the Name of Allah the Entirely Merciful, the Especially Merciful.
2. [All] praise is [due] to Allah, Lord of the worlds -
3. The Entirely Merciful, the Especially Merciful,
4. Sovereign of the Day of Recompense.
5. It is You we worship and You we ask for help
6. Guide us to the straight path-
7. The path of those upon whom You have bestowed favor, not of those
who have evoked [Your] anger or of those who are astray.
Quran 1:1–7
197. Sacred Story
1. God called Abraham,
fi
rst monotheist
2. Ishmael, not Isaac, was Abraham’s Heir
3. Ishmael traveled to Mecca where Abraham built the Ka’aba
4. God sent prophets, all rejected
5. Gabriel appeared to Muhammad,
fi
nal prophet
6. Resurrection at the end of time and
fi
nal battle
7. Final judgement of the world
200. Sunni Islam
• 89 - 90% of Muslims
• Abu Bakr Siddique Caliph
• Await the Mahdi, true successor
• Imam is only a religious leader
• Followers do not need intermediary
201. Shi’a Islam
• 200 Million followers
• Iran, Iraq, Yemen, and Syria
• Ali ibn Talib was divine successor
• Imam religious & community leader
• Imam decides meaning of Quran
202. Ibadi Islam
• Oman
• Claims they pre-date Sunni & Shi’a
• God will not show himself Judgement day
• Do not need community leader a
203. Ahmadiyya Islam
• East Africa, Southeast Asia
• Mirza Ghulam Ahmad (1835 - 1908)
• Ahmad was newest prophet
• Renewal movement
• Beliefs similar to Sunni
204. Su
fi
sm Islam
• Turkey, Iran, Greece, Balkans
• Follow Ali Ibn Talib (successor)
• Puri
fi
cation of the Inner Self
• Personal, mystical experience with Allah
• Cross-denominational movement
205. Bahai
• Persia in 1844
• Taught God would send a new prophet
The Bab (1819 - 1850)
206. Bahai
• Baha’ullah claimed to be that prophet.
• In 1863 declared he was the new prophet
• Was thrown in jail
Baha’ullah. (1817-1892)
207. Bahai
• Abdul-Bahai (son) in 1908 traveled to
Europe and the US teaching.
• Established Bahai religion
208. Bahai
• Today about 5-8 million adherents to Bahai
• Claims to unite all the world religions
209. Wahhabism
• 1703-1792
• Founded Wahhabi Islam
• Reaction to Modern Culture
• Return to Strict Islam
Muḥammad ibn ʿAbd al-Wahhāb
211. Wahhabism
Sunni, Reform movement that sought
to purge medieval practices such as
venerating Muslim saints, and
sacred shrines.
Return to 7th century Islam as they
believed it to be.
Jihadist Movement
Taliban in Afghanistan
221. Cultural Values
• Male dominate (women subordinate roles)
• Collectivist (not individual)
• High Uncertainty avoidance
222. Cultural Values
• Giving to charity
• Modesty and conservative dress
• Hospitality and generosity
• Respect all religion and tradition
223. Sensitivities
• Israel and their occupation of the territories
• Palestinians and autonomy
• Dietary restrictions
• Social interaction of men with women
• Modest dress (especially women)
224. Sensitivities
• Movies, music, celebration (ex. Alcohol)
• Avoid depictions of Muhammed
• Never criticize Muhammed or the Quran
• Don’t put the Quran on the
fl
oor!