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Life & Death

1. Life as a journey.

2. Rites of passageCeremonies which celebrate transitions e.g. birth, adolescence, marriage and death, birth, adolescence, marriage

3. Death as the final rite – meaning and purpose

4. Comparisons of death with other faiths

5. Response of faith to life & death issues

6. Understanding commitment through rites.

Birth

When a MuslimOne who submits to Allah by following the religion of Islam child is born the adhanThe Islamic call to prayer (call to prayer) is whispered in its right ear and the 'iqamah (command to rise and worshipThe offering of praise and reverence to God via a religious service) in the left. This means that the first words the baby hears are: 'Allahu Akbarliterally - God is the most great - and a phrase occupying a prominent place in salah'. The words are usually said by the oldest male present but can be said by a Muslim woman.

In India, Pakistan and Bangladesh the tahnik ceremony is held. Sugar, honey or a squashed date is rubbed on the baby's gums by an elderly relative. This expresses the hope that the baby will be sweet-natured, kind, obedient and considerate.

AqiqaIslamic name-giving ceremony

Seven days after birth is the Aqiqa ceremony where the father announces the name of the child to friends and relatives. The parents or the grandparents choose the name. The baby is being welcomed into the ummahIn Islam, belonging to the wider community. PrayersExtempore and set conversations with God are recited asking for AllahThe Arabic name for God's blessing and for the child's future health, prosperity and spiritualA word with many religious connotations, often used to describe a multiplicity of phenomena that would include inner, reflective or emotional experiences, and those aspects of life that give it meaning and depth or which are profoundly moving or aesthetic. growth. The baby's head is wiped with olive oil then washed or shaved. The equivalent weight of the shaven hair, in gold or silver, is then given to the poor.

Some Muslims offer a sacrificeGiving on behalf of to the betterment of others after the Aqiqa ceremony. A sheep or goat is offered for a girl and two animals for a boy.

The khitan, or circumcision, may be performed at the aqiqa ceremony or at twenty-one days or even later. It can be done any time up to the tenth birthday.

BismillahThe beginning of the religious instruction ceremony in Islam

The Bismillah ceremony is the beginning of the religious education of the child. It takes place when the child is four years old: sometimes when the child is exactly four years, four months and four days. The child must be able to recite 'Bismillah-ir-Rahman-ir-Rahim' (In the name of Allah, the Compassionate, the Merciful).

By the age of seven the child will be able to take part in the five daily prayers and, by the age of ten, to fast, though usually not for the whole month of RamadanThe Islamic month of fasting. By the time a child is twelve Muslims are usually considered old enough to be responsible for their own religious activities.

Marriage

Marriages in the Muslim community are often arranged but they can only take place with the consent of both parties. All Muslims are expected to marry. Men may have up to four wives but each must be treated equally.

If ye fear that ye shall not be able to deal justly with the orphans, Marry women of your choice, Two or three or four; but if ye fear that ye shall not be able to deal justly (with them), then only one, or (a captive) that your right hands possess, that will be more suitable, to prevent you from doing injustice. (Surah 4:3)

A Muslim man may marry a Jew or a Christian but a Muslim woman may only marry a Muslim man. Divorce is regarded as a last resort.

A Muslim marriage usually takes place in the home or the mosqueA Muslim place of worship, literally place of prostration and the couple give their consent before at least two witnesses. There are readings from the Qur'anThe sacred text of Islam and believed by Muslims to be the word of God revealed to the Prophet and the imamA Muslim leader of prayers and the guests pray for the couple.

The Aqd Nikah (contract of marriage) is spoken and written. The bride and groom sign three copies to ensure that they have both agreed to the marriage.

The groom gives mahrA marriage gift (a sum of money, property or other valuable gift) to the bride and this remains her property for life. Often a walimah or nuptial feast follows the ceremony.

Sometimes the bride does not attend the ceremony. She may remain at home while the bridegroom goes to the mosque and she appoints an agent and two witnesses to represent her part of the contract.

Death

The funeral rites for Muslims are not in the Qur'an but in law books. Rituals vary according to the customs of the country. Muslim graves in the UK run from north-east to south-west, so the heads can be at the south-west end facing right towards the direction of MakkahThe holy city of Islam to be found on the Arabian peninsular and the Ka'bahThe cube shaped shrine to be found at Makkah, and the direction towards which Muslims turn to pray.

Muslims are buried and not crematedTo be burned rather than buried on death as they want the bodies to be intact for the resurrectionReferring to the collective and individual raising from the dead of humans and for Christians, Jesus of the dead from their graves at the Day of JudgementA belief in many faith systems of the end of time when God will judge the people of the world according to their worldly deeds and determine their eternal destiny.

When Muslims are dying, they say the words attributed to Muhammad (pbuh) ('Allah, help me through the hardship and agony of death'). They also try to repeat the ShahadahThe declaration of the truth in Islam that Allah is one and Muhammad (pbuh) is his messenger (declaration of faith): 'There is no godWord used to describe a personal transcendent Being but Allah; Muhammad is the messenger of Allah'.

Relatives recite verses from the Qur'an to call on the barakah (grace) of Allah and they repeat loudly, 'la-ilaha-illallah', 'there is no god but Allah' so that Satan will have no opportunity to confuse the dying person with doubts.

The dead body is placed on a stretcher with the head in the direction of the QiblahThe direction wall of a mosque facing the holy city of Makkah. Ghusl a ritual washing is done by relatives of the same sex as the deceased. The corpse is washed three times, perfumed with scents such as camphor, wrapped in a shroud, a single piece of unsewn cloth, and placed in a coffin.

Laws in many countries require coffins but in some Muslim countries the body is placed straight into the ground, protected by planks or with a coffin inverted over it and then covered with earth. SalahAn Arabic word referring to Islamic prayers is then performed in the house of the dead Muslim or in the mosque.

The funeral takes place as soon as possible, usually the next day, but certainly within three days.

At the graveside in the cemetery, funeral prayers Salat-ul-Janaza (which is salah with no prostrations), and al-Fatihah (Surah 1) are said.

When the corpse is lowered into the ground, the body is committed to the earth with the words, 'In the name of Allah, (we bury) according to the Way of the Prophet of Allah' and the 'From the (earth) did We create you, and into it shall We return you, and from it shall We bring you out once again.'(Surah 20:55).

Seven days after the burial, relatives try to visit the grave as a mark of respect.

Generally, mourning does not last more than three days.

Shi'ahA faction of Islam Muslims have different traditions including rawdahs (memorial gatherings) on the fortieth day of mourning.

It is traditional for the grave to be raised a little above the level of the ground, simply to stop people from walking on it or sitting on it.

Websites

http://pof.reonline.org.uk/islam.php

http://www.al-islam.org

http://www.al-islam.org/ethics/index.htm

http://www.bbc.co.uk/religion/religions/islam

http://www.livingislam.org/ Traditional Islam website

http://www.uga.edu/islam/home.html One of the most comprehensive websites on Islam on the internet.

http://www.usc.edu/dept/MSA/quran/ (useful Qur'an search engine in English)

http://www.virtuallyislamic.com (This website provides a list of Islamic websites which are regularly updated, go to 'Islamic Studies Pathways')

Bibliography

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