Discuss mohammad and the funding of the early islamic church.
Serious discussion only.
Two refs on Dr Patricia Crone
Wiki article on Patricia Crone
Quote:In their book Hagarism: The Making of the Islamic World, Crone and her associate Michael Cook, working at SOAS at the time, provided an analysis of early Islamic history by looking at the only surviving contemporary accounts of the rise of Islam, written in Armenian, Greek, Aramaic and Syriac by witnesses. They argued that Islam, as represented by contemporary, Non-Muslim sources, was in essence a tribal rebellion against the Byzantine and Persian empires with deep roots in Judaism, and that Arabs and Jews were allies in these conquering communities.[5]
In her book Meccan Trade and the Rise of Islam, Crone argues that the importance of the pre-Islamic Meccan trade has been grossly exaggerated. She also suggests that while Muhammad never traveled much beyond the Hijaz, internal evidence in the Qur'an such as its description of Muhammad's polytheist opponents as olive growers, might indicate that the events surrounding the prophet took place near to the Mediterranean milieu.[5]
and
And What do We Actually know About Muhammad
Among the Believers
09-16-2012, 05:53 PM
(This post was last modified: 09-16-2012, 09:37 PM by dhu.)
Quote:Sahih Bukhari Volume 4, Book 56, Number 814
Narrated by Anas
"There was a Christian who embraced Islam and read Surat-al-Baqara and Al-Imran, and he used to write (the revelations) for the Prophet. Later on he returned to Christianity again and he used to say: "Muhammad knows nothing but what I have written for him."
What is his name? Maybe he wrote down what he wanted.
Any other corroborating quotes?
eSamskriti.org:
Pagan Arab Pantheon
So the Arabs had atleast 360 gods and goddesses before Muhammad came up with his anti-woman cult.
Chapter 1
Quote:The Pagan Arab Pantheon
By Sanjeev Nayyar, November 2002 [esamskriti@suryaconsulting.net]
Before & after the Taliban destroyed the Buddha statues in Afghanistan there were a number of articles on whether Islam permitted destruction of idols. Indiaââ¬â¢s leading current affairs magazine India Today had carried an article on the destruction. Amidst conflicting interpretations of Islam and the Koran I remember an interesting letter in the magazine from an Indian Muslim. While I do not remember his name the gist of what he said was, ââ¬ËI wonder why everyone is making such a hue & cry of the destruction of Buddha statues. When Prophet Mohammed entered the Kaba he destroyed 360 idolsââ¬â¢. I read the same thing in the book, History & Culture of Indian People published by the Bhartiya Vidya Bhavan. It read ââ¬Åafter the military conquest of Mecca by the Prophet, he entered the sanctuary and smashed its many idols said to have numbered three hundred and sixty exclaiming ââ¬Å Truth hath come and falsehood hath vanished.ââ¬Â
Idols, Gods & Goddesses in Arabia! I was foxed till I read volume 2 of a book by Sitaram Goelji titled ââ¬ËHindu Temples What Happened to Themââ¬â¢. Chapter eleven is titled Religion of Pagan Arabia. The Chambers 20th Century Dictionary defines a pagan as ââ¬Åa heathen, who is not a Christian, Jew or a Muslimââ¬Â.
I have reproduced parts of chapter eleven verbatim. (Courtesy & copyright Voice of India). The piece has three chapters, one gives you names of Gods and function in a table form, two gives complete details and three is conclusion.
Name of God Sex Function
1. Al-lah Man Creator Supreme Provider
2. Al ââ¬â Malik Man The King. In the days of Islam he became one of the epithets of Allah.
3. Baââ¬â¢l or Baââ¬â¢al Man Lord of Cultivated Land.
4. El Man God.
5. Al ââ¬â lat Women Sun God. In Quran one of the three daughters of Allah.
6. Manat Women Goddess of Time. Also known as Goddess of Death.
7. Al ââ¬â Uzza. Women Means ââ¬Ëthe Most Mightyââ¬â¢. She was a Goddess of the Saebeans, embodied the cult of planet Venus. In Quran she is one of the three great goddess of Mecca, who were supposed to be daughters of Allah.
8. Shams Women Is Sun. The name Abd Shams is ââ¬Ëservant of the Sunââ¬â¢. The word ââ¬Ëshamsââ¬â¢ survives in Muslim names also.
9. Dhuââ¬â¢sh-Shara Man Possibly God of Fertility.
10.At ââ¬â Thuraiya Not sure Supposed to bestow Rain. The name Thuraiya means ââ¬Ëexisting in plentyââ¬â¢ and survives in the name Suraiya.
11.Quzah Man Ancient Arabian thunder god who shot hail from his bow then hung the latter on the clouds. Other meanings too go to chapter two.
12.Wadd Man i.e. Friendship, according to Quran a god worshipped by the contemporaries of Noah. The name of this God survives in Al-Wadud, one of the 92 names of Allah meaning ââ¬Ëthe Loving Oneââ¬â¢.
13.Ruda Women Symbolized ââ¬Ëgoodwill or favorââ¬â¢.
14.Jadd Not sure Name of a deity venerated by various Semitic people. Name used in the Quran in the sense of greatness majesty.
15. Saââ¬â¢d Man In Arab astronomy it is the common name for small groups of stars in the constellations of Pegasus, Aquarius Capricon that augur good fortune.
16. Manaf Man Means height or high place.
17. Nasr Man It was worshipped under the form of an eagle.
18. Auf Means ââ¬Ëthe great bird of preyââ¬â¢.
19. Yaguth Man Means ââ¬Ëhelperââ¬â¢ had the shape of a lion.
20.Yaââ¬â¢uq Suwa Man Yaââ¬â¢uq was in the form of a horse, Suwa in the form of a women, was said to be from antidiluvian times.
21. Hubal Man God the sanctuary worshipped in the Kaââ¬â¢ba at Mecca.
22. Isaf Naââ¬â¢ila Tradition says ââ¬Ëthey were a man women of Jurhumââ¬â¢.
23. Al-Qais Man Ancient God of the pagan Arabs.
24. Al-Uqaisir Man Unknown.
25. Shai al ââ¬âQaum Man Companion of People.
26. Duwar Women Was the virgins idol young women used to go around it in procession, hence its name.
Quote:The Pagan Arab Pantheon
By Sanjeev Nayyar, November 2002 [esamskriti@suryaconsulting.net]
2Chapter :
Arab Gods
ââ¬ÅNow we can take up, in greater detail, individual Arab Gods and Goddesses, starting with the one who presided over the pantheon.
Al ââ¬â Lah
The name Allah has become so much identified with Islam as to rule out any suspicion that he was the Great God of the pagan Arabs. ââ¬ÅAllah, in the Safa inscriptions. Hallah, ââ¬Ëthe godââ¬â¢, enters into the composition of numerous personal names among the Nabataeans and other Northern Arabs of an early period e.g. Zaid Allahi, ââ¬Ëincrease of Godââ¬â¢ (that is increase of the family through the son given by God), ââ¬ËAbd Allahi, and so forth. Among the heathen Arabs Allah is extremely common, both by itself and in theophorous names. Wellhausen cites a large number of passages in which pre-Islamic Arabs mention Allah as a great deity; and even if we strike out certain passages (for instance on the ground that the text has been altered by Muhammadan scribes) so many still remain over, and so many more which are above suspicion can without difficulty be found, that the fact is clearly established. Moreover, Allah forms an integral part of various idiomatic phrases, which were in constant use among the heathen Arabs. Of special importance is the terminology of the Qurââ¬â¢an, which proves beyond all doubt that the heathen Arabs themselves regarded Allah as the Supreme Being. The Nabataen inscriptions mention repeatedly the names of a deity accompanied by a title ââ¬ËAlaha, ââ¬Ëthe godââ¬â¢.
The Qurââ¬â¢an (13.17;29.61, 63;41.24;39.39;43.87) itself provides ample evidence that the pre-Islamic Arabs regarded Allah as ââ¬Åthe creator and supreme providerââ¬Â and ââ¬Åassigned to him a separate position distinct from that of all other deities (6.137).ââ¬Â Here it becomes difficult ââ¬Åto distinguish between their views and the interpretation of their views adopted by Muhammad, especially their vocabulary and that of Muhammad. It will be seen then, that whatever may have been the origin of the names applied, the religion of Mecca in Muhammadââ¬â¢s time was far from simple idolatry.ââ¬Â Both sides seem to say the same things about Allah. ââ¬ÅBut though the names was the same for the Meccans and for Muhammad, their conception of the bearer of the names must have differed widely. The Meccans evidently had in general no fear of him; the fear of Allah was an element in Muhammadââ¬â¢s creedââ¬Â¦. The Meccans did not hesitate to disregard him and to cultivate the minor gods; Muhammad knew him as a jealous and vindictive sovereign who would assuredly judge and condemn in the endââ¬Â¦.
It is significant that while the sources, Islamic as well as others, mention idols of many Gods and Goddesses in the Kaââ¬â¢ba and else where, they nowhere mention an idol of Allah. The only explanation is that every God and Goddesses was seen by the pagan Arabs as representing Allah who could be prayed to through any one of them. In fact, the Meccans pointed out to Muhammad (Qurââ¬â¢an 6.149; 37.68) that ââ¬ÅAllah had never forbidden them to worship other gods with him.ââ¬Â Ibn Ishaq reports that ââ¬ËAbduââ¬â¢ I-Muttalib ââ¬Åstood by Hubal praying to Allah.ââ¬Â The Qurââ¬â¢an is never tired of saying that those whom the idolaters associate with Allah will not intercede for them on the last day. For the pagan Arabs, however, Allah is no other than his associates; he is them and they are he. Of course, the pagans have no notion of the last day when alone Allah will visit them; instead, they are aware of him every moment of their lives. He is present not in some high heaven but in and around them, in many names and forms. The character which the Qurââ¬â¢an assigns to Allah must have looked like a prison-house to the pagan Arabs; their Allah could not be contained in concepts created by the external and shallow mind of man, nor was he helplessly dependent upon the services of a prophet.
The pagan poets ââ¬Åhad already developed in Arabic a vivid power of wielding descriptive epithets vis-à-vis Allah.ââ¬Â Many of the ninety-nine names (Asmaââ¬â¢ al-husna) which Muslim theologians mention, can be found in pagan poetry. Most probably, Allah had many more names, may be a thousand, in the pagan parlance. It has been characteristic of pagan spirituality everywhere that it adorns with numerous names and forms whatever it adores. Muhammad retained only those names, which did not offend his monotheism, and dropped the rest. He also added names which did not square with the pagan perception of Allah but which went very well with the Allah of his conception. Al-Mutakabbir, the Haughty, looks like one such name. Al-Muntaqim, the Avenger, is another. The most typical of Muhammadââ¬â¢s contributions, however, is al-Mughni, the Enricher, that is, by means of body, which includes, we may remember, the women and children of those who become victims of Jihad. Small wonder that one of the names of Muhammadââ¬â¢s Allah is al-Zarr, the Distresser. We find that the Qurââ¬â¢an (58.11) uses the same name for Satan. As we shall see, that is exactly what Allah came to mean in the doctrine as well as the history of Islam.
The two names, ar-Rahman, the Compassionate, and al-Rahim, the Meriful, are the most frequent in Muhammadââ¬â¢s usage. They stand at the head of every Sura of the Qurââ¬â¢an except one. There is nothing intrinsically offensive in these names when applied to Allah. In fact, they are more appropriate for the Allah of the Pagan Arabs than for the Allah of Islam. Yet the Meccans found them the most objectionable. Muhammad had tacked them to Allah while dictating to ââ¬ËAli the draft of the treaty at Hudaybiya. The Meccan representative protested and had them dropped. ââ¬ÅThen the apostle,ââ¬Â narrates Ibn Ishaq, ââ¬Åsummoned ââ¬ËAli and told him to write ââ¬ËIn the name of Allah the Compassionate, the Merciful.ââ¬â¢ Suhayl said ââ¬ËI do not recognize this; but write ââ¬ËIn thy name, O Allah.ââ¬â¢ The apostle told him to write the latter and he did so.ââ¬Â This was not the only occasion when the Meccans showed their repugnance for these names. They had all along accused Muhammad of importing alien names and imposing them upon Allah. To them these names were Jewish and the Jews had been in league with Muhammad so far as Arabiaââ¬â¢s ancient religion and culture were concerned. They saw these names as symbols of the new-fangled creed, which Muhammad was trying to foist on them. On the other hand, Muhammad insisted on using these names because, in his mind, they embodied all that he stood for.
Incidentally, ââ¬ÅTraditions assign two hundred names to Muhammad.ââ¬Â It seems that the Prophet grew in size at the expense of Allah who was made to look smaller and smaller. That was quite in keeping with the Prophetââ¬â¢s own image of himself. He was out to block everyone elseââ¬â¢s access to Allah while proclaiming himself as Habib Allah, an Nabi, ar-Rasul and Khatim al-Anbiya. So it was no more sufficient that one believed in Allah; one had also to believe in Muhammad as the only channel through which Allahââ¬â¢s will could be known. It was inevitable that, in due course, the Prophet became more important than the contrived god in whose name he spoke.
Al-Malik
There were other deities ââ¬Åwhose titles themselves seem to designate them as occupying a position of supreme importance in the eyes of the worshippers.ââ¬Â Al-Malik, ââ¬Ëthe King,ââ¬â¢ was the name of such a deity. ââ¬ÅIn the days of Islam, al-Malik became one of the epithets of Allah, and hence the name ââ¬ÅAbd al-Malik survives among Muhammadans.
Baââ¬â¢l or Baââ¬â¢al
ââ¬ÅThe divine title Baââ¬â¢l or Baââ¬â¢al, ââ¬Ëthe lordââ¬â¢ which was very common among the Northen Semites survived among the Arabs of the Sinai Peninsula in the form al-Baââ¬â¢lu which occurs in their inscriptions together with the proper names ââ¬ËAbd al-Baââ¬â¢li, Aus al-Baââ¬â¢li, ââ¬Ëgift of the Lord,ââ¬â¢ and Garm al-Baââ¬â¢li, probably ââ¬Ëact of the Lord.ââ¬â¢ A trace of the worship of this god may be found in Sharaf-al-Baââ¬ËI, the name of a place between Medina and Syria. The Arabs of later times were not aware that any such deity had existed, but certain phrases in their language clearly prove that he had once been known. Thus the term ââ¬Ësoil of Ba ââ¬ËIââ¬â¢ or simply ââ¬ËBa ââ¬Ëlââ¬â¢ is applied to land, which does not require irrigation, but has an underground water supply, and therefore yields fruit of the best quality. In this case the god seems to be regarded as the lord of the cultivated landââ¬Â¦ Again, the verb baââ¬â¢la and other derivatives of Baââ¬â¢l meanââ¬â¢ to be bewildered,ââ¬â¢ properly ââ¬Ëto be seized by the god Ba ââ¬Ëlââ¬â¢.
El
ââ¬ÅAmong the Northern Arabs of early times, particularly in the region of Safa, the word El, ââ¬ËGodââ¬â¢ was still very commonly used as a separate name of the Deity. It is true that it does not actually occur except in compound proper names of persons, Wahb El, and many others. Some of these such as Wahbil, ââ¬Ëgift of El,ââ¬â¢ Abdil, ââ¬ËServant of El,ââ¬â¢appear among the Arabs of a later age but at least in certain cases they must have been borrowed from the Sabaean language, while in other cases they are restricted to the extreme north of Arabia. It may be added that the divine name Iayal, which occurs once in an ancient verse, is possibly a plural of majesty formed from El; Uwal is a variation of the same name.
ââ¬ÅThe names commonly used in dynasties, or distinguished families, who originally came from districts where Sabaean or some other peculiar dialect of southern Arabia was spoken, had naturally a tendency to spread among the Arabs in general.ââ¬Â
Al-Lat
ââ¬ÅThe Sun-god, who according to Strabo (784) was held especial honor by the Nabataeans, is very probably to be identified with Allatââ¬Â¦ We have already seen that the sun is properly feminine in Arabic and in most other Semitic languages; hence the name Allat which so far as we can judge means simply ââ¬Ëthe Goddess,ââ¬â¢ is particularly suited in this case.ââ¬Â The Greek historian, Herodotus, mentions an Arabian Goddess named Aliat. ââ¬ÅThat Alilat is identical with Allat, a goddess frequently mentioned, has long been an acknowledge fact. References to Allat were found in several Nabataean inscriptions; in one of them she is called the ââ¬ËMother of Gods.ââ¬â¢ Moreover, proper names compounded with Allat appear both among the Nabataeans and the Palmyrenesââ¬Â¦ Among the later Arabs this goddess was no less venerated. In the Qurââ¬â¢an (liii 50) she is one of the three daughters of Allah. She is also mentioned occasionally in poetry. Thus one poet says: I swear to him, in the presence of the throng, by the salt, by the fire, and by Allat who is the greatest of all.ââ¬â¢ Of the names compounded with Allat, which were widely diffused, some at least must be of considerable antiquity ââ¬Â¦. The cult of the goddess flourished, in particular, at the sanctuary of Taââ¬â¢if, a town to the east of Mecca; the tribe of Thaquif, who dwelt in that district spoke of her as the ââ¬Ëmistressââ¬â¢, That is, al-Rabba. Among the Lihyan, a branch of the Hudhail, settled in the country northeast of Mecca, Allat was worshipped ââ¬Åalongside typically Arabââ¬Â deities. Allat reminds us of Aditi, the Mother of Gods in the Vedic pantheon.
Manat
ââ¬ÅSome Arabian deities were originally personifications of abstract ideasââ¬Â¦ Time in the abstract was popularly imagined to be the cause of all earthly happiness and especially of all earthly misery. Muhammad in the Qurââ¬â¢an (Sura xlv. 23) blames the unbelievers for saying, 'It isââ¬Ë Time that destroys us.ââ¬â¢ Her main sanctuary was a black stone among the Hudailis in Qudaid, not far from Mecca on the road to Medina near a hill called Mushallal. She was however worshipped by many Arab tribes, primarily the Aws and Khazradj in Yathrib. In Mecca she was very popular along with the goddesses al-Lat and al-ââ¬ËUzza; the three (according to the Qurââ¬â¢an) were regarded as Allahââ¬â¢s daughters, and in a weak moment Muhammad declared their worship permitted (cf. Sura liii. 19 sqq.)ââ¬Â¦ According to Ibn al-Kalbi, she was the oldest deity whose worship gave rise to that of the others, because names compounded with Manat occur earlier than other theophoric names. Another view is found in Ibn Hisham, p.145, where ââ¬Ëthe two daughters of ââ¬ËUzza are Manat and al-Lat,ââ¬â¢ As an independent deity we find her in the Nabataen inscriptions of a al-Hidjr-Manat is connected in a peculiar way by some writers with the great hadjdj, for we are told that several tribes including the Aws and Khazradj assumed the ihram at the sanctuary of Manat and on conclusion of the rites cut their hair and dropped the ihramââ¬Â¦
The character of the Goddess can be inferred from her name. In Arabic maniya (plural, manaya) means ââ¬Åthe alloted, fate, doom of death, destructionââ¬Â. Manat, therefore, was primarily the Goddess of Time. ââ¬ÅThe poets are continually alluding to the action of Time (dahr, zaman) for which they often substitute ââ¬Ëthe days,ââ¬â¢ or night.ââ¬â¢ Time is represented as bringing misfortune, causing perpetual change, as biting, wearing down, shooting arrows that never miss the mark, hurling stones, and so forthââ¬Â¦ Occasionally we come across such passages as the following: ââ¬ËTime has brought woe upon him, for the days and the (allotted) measure (qadar) have caused him to perish.ââ¬â¢ Various expressions are used by the poets in speaking of the ââ¬Ëportionââ¬â¢ allotted to them or the goal that is set before themââ¬Â¦ Once we meet with the phrase ââ¬Ëtill it be seen what the Apportioner shall apportion to theeââ¬â¢ (ma yamni laka ââ¬Ëamani), which apparently refers to a godââ¬Â¦ The word here translated ââ¬Ëapportionââ¬â¢ originally means ââ¬Ëto countââ¬â¢, hence to ââ¬Ëreckonââ¬â¢ a thing to someoneââ¬Â¦.ââ¬Â
She is also the Goddess of Death. ââ¬ÅManiya appears in poetry as driving a man into the grave, piercing him with an arrow, handing to him the cup of death, lying in ambush for him, receiving him as a guest (when he is about to die), and so forth. Not infrequently the possessive suffix is added, ââ¬Ëwhen my Maniya overtakes me,ââ¬â¢ ââ¬Ëhis Maniya has come upon him,ââ¬â¢ and the likeââ¬Â¦.ââ¬Â
Al- ââ¬ËUzza
Her name means ââ¬Ëthe Most Mighty.ââ¬â¢ She was a Goddess of the Sabaeans who, in due course, become popular all over Arabia. She embodied the cult of the planet Venus. ââ¬ÅThe Syrian poet Issac of Antioch, who lived in the first half of the 5th cent., bears witness to the worship of ââ¬ËUzza by the Arabs of that period; in another passage he identifies ââ¬ËUzza with the planet Venusââ¬Â¦ The Arabian cult of the Venus is mentioned like-wise by Ephrahim Syrus (who died in AD 373), by Jerome, Theodret, and later still by Evagrius.. As early as the 2nd century Or thereabout, references to a priest of this goddess occur in two Sinaitic inscriptionsââ¬Â¦ Another Sinaitic inscription mentions the name ââ¬ËAbd al-ââ¬ËUzza which at a later time, just before the rise of Islam, was extremely common among the Arabs. ââ¬ÅUzza figures in the Qurââ¬â¢an (Sura liii. 19) as one of the three great goddesses of Mecca. who were supposed to be daughters of Allah. That Muhammad himself offered sacrifices to her in his younger days is expressly stated by traditionââ¬Â¦
ââ¬ÅKuthra which probably means ââ¬Åthe Most Rich,ââ¬â¢ the name of an idol destroyed by order of Muhammad, is perhaps only another title of ââ¬ËUzza. We also read of a man call ââ¬ÅAbd Kuthra, belonging to the tribe of Tai, in the very center of Arabia. Here the absence of the definite article proves that the name Kuthra is ancient.ââ¬Â
Another poet is known to have sworn by the Saââ¬â¢ida (Blessed) ââ¬ËUzza. As as-Saââ¬â¢ida is known to be name of a Goddess worshipped at Medina, it is inferred that she was ââ¬ÅUzza. ââ¬ÅShe was especially associated with the Ghatafan but her principal sanctuary was in the valley of the Nakhla on the road from Taââ¬â¢if to Meccaââ¬Â¦ It consisted of three samura (acacia) trees in one of which the goddess revealed herselfââ¬Â¦ From these centers her cult spread among a number of Beduin tribes, the Khuzaââ¬â¢a, Ghanm, Kinana, Bali, Thakif and especially the Quraish, among whom she gradually acquired a predominant positionââ¬Â¦ Here she formed with al-Lat and Manat a trinity in which she was the youngest but came in time to overshadow the othersââ¬Â¦ When in the year 3, Abu Sufyan set out to attack Muhammad he took the symbols of al-ââ¬ËUzza and al-Lat with him. That of the two al-ââ¬ËUzza was the more important as the patron deity of Mecca is shown from Abu Sufyanââ¬â¢s war cry: al-ââ¬ËUzza is for us and not for youââ¬Â¦.
ââ¬ÅHer cult disappeared after this [destruction of her sanctuary], as did the numerous proper names, combinations of al-ââ¬ËUzza, while the masculine counterpart ââ¬ËAbd al-ââ¬ËAziz remained because ââ¬ËAziz was one of the names of Allahââ¬Â¦Ã¢â¬Â
Shams
ââ¬ÅThe Sun (Shams, construed as feminine) was honored by several Arabian tribes with a sanctuary and an idol. The names ââ¬ËAbd Shams, ââ¬Ëservant of the Sun,ââ¬â¢ is founded in many parts of the country. In the North we meet with the name Amrishams, ââ¬Ëman of the Sunââ¬â¢Ã¢â¬Â¦
ââ¬ÅFor the worship of the rising Sun we have the evidence of the name ââ¬ËAbd ash-Shariq, ââ¬Ëservant of the Rising Oneââ¬â¢Ã¢â¬Â¦ In the extreme South there was a God called Dharih or Dhirrih, which appears like wise to denote the rising Sunââ¬Â¦ Once we meet the name ââ¬ËAbd Muharriq; here Muharriq, ââ¬Ëthe Burner,ââ¬â¢ may perhaps be another title of the Sun god. The Muharriq who is mentioned as the ancestor of certain royal houses admits of a similar explanation.ââ¬Â
Sura 91 of the Qurââ¬â¢an is named Ash-Shams. The word ââ¬Åshamsââ¬Â survives in Muslim names also.
Dhuââ¬â¢sh-Shara
He was an ancient Arab deity. ââ¬ÅAccording to the Arab tradition he was a god who owned a reserved grazing ground (hima) among the Dawsites with a hollow in which the water trickled down from the rocks, which is in agreement with the fact that the name ââ¬ËAbd Dhu ââ¬Ël- Shara is found in this tribe. According to al-Kalbi also, this deity was worshipped among the related Banu ââ¬Ël-Harithââ¬Â¦ we meet with Dhu ââ¬Ël-Shara (dusares) on more historical ground as a the chief god of the Nabataeans in whose inscriptions from Petra, the land east of Jordan and as far as al-Hidjr, he is often mentioned. His chief sanctuary was in Petra where a large black, quadrangular stone was dedicated to him in a splendid temple. He had another important sanctuary in Soada which was called Dionysias after hi. His festival was celebrated here in August, which is certainly connected with the fact that he was identified with Dionysos as the god of fertility, particularly of the vintage. In Petra and Elusa, on the other hand, his festival, according to Epiphanius, fell on the 25th day of December on which day ââ¬Ëthe virgin called Kkhbou in Arabic and Dusares born of her were worshipped with Arabic hymnsââ¬â¢Ã¢â¬Â¦ It naturally reminds one of the Arabic kaââ¬â¢ab ââ¬Ëa young maiden with breasts developedââ¬â¢; but it is also possible to connect it with kaââ¬â¢b ââ¬Ëcubeââ¬â¢ 9cf, the Kaââ¬â¢ba at Mecca) according to which interpretation the god was thought to have been born from the stone.ââ¬Â
ââ¬Åââ¬Â¦. But there were several places called ash-Shara, and the difficulty of determining with which of them the god was originally connected is increased by the fact that his cult goes back to very early times. The localities which bear this name appear to have been moist and rich in vegetation; such a spot, in the midst of a sterile country like Arabia, easily became a center of worship.ââ¬Â The fact that underneath his idol ââ¬Åstood a golden pedestal, and whole sanctuary blazed with gold and votive offeringsââ¬Â, as also the fact that his festival fell ââ¬Åabout the time of the winter solsticeââ¬Â, establish his ââ¬Åconnection with Sun worshipââ¬Â, He was the ââ¬Åpatron of luxuriant vegetationââ¬Â, which further emphasizes his ââ¬Åcharacter as a Sun-god.ââ¬Â
ââ¬ÅAnother god who appears to have been named after a place is Dhuââ¬â¢l-Halasa or Dhu ââ¬Ël-Hulasa. He was greatly venerated at a place in the north of Yemen, apparently the district now called ââ¬ËAsir. Between his sanctuary and the sanctuary at Mecca there existed a certain amount of rivalry.
ââ¬ÅFrom a grammatical point of view, the gods Dhu ââ¬Ël-Kaffain, ââ¬ËHe who has two hands,ââ¬â¢ and Dhuââ¬â¢r-rijl, ââ¬ËHe who has a foot,ââ¬â¢ must be classed with the two forgoing ones. Perhaps these names may have been originally applied to sacred stones, which by means of rude carving were made to bear a partial resemblance to the human form.ââ¬Â
Another God with a similar name was Dhu ââ¬Ël-Khabsa who was worshipped all al-Azd, ââ¬Åa widely ramified family of tribesââ¬Â among which ââ¬Åthe al-Aws and al-Khazradji of Medina and the Khuzaââ¬â¢a in and around Mecca were counted.ââ¬Â They were worshippers of Manat. The same tribe living in the mountains of Sarat worshipped an idol named ââ¬ËAââ¬â¢im.
At-Thuraiya
ââ¬ÅThe constellation of the Pleiades (ah-Thuraiya) which was supposed to bestow rain, appears as a deity in the name ââ¬ËAbd ath-Thuraiya; the name ââ¬ËAbd Najm refers also to the Pleiades, for the latter are often called simply an-Najm, ââ¬Ëconstellation.ââ¬Â
ââ¬ÅThe word ââ¬Åthuraiyaââ¬Â is a diminutive of ââ¬Åtharwaââ¬Â which means ââ¬Ëexisting in plentyââ¬â¢Ã¢â¬Â¦ The constellation is so called because rain at its rising at the dawn brings tharwa i.e. great plenty. in any case, from early times the Pleiades have been credited with great influence on weather and the processes of nature dependent upon itââ¬Â¦ The constellation is also regarded as a diadem with jewels and it is mentioned in countless passages in the poetsââ¬Â¦Ã¢â¬Â
The word ââ¬Åthuraiyaââ¬Â survives in the name Suraiya that is still common among Muslims everywhere; Sura liii of the Qurââ¬â¢an is named An-Najm. Najm and Najm are also components of Muslim names.
Quzah
He was an ââ¬Åancient Arabian thunder god who shot hail from his bow and then hung the latter on the clouds.ââ¬Â We meet him in the ââ¬Åcombination Qaus Quzahââ¬Â, the bow of Quzah, meaning the rainbow. Quzah was also ââ¬Åthe name of a certain spot, within the sacred territory of Mecca, where pilgrims were accustomed to kindle fire.ââ¬Â The Islamic lore is not quite logical about this God. He is described as a shaitan (devil) and also as an angel who looks after the clouds. The rainbow becomes Allahââ¬â¢s bow, bow of the prophet of Allah, bow of the heavens, bow of the clouds, signs of heaven. Etc., and the word loses its association with a God.
Wadd
ââ¬Åââ¬Â¦ also pronounced Wudd or Udd i.e. ââ¬Ëfriendship,ââ¬â¢ ââ¬Ëaffection,ââ¬â¢ was according to the Qurââ¬â¢an (Sura lxxi 22) a god worshipped by the con-tempories of Noah. But it would be a mistake to conclude that his worship was obsolete in Muhammadââ¬â¢s time, for we have sufficient evidence to the contrary. The poet Nabigha says once, ââ¬ËWadd greet thee!ââ¬â¢ There was a statue of this god at Duma, a great oasis in the extreme North of Arabia. The name ââ¬ËAbd Wadd occurs in a number of wholly distinct tribesââ¬Â¦ As were told that his statue had a bow and arrows attached to it we might be tempted to imagine that he was a kind of Eross, and this would imply a foreign origin. But though the root WDD means ââ¬Ëto love,ââ¬â¢ ââ¬Ëto feel affectionââ¬â¢ for an object, it is never used in a sexual sense. Moreover the statue in question bore not only a bow and arrows, but like wise a sword and lance from which hung a flag; the god was also fully clad and therefore does not look like a copy of the Greek Eros.ââ¬Â
Ch. Muhammad Ismail mentions an inscription, which he saw in the Prince of Wales Museum of Western India, Bombay, in 1921. It was on one of the stones ââ¬Åbrought from Aden by Colonel H.F. Jacob of the Indian Army, who was for a long time at Adenââ¬Â¦ The language of the inscription was ââ¬Åwhat may be called Himyaritic though Sabaean and South Arabic are also names given to itââ¬Â. Ch. Ismail read the inscription as saying, ââ¬ÅThe House No. 2 of Father Waddââ¬Â, and commented: ââ¬ÅWadd was a god worshipped by the Arabs who often wore talismans being the name Wadd. The word itself is derived from wudd, which means love. It was opposed to Nakruh, the god of hatred.ââ¬Â
The name of this God survives in Al-Wadud, one of the ninety-nine names of Allah meaning ââ¬Åthe Loving Oneââ¬Â ( Qurââ¬â¢an, xi. 92; lxxv. 14).
Ruda
She was a Goddess who symbolized ââ¬Ëgoodwillââ¬â¢ or ââ¬Ëfavorââ¬â¢. The commentary on a term in which the names is mentioned informs us that Ruda was worshipped in the shape of an idol by the great tribe of Tamim. The proper name ââ¬ËAbd Ruda is found among several Arab tribes. To the nature of the deity in question the name supplies no clueââ¬Â¦ The remarkable fact that in the abovementioned verse Ruda is construed as feminine (whereas this grammatic form would normally be masculine), naturally suggests that at that period, about the time of Muhammad, people still realized that Ruda was merely an epithet applied to a goddess who properly bore some other name. But against this hypothesis, it may be urged that the name is of considerable antiquity, as is proved by the Palmyrene inscriptions, where it occurs separately in the form ââ¬ËRSU, and in theophorous proper names as RSUââ¬Â¦ The RDU of the Safa inscriptions seems to denote the same deity.ââ¬Â
Jadd
It was the name of a deity venerated by various Semitic people. The word occurs in Nabataean inscriptions in the form Gadda. But since we meet the proper name ââ¬ËAbd al-Jadd in a few casesââ¬Â¦. and since the noun judd, ââ¬Ëluckââ¬â¢, remained in current use among the Arabs, it is more natural to regard the Nabataean Gadda as an Aramaized form of the native Arabic al-Gadd (al-Jadd).ââ¬Â The name is used in the Qurââ¬â¢an (lxxii. 3) in the sense of ââ¬Ëgreatnessââ¬â¢ and ââ¬Ëmajestyââ¬â¢.
Saââ¬â¢d
In Arab astronomy it is the common name for small groups of stars in the constellations Pegasus, Aquarius and Capricorn, which augur good fortune. That is what the God Saââ¬â¢d stood for. ââ¬ÅAccording to a certain verse and statements of the commentator, Saââ¬â¢d was the name given to a rock not far from Jidda, to which divine honors were paid. Moreover, we meet the name ââ¬ËAbd Saââ¬â¢d in quite a different part of Arabia, to the north-east. At an earlier period a manââ¬â¢s name, which seems to be compounded with Saââ¬â¢d occurs in the inscriptions of Safa. Three of Muhammadââ¬â¢s leading companions were named Saââ¬â¢d ââ¬â Saââ¬â¢d ibn Abi Waqqas, Saââ¬â¢d ibn Muââ¬â¢az and Saââ¬â¢d ibn ââ¬ËUbadah. The name seems to have survived, though in an abbreviated form, in the title of the thirty-eighth Sura of the Qurââ¬â¢an.
Manaf
The name means ââ¬Ëheightââ¬â¢, or ââ¬Ëhigh placeââ¬â¢. ââ¬ÅThat Manaf was worshipped as a God is proved by the testimony of a verse, and is confirmed by the occurrence of a name ââ¬ËAbd Manaf which was especially common at Mecca and among the neighboring tribe of Hudhail.ââ¬Â The word Manaphis is found in an ancient inscription from the Hauran and seems to be derived from Manaphios, the name of this God.
ââ¬Åââ¬Â¦It is said that one of Muhammadââ¬â¢s ancestors-the pedigree being Muhammad b. ââ¬ËAbd Allah b. ââ¬ËAbd al-Muttalib b. Hashim b. ââ¬ËAbd Manaf-received this name because his mother consecrated him to Manaf, who was then the chief deity of Makka.
ââ¬Å.. Ibn Kalbi knows nothing of its whereabouts except that menstruating women were bound to keep themselves at a distance from it. ââ¬ÅThe name does not occur either in the Qurââ¬â¢an or in classical hadith. It derives from a root n-w-f, which in several Semitic languages conveys the meaning of ââ¬Ëbeing elevatedââ¬â¢.ââ¬Â
Nasr
It was ââ¬ÅOne of the idols of ancient Arabs, mentioned in the Qurââ¬â¢an, Surah lxxi. 23. It was an idol which, as its name implies, was worshipped under the form of an eagle.ââ¬Â Muhammad made this God a contemporary of Noah. ââ¬ÅBut it is to be noticed that the Sabaeans like wise had a god called Nasrââ¬Â¦.
ââ¬ËAuf
The name ââ¬ËAbd ââ¬ÅAuf was quite common among the Arabs. ââ¬ËAuf means ââ¬Åthe great bird of preyââ¬Â. The word is not found in this form in the Arab language at present. But ââ¬Åthe verb ââ¬Ëafa, which is derived from it, means ââ¬Ëto wheel in the air,ââ¬â¢ as birds of prey are wont to do.ââ¬Â The word ââ¬Åhas, in particular, the sense of augurium, and it may be that the name of the god did not refer to the bird but to the omen drawn from it; in this case ââ¬ËAuf would be a synonymous of Saââ¬â¢d.ââ¬Â
Yaguth
ââ¬ÅThe god Yaguth, whose name evidently means ââ¬Ëhelper,ââ¬â¢ was according to the Qurââ¬â¢an (Sura Lxxi. 23), another of the deities worshipped in the days of Noahââ¬Â¦ We find no trace of this god in early timesââ¬Â¦But at a later period we hear of a god Yaguth, whose idol was an object of contention among the tribes of Yemen, and the name ââ¬ËAbd Yaguth occurs in various part of Arabia, even in the tribe of Taghilib on the north-eastern frontier.ââ¬Â
ââ¬ÅYaguth had the shape of a lion.ââ¬Â
Yaââ¬â¢uq and Suwaââ¬â¢
The idol of Yaââ¬â¢uq ââ¬Åwas in the form of a horse, and was worshipped in Yemen. (Bronze images of this idol are found in ancient tombs and are still used as amulets)ââ¬Â¦
ââ¬ÅSuwaââ¬â¢, in the form of a woman, was said to be from antidiluvian timesââ¬Â¦.ââ¬Â
ââ¬ÅThe name of the god Yaââ¬â¢uq, who is mentioned in the Qurââ¬â¢an together with Yaguth, probably means ââ¬Ëthe Preserverââ¬â¢; his cult seems to have been confined to Yemen. Suwaââ¬â¢, who is also included among gods worshipped by Noahââ¬â¢s contemporaries (Sura lxxi. 20), was apparently of no great importance. He had a sanctuary at a place in the territory of the Hudhail, but none, so far as we know, elsewhere. The meaning of his name is altogether obscure. Neither Suwaââ¬â¢ nor Yaââ¬â¢uq seems to occur in the theophorous proper names. It is hardly necessary to remark that the transferring of all these Arabian deities to the age of Noah was a fantastic anachronism due to Muhammad himself.ââ¬Â
Hubal
ââ¬ÅHubal was worshipped at Mecca; his idol stood in the Kaââ¬â¢ba, and appears to have been in reality, the god of that sanctuary.. It would be unsafe to trust the descriptions of the idol in question which are given by writers of a later period; there is reason, however, to believe that the god had a human form. We may like wise accept as historical the statement that near him were kept divining arrows, used for the purpose of ascertaining his will or forecasting future events. It is related that the idol was brought by ââ¬ËAmr b. Luhai from Maââ¬â¢ab (Moab), a tradition which may contain some elements of truth, for we have independent evidence indicating that the god was known in the North. He seems to be mentioned in a Nabataean inscription at Hejr; and the tribe of Kalb, who dwelt in the Syrian Desert, used the name of Hubal as the name of a person or clan; the same tribeââ¬Â¦used in like manner the names of Isaf and Naââ¬â¢ila, two other deities peculiar to Mecca. Moreover, ââ¬ËAmr b. Luhai is the representative of the Huzaââ¬â¢a, a tribe who, according to tradition, occupied the sacred territory of Mecca before it passed into the hands of the Quraish. The assertion thatââ¬â¢ Amr introduced the worship of idols into Mecca for the first time is, of course, utterly incredible. But the hypothesis that Hubal was a late importation from a foreign country is further supported by the fact that we hear nothing of him in other parts of Arabia, and even at Mecca personal names compounded with Hubal were unknown. When the Meccans gained a victory over the Prophet in the immediate neighborhood of Medina, their leader shouted, ââ¬ËHurrah for Hubal!ââ¬â¢ Thus they regarded him as the natural enemy of the God preached by Muhammad.
ââ¬ÅAnother tradition indeed relates that Hubal was an idol of Banu Kinana, worshipped also by the Quraish and had been placed in the Kaââ¬â¢ba Khuzaima b. Mudrika wherefore it used to be called Hubal Khuzaima. It is further related that the idol was of red carnelian, in the form of a man; Quraish replaced the right hand which was broken, by a golden oneââ¬Â¦Ã¢â¬Â
ââ¬ÅHubal was in the form of a man and came from Syria; he was the god of rain and a high place of honor.ââ¬Â
ââ¬ÅAn idol, the God of the Moonââ¬Â¦Ã¢â¬Â
ââ¬ÅIt is remarkable that there is no distinct allusion to the idol in the whole of the Qurââ¬â¢an.ââ¬Â
ââ¬ÅThe learned Dr. Pocock.. derives the name from the Hebrew habbaââ¬â¢l or habbeââ¬â¢l and suggestsââ¬Â¦ the appropriateness of havel, ââ¬Ëvanity!ââ¬â¢ Among the Arabs, Hubal seems to have had a double character, in which respect he resembled the Syrian idol Ball (properly, Baââ¬â¢al), who was regarded both as the founder of the Babylonian empire, and as the sun personified as a deity. The opinion that Hubal was the same as the Babylonian or Syrian idol Baââ¬â¢al or Bel, or synonymous with it, is in fact supported by the testimony of the Arabian authorities, who relate that it was originally brought from Syria or Mesopotamia. Of course, the Arabian writes do not maintain that Hubal was identical with Baââ¬â¢al: they admit however that it was an astronomical deity, which Baââ¬â¢al also is believed to have been ââ¬âwhose designation by the way, like that of ââ¬Ëthe sunââ¬â¢ among ourselves, always appears with the article-ââ¬ËHabbaââ¬â¢alââ¬â¢. Further, Herodotus ( and after him, Rawlison) held the opinion that Hubbal was ââ¬Ëthe Jupiter of the Arabiansââ¬â¢-presumably because he was believed to have the power of sending rainââ¬Â¦.ââ¬Â
Isaf and Naââ¬â¢ila
Muslim tradition says that ââ¬ÅThey were a man and woman of Jurhum-Isaf b. Baghy and Naââ¬â¢ila d. Dil-who were guilty of sexual relations in the Kaââ¬â¢ba and so God transformed them into two stones.ââ¬Â
Obviously the tradition is a fabrication. As pointed out above, the tribe of Kalb in the Syrian Desert worshipped both of them as deities along with Hubal. the idols ââ¬Åstood near Mecca on the hills of Safa and Mirwa; the visitation of these popular shrines is now a part of the Muslim pilgrimageââ¬Â¦Ã¢â¬Â They were no doubt ââ¬Åtwo sacred stones, but the origin of their names is so far unexplained.ââ¬Â
Al-Qais
He was an ancient God of the pagan Arabs. ââ¬ÅHe must have early disappeared as a deity, for al-Kalbi does not mention him in his Kitab al-Asnam and he is not given in the various passages in Arab literature that give lists of the gods of the Djahiliya. But that he was at one time worshipped as a god may be deduced with considerable certainly from the tribal name ââ¬Åabd al-Qais and from the well-known personal and tribal name Imruââ¬â¢ al-Qais.ââ¬Â The name of a God mentioned in the Nabataean inscription from al-Hijr ââ¬Åcan hardly be other than an Aramaic adaptation of al-Qaisââ¬Â who ââ¬Åhad a sanctuary in al-Hijr in which copies of documents used to be deposited.ââ¬Â The word ââ¬Åqaisââ¬Â carries several meanings in the dictionaries. De Goeje ââ¬Åhas deduced the meaning ââ¬ËLordââ¬â¢ from al-Hamdani, Djazirat al-ââ¬ËArab.ââ¬Â
Al-Uqaisir
ââ¬Åââ¬Â¦.The name of a divinity of pre-Muhammadan Arabia, or better an epithet, the meaning of which (diminutive of aqsar, ââ¬Ëhe who has a stiff neckââ¬â¢ orperhaps simply ââ¬Ëthe shortââ¬â¢) seems to indicate an idol in a human shape. All that we know of the god (whose real name is unknown) goes back to the references to him by Ibn al-Kalbi, Kitab al-Asnam followed by Yaqut, Nuââ¬â¢djamââ¬Â¦ Al-Uqaisir was worshipped by the tribes of Qudaââ¬â¢a, Lakhm, Djudham, ââ¬ËAmila and Ghatafan living on the plateau of the Syrian Desert. Verses in old poets quoted by Ibn al-Kalbi mention stones (ansab) put up around the sacred place, the ââ¬Ëgarmentsââ¬â¢ (athwab), the ditch (djafr) into which were thrown the offerings, the cries and chants of the pilgrimsââ¬Â¦
ââ¬ÅAs Wellhausen notes, the expressions used in the verses which Ibn al-Kalbi qutoes in connection with al-Uqaisir must refer to a sanctuary as well as to an idol. We might then suppose that the epithet reflects the squat from of the building. It is worthwhile recalling that the name Uqaisir is also applied to a tribe, to individuals and even to a sword.ââ¬Â
Shai al-Qaum
We learn about this God from a Palmyrene and a Nabataean inscription. He is ââ¬Åthe Companion of the peopleââ¬Â, ââ¬Åthe kind god who rewards (or who is grateful), and who drinks no wineââ¬Â, that is ââ¬Åto whom no libations of wine are offered.ââ¬Â
Duwar
ââ¬Åââ¬Â¦ was the virginsââ¬â¢ idol and young women used to go around it in procession, hence its name.ââ¬Â
Chapter 3:
Quote:The Pagan Arab Pantheon
By Sanjeev Nayyar, November 2002 [esamskriti@suryaconsulting.net]
3Chapter :
Conclusion
The deities listed in the foregoing few pages may sound too many to minds under the spell of monotheism. The fact, however, is that they are far too few and represent only what has been salvaged by modern scholarship form the extensive ruins caused by Islam. For the pagan Arabs, the whole of their homeland was honeycombed with temples and sanctuaries housing hundreds of divinities with as may Names and Forms. Every household had its ancestral deities which were joined by those brought in by the brides. Every locality, every oasis, every grove had its own presiding deity. So also every tribal territory. Finally, the national temple, the Kaââ¬â¢ba at Mecca, had as many as three hundred and sixty deities, the Names and Forms of which remain unknown except in the case of few. ââ¬ÅIt seems that in course of time the various Arab tribes had brought in their gods and placed them in the Kaââ¬â¢ba, which had consequently acquired the character of the national pantheon for the whole of Arabia.ââ¬Â
The more pertinent point in the present context, however, is that the pagan Arabs were fully satisfied their ancestral religion and felt no need for a replacement. Of course, they were not in the business of saving souls and civilizing other people, which is what has come to count in the history of religion. But that is a ââ¬Åfaultââ¬Â inbuilt in the very genius of paganism. ââ¬ÅOccupied with the reform of their own lives and the righting of actual wrongs, these persons made no noise and being earnest did not suppose that the replacement of one cult for another would make men virtuous; and Mohammed himself had occasion to draw a contrast between the conduct of his pagan and that of his believing son-in-law, greatly to the disadvantage of the latter. So far as the religious sentiment requires gratification, there is no evidence to show that paganism had failed to gratify it. We gather from the inscriptions of the pagan Arabs that a wealth of affection and gratitude was bestowed upon their gods and patrons.ââ¬Â In the pagan spiritual tradition people are expected to be ââ¬Åbusy with themselvesââ¬Â. That is, busy in improving their own morals by purifying their own consciousness. The prophetic tradition, on the other hand, harangues people to be ââ¬Åbusy with the othersââ¬Â, that is, saving other people from sin, infidelity, and the eternal hell-fire. That is why the prophetic tradition abounds in missions and daââ¬â¢was, crusades and jihads.
It is often pointed out that no pagan Arab came forward with a philosophical defence of his religion when it was assailed by Muhammad. The only defence which every pagan put up for his religions was that it was the religion of his forefathers and as, such, hallowed by time and tradition. A deeper reflection goes to show that this was indeed a very strong defence. What the monotheists dismiss as polytheism and idol-worship are natural to the normal human psyche. Moreover, honoring that which was honored by oneââ¬â¢s ancestors keeps one rooted in oneââ¬â¢s history and culture. Cults which encourage one to denounce oneââ¬â¢s ancestors as barbarians or infidels, and oneââ¬â¢s past history as an age of ignorance, render one rootless and make one into a menace to oneââ¬â¢s neighbors.
The Bible provides ample evidence of the normal people reverting to polytheism and idol-worship again and again, and the persistent and violent wars which the prophets had to wage for reimposing Jehovah on them. In any case, a religion stands in needs of a philosophical defence only when it is already on a course of decline, and an inner dissatisfaction stars gnawing at the heart of its more perceptive adherents. There is no evidence that the pagan Arabs were suffering from such a psychosis on the eve of Islam. The confidence with which they spurned Muhammadââ¬â¢s message and ridiculed his superior claims leaves little doubt that Arab paganism was still in a state of god health. Though not so the environment in which this paganism lived and breathed. The mental disorder glorified as monotheism was present in an epidemic form, not only all around it but also in its very midst. Arab paganism was blissfully ignorant of what monotheism meant and the mischief it intended for a society, which permitted it to spread.
[quote name='ramana' date='15 July 2014 - 03:36 AM' timestamp='1405375095' post='117305']
The Islamic rule for four witnesses to a crime against woman is a copy of the Roman half truth law. Roman law accepted two half truths from witnesses. Islamic law accepts four quarter truths.
The acceptance of partial truths is due to not understanding probability aspects in ancient times.
Romans wanted to consider the possibility of independent witnesses lying and thus came up with the half-truth law i.e two independent witnesses partial testimony can be accepted as a full testimony.
However this ignores the mathematical rule that independent events probability has to be mulitplied and not added.
The bigger issue is if Mo copied and built upon the Roman law (four witnesses is twice as good as Roman Law!) and claimed it as a hadith what else was copied from elsewhere?
And was there really a Mo?
[/quote]
10-14-2014, 01:57 PM
(This post was last modified: 10-14-2014, 08:20 PM by Husky.)
Related to an IF post by Shambhu from 2008 containing the Wall Street Journal article "Professor Hired for Outreach to Muslims Delivers a Jolt: PBUH probably never existed" (online.wsj.com/article/SB122669909279629451.html)
Wasn't aware that the aforementioned German uni-professor - "Muhammed" Sven Kalisch - ceased to be a muslim in 2010. Although he has definitely deconverted from islam, his current ideological/religious situation is unknown as per the site "wikiislam", see below.
What's also at least as interesting is that the guy behind the muslim "Answering christianity" site has deconverted from islam too. (Lots of christian apologists and reverends debating with atheists similarly deconverted from christianism. See FFRF and other sites for a listing)
wikiislam.net/wiki/ Notable_Former_Muslims
(Includes listings of which religions they've moved on to, or if they've left religions altogether.
Added: Apparently only English-enabled apostates/those in English-enabled countries are given coverage. Because there are many apostates of islam in China, many of whom even revert to ancestral heathenism.)
The relevant section is:
Quote:Current Beliefs Unknown
ââ¬Â¢Wesley Snipes - Major Hollywood star who left Islam in 1988.[24]
ââ¬Â¢SeÃÆány O'Kane - Big Brother 2007 UK housemate, converted to Islam in 2003,[25] and practised the religion for a short time, but stopped after believing it to be in conflict with his homosexuality.[26]
ââ¬Â¢Qais Ali - Muslim internet debater behind the now defunct "Answering Christianity" site.[27][28]
ââ¬Â¢Muhammad Sven Kalisch - Former Muslim convert and Germany's first professor of Islamic theology. In 2008 after extensive research he came to the conclusion that "Muhammad probably never existed",[29] and apostatized in 2010.[30]
[...]
(The footnotes on Kalisch
29. Andrew Higgins - Professor Hired for Outreach to Muslims Delivers a Jolt - Wall Street Journal, November 15, 2008
30. Muslim professor who questioned Big Mo's existence has ditched Islam - The Freethinker, April 21, 2010
Quote:Disputed Conversions
ââ¬Â¢Barack Obama - Current President of the USA. Although President Obama (who is a Christian) has stated that he was never a Muslim, some have suggested otherwise.[31] This issue has also been discussed within the Muslim world,[32] and a Sudanese scholar has even called for his execution on the grounds that he is an apostate[33]
Didn't remember that islamaniacs had gone about calling for Obama's execution on the assumption that he had been (or "ought to have been") muslim. But what else is new.
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