From: Tyagi@HouseOfKaos.Abyss.com Subject: Islam3:Mecca Date: Fri, 7 Jan 94 15:28:49 PST 940107 Do what thou wilt shall be the whole of the Law. Assalam alaikum, my kin. This is part 3 in a continuing series on Islam and Sufism. ----------------------------------------------------------- On the tribal aspects of Mohammed's birthplace, Parrinder writes, "Like all Arabs, Mohammed was a member of a tribe, the Quraysh, and the conditions of tribal life form one of the important elements in his own background and the rise of Islam. Some time before Mohammed's birth, the Quraysh had come into possession of the barren valley of Mecca, with its shrines and wells, and had settled there. They soon built a thriving community that flourished on commerce, and rapidly rose from their former status of insignificance to become one of the most powerful tribal groups in the peninsula. Although the Quraysh lived in a city, and although Mohammed himself was born in a city, the ties of the Quraysh with their former existence in the desert were still very strong. In order to maintain contact with the desert life, it was their practice to send children to live for a time with a nomad group. Mohammed spent part of his childhood in such a group." _World Religions..._, Parrinder Ed., page 464. --------------------------------------------------------- On Mohammed's environment generally, H.D. Lewis and R.L. Slater write: "The Mecca of the seventh century where Muhammad was born and where he taught is seen today as no mean city. It was a thriving commercial town at the juncture of caravan routes crossing the Arabian desert. "It was also a religious centre renowned throughout Arabia. The Ka'bah sanctuary in the heart of the city attracted many pilgrims. It reflected the complex pattern of Arabian paganism, a paganism best described as a nature worship verging on polytheism, a worship which included a veneration of sacred stones, natural phenomena, and particular places associated with divine powers or agencies. The pilgrims who came to the Ka'bah from all parts of the tribal Arabia might have special regard for the famous Black Stone set in one of the walls of the central building. This was an object of immense veneration. But there were many other sacred stones in the Ka'bah as also the shrines of the three goddesses of Mecca, al-Izzat, the goddess of power, Manat, the goddess of fate, and Allat, the goddess of fertility. There was also some recognition of a supreme Being named Allah, the creator of heaven and earth.... "Muhammad therefore had no need to argue for the *existence* of Allah and he did not do so. What he emphasized was the reverence due to Allah. The worship of Allah, he argued, should be the only worship. All other worship was idolatrous. "Nor was he the first to maintain this view. Besides mentioning Jews and Christians, 'the people of the Book', the Qur'an refers to an obscure, pre-Islamic tradition of monotheism represented by the so-called Hanifs, who believed that Allah was the only God and apparently shared Muhammad's conviction that Allah and none else was the Lord of the Ka'bah, the 'Lord of the House'... "Neither the name Allah, then, nor the belief in one supreme deity, was entirely new to Arabia. Nevertheless, the Hanifs seemed to be comparatively few and far between, the Jews and Christians were aliens, and the great majority of Muhammad's fellow countrymen in Mecca and beyond Mecca were pagans in practice and belief. The Ka'bah in Muhammad's day was the citadel of a confused idolatry. While, therefore, Muhammad could appeal to a vague belief in one supreme God named Allah, he was something more than a reformer. He was not merely calling upon men to be logical and put into practice what they already believed. To all intents and purposes, the faith he preached meant a parting of the ways. It challenged the whole complex of pagan belief wedded to tribal custom which found expression in the Ka'bah rituals as well as the shrine. The measure of the man, therefore, must be taken in the light of the measure of the force of this challenge, the resistance it was bound to arouse, and Muhammad's achievement despite this resistance. He found an Arabia which merely looked over its shoulder at Allah and left an Arabia for whom Allah was all in all, the First and the Last." _The Study of Religions_, 1969, published by Pelican Books, (originally written in 1966); pages 97-99. ------------------------------------------------------------ Part 3 in a continuing series. Assalam alaikum, my kin. Love is the law, love under will. Haramullah (Allah's Woman) Tyagi@HouseofkAos.Abyss.com