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Allah

Allah (/ˈæl.lə, ˈɑːl.lə, əˈl.lɑː/;[1][2] Arabic: ٱللَّٰه, romanizedAllāh, IPA: [ʔaɫ.ɫaːh] (listen)) is the common Arabic word for God. In the English language, the word generally refers to God in Islam.[3][4][5] The word is thought to be derived by contraction from al-ilāh, which means "the god", and is linguistically related to the Aramaic words Elah and Syriac ܐܲܠܵܗܵܐ (ʼAlāhā) and the Hebrew word El (Elohim) for God.[6][7]

The word 'Allah' in Arabic calligraphy

The word Allah has been used by Arabic people of different religions since pre-Islamic times.[8] The pre-Islamic Arabs worshipped a supreme deity whom they called Allah, alongside other lesser deities.[9] Muhammad used the word Allah to indicate the Islamic conception of God. Allah has been used as a term for God by Muslims (both Arab and non-Arab) and even Arab Christians[10] after the term "al-ilāh" and "Allah" were used interchangeably in Classical Arabic by the majority of Arabs who had become Muslims. It is also often, albeit not exclusively, used in this way by Bábists, Baháʼís, Mandaeans, Indonesian and Maltese Christians, and Sephardi Jews,[11][12][13] as well as by the Gagauz people.[14] Similar usage by Christians and Sikhs in West Malaysia has recently led to political and legal controversies.[15][16][17][18]

Etymology

 
The Arabic components that make up the word "Allah":
  1. alif
  2. hamzat waṣl (همزة وصل)
  3. lām
  4. lām
  5. shadda (شدة)
  6. dagger alif (ألف خنجرية)
  7. hāʾ

The etymology of the word Allāh has been discussed extensively by classical Arab philologists.[19] Grammarians of the Basra school regarded it as either formed "spontaneously" (murtajal) or as the definite form of lāh (from the verbal root lyh with the meaning of "lofty" or "hidden").[19] Others held that it was borrowed from Syriac or Hebrew, but most considered it to be derived from a contraction of the Arabic definite article al- "the" and ilāh "deity, god" to al-lāh meaning "the deity", or "the God".[19] The majority of modern scholars subscribe to the latter theory, and view the loanword hypothesis with skepticism.[20]

Cognates of the name "Allāh" exist in other Semitic languages, including Hebrew and Aramaic.[21] The corresponding Aramaic form is Elah (אלה), but its emphatic state is Elaha (אלהא). It is written as ܐܠܗܐ (ʼĔlāhā) in Biblical Aramaic and ܐܲܠܵܗܵܐ (ʼAlâhâ) in Syriac as used by the Assyrian Church, both meaning simply "God".[22]

History of usage

Pre-Islamic Arabians

Regional variants of the word Allah occur in both pagan and Christian pre-Islamic inscriptions.[8][23] Different theories have been proposed regarding the role of Allah in pre-Islamic polytheistic cults. According to the Islamic scholar Ibn Kathir, Arab pagans considered Allah as an unseen God who created and controlled the Universe. Pagans believed worship of humans or animals who had lucky events in their life brought them closer to God. Pre-Islamic Meccans worshiped Allah alongside a host of lesser gods and those whom they called the "daughters of Allah."[9] Islam forbade worship of anyone or thing other than God.[24] Some authors have suggested that polytheistic Arabs used the name as a reference to a creator god or a supreme deity of their pantheon.[25][26] The term may have been vague in the Meccan religion.[25][27] According to one hypothesis, which goes back to Julius Wellhausen, Allah (the supreme deity of the tribal federation around Quraysh) was a designation that consecrated the superiority of Hubal (the supreme deity of Quraysh) over the other gods.[8] However, there is also evidence that Allah and Hubal were two distinct deities.[8] According to that hypothesis, the Kaaba was first consecrated to a supreme deity named Allah and then hosted the pantheon of Quraysh after their conquest of Mecca, about a century before the time of Muhammad.[8] Some inscriptions seem to indicate the use of Allah as a name of a polytheist deity centuries earlier, but nothing precise is known about this use.[8] Some scholars have suggested that Allah may have represented a remote creator god who was gradually eclipsed by more particularized local deities.[28][29] There is disagreement on whether Allah played a major role in the Meccan religious cult.[28][30] No iconic representation of Allah is known to have existed.[30][31] Allah is the only god in Mecca that did not have an idol.[32] Muhammad's father's name was ʿAbd-Allāh meaning "the slave of Allāh".[27]

Islam

 
Medallion showing "Allah Jalla Jalaluhu" in the Hagia Sophia, Istanbul, Turkey
 
Allah script outside the Old Mosque in Edirne, Turkey

In Islam, Allah is the unique, omnipotent and only deity and creator of the universe and is equivalent to God in other Abrahamic religions.[11][12] Allah is usually seen as the personal name of God, a notion which became disputed in contemporary scholarship, including the question, whether or not the word Allah should be translated as God.[33]

According to Islamic belief, Allah is the most common word to represent God,[34] and humble submission to his will, divine ordinances and commandments is the pivot of the Muslim faith.[11] "He is the only God, creator of the universe, and the judge of humankind."[11][12] "He is unique (wāḥid) and inherently one (aḥad), all-merciful and omnipotent."[11] No human eyes can see Allah till the Day Of Judgement.[35] The Qur'an declares "the reality of Allah, His inaccessible mystery, His various names, and His actions on behalf of His creatures."[11] Allah doesn't depend on anything.[36] God is not a part of the Christian Trinity.[37] God has no parents and no children.[38]

The concept correlates to the Tawhid, where chapter 112 of the Qur'an (Al-'Ikhlās, The Sincerity) reads:

۝[39] SAY, God is one GOD;
۝ the eternal GOD:
۝ He begetteth not, neither is He begotten:
۝ and there is not any one like unto Him.[40]

and in the Ayat ul-Kursi ("Verse of the Throne"), which is the 255th verse and the powerful verse in the longest chapter (the 2nd chapter) of the Qur'an, Al-Baqarah ("The Cow") states:

Allah! There is no deity but Him, the Alive, the Eternal.

Neither slumber nor sleep overtaketh Him.

Unto Him belongeth whatsoever is in the heavens and whatsoever is in the earth. Who could intercede in His presence without His permission?

He knoweth that which is in front of them and that which is behind them, while they encompass nothing of His knowledge except what He wills.

His throne includeth the heavens and the earth, and He is never weary of preserving them.

He is the Sublime, the Tremendous.

In Islamic tradition, there are 99 Names of God (al-asmā' al-ḥusná lit. meaning: 'the best names' or 'the most beautiful names'), each of which evoke a distinct characteristic of Allah.[12][41] All these names refer to Allah, the supreme and all-comprehensive divine name.[42] Among the 99 names of God, the most famous and most frequent of these names are "the Merciful" (ar-Raḥmān) and "the Compassionate" (ar-Raḥīm),[12][41] including the forementioned above al-Aḥad ("the One, the Indivisible") and al-Wāḥid ("the Unique, the Single").

Most Muslims use the untranslated Arabic phrase in shā’a llāh (meaning 'if God wills') after references to future events.[43] Muslim discursive piety encourages beginning things with the invocation of bi-smi llāh (meaning 'In the name of God').[44] There are certain phrases in praise of God that are favored by Muslims, including "Subḥāna llāh" (Glory be to God), "al-ḥamdu li-llāh" (Praise be to God), "lā ilāha illā llāh" (There is no deity but God) or sometimes "lā ilāha illā inta/ huwa" (There is no deity but You/ Him) and "Allāhu Akbar" (God is the Most Great) as a devotional exercise of remembering God (dhikr).[45]

 
Silk textile panel repeating the name Allah, North Africa, 18th century

In a Sufi practice known as dhikr Allah (Arabic: ذكر الله, lit. "Remembrance of God"), the Sufi repeats and contemplates the name Allah or other associated divine names to Him while controlling his or her breath.[46] For example, in countless references in the context from the Qur'an forementioned above:

  1. Allah is referred to in the second person pronoun in Arabic as "Inta (Arabic: َإِنْت)" like the English "You", or commonly in the third person pronoun "Huwa (Arabic: َهُو)" like the English "He" and uniquely in the case pronoun of the oblique form "Hu/ Huw (Arabic: هو /-هُ)" like the English "Him" which rhythmically resonates and is chanted as considered a sacred sound or echo referring Allah as the "Absolute Breath or Soul of Life"—Al-Nafs al-Hayyah (Arabic: النّفس الحياة, an-Nafsu 'l-Ḥayyah)—notably among the 99 names of God, "the Giver of Life" (al-Muḥyī) and "the Bringer of Death" (al-Mumiyt);
  2. Allah is neither male or female (who has no gender), but who is the essence of the "Omnipotent, Selfless, Absolute Soul (an-Nafs, النّفس) and Holy Spirit" (ar-Rūḥ, الرّوح) - notably among the 99 names of God, "the All-Holy, All-Pure and All-Sacred" (al-Quddus);
  3. Allah is the originator of both before and beyond the cycle of creation, destruction and time, - notably among the 99 names of God, "the First, Beginning-less" (al-Awwal), "the End/ Beyond ["the Final Abode"]/ Endless" (al-Akhir/ al-Ākhir) and "the Timeless" (aṣ-Ṣabūr).

According to Gerhard Böwering, in contrast with pre-Islamic Arabian polytheism, God in Islam does not have associates and companions, nor is there any kinship between God and jinn.[34] Pre-Islamic pagan Arabs believed in a blind, powerful, inexorable and insensible fate over which man had no control. This was replaced with the Islamic notion of a powerful but provident and merciful God.[11]

According to Francis Edward Peters, "The Qur’ān insists, Muslims believe, and historians affirm that Muhammad and his followers worship the same God as the Jews ( 29:46). The Qur’an's Allah is the same Creator God who covenanted with Abraham". Peters states that the Qur'an portrays Allah as both more powerful and more remote than Yahweh, and as a universal deity, unlike Yahweh who closely follows Israelites.[47]

Christianity

The Christian Arabs of today have no other word for "God" than "Allah".[48] Similarly, the Aramaic word for "God" in the language of Assyrian Christians is ʼĔlāhā, or Alaha. (Even the Arabic-descended Maltese language of Malta, whose population is almost entirely Catholic, uses Alla for "God".) Arab Christians, for example, use the terms Allāh al-ab (الله الأب) for God the Father, Allāh al-ibn (الله الابن) for God the Son, and Allāh ar-rūḥ al-quds (الله الروح القدس) for God the Holy Spirit. (See God in Christianity for the Christian concept of God.)

Arab Christians have used two forms of invocations that were affixed to the beginning of their written works. They adopted the Muslim bismillāh, and also created their own Trinitized bismillāh as early as the 8th century.[49] The Muslim bismillāh reads: "In the name of God, the Compassionate, the Merciful." The Trinitized bismillāh reads: "In the name of Father and the Son and the Holy Spirit, One God." The Syriac, Latin and Greek invocations do not have the words "One God" at the end. This addition was made to emphasize the monotheistic aspect of Trinitarian belief and also to make it more palatable to Muslims.[49]

According to Marshall Hodgson, it seems that in the pre-Islamic times, some Arab Christians made pilgrimage to the Kaaba, a pagan temple at that time, honoring Allah there as God the Creator.[50]

Some archaeological excavation quests have led to the discovery of ancient pre-Islamic inscriptions and tombs made by Arab Christians in the ruins of a church at Umm el-Jimal in Northern Jordan, which initially, according to Enno Littman (1949), contained references to Allah as the proper name of God. However, on a second revision by Bellamy et al. (1985 & 1988) the 5-versed-inscription was re-translated as "(1)This [inscription] was set up by colleagues of ʿUlayh, (2) son of ʿUbaydah, secretary (3) of the cohort Augusta Secunda (4) Philadelphiana; may he go mad who (5) effaces it."[51][52][53]

The syriac word ܐܠܗܐ (ʼĔlāhā) can be found in the reports and the lists of names of Christian martyrs in South Arabia,[54][55] as reported by antique Syriac documents of the names of those martyrs from the era of the Himyarite and Aksumite kingdoms[56]

In Ibn Ishaq's biography there is a Christian leader named Abd Allah ibn Abu Bakr ibn Muhammad, who was martyred in Najran in 523, as he had worn a ring that said "Allah is my lord".[57]

In an inscription of Christian martyrion dated back to 512, references to 'l-ilah (الاله)[58] can be found in both Arabic and Aramaic. The inscription starts with the statement "By the Help of 'l-ilah".[59][60]

In pre-Islamic Gospels, the name used for God was "Allah", as evidenced by some discovered Arabic versions of the New Testament written by Arab Christians during the pre-Islamic era in Northern and Southern Arabia.[61] However most recent research in the field of Islamic Studies by Sydney Griffith et al. (2013), David D. Grafton (2014), Clair Wilde (2014) & ML Hjälm et al. (2016 & 2017) assert that "all one can say about the possibility of a pre-Islamic, Christian version of the Gospel in Arabic is that no sure sign of its actual existence has yet emerged."[62][63][64][65][66] Additionally ML Hjälm in her most recent research (2017) inserts that "manuscripts containing translations of the gospels are encountered no earlier than the year 873"[67]

Irfan Shahîd quoting the 10th-century encyclopedic collection Kitab al-Aghani notes that pre-Islamic Arab Christians have been reported to have raised the battle cry "Ya La Ibad Allah" (O slaves of Allah) to invoke each other into battle.[68] According to Shahid, on the authority of 10th-century Muslim scholar Al-Marzubani, "Allah" was also mentioned in pre-Islamic Christian poems by some Ghassanid and Tanukhid poets in Syria and Northern Arabia.[69][70][71]

Pronunciation

The word Allāh is generally pronounced [ɑɫˈɫɑː(h)], exhibiting a heavy lām, [ɫ], a velarized alveolar lateral approximant, a marginal phoneme in Modern Standard Arabic. Since the initial alef has no hamza, the initial [a] is elided when a preceding word ends in a vowel. If the preceding vowel is /i/, the lām is light, [l], as in, for instance, the Basmala.[72]

As a loanword

English and other European languages

The history of the name Allāh in English was probably influenced by the study of comparative religion in the 19th century; for example, Thomas Carlyle (1840) sometimes used the term Allah but without any implication that Allah was anything different from God. However, in his biography of Muḥammad (1934), Tor Andræ always used the term Allah, though he allows that this "conception of God" seems to imply that it is different from that of the Jewish and Christian theologies.[73]

Languages which may not commonly use the term Allah to denote God may still contain popular expressions which use the word. For example, because of the centuries long Muslim presence in the Iberian Peninsula, the word ojalá in the Spanish language and oxalá in the Portuguese language exist today, borrowed from Arabic inshalla (Arabic: إِنْ شَاءَ ٱللَّٰهُ). This phrase literally means 'if God wills' (in the sense of "I hope so").[74] The German poet Mahlmann used the form "Allah" as the title of a poem about the ultimate deity, though it is unclear how much Islamic thought he intended to convey.

Some Muslims leave the name "Allāh" untranslated in English, rather than using the English translation "God".[75] The word has also been applied to certain living human beings as personifications of the term and concept.[76][77]

Malaysian and Indonesian language

 
The first dictionary of Dutch-Malay by A.C. Ruyl, Justus Heurnius, and Caspar Wiltens in 1650 recorded "Allah" as the translation of the Dutch word "Godt".
 
Gereja Kalam Kebangunan Allah (Word of God Revival Church) in Indonesia. Allah is the word for "God" in the Indonesian language - even in Alkitab (Christian Bible, from الكتاب al-kitāb = the book) translations, while Tuhan is the word for "Lord".
 
Christians in Malaysia also use the word Allah for "God".

Christians in Malaysia and Indonesia use Allah to refer to God in the Malaysian and Indonesian languages (both of them standardized forms of the Malay language). Mainstream Bible translations in the language use Allah as the translation of Hebrew Elohim (translated in English Bibles as "God").[78] This goes back to early translation work by Francis Xavier in the 16th century.[79][80] The first dictionary of Dutch-Malay by Albert Cornelius Ruyl, Justus Heurnius, and Caspar Wiltens in 1650 (revised edition from 1623 edition and 1631 Latin edition) recorded "Allah" as the translation of the Dutch word "Godt".[81] Ruyl also translated the Gospel of Matthew in 1612 into the Malay language (an early Bible translation into a non-European language,[82] made a year after the publication of the King James Version[83][84]), which was printed in the Netherlands in 1629. Then he translated the Gospel of Mark, published in 1638.[85][86]

The government of Malaysia in 2007 outlawed usage of the term Allah in any other but Muslim contexts, but the Malayan High Court in 2009 revoked the law, ruling it unconstitutional. While Allah had been used for the Christian God in Malay for more than four centuries, the contemporary controversy was triggered by usage of Allah by the Roman Catholic newspaper The Herald. The government appealed the court ruling, and the High Court suspended implementation of its verdict until the hearing of the appeal. In October 2013 the court ruled in favor of the government's ban.[87] In early 2014 the Malaysian government confiscated more than 300 bibles for using the word to refer to the Christian God in Peninsular Malaysia.[88] However, the use of Allah is not prohibited in the two Malaysian states of Sabah and Sarawak.[89][90] The main reason it is not prohibited in these two states is that usage has been long-established and local Alkitab (Bibles) have been widely distributed freely in East Malaysia without restrictions for years.[89] Both states also do not have similar Islamic state laws as those in West Malaysia.[18]

In reaction to some media criticism, the Malaysian government has introduced a "10-point solution" to avoid confusion and misleading information.[91][92] The 10-point solution is in line with the spirit of the 18- and 20-point agreements of Sarawak and Sabah.[18]

National flags with "Allah" written on them


Typography

 
The word Allah written in different writing systems

The word Allāh is always written without an alif to spell the ā vowel. This is because the spelling was settled before Arabic spelling started habitually using alif to spell ā. However, in vocalized spelling, a small diacritic alif is added on top of the shaddah to indicate the pronunciation.

In the pre-Islamic Zabad inscription,[94] God is referred to by the term الاله, that is, alif-lam-alif-lam-ha.[58] This presumably indicates Al-'ilāh = "the god", without alif for ā.

Many Arabic type fonts feature special ligatures for Allah.[95]

Since Arabic script is used to write other texts rather than Koran only, rendering lām + lām + hā’ as the previous ligature is considered faulty which is the case with most common Arabic typefaces.

This simplified style is often preferred for clarity, especially in non-Arabic languages, but may not be considered appropriate in situations where a more elaborate style of calligraphy is preferred.

SIL International[96]

Unicode

Unicode has a code point reserved for Allāh, ‎ = U+FDF2, in the Arabic Presentation Forms-A block, which exists solely for "compatibility with some older, legacy character sets that encoded presentation forms directly";[97][98] this is discouraged for new text. Instead, the word Allāh should be represented by its individual Arabic letters, while modern font technologies will render the desired ligature.

The calligraphic variant of the word used as the emblem of Iran is encoded in Unicode, in the Miscellaneous Symbols range, at code point U+262B (☫).

See also

Citations

  1. ^ "Allah". Random House Webster's Unabridged Dictionary.
  2. ^ "Allah". Oxford Learner's Dictionaries.
  3. ^ . Islam: Empire of Faith. PBS. Archived from the original on 27 March 2014. Retrieved 18 December 2010.
  4. ^ "Islam and Christianity", Encyclopedia of Christianity (2001): Arabic-speaking Christians and Jews also refer to God as Allāh.
  5. ^ Gardet, L. "Allah". In Bearman, P.; Bianquis, Th.; Bosworth, C.E.; van Donzel, E.; Heinrichs, W.P. (eds.). Encyclopaedia of Islam Online. Brill Online. Retrieved 2 May 2007.
  6. ^ Zeki Saritoprak (2006). "Allah". In Oliver Leaman (ed.). The Qur'an: An Encyclopedia. Routledge. p. 34. ISBN 978-0-415-32639-1.
  7. ^ Vincent J. Cornell (2005). "God: God in Islam". In Lindsay Jones (ed.). Encyclopedia of Religion. Vol. 5 (2nd ed.). MacMillan Reference USA. p. 724.
  8. ^ a b c d e f Christian Julien Robin (2012). Arabia and Ethiopia. In The Oxford Handbook of Late Antiquity. OUP USA. pp. 304–305. ISBN 978-0-19-533693-1.
  9. ^ a b Anthony S. Mercatante & James R. Dow (2004). "Allah". The Facts on File Encyclopedia of World Mythology and Legend. Facts on File. p. 53. ISBN 978-1-4381-2685-2.
  10. ^ Merriam-Webster. . Merriam-Webster. Archived from the original on 20 April 2014. Retrieved 25 February 2012.
  11. ^ a b c d e f g "Allah." Encyclopædia Britannica. 2007. Encyclopædia Britannica
  12. ^ a b c d e Encyclopedia of the Modern Middle East and North Africa, Allah
  13. ^ Willis Barnstone, Marvin Meyer The Gnostic Bible: Revised and Expanded Edition Shambhala Publications 2009 ISBN 978-0-8348-2414-0 page 531
  14. ^ Carl Skutsch (2005). Encyclopedia of the World's Minorities. Routledge. p. 480.
  15. ^ Sikhs target of 'Allah' attack, Julia Zappei, 14 January 2010, The New Zealand Herald. Accessed on line 15 January 2014.
  16. ^ Malaysia court rules non-Muslims can't use 'Allah', 14 October 2013, The New Zealand Herald. Accessed on line 15 January 2014.
  17. ^ Malaysia's Islamic authorities seize Bibles as Allah row deepens, Niluksi Koswanage, 2 January 2014, Reuters. Accessed on line 15 January 2014. [1]
  18. ^ a b c Idris Jala (24 February 2014). "The 'Allah'/Bible issue, 10-point solution is key to managing the polarity". The Star. Retrieved 25 June 2014.
  19. ^ a b c D.B. Macdonald. Encyclopedia of Islam, 2nd ed, Brill. "Ilah", Vol. 3, p. 1093.
  20. ^ Gerhard Böwering. Encyclopedia of the Quran, Brill, 2002. Vol. 2, p. 318
  21. ^ Columbia Encyclopaedia says: Derived from an old Semitic root referring to the Divine and used in the Canaanite El, the Mesopotamian ilu, and the biblical Elohim and Eloah, the word Allah is used by all Arabic-speaking Muslims, Christians, Jews, and other monotheists.
  22. ^ The Comprehensive Aramaic Lexicon – Entry for ʼlh 18 October 2013 at the Wayback Machine
  23. ^ Hitti, Philip Khouri (1970). History of the Arabs. Palgrave Macmillan. pp. 100–101.
  24. ^ IslamKotob. Tafsir Ibn Kathir all 10 volumes. IslamKotob.
  25. ^ a b L. Gardet, Allah, Encyclopaedia of Islam, ed. by Sir H.A.R. Gibb
  26. ^ Zeki Saritopak, Allah, The Qu'ran: An Encyclopedia, ed. by Oliver Leaman, p. 34
  27. ^ a b Gerhard Böwering, God and his Attributes, Encyclopedia of the Qur'an, ed. by Jane Dammen McAuliffe
  28. ^ a b Jonathan Porter Berkey (2003). The Formation of Islam: Religion and Society in the Near East, 600-1800. Cambridge University Press. p. 42. ISBN 978-0-521-58813-3.
  29. ^ Daniel C. Peterson (26 February 2007). Muhammad, Prophet of God. Wm. B. Eerdmans Publishing. p. 21. ISBN 978-0-8028-0754-0.
  30. ^ a b Francis E. Peters (1994). Muhammad and the Origins of Islam. SUNY Press. p. 107. ISBN 978-0-7914-1875-8.
  31. ^ Irving M. Zeitlin (19 March 2007). The Historical Muhammad. Polity. p. 33. ISBN 978-0-7456-3999-4.
  32. ^ "Allah." In The Oxford Dictionary of Islam. Ed. John L. Esposito. Oxford Islamic Studies Online. 1 January 2019. <http://www.oxfordislamicstudies.com/article/opr/t125/e128>.
  33. ^ Andreas Görke and Johanna Pink Tafsir and Islamic Intellectual History Exploring the Boundaries of a Genre Oxford University Press in association with The Institute of Ismaili Studies London ISBN 978-0-19-870206-1 p. 478
  34. ^ a b Böwering, Gerhard, God and His Attributes, Encyclopaedia of the Qurʼān, Brill, 2007.
  35. ^ "The Quranic Arabic Corpus - Translation". corpus.quran.com. Retrieved 11 April 2021.
  36. ^ "112. Surah Al-Ikhlaas or At-Tauhid – NobleQuran.com". Retrieved 11 April 2021.
  37. ^ "The Quranic Arabic Corpus - Translation". corpus.quran.com. Retrieved 30 March 2021.
  38. ^ "The Quranic Arabic Corpus - Translation". corpus.quran.com. Retrieved 30 March 2021.
  39. ^ Arabic script in Unicode symbol for a Quran verse, U+06DD, page 3, Proposal for additional Unicode characters
  40. ^ Sale, G AlKoran
  41. ^ a b Bentley, David (September 1999). The 99 Beautiful Names for God for All the People of the Book. William Carey Library. ISBN 978-0-87808-299-5.
  42. ^ Murata, Sachiko (1992). The Tao of Islam : a sourcebook on gender relationships in Islamic thought. Albany NY USA: SUNY. ISBN 978-0-7914-0914-5.
  43. ^ Gary S. Gregg, The Middle East: A Cultural Psychology, Oxford University Press, p.30
  44. ^ Carolyn Fluehr-Lobban, Islamic Society in Practice, University Press of Florida, p. 24
  45. ^ M. Mukarram Ahmed, Muzaffar Husain Syed, Encyclopaedia of Islam, Anmol Publications PVT. LTD, p. 144
  46. ^ Carl W. Ernst, Bruce B. Lawrence, Sufi Martyrs of Love: The Chishti Order in South Asia and Beyond, Macmillan, p. 29
  47. ^ F.E. Peters, Islam, p.4, Princeton University Press, 2003
  48. ^ Lewis, Bernard; Holt, P. M.; Holt, Peter R.; Lambton, Ann Katherine Swynford (1977). The Cambridge history of Islam. Cambridge, Eng: University Press. p. 32. ISBN 978-0-521-29135-4.
  49. ^ a b Thomas E. Burman, Religious Polemic and the Intellectual History of the Mozarabs, Brill, 1994, p. 103
  50. ^ Marshall G. S. Hodgson, The Venture of Islam: Conscience and History in a World Civilization, University of Chicago Press, p. 156
  51. ^ James Bellamy, "Two Pre-Islamic Arabic Inscriptions Revised: Jabal Ramm and Umm al-Jimal", Journal of the American Oriental Society, 108/3 (1988) pp. 372–378 (translation of the inscription) "This was set up by colleagues/friends of ʿUlayh, the son of ʿUbaydah, secretary/adviser of the cohort Augusta Secunda Philadelphiana; may he go mad/crazy who effaces it."
  52. ^ Enno Littmann, Arabic Inscriptions (Leiden, 1949)
  53. ^ Daniels, Peter T. (2014). The Type and Spread of Arabic Script.
  54. ^ "The Himyarite Martyrs (text) —".
  55. ^ James of Edessa the hymns of Severus of Antioch and others." Ernest Walter Brooks (ed.), Patrologia Orientalis VII.5 (1911)., vol: 2, p. 613. pp. ܐܠܗܐ (Elaha).
  56. ^ Ignatius Ya`qub III, The Arab Himyarite Martyrs in the Syriac Documents (1966), Pages: 9-65-66-89
  57. ^ Alfred Guillaume& Muhammad Ibn Ishaq, (2002 [1955]). The Life of Muhammad: A Translation of Isḥāq's Sīrat Rasūl Allāh with Introduction and Notes. Karachi and New York: Oxford University Press, page 18.
  58. ^ a b M. A. Kugener, "Nouvelle Note Sur L'Inscription Trilingue De Zébed", Rivista Degli Studi Orientali, pp. 577-586.
  59. ^ Adolf Grohmann, Arabische Paläographie II: Das Schriftwesen und die Lapidarschrift (1971), Wien: Hermann Böhlaus Nochfolger, Page: 6-8
  60. ^ Beatrice Gruendler, The Development of the Arabic Scripts: From the Nabatean Era to the First Islamic Century according to Dated Texts (1993), Atlanta: Scholars Press, Page:
  61. ^ Frederick Winnett V, Allah before Islam-The Moslem World (1938), Pages: 239–248
  62. ^ Sidney H Griffith, "The Gospel in Arabic: An Enquiry into Its Appearance in the First Abbasid Century", Oriens Christianus, Volume 69, p. 166. "All one can say about the possibility of a pre-Islamic, Christian version of the Gospel in Arabic is that no sure sign of its actual existence has yet emerged.
  63. ^ Grafton, David D (2014). The identity and witness of Arab pre-Islamic Arab Christianity: The Arabic language and the Bible. Christianity [...] did not penetrate into the lives of the Arabs primarily because the monks did not translate the Bible into the vernacular and inculcate Arab culture with biblical values and tradition. Trimingham's argument serves as an example of the Western Protestant assumptions outlined in the introduction of this article. It is clear that the earliest Arabic biblical texts can only be dated to the 9th century at the earliest, that is after the coming of Islam.
  64. ^ Sidney H. Griffith, The Bible in Arabic: The Scriptures of the 'People of the Book' in the Language of Islam. Jews, Christians and Muslims from the Ancient to the Modern World, Princeton University Press, 2013, pp242- 247 ff.
  65. ^ The Arabic Bible before Islam – Clare Wilde on Sidney H. Griffith's The Bible in Arabic. June 2014.
  66. ^ Hjälm, ML (2017). Senses of Scripture, Treasures of Tradition: The Bible in Arabic Among Jews, Christians and Muslims. Brill. ISBN 978-90-04-34716-8.
  67. ^ Hjälm, ML (2017). Senses of Scripture, Treasures of Tradition, The Bible in Arabic among Jews, Christians and Muslims (Biblia Arabica) (English and Arabic ed.). Brill. ISBN 978-90-04-34716-8. By contrast, manuscripts containing translations of the gospels are encountered no earlier then the year 873 (Ms. Sinai. N.F. parch. 14 & 16)
  68. ^ Irfan Shahîd, Byzantium and the Arabs in the Fourth Century, Dumbarton Oaks Trustees for Harvard University-Washington DC, page 418.
  69. ^ Irfan Shahîd, Byzantium and the Arabs in the Fourth Century, Dumbarton Oaks Trustees for Harvard University-Washington DC, Page: 452
  70. ^ A. Amin and A. Harun, Sharh Diwan Al-Hamasa (Cairo, 1951), Vol. 1, Pages: 478-480
  71. ^ Al-Marzubani, Mu'jam Ash-Shu'araa, Page: 302
  72. ^ . ARABIC for NERDS. 16 June 2018. Archived from the original on 17 June 2018. Retrieved 16 June 2018.
  73. ^ William Montgomery Watt, Islam and Christianity today: A Contribution to Dialogue, Routledge, 1983, p.45
  74. ^ Islam in Luce López Baralt, Spanish Literature: From the Middle Ages to the Present, Brill, 1992, p.25
  75. ^ F. E. Peters, The Monotheists: Jews, Christians, and Muslims in Conflict and Competition, Princeton University Press, p.12
  76. ^ . www.bible.ca. Archived from the original on 13 August 2013.
  77. ^ . Finalcall.com. Archived from the original on 22 October 2013. Retrieved 14 January 2014.
  78. ^ Example: Usage of the word "Allah" from Matthew 22:32 in Indonesian bible versions (parallel view) as old as 1733 19 October 2013 at the Wayback Machine
  79. ^ The Indonesian Language: Its History and Role in Modern Society Sneddon, James M.; University of New South Wales Press; 2004
  80. ^ The History of Christianity in India from the Commencement of the Christian Era: Hough, James; Adamant Media Corporation; 2001
  81. ^ Wiltens, Caspar; Heurnius, Justus (1650). . Archived from the original on 22 October 2013. Retrieved 14 January 2014.
  82. ^ But compare: Milkias, Paulos (2011). "Ge'ez Literature (Religious)". Ethiopia. Africa in Focus. Santa Barbara, California: ABC-CLIO. p. 299. ISBN 978-1-59884-257-9. Retrieved 15 February 2018. Monasticism played a key role in the Ethiopian literary movement. The Bible was translated during the time of the Nine Saints in the early sixth century [...].
  83. ^ Barton, John (2002–12). The Biblical World, Oxford, UK: Routledge. ISBN 978-0-415-27574-3.
  84. ^ North, Eric McCoy; Eugene Albert Nida ((2nd Edition) 1972). The Book of a Thousand Tongues, London: United Bible Societies.
  85. ^ "Sejarah Alkitab Indonesia / Albert Conelisz Ruyl". sejarah.sabda.org.
  86. ^ . Britannica.com. Archived from the original on 19 October 2013. Retrieved 14 January 2014.
  87. ^ Roughneen, Simon (14 October 2013). "No more 'Allah' for Christians, Malaysian court says". The Christian Science Monitor. Retrieved 14 October 2013.
  88. ^ "BBC News - More than 300 Bibles are confiscated in Malaysia". BBC. 2 January 2014. from the original on 25 January 2014. Retrieved 14 January 2014.
  89. ^ a b "Catholic priest should respect court: Mahathir". Daily Express. 9 January 2014. from the original on 10 January 2014. Retrieved 10 January 2014.
  90. ^ Jane Moh; Peter Sibon (29 March 2014). "Worship without hindrance". The Borneo Post. from the original on 29 March 2014. Retrieved 29 March 2014.
  91. ^ "Bahasa Malaysia Bibles: The Cabinet's 10-point solution". 25 January 2014.
  92. ^ "Najib: 10-point resolution on Allah issue subject to Federal, state laws". The Star. 24 January 2014. Retrieved 25 June 2014.
  93. ^ "Flags, Symbols & Currency of Uzbekistan". WorldAtlas. 24 February 2021.
  94. ^ "Zebed Inscription: A Pre-Islamic Trilingual Inscription In Greek, Syriac & Arabic From 512 CE". Islamic Awareness. 17 March 2005.
  95. ^
  96. ^ "Scheherazade New". SIL International. Retrieved 4 February 2022.
  97. ^ The Unicode Consortium. FAQ - Middle East Scripts 1 October 2013 at the Wayback Machine
  98. ^ (PDF). Archived from the original (PDF) on 28 April 2014. Retrieved 14 January 2014.

General and cited references

Further reading

Online

  • Allah Qur'ān, in Encyclopædia Britannica Online, by Asma Afsaruddin, Brian Duignan, Thinley

External links

  • Names of Allah with Meaning on Website, Flash, and Mobile Phone Software
  • Concept of God (Allah) in Islam
  • The Concept of Allāh According to the Qur'an by Abdul Mannan Omar
  • Allah, the Unique Name of God
Typography

allah, this, article, about, arabic, word, islamic, view, islam, other, uses, disambiguation, ɑː, ɑː, arabic, ٱلل, romanized, allāh, ʔaɫ, ɫaːh, listen, common, arabic, word, english, language, word, generally, refers, islam, word, thought, derived, contraction. This article is about the Arabic word Allah For the Islamic view of God see God in Islam For other uses see Allah disambiguation Allah ˈ ae l l e ˈ ɑː l l e e ˈ l l ɑː 1 2 Arabic ٱلل ه romanized Allah IPA ʔaɫ ɫaːh listen is the common Arabic word for God In the English language the word generally refers to God in Islam 3 4 5 The word is thought to be derived by contraction from al ilah which means the god and is linguistically related to the Aramaic words Elah and Syriac ܐ ܠ ܗ ܐ ʼAlaha and the Hebrew word El Elohim for God 6 7 The word Allah in Arabic calligraphy The word Allah has been used by Arabic people of different religions since pre Islamic times 8 The pre Islamic Arabs worshipped a supreme deity whom they called Allah alongside other lesser deities 9 Muhammad used the word Allah to indicate the Islamic conception of God Allah has been used as a term for God by Muslims both Arab and non Arab and even Arab Christians 10 after the term al ilah and Allah were used interchangeably in Classical Arabic by the majority of Arabs who had become Muslims It is also often albeit not exclusively used in this way by Babists Bahaʼis Mandaeans Indonesian and Maltese Christians and Sephardi Jews 11 12 13 as well as by the Gagauz people 14 Similar usage by Christians and Sikhs in West Malaysia has recently led to political and legal controversies 15 16 17 18 Contents 1 Etymology 2 History of usage 2 1 Pre Islamic Arabians 2 2 Islam 2 3 Christianity 3 Pronunciation 4 As a loanword 4 1 English and other European languages 4 2 Malaysian and Indonesian language 5 National flags with Allah written on them 6 Typography 6 1 Unicode 7 See also 8 Citations 9 General and cited references 10 Further reading 10 1 Online 11 External linksEtymology The Arabic components that make up the word Allah alifhamzat waṣl همزة وصل lamlamshadda شدة dagger alif ألف خنجرية haʾ The etymology of the word Allah has been discussed extensively by classical Arab philologists 19 Grammarians of the Basra school regarded it as either formed spontaneously murtajal or as the definite form of lah from the verbal root lyh with the meaning of lofty or hidden 19 Others held that it was borrowed from Syriac or Hebrew but most considered it to be derived from a contraction of the Arabic definite article al the and ilah deity god to al lah meaning the deity or the God 19 The majority of modern scholars subscribe to the latter theory and view the loanword hypothesis with skepticism 20 Cognates of the name Allah exist in other Semitic languages including Hebrew and Aramaic 21 The corresponding Aramaic form is Elah אלה but its emphatic state is Elaha אלהא It is written as ܐܠܗܐ ʼĔlaha in Biblical Aramaic and ܐ ܠ ܗ ܐ ʼAlaha in Syriac as used by the Assyrian Church both meaning simply God 22 History of usagePre Islamic Arabians See also Religion in pre Islamic ArabiaRegional variants of the word Allah occur in both pagan and Christian pre Islamic inscriptions 8 23 Different theories have been proposed regarding the role of Allah in pre Islamic polytheistic cults According to the Islamic scholar Ibn Kathir Arab pagans considered Allah as an unseen God who created and controlled the Universe Pagans believed worship of humans or animals who had lucky events in their life brought them closer to God Pre Islamic Meccans worshiped Allah alongside a host of lesser gods and those whom they called the daughters of Allah 9 Islam forbade worship of anyone or thing other than God 24 Some authors have suggested that polytheistic Arabs used the name as a reference to a creator god or a supreme deity of their pantheon 25 26 The term may have been vague in the Meccan religion 25 27 According to one hypothesis which goes back to Julius Wellhausen Allah the supreme deity of the tribal federation around Quraysh was a designation that consecrated the superiority of Hubal the supreme deity of Quraysh over the other gods 8 However there is also evidence that Allah and Hubal were two distinct deities 8 According to that hypothesis the Kaaba was first consecrated to a supreme deity named Allah and then hosted the pantheon of Quraysh after their conquest of Mecca about a century before the time of Muhammad 8 Some inscriptions seem to indicate the use of Allah as a name of a polytheist deity centuries earlier but nothing precise is known about this use 8 Some scholars have suggested that Allah may have represented a remote creator god who was gradually eclipsed by more particularized local deities 28 29 There is disagreement on whether Allah played a major role in the Meccan religious cult 28 30 No iconic representation of Allah is known to have existed 30 31 Allah is the only god in Mecca that did not have an idol 32 Muhammad s father s name was ʿAbd Allah meaning the slave of Allah 27 Islam Main article God in Islam See also Names of God in Islam Medallion showing Allah Jalla Jalaluhu in the Hagia Sophia Istanbul Turkey Allah script outside the Old Mosque in Edirne Turkey In Islam Allah is the unique omnipotent and only deity and creator of the universe and is equivalent to God in other Abrahamic religions 11 12 Allah is usually seen as the personal name of God a notion which became disputed in contemporary scholarship including the question whether or not the word Allah should be translated as God 33 According to Islamic belief Allah is the most common word to represent God 34 and humble submission to his will divine ordinances and commandments is the pivot of the Muslim faith 11 He is the only God creator of the universe and the judge of humankind 11 12 He is unique waḥid and inherently one aḥad all merciful and omnipotent 11 No human eyes can see Allah till the Day Of Judgement 35 The Qur an declares the reality of Allah His inaccessible mystery His various names and His actions on behalf of His creatures 11 Allah doesn t depend on anything 36 God is not a part of the Christian Trinity 37 God has no parents and no children 38 The concept correlates to the Tawhid where chapter 112 of the Qur an Al Ikhlas The Sincerity reads 39 SAY God is one GOD the eternal GOD He begetteth not neither is He begotten and there is not any one like unto Him 40 and in the Ayat ul Kursi Verse of the Throne which is the 255th verse and the powerful verse in the longest chapter the 2nd chapter of the Qur an Al Baqarah The Cow states Allah There is no deity but Him the Alive the Eternal Neither slumber nor sleep overtaketh Him Unto Him belongeth whatsoever is in the heavens and whatsoever is in the earth Who could intercede in His presence without His permission He knoweth that which is in front of them and that which is behind them while they encompass nothing of His knowledge except what He wills His throne includeth the heavens and the earth and He is never weary of preserving them He is the Sublime the Tremendous In Islamic tradition there are 99 Names of God al asma al ḥusna lit meaning the best names or the most beautiful names each of which evoke a distinct characteristic of Allah 12 41 All these names refer to Allah the supreme and all comprehensive divine name 42 Among the 99 names of God the most famous and most frequent of these names are the Merciful ar Raḥman and the Compassionate ar Raḥim 12 41 including the forementioned above al Aḥad the One the Indivisible and al Waḥid the Unique the Single Most Muslims use the untranslated Arabic phrase in sha a llah meaning if God wills after references to future events 43 Muslim discursive piety encourages beginning things with the invocation of bi smi llah meaning In the name of God 44 There are certain phrases in praise of God that are favored by Muslims including Subḥana llah Glory be to God al ḥamdu li llah Praise be to God la ilaha illa llah There is no deity but God or sometimes la ilaha illa inta huwa There is no deity but You Him and Allahu Akbar God is the Most Great as a devotional exercise of remembering God dhikr 45 Silk textile panel repeating the name Allah North Africa 18th century In a Sufi practice known as dhikr Allah Arabic ذكر الله lit Remembrance of God the Sufi repeats and contemplates the name Allah or other associated divine names to Him while controlling his or her breath 46 For example in countless references in the context from the Qur an forementioned above Allah is referred to in the second person pronoun in Arabic as Inta Arabic إ ن ت like the English You or commonly in the third person pronoun Huwa Arabic ه و like the English He and uniquely in the case pronoun of the oblique form Hu Huw Arabic هو ه like the English Him which rhythmically resonates and is chanted as considered a sacred sound or echo referring Allah as the Absolute Breath or Soul of Life Al Nafs al Hayyah Arabic الن فس الحياة an Nafsu l Ḥayyah notably among the 99 names of God the Giver of Life al Muḥyi and the Bringer of Death al Mumiyt Allah is neither male or female who has no gender but who is the essence of the Omnipotent Selfless Absolute Soul an Nafs الن فس and Holy Spirit ar Ruḥ الر وح notably among the 99 names of God the All Holy All Pure and All Sacred al Quddus Allah is the originator of both before and beyond the cycle of creation destruction and time notably among the 99 names of God the First Beginning less al Awwal the End Beyond the Final Abode Endless al Akhir al Akhir and the Timeless aṣ Ṣabur According to Gerhard Bowering in contrast with pre Islamic Arabian polytheism God in Islam does not have associates and companions nor is there any kinship between God and jinn 34 Pre Islamic pagan Arabs believed in a blind powerful inexorable and insensible fate over which man had no control This was replaced with the Islamic notion of a powerful but provident and merciful God 11 According to Francis Edward Peters The Qur an insists Muslims believe and historians affirm that Muhammad and his followers worship the same God as the Jews 29 46 The Qur an s Allah is the same Creator God who covenanted with Abraham Peters states that the Qur an portrays Allah as both more powerful and more remote than Yahweh and as a universal deity unlike Yahweh who closely follows Israelites 47 Christianity The Christian Arabs of today have no other word for God than Allah 48 Similarly the Aramaic word for God in the language of Assyrian Christians is ʼĔlaha or Alaha Even the Arabic descended Maltese language of Malta whose population is almost entirely Catholic uses Alla for God Arab Christians for example use the terms Allah al ab الله الأب for God the Father Allah al ibn الله الابن for God the Son and Allah ar ruḥ al quds الله الروح القدس for God the Holy Spirit See God in Christianity for the Christian concept of God Arab Christians have used two forms of invocations that were affixed to the beginning of their written works They adopted the Muslim bismillah and also created their own Trinitized bismillah as early as the 8th century 49 The Muslim bismillah reads In the name of God the Compassionate the Merciful The Trinitized bismillah reads In the name of Father and the Son and the Holy Spirit One God The Syriac Latin and Greek invocations do not have the words One God at the end This addition was made to emphasize the monotheistic aspect of Trinitarian belief and also to make it more palatable to Muslims 49 According to Marshall Hodgson it seems that in the pre Islamic times some Arab Christians made pilgrimage to the Kaaba a pagan temple at that time honoring Allah there as God the Creator 50 Some archaeological excavation quests have led to the discovery of ancient pre Islamic inscriptions and tombs made by Arab Christians in the ruins of a church at Umm el Jimal in Northern Jordan which initially according to Enno Littman 1949 contained references to Allah as the proper name of God However on a second revision by Bellamy et al 1985 amp 1988 the 5 versed inscription was re translated as 1 This inscription was set up by colleagues of ʿUlayh 2 son of ʿUbaydah secretary 3 of the cohort Augusta Secunda 4 Philadelphiana may he go mad who 5 effaces it 51 52 53 The syriac word ܐܠܗܐ ʼĔlaha can be found in the reports and the lists of names of Christian martyrs in South Arabia 54 55 as reported by antique Syriac documents of the names of those martyrs from the era of the Himyarite and Aksumite kingdoms 56 In Ibn Ishaq s biography there is a Christian leader named Abd Allah ibn Abu Bakr ibn Muhammad who was martyred in Najran in 523 as he had worn a ring that said Allah is my lord 57 In an inscription of Christian martyrion dated back to 512 references to l ilah الاله 58 can be found in both Arabic and Aramaic The inscription starts with the statement By the Help of l ilah 59 60 In pre Islamic Gospels the name used for God was Allah as evidenced by some discovered Arabic versions of the New Testament written by Arab Christians during the pre Islamic era in Northern and Southern Arabia 61 However most recent research in the field of Islamic Studies by Sydney Griffith et al 2013 David D Grafton 2014 Clair Wilde 2014 amp ML Hjalm et al 2016 amp 2017 assert that all one can say about the possibility of a pre Islamic Christian version of the Gospel in Arabic is that no sure sign of its actual existence has yet emerged 62 63 64 65 66 Additionally ML Hjalm in her most recent research 2017 inserts that manuscripts containing translations of the gospels are encountered no earlier than the year 873 67 Irfan Shahid quoting the 10th century encyclopedic collection Kitab al Aghani notes that pre Islamic Arab Christians have been reported to have raised the battle cry Ya La Ibad Allah O slaves of Allah to invoke each other into battle 68 According to Shahid on the authority of 10th century Muslim scholar Al Marzubani Allah was also mentioned in pre Islamic Christian poems by some Ghassanid and Tanukhid poets in Syria and Northern Arabia 69 70 71 PronunciationThe word Allah is generally pronounced ɑɫˈɫɑː h exhibiting a heavy lam ɫ a velarized alveolar lateral approximant a marginal phoneme in Modern Standard Arabic Since the initial alef has no hamza the initial a is elided when a preceding word ends in a vowel If the preceding vowel is i the lam is light l as in for instance the Basmala 72 As a loanwordEnglish and other European languages The history of the name Allah in English was probably influenced by the study of comparative religion in the 19th century for example Thomas Carlyle 1840 sometimes used the term Allah but without any implication that Allah was anything different from God However in his biography of Muḥammad 1934 Tor Andrae always used the term Allah though he allows that this conception of God seems to imply that it is different from that of the Jewish and Christian theologies 73 Languages which may not commonly use the term Allah to denote God may still contain popular expressions which use the word For example because of the centuries long Muslim presence in the Iberian Peninsula the word ojala in the Spanish language and oxala in the Portuguese language exist today borrowed from Arabic inshalla Arabic إ ن ش اء ٱلل ه This phrase literally means if God wills in the sense of I hope so 74 The German poet Mahlmann used the form Allah as the title of a poem about the ultimate deity though it is unclear how much Islamic thought he intended to convey Some Muslims leave the name Allah untranslated in English rather than using the English translation God 75 The word has also been applied to certain living human beings as personifications of the term and concept 76 77 Malaysian and Indonesian language Main articles Titular Roman Catholic Archbishop of Kuala Lumpur v Menteri Dalam Negeri and 2010 attacks against places of worship in Malaysia The first dictionary of Dutch Malay by A C Ruyl Justus Heurnius and Caspar Wiltens in 1650 recorded Allah as the translation of the Dutch word Godt Gereja Kalam Kebangunan Allah Word of God Revival Church in Indonesia Allah is the word for God in the Indonesian language even in Alkitab Christian Bible from الكتاب al kitab the book translations while Tuhan is the word for Lord Christians in Malaysia also use the word Allah for God Christians in Malaysia and Indonesia use Allah to refer to God in the Malaysian and Indonesian languages both of them standardized forms of the Malay language Mainstream Bible translations in the language use Allah as the translation of Hebrew Elohim translated in English Bibles as God 78 This goes back to early translation work by Francis Xavier in the 16th century 79 80 The first dictionary of Dutch Malay by Albert Cornelius Ruyl Justus Heurnius and Caspar Wiltens in 1650 revised edition from 1623 edition and 1631 Latin edition recorded Allah as the translation of the Dutch word Godt 81 Ruyl also translated the Gospel of Matthew in 1612 into the Malay language an early Bible translation into a non European language 82 made a year after the publication of the King James Version 83 84 which was printed in the Netherlands in 1629 Then he translated the Gospel of Mark published in 1638 85 86 The government of Malaysia in 2007 outlawed usage of the term Allah in any other but Muslim contexts but the Malayan High Court in 2009 revoked the law ruling it unconstitutional While Allah had been used for the Christian God in Malay for more than four centuries the contemporary controversy was triggered by usage of Allah by the Roman Catholic newspaper The Herald The government appealed the court ruling and the High Court suspended implementation of its verdict until the hearing of the appeal In October 2013 the court ruled in favor of the government s ban 87 In early 2014 the Malaysian government confiscated more than 300 bibles for using the word to refer to the Christian God in Peninsular Malaysia 88 However the use of Allah is not prohibited in the two Malaysian states of Sabah and Sarawak 89 90 The main reason it is not prohibited in these two states is that usage has been long established and local Alkitab Bibles have been widely distributed freely in East Malaysia without restrictions for years 89 Both states also do not have similar Islamic state laws as those in West Malaysia 18 In reaction to some media criticism the Malaysian government has introduced a 10 point solution to avoid confusion and misleading information 91 92 The 10 point solution is in line with the spirit of the 18 and 20 point agreements of Sarawak and Sabah 18 National flags with Allah written on them Flag of Iraq with the Takbir written on it Flag of Saudi Arabia with the Islamic holy creed written on it Flag of Afghanistan with the Shahadah written on it Flag of Iran with Allah written on it The 12 stars in the Flag of Uzbekistan form the inscription Allah in Arabic script 93 Typography The word Allah written in different writing systems The word Allah is always written without an alif to spell the a vowel This is because the spelling was settled before Arabic spelling started habitually using alif to spell a However in vocalized spelling a small diacritic alif is added on top of the shaddah to indicate the pronunciation In the pre Islamic Zabad inscription 94 God is referred to by the term الاله that is alif lam alif lam ha 58 This presumably indicates Al ilah the god without alif for a Many Arabic type fonts feature special ligatures for Allah 95 Since Arabic script is used to write other texts rather than Koran only rendering lam lam ha as the previous ligature is considered faulty which is the case with most common Arabic typefaces This simplified style is often preferred for clarity especially in non Arabic languages but may not be considered appropriate in situations where a more elaborate style of calligraphy is preferred SIL International 96 Unicode Unicode has a code point reserved for Allah ﷲ U FDF2 in the Arabic Presentation Forms A block which exists solely for compatibility with some older legacy character sets that encoded presentation forms directly 97 98 this is discouraged for new text Instead the word Allah should be represented by its individual Arabic letters while modern font technologies will render the desired ligature The calligraphic variant of the word used as the emblem of Iran is encoded in Unicode in the Miscellaneous Symbols range at code point U 262B See alsoAbdullah name Allah as a lunar deity Emblem of Iran Ismul Azam Names of God Kalsang Bhutia Gloria Lotha Marco Sampaolo Matt StefonTesc Noah Tesch and Adam ZeidanCitations Allah Random House Webster s Unabridged Dictionary Allah Oxford Learner s Dictionaries God Islam Empire of Faith PBS Archived from the original on 27 March 2014 Retrieved 18 December 2010 Islam and Christianity Encyclopedia of Christianity 2001 Arabic speaking Christians and Jews also refer to God as Allah Gardet L Allah In Bearman P Bianquis Th Bosworth C E van Donzel E Heinrichs W P eds Encyclopaedia of Islam Online Brill Online Retrieved 2 May 2007 Zeki Saritoprak 2006 Allah In Oliver Leaman ed The Qur an An Encyclopedia Routledge p 34 ISBN 978 0 415 32639 1 Vincent J Cornell 2005 God God in Islam In Lindsay Jones ed Encyclopedia of Religion Vol 5 2nd ed MacMillan Reference USA p 724 a b c d e f Christian Julien Robin 2012 Arabia and Ethiopia In The Oxford Handbook of Late Antiquity OUP USA pp 304 305 ISBN 978 0 19 533693 1 a b Anthony S Mercatante amp James R Dow 2004 Allah The Facts on File Encyclopedia of World Mythology and Legend Facts on File p 53 ISBN 978 1 4381 2685 2 Merriam Webster Allah Merriam Webster Archived from the original on 20 April 2014 Retrieved 25 February 2012 a b c d e f g Allah Encyclopaedia Britannica 2007 Encyclopaedia Britannica a b c d e Encyclopedia of the Modern Middle East and North Africa Allah Willis Barnstone Marvin Meyer The Gnostic Bible Revised and Expanded Edition Shambhala Publications 2009 ISBN 978 0 8348 2414 0 page 531 Carl Skutsch 2005 Encyclopedia of the World s Minorities Routledge p 480 Sikhs target of Allah attack Julia Zappei 14 January 2010 The New Zealand Herald Accessed on line 15 January 2014 Malaysia court rules non Muslims can t use Allah 14 October 2013 The New Zealand Herald Accessed on line 15 January 2014 Malaysia s Islamic authorities seize Bibles as Allah row deepens Niluksi Koswanage 2 January 2014 Reuters Accessed on line 15 January 2014 1 a b c Idris Jala 24 February 2014 The Allah Bible issue 10 point solution is key to managing the polarity The Star Retrieved 25 June 2014 a b c D B Macdonald Encyclopedia of Islam 2nd ed Brill Ilah Vol 3 p 1093 Gerhard Bowering Encyclopedia of the Quran Brill 2002 Vol 2 p 318 Columbia Encyclopaedia says Derived from an old Semitic root referring to the Divine and used in the Canaanite El the Mesopotamian ilu and the biblical Elohim and Eloah the word Allah is used by all Arabic speaking Muslims Christians Jews and other monotheists The Comprehensive Aramaic Lexicon Entry for ʼlh Archived 18 October 2013 at the Wayback Machine Hitti Philip Khouri 1970 History of the Arabs Palgrave Macmillan pp 100 101 IslamKotob Tafsir Ibn Kathir all 10 volumes IslamKotob a b L Gardet Allah Encyclopaedia of Islam ed by Sir H A R Gibb Zeki Saritopak Allah The Qu ran An Encyclopedia ed by Oliver Leaman p 34 a b Gerhard Bowering God and his Attributes Encyclopedia of the Qur an ed by Jane Dammen McAuliffe a b Jonathan Porter Berkey 2003 The Formation of Islam Religion and Society in the Near East 600 1800 Cambridge University Press p 42 ISBN 978 0 521 58813 3 Daniel C Peterson 26 February 2007 Muhammad Prophet of God Wm B Eerdmans Publishing p 21 ISBN 978 0 8028 0754 0 a b Francis E Peters 1994 Muhammad and the Origins of Islam SUNY Press p 107 ISBN 978 0 7914 1875 8 Irving M Zeitlin 19 March 2007 The Historical Muhammad Polity p 33 ISBN 978 0 7456 3999 4 Allah In The Oxford Dictionary of Islam Ed John L Esposito Oxford Islamic Studies Online 1 January 2019 lt http www oxfordislamicstudies com article opr t125 e128 gt Andreas Gorke and Johanna Pink Tafsir and Islamic Intellectual History Exploring the Boundaries of a Genre Oxford University Press in association with The Institute of Ismaili Studies London ISBN 978 0 19 870206 1 p 478 a b Bowering Gerhard God and His Attributes Encyclopaedia of the Qurʼan Brill 2007 The Quranic Arabic Corpus Translation corpus quran com Retrieved 11 April 2021 112 Surah Al Ikhlaas or At Tauhid NobleQuran com Retrieved 11 April 2021 The Quranic Arabic Corpus Translation corpus quran com Retrieved 30 March 2021 The Quranic Arabic Corpus Translation corpus quran com Retrieved 30 March 2021 Arabic script in Unicode symbol for a Quran verse U 06DD page 3 Proposal for additional Unicode characters Sale G AlKoran a b Bentley David September 1999 The 99 Beautiful Names for God for All the People of the Book William Carey Library ISBN 978 0 87808 299 5 Murata Sachiko 1992 The Tao of Islam a sourcebook on gender relationships in Islamic thought Albany NY USA SUNY ISBN 978 0 7914 0914 5 Gary S Gregg The Middle East A Cultural Psychology Oxford University Press p 30 Carolyn Fluehr Lobban Islamic Society in Practice University Press of Florida p 24 M Mukarram Ahmed Muzaffar Husain Syed Encyclopaedia of Islam Anmol Publications PVT LTD p 144 Carl W Ernst Bruce B Lawrence Sufi Martyrs of Love The Chishti Order in South Asia and Beyond Macmillan p 29 F E Peters Islam p 4 Princeton University Press 2003 Lewis Bernard Holt P M Holt Peter R Lambton Ann Katherine Swynford 1977 The Cambridge history of Islam Cambridge Eng University Press p 32 ISBN 978 0 521 29135 4 a b Thomas E Burman Religious Polemic and the Intellectual History of the Mozarabs Brill 1994 p 103 Marshall G S Hodgson The Venture of Islam Conscience and History in a World Civilization University of Chicago Press p 156 James Bellamy Two Pre Islamic Arabic Inscriptions Revised Jabal Ramm and Umm al Jimal Journal of the American Oriental Society 108 3 1988 pp 372 378 translation of the inscription This was set up by colleagues friends of ʿUlayh the son of ʿUbaydah secretary adviser of the cohort Augusta Secunda Philadelphiana may he go mad crazy who effaces it Enno Littmann Arabic Inscriptions Leiden 1949 Daniels Peter T 2014 The Type and Spread of Arabic Script The Himyarite Martyrs text James of Edessa the hymns of Severus of Antioch and others Ernest Walter Brooks ed Patrologia Orientalis VII 5 1911 vol 2 p 613 pp ܐܠܗܐ Elaha Ignatius Ya qub III The Arab Himyarite Martyrs in the Syriac Documents 1966 Pages 9 65 66 89 Alfred Guillaume amp Muhammad Ibn Ishaq 2002 1955 The Life of Muhammad A Translation of Isḥaq s Sirat Rasul Allah with Introduction and Notes Karachi and New York Oxford University Press page 18 a b M A Kugener Nouvelle Note Sur L Inscription Trilingue De Zebed Rivista Degli Studi Orientali pp 577 586 Adolf Grohmann Arabische Palaographie II Das Schriftwesen und die Lapidarschrift 1971 Wien Hermann Bohlaus Nochfolger Page 6 8 Beatrice Gruendler The Development of the Arabic Scripts From the Nabatean Era to the First Islamic Century according to Dated Texts 1993 Atlanta Scholars Press Page Frederick Winnett V Allah before Islam The Moslem World 1938 Pages 239 248 Sidney H Griffith The Gospel in Arabic An Enquiry into Its Appearance in the First Abbasid Century Oriens Christianus Volume 69 p 166 All one can say about the possibility of a pre Islamic Christian version of the Gospel in Arabic is that no sure sign of its actual existence has yet emerged Grafton David D 2014 The identity and witness of Arab pre Islamic Arab Christianity The Arabic language and the Bible Christianity did not penetrate into the lives of the Arabs primarily because the monks did not translate the Bible into the vernacular and inculcate Arab culture with biblical values and tradition Trimingham s argument serves as an example of the Western Protestant assumptions outlined in the introduction of this article It is clear that the earliest Arabic biblical texts can only be dated to the 9th century at the earliest that is after the coming of Islam Sidney H Griffith The Bible in Arabic The Scriptures of the People of the Book in the Language of Islam Jews Christians and Muslims from the Ancient to the Modern World Princeton University Press 2013 pp242 247 ff The Arabic Bible before Islam Clare Wilde on Sidney H Griffith s The Bible in Arabic June 2014 Hjalm ML 2017 Senses of Scripture Treasures of Tradition The Bible in Arabic Among Jews Christians and Muslims Brill ISBN 978 90 04 34716 8 Hjalm ML 2017 Senses of Scripture Treasures of Tradition The Bible in Arabic among Jews Christians and Muslims Biblia Arabica English and Arabic ed Brill ISBN 978 90 04 34716 8 By contrast manuscripts containing translations of the gospels are encountered no earlier then the year 873 Ms Sinai N F parch 14 amp 16 Irfan Shahid Byzantium and the Arabs in the Fourth Century Dumbarton Oaks Trustees for Harvard University Washington DC page 418 Irfan Shahid Byzantium and the Arabs in the Fourth Century Dumbarton Oaks Trustees for Harvard University Washington DC Page 452 A Amin and A Harun Sharh Diwan Al Hamasa Cairo 1951 Vol 1 Pages 478 480 Al Marzubani Mu jam Ash Shu araa Page 302 How do you pronounce Allah الله correctly ARABIC for NERDS 16 June 2018 Archived from the original on 17 June 2018 Retrieved 16 June 2018 William Montgomery Watt Islam and Christianity today A Contribution to Dialogue Routledge 1983 p 45 Islam in Luce Lopez Baralt Spanish Literature From the Middle Ages to the Present Brill 1992 p 25 F E Peters The Monotheists Jews Christians and Muslims in Conflict and Competition Princeton University Press p 12 Nation of Islam www bible ca Archived from the original on 13 August 2013 A history of Clarence 13X and the Five Percenters referring to Clarence Smith as Allah Finalcall com Archived from the original on 22 October 2013 Retrieved 14 January 2014 Example Usage of the word Allah from Matthew 22 32 in Indonesian bible versions parallel view as old as 1733 Archived 19 October 2013 at the Wayback Machine The Indonesian Language Its History and Role in Modern Society Sneddon James M University of New South Wales Press 2004 The History of Christianity in India from the Commencement of the Christian Era Hough James Adamant Media Corporation 2001 Wiltens Caspar Heurnius Justus 1650 Justus Heurnius Albert Ruyl Caspar Wiltens Vocabularium ofte Woordenboeck nae ordre van den alphabeth in t Duytsch en Maleys 1650 65 Archived from the original on 22 October 2013 Retrieved 14 January 2014 But compare Milkias Paulos 2011 Ge ez Literature Religious Ethiopia Africa in Focus Santa Barbara California ABC CLIO p 299 ISBN 978 1 59884 257 9 Retrieved 15 February 2018 Monasticism played a key role in the Ethiopian literary movement The Bible was translated during the time of the Nine Saints in the early sixth century Barton John 2002 12 The Biblical World Oxford UK Routledge ISBN 978 0 415 27574 3 North Eric McCoy Eugene Albert Nida 2nd Edition 1972 The Book of a Thousand Tongues London United Bible Societies Sejarah Alkitab Indonesia Albert Conelisz Ruyl sejarah sabda org Encyclopaedia Britannica Albert Cornelius Ruyl Britannica com Archived from the original on 19 October 2013 Retrieved 14 January 2014 Roughneen Simon 14 October 2013 No more Allah for Christians Malaysian court says The Christian Science Monitor Retrieved 14 October 2013 BBC News More than 300 Bibles are confiscated in Malaysia BBC 2 January 2014 Archived from the original on 25 January 2014 Retrieved 14 January 2014 a b Catholic priest should respect court Mahathir Daily Express 9 January 2014 Archived from the original on 10 January 2014 Retrieved 10 January 2014 Jane Moh Peter Sibon 29 March 2014 Worship without hindrance The Borneo Post Archived from the original on 29 March 2014 Retrieved 29 March 2014 Bahasa Malaysia Bibles The Cabinet s 10 point solution 25 January 2014 Najib 10 point resolution on Allah issue subject to Federal state laws The Star 24 January 2014 Retrieved 25 June 2014 Flags Symbols amp Currency of Uzbekistan WorldAtlas 24 February 2021 Zebed Inscription A Pre Islamic Trilingual Inscription In Greek Syriac amp Arabic From 512 CE Islamic Awareness 17 March 2005 Arabic fonts and Mac OS X Archived 10 March 2008 at the Wayback Machine Programs for Arabic in Mac OS X Archived 6 October 2013 at the Wayback Machine Scheherazade New SIL International Retrieved 4 February 2022 The Unicode Consortium FAQ Middle East Scripts Archived 1 October 2013 at the Wayback Machine Unicode Standard 5 0 p 479 492 PDF Archived from the original PDF on 28 April 2014 Retrieved 14 January 2014 General and cited referencesThe Unicode Consortium Unicode Standard 5 0 Addison Wesley 2006 ISBN 978 0 321 48091 0 About the Unicode Standard Version 5 0 BookFurther readingOnline Allah Qur an in Encyclopaedia Britannica Online by Asma Afsaruddin Brian Duignan ThinleyExternal links Wikisource has original text related to this article Allah Wikiquote has quotations related to Allah Wikimedia Commons has media related to Allah in calligraphy Names of Allah with Meaning on Website Flash and Mobile Phone Software Concept of God Allah in Islam The Concept of Allah According to the Qur an by Abdul Mannan Omar Allah the Unique Name of GodTypographyArabic Fonts and Mac OS X Programs for Arabic in Mac OS X Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title Allah amp oldid 1140361975, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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