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Divisions of the world in Islam

In classical Islamic law, the major divisions are dar al-Islam (lit. territory of Islam/voluntary submission to God), denoting regions where Islamic law prevails,[1] dar al-sulh (lit. territory of treaty) denoting non-Islamic lands which have concluded an armistice with a Muslim government,[2] and dar al-harb (lit. territory of war), denoting adjoining non-Islamic lands whose rulers are "called upon" to accept Islam.[3]

The Arabic singular form dar (دار), translated literally, may mean "house", "abode", "structure", "place", "land", or "country". In Islamic jurisprudence it often refers to a part of the world.

The notions of "houses" or "divisions" of the world in Islam such as dar al-Islam and dar al-harb does not appear in the Quran or the hadith.[4] According to Abou El Fadl, the only dars the Qur'an speaks of are "the abode of the Hereafter and the abode of the earthly life, with the former described as clearly superior to the latter".[5]

Early Islamic jurists devised these terms to denote legal rulings for ongoing Muslim conquests almost a century after Muhammad. The first use of the terms was in Iraq by Abu Hanifa and his disciples Abu Yusuf and Al-Shaybani. Among those in the Levant, Al-Awza'i was leading in this discipline and later Al-Shafi'i.

The concept of dar al-harb has been affected by historical changes such as the political fragmentation of the Muslim world, and has little significance today.[3] The theoretical distinction between dar al-Islam and dar al-harb is widely considered inapplicable, and many contemporary Islamic jurists regard the Western world as part of the former, since Muslims can freely practise and proselytize their faith in Western countries.[6]

Major religious divisions edit

 
The lands and cities of the Dar al-Islam in the 10th century, according to the geographer al-Muqaddasi

Early Islamic legal theory divided the world into two divisions: "abode of Islam" and "abode of war". The first, called dar al-Islam, sometimes Pax Islamica, consisted of Muslims and non-Muslims living under Islamic sovereignty.[7] The second was dar al-harb.

Dar al-Islam edit

Dar al-Islam (Arabic: دار الإسلام literally house/abode of Islam or dar al-Tawhid, house/abode of monotheism) was a term used by Muslim scholars to refer to those countries under Muslim sovereignty, sometimes considered "the home of Islam"[8] or Pax Islamica.[7] Dar al-Islam meaning "house/abode of Islam" is also referred to as dar al-salam or "house/abode of peace". In the Qur'an (10.25 and 6.127) this term refers to Paradise in Heaven.[9]

Dar al-Islam consisted of Muslims and non-Muslims, with the latter living as dhimmis (protected persons). The non-Muslims had the right to their own law and religion in exchange for paying the jizya.[7] While Muslims enjoyed full civil rights, non-Muslims were given partial civil rights. However, both Muslims and non-Muslims were equal in their claim to security and being protected from attack.[7] For example, if an enemy seized dar al-Islam's citizens, the state was obliged to free them, whether they were Muslim or non-Muslim.[10]

Likewise, in foreign affairs, the Muslim government represented both its Muslim and non-Muslim citizens.[7] Relations between Muslims and non-Muslims were regulated by "constitutional charters" (special agreements issued by the authorities), and these agreements recognized the personal law of each non-Muslim community (the Jewish community, Christian community etc).[11] Non-Muslims could access Islamic courts if they wished.[12]

According to Abu Hanifa, considered to be the originator of the concept, the requirements for a country to be part of dar al-Islam are:[13][14]

  1. Muslims must be able to enjoy peace and security with and within this country.
  2. The country should be ruled by a Muslim government.[15]
  3. It has common frontiers with some Muslim countries.

Dar al-'Ahd edit

Dar al-'Ahd (Arabic: دار العهد "house of truce") or dar al-Sulh (Arabic: دار الصلح "house of conciliation/treaty") were terms used for territories that have a treaty of non-aggression or peace with Muslims.[16] Such a division was recognized by Shafi'i jurists.[17] But Hanafi jurists argued that if a territory concluded a peace treaty with dar al-Islam, dar al-Islam was obligated to protect this territory and its people, hence the territory effectively became dar al-Islam.[17] Thus, Hanafis did not recognize this division.[17]

This designation can be found in the Quran, where Muslims are directed on how they should act in war:

Excepting those who join a people between whom and you there is a treaty, or such as come to you with hearts reluctant to fight you, or to fight their own people. Had Allah wished, He would have imposed them upon you, and then they would have surely fought you. So if they keep out of your way and do not fight you, and offer you peace, then Allah does not allow you any course [of action] against them.

— Quran 4:90

Dar al-harb edit

Dar al-harb (Arabic: دار الحرب "house of war") was a term classically referring to those countries which do not have a treaty of non-aggression or peace with Muslims (those that do are called dar al-'Ahd or dar al-Sulh).[16] The notions of divisions of the world, or dar al-harb, does not appear in the Quran or the Hadith.[4] According to some scholars, the term "abode of war" was simply a description of the harsh reality of the premodern world.[18][19]

According to Majid Khadduri, the fundamental distinction between dar al-Islam and dar al-harb was introduced after the defeat of the Umayyad Caliphate at the Battle of Tours in 732 which prevented the expansion of Islam to the north, while at the same time the expansion of the caliphate to the east had been halted.[20] Wahbah al-Zuhayli argues that the concept of dar al-harb is mostly historical: "The existence of Dār al-Islām and Dār al-Ḥarb in contemporary times is rare or extremely limited. This is because Islamic countries have joined the United Nations covenant that stipulates that the relationship between nations is peace and not war. Therefore non-Muslim countries are Dār al-‘Ahd ..."[21]

According to Abu Hanifa there are three conditions that need to be fulfilled for a land to be classified as dar al-harb:

  1. Implementation of the laws of the non-Muslims openly and that no rule of Islam is implemented any longer
  2. Bordering another dar al-harb
  3. No Muslim remains safe as he was before the non-Muslims took power.

The purpose behind differentiating between dar al-Islam and dar al-harb was to identify the land as either one of safety for the Muslims or of fear. So, if Muslims are generally safe in a land and not in fear, then it cannot be classified as dar al-harb.[22]

Under the classical doctrine, it was the duty of Muslim rulers to bring dar al-harb under Islamic sovereignty.[12] A state of war was presumed between dar al-harb and dar al-Islam, but this did not necessarily imply that hostilities must occur.[23] It was up to the ruler to decide when, where and against whom wage war.[24] So in practice there was often peace between dar al-Islam and dar al-harb; formal armistices could last up to 10 years, while informal peace could last much longer than 10 years.[24]

During periods of a formal peace treaty with a territory in dar al-harb, it was immune from attack by Muslims, and its inhabitants (called harbi) could enter Muslim lands unmolested.[25] In the absence of a peace treaty, a harbi could also enter Muslim lands safely if that 'harbi first obtained an aman (assurance of protection). It was through such aman that trade and cultural exchange was conducted between dar al-harb and dar al-Islam.[25] Any adult Muslim resident of dar al-Islam (male or female, free or slave) could grant such aman to a harbi.[10] Al-Shaybani ruled that even non-Muslim residents (dhimmis) could grant aman,[26] while others sources say non-Muslim residents could not grant aman.[10]

See also edit

References edit

  1. ^ Dar al-Islam The Oxford Dictionary of Islam
  2. ^ Dar al-Sulh The Oxford Dictionary of Islam
  3. ^ a b "Dar al-Harb", The Oxford Dictionary of Islam
  4. ^ a b Abdel-Haleem, Muhammad (8 Sep 2010). Understanding the Qur'ān: Themes and Style. I. B. Tauris & Co Ltd. p. 68. ISBN 978-1845117894.
  5. ^ Abou El Fadl, Khaled (January 23, 2007). The Great Theft: Wrestling Islam from the Extremists. HarperOne. p. 227. ISBN 978-0061189036.
  6. ^ Hendrickson, Jocelyn (2009). "Law. Minority Jurisprudence". In John L. Esposito (ed.). The Oxford Encyclopedia of the Islamic World. Oxford: Oxford University Press.
  7. ^ a b c d e Khadduri 1966, p. 11.
  8. ^ "Dar al Islam". Encyclopedia of the Middle East. Retrieved 2 August 2019.
  9. ^ Arnold, T. W. (1927). "Gagauzes – Gakhar". The Encyclopaedia of Islam. Vol. 2. Leiden: Brill. p. 128.
  10. ^ a b c Fadel 2009, p. 534.
  11. ^ Khadduri 1966, p. 11–12.
  12. ^ a b Khadduri 1966, p. 12.
  13. ^ Saqr, Atiya (11 October 2012). . Islam Online. Archived from the original on 21 October 2006. Retrieved 2 August 2019.
  14. ^ Khalil, Ahmed (27 May 2002). "Dar Al-Islam And Dar Al-Harb: Its Definition and Significance". English.islamway.com. Retrieved 13 March 2011.
  15. ^ Black, E. Ann; Esmaeili, Hossein; Hosen, Nadirsyah (1 January 2013). Modern Perspectives on Islamic Law. Edward Elgar Publishing. p. 42. ISBN 9780857934475.
  16. ^ a b "Dar al-Harb". oxfordislamicstudies.com.
  17. ^ a b c Khadduri 1966, p. 12–13.
  18. ^ Mohammad Hassan Khalil. Jihad, Radicalism, and the New Atheism. Cambridge University Press. p. 19.
  19. ^ Sherman Jackson. "Jihad and the Modern World". Oxford Islamic Studies Online. Indeed, the 'Abode of Islam/Abode of War' dichotomy, cited ad nauseam by certain Western scholars as proof of Islam's inherent hostility towards the West, was far more a description of the Muslim peoples of the world in which they lived than it was a prescription of the Islamic religion per se. {{cite web}}: External link in |publisher= (help)
  20. ^ Clinton Bennet (2005). Muslims and Modernity: Current Debates. Bloomsbury Publishing. p. 158. ISBN 9781441100504.
  21. ^ Al-Zuhaylī, Al-Mu‘āmalāt al-Māliyyah, p. 255.
  22. ^ "Fatwas by Mufti Ebrahim Desai » Askimam". askimam.org. Retrieved 2021-09-09.
  23. ^ Khadduri 1966, p. 14.
  24. ^ a b James Turner Johnson. Holy War Idea in Western and Islamic Traditions. Pennsylvania State University Press. p. 63.
  25. ^ a b Khadduri 1966, p. 17-18.
  26. ^ Viorel Panaite (2019). Ottoman Law of War and Peace. Brill publishers. p. 166.

Further reading edit

  • Albrecht, Sarah (2016). "Dār al-Islām and dār al-ḥarb". In Fleet, Kate; Krämer, Gudrun; Matringe, Denis; Nawas, John; Rowson, Everett (eds.). Encyclopaedia of Islam (3rd ed.). Brill Online. doi:10.1163/1573-3912_ei3_COM_25867. ISSN 1873-9830.
  • Western Muslims and the Future of Islam, by Tariq Ramadan
  • Fatwa on Terrorism and Suicide Bombings, by Muhammad Tahir-ul-Qadri
  • Nicola Melis, Trattato sulla guerra. Il Kitab al-gihad di Molla Husrev. Cagliari: Aipsa, 2002.
  • König, Daniel G., Arabic-Islamic Views of the Latin West. Tracing the Emergence of Medieval Europe, Oxford, OUP, 2015.

External links edit

divisions, world, islam, classical, islamic, major, divisions, islam, territory, islam, voluntary, submission, denoting, regions, where, islamic, prevails, sulh, territory, treaty, denoting, islamic, lands, which, have, concluded, armistice, with, muslim, gove. In classical Islamic law the major divisions are dar al Islam lit territory of Islam voluntary submission to God denoting regions where Islamic law prevails 1 dar al sulh lit territory of treaty denoting non Islamic lands which have concluded an armistice with a Muslim government 2 and dar al harb lit territory of war denoting adjoining non Islamic lands whose rulers are called upon to accept Islam 3 The Arabic singular form dar دار translated literally may mean house abode structure place land or country In Islamic jurisprudence it often refers to a part of the world The notions of houses or divisions of the world in Islam such as dar al Islam and dar al harb does not appear in the Quran or the hadith 4 According to Abou El Fadl the only dars the Qur an speaks of are the abode of the Hereafter and the abode of the earthly life with the former described as clearly superior to the latter 5 Early Islamic jurists devised these terms to denote legal rulings for ongoing Muslim conquests almost a century after Muhammad The first use of the terms was in Iraq by Abu Hanifa and his disciples Abu Yusuf and Al Shaybani Among those in the Levant Al Awza i was leading in this discipline and later Al Shafi i The concept of dar al harb has been affected by historical changes such as the political fragmentation of the Muslim world and has little significance today 3 The theoretical distinction between dar al Islam and dar al harb is widely considered inapplicable and many contemporary Islamic jurists regard the Western world as part of the former since Muslims can freely practise and proselytize their faith in Western countries 6 Contents 1 Major religious divisions 1 1 Dar al Islam 1 2 Dar al Ahd 1 3 Dar al harb 2 See also 3 References 4 Further reading 5 External linksMajor religious divisions edit nbsp The lands and cities of the Dar al Islam in the 10th century according to the geographer al MuqaddasiEarly Islamic legal theory divided the world into two divisions abode of Islam and abode of war The first called dar al Islam sometimes Pax Islamica consisted of Muslims and non Muslims living under Islamic sovereignty 7 The second was dar al harb Dar al Islam edit Main article Muslim worldDar al Islam Arabic دار الإسلام literally house abode of Islam or dar al Tawhid house abode of monotheism was a term used by Muslim scholars to refer to those countries under Muslim sovereignty sometimes considered the home of Islam 8 or Pax Islamica 7 Dar al Islam meaning house abode of Islam is also referred to as dar al salam or house abode of peace In the Qur an 10 25 and 6 127 this term refers to Paradise in Heaven 9 Dar al Islam consisted of Muslims and non Muslims with the latter living as dhimmis protected persons The non Muslims had the right to their own law and religion in exchange for paying the jizya 7 While Muslims enjoyed full civil rights non Muslims were given partial civil rights However both Muslims and non Muslims were equal in their claim to security and being protected from attack 7 For example if an enemy seized dar al Islam s citizens the state was obliged to free them whether they were Muslim or non Muslim 10 Likewise in foreign affairs the Muslim government represented both its Muslim and non Muslim citizens 7 Relations between Muslims and non Muslims were regulated by constitutional charters special agreements issued by the authorities and these agreements recognized the personal law of each non Muslim community the Jewish community Christian community etc 11 Non Muslims could access Islamic courts if they wished 12 According to Abu Hanifa considered to be the originator of the concept the requirements for a country to be part of dar al Islam are 13 14 Muslims must be able to enjoy peace and security with and within this country The country should be ruled by a Muslim government 15 It has common frontiers with some Muslim countries Dar al Ahd edit Dar al Ahd Arabic دار العهد house of truce or dar al Sulh Arabic دار الصلح house of conciliation treaty were terms used for territories that have a treaty of non aggression or peace with Muslims 16 Such a division was recognized by Shafi i jurists 17 But Hanafi jurists argued that if a territory concluded a peace treaty with dar al Islam dar al Islam was obligated to protect this territory and its people hence the territory effectively became dar al Islam 17 Thus Hanafis did not recognize this division 17 This designation can be found in the Quran where Muslims are directed on how they should act in war Excepting those who join a people between whom and you there is a treaty or such as come to you with hearts reluctant to fight you or to fight their own people Had Allah wished He would have imposed them upon you and then they would have surely fought you So if they keep out of your way and do not fight you and offer you peace then Allah does not allow you any course of action against them Quran 4 90 Dar al harb edit Dar al harb Arabic دار الحرب house of war was a term classically referring to those countries which do not have a treaty of non aggression or peace with Muslims those that do are called dar al Ahd or dar al Sulh 16 The notions of divisions of the world or dar al harb does not appear in the Quran or the Hadith 4 According to some scholars the term abode of war was simply a description of the harsh reality of the premodern world 18 19 According to Majid Khadduri the fundamental distinction between dar al Islam and dar al harb was introduced after the defeat of the Umayyad Caliphate at the Battle of Tours in 732 which prevented the expansion of Islam to the north while at the same time the expansion of the caliphate to the east had been halted 20 Wahbah al Zuhayli argues that the concept of dar al harb is mostly historical The existence of Dar al Islam and Dar al Ḥarb in contemporary times is rare or extremely limited This is because Islamic countries have joined the United Nations covenant that stipulates that the relationship between nations is peace and not war Therefore non Muslim countries are Dar al Ahd 21 According to Abu Hanifa there are three conditions that need to be fulfilled for a land to be classified as dar al harb Implementation of the laws of the non Muslims openly and that no rule of Islam is implemented any longer Bordering another dar al harb No Muslim remains safe as he was before the non Muslims took power The purpose behind differentiating between dar al Islam and dar al harb was to identify the land as either one of safety for the Muslims or of fear So if Muslims are generally safe in a land and not in fear then it cannot be classified as dar al harb 22 Under the classical doctrine it was the duty of Muslim rulers to bring dar al harb under Islamic sovereignty 12 A state of war was presumed between dar al harb and dar al Islam but this did not necessarily imply that hostilities must occur 23 It was up to the ruler to decide when where and against whom wage war 24 So in practice there was often peace between dar al Islam and dar al harb formal armistices could last up to 10 years while informal peace could last much longer than 10 years 24 During periods of a formal peace treaty with a territory in dar al harb it was immune from attack by Muslims and its inhabitants called harbi could enter Muslim lands unmolested 25 In the absence of a peace treaty a harbi could also enter Muslim lands safely if that harbi first obtained an aman assurance of protection It was through such aman that trade and cultural exchange was conducted between dar al harb and dar al Islam 25 Any adult Muslim resident of dar al Islam male or female free or slave could grant such aman to a harbi 10 Al Shaybani ruled that even non Muslim residents dhimmis could grant aman 26 while others sources say non Muslim residents could not grant aman 10 See also edit nbsp Islam portalCaliphate Dhimmi Glossary of Islam Index of Islam related articles Islamic studies Outline of Islam Pan Islamism Sulh Theology of religions UmmahReferences edit Dar al Islam The Oxford Dictionary of Islam Dar al Sulh The Oxford Dictionary of Islam a b Dar al Harb The Oxford Dictionary of Islam a b Abdel Haleem Muhammad 8 Sep 2010 Understanding the Qur an Themes and Style I B Tauris amp Co Ltd p 68 ISBN 978 1845117894 Abou El Fadl Khaled January 23 2007 The Great Theft Wrestling Islam from the Extremists HarperOne p 227 ISBN 978 0061189036 Hendrickson Jocelyn 2009 Law Minority Jurisprudence In John L Esposito ed The Oxford Encyclopedia of the Islamic World Oxford Oxford University Press a b c d e Khadduri 1966 p 11 Dar al Islam Encyclopedia of the Middle East Retrieved 2 August 2019 Arnold T W 1927 Gagauzes Gakhar The Encyclopaedia of Islam Vol 2 Leiden Brill p 128 a b c Fadel 2009 p 534 Khadduri 1966 p 11 12 a b Khadduri 1966 p 12 Saqr Atiya 11 October 2012 Concept of Dar al Harb and Dar al Islam Islam Online Archived from the original on 21 October 2006 Retrieved 2 August 2019 Khalil Ahmed 27 May 2002 Dar Al Islam And Dar Al Harb Its Definition and Significance English islamway com Retrieved 13 March 2011 Black E Ann Esmaeili Hossein Hosen Nadirsyah 1 January 2013 Modern Perspectives on Islamic Law Edward Elgar Publishing p 42 ISBN 9780857934475 a b Dar al Harb oxfordislamicstudies com a b c Khadduri 1966 p 12 13 Mohammad Hassan Khalil Jihad Radicalism and the New Atheism Cambridge University Press p 19 Sherman Jackson Jihad and the Modern World Oxford Islamic Studies Online Indeed the Abode of Islam Abode of War dichotomy cited ad nauseam by certain Western scholars as proof of Islam s inherent hostility towards the West was far more a description of the Muslim peoples of the world in which they lived than it was a prescription of the Islamic religion per se a href Template Cite web html title Template Cite web cite web a External link in code class cs1 code publisher code help Clinton Bennet 2005 Muslims and Modernity Current Debates Bloomsbury Publishing p 158 ISBN 9781441100504 Al Zuhayli Al Mu amalat al Maliyyah p 255 Fatwas by Mufti Ebrahim Desai Askimam askimam org Retrieved 2021 09 09 Khadduri 1966 p 14 a b James Turner Johnson Holy War Idea in Western and Islamic Traditions Pennsylvania State University Press p 63 a b Khadduri 1966 p 17 18 Viorel Panaite 2019 Ottoman Law of War and Peace Brill publishers p 166 Khadduri Majid 1966 Translator s Introduction The Islamic Law of Nations Shaybani s Siyar Johns Hopkins University Press Fadel Mohammad 2009 International Law Regional Developments Islam International Development Law The Max Planck Encyclopedia of Public International Law Oxford University Press p 532 544 Further reading editAlbrecht Sarah 2016 Dar al Islam and dar al ḥarb In Fleet Kate Kramer Gudrun Matringe Denis Nawas John Rowson Everett eds Encyclopaedia of Islam 3rd ed Brill Online doi 10 1163 1573 3912 ei3 COM 25867 ISSN 1873 9830 Western Muslims and the Future of Islam by Tariq Ramadan Fatwa on Terrorism and Suicide Bombings by Muhammad Tahir ul Qadri Nicola Melis Trattato sulla guerra Il Kitab al gihad di Molla Husrev Cagliari Aipsa 2002 Konig Daniel G Arabic Islamic Views of the Latin West Tracing the Emergence of Medieval Europe Oxford OUP 2015 External links edit nbsp Wikiquote has quotations related to Divisions of the world in Islam Sects in Islam Archived 2010 07 01 at the Wayback Machine Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title Divisions of the world in Islam amp oldid 1180275012, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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