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This article contains Arabic text, written from right to left in a cursive style with some letters joined. Without proper rendering support, you may see unjoined Arabic letters written left-to-right, instead of right-to-left or other symbols instead of Arabic script.

The Shahada, also spelled shahadah, (Arabic: - a„--ah“da ar_shahada.ogg audio from the verb -ahida "to testify") is the Islamic creed. The Shahada is the Muslim declaration of belief in the oneness of God and acceptance of Muhammad as his prophet. The declaration reads: L- ilaha illa al-L-h, Muhammadun ras-lu l-L-h -There is no god but God, Muhammad is the Messenger of God" in English. This declaration is called the Kalima, which literally means "words." Recitation of the Shahadah is the most important of the Five Pillars of Islam for Muslims and is performed daily. Non-Muslims wishing to convert to Islam do so by a public recitation of the creed.[1] Technically the Shi'a do not consider the Shahadah to be a separate pillar, but connect it to the beliefs.[2]

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Contents

Recitation

ar_shahada.ogg audio

Arabic text: - -- -- -- - - - -- - - - Romanization: „a“hadu -an l- il-ha ill- l-L-h wa „a“hadu -an mu-ammadan ras-lu l-L-h

A single honest recitation of the Shahadah in Arabic is all that is required for a person to become a Muslim according to most traditional schools.

In usage the two occurrences of 'a-hadu 'an (or similar) = "I testify that" are very often omitted.

History

An Islamic Flag, known as the 'Flag of Islam' ('Alam al-Islam) or 'Flag of Shahada' ('Alam al-Shahada) featuring the first Kalimah, the Shahada, widely used by Muslims. White flags with black lettering symbolically represent 'Dar al-Salam/Islam' and Black flags with white lettering symbolically represent 'Dar al-Harb/Kufr

One of the earliest surviving translations of the Shahadah into a foreign language is in Greek, from the reign of al-Walid I (86-96 AH, 705-715 CE): -[- - -- -- - - --·] -„[“ -] (Ouk esti[n theos ei m- ho theos monos;] Maame[t apostolos theou]).[1] "There is no god except for God alone; Muhammad is God's apostle", i.e. "Allah" is translated as - - and Muhammad is transliterated as .

The Shahada is the Second of the Six Kalimas. The Six Kalimas are recorded in various books of knowledge, and are recited and remembered by Muslims across the globe. The Kalimas were compiled for people to memorise and learn the basic fundamentals of Islam.[citation needed]

Conditions of the Shahadah

The flag of Saudi Arabia, displaying the Shahadah.
The flag of Afghanistan between 1997-2001, displaying the Shahadah.

There are seven critical conditions of the Shahadah, without which it is considered to be meaningless:[citation needed]

  • Al-`Ilm: Knowledge of the meaning of the Shahadah, its negation and affirmation.
  • Al-Yaqeen: Certainty - perfect knowledge of it that counteracts suspicion and doubt.
  • Al-Ikhlaas: Sincerity which negates shirk.
  • Al-Sidq: Truthfulness that permits neither falsehood nor hypocrisy.
  • Al-Mahabbah: Love of the Shahadah and its meaning, and being happy with it.
  • Al-Inqiad: Submission to its rightful requirements, which are the duties that must be performed with sincerity to God (alone) seeking His pleasure.
  • Al-Qubool: Acceptance that contradicts rejection.

Flags

The flag of Somaliland, featuring the Shahadah

Several national flags display the Shahadah:

Several other flags display the shahadah, such as the flag of Hamas.

Differences

Minaret in Granada displaying the Shahadah in Kufic script

Muslims believe reference to previous prophets as Messengers (rasul), and a few groups (notably certain Sufi mystics) amend the declaration to mention prior prophets whose names are found in the Qur'an.[citation needed]

Sometimes - -- 'ashhadu -an = "I witness that" is prefixed to each half of the Shahadah.

Sometimes - wa = "and" is prefixed to the first word of the second half of the Shahada.

Some Indonesian Muslims pray "Allah il Allah" when appealing for God's help. This is an altered form of the first part of the Shahadah.[citation needed]

Some Sh Muslims add "and Ali is the wali of God" (wa--Aliyun waliyu l-L-h), but this is not obligatory.

See also

References

  1. ^ Farah (1994), p.135
  2. ^ "If You Decide to Convert". Retrieved on 2007-07-09.

External links



 

 

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