Our common Abrahamic heritage

Javeed Akhter

Posted Dec 27, 2006      •Permalink      • Printer-Friendly Version
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Our common Abrahamic heritage

By Javeed Akhter


WHY YOU SHOULD CARE ABOUT THE HAJJ
We have a common heritage

I have been to Hajj once and Umra twice. This has left me savvy as I try to negotiate the physical hurdles, including massive crowds and the heat, while performing the pilgrimage rituals.

With the pilgrimage I hope to refill my always empty spiritual cup by praying and reflecting in peace. The best time to visit the Kaaba and do this, I have come to realize, is after midnight.  After midnight, the crowds thin out, the heat is less oppressive and I can have a little space to sit quietly on the steps of the courtyard surrounding the Kaaba and reflect.

The Kaaba, draped in black silk cloth embroidered with Koranic calligraphy, is brilliantly lit at night. Even late, scores of pilgrims are circling the structure. The sounds of the Koranic verses they are reciting wash over me like ocean waves. The marble floor of the courtyard has just been washed down. The place is clean indeed.

I focus on the Kaaba, imagining the scene when it was being built. I try to see Prophet Abraham, by then an old man, and his son Prophet Ismail, as they stood side by side building the structure, which the Qur’an describes as “The First House (of worship) appointed for mankind.”

Hajj, an annual pilgrimage Muslims must perform once in their lifetime if they can afford it, is a journey to what Muslims believe is this first house of worship. The spot where Prophet Abraham stood to build the Kaaba is marked by a small structure called the “Station of Abraham.” As they built the walls of the Kaaba, the Qur’an states, the prophet and his son prayed: “My Lord, make this a City of Peace.”

Most people familiar with Islam may recognize Hajj as one of its five pillars, but they may not know its primary association with Prophet Abraham. Several of the Hajj rituals—such as running between the hills of Safa and Marwa, which are a few hundred yards from the Kaaba, and the stoning of the three pillars that represent the devil—are also linked to Prophet Abraham.

I thought about my fellow pilgrims running between the two hills in what was once a desert, re-enacting the desperate search for water by Prophet Ismail’s mother, Hagar. 

I thought about us stoning the pillars, symbolically warding off evil, and emulating Prophet Abraham’s stoning of the devil each of the three times the devil tried to stop him from fulfilling his duty to God.

And I thought about the celebration of Eid al-Adha, “the festival of the sacrifice,” on the last day of Hajj. The holiday commemorates Prophet Abraham’s willingness to sacrifice his dearest possession, his son, at Allah’s command.

Prophet Abraham’s willingness to sacrifice all for God is admired by all three Abrahamic faiths, Judaism, Christianity and Islam. And the theme of connecting the three religions as part of the Abrahamic tradition runs all through the Qur’an.

Jews and Christians are referred to as “People of the book.” On more than one occasion the following verse appears in the Qur’an: “Verily they who believe and they who are Jews, Christians and Sabeans, whoever believes in God and the Last Day, and do that, which is right, shall have their reward with their Lord. Fear shall not come upon them and neither shall they grieve.”

Prophet Muhammad wanted Muslims to remind themselves constantly of this link to Abraham. His companions asked him how they should invoke the blessings of God upon him. He replied, “(First) Say; May the blessings of God be upon Muhammad and his progeny” and then say “May the blessings of God be upon Abraham and his progeny.” This invocation is part of Muslims’ daily prayers.

The time I spent reflecting at the footsteps of Kaaba has reinforced my belief that it is essential for the “progeny of Abraham” to be conscious of their common heritage. The close proximity of the three major holidays this year—Hanukkah, Christmas and Eid al-Adha are within two weeks of each other—provides additional symbolism for shared belief.

Appreciation of this Abrahamic tradition may unite Jews, Christians and Muslims in attaining a dream of peaceful coexistence. Muslims are reminded of it during Hajj and in their daily prayers. Sitting on the steps of the Kaaba, I found myself echoing Prophet Abraham with my prayer: Lord, bring peace to this world.


Javeed Akhter, a physician, is a founding member of a Chicago based Muslim American think tank “The International Strategy and Policy Institute.” ( http://www.ispi-usa.org )

 

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