Glossary
Ādam:
name of the first Prophet of Allāh, i.e. Adam.
Asr: afternoon prayer time; midway between zuhr and maghrib.
bidah: innovation.
dhikr: literally remembrance; reminder; evocation. The Qur'ān stresses human
forgetfulness, with continual imperatives to remember Allah, ones own mortality, and the day
of judgement. The Qur'an refers to itself and earlier revelations as a dhikr (reminder).
Dhikr refers both to a divine name or Quranic phrase repeatedly chanted, and to the
practice of chanting.
duā: making supplication to Allāh.
hadīth: pl. hadīths or ahādīth. The sayings, practice and approved
traditions of the Prophet Muhammad (saw).
hajj: the yearly pilgrimage of the Muslims to Makkah.
harām: unlawful, forbidden and punishable from the viewpoint of religion; also an
inviolable place or object.
hasan: a hadīth, narrated by a reliable chain though not approaching the
grade of sahīh (sound) hadīth, but records a complete chain of narrators up to the
Prophet (saw).
imām: One who leads prayers; an eminent Islamic scholar.
īmān: literally faith or belief, īmān is technically faith in the religion of
Islam, the person with īmān being a mumin. The Arabic word connotes security: one
who believes becomes secure against untruth and misguidance in this world and against punishment
in the next. Īmān, in the sense of to become a believer, distinguishes a Muslim from a
non-Muslim. In sum, it represents beliefs in the following: the oneness of God, angels, Prophets,
revealed books, and the Hereafter. The phrase īmān bil-ghayb, usually translated belief in
the unseen, stands for belief in metaphysical realities that are inaccessible to the senses but
are presumably affirmed by reason.
Īsā: name of Allāhs penultimate Messenger, Jesus.
Ishā: evening, and in particular Ishā prayer, the obligatory night prayer.
Jibrīl: the archangel Gabriel who brought the revelations of Allāh to His Messengers (as).
madrasah: a college for higher studies where the Islamic sciences are taught. In
the past, the madrasah was devoted primarily to teaching law, and the other Islamic
sciences and literary philosophical subjects were optionally taught. Today, however, the
designation madrasah is ambiguous. Although originally the madrasah was created
as an institution of Islamic higher learning in contrast to the kuttab or maktab,
the childrens schools in the Middle East, currently the term madrasah is sometimes used
for establishments for elementary teaching of Qurānic knowledge.
Maghrib: the time of sunset, lit. the west. In particular, the obligatory
Maghrib prayer, which is just after the sunset.
muadhdhin: one who gives the adhān, the call to prayer, loudly calling
people to come and perform the salāt (prayer).
sahīh: sound. A hadīth with an unbroken chain of narrators, ranging from the
Prophet Muhammad (saw) and approaching an era through reliable reporters without being shādh
(odd) or muallal (faulty) in between the two cross relaters.
sunnah: pl. sunan. literally the path, way or a form, the customary practice
of a person or a group of people. It has come to refer almost exclusively to the legal way or
ways, orders, acts of worship and statements etc., of Prophet Muhammad (saw) which have become
models to be followed by the Muslims.
sharīah: literally road. It is a legal modality of a people based on the revelation
of their Prophet (as). The last sharīah is that of Islam that abrogates all previous
sharīahs.
zakāt: a yearly fixed percentage of wealth and property of the Muslims liable to
zakāt to be paid to the poor of the Muslim community. It is obligatory, as it is one of
the five indispensable pillars of Islam.
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Minhajians 2001. All rights reserved.