The Concise Oxford Dictionary of World Religions (2206 page)

BOOK: The Concise Oxford Dictionary of World Religions
4.39Mb size Format: txt, pdf, ePub
ta‘z
ya
(condolence, expressed through re-enactments of the life and death of al-
usain). It is moderated by
aq
ya
, the concealment of faith under persecution or pressure—perhaps even as an obligation.
The word and the concept of martyrdom were adopted by the Sikhs (though usually transliterated as ‘shaheed’).
Shahrast
n
, Abu-’l-Fath Mu
ammadibn ‘Abd al-Kar
m
(1076–1153 (AH 469–548))
. Muslim scholar, especially of the relation of religions to Islam. He was a
Sunni
and an Ash‘arite (
al-Ash‘ari
), who wrote a work on the limitations of philosophy in relation to theology (
Nih
yat al-Iqd
m fi ‘Ilm al-Kal
m
), but he is remembered particularly for
Kit
b al-Milal w‘al-Nihal
(The Book of Religions and Systems). Islam is placed at the centre, as the recipient of the uncorrupted
Qur’
n
, and other religions (including Islamic sects) are then placed in varying degrees of positive or negative relation to Islam.

Other books

Parallel Seduction by Deidre Knight
Black Dawn by Desconhecido(a)
Thrill Ride by Julie Ann Walker
Rain Reign by Ann M. Martin
Enright Family Collection by Mariah Stewart
A Man to Remember by Engels, Mary Tate