The Concise Oxford Dictionary of World Religions (82 page)

BOOK: The Concise Oxford Dictionary of World Religions
4.84Mb size Format: txt, pdf, ePub
Ahl al-Hadith
(People of the Tradition)
.
A relatively small but vigorous Islamic reform movement. It first appeared in India at the end of the 19th cent., and its characteristics are similar to the
Wahh
b
movement of Arabia. Their creed is ‘whatever the Prophet
Mu
ammad
taught in the
Qur’
n
and the authentic traditions, that alone is the basis of our religion’. On matters of Islamic law, the ahl-al-Hadith far exceed Wahh
b
puritanism. They cast aside the four orthodox schools of law, and instead contend that every believer is free to follow his own interpretation of the Qur’
n and the traditions, provided that he has sufficient learning to enable him to give a valid interpretation.
Ahl al-Kit
b
.
‘People of the Book’, i.e. possessing a
scripture
; the name given by the Qur’
n to the Jewish (Ban
Isr

l) and Christian (
Na
r
) communities, possessors respectively of the
Tawr
t
(Torah) and Zab
r (Psalms) and of the
Inj
l
(Gospel), and later extended by Muslim law to the Sabeans and the
Zoroastrians
. To these people was given the status of
dhimma
, ‘protection’. Although the Qur’
n allows them to keep their own religion, and affords them protection, they are expected to pay a special tribute, the
jizya
(9.29). Because of this special status, it is a vital issue in community relations whether the category can be extended to include others, e.g., Hindus.

Other books

The Troll Whisperer by Sera Trevor
The Spirit War by Rachel Aaron
Queen of Springtime by Robert Silverberg
Tender Fury by Connie Mason
The Night In Question by Tobias Wolff
Dead Man's Land by Robert Ryan
For The Love Of Laurel by Harreld, Patricia