Hanif

Hanif

ArabDIN|Ḥanīf (Arabic _ar. حنيف, plural "ArabDIN|ḥunafā'" حنفاء) is an Arabic term that refers to pre-Islamic non-Jewish or non-Christian Arabian monotheists.Hans, pg.29] More specifically, in Islamic thought it refers to the Arabs during the (pre-Islamic) period known as the "Jāhiliyya" or "Ignorance", who were seen to have rejected "Shirk" (polytheism) and retained some or all of the true tenets of the monotheist religion of Ibrahim (Abraham) that, according to Islamic view, has preceded Judaism and Christianity. Peters, pg 122-124]

Etymology and History of the term

The term is from the Arabic root "ArabDIN|ḥ-n-f" meaning "to incline, to decline" (Lane 1893) from the Syriac root of the same meaning. The "ArabDIN|ḥanīfiyyah" is the law of Abraham; the verb "ArabDIN|taḥannafa" means "to turn away from (idolatry)", with a secondary and subsequent meaning of "to become circumcised". In the verse 3:27 of the Quran it has also been translated as "upright person" and outside the Quran as "to incline towards a right state or tendency".It appears to have been used earlier by Jews and Christians in reference to 'pagans' and applied to followers of an old Hellenized Syro-Arabian religion and used to taunt early Muslims. Watt, pg 117-119]

In the Quran

The term "hanif" is used 12 times in the Quran; eight times in reference to Ibrahim, who is the only person to have been explicitly identified with the term. Kaltner, pg 87-91] Ibrahim is mentioned in the Qur'an as a Hanif, being a prophet predating the Judaic and Christian traditions, who turned away from polytheism and pantheism for monotheism. cquote|"Ibrahim was neither a Jew nor a Christian, but a 'Hanif', a Muslim, one who is not among the idol-worshipers." cite quran|3|67|style=ref - Shakir
* Other verses: cite quran|2|135|style=ref|expand=no, cite quran|3|95|style=ref|expand=no, cite quran|4|125|style=ref|expand=no.
* Verse cite quran|10|105|style=ref|expand=no indicates the Islamic prophet Muhammad as being one of the hanif as well.

By Muslims

The term has been used synonymously with the term Muslim in reference to a historical Islam, extending upon the belief of Islam being a restoration of the pure monotheistic religion of Abraham - this pure religion Muslims considered to have become corrupted in the Jewish and Christian traditions- by stating that they followed the "...religion of Ibrahim, the hanif, the Muslim..." It has been theorized by Watt that the verbal term Islam; arising from the participle form of Muslim (meaning: surrendered to God); may have only arisen as an identifying descriptor for the religion in the late Medinan period.

Muslim scholars took the term "hanif" and its abstract noun "haniffiya" in two senses: as a synonym for historical Islam in the sense of the revealed to Muhammad and practiced by Muslims, and the other as natural state of monotheism of which Ibrāhīm was a significant but not the sole practitioner.

Muslim views

At the time before the Prophet Muhammad received his first revelations of Islam, the city of Mecca was mainly polytheistic. Many Muslim traditions point to a small group of Meccan men and women that detested the use of the Kaˤaba by the polytheists and kept their practice of religion monotheistic as was taught by earlier prophets in the region. Muslims believe that one of these was Ibrāhīm (Abraham), who is also believed to have built the Kaˤba.

According to Islamic belief, these people regularly spent some of their time away from the polytheist environment and made many retreats to nearby hills to pray. One such hill was Ḥirā' which is believed to be the location where Muhammad received his revelations from the Archangel Gabriel (Jibreel) which were later recorded as the Qur'an.

The only ḥanīf mentioned by name in the Qur'ān is Ibrāhīm. Other Islamic sources such as the sīrat, aḥadīth, and tafsīr go into further detail on the ħunafā. They are said to be Arabs who held to the "pure" religion of Ibrāħīm and were not seduced into polytheism. This includes the followers of Ibrāhīm and of his sons Ismā'īl (Ishmael) and Isḥāq (Isaac).

Muslims are far from unanimous as to who was a ḥanīf and how many ḥunafā' there were.

List of hanifs

*Ibrahim
*Ismael
*Hashim ibn Abd al-Manaf
*Abdul Muttalib
*‘Abd Allah ibn ‘Abd al-Muttalib
*Abu Talib ibn ‘Abd al-Muttalib
*Muhammad
*Ali
*Said ibn Zayd

The four friends in Mecca from Ibn Ishaq's account:

*Zaid ibn Amr ibn Nufail: rejected both Judaism and Christianity
*Waraqah ibn Nawfal: converted to Christianity
*Uthman ibn Huwarith: travelled to the Byzantine Empire and converted to Christianity
*Ubayd-Allah ibn Jahsh:early Muslim convert who emigrated to Abyssinia and then converted to Christianity.

Hanif opponents of Islam from Ibn Ishaq's account:

*Abu Amir Abd Amr ibn Sayfi: a leader of the tribe of Aws at Medina and builder of the "Mosque of the Schism" mentioned in the Quranic verse cite quran|9|107|style=ref|expand=no and later allied with the Quraysh then moved to Taif and onto Syria after subsequent Muslim conquests.
*Abu Qays ibn al-Aslat

Non-Muslim views

The "hanafiyya" are seen as the followers of the religion of Abraham who venerated the Kaaba and differed with the Quraysh and having differed over the "association" of the Lord of the sacred precinct in Mecca with other gods. Some of the "devotional practices" of Islam attributed to them include the veneration of the Kaaba, the pilgrimages of the Hajj and umra, the standing at Arafat and Muzdalifa and the sacrificing of camels. [ Peters, pg 106]

The hanīfiyya have been the subject of academic controversy and accounts of natural "Arab" monotheist have not been universally accepted by Western scholars, with some instances being generally ascribed to special pleading, such as for Waraqa, while G.R. Hawting rejects the Muslim explanations believing that they are later distortions.Fact|date=February 2007

As a name

"ArabDIN|Ḥanīf", capitalized, can also be a common Arabic proper name used for its more literary and poetic definition, "true believer" or "righteous one". The name is used throughout the Muslim world including non-Arabic speaking cultures.

ee also

*Banu Khuza'a
*virtuous pagan
*Urmonotheismus

Notes

References

* Hawting G R 1999: "The Idea of Idolatry and the Emergence of Islam: From Polemic to History", Cambridge University Press
*Ambros Arne A & Procháczka Stephan 2004: "A Concise Dictionary of Koranic Arabic", Reichert
* Kochler, Hans (EDT), [http://books.google.com/books?vid=ISBN3700303394&id=zMuipwd5MTEC&printsec=frontcover&dq=isbn:3700303394&sig=1c9OhvIyAcsl3rd7KvxhZrpPl1I "Concept of Monotheism in Islam & Christianity"] , I.P.O., Jan 1, 1982, ISBN 3-7003-0339-4
* William Montgomery Watt, "Muhammad: prophet and statesman", Oxford University Press US, Jun 1, 1974 ,ISBN 0-19-881078-4
* F. E. (Francis E.) Peters, "Muhammad and the Origins of Islam", SUNY Press, Jul 1, 1994, ISBN 0-7914-1875-8
* John Kaltner, "Ishmael Instructs Isaac: An Introduction to the Qu'ran for Bible Readers", Liturgical Press, Oct 31, 1999, ISBN 0-8146-5882-2
* [http://encyclopedia.thefreedictionary.com/Abdullah+ibn+Jahsh"Abd-Allah ibn Jahsh"] , The Free Dictionary, fat


Wikimedia Foundation. 2010.

Игры ⚽ Нужно решить контрольную?

Look at other dictionaries:

  • *hanif — ● hanif, hunafahanifiyya nom masculin (arabe ḥanīf) Dans la littérature islamique, adepte de la religion originelle, vraie, monothéiste, celle d Abraham …   Encyclopédie Universelle

  • hanif — HANÍF s. m. nume dat în Coran celor care posedă o credinţă pură, adevărată. (< fr. hanif) Trimis de raduborza, 15.09.2007. Sursa: MDN …   Dicționar Român

  • ḤANĪF — (pl. Ḥunafā), Arabic term which occurs many times in the koran in connection with true monotheism. The primary meaning and the origin of the word is still to be determined. In pre Islamic times it seems to have been used for adherents of… …   Encyclopedia of Judaism

  • Hanif — Das arabische Wort Hanīf, Plural Hunafāʾ ‏حنيف , حنفاء ‎ / ḥanīf / ḥunafāʾ bezeichnet vorislamische Monotheisten[1], die weder Juden noch Christen waren. Diese religiöse Strömung auf der Arabischen Halbinsel nennt man im islamischen Schrifttum al …   Deutsch Wikipedia

  • Hanīf — Das arabische Wort Hanīf, Plural Hunafāʾ (arabisch ‏حنيف، حنفاء‎, DMG ḥanīf, ḥunafāʾ) bezeichnet vorislamische Monotheisten[1], die weder Juden noch Christen waren. Diese religiöse Strömung auf der Arabischen Halbinsel nennt man im… …   Deutsch Wikipedia

  • Hanif — El término Hanif describe al hombre monoteísta que vive antes de la revelación del Corán, que ni es judío ni cristiano, pero que renuncia al culto de imágenes y de los astros. Contenido 1 Etimología 2 Concepto 3 Bibliografía utilizada …   Wikipedia Español

  • Hanif — L’adjectif hanîf (arabe : حَنِيف [hanīf], vrai croyant, pl. حُنَفاء [hunafā ]) désigne selon le Coran celui qui suit le monothéisme pur d Abraham. Le sens littéral du mot Hanîf est celui qui s écarte vers quelque chose. Le Hanifisme a été… …   Wikipédia en Français

  • hanif — ▪ Islām       in the Qurʾān, the sacred scripture of Islām, an Arabic designation for true monotheists (especially Abraham) who were not Jews, Christians, or worshipers of idols. The word appears to have been borrowed from a Syriac word meaning… …   Universalium

  • Hanif Kureishi — (Londres, 5 de diciembre de 1954) es un novelista, autor teatral, guionista y director de cine británico, hijo de inglesa y pakistaní. Se crio en Bromley. Comenzó a escribir a los 12 años, aunque lo que deseaba era convertirse en jugador… …   Wikipedia Español

  • Hanif Kureishi — (* 5. Dezember 1954 in Bromley, Grafschaft Kent) ist ein britischer Schriftsteller. Er ist Autor von Romanen, Kurzgeschichten, Theaterstücken, Drehbüchern und Essays. Er arbeitete auch als Regisseur. Inhaltsverzeichnis …   Deutsch Wikipedia

Share the article and excerpts

Direct link
Do a right-click on the link above
and select “Copy Link”