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{{Short description|Disbeliever in Islam}} | |||
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'''''Kafir''''' ({{langx|ar|كَافِر|kāfir}}; {{small|plural:}} {{lang|ar|كَافِرُون}} {{transliteration|ar|kāfirūn}}, {{lang|ar|كُفَّار}} {{transliteration|ar|kuffār}}, or {{lang|ar|كَفَرَة}} {{transliteration|ar|kafara}}; {{small|feminine:}} {{lang|ar|كَافِرَة}} {{transliteration|ar|kāfira}}; {{small|feminine plural:}} {{lang|ar|كَافِرَات}} {{transliteration|ar|kāfirāt}} or {{lang|ar|كَوَافِر}} {{transliteration|ar|kawāfir}}) is an ] term in ] which refers to a person who disbelieves the ], denies his authority, rejects the tenets of Islam, or simply is not a ]—one who does not believe in the guidance of ], the ].<ref name="auto1">{{Cite web |last=Rabbani |first=Faraz |date=2016-06-06 |title=Are All Non-Muslims Deemed "Kafir"? |url=https://seekersguidance.org/answers/islamic-belief/non-muslims-deemed-kafir/ |archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20230621064238/https://seekersguidance.org/answers/islamic-belief/non-muslims-deemed-kafir/ |archive-date=2023-06-21 |access-date=2023-06-21 |website=Seekers Guidance}}</ref><ref name="Schirrmacher 2020">{{cite book |author-last=Schirrmacher |author-first=Christine |year=2020 |chapter=Chapter 7: Leaving Islam |chapter-url=https://brill.com/view/book/edcoll/9789004331471/BP000008.xml?body=pdf-43180 |editor1-last=Enstedt |editor1-first=Daniel |editor2-last=Larsson |editor2-first=Göran |editor3-last=Mantsinen |editor3-first=Teemu T. |title=Handbook of Leaving Religion |location=] and ] |publisher=] |series=Brill Handbooks on Contemporary Religion |volume=18 |doi=10.1163/9789004331471_008 |doi-access=free |pages=81–95 |isbn=978-90-04-33092-4 |issn=1874-6691}}</ref><ref name="Adang 2001">{{cite encyclopedia |author-last=Adang |author-first=Camilla |year=2001 |title=Belief and Unbelief: choice or destiny? |editor-last=McAuliffe |editor-first=Jane Dammen |editor-link=Jane Dammen McAuliffe |encyclopedia=] |volume=I |location=] |publisher=] |doi=10.1163/1875-3922_q3_EQCOM_00025 |isbn=978-90-04-14743-0}}</ref><ref name=Glasse-2001-247>{{cite book|last1=Glasse|first1=Cyril|title=The New Encyclopedia of Islam|date=1989|publisher=Altamira Press|location=New York|isbn=978-0759101890|page=|edition=Revised 2001|url=https://archive.org/details/newencyclopediao0000glas/page/247}}</ref><ref>{{cite journal |last1=Sevinç |first1=Kenan |last2=Coleman |first2=Thomas J. |last3=Hood |first3=Ralph W. |title=Non-Belief: An Islamic Perspective |journal=Secularism and Nonreligion |date=25 July 2018 |volume=7 |pages=5 |doi=10.5334/snr.111|doi-access=free }}</ref> | |||
* ''See ] for the condiment'' | |||
* ''See ] for the derogatory Afrikaans term for native Africans.'' | |||
''Kafir'' is often translated as ']',<ref name=TIK/><ref>{{Cite book|url=https://books.google.com/books?id=ID-bCsGmWLkC&pg=PA27|title=Religious Minorities in Iran|last=Sansarian|first=Eliz|year=2000|publisher=Cambridge University Press |isbn=9781139429856}}</ref> ']', 'rejector',<ref>{{Cite book|url=https://books.google.com/books?id=XvbXAAAAMAAJ&q=kafir+rejector|title=A Faith for All Seasons: Islam and Western Modernity|last=Akhtar|first=Shabbir|year=1990|publisher=Bellew |isbn=9780947792411}}</ref> ']', 'disbeliever',<ref name="Adang 2001"/> 'unbeliever',<ref name="Schirrmacher 2020"/><ref name="Adang 2001"/> 'nonbeliever',<ref name="Schirrmacher 2020"/><ref name="Adang 2001"/> and 'non-Muslim'.<ref name="Willis 2018">{{cite book |editor-last=Willis |editor-first=John Ralph |year=2018 |origyear=1979 |title=Studies in West African Islamic History, Volume 1: The Cultivators of Islam |chapter=Glossary |chapter-url=https://books.google.com/books?id=rD0sBgAAQBAJ&pg=PA197 |location=] and ] |publisher=] |edition=1st |pages=197 |isbn=9781138238534 |quote=''Kufr'': Unbelief; non-Muslim belief (''Kāfir'' = a non-Muslim, one who has received no Dispensation or Book; ''Kuffār'' plural of ''Kāfir'').}}</ref> The term is used in different ways in the ], with the most fundamental sense being ungrateful toward God.<ref name=adams/><ref name="EI2">{{cite encyclopedia |author-last=Björkman |author-first=W. |year=2012 |origyear=1978 |title=Kāfir |editor1-last=Bosworth |editor1-first=C. E. |editor1-link=Clifford Edmund Bosworth |editor2-last=van Donzel |editor2-first=E. J. |editor2-link=Emeri Johannes van Donzel |editor3-last=Heinrichs |editor3-first=W. P. |editor3-link=Wolfhart Heinrichs |editor4-last=Lewis |editor4-first=B. |editor5-last=Pellat |editor5-first=Ch. |editor5-link=Charles Pellat |editor6-last=Schacht |editor6-first=J. |editor6-link=Joseph Schacht |encyclopedia=] |location=] and ] |publisher=] |volume=4 |doi=10.1163/1573-3912_islam_SIM_3775 |isbn=978-90-04-16121-4}}</ref> ''Kufr'' means 'disbelief', 'unbelief', 'non-belief',<ref name="Schirrmacher 2020"/> 'to be thankless', 'to be faithless', or 'ingratitude'.<ref name="EI2"/> The opposite term of ''kufr'' ('disbelief') is ] ('faith'),<ref name="OISO"/> and the opposite of ''kafir'' ('disbeliever') is ] ('believer').<ref>{{cite encyclopedia |author-last=Jansen |author-first=J. J. G. |year=2012 |origyear=1993 |title=Muʾmin |editor1-last=Bosworth |editor1-first=C. E. |editor1-link=Clifford Edmund Bosworth |editor2-last=van Donzel |editor2-first=E. J. |editor2-link=Emeri Johannes van Donzel |editor3-last=Heinrichs |editor3-first=W. P. |editor3-link=Wolfhart Heinrichs |editor4-last=Lewis |editor4-first=B. |editor5-last=Pellat |editor5-first=Ch. |editor5-link=Charles Pellat |editor6-last=Schacht |editor6-first=J. |editor6-link=Joseph Schacht |encyclopedia=] |location=] and ] |publisher=] |volume=7 |doi=10.1163/1573-3912_islam_SIM_5493 |isbn=978-90-04-16121-4}}</ref> A ] might be called a ].<ref>{{cite book|last=Swartz|first=Merlin|title=A medieval critique of Anthropomorphism| page =96|url=https://books.google.com/books?id=_5dbo6vYOREC&q=dahriya&pg=PA96|date=30 January 2015|publisher=Brill|access-date=27 July 2017|isbn=978-9004123762}}</ref><ref>{{cite journal |title=Dahrīya |url=https://referenceworks.brillonline.com/entries/encyclopaedia-of-islam-1/dahriya-SIM_1762?s.num=27&s.start=20 |website=BrillOnline Reference Works |publisher=Brill Online |access-date=9 January 2019|date=2012-04-24 |last1=Goldziher |first1=I. }}</ref> | |||
'''Kafir''' (or ''kāfir''; plural '''Kuffar''', ''kuffār'') is an ] word meaning "denier" or "concealer." The Turkish form is Gavur. | |||
In a religious context it generally means a person who is not of the ], however it is often used to mean "person who disbelieves in Islam" or "]" . The noun '''kufr''' means "not believing in God" or "blasphemy, ]." In ], the term amounts to the equivalent of Christian ]. The verb, "to declare someone a kafir" is '''].''' For example, the novelist ] was declared a ''kafir'' in the ] of ]. | |||
One type of ''kafir'' is a '']'' (مشرك), another group of religious wrongdoer mentioned frequently in the ]. Several concepts of vice are seen to revolve around the concept of ''kufr'' in the Quran.<ref name="OISO"/> Historically, while Islamic scholars agreed that a ''mushrik'' was a ''kafir'', they sometimes disagreed on the propriety of applying the term to Muslims who committed a grave sin or the ].<ref name="adams" /><ref name="EI2"/> The Quran distinguishes between ''mushrikūn'' and People of the Book, reserving the former term for idol worshippers, although some classical commentators considered the ] to be a form of ''shirk''.<ref name="EI2-shirk" /> | |||
According to some scholars in Islam, the correct use of the word ''kafir'' in Islamic ] does not include either ]s, ]s, ]s, and all "]" who are covered by the term ], or "People of the Book," because they are considered recipients of divine revelation from ]. However, other scholars, such as those backing militant ]s, often do not make the distinction in their rhetoric and do often use it to include these religious communities, or any enemy. | |||
In modern times, ''kafir'' is sometimes applied to self-professed Muslims,<ref>{{cite book|last=Rajan|first=Julie|title=Al Qaeda's Global Crisis: The Islamic State, Takfir and the Genocide of Muslims| page =cii|url=https://books.google.com/books?id=Pz5yBgAAQBAJ&pg=PA102|date=30 January 2015|publisher=Routledge|access-date=27 August 2015|isbn=9781317645382}}</ref><ref name="Bunt 2009">{{cite book|last=Bunt|first=Gary|title=Muslims| page =ccxxiv|url=https://books.google.com/books?id=gpz2v-6cnsEC&pg=PA224|date=2009|publisher=The Other Press|access-date=27 August 2015|isbn=9789839541694}}</ref><ref>{{cite book|last=Pruniere|first=Gerard|title=Darfur: The Ambiguous Genocide| page =xvi|url=https://books.google.com/books?id=MctyAAAAMAAJ&q=kuffar+derogatory|date=1 January 2007|publisher=Cornell University Press|access-date=27 August 2015|isbn=9780801446023}}</ref> particularly by members of ]s.<ref>Emmanuel M. Ekwo ''Racism and Terrorism: Aftermath of 9/11'' Author House 2010 {{ISBN|978-1-452-04748-5}} page 143</ref> The act of declaring another self-professed Muslim a ''kafir'' is known as '']'',<ref name="oxforddictionaries.com">{{cite web |title=kafir |website=] |url=http://www.oxforddictionaries.com/definition/english/kafir |url-status=dead |archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20150512211202/http://www.oxforddictionaries.com/definition/english/kafir |archive-date=2015-05-12}}</ref> a practice that has been condemned but also employed in theological and political polemics over the centuries.<ref name="EJBFEI-619" /> | |||
== Kaafirphobia == | |||
According to various results generated through a search in Google, '''Kaafirphobia''' is a contemporary term used to describe an irrational fear or hatred of non-Muslim peoples, or Kafirs in general. It is the opposite of the term ]. Kaafirphobia is defined as the prejudice against non-Muslims and encompasses any Muslim who | |||
A '']'' or ''mu'ahid'' is a historical term<ref name=Campo/> for non-Muslims living in an ] with legal protection.<ref name="Stillman 1998">{{cite book |last=Stillman |first=Norman A. |author-link=Norman Stillman |year=1998 |origyear=1979 |title=The Jews of Arab Lands: A History and Source Book |chapter=Under the New Order |chapter-url=https://books.google.com/books?id=bFN2ismyhEYC&pg=PA22 |location=] |publisher=] |pages=22–28 |isbn=978-0-8276-0198-7}}</ref><ref name=Campo>{{cite encyclopedia |title=dhimmi |encyclopedia=] |editor=Juan Eduardo Campo |pages=194–195 |publisher=Infobase Publishing |date=12 May 2010 |quote= dhimmis are non-Muslims who live within Islamdom and have a regulated and protected status.{{nbsp}} In the modern period, this term has generally has occasionally been resuscitated, but it is generally obsolete.}}</ref><ref name="Modarresi">{{cite book|author=Mohammad Taqi al-Modarresi|author-link=Mohammad Taqi al-Modarresi|title=The Laws of Islam|date=26 March 2016|publisher=Enlight Press|isbn=978-0994240989|url=http://almodarresi.com/en/books/pdf/TheLawsofIslam.pdf|access-date=22 December 2017|ref=Modarresi|archive-date=2 August 2019|archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20190802163247/http://almodarresi.com/en/books/pdf/TheLawsofIslam.pdf|url-status=dead}}</ref>{{rp|470}} ''Dhimmis'' were exempt from certain duties specifically assigned to Muslims if they paid the '']'' poll tax, but otherwise equal under the laws of property, contract, and obligation according to some scholars,<ref name="Patrick" /><ref name="Gustave" /><ref name="El Fadl" /> whereas others state religious minorities subjected to the status of ''dhimmis'' (such as ], ], ], ], ], ], and ]) were inferior to the status of Muslims in Islamic states.<ref name="Stillman 1998"/> Jews and Christians were required to pay the ''jizya'' and '']'' taxes,<ref name="Stillman 1998"/> while others, depending on the different rulings of the ], might be required to convert to Islam, pay the ''jizya'', exiled, or subject to the ].<ref name="Stillman 1998"/><ref name=Bon08/><ref name=Wai03/><ref name=Win02/><ref name=Lapid/> | |||
:(1) upholds violent tendencies towards non-Muslims, | |||
:(2) upholds acts of terrorism against non-Muslims, and | |||
:(3) rejects concepts such as: | |||
::(a) equality between Muslims and non-Muslims | |||
::(b) tolerance towards apostates from Islam | |||
::(c) democracy | |||
::(d) human rights | |||
In 2019, ], the world's largest independent Islamic organization, issued a proclamation urging Muslims to refrain from using the word ''kafir'' to refer to non-Muslims because the term is both offensive and perceived as "theologically violent".<ref name=pri /><ref name="The Jakarta Post 2019">{{cite web | author=The Jakarta Post | title=NU calls for end to word 'infidels' to describe non-Muslims | website=The Jakarta Post | date=2019-03-01 | url=https://www.thejakartapost.com/news/2019/03/01/nu-calls-for-end-to-word-infidels-to-describe-non-muslims.html | access-date=2022-05-14}}</ref> | |||
== See also == | |||
*] | |||
*] - ] - ] | |||
*] - ] - ] | |||
*], ] | |||
==Etymology== | |||
== External links == | |||
The word {{transliteration|ar|DIN|kāfir}} is the active participle of the verb {{langx|ar|كَفَرَ|kafara|label=none}}, from ] {{lang|ar|ك-ف-ر}} ].<ref name="EI2"/> As a pre-Islamic term it described farmers burying seeds in the ground. One of its applications in the Quran has also the same meaning as farmer.<ref>(أَعْجَبَ الْكُفَّارَ نَبَاتُهُ) </ref> Since farmers cover the seeds with soil while planting, the word {{transliteration|ar|DIN|kāfir}} implies a person who hides or covers.<ref name="EI2"/> Ideologically, it implies a person who hides or covers the truth. Arabic poets personify the darkness of night as {{transliteration|ar|kāfir}}, perhaps as a survival of ].<ref>{{cite book|last1=Goldziher|first1=Ignác|title=Mythology among the Hebrews|date=1877|access-date=2015-06-28|page=193|url=http://www.gutenberg.org/files/48967/48967-h/48967-h.htm#Page_193}}</ref> | |||
*http://www.inminds.co.uk/imam-cassiem-talk.html | |||
* | |||
The noun for 'disbelief', 'blasphemy', 'impiety' rather than the person who disbelieves, is {{transliteration|ar|kufr}}.<ref name="EI2"/><ref>{{cite web|last1=Mansour|first1=Ahmed|title=Ahl al-Quran|url=http://www.ahl-alquran.com/English/show_article.php?main_id=6306|access-date=11 June 2015|date=24 September 2006}}</ref><ref>{{cite book|last1=Kepel|first1=Gilles|title=Jihad: The Trail of Political Islam|date=2002|publisher=Harvard University Press|page=31|url=https://books.google.com/books?id=OLvTNk75hUoC&q=definition+kufr+impiety&pg=PA31|access-date=11 June 2015|isbn=9781845112578}}</ref>{{#tag:ref|Oxford Islamic Studies Online states a better definition of {{transliteration|ar|kufr}} is 'to be thankless,' 'to be faithless.'<ref name="OISO">{{cite web |last1=Adams |first1=Charles |last2=Reinhart |first2=A. Kevin |title=Kufr |url=http://www.oxfordislamicstudies.com/article/opr/t236/e0467 |archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20190322140305/http://www.oxfordislamicstudies.com/article/opr/t236/e0467 |url-status=dead |archive-date=22 March 2019 |website=Oxford Islamic Studies Online |access-date=2 January 2021}}</ref>|group=note}} | |||
] | |||
] | |||
==In the Quran== | |||
] | |||
The distinction between those who believe in Islam and those who do not is an essential one in the ].{{citation needed|date= November 2023}} {{transliteration|ar|Kafir}}, and its plural {{transliteration|ar|kuffaar}}, is used directly 134 times in Quran, its verbal noun {{transliteration|ar|kufr}} is used 37 times, and the verbal cognates of {{transliteration|ar|kafir}} are used about 250 times.<ref>{{cite book|last1=Campo |first1= Juan Eduardo |year=2009 |title=Encyclopedia of Islam |publisher=Infobase Publishing| isbn=9781438126968| pages=420–22|url=https://books.google.com/books?id=OZbyz_Hr-eIC&q=encyclopedia+of+islam+kafir&pg=PA420}}</ref> | |||
By extension of the basic meaning of the root, 'to cover', the term is used in the Quran in the senses of ignore/fail to acknowledge and to spurn/be ungrateful.<ref name="Adang 2001"/> The meaning of 'disbelief', which has come to be regarded as primary, retains all of these connotations in the Quranic usage.<ref name="Adang 2001"/> In the Quranic discourse, the term typifies all things that are unacceptable and offensive to God.<ref name=adams>{{cite encyclopedia |author=Charles Adams |author2=A. Kevin Reinhart |title=Kufr |encyclopedia=The Oxford Encyclopedia of the Islamic World |editor=John L. Esposito |publisher=Oxford University Press |location=Oxford |year=2009 |url=http://www.oxfordreference.com/view/10.1093/acref/9780195305135.001.0001/acref-9780195305135-e-0467 |url-access=subscription |isbn=9780195305135}}</ref> Whereby it is not necessary to deny the existence of God, but it suffices to deviate from his will as seen in a dialogue between God and ], the latter called a {{transliteration|ar|kafir}}.<ref>Juan Cole University of Michigan, Ann Arbor ''Juan Cole University of Michigan, Ann Arbor''</ref> According to ] (1341–1405) it is neither denying God, nor the act of disobedience alone, but Iblis' attitude (claiming that God's command is unjust), which makes him a {{transliteration|ar|kafir}}.<ref>Sharpe, Elizabeth Marie into the realm of smokeless fire: (Qur'an 55:14): A critical translation of al-Damiri's article on the jinn from "] 1953 The University of Arizona download date: 15 March 2020</ref> The most fundamental sense of {{transliteration|ar|kufr}} in the Quran is 'ingratitude', the willful refusal to acknowledge or appreciate the benefits that God bestows on humankind, including clear signs and revealed scriptures.<ref name=adams/> | |||
According to the ''E. J. Brill's First Encyclopaedia of Islam, 1913–1936, Volume 4'', the term first applied in the Quran to unbelieving Meccans, who endeavoured "to refute and revile the Prophet". A waiting attitude towards the {{transliteration|ar|kafir}} was recommended at first for Muslims; later, Muslims were ordered to keep apart from unbelievers and defend themselves against their attacks and even take the offensive.<ref name=EJBFEI-619/> Most passages in the Quran referring to unbelievers in general talk about their fate on the ] and destination in ].<ref name=EJBFEI-619/> | |||
According to scholar Marilyn Waldman, as the Quran "progresses" (as the reader goes from the verses revealed first to later ones), the meaning behind the term {{transliteration|ar|kafir}} does not change but "progresses", i.e. "accumulates meaning over time". As the ]'s views of his opponents change, his use of {{transliteration|ar|kafir}} "undergoes a development". {{transliteration|ar|Kafir}} moves from being {{em|one}} description of Muhammad's opponents to the primary one. Later in the Quran, {{transliteration|ar|kafir}} becomes more and more connected with {{transliteration|ar|]}}. Finally, towards the end of the ], {{transliteration|ar|kafir}} begins to also signify the group of people to be fought by the {{transliteration|ar|mu'minīn}} ('believers').<ref>{{cite journal|last=Waldman|first=Marilyn|title=The Development of the Concept of Kufr in the Qur'an|journal=Journal of the American Oriental Society|date=Jul–Sep 1968|volume=88|issue=3|pages=442–55|doi=10.2307/596869|jstor=596869}}</ref> | |||
] argues that Quran 2:62 supports religious pluralism, implying that some non-Muslims are not kafirs: "Those who believe, Jews, Christians, Sabians --whoever believes in God and the Last Day and do good, will have their reward with their Lord and they will not fear, nor grieve." {{qref|2|62}}<ref>El Fadl, Khaled Abou (2005), ''The Great Theft: Wrestling Islam From The Extremists'', Harper San Francisco, p.216-217</ref> | |||
==Types of unbelievers== | |||
===People of the Book=== | |||
Charles Adams writes that the Quran reproaches the People of the Book with {{transliteration|ar|kufr}} for rejecting Muhammad's message when they should have been the first to accept it as possessors of earlier revelations, and singles out Christians for disregarding the evidence of God's unity.<ref name=adams/> The Quranic verse {{qref|5:73}} ("Certainly they disbelieve who say: God is the third of three"), among other verses, has been traditionally understood in Islam as ],<ref name=EoQ-Trinity>{{Cite encyclopedia|last=Thomas |first=David | year= 2006 | title=Trinity|encyclopedia=Encyclopaedia of the Qurʾān|editor=Jane Dammen McAuliffe|url=http://referenceworks.brillonline.com/entries/encyclopaedia-of-the-quran/trinity-EQSIM_00428|publisher=Brill|url-access=subscription }}</ref> though modern scholarship has suggested alternative interpretations.{{refn|group=note|That this verse criticizes a deviant form of Trinitarian belief which overstressed distinctiveness of the three persons at the expense of their unity. Modern scholars have also interpreted it as a reference to Jesus, who was often called "the third of three" in Syriac literature and as an intentional over-simplification of Christian doctrine intended to highlight its weakness from a strictly monotheistic perspective.<ref name=EoQ-Trinity/>}} Other Quranic verses strongly deny the ], son of Mary and reproach the people who treat Jesus as equal with God as disbelievers who will have strayed from the path of God which would result in the entrance of ].<ref>Joseph, Jojo, '''', {{Webarchive|url=https://web.archive.org/web/20220217110118/http://theolibrary.shc.edu/resources/Quran-Gospel.pdf |date=17 February 2022 }}, ''Journal of Dharma'', 1 (January–March 2010), pp. 55–76</ref><ref>Mazuz, Haggai (2012) , ''Journal of Dharma'' 35, 1 (January–March 2010), 55–76</ref> While the Quran does not recognize the attribute of Jesus as the Son of God or God himself, it respects Jesus as a prophet and messenger of God sent to children of Israel.<ref>Schirrmacher, Christine, </ref> Some Muslim thinkers such as ] have viewed the most extreme Quranic presentations of the dogmas of the Trinity and divinity of Jesus ({{qref|5:19}}, {{qref|5:75}}, {{qref|5:119}}) as non-Christian formulas that were rejected by the Church.<ref>{{cite book|author=Carré, Olivier|year=2003|title=Mysticism and Politics: A Critical Reading of Fī Ẓilāl Al-Qur'ān by Sayyid Quṭb|location=Boston|publisher=Brill|pages=63–64|url=https://books.google.com/books?id=N85UaTV-0VoC&pg=PA63|isbn=978-9004125902}}</ref> | |||
On the other hand, modern scholarship has suggested alternative interpretations of verse Q.{{qref|5:73}}.{{citation needed|date=January 2021}} Cyril Glasse criticizes the use of {{transliteration|ar|kafirun}} (plural of {{transliteration|ar|kafir}}) to describe Christians as "loose usage".<ref name=Glasse-2001-247/> According to the '']'', in traditional ], {{transliteration|ar|ahl al-kitab}} are "usually regarded more leniently than other {{transliteration|ar|kuffar}} " and "in theory" a Muslim commits a punishable offense if they say to a Jew or a Christian: "Thou unbeliever".<ref name="EI2"/> Charles Adams and A. Kevin Reinhart also write that "later thinkers" in Islam distinguished between ''ahl al-kitab'' and the polytheists/''mushrikīn''.<ref name="OISO"/> | |||
Historically, People of the Book permanently residing under Islamic rule were entitled to a special status known as {{transliteration|ar|]}}, while those visiting Muslim lands received a different status known as {{transliteration|ar|]}}.<ref name="EI2"/> | |||
===The Mushrikun=== | |||
The mushrikun are those who believe in shirk 'association', which refers to accepting other gods and divinities alongside ].<ref name=EI2-shirk>{{Cite encyclopedia|last=Gimaret |first=D. | year= 2012 | title=S̲h̲irk |encyclopedia=Encyclopaedia of Islam| edition=2nd|publisher=Brill |editor1-first=P. |editor1-last=Bearman |editor2-first=Th. |editor2-last=Bianquis |editor3-first=C. E. |editor3-last=Bosworth |editor4-first=E. |editor4-last=van Donzel |editor5-first=W. P. |editor5-last=Heinrichs| doi= 10.1163/1573-3912_islam_SIM_6965 }}</ref> The term is often translated as ].<ref name=EI2-shirk/> | |||
The Quran distinguishes between mushrikun and People of the Book, reserving the former term for idol worshipers, although some classical commentators considered Christian doctrine to be a form of shirk.<ref name=EI2-shirk/> Shirk is held to be the worst form of disbelief and it is identified in the Quran as the only sin that God will not pardon ({{qref|4:48}}, {{qref|4:116}}).<ref name=EI2-shirk/> | |||
Accusations of {{transliteration|ar|shirk}} have been common in religious polemics within Islam.<ref name=EI2-shirk/> Thus, in the early Islamic debates on free will and ], Sunni theologians charged their ] adversaries with {{transliteration|ar|shirk}}, accusing them of attributing to man creative powers comparable to those of God in both originating and executing actions.<ref name=EI2-shirk/> Mu'tazila theologians, in turn, charged the Sunnis with shirk because under their doctrine a voluntary human act results from an "association" between God, who creates the act, and the individual who appropriates it by carrying it out.<ref name=EI2-shirk/> | |||
In classical jurisprudence, Islamic ] applied only to the People of the Book, while mushrikun, based on the ], faced a choice between conversion to Islam and fight to the death,<ref name=hallaq>{{cite book|first=Wael B. |last=Hallaq|author-link = Wael Hallaq|title=Sharī'a: Theory, Practice, Transformations|year=2009|publisher=Cambridge University Press |edition=Kindle |page=327 }}</ref> which may be substituted by enslavement.<ref name=lewis-1995-230>{{cite book|last1=Lewis|first1=Bernard|title=The Middle East, A Brief History of the Last 2000 Years|date=1995|publisher=Touchstone|isbn=978-0684832807|page=230}}</ref> In practice, the designation of People of the Book and the dhimmī status was extended even to non-monotheistic religions of conquered peoples, such as Hinduism.<ref name=hallaq/> Following destruction of major Hindu temples during the ], Hindus and Muslims on the subcontinent came to share a number of popular religious practices and beliefs, such as veneration of ] and worship at Sufi ]s, although Hindus may worship at Hindu shrines also.<ref>{{Cite book| last = Lapidus | first = Ira M. | author-link=Ira M. Lapidus | title = A History of Islamic Societies | publisher = Cambridge University Press |edition=Kindle | year = 2014| isbn=978-0-521-51430-9 | pages= 391, 396}}</ref> | |||
In the 18th century, followers of ], known as ], believed kufr or shirk was found in the Muslim community itself, especially in "the practice of popular religion": | |||
{{blockquote|hirk took many forms: the attribution to prophets, saints, astrologers, and soothsayers of knowledge of the unseen world, which only God possesses and can grant; the attribution of power to any being except God, including the power of intercession; reverence given in any way to any created thing, even to the tomb of the Prophet; such superstitious customs as belief in omens and in auspicious and inauspicious days; and swearing by the names of the Prophet, ʿAlī, the Shīʿī imams, or the saints. Thus the Wahhābīs acted even to destroy the cemetery where many of the Prophet's most notable companions were buried, on the grounds that it was a center of idolatry.<ref name="OISO"/>}} | |||
While ibn Abd al-Wahhab and the Wahhābīs were "the best-known premodern" revivalist and "sectarian movement" of that era, other revivalists included ] and ], leaders of the ] in the early 19th century.<ref name="OISO"/> | |||
===Sinners=== | |||
Whether a Muslim could commit a sin great enough to become a {{transliteration|ar|kafir}} was disputed by jurists in the early centuries of Islam. The most tolerant view (that of the {{transliteration|ar|]}}) was that even those who had committed a major sin ({{transliteration|ar|kabira}}) were still believers and "their fate was left to God".<ref name=EJBFEI-619/> The most strict view (that of Kharidji Ibadis, descended from the ]) was that every Muslim who dies having not repented of their sins was considered a {{transliteration|ar|kafir}}. In between these two positions, the {{transliteration|ar|Mu'tazila}} believed that there was a status between believer and unbeliever called "rejected" or {{transliteration|ar|]}}.<ref name=EJBFEI-619/> | |||
==={{transliteration|ar|Takfir}}=== | |||
{{main|Takfir}} | |||
{{further|Takfiri}} | |||
The ]' view that the self-proclaimed Muslim who had sinned and "failed to repent had ipso facto excluded himself from the community, and was hence a {{transliteration|ar|kafir}}" (a practice known as {{transliteration|ar|]}})<ref name="Izutsu 2006">{{cite book |last=Izutsu |first=Toshihiko |author-link=Toshihiko Izutsu |year=2006 |origyear=1965 |title=The Concept of Belief in Islamic Theology: A Semantic Analysis of Imān and Islām |chapter=The Infidel (''Kāfir''): The Khārijites and the origin of the problem |chapter-url=https://books.google.com/books?id=PDxHG5MtLawC&pg=PA1 |location=] |publisher=Keio Institute of Cultural and Linguistic Studies at ] |pages=1–20 |isbn=983-9154-70-2}}</ref> was considered so extreme by the ] majority that they in turn declared the ] to be {{transliteration|ar|kuffar}},<ref>{{cite journal|last=Ruthven|first=Malise|title=The Eleventh of September and the Sudanese mahdiya in the Context of Ibn Khaldun's Theory of Islamic History|journal=International Affairs|date=April 2002|volume=78|issue=2|pages=344–45|doi=10.1111/1468-2346.00254}}<!--|access-date=2 December 2012--></ref> following the hadith that declared, "If a Muslim charges a fellow Muslim with {{transliteration|ar|kufr}}, he is himself a {{transliteration|ar|kafir}} if the accusation should prove untrue".<ref name=EJBFEI-619/> | |||
Nevertheless, in ] {{transliteration|ar|kafir}} was "a frequent term for the Muslim protagonist" holding the opposite view, according to ''Brill's Islamic Encyclopedia''.<ref name=EJBFEI-619>{{cite book|editor1-last=Houtsma|editor1-first=M. Th.|title=E. J. Brill's First Encyclopaedia of Islam, 1913–1936 |volume=4|publisher=Brill|page=619|url=https://books.google.com/books?id=7CP7fYghBFQC&q=kafir+ahl+al-kitab&pg=PA619|access-date=29 June 2015|isbn=978-9004097902|year=1993}}</ref> | |||
Present-day Muslims who make interpretations that differ from what others believe are declared {{transliteration|ar|kafirs}}; {{transliteration|ar|]s}} (edicts by Islamic religious leaders) are issued ordering Muslims to kill them, and some such people have been killed also.<ref>{{cite news|url= https://www.heraldscotland.com/news/16266154.you-will-get-your-head-chopped-off-scots-muslim-writer-threatened-by-extremists/ |title='You will get your head chopped off' – Scots Muslim writer threatened by extremists|newspaper= The Herald |date=2018-06-03 |access-date=2019-08-21}}</ref> | |||
==={{transliteration|ar|Murtad}}=== | |||
Another group that are "distinguished from the mass of {{transliteration|ar|kafirun}}"<ref name=EJBFEI-619/> are the {{transliteration|ar|]}}, or apostate ex-Muslims, who are considered renegades and traitors.<ref name=EJBFEI-619/> Their traditional punishment is death, even, according to some scholars, if they recant their abandonment of Islam.<ref name=lewis-1995-230q>{{cite book|last1=Lewis|first1=Bernard|title=The Middle East: A Brief History of the Last 2000 Years|date=1995|publisher=Touchstone|isbn=978-0684832807|page=230|quote=Tolerance may in no circumstances be extended to the apostate, the renegade Muslim, whose punishment is death. Some authorities allow the remission of this punishment if the apostate recants. Others insist on the death penalty even then. God may pardon him the world to come; the law must punish him in this world.}}</ref> | |||
==={{transliteration|ar|Muʿāhid}} / {{transliteration|ar|Dhimmī}}=== | |||
{{transliteration|ar|]}} are non-Muslims living under the protection of an ].<ref>{{cite encyclopedia |title=Glossary and Index of Terms: muʿāhad |encyclopedia=Encyclopaedia of Islam |edition=2nd |editor1-first=P. J. |editor1-last=Bearman |editor2-first=Th. |editor2-last=Banquis |editor3-first=C. E. |editor3-last=Bowworth |editor4-first=E. |editor4-last=van Donzel |editor5-first=W. P. |editor5-last=Heinrichs Bowworth |access-date=6 August 2018 |url=https://dx.doi.org/10.1163/1573-3912_ei2glos_SIM_gi_03145 |isbn=9789004144484 |pages=137–592 |date=2009-05-01|doi=10.1163/1573-3912_ei2glos_SIM_gi_03145 }}</ref><ref>{{cite encyclopedia |title=Muʿāhid |encyclopedia=Encyclopaedia of Islam |edition=2nd |editor1-first=P. J. |editor1-last=Bearman |editor2-first=Th. |editor2-last=Banquis |editor3-first=C. E. |editor3-last=Bowworth |editor4-first=E. |editor4-last=van Donzel |editor5-first=W. P. |editor5-last=Heinrichs Bowworth |access-date=6 August 2018 |url=https://dx.doi.org/10.1163/1573-3912_islam_DUM_3909 |isbn=9789004161214 |pages=137–592 |date=2009-05-01|doi=10.1163/1573-3912_islam_DUM_3909 }}</ref> {{transliteration|ar|Dhimmī}} are exempt from certain duties assigned specifically to Muslims if they paid the poll tax ({{transliteration|ar|]}}) but were otherwise equal under the laws of property, contract, and obligation according to some scholars,<ref name="Patrick">H. Patrick Glenn, ''Legal Traditions of the World''. ], 2007, p. 219.</ref><ref name="Gustave">The French scholar Gustave Le Bon (author of ''La civilisation des Arabes'') writes "that despite the fact that the incidence of taxation fell more heavily on a Muslim than a non-Muslim, the non-Muslim was free to enjoy equally well with every Muslim all the privileges afforded to the citizens of the state. The only privilege that was reserved for the Muslims was the seat of the caliphate, and this, because of certain religious functions attached to it, which could not naturally be discharged by a non-Muslim." Mun'im Sirry (2014), ''Scriptural Polemics: The Qur'an and Other Religions'', p.179. ]. {{ISBN|978-0199359363}}.</ref><ref name="El Fadl">{{cite book|last1=Abou El Fadl|first1=Khaled|author-link=Khaled Abou El Fadl|title=The Great Theft: Wrestling Islam from the Extremists|date=2007|publisher=]|isbn=978-0061189036|page=204|quote = According to the dhimma status system, non-Muslims must pay a poll tax in return for Muslim protection and the privilege of living in Muslim territory. Per this system, non-Muslims are exempt from military service, but they are excluded from occupying high positions that involve dealing with high state interests, like being the president or prime minister of the country. In Islamic history, non-Muslims did occupy high positions, especially in matters that related to fiscal policies or tax collection.}}</ref> whereas others state that religious minorities subjected to the status of {{transliteration|ar|Dhimmī}} (such as ], ], ], ], and ]) were inferior to the status of Muslims in Islamic states.<ref name="Stillman 1998"/> Jews and Christians were required to pay the {{transliteration|ar|jizyah}} while pagans, depending on the different rulings of the four {{transliteration|ar|]}}, might be required to accept Islam, pay the jizya, be exiled, or be killed under the Islamic death penalty.<ref name="Stillman 1998"/><ref name=Bon08>{{cite book|author=Michael Bonner|title=Jihad in Islamic History|publisher=Princeton University Press|year=2008|pages= 89–90|url=https://books.google.com/books?id=Qxq7eykoJgoC&pg=PA89|quote=To begin with, there was no forced conversion, no choice between "Islam and the Sword". Islamic law, following a clear Quranic principle (2:256), prohibited any such things{{nbsp}} although there have been instances of forced conversion in Islamic history, these have been exceptional.|isbn=978-1400827381}}</ref><ref name=Wai03>Waines (2003). "An Introduction to Islam". ''Cambridge University Press''. p. 53</ref><ref name=Win02>Winter, T. J., & Williams, J. A. (2002). ''Understanding Islam and the Muslims: The Muslim Family Islam and World Peace''. Louisville, Kentucky: Fons Vitae. p. 82. {{ISBN|978-1-887752-47-3}}. Quote: The laws of Muslim warfare forbid any forced conversions, and regard them as invalid if they occur.</ref><ref name=Lapid>{{cite book|title=Islamic Societies to the Nineteenth Century: A Global History|first=Ira M. |last=Lapidus|page=345}}</ref> Some historians believe that forced conversion was rare in Islamic history, and most conversions to Islam were voluntary. Muslim rulers were often more interested in conquest than conversion.<ref name="Lapid" /> | |||
Upon payment of the tax ({{transliteration|ar|jizya}}), the {{transliteration|ar|dhimmī}} would receive a receipt of payment, either in the form of a piece of paper or parchment or as a seal humiliatingly placed upon their neck, and was thereafter compelled to carry this receipt wherever they went within the realms of Islam. Failure to produce an up-to-date {{transliteration|ar|jizya}} receipt on the request of a Muslim could result in death or forced conversion to Islam of the {{transliteration|ar|dhimmī}} in question.<ref>{{cite book|last1=Ye'or|first1=B|title=The decline of Eastern Christianity under Islam|date=2011|location=Madison, New Jersey |publisher=Fairleigh Dickinson University Press|page=79}}</ref>{{failed verification|date=October 2022}} | |||
==Types of disbelief== | |||
Various types of unbelief recognized by legal scholars include: | |||
* {{transliteration|ar|kufr bi-l-qawl}} (verbally expressed unbelief)<ref name="Adang-2015-11">{{cite book |last1=Adang |first1=Camilla |last2=Ansari |first2=Hassan |last3=Fierro |first3=Maribel |title=Accusations of Unbelief in Islam: A Diachronic Perspective on Takfīr |date=2015 |publisher=Brill |page=11 |isbn=9789004307834 |url=https://books.google.com/books?id=nf_dCgAAQBAJ&q=takfir+in+islam |access-date=25 December 2020}}</ref> | |||
* {{transliteration|ar|kufr bi-l-fi'l}} (unbelief expressed through action)<ref name="Adang-2015-11"/> | |||
* {{transliteration|ar|kufr bi-l-i'tiqad}} (unbelief of convictions)<ref name="Adang-2015-11"/> | |||
* {{transliteration|ar|kufr akbar}} (major unbelief)<ref name="Adang-2015-11"/> | |||
* {{transliteration|ar|kufr asghar}} (minor unbelief)<ref name="Adang-2015-11"/> | |||
* {{transliteration|ar|takfir 'amm}} (general charge of unbelief, i.e. charged against a community like ahmadiyya<ref name="Adang-2015-11"/> | |||
* {{transliteration|ar|takfir al-mu'ayyan}} (charge of unbelief against a particular individual)<ref name="Adang-2015-11"/> | |||
* {{transliteration|ar|takfir al-'awamm}} (charge of unbelief against "rank and file Muslims" for example following taqlid.<ref name="Adang-2015-11"/> | |||
* {{transliteration|ar|takfir al-mutlaq}} (category covers general statements such as 'whoever says X or does Y is guilty of unbelief')<ref name="Adang-2015-11"/> | |||
* {{transliteration|ar|kufr asli}} (original unbelief of non-Muslims, those born to non-Muslim family)<ref name="Adang-2015-11"/> | |||
* {{transliteration|ar|kufr tari}} (acquired unbelief of formerly observant Muslims, i.e. apostates)<ref name="Adang-2015-11"/> | |||
===Iman=== | |||
Muslim belief/doctrine is often summarized in "]",<ref name=RF>{{cite web|title=Six Articles of the Islamic Faith|url=http://www.religionfacts.com/islam/practices/six-articles|website=Religion Facts|access-date=17 June 2015}}</ref> (the first five are mentioned together in the {{qref|2:285|}}). | |||
# ]<ref name=q-trans/> | |||
# His ]<ref name=q-trans/> | |||
# His ]<ref name=q-trans/> | |||
# His ],<ref name=q-trans/> | |||
# The ]<ref name=q-trans/> | |||
# {{transliteration|ar|]}}, Divine Preordainments, i.e. whatever God has ordained must come to pass<ref name=q-trans/> | |||
According to the ] scholar ], "{{transliteration|ar|kufr}} is basically disbelief in any of the articles of faith." He also lists several different types of major disbelief, (disbelief so severe it excludes those who practice it completely from the fold of Islam): | |||
# {{transliteration|ar|Kufr-at-Takdhib}}: disbelief in divine truth or the denial of any of the articles of Faith (Quran 39:32)<ref name=q-trans/> | |||
# {{transliteration|ar|Kufr-al-iba wat-takabbur ma'at-Tasdiq}}: refusing to submit to God's Commandments after conviction of their truth (Quran 2:34)<ref name=q-trans/> | |||
# {{transliteration|ar|Kufr-ash-Shakk waz-Zann}}: doubting or lacking conviction in the six articles of Faith. (Quran 18:35–38)<ref name=q-trans/> | |||
# {{transliteration|ar|Kufr-al-I'raadh}}: turning away from the truth knowingly or deviating from the obvious signs which God has revealed. (Quran 46:3)<ref name=q-trans/> | |||
# {{transliteration|ar|]}}: hypocritical disbelief (Quran 63:2–3)<ref name=q-trans>{{cite book|last1=Taqi-ud-Din Al-Hilali|first1=Muhammad|first2=Muhammad Muhsin|last2=Khan|title=The Holy Quran Translation|publisher=ideas4islam|pages=901–02|url=https://books.google.com/books?id=dMK6fNcjg44C&q=Al-Kufr+al-Akbar&pg=PA901|access-date=16 June 2015|isbn=9781591440000|year=2000}}{{Dead link|date=May 2023 |bot=InternetArchiveBot |fix-attempted=yes }}</ref> | |||
Minor disbelief or {{transliteration|ar|Kufran-Ni'mah}} indicates "ungratefulness of God's Blessings or Favours".<ref name=q-trans/> | |||
According to another source, a paraphrase of the {{transliteration|ar|]}} by ],<ref name=TIK>{{cite web|url=http://www.sunnahonline.com/ilm/aqeedah/0038.htm|title=Types of Kufr (Disbelief)|access-date=3 January 2016|publisher=SunnaOnline.com|author=Adapted from ]|archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20090205125838/http://www.sunnahonline.com/ilm/aqeedah/0038.htm|archive-date=5 February 2009|url-status=dead}}</ref>{{unreliable source?|date=January 2017}} there are eight kinds of {{transliteration|ar|Al-Kufr al-Akbar}} (major unbelief), some are the same as those described by Al-Hilali ({{transliteration|ar|Kufr-al-I'rad}}, {{transliteration|ar|Kufr-an-Nifaaq}}) and some different. | |||
# {{transliteration|ar|Kufrul-'Inaad}}: Disbelief out of stubbornness. This applies to someone who knows the Truth and admits to knowing the Truth, and knowing it with their tongue, but refuses to accept it and refrains from making a declaration.<ref>{{cite book|last=Ali|first=Abdullah Yusuf|title=The Qur'an|year=2001|publisher=Tahrike Tarsile Qur'an |section = verse 50:24}}</ref> | |||
# {{transliteration|ar|Kufrul-Inkaar}}: Disbelief out of denial. This applies to someone who denies with both heart and tongue.<ref>{{cite book|last=Ali|first=Abdullah Yusuf|title=The Qur'an|year=2001|publisher=Tahrike Tarsile Qur'an|section = verse 16:83}}</ref> | |||
# {{transliteration|ar|Kufrul-Juhood}}: Disbelief out of rejection. This applies to someone who acknowledges the truth in their heart, but rejects it with their tongue. This type of {{transliteration|ar|kufr}} is applicable to those who call themselves Muslims but who reject any necessary and accepted norms of ] such as {{transliteration|ar|]}} and {{transliteration|ar|]}}.<ref>{{cite book|last=Ali|first=Abdullah Yusuf|title=The Qur'an|year=2001|publisher=Tahrike Tarsile Qur'an|section=verse 27:14}}</ref> | |||
# {{transliteration|ar|]}}: Disbelief out of hypocrisy. This applies to someone who pretends to be a believer but conceals their disbelief. Such a person is called a {{transliteration|ar|]}} or hypocrite.<ref>{{cite book|last=Ali|first=Abdullah Yusuf|title=The Qur'an|year=2001|publisher=Tahrike Tarsile Qur'an |section=verse 4:145}}</ref> | |||
# {{transliteration|ar|Kufrul-Kurh}}: Disbelief out of detesting any of God's commands.<ref>{{cite book|last=Ali|first=Abdullah Yusuf|title=The Qur'an|year=2001|publisher=Tahrike Tarsile Qur'an|section=verse 47:8–9}}</ref> | |||
# {{transliteration|ar|Kufrul-Istihzaha}}: Disbelief due to mockery and derision.<ref>{{cite book|last=Ali|first=Abdullah Yusuf|title=The Qur'an|year=2001|publisher=Tahrike Tarsile Qur'an |section=verse 9:65–66 }}</ref> | |||
# {{transliteration|ar|Kufrul-I'raadh}}: Disbelief due to avoidance. This applies to those who turn away and avoid the truth.<ref>{{cite book|last=Ali|first=Abdullah Yusuf|title=The Qur'an|year=2001|publisher=Tahrike Tarsile Qur'an|section=verse 18:57 }}</ref> | |||
# {{transliteration|ar|Kufrul-Istibdaal}}: Disbelief because of trying to substitute ] with man-made laws.<ref>{{cite book|last=Ali|first=Abdullah Yusuf|title=The Qur'an|year=2001|publisher=Tahrike Tarsile Qur'an|section=verse 42:8}}</ref><ref>{{cite book|last=Ali|first=Abdullah Yusuf|title=The Qur'an|year=2001|publisher=Tahrike Tarsile Qur'an |section=verse 16:116}}</ref> | |||
===Ignorance=== | |||
In Islam, {{transliteration|ar|]}} ('ignorance') refers to the time of ]. | |||
==History of the usage of the term== | |||
===Usage in the earliest sense=== | |||
{{Further|Islam and other religions}} | |||
When the Islamic empire expanded, the word {{transliteration|ar|kafir}} was broadly used as a descriptive term for all ]s and anyone else who disbelieved in Islam.<ref name=HMP/><ref name=HoI/> | |||
Historically, the attitude toward unbelievers in Islam was determined more by socio-political conditions than by religious doctrine.<ref name=EJBFEI-619/> A tolerance toward unbelievers "impossible to imagine in contemporary Christendom" prevailed even to the time of the ], particularly with respect to the People of the Book.<ref name=EJBFEI-619/> However, due to animosity towards ], the term {{transliteration|ar|kafir}} developed into a term of abuse. During the ], the ] used the term {{transliteration|ar|kuffar}} against Ottoman Turks,<ref name=EJBFEI-619/> and the Turks themselves used the term {{transliteration|ar|kuffar}} towards Persians during the ].<ref name=EJBFEI-619/> In modern Muslim popular imagination, the {{transliteration|ar|]}} (]-like figure) will have k-f-r written on his forehead.<ref name=EJBFEI-619/> | |||
However, there was extensive ] between Muslims and non-Muslims during the ] and ] (before the political decline of Islam).<ref name=mgat>{{cite journal |last=Gaborieau |first=Marc |date=June 1985 |title=From Al-Beruni to Jinnah: Idiom, Ritual and Ideology of the Hindu-Muslim Confrontation in South Asia |journal=Anthropology Today |volume=1 |issue=3 |pages=7–14 |doi=10.2307/3033123 |jstor=3033123}}</ref><ref>Holt et al., The Cambridge History of Islam – The Indian sub-continent, south-east Asia, Africa and the Muslim west, {{ISBN|978-0521291378}}</ref><ref>Scott Levi (2002), Hindu beyond Hindu Kush: Indians in Central Asian Slave Trade, Journal of the Royal Asiatic Society, Vol 12, Part 3, pp. 281–83</ref> In their memoirs on Muslim invasions, enslavement and plunder of this period, many Muslim historians in South Asia used the term {{transliteration|ar|kafir}} for ], ]s, ] and ]s.<ref name=HMP>{{cite journal |last=Engineer |first=Ashghar Ali |date=13–19 February 1999 |title=Hindu-Muslim Problem: An Approach |journal=Economic and Political Weekly |volume=37 |issue=7 |pages=396–400 |jstor=4407649}}</ref><ref name=HoI>Elliot and Dowson, , ] – The Muhammadan Period, Vol 4, Trubner London, p. 273</ref><ref>Elliot and Dowson, , The History of India, as Told by Its Own Historians – The Muhammadan Period, Vol 2, Trubner London, pp. 347–67</ref><ref>Elliot and Dowson, , The History of India, as Told by Its Own Historians – The Muhammadan Period, Vol 4, Trubner London, pp. 68–69</ref> ] states that "non-Muslims were often condemned as {{transliteration|ar|kafirs}}, in medieval Indian Islamic literature, including court chronicles, Sufi texts and literary compositions" and {{transliteration|ar|fatwas}} were issued that justified persecution of the non-Muslims.<ref>Raziuddin Aquil (2008), On Islam and Kufr in the Delhi Sultanate, in Rethinking a Millennium: Perspectives on Indian History (Editor: Rajat Datta), {{ISBN|978-8189833367}}, Chapter 7, pp. 168–85</ref> | |||
Relations between ] and Muslims in the Arab world and use of the word {{transliteration|ar|kafir}} were equally as complex, and over the last century, issues regarding {{transliteration|ar|kafir}} have arisen over the conflict in ] and ].<ref name="Taji-Farouki2000">{{cite journal |last=Taji-Farouki |first=Suha |date=October 2000 |title=Islamists and the Threat of Jihad: Hizb al-Tahrir and al-Muhajiroun on Israel and the Jews|journal=Middle Eastern Studies |volume=36 |issue=4 |pages=21–46 |doi=10.1080/00263200008701330 |jstor=4284112|s2cid=144653647 }}</ref> Calling the Jews of Israel, "the usurping {{transliteration|ar|kafir}}", ] turned on the Muslim resistance and "allegedly set a precedent for preventing Muslims from mobilizing against 'aggressor disbelievers' in other Muslim lands, and enabled 'the cowardly, alien {{transliteration|ar|kafir}}' to achieve new levels of intervention in Muslim affairs."<ref name="Taji-Farouki2000" /> | |||
In 2019, ], the largest independent Islamic organization in the world, issued a proclamation urging Muslims to refrain from using the word {{transliteration|ar|kafir}} to refer to non-Muslims, as the term is both offensive and perceived to be "theologically violent".<ref name=pri>{{cite news |work=The World, ] |first1=Patrick |last1=Winn |title=The world's largest Islamic group wants Muslims to stop saying 'infidel' |date=8 March 2019|url=https://www.pri.org/stories/2019-03-08/world-s-largest-islamic-group-wants-muslims-stop-saying-infidel |access-date=3 October 2020}}</ref><ref>{{cite news |url=https://www.thejakartapost.com/news/2019/03/01/nu-calls-for-end-to-word-infidels-to-describe-non-muslims.html |title=NU calls for end to word 'infidels' to describe non-Muslims |date=1 March 2019 |work=] |publisher=Niskala Media Tenggara |access-date=28 September 2020}}</ref> | |||
====Muhammad's parents==== | |||
{{Further|Banu Hashim}} | |||
{{See also|Religion in pre-Islamic Arabia}} | |||
According to Islamic sources, none of forefathers of ] were {{transliteration|ar|kafirs}}.<ref>Alusi. ''Roohul Ma'ani.'' Vol. 7. pp. 194-195.</ref><ref>Jalaludheen Suyuti. ''Masalikul Hunafa.'' p''.'' 33.</ref> According to Ibn Hajar, the Quran clearly declares that ] were among the Muslims.<ref name="auto">Ibn Hajar. ''Al-Minah al-Makkiyyah.'' p. 151.</ref> Ibn Hajar is of opinion that none of the Muhammad's parents who were non-prophets were {{transliteration|ar|kafirs}} (disbelievers) and all the hadiths on this subject (although some hadiths{{which|date=August 2023}} seem to contradict it) mean that.<ref name="auto"/> Ibn Hajar says about Muhammad saying his {{transliteration|ar|]}} is in the Hell, that the {{transliteration|ar|ab}} in the hadith refers to ] and that Arabs widely use {{transliteration|ar|ab}} to refer to {{transliteration|ar|'amm}} (paternal uncle).<ref>]. ''Al-Minah al-Makkiyyah.'' p. 153.</ref> Most ] scholars hold the view that the parents of Muhammad are saved and inhabitants of ].<ref>{{Cite web |last=Weltch |first=Yusuf |date=2023-04-07 |title=Are the Parents of the Prophet (Blessings and Peace upon Him) Saved? |url=https://seekersguidance.org/answers/adab/are-the-parents-of-the-prophet-blessings-and-peace-upon-him-saved/ |archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20240716033241/https://seekersguidance.org/answers/adab/are-the-parents-of-the-prophet-blessings-and-peace-upon-him-saved/ |archive-date=2024-07-16 |access-date=2024-07-16 |website=SeekersGuidance |language=en}}</ref> | |||
] scholars likewise consider Muhammad's parents to be in Paradise.<ref>alhassanain. {{Webarchive|url=https://web.archive.org/web/20171018135534/http://www.alhassanain.com/english/book/book/beliefs_library/religions_and_sects/devils_deception_of_the_nasibi_wahabis/003.html |date=18 October 2017 }}</ref><ref>Shia Pen. {{Webarchive|url=https://web.archive.org/web/20170818214543/http://www.shiapen.com/comprehensive/non-egalitarian-imamate/monotheistic-lineage-prophets-imams.html |date=18 August 2017 }}</ref> In contrast, the ]<ref>{{cite book |last=Gauvain |first=Richard |year=2013 |url=https://books.google.com/books?id=AJ6gL2iwhy8C&pg=PA335 |title=Salafi Ritual Purity: In the Presence of God |location=] |publisher=] |series=Routledge Islamic studies series |page=335 |isbn=978-0-7103-1356-0}}</ref> website ], founded by the ]n Salafi scholar ], argues that Islamic tradition teaches that Muhammad's parents were {{transliteration|ar|kuffār}} ('disbelievers') who are in Hell.<ref name="Al-Munajjid">{{cite web |url=https://islamqa.info/en/answers/47170/are-the-parents-of-the-prophet-peace-and-blessings-of-allaah-be-upon-him-in-paradise-or-in-hell |title=Are the parents of the Prophet (peace and blessings of Allaah be upon him) in Paradise or in Hell? |last=Al-Munajjid |first=Muhammad |author-link=Muhammad Al-Munajjid |date=16 February 2004 |website=] |access-date=20 July 2020}}</ref> | |||
===Other uses=== | |||
{{See also|Kaffir (racial term)|Kafiristan|Kaffrine|Kaffraria}} | |||
] | |||
By the 15th century, ] were using the word {{transliteration|ar|kaffir}} in reference to the non-Muslim African natives. Many of those {{transliteration|ar|kufari}} were ] and sold to European and Asian merchants by their Muslim captors, most of the merchants were from ], which had established trading outposts along the coast of West Africa by that time. These European traders adopted the Arabic word and its derivatives.<ref>{{cite book|last=Campo|first=Juan Eduardo|title=Encyclopedia of Islam|year=2009|publisher=Infobase Publishing|isbn=978-0-8160-5454-1 |page=422|url=https://books.google.com/books?id=OZbyz_Hr-eIC}}</ref> | |||
Some of the earliest records of European usage of the word can be found in ''The Principal Navigations, Voyages, Traffiques and Discoveries of the English Nation'' (1589) by ].<ref>{{gutenberg author|id=1212| name=Richard Hakluyt}}</ref> In volume 4, Hakluyt writes: "calling them ''Cafars'' and ''Gawars'', which is, infidels or disbelievers".<ref>{{gutenberg|author=Richard Hakluyt|name=The Principal Navigations, Voyages, Traffiques and Discoveries of the English Nation – Volume 04|no=7769}}</ref> Volume 9 refers to the slaves (slaves called ''Cafari'') and inhabitants of Ethiopia ("and they use to go in small shippes, and trade with the ''Cafars''") by two different but similar names. The word is also used in reference to the coast of Africa as "land of Cafraria".<ref>{{gutenberg|author=Richard Hakluyt|name=The Principal Navigations, Voyages, Traffiques and Discoveries of the English Nation – Volume 09|no=10673}}</ref> The 16th century explorer ] described the ''Cafri'' as "]es", and he also stated that they constituted one of five principal population groups in Africa. He identified their geographical heartland as being located in a remote region of southern Africa, an area which he designated as ''Cafraria''.<ref name="Leo5153">{{cite book|last1=Africanus|first1=Leo|title=The History and Description of Africa|date=1526|publisher=Hakluyt Society|pages=20, 53 & 65|url=https://archive.org/stream/historyanddescr03porygoog#page/n180/mode/2up|access-date=27 July 2017}}</ref> | |||
By the late 19th century, the word was in use in English-language newspapers and books.<ref>{{cite web|url=https://query.nytimes.com/gst/abstract.html?res=9B02E2DD163DE433A25756C1A9609C94669ED7CF|title=Barnato a Suicide; The Kafir King Leaps Overboard....|year=1897|work=] |access-date=23 October 2008}}</ref><ref>{{cite web|url=https://query.nytimes.com/gst/abstract.html?res=9E00E6DB1F3DE633A2575BC1A9669D946497D6CF|title=Kafir Band in Jail and Mighty Glad, Too|date=1905-10-18|work=]|access-date=2008-10-23}}</ref><ref>{{gutenberg|no=20491|name=Kafir Stories| author=W. C. Scully}}</ref><ref>{{gutenberg|no=25277|name=The Right of American Slavery|author=T. W. Hoit}}</ref><ref>{{cite web|url=http://digital.library.upenn.edu/women/hsmith/autobiography/harry.html|title=The Autobiography of Lieutenant-General Sir Harry Smith|access-date=23 October 2008}}</ref> One of the ] ships operating off the South African coast was named SS {{transliteration|ar|Kafir}}.<ref>{{cite web|url=http://www.theshipslist.com/ships/lines/union.html|title=Union Steamship Company|access-date=23 October 2008|url-status=dead|archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20080922185140/http://www.theshipslist.com/ships/lines/union.html|archive-date=22 September 2008}}</ref> In the early 20th century, in his book ''The Essential'' {{transliteration|ar|Kafir}}, Dudley Kidd writes that the word {{transliteration|ar|kafir}} had come to be used for all dark-skinned South African tribes. Thus, in many parts of South Africa, {{transliteration|ar|kafir}} became synonymous with the word "native".<ref name="Kidd 1925 v">{{cite book|last=Kidd|first=Dudley|title=The Essential Kafir|year=1925|publisher=The MacMillan Company|location=New York|pages=v}}</ref> Currently in ], however, the word '']'' is regarded as a racial slur, applied pejoratively or offensively to blacks.<ref>{{cite book|last=Theal|first=Georg McCall|title=Kaffir (Xhosa) Folk-Lore: A Selection from the Traditional Tales Current among the People Living on the Eastern Border of the Cape Colony with Copious Explanatory Notes|year=1970|publisher=Negro Universities|location=Westport, CT}}</ref> | |||
The song "Kafir" by the American technical death metal band ] on its sixth album '']'' uses the violent attitudes that ] have towards {{transliteration|ar|kafirs}} as subject matter.<ref>{{cite web|title=Song Lyrics|url=http://www.songlyrics.com/nile/kafir!-lyrics/|publisher=Sound Media; Tone Media|access-date=4 December 2012}}</ref>{{unreliable source?|date=August 2023}} | |||
The ] were formerly known as the Kaffirs of ] before the ] ] of the region. | |||
The ] who live in the Hindu Kush mountain range which is located south west of ] are referred to as {{transliteration|ar|kafirs}} by the Muslim population of Chitral.<ref>{{cite web|last=Welker|first=Glenn|title=Kalash Kafirs of Chitral|url=http://www.indigenouspeople.net/Kalash%20Kafirs%20of%20Chitral.htm|publisher=Indigenous Peoples' Literature|access-date=5 December 2012|url-status=dead|archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20120412035117/http://www.indigenouspeople.net/Kalash%20Kafirs%20of%20Chitral.htm|archive-date=12 April 2012}}</ref> | |||
In modern ], the word {{lang|es|]}}, derived from the Arabic word {{transliteration|ar|kafir}} by way of the ], also means 'uncouth' or 'savage'.<ref>{{cite encyclopedia|encyclopedia=Collins Spanish Dictionary |title=cafre|url=http://www.wordreference.com/es/en/translation.asp?spen=cafre }}</ref> | |||
==See also== | |||
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==References== | |||
===Notes=== | |||
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===Citations=== | |||
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==External links== | |||
{{Wikiquote}} | |||
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* {{Webarchive|url=https://web.archive.org/web/20220314054631/https://www.quranlightuponlight.com/2021/04/quran-towards-non-muslims.html |date=14 March 2022 }} | |||
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Disbeliever in Islam For the ethnic slur used in South Africa, see Kaffir (racial term). For other uses, see Kafir (disambiguation).
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Kafir (Arabic: كَافِر, romanized: kāfir; plural: كَافِرُون kāfirūn, كُفَّار kuffār, or كَفَرَة kafara; feminine: كَافِرَة kāfira; feminine plural: كَافِرَات kāfirāt or كَوَافِر kawāfir) is an Arabic term in Islam which refers to a person who disbelieves the God in Islam, denies his authority, rejects the tenets of Islam, or simply is not a Muslim—one who does not believe in the guidance of Muhammad, the Islamic prophet.
Kafir is often translated as 'infidel', 'pagan', 'rejector', 'denier', 'disbeliever', 'unbeliever', 'nonbeliever', and 'non-Muslim'. The term is used in different ways in the Quran, with the most fundamental sense being ungrateful toward God. Kufr means 'disbelief', 'unbelief', 'non-belief', 'to be thankless', 'to be faithless', or 'ingratitude'. The opposite term of kufr ('disbelief') is iman ('faith'), and the opposite of kafir ('disbeliever') is mu'min ('believer'). A person who denies the existence of a creator might be called a dahri.
One type of kafir is a mushrik (مشرك), another group of religious wrongdoer mentioned frequently in the Quran and other Islamic works. Several concepts of vice are seen to revolve around the concept of kufr in the Quran. Historically, while Islamic scholars agreed that a mushrik was a kafir, they sometimes disagreed on the propriety of applying the term to Muslims who committed a grave sin or the People of the Book. The Quran distinguishes between mushrikūn and People of the Book, reserving the former term for idol worshippers, although some classical commentators considered the Christian doctrine to be a form of shirk.
In modern times, kafir is sometimes applied to self-professed Muslims, particularly by members of Islamist movements. The act of declaring another self-professed Muslim a kafir is known as takfir, a practice that has been condemned but also employed in theological and political polemics over the centuries.
A dhimmi or mu'ahid is a historical term for non-Muslims living in an Islamic state with legal protection. Dhimmis were exempt from certain duties specifically assigned to Muslims if they paid the jizya poll tax, but otherwise equal under the laws of property, contract, and obligation according to some scholars, whereas others state religious minorities subjected to the status of dhimmis (such as Hindus, Christians, Jews, Samaritans, Gnostics, Mandeans, and Zoroastrians) were inferior to the status of Muslims in Islamic states. Jews and Christians were required to pay the jizya and kharaj taxes, while others, depending on the different rulings of the schools of Islamic jurisprudence, might be required to convert to Islam, pay the jizya, exiled, or subject to the death penalty.
In 2019, Nahdlatul Ulama, the world's largest independent Islamic organization, issued a proclamation urging Muslims to refrain from using the word kafir to refer to non-Muslims because the term is both offensive and perceived as "theologically violent".
Etymology
The word kāfir is the active participle of the verb كَفَرَ, kafara, from root ك-ف-ر K-F-R. As a pre-Islamic term it described farmers burying seeds in the ground. One of its applications in the Quran has also the same meaning as farmer. Since farmers cover the seeds with soil while planting, the word kāfir implies a person who hides or covers. Ideologically, it implies a person who hides or covers the truth. Arabic poets personify the darkness of night as kāfir, perhaps as a survival of pre-Islamic Arabian religious or mythological usage.
The noun for 'disbelief', 'blasphemy', 'impiety' rather than the person who disbelieves, is kufr.
In the Quran
The distinction between those who believe in Islam and those who do not is an essential one in the Quran. Kafir, and its plural kuffaar, is used directly 134 times in Quran, its verbal noun kufr is used 37 times, and the verbal cognates of kafir are used about 250 times.
By extension of the basic meaning of the root, 'to cover', the term is used in the Quran in the senses of ignore/fail to acknowledge and to spurn/be ungrateful. The meaning of 'disbelief', which has come to be regarded as primary, retains all of these connotations in the Quranic usage. In the Quranic discourse, the term typifies all things that are unacceptable and offensive to God. Whereby it is not necessary to deny the existence of God, but it suffices to deviate from his will as seen in a dialogue between God and Iblis, the latter called a kafir. According to Al-Damiri (1341–1405) it is neither denying God, nor the act of disobedience alone, but Iblis' attitude (claiming that God's command is unjust), which makes him a kafir. The most fundamental sense of kufr in the Quran is 'ingratitude', the willful refusal to acknowledge or appreciate the benefits that God bestows on humankind, including clear signs and revealed scriptures.
According to the E. J. Brill's First Encyclopaedia of Islam, 1913–1936, Volume 4, the term first applied in the Quran to unbelieving Meccans, who endeavoured "to refute and revile the Prophet". A waiting attitude towards the kafir was recommended at first for Muslims; later, Muslims were ordered to keep apart from unbelievers and defend themselves against their attacks and even take the offensive. Most passages in the Quran referring to unbelievers in general talk about their fate on the day of judgement and destination in hell.
According to scholar Marilyn Waldman, as the Quran "progresses" (as the reader goes from the verses revealed first to later ones), the meaning behind the term kafir does not change but "progresses", i.e. "accumulates meaning over time". As the Islamic prophet Muhammad's views of his opponents change, his use of kafir "undergoes a development". Kafir moves from being one description of Muhammad's opponents to the primary one. Later in the Quran, kafir becomes more and more connected with shirk. Finally, towards the end of the Quran, kafir begins to also signify the group of people to be fought by the mu'minīn ('believers').
Khaled Abou El Fadl argues that Quran 2:62 supports religious pluralism, implying that some non-Muslims are not kafirs: "Those who believe, Jews, Christians, Sabians --whoever believes in God and the Last Day and do good, will have their reward with their Lord and they will not fear, nor grieve." 2:62
Types of unbelievers
People of the Book
Charles Adams writes that the Quran reproaches the People of the Book with kufr for rejecting Muhammad's message when they should have been the first to accept it as possessors of earlier revelations, and singles out Christians for disregarding the evidence of God's unity. The Quranic verse 5:73 ("Certainly they disbelieve who say: God is the third of three"), among other verses, has been traditionally understood in Islam as rejection of the Christian doctrine on the Trinity, though modern scholarship has suggested alternative interpretations. Other Quranic verses strongly deny the deity of Jesus Christ, son of Mary and reproach the people who treat Jesus as equal with God as disbelievers who will have strayed from the path of God which would result in the entrance of hellfire. While the Quran does not recognize the attribute of Jesus as the Son of God or God himself, it respects Jesus as a prophet and messenger of God sent to children of Israel. Some Muslim thinkers such as Mohamed Talbi have viewed the most extreme Quranic presentations of the dogmas of the Trinity and divinity of Jesus (5:19, 5:75, 5:119) as non-Christian formulas that were rejected by the Church.
On the other hand, modern scholarship has suggested alternative interpretations of verse Q.5:73. Cyril Glasse criticizes the use of kafirun (plural of kafir) to describe Christians as "loose usage". According to the Encyclopedia of Islam, in traditional Islamic jurisprudence, ahl al-kitab are "usually regarded more leniently than other kuffar " and "in theory" a Muslim commits a punishable offense if they say to a Jew or a Christian: "Thou unbeliever". Charles Adams and A. Kevin Reinhart also write that "later thinkers" in Islam distinguished between ahl al-kitab and the polytheists/mushrikīn.
Historically, People of the Book permanently residing under Islamic rule were entitled to a special status known as dhimmī, while those visiting Muslim lands received a different status known as musta'min.
The Mushrikun
The mushrikun are those who believe in shirk 'association', which refers to accepting other gods and divinities alongside God. The term is often translated as polytheist.
The Quran distinguishes between mushrikun and People of the Book, reserving the former term for idol worshipers, although some classical commentators considered Christian doctrine to be a form of shirk. Shirk is held to be the worst form of disbelief and it is identified in the Quran as the only sin that God will not pardon (4:48, 4:116).
Accusations of shirk have been common in religious polemics within Islam. Thus, in the early Islamic debates on free will and theodicy, Sunni theologians charged their Mutazila adversaries with shirk, accusing them of attributing to man creative powers comparable to those of God in both originating and executing actions. Mu'tazila theologians, in turn, charged the Sunnis with shirk because under their doctrine a voluntary human act results from an "association" between God, who creates the act, and the individual who appropriates it by carrying it out.
In classical jurisprudence, Islamic religious tolerance applied only to the People of the Book, while mushrikun, based on the Sword Verse, faced a choice between conversion to Islam and fight to the death, which may be substituted by enslavement. In practice, the designation of People of the Book and the dhimmī status was extended even to non-monotheistic religions of conquered peoples, such as Hinduism. Following destruction of major Hindu temples during the Muslim conquests in South Asia, Hindus and Muslims on the subcontinent came to share a number of popular religious practices and beliefs, such as veneration of Sufi saints and worship at Sufi dargahs, although Hindus may worship at Hindu shrines also.
In the 18th century, followers of Muhammad ibn Abd al-Wahhab, known as Wahhabis, believed kufr or shirk was found in the Muslim community itself, especially in "the practice of popular religion":
hirk took many forms: the attribution to prophets, saints, astrologers, and soothsayers of knowledge of the unseen world, which only God possesses and can grant; the attribution of power to any being except God, including the power of intercession; reverence given in any way to any created thing, even to the tomb of the Prophet; such superstitious customs as belief in omens and in auspicious and inauspicious days; and swearing by the names of the Prophet, ʿAlī, the Shīʿī imams, or the saints. Thus the Wahhābīs acted even to destroy the cemetery where many of the Prophet's most notable companions were buried, on the grounds that it was a center of idolatry.
While ibn Abd al-Wahhab and the Wahhābīs were "the best-known premodern" revivalist and "sectarian movement" of that era, other revivalists included Shah Ismail Dehlvi and Ahmed Raza Khan Barelvi, leaders of the Mujāhidīn movement on the North-West frontier of India in the early 19th century.
Sinners
Whether a Muslim could commit a sin great enough to become a kafir was disputed by jurists in the early centuries of Islam. The most tolerant view (that of the Murji'ah) was that even those who had committed a major sin (kabira) were still believers and "their fate was left to God". The most strict view (that of Kharidji Ibadis, descended from the Kharijites) was that every Muslim who dies having not repented of their sins was considered a kafir. In between these two positions, the Mu'tazila believed that there was a status between believer and unbeliever called "rejected" or fasiq.
Takfir
Main article: Takfir Further information: TakfiriThe Kharijites' view that the self-proclaimed Muslim who had sinned and "failed to repent had ipso facto excluded himself from the community, and was hence a kafir" (a practice known as takfir) was considered so extreme by the Sunni majority that they in turn declared the Kharijites to be kuffar, following the hadith that declared, "If a Muslim charges a fellow Muslim with kufr, he is himself a kafir if the accusation should prove untrue".
Nevertheless, in Islamic theological polemics kafir was "a frequent term for the Muslim protagonist" holding the opposite view, according to Brill's Islamic Encyclopedia.
Present-day Muslims who make interpretations that differ from what others believe are declared kafirs; fatwas (edicts by Islamic religious leaders) are issued ordering Muslims to kill them, and some such people have been killed also.
Murtad
Another group that are "distinguished from the mass of kafirun" are the murtad, or apostate ex-Muslims, who are considered renegades and traitors. Their traditional punishment is death, even, according to some scholars, if they recant their abandonment of Islam.
Muʿāhid / Dhimmī
Dhimmī are non-Muslims living under the protection of an Islamic state. Dhimmī are exempt from certain duties assigned specifically to Muslims if they paid the poll tax (jizya) but were otherwise equal under the laws of property, contract, and obligation according to some scholars, whereas others state that religious minorities subjected to the status of Dhimmī (such as Jews, Samaritans, Gnostics, Mandeans, and Zoroastrians) were inferior to the status of Muslims in Islamic states. Jews and Christians were required to pay the jizyah while pagans, depending on the different rulings of the four madhhab, might be required to accept Islam, pay the jizya, be exiled, or be killed under the Islamic death penalty. Some historians believe that forced conversion was rare in Islamic history, and most conversions to Islam were voluntary. Muslim rulers were often more interested in conquest than conversion.
Upon payment of the tax (jizya), the dhimmī would receive a receipt of payment, either in the form of a piece of paper or parchment or as a seal humiliatingly placed upon their neck, and was thereafter compelled to carry this receipt wherever they went within the realms of Islam. Failure to produce an up-to-date jizya receipt on the request of a Muslim could result in death or forced conversion to Islam of the dhimmī in question.
Types of disbelief
Various types of unbelief recognized by legal scholars include:
- kufr bi-l-qawl (verbally expressed unbelief)
- kufr bi-l-fi'l (unbelief expressed through action)
- kufr bi-l-i'tiqad (unbelief of convictions)
- kufr akbar (major unbelief)
- kufr asghar (minor unbelief)
- takfir 'amm (general charge of unbelief, i.e. charged against a community like ahmadiyya
- takfir al-mu'ayyan (charge of unbelief against a particular individual)
- takfir al-'awamm (charge of unbelief against "rank and file Muslims" for example following taqlid.
- takfir al-mutlaq (category covers general statements such as 'whoever says X or does Y is guilty of unbelief')
- kufr asli (original unbelief of non-Muslims, those born to non-Muslim family)
- kufr tari (acquired unbelief of formerly observant Muslims, i.e. apostates)
Iman
Muslim belief/doctrine is often summarized in "the Six Articles of Faith", (the first five are mentioned together in the 2:285).
- God
- His angels
- His Messengers
- His Revealed Books,
- The Day of Resurrection
- Al-Qadar, Divine Preordainments, i.e. whatever God has ordained must come to pass
According to the Salafi scholar Muhammad Taqi-ud-Din al-Hilali, "kufr is basically disbelief in any of the articles of faith." He also lists several different types of major disbelief, (disbelief so severe it excludes those who practice it completely from the fold of Islam):
- Kufr-at-Takdhib: disbelief in divine truth or the denial of any of the articles of Faith (Quran 39:32)
- Kufr-al-iba wat-takabbur ma'at-Tasdiq: refusing to submit to God's Commandments after conviction of their truth (Quran 2:34)
- Kufr-ash-Shakk waz-Zann: doubting or lacking conviction in the six articles of Faith. (Quran 18:35–38)
- Kufr-al-I'raadh: turning away from the truth knowingly or deviating from the obvious signs which God has revealed. (Quran 46:3)
- Kufr-an-Nifaaq: hypocritical disbelief (Quran 63:2–3)
Minor disbelief or Kufran-Ni'mah indicates "ungratefulness of God's Blessings or Favours".
According to another source, a paraphrase of the tafsir by Ibn Kathir, there are eight kinds of Al-Kufr al-Akbar (major unbelief), some are the same as those described by Al-Hilali (Kufr-al-I'rad, Kufr-an-Nifaaq) and some different.
- Kufrul-'Inaad: Disbelief out of stubbornness. This applies to someone who knows the Truth and admits to knowing the Truth, and knowing it with their tongue, but refuses to accept it and refrains from making a declaration.
- Kufrul-Inkaar: Disbelief out of denial. This applies to someone who denies with both heart and tongue.
- Kufrul-Juhood: Disbelief out of rejection. This applies to someone who acknowledges the truth in their heart, but rejects it with their tongue. This type of kufr is applicable to those who call themselves Muslims but who reject any necessary and accepted norms of Islam such as Salah and Zakat.
- Kufrul-Nifaaq: Disbelief out of hypocrisy. This applies to someone who pretends to be a believer but conceals their disbelief. Such a person is called a munafiq or hypocrite.
- Kufrul-Kurh: Disbelief out of detesting any of God's commands.
- Kufrul-Istihzaha: Disbelief due to mockery and derision.
- Kufrul-I'raadh: Disbelief due to avoidance. This applies to those who turn away and avoid the truth.
- Kufrul-Istibdaal: Disbelief because of trying to substitute God's Laws with man-made laws.
Ignorance
In Islam, jahiliyyah ('ignorance') refers to the time of Arabia before Islam.
History of the usage of the term
Usage in the earliest sense
Further information: Islam and other religionsWhen the Islamic empire expanded, the word kafir was broadly used as a descriptive term for all pagans and anyone else who disbelieved in Islam. Historically, the attitude toward unbelievers in Islam was determined more by socio-political conditions than by religious doctrine. A tolerance toward unbelievers "impossible to imagine in contemporary Christendom" prevailed even to the time of the Crusades, particularly with respect to the People of the Book. However, due to animosity towards Franks, the term kafir developed into a term of abuse. During the Mahdist War, the Mahdist State used the term kuffar against Ottoman Turks, and the Turks themselves used the term kuffar towards Persians during the Ottoman-Safavid wars. In modern Muslim popular imagination, the dajjal (Antichrist-like figure) will have k-f-r written on his forehead.
However, there was extensive religious violence in India between Muslims and non-Muslims during the Delhi Sultanate and Mughal Empire (before the political decline of Islam). In their memoirs on Muslim invasions, enslavement and plunder of this period, many Muslim historians in South Asia used the term kafir for Hindus, Buddhists, Sikhs and Jains. Raziuddin Aquil states that "non-Muslims were often condemned as kafirs, in medieval Indian Islamic literature, including court chronicles, Sufi texts and literary compositions" and fatwas were issued that justified persecution of the non-Muslims.
Relations between Jews and Muslims in the Arab world and use of the word kafir were equally as complex, and over the last century, issues regarding kafir have arisen over the conflict in Israel and Palestine. Calling the Jews of Israel, "the usurping kafir", Yasser Arafat turned on the Muslim resistance and "allegedly set a precedent for preventing Muslims from mobilizing against 'aggressor disbelievers' in other Muslim lands, and enabled 'the cowardly, alien kafir' to achieve new levels of intervention in Muslim affairs."
In 2019, Nahdlatul Ulama, the largest independent Islamic organization in the world, issued a proclamation urging Muslims to refrain from using the word kafir to refer to non-Muslims, as the term is both offensive and perceived to be "theologically violent".
Muhammad's parents
Further information: Banu Hashim See also: Religion in pre-Islamic ArabiaAccording to Islamic sources, none of forefathers of Muhammad were kafirs. According to Ibn Hajar, the Quran clearly declares that Ahl al-Fatrah were among the Muslims. Ibn Hajar is of opinion that none of the Muhammad's parents who were non-prophets were kafirs (disbelievers) and all the hadiths on this subject (although some hadiths seem to contradict it) mean that. Ibn Hajar says about Muhammad saying his ab is in the Hell, that the ab in the hadith refers to the paternal uncle and that Arabs widely use ab to refer to 'amm (paternal uncle). Most Sunni scholars hold the view that the parents of Muhammad are saved and inhabitants of Heaven.
Shia Muslim scholars likewise consider Muhammad's parents to be in Paradise. In contrast, the Salafi website IslamQA.info, founded by the Saudi Arabian Salafi scholar Muhammad Al-Munajjid, argues that Islamic tradition teaches that Muhammad's parents were kuffār ('disbelievers') who are in Hell.
Other uses
See also: Kaffir (racial term), Kafiristan, Kaffrine, and KaffrariaBy the 15th century, Muslims in Africa were using the word kaffir in reference to the non-Muslim African natives. Many of those kufari were enslaved and sold to European and Asian merchants by their Muslim captors, most of the merchants were from Portugal, which had established trading outposts along the coast of West Africa by that time. These European traders adopted the Arabic word and its derivatives.
Some of the earliest records of European usage of the word can be found in The Principal Navigations, Voyages, Traffiques and Discoveries of the English Nation (1589) by Richard Hakluyt. In volume 4, Hakluyt writes: "calling them Cafars and Gawars, which is, infidels or disbelievers". Volume 9 refers to the slaves (slaves called Cafari) and inhabitants of Ethiopia ("and they use to go in small shippes, and trade with the Cafars") by two different but similar names. The word is also used in reference to the coast of Africa as "land of Cafraria". The 16th century explorer Leo Africanus described the Cafri as "negroes", and he also stated that they constituted one of five principal population groups in Africa. He identified their geographical heartland as being located in a remote region of southern Africa, an area which he designated as Cafraria.
By the late 19th century, the word was in use in English-language newspapers and books. One of the Union-Castle Line ships operating off the South African coast was named SS Kafir. In the early 20th century, in his book The Essential Kafir, Dudley Kidd writes that the word kafir had come to be used for all dark-skinned South African tribes. Thus, in many parts of South Africa, kafir became synonymous with the word "native". Currently in South Africa, however, the word kaffir is regarded as a racial slur, applied pejoratively or offensively to blacks.
The song "Kafir" by the American technical death metal band Nile on its sixth album Those Whom the Gods Detest uses the violent attitudes that Muslim extremists have towards kafirs as subject matter.
The Nuristani people were formerly known as the Kaffirs of Kafiristan before the Afghan Islamization of the region.
The Kalash people who live in the Hindu Kush mountain range which is located south west of Chitral are referred to as kafirs by the Muslim population of Chitral.
In modern Spanish, the word cafre, derived from the Arabic word kafir by way of the Portuguese language, also means 'uncouth' or 'savage'.
See also
- Outline of Islam
- Glossary of Islam
- Index of Islam-related articles
- Ahl al-Fatrah
- Divisions of the world in Islam
- Giaour
- Kafirun (Sura)
- Kaffir (racial term)
- Takfir
- Takfiri
- Mumin
- Zandaqa
- Dar al-harb
- Discovery doctrine
References
Notes
- Oxford Islamic Studies Online states a better definition of kufr is 'to be thankless,' 'to be faithless.'
- That this verse criticizes a deviant form of Trinitarian belief which overstressed distinctiveness of the three persons at the expense of their unity. Modern scholars have also interpreted it as a reference to Jesus, who was often called "the third of three" in Syriac literature and as an intentional over-simplification of Christian doctrine intended to highlight its weakness from a strictly monotheistic perspective.
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External links
- Nonbelief: An Islamic Perspective
- Qur'an verses that speak about non-Muslims Archived 14 March 2022 at the Wayback Machine
- Takfir – Anathematizing
- Universal Validity of Religions and the Issue of Takfir
- Inminds.co.uk
- Hermeneutics of takfir
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