Saturday, August 14, 2010

What Is Ramadan?

Ramadan 2010 began on or around August 11 and will end on or about September 10. Muslims, ever contentious about nearly every matter, even disagree among themselves as to when Ramadan should begin.

What does Ramadan really celebrate, particularly Eid ul-Fitr, which marks the end of Ramadan? If one understands the history of Islam and, especially, that of Ramadan, one will come to understand that such a commemoration, including iftar dinners at the White House, should be unacceptable to all those who oppose Islamic supremacism.

Ramadan involves more than prayers, fasting, and the giving of alms — all of which are part of the month long observance but which are also the outward signs of another message. By literal definition, of course, Ramadan commemorates Allah's "revealing" the Qur'an to Muhammad. But history clearly indicates that the "revelations" from Allah to Muhammad began around 610, some fourteen years earlier than 624.

Those earlier passages, sometimes referred to as the Meccan verses, are the oft-quoted peaceful verses in the Koran. Contrary to what one might expect, however, the last day of Ramadan does not celebrate the actual date of the earliest peaceful "revelations" of Allah to Muhammad but rather the Battle of Badr, the first significant military victory by the forces of Muhammad.

The Battle of Badr of March 17, 624, is one of the few military conflicts specifically mentioned in the Qur'an and holds a great deal of significance in Islam. Eid ul-Fitr, the final portion of Ramadan, has as its origin the aforementioned battle. Furthermore and most importantly, this battle marked the turning point for Islam, both politically and ideologically.

Having earlier fled to Medina along with followers who accepted him as their prophet whereas most of the tribes of Mecca did not, early on that morning in 624 Muhammad got word that a rich Quraish caravan from Syria was returning to Mecca. He therefore assembled the largest army he had ever been able to muster, some 300 men, with the original intent of raiding the caravan. After his men successfully overtook the caravan and brought back the booty, Muhammad then conveniently received a new "revelation" from Allah — a "revelation" which not only included rejoicing in having captured an enemy's caravan but which also called "proved" that Muhammad had been preaching the true way all along. Fulfilling Destiny, Muhammad and his forces proceeded to trounce the Quraish as punishment for having earlier rejected the prophet's teachings. From this source:
In the name of Allah, the Beneficient, the Merciful.

The battle of Badr was the most important among the Islamic battles of Destiny. For the first time the followers of the new faith were put into a serious test. Had victory been the lot of the pagan army while the Islamic Forces were still at the beginning of their developments, the faith of Islam could have come to an end.

No one was aware of the importance of the outcome of the Battle as the Prophet (S.A.W.) himself. We might read the depth of his anxiety in his prayer before the beginning of the Battle when he stood up supplicating his Lord:
God this is Quraish. It has come with all its arrogance and boastfulness, trying to discredit Thy Apostle. God, I ask Thee to humiliate them tomorrow. God, if this Muslim band will perish today, Thou shall not be worshipped.
[...]

This battle laid the foundation of the Islamic State...
In other words, victory at the Battle of Badr proved to Muhammad and his adherents that Islam should from that time forth take on a militant aspect because such is the will of Allah. From the day of the Battle of Badr on, the tone of the verses in the Qur'an changed. These more recent "revelations," sometimes referred to as the Medinan verses, abrogated the earlier and peaceful Meccan ones. Because preaching and tolerance had not brought Muhammad the following which he needed in order to establish himself and Islam as political forces to be reckoned with, Allah, via a military victory, showed the prophet a more effective way to spread Islam. Therefore, Muhammad's victory at the Battle of Badr symbolizes both the way to bring about the will of Allah and the will of Allah itself.

In sum, Ramadan is, in and of itself, a statement advocating submission to Islam and to the will of Allah. Ah, the dhimmitude and submission of all Western leaders when they send Ramadan greetings to the Islamic world!

5 comments:

LL said...

It's fitting and proper that barack hussein obama, a Muslim, celebrate Ramadan.

I think he's the first US President who has, but then again he's also our first Muslim president.

However it's important to note that he has (sort of) denied it, claiming instead to be a member of a church that bases its teachings on the hatred of white people (Black Liberation Theology).

Both faiths he adheres to are faiths based on hatred.

Am I the only one that finds that to be a fascinating insight into barack hussein obama?

Pastorius said...

No, you certainly are not the only one.

Damien said...

Always On Watch,

I saw an article somewhere that said Muslims were worried that since Ramadan this year would be celebrated around 9/11, it could lead to a "misunderstanding and more hatred of their religion." Someone should point out, that Muslims do things that do far more to make their religion look bad than having one of their holidays happen to occur around 9/11. The reason behind the holiday, for one thing, does more to make Islam look bad than the fact that it happens to be occurring around 9/11 this year. Not to mention the reason 9/11 happened in the first place.

Always On Watch said...

Damien,
it happens to be occurring around 9/11 this year

Another jihad attack, perhaps?

I wouldn't be surprised. It would likely be launched by a lone jihadist or, perhaps, even Al Qaeda. AQ has a habit of perseverating once they latch onto something.

Damien said...

Always On Watch,

In this case, its not likely. Most likely its just the way the Islamic calender is set up. Unlike the western calender, theirs is based on the cycles of the moon.

Islam's Holy Days: Muslim Holidays Define What's Important for Muslims

So its just a coincidence that Ramadan will be happening around 9/11 this year. If they were really changing it to attack us, I'd imagine they'd change it for every year as well. Don't think to much about it.