Here is a short essay I wrote for my Islamic Thought and Practice class.
Essay
1: The Islamic Revolution
During the time of Muhammad, around 570-632 AD, the
Arabian Peninsula was introduced to a variety of cultures and religious ideas,
via the trade routes running from the Spice Road to the coast. The main Empires
towards the north of the Arabian Peninsula both practiced monotheism,
Christianity in Byzantium and Zoroastrianism in Sassanid. To the south west, Arabia
was influenced by the country of Yemen, which was polytheistic.
Arabia, populated largely by Bedouin or tribal clans of
“Camel Nomads,”
practiced a polytheistic paganism which held that the gods manifested
themselves in natural objects, such as trees or rocks. An example of this is the
worship of the Ka’aba stone in Mecca, which was being performed before the rise
of Islam. The first major change that Muhammad’s religion brought to the
Arabian Peninsula was to denounce polytheism, and to propose the idea of
monotheism towards one of the local gods, Allah. This was borrowed largely
from the Jewish population in the area, as well as from the two monotheistic
empires to the north.
A second significant change Islam brought was a social
one, which drew the tribally independent Arabs into a common Umma, or nation. Islam taught that all
Muslims shared a common identity, as well as a common law, Sharia, which
“encompassed all relationships.”
This formation of an Umma also resulted in a political
change. The Byzantine and Sassanid
empires had been engaged in warfare from 450-629, and both nations were in a
state of weakness. As Gatje states, within a few years after the military exertions of the Arabs,
Byzantium was weakened, and the Sassanid Empire disappeared altogether.
In these three ways, Islam shaped history within the
Middle East, causing revolutionary changes in the Arab People’s religion, as
well as their social and political structure.
It is very interesting to learn about how Islam influenced the Middle East. I find it especially interesting that Islam introduced monotheism and the concept of Umma (unity pretty much right?) to the people groups. Very interesting. Well written Abby!
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