Actually, there are many misconceptions filling the mind of many
non-Muslims, who fail to perceive the significance and wisdom behind
acts of worship in Islam. That is why addressing those misconceptions
becomes obligatory in order to erase distortions about Islam. Thus, on
the case in point, we find it relevant to cite for you the following:
Sacrifice is not a pillar of Islam. We must look at the
occurrences in a contextual manner, understanding not only the
pre-Islamic institution of sacrifice, the Qur'anic reforms concerning
this practice, and the continuance of sacrifice in the Muslim world, but
also the context in which the Qur'anic revelations occurred. For it
seems that with many people, both non-Muslims and Muslims alike, context
is the key that they are missing.
With this in mind, let us start with the situation as it was in
pre-Islamic Arabia with regard to animal sacrifice. Not only did the
pagan Arabs sacrifice to a variety of gods in hopes of attaining
protection or some favor or material gain, but so, too, did the Jews of
that day seek to appease the One True God by blood sacrifice and burnt
offerings. Even the Christian community felt Jesus to be the last
sacrifice, the final lamb, so to speak, in an otherwise valid tradition
of animal sacrifice (where one's sins are absolved by the blood of
another).
Islam, however, broke away from this longstanding tradition of
appeasing an "angry God" and instead demanded personal sacrifice and
submission as the only way to die before death and reach "fana�" or
"extinction in Allah." The notion of "vicarious atonement of sin"
(absolving one's sins through the blood of another) is nowhere to be
found in the Qur'an. Neither is the idea of gaining favor by offering
the life of another to Allah. In Islam, all that is demanded as a
sacrifice is one's personal willingness to submit one's ego and
individual will to Allah.
One only has to look at how the Qur'an treats this subject, to
see a marked difference regarding sacrifice and whether or not Allah is
appeased by blood. The Qur'anic account of the sacrifice of Isma`il
ultimately speaks against blood atonement. Allah says: (Then when
(the son) reached (the age of) (serious) work with him, he said: "Oh my
son! I see in vision that I offer thee in sacrifice: Now see what is thy
view!" (The son) said: "Oh my father! Do As thou art commanded: Thou
wilt find me, if Allah so wills one practicing patience and constancy!"
So when they had both submitted their wills (to Allah), and he had laid
him prostrate on his forehead (for sacrifice), We called out to him, "Oh
Abraham! Thou hast already fulfilled the vision!" Thus indeed do We
reward those who do right. For this was obviously a trial and We
ransomed him with a momentous sacrifice.) (As-Safat 37: 102-107)
Notice that the Qur'an never says that Allah told Abraham to kill
(sacrifice) his son. Though subtle, this is very important, for the
moral lesson is very different from that which appears in the Bible.
Here, it teaches us that Abraham had a dream in which he saw himself
slaughtering his son. Abraham believed the dream and thought that the
dream was from Allah, but the Qur'an never says that the dream was from
Allah. However, in Abraham and Isma`il's willingness to make the
ultimate sacrifice�Abraham of his son, Isma`il of his own life�they are
able to transcend notions of self and false attachment to the material
realm, thus removing a veil between themselves and Allah, enabling
Allah's mercy to descend upon them as the Spirit of Truth and illuminate
them with divine wisdom (thus preventing a miscarriage of justice and
once and for all correcting the false notion of vicarious atonement of
sin).
For, certainly, Allah, the Ever Merciful, Most Compassionate,
would never ask a father to go against His command of "thou shall not
kill" and kill his own son in order to be accepted by Him. For the
Qur'an teaches us that Allah never advocates evil (see 7:28 and 16:90)
and that only Satan advocates evil and vice (24:21). The notion that
Allah would want us to do an immoral act runs counter to Allah's
justice.
As far as the yearly tradition that has followed this event (that
is, the sacrificing of a ram to commemorate Abraham and Isma`il's great
self sacrifice), we must understand it and the Qur'anic versus that
pertain to animal sacrifice, in relation to the time and place
circumstances under which these revelations were received and how people
were trying to make a personal sacrifice by sharing their limited means
of survival with the poorer members of their community.
That is to say, the underlying implication of Islam's attitude
toward ritual slaughter is not that of blood atonement, or seeking favor
with Allah through another's death, but rather, the act of thanking
Allah for one's sustenance and the personal sacrifice of sharing one's
possessions and valuable food with one's fellow humans. The ritual
itself is NOT the sacrifice. It is merely a method of killing where the
individuals kill as quickly as possible and acknowledge that only Allah
has the right to take a life and that they do so as a humble member of
Allah's creation in need of sustenance just like every other species in
Allah's creation.
So let us examine some of the appropriate verses in the Qur'an to
see what it has to say about sacrifice and how it related to life in
500 C.E. Arabia. (Also included is commentary by Yusuf Ali to show that
even someone who was pro-sacrifice with an understanding of animals as
subject to humans, did not champion wanton cruelty or notions of blood
atonement.) Allah says: (In them ye have benefits for a term appointed: In the end their place of sacrifice is near the Ancient House.) (Al-Hajj 22: 33)
�The word �In them� refers to cattle or animals offered for
sacrifice. It is quite true that they are useful in many ways to humans,
e.g., camels in desert countries are useful as mounts or for carrying
burdens or for giving milk, and so, for horses and oxen; and camels and
oxen are also good for meat, and camel's hair can be woven into cloth;
goats and sheep also yield milk and meat, and hair or wool. But if they
are used for sacrifice, they become symbols by which people show that
they are willing to give up some of their own benefits for the sake of
satisfying the needs of their poorer brethren." (Yusuf Ali commentary)
Allah also says: (To every people did We appoint rites (of
sacrifice) that they might celebrate the name of Allah over the
sustenance He gave them from animals (fit for food). But your God is One
God: Submit then your wills to Him (In Islam): and give thou the good
news to those who humble themselves.) (Al-Hajj 22: 34)
�This is the true end of sacrifice, not propitiation of higher
powers, for Allah is One, and He does not delight in flesh and blood,
but a symbol of thanksgiving to Allah by sharing meat with fellow
humans. The solemn pronouncement of Allah's name over the sacrifice is
an essential part of the rite." (Yusuf Ali commentary)
Allah says further: (It is not their meat nor their blood,
that reaches Allah: it is your piety that reaches Him: He has thus made
them subject to you, that ye may glorify Allah for His guidance to you:
And proclaim the Good News to all who do right.) (Al-Hajj 22: 37)
�No one should suppose that meat or blood is acceptable to the
One True God. It was a pagan fancy that Allah could be appeased by blood
sacrifice. But Allah does accept the offering of our hearts, and as a
symbol of such offer, some visible institution is necessary. He has
given us power over the brute creation, and permitted us to eat meat,
but only if we pronounce His name at the solemn act of taking life, for
without this solemn invocation, we are apt to forget the sacredness of
life. By this invocation we are reminded that wanton cruelty is not in
our thoughts, but only the need for food �" (Yusuf Ali commentary)
It is quite clear from the Qur'anic passages above that the issue
of animal sacrifice is in relation to the role animals played in
Arabian society at that place and time (as well as other societies with
similar climates and culture), in that humans are commanded to give
thanks to Allah and praise Allah for the sustenance He has given them
and that they should sacrifice something of value to themselves to
demonstrate their appreciation for what they have been given (which in
their case was the very animals on which their survival was based).
Excerpted, with slight modifications, from http://www.islamveg.com/sacri.html
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