Portal: Islamic Law: Difference between revisions

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*[[The Pact of Umar]]
*[[The Pact of Umar]]
*[[Analysis of the Pact of Umar]]
*[[Analysis of the Pact of Umar]]
*[[Taqiyya]]
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==Crime and punishment==
==Crime and punishment==
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*[[Tatbir (Shi'i Devotional Self-Flagellation)]]
*[[Tatbir (Shi'i Devotional Self-Flagellation)]]
*[[Mutaween (Religious Police)]]
*[[Mutaween (Religious Police)]]
*[[Islam and Violence]]
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==Jihad==
==Jihad==
<br />
{{PortalArticle|image=|summary=|title=Jihad in Islamic Law|description=Jihad has been a central imperative in Islamic law throughout history and remains one today. Although the doctrine of global religious and imperial conquest has proven controversial in recent times, particularly when groups have attempted to implement it, the basic contours of the doctrine have remained static since rise of first Islamic caliphates.}}{{PortalArticle|title=Invitation to Islam Prior to Jihad|summary=|image=Muhammad-Letter-To-Heraclius.jpg|description=The practice of inviting non-Muslim nations to join Islam or pay the Jizyah prior to engaging in offensive Jihad was first initiated by the Prophet Muhammad. His example was then followed by the Rightly-Guided Caliphs and the leaders of Islamic empires, codified within the Islamic Shari'ah. Where radical Islamists have today tried to emulate Muhammad and implement this well-established practice, they have generally been faced with widespread criticism.}}{{PortalArticle|image=|summary=|title=Suicide Bombing in Islam|description=There are many hadith narrations and Qur'anic verses forbidding suicide, however, there are also some hadith (and one Qur'anic verse related to one of them) which indicate that killing oneself is allowed under certain circumstances. Islamic law has generally been willing to amplify this variety of exception particularly in legal contexts, which has led numerous Islamic jurists to sanction suicide bombing in certain contexts (even where they have not supported the particular movements or groups implementing the practice).}}{{PortalArticle|summary=|image=|description="Fard" means Compulsory. Jihad is an Individual duty and is also a community responsibility, or sufficiency duty, for each and every Muslim. While modern voices differentiate between a personal or greater Jihad and a military or lesser Jihad, such a dichotomy is not found in classical and especially early Islamic literature, and finds no endorsement in Islamic scripture, which refers to Jihad overwhelmingly, and some argue exclusively, as a doctrine of military conquest, with the reference to internal struggle being a metaphorical usage.|title=Jihad as Obligation (Fard)}}
 
=== Other articles in this category ===
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*[[Khilafah (Caliphate)]]
*[[Dar al-Harb and Dar al-Islam (the Abodes of War and Peace)]]
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*[[Taqiyya]]
*[[Islam and Violence]]
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*[[Jizyah]]
*[[Dhimma]]
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==Ritual==
==Ritual==
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