Jump to content

Sakina: Difference between revisions

From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
Content deleted Content added
Dhushara (talk | contribs)
Usage in the Quran: reference for Ibn Sa’d
Dhushara (talk | contribs)
m spaces
Line 21: Line 21:
''"Allah's Good Pleasure was on the Believers when they swore Fealty to thee under the Tree: He knew what was in their hearts, and He sent down [[Sakina]] [Tranquillity] (alssakeenata) to them; and He rewarded them with a speedy Victory;"'' (48:18)
''"Allah's Good Pleasure was on the Believers when they swore Fealty to thee under the Tree: He knew what was in their hearts, and He sent down [[Sakina]] [Tranquillity] (alssakeenata) to them; and He rewarded them with a speedy Victory;"'' (48:18)


The root of the word is ''sa-ka-na'' which means "dwelled" or "remained in place". This further supports the association with the [[Shekhinah]] as "indwelling". The fact that the word is preceded by "al" (the) shows that it does not denote a name, but has an abstract meaning. This is consistent with the [[Shekhinah]] as abstract feminine and is the only remaining reference to the [[sacred feminine]] in [[Islam]] after [[Allat]], [[al-Uzza]] and [[Manat]] were excommunicated in the [[Satanic Verses]] according to [[al-Tabari]] and [[Ibn Sa’d]]<ref> Armstrong , Karen "Muhammad" 1991 Victor Gollancz p 113</ref>.
The root of the word is ''sa-ka-na'' which means "dwelled" or "remained in place". This further supports the association with the [[Shekhinah]] as "indwelling". The fact that the word is preceded by "al" (the) shows that it does not denote a name, but has an abstract meaning. This is consistent with the [[Shekhinah]] as abstract feminine and is the only remaining reference to the [[sacred feminine]] in [[Islam]] after [[Allat]], [[al-Uzza]] and [[Manat]] were excommunicated in the [[Satanic Verses]] according to [[al-Tabari]] and [[Ibn Sa’d]]<ref> Armstrong , Karen "Muhammad" 1991 Victor Gollancz p 113</ref>.


Another association with the concord of dwellings in peace coincides with the attribution of the Shekhinah to matrimonial concord and the tent of Sarah:
Another association with the concord of dwellings in peace coincides with the attribution of the Shekhinah to matrimonial concord and the tent of Sarah:

Revision as of 06:48, 25 July 2007

Sakina (Arabic: سكينة) is an Arabic word derived from "Sakoon", meaning "peace" [1] or "tranquility".

Usage in the Quran

Sakina is the Spirit of Tranquillity, or Peace of Reassurance, mentioned in the Quran which descended upon Muhammad and the believers, when making an unarmed pilgrimage to Mecca, and faced with an opposing military force of the Quraysh, he struck the Treaty of Hudaybiyah.

"He it is Who sent down the sakina into the hearts of the believers that they might add faith unto their faith" (48:4)

Karen Armstrong [2] notes: “The sakina it will also be recalled, seems to be related to the Hebrew Shekhinah, the term for God’s presence in the world”.

The Shekhinah is commonly referred to as the indwelling feminine face of God manifest on Earth in matrimonial concord, which retreated in the Fall, and will return as scattered shards or 'sparks' in the final unveiling.

The purported association with the Hebrew Shekhinah is reinforced by Quranic reference to the Ark of the Covenant:

"And their Prophet said unto them: Lo! the token of his kingdom is that there shall come unto you the ark wherein is the sakina from your Lord, and a remnant of that which the house of Moses and the house of Aaron left behind, the angels bearing it. Lo! herein shall be a token for you if (in truth) ye are believers." (2:248)

Another Quranic verse portrays it as simply being 'sakina' (reassurance), rather than an actual human girl predicted to come in the future as an incarnation of 'tranquility':

"Allah's Good Pleasure was on the Believers when they swore Fealty to thee under the Tree: He knew what was in their hearts, and He sent down Sakina [Tranquillity] (alssakeenata) to them; and He rewarded them with a speedy Victory;" (48:18)

The root of the word is sa-ka-na which means "dwelled" or "remained in place". This further supports the association with the Shekhinah as "indwelling". The fact that the word is preceded by "al" (the) shows that it does not denote a name, but has an abstract meaning. This is consistent with the Shekhinah as abstract feminine and is the only remaining reference to the sacred feminine in Islam after Allat, al-Uzza and Manat were excommunicated in the Satanic Verses according to al-Tabari and Ibn Sa’d [3].

Another association with the concord of dwellings in peace coincides with the attribution of the Shekhinah to matrimonial concord and the tent of Sarah:

"And God gave you your houses as a quiescent place (sakanan)." (16:80)

Sakina is further mentioned in the following verse:

"While the Unbelievers got up in their hearts heat and cant - the heat and cant of ignorance,- Allah sent down His Sakina [Tranquillity] (sakeenatahu) to his Messenger and to the Believers, and made them stick close to the command of self-restraint; and well were they entitled to it and worthy of it. And Allah has full knowledge of all things." (48:26)

This point is reinforced by another Quranic passage:

"If you will not aid him, Allah certainly aided him when those who disbelieved expelled him, he being the second of the two, when they were both in the cave, when he said to his companion: 'Grieve not, surely Allah is with us.' So Allah sent down His sakina -peace (Sakīnatahu) upon him and strengthened him with hosts which you did not see..." (9:40)

This passage with the first above gives rise to a warning about the qualified nature of the peace, or tranquillity, expressed in the Quranic form of Sakina. In three distinct passages, at Hudaybiyah (48:4), under the tree (48:18), and in the cave (9:40), sakina is associated with another concept, takiya, which means the right to fake peace or lie still when you are weak, so as to ultimately defeat your enemy when you are stronger. Takiya and its relationsip with Hudaybiyah has been specifically associated with Yasser Arafat's attitude to the Oslo Peace Accords as expressed in his speech in South Africa [4] in 1993 shortly after signing the accords.Takiya has also been attributed to Iran's strategy on nuclear 'power' - 'Mahmoud Ahmadinejad practises the Takiya' [5], and the dissembling survival strategies of Shiites under Sunni dominance. In Muslim apocalyptic vision, the world is divided between Domain of Islam and the Domain of War - Dar al-Harb, thus invoking takiya as the strategic underlying basis in jihad of any transient peace treaty.

Karen Armstrong [ibid] notes that the episode in the cave hearkens to a time "when Abu Bake and Muhammad had hidden for three days in the Cave outside Mecca, despised and rejected by their kinsmen and facing the possibility of imminent, pointless death", only later to regroup in greater strength in Medina, confirming the consistent undercurrent of takiya underlying sakina. The peace treaty at Hudaybiyah was struck for 10 years, but 2 years later, when his forces were stronger and the Meccans were living securely and off their guard, the prophet marched into Mecca. Muslims claim it was necessary to retaliate because the treaty was technically broken by skirmishes from allies of the other side, however Karen Armstrong [6] comments rather that they had handed Muhammad "a perfect excuse".

References

  1. ^ http://www.behindthename.com/php/view.php?name=sakina
  2. ^ Armstrong , Karen "Muhammad" 1991 Victor Gollancz p 224
  3. ^ Armstrong , Karen "Muhammad" 1991 Victor Gollancz p 113
  4. ^ http://www.worldnetdaily.com/news/article.asp?ARTICLE_ID=27712
  5. ^ http://regimechangeiniran.com/2005/07/mahmoud-ahmadinejad-practises
  6. ^ Armstrong , Karen "Muhammad" 1991 Victor Gollancz p 241

See also