DECONSTRUCTING THE FIVE PILLARS OF ISLAM: Islam is composed of five pillars: Belief, Worship/Prayer, Fasting, Charity, and the Holy Pilgrimage of Hajj. To practice Islam, one must believe in and practice all five pillars. But only men and women who have reached puberty are obligated to observe the pillars. The first Pillar of Islam, “Belief,” requires Muslims to profess, in Arabic, “There is no god but God, and Muhammad, peace be upon him, is His messenger.” This phrase is known as the shahada, and is considered the central pillar to Islam because it affirms both God’s oneness and the essential role of the Prophet Muhammad. “The first pillar is more a testimony of the soul, and the rest are testimonies of the physical body,” explained Arif Komal, the Imam of the Mosque of Nasreen in San Luis Obispo. An Imam is a religious scholar who leads all five of the daily prayers and memorizes and teaches from the Quran. “The Quran is considered the manual, and Prophet Muhammad is the perfect person chosen by God to share and enforce the laws,” Komal said. The second pillar is to perform the salaah, in Arabic, five times a day—at sunrise, in the afternoon and evening, at sunset, and late at night. “When you pray, it removes your sins and prevents you from doing acts of evil,” Komal said. “It is done out of love, and helps you remember that God is watching you.” The third pillar is fasting during the month of Ramadan. Ramadan is usually the ninth or 10th month of the lunar calendar, and a time during which Muslims are expected to refrain from eating, drinking, smoking, or sex from dawn until dusk. “Fasting teaches patience. It makes us aware of our hunger, and, for those who usually aren’t hungry, it makes us realize how lucky we are for the gifts we receive from God,” Komal said. At the end of the month, Muslims celebrate Eid ul-Fitr, the break-fast feast, by cooking a special meal, praising God, and visiting loved ones. Komal said fasting during Ramadan is also meant to inspire people to practice the fourth pillar of Islam: donating to charity. “It makes you want to take care of people who are less fortunate than you are, people who have no food or no clean water,” he said. At the end of Ramadan, all Muslims who are financially able donate approximately 2.5 percent of their income to poor members of the Ummah, or community. Donating money, Komal said, is a way to “purify the wealth that you do have.” “It is a decrease of wealth, but God says in the Quran your wealth will actually increase because it is purified,” he said. Lastly, all Muslims who are financially able must make the Hajj, a holy pilgrimage to Mecca, at least once in their lifetimes.

DIVINE DESIGNS: The Mosque of Nasreen in San Luis Obispo features Middle Eastern-inspired architecture and exotic carpets installed diagonally to face Mecca. Credit: BY STEVE E. MILLER
DECONSTRUCTING THE FIVE PILLARS OF ISLAM: Islam is composed of five pillars: Belief, Worship/Prayer, Fasting, Charity, and the Holy Pilgrimage of Hajj. To practice Islam, one must believe in and practice all five pillars. But only men and women who have reached puberty are obligated to observe the pillars. The first Pillar of Islam, “Belief,” requires Muslims to profess, in Arabic, “There is no god but God, and Muhammad, peace be upon him, is His messenger.” This phrase is known as the shahada, and is considered the central pillar to Islam because it affirms both God’s oneness and the essential role of the Prophet Muhammad. “The first pillar is more a testimony of the soul, and the rest are testimonies of the physical body,” explained Arif Komal, the Imam of the Mosque of Nasreen in San Luis Obispo. An Imam is a religious scholar who leads all five of the daily prayers and memorizes and teaches from the Quran. “The Quran is considered the manual, and Prophet Muhammad is the perfect person chosen by God to share and enforce the laws,” Komal said. The second pillar is to perform the salaah, in Arabic, five times a day—at sunrise, in the afternoon and evening, at sunset, and late at night. “When you pray, it removes your sins and prevents you from doing acts of evil,” Komal said. “It is done out of love, and helps you remember that God is watching you.” The third pillar is fasting during the month of Ramadan. Ramadan is usually the ninth or 10th month of the lunar calendar, and a time during which Muslims are expected to refrain from eating, drinking, smoking, or sex from dawn until dusk. “Fasting teaches patience. It makes us aware of our hunger, and, for those who usually aren’t hungry, it makes us realize how lucky we are for the gifts we receive from God,” Komal said. At the end of the month, Muslims celebrate Eid ul-Fitr, the break-fast feast, by cooking a special meal, praising God, and visiting loved ones. Komal said fasting during Ramadan is also meant to inspire people to practice the fourth pillar of Islam: donating to charity. “It makes you want to take care of people who are less fortunate than you are, people who have no food or no clean water,” he said. At the end of Ramadan, all Muslims who are financially able donate approximately 2.5 percent of their income to poor members of the Ummah, or community. Donating money, Komal said, is a way to “purify the wealth that you do have.” “It is a decrease of wealth, but God says in the Quran your wealth will actually increase because it is purified,” he said. Lastly, all Muslims who are financially able must make the Hajj, a holy pilgrimage to Mecca, at least once in their lifetimes.

A group of men gathers to pray in a corner room of a second-story office building on East Plaza Drive in Santa Maria. On the street below and a few blocks over on Broadway, someone has hung Christmas decorations and twinkling lights, signifying the beginning of the Christmas holiday.

But unlike many of their neighbors, the men in the room aren’t celebrating the birth of Jesus, nor are they concerned about which stores are offering the best holiday sales. Right now, they’re all completely absorbed in performing afternoon salaah—an installment of the formal prayer of Islam.

The men stand side by side, facing northeast toward Mecca, behind a worship leader as he recites in lilting Arabic the holy prayers designated in the Quran:

“In the name of Allah, the Most Gracious the Most Merciful … You alone we worship, and You alone we ask for help …”

Together, the men go through every Rakaa, or unit, of prayer and corresponding movements, including prostrating themselves before the Lord. The room is silent, except for the murmur of whispered entreaties and the rustle of clothes.

EMBLEMS OF ISLAM: The Rub el Hizb octogram and crescent and star are common symbols of Islam, as seen here outside the Mosque of Nasreen. Credit: BY STEVE E. MILLER

To the unfamiliar eye, the salaah might seem like a mysterious, ancient custom. But to the followers of Islam, it’s a powerful and vibrant component of their faith.

In contrast to practitioners of many other religions, a believer of Islam worships God directly without the intercession of priests, clergy, or saints.

“The beauty of Islam is that no one owns it,” said Santa Maria resident Mateen Aliniazee, who led the Friday prayer at the Central Coast Islamic Center of Santa Maria.

“It’s all about submission to, and worshipping, God. It’s a personal relationship with God,” he said. “There is no go-between between you and God. I think that’s part of what attracts people of all cultures to the religion.”

But Islam is also very much about community and living in peace.

“Islam is not just ritual,” the center’s volunteer director, Mohammed Diab, said in a sermon following the prayer. “It’s how you treat your brother, your wife and children. It’s how you treat your fellow human being. Putting a smile on your brother’s face will be your reward.”

FAMILY FEAST: Muslims up and down the Central Coast come together once a month at the Ludwick Community Center to celebrate their faith and culture. And at the end of the Hajj, everyone shares in the Eid-Ul-Adha, the “greater” of the two Islamic holidays, meant to commemorate the life of Prophet Ibrahim. Credit: BY STEVE E. MILLER

Pillars of the community

A Muslim’s duty is to balance leading a righteous lifestyle with caring for one’s family and community. This symbiotic devotion to both God and community is expressed well in the Hajj, the holy pilgrimage to Mecca.

The Hajj is one of the five pillars, or duties, of Islam that faithful Muslims are called to live by. According to the Quran, all believers who are financially able must go on a pilgrimage to Mecca at least once in their lifetime.

For five days, Muslims journey back and forth together between Mecca and several other nearby towns to pray and participate in holy rituals.

During this time, all of the pilgrims wear an Ihram, a garment composed of two white sheets. While wearing the Ihram, pilgrims may not have sex, shave, clip their nails, or wear perfume.

When everyone is wearing the Ihram, Central Coast Islamic Center’s Aliniazee said, “Status is of no importance. It’s all about sacrificing and purifying yourself in the presence of God. There is really no difference—black, white, yellow, brown—everyone is the same.

“There will be kings and prime ministers kneeling and praying right next to someone who can barely feed himself,” Aliniazee said.

HAPPY MUHARRAM!: This year, Muslims on the Central Coast—and around the world—will be celebrating the New Year on Dec. 17 and 18, a little bit earlier than their Gregorian calendar-centric neighbors. Muharram, the Islamic New Year, is a generally low-key event in the Muslim world, celebrated with less pomp than the two major festivals, Eid-ul-Fitr and Eid-ul-Adha. There are no specific religious customs practiced on this day, but Muslims will use it as a time to reflect on the Hijra, the migration of the Prophet Muhammad and his followers from Mecca to Medina in 622 CE to set up the first Islamic state. This year’s Muharram marks the 1431st year A.H. (after the Hijra) on the Islamic calendar. “Before [the Hijra], everyone practiced tribalism. Your identity, your chance of survival, was all based on your tribe. This group left all that to follow Muhammad and his vision,” explained Stephen Lloyd-Moffett, head of the religious studies program at Cal Poly, San Luis Obispo. Lloyd-Moffett said Muslims view Muharram as a time to “recommit themselves to the grand vision of Prophet Muhammad”—that everyone is united and part of Allah’s Ummah, meaning “community” or “nation.” “It’s very telling that this [holiday] starts the Islamic calendar because it’s a perfect example of the Islamic world view—to cast off all the things that divide us and recommit ourselves to God,” he said. But as with most religious histories, there is also a darker side to Muharram. For Shi’ite Muslims, Muharram begins the period of mourning for Imam Husayn, a blood relative and potential successor of Prophet Muhammad who was killed by the Sunnis in 61 A.H. “He was martyr, but he was more than that. For many Shi’ites, he’s not quite equal to Muhammad but almost,” Lloyd-Moffett said. “It’s an event that divides the Shi’ites and Sunnis to this day.”

Like a giant, white cloud, the pilgrims together perform a series of rituals meant to commemorate the lives of Ibrahim (Abraham), the founding father of the religion, and his wife, Hajra (Hagar).

One of the central rituals is the Tawaf, in which everyone enters the sacred mosque and walks counter-clockwise around the Kaaba—the central shrine of Islam—seven times.

Another essential ritual is the Sa’ee, which means “to run” in Arabic, and involves running or walking seven times between the hills of Safa and Marwah. This is a reenactment of Hajra’s frantic search for water when she and her baby, Ismaeel (Ishmael), were banished to the desert.

When Hajra went to search for water, the story goes, she left the crying baby under a shrub, and he struck the ground with his heel, releasing a gushing spring of water. To this day, the Zamzam well is still bubbling up, and Muslims are allowed to drink from it during the Hajj.

“It cures every disease, and it has nutrition, so when you drink it you’re not hungry,” said Santa Maria resident Mohammad Arain, who just returned from the Hajj. “Your body completely absorbs it.”

People come from all over the world to drink the water and be healed, Arain said.

On the third day—the busiest day of the Hajj—everyone performs the Ramy al-Jamarat, a ritual in which they stone three pillars in Mecca meant to symbolize the three times Ibrahim resisted the temptations of Satan while deciding whether or not to obey Allah and sacrifice his son, Ismaeel. While stoning the pillars, people often reflect on their own sins and recommit to living a righteous life in the eyes of Allah.

“It’s really very emotional. Once you get there, you truly forget the world around you—your family, the people praying next to you—you just want to pray, and ask God for forgiveness, and do the rituals,” Arain said.

At the same time the sacrifices occur at Mecca, Muslims around the world perform similar sacrifices as part of Eid ul-Adha, translated as the “Festival of Sacrifice.” Muslims split food from the sacrifices (usually lamb) equally among their families, the community, and the poor.

SHARING THE EXPERIENCE: Santa Maria resident Mohammad Arain recently returned home from the Hajj, a holy pilgrimage to Mecca and fifth pillar of Islam. “It’s really very emotional. Once you get there, you truly forget the world around you,” he said. Credit: BY STEVE E. MILLER

“For people who can’t go on the Hajj, it’s like the Muslim equivalent to Christmas,” said Imam Arif Komal, the leader of the Mosque of Nasreen in San Luis Obispo—the only mosque on the Central Coast.

This year, Muslims all over the Central Coast came together to feast and celebrate at a special dinner on the Friday after Thanksgiving and a picnic on Saturday.

CAPTION: The Mosque of Nasreen, located on Walnut Street in San Luis Obispo, opened in June of 2008. It was built in the memory of Nasreen Iqbal, a longtime San Luis Obispo resident. Credit: BY STEVE E. MILLER

“We were really lucky this year because the first day of the Eid fell on Thanksgiving, so we got it off [from school and work]. Usually our holidays aren’t recognized, so we don’t get them off,” explained Central Coast native Nahlah Kolkailah during a monthly gathering at the Ludwick Community Center in San Luis Obispo.

The center, along with the Mosque of Nasreen, is a central meeting place for about 400 to 500 Muslims living in cities from Lompoc to Paso Robles.

Kolkailah said having the monthly gatherings and celebrating the Islamic holidays with other Muslims gives her “a sense of identity and unity, especially in a small community where there isn’t very much diversity.”

“It means a lot to keep your identity and culture a part of you,” she said. “It’s not just about the festive feeling.”

Kolkailah added she is especially glad to be able to share her beliefs and traditions with her 3-year-old son, Yunus.

COMMUNAL CULTURES: Nahlah Kolkailah, a 25-year San Luis Obispo resident, explains aspects of the Muslim culture, including her choice to wear the hijab. Translated as “cover,” the hijab is meant as a way to show humility toward God. “It’s not something that’s opposed on me,” she said. “It’s a personal choice.” Credit: BY STEVE E. MILLER

“We gets to learn the language and learn about the culture and who he is,” she said.

Each family is different when it comes to celebrating Eid ul-Adha. But Kolkailah said the main focus of the “greater Eid” is to commemorate the life of Prophet Ibrahim and thank Allah for the blessings in one’s life.

“A lot of people assume we only celebrate Ramadan,” she said. “When I explain the Eid ul-Adha to them, they’re fascinated.”

Rather than shying away from sharing her culture with other people, Kolkailah said she enjoys the interaction.

“I’d rather have someone come up to me and ask me questions, even if they think it’s trivial or uneducated, rather than judge me,” she said.

PRAISING ALLAH: A group of men meet weekly at the Central Coast Islamic Center of Santa Maria on East Plaza Drive to pray together. Credit: BY STEVE E. MILLER

Unfortunately, she said there have been plenty of times when people did the latter.

“I’ve had people tell me, ‘Go back to Iraq or Afghanistan.’ It usually changes on what’s going on in the news,” she said.

And sometimes people’s prejudices can become dangerous: “Someone tried to throw a knife at my sister,” she said.

The way to fight such hatred and violence, Kolkailah said, is to educate oneself.

“Cultures are easy to judge when they’re taken out of context. But it’s not fair to label an entire culture based on what’s going on in the media. There are always two sides to a story,” she said.

“I think, at the end of the day, we have a lot more similarities in our religions and cultures than differences,” she added. “It’s easy to focus on the differences, but it’s so much more rewarding to look at the things we have in common.”

 Contact News Editor Amy Asman at aasman@santa maria sun.com.

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