2010
DOI: 10.1163/156852710x501342
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Gift of the Body in Islam: The Prophet Muhammad's Camel Sacrifice and Distribution of Hair and Nails at his Farewell Pilgrimage

Abstract: The following pages examine the relationship between the prophet Muhammad's sacrifice of the camels and the distribution of his hair at the conclusion of his farewell pilgrimage just before his death. A study of the accounts of the Prophet's camel sacrifice shows that it prefigures the annual rites of the Ḥ ajj using the biblical model of Abraham's sacrifice to align other pre-Islamic practices, including those associated with the cult at Mecca, with the origins of a specifically Islamic civilization. The pro… Show more

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Cited by 24 publications
(3 citation statements)
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“…2.1 Qurban Qurban in the Islamic ritual is in line with the Hajj ritual, which takes the example of Prophet Ibrahim's history of sacrificing his son Prophet Ismail, who was then replaced with JIABR 15,2 a fat lamb (Wheeler, 2010;Stilt, 2020). In the Hijri calendar, Qurban begins on the 10th day of Zulhijjah and lasts until the 13th day.…”
Section: Literature Reviewmentioning
confidence: 99%
See 1 more Smart Citation
“…2.1 Qurban Qurban in the Islamic ritual is in line with the Hajj ritual, which takes the example of Prophet Ibrahim's history of sacrificing his son Prophet Ismail, who was then replaced with JIABR 15,2 a fat lamb (Wheeler, 2010;Stilt, 2020). In the Hijri calendar, Qurban begins on the 10th day of Zulhijjah and lasts until the 13th day.…”
Section: Literature Reviewmentioning
confidence: 99%
“…Zulhijjah is the 12th month of the Islamic calendar (Torlak et al , 2018). Those who have wealth slaughter a Qurban animal like a camel, cow, sheep or goat and divide the meat into three parts: one part for the household, one part for relatives or friends and one part for the poor in need, including someone who is not a Muslim (Jones, 2015; Wheeler, 2010).…”
Section: Literature Reviewmentioning
confidence: 99%
“…7 In many cultures, saliva was (and indeed still is) believed to have therapeutic qualities. Jesus, Muhammad, and other healers used saliva for healing purposes (Frayer-Griggs 2013;Perrino 2002;Wheeler 2010). For many generations, saliva was also intuitively used for cleaning and hygiene purposes, properties that were later confirmed scientifically (Romão et al 1990).…”
Section: A Short History Of Salivamentioning
confidence: 99%