Caesarean Moon Births: Calculations, Moon Sighting, and the Prophetic Way
By Hamza Yusuf
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About this ebook
Prior to the advent of electricity, every night held the possibility of a celestial light show. People in even the most urban environments were exposed to the awe and majesty of the heavens, which clearly “proclaim the glory of God.” The contemplation of the celestial orbs and their movements provided early man with the most direct c
Hamza Yusuf
Hamza Yusuf nació en Walla Walla, estado de Washington (USA). A los dieciocho años se hizo musulmán. Posteriormente, se trasladó a Oriente Medio donde pasó más de diez años estudiando las ciencias del Islam en la Península Arábiga y también en el norte y oeste de África. Después regresó a los Estados Unidos, y durante los últimos veinte años ha proseguido sus estudios con Šeij Abdallah bin Bayyah, el jurista más destacado del mundo islámico. Hamza Yusuf ha estado ocupado también enseñando y escribiendo desde que regresó a los Estado Unidos. Ha traducido al inglés varios textos y poemas clásicos, entre ellos The Content of Character, una recopilación de dichos morales del Profeta Muhammad (la paz sea con él); The Burda: The Poem of the Cloak, un poema laudatorio del siglo XIII considerado como el poema más recitado del mundo; The Creed of Imam al-Tahawi, un credo unificador de principios del siglo X, que sirve de base sólida para la fe islámica, y es la más fiable de las primeras redacciones del credo musulmán; y The Prayer of the Oppressed, que incluye su traducción de la poderosa y profundamente espiritual súplica del Imam Mubammad ibn Nasir al-Dar'i junto con el análisis de Hamza Yusuf sobre la naturaleza de la opresión y su impacto en la sociedad en general y en el corazón del individuo. A través de sus numerosas conferencias y apariciones en los medios, Hamza Yusuf participa activamente en el discurso público actual sobre el Islam, en el plano nacional e internacional. Es también cofundador del Zaytuna College, el primer Instituto Islámico de Humanidades creado en Occidente.
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Caesarean Moon Births - Hamza Yusuf
PREFACE
ALL RELIGIONS HAVE rites that connect people to sacred time and place. Indeed, devotional observances are the hallmark of religion and maintain its perpetuity. Islam is noted for sacred rites that are largely time-based but also include rites involving places. The central daily rite is prayer; the central weekly rite is congregation; the central monthly rite is monitoring the new moon; the central yearly rite is Ramadan; and the central rite of one’s lifetime is pilgrimage to the House of God.
The Abrahamic religions are rooted in the mystery of time; sacred timekeeping is central to Judaism, Christianity, and Islam. The original Abrahamic way was entirely lunar. The Jewish ritual experience was centered around the lunar months. As time passed, the Jewish community moved from a lunar to a solar-lunar calendar. The Christians, who emerged out of Jewish tradition, abandoned the Jewish lunar calendar for a Roman solar one. Islam, uniquely, has maintained this ancient tie solely to the celestial phenomenon of the lunar month.
Prior to the advent of electricity, every night held the possibility of a celestial light show. People in even the most urban environments were exposed to the awe and majesty of the heavens, which clearly proclaim the glory of God.
The contemplation of the celestial orbs and their movements provided early man with the most direct connection to his Lord. In the Qur’anic story of Abraham, it is his observance of heavenly phenomena that leads him to his certainty of God’s unity and transcendence. Since the time of the Seljuq Turks, the crescent moon has been a sign of Islam. Today, for instance, it serves in place of the cross for the relief work of the Muslim medics of the Red Crescent in Muslim lands.
Of late, certain Muslims, responding to the yearly anarchy in determining the beginning of Ramadan, have called for a move to calculations and an abandonment of the traditional practice of physical observation to determine the new moon. Some highly qualified mathematicians and astronomers believe that Muslims in North America should follow lunar months determined by calculation. They argue that the science of astronomy is highly developed and visibility charts can be generated to high degrees of precision; that calculation will help the Muslim community gain recognition from the government for Muslim holidays, which would obviously need to be known in the previous year when calendars are prepared; that it is not against the Sunnah, as some scholars of the earliest period have accepted calculations as have others of the later period; and that many modern scholars are inclining toward this position in larger numbers.
As the argument has been presented, the call is buttressed by early Muslim opinions, isolated but authoritative nonetheless, which allowed calculation. I have written this essay to reveal what I believe to be the fallacies in that claim. As I substantiate in this paper, the few scholars who did permit calculation did so for only the 29th night, and then only if clouds or other atmospheric conditions obscured the twilight sky. I do not believe there is any evidence to support an argument for calculation unless it is based upon the early Fatimid position that the new moon begins with the separation of the sun and moon’s monthly conjunction—an opinion rejected by consensus among Sunni scholars and almost all of the Shia scholars. A few late Muslim scholars of the nineteenth century, not mentioned in any of the papers I read, did acknowledge the advancement of astronomy and the reliability of calculation. Their colleagues, however, ignored their opinions.
Hence we find that before this modern period, authoritative Imams did not advocate the abandonment of a prophetic practice that has been continually applied throughout Muslim history and remains viable today. Oddly, the one argument that might have merit is not put forward by the current proponents of calculation: that is a maqāṣadī argument, i.e., one that looks at the aims and purposes of the sacred law. While I recognize that such an argument would seem reasonable given the relative hardships people in North America face in adjusting fixed secular schedules with fluid sacred ones each year, the presence of a clear and unambiguous text from the sound hadith makes ijtihād untenable. Indeed, it could even be argued that connecting people with the natural phenomenon in our selves and on the horizon—which is where we must look every month for the new moon—is a central aim and purpose of the religion itself.
Having said that, I do see a compromise possible between the two positions if the proponents of calculation would alter their sighting calculation criterion to a 12-degree angular separation instead of their current 9-degree separation, which allows for probable sighting only under perfect conditions. For several years now, in monthly crescent observations, we have found that the moon sighting visibility charts based upon a 12-degree separation in North America consistently concur with our physical sightings on the West Coast of the United States.
The current crisis is largely the result of the lack of a unified religious authority and the split in the scholarly community over local sightings as opposed to one global sighting for all Muslims. And while both positions are sound and have their proofs from the early Muslim community and are recognized by all of our juristic schools, the latter position is hard to adhere to, given what we know about the earth and its vastness and the fact that while the moon is born in one region it has yet to be in others. Despite that, we should not make the local/global issue a point of dissention or division in our communities. It would foster unity if we adhered to one moon sighting that is seen by sound witnesses anywhere in North America. Devotional practices based upon moon calculations will always split the community. Those who question why we cannot calculate our moon dates when we calculate our prayer times will find unequivocal answers in this paper.
My hope is that this book will alleviate confusion and provide clarity—and guidance for those who are fed up with the inability of our community to agree on matters of the utmost importance and who simply want to fast, and break the fast, without worrying that they are doing it at the wrong time. We can be unified on this issue if we develop trained moon-sighting committees throughout North America who are committed to going out every month and maintaining a religious duty. My intention is not to be