Islam, Muslim / Christian Forum - Welcome All

General Category => The Quran and Hadith => Topic started by: Peter on March 17, 2010, 09:05:32 AM

Title: The Ahnaf - the Faith of Abraham?
Post by: Peter on March 17, 2010, 09:05:32 AM
http://religionresearchinstitute.org/

The Ahnaf

By Dr. Rafat Amari

Ahnaf is a pagan Arabian religious group which began at the time of Mohammed. It had nothing to do with the faith of Abraham.

Islamic tradition claims that at the time of Mohammed, there was a group of people who refused to be either Jews or Christians, but instead, they claimed to be of the "faith of Abraham," which, according to Islam, would mean they were the true followers of Abraham, and continued throughout  history. They called themselves "Ahnaf - or 'Honafa.'

This claim is blatantly false.  Nowhere in the pages of history was there a religion of Abraham called - Hanifa'. Abraham was never called "Hanifa" nor did Abraham ever call himself "Hanif,"  nor did he establish a religion. Faith in the God of the Bible did not begin with Abraham nor did it begin in his lifetime. Before Abraham, the Bible presented men such as Enoch and Noah with whom God spoke and fellowshipped.

But Abraham was called to leave Ur in Mesopotamia, to become the  one of the forefathers in the genealogy of the promised Messiah. Since humanity fell into sin, God planned to send Christ into the world , so that He might redeem humanity by dying on the cross.

Abraham knew that the Savior would come from his offspring. This knowledge was given to Abraham when God led Abraham to Mount Moriah near Jerusalem to present his son Isaac as a sacrifice.  Moriah is the range of mountains around Jerusalem, where God the Father- 2000 thousands later - sacrificed His son as atonement for mankind's sins.  Abraham was part of God's prophetical statement when he prepared to sacrifice his beloved son Isaac, after he sent away Hagar and her son ,Ishmael, and remained with Isaac whom he much loved. God did this so Abraham could experience and reflects on the pain which God, the Father experienced when He sacrificed His only eternal Son.


 The term " son of God" does not mean that Christ was born to the Father, like and earthly son is born to a human father. He is the Son of God because He is the object of God's eternal love, concern and glory. The Bible speaks of Christ in Colossians 1:13 as "the Son of His love ", in  Hebrews1:2. He is the heir of all things. He declared in John 16:15, "all the things that belong to the Father are mine." And again in John 1:3. "all things were made by Him and without Him nothing was made that has been made."

Abraham, as you may remember,  placed Isaac on the wood stacked high on the altar, and he prepared to kill him. God stopped Abraham by providing a ram caught in the thicket. Isaac could never be the redeemer for mankind himself because he was born in sin like all human beings.  God was showing him that the redeemer must come from heaven. The ram Abraham saw symbolized Jesus,  the Lamb of God who carried away the sins of the world.

Abraham was never given a law to be considered as a founder of a religion. The Law in the Old Testament was given to Moses. He never was inspired to write a book, like many other prophets of the Old Testament. To assert that Abraham founded a religion is inconceivable. One can't single out one event in the Bible and make a "religion" from it. All the revelations of the Old and New Testaments are the providence's of the same true God. The revelations of the Old Testament pointed to the coming of Christ, His death and resurrection from the dead, in order to bring man to fellowship with God.

Yet, Mohammed in the Qu'ran speaks about the religion of Abraham as Hanif. And calls Muslims to be neither Jews nor Christians but to be Hanifas as we read in Surah Al Baqarah 2:135. This verse contradicts the truth which all the prophets announced. It opposes the main subject around which their prophecies revolve, which is that Christ is the Eternal Son of God,  and took on a human form, died on the Cross and was resurrected from the dead.  


Islamic claims about Honafa' or  Ahnaf

There are no mention of Ahnaf in the Jahilieh period  before Islam. This fact is recognizable by Islamic scholars themselves. Jawad Ali, an Iraqi Islamic scholar, says, "There is nothing about Ahnaf in Arabian sources before Islam. most the information that Islamic authors provide is obscure and a fabrication.  -  Jawad Ali goes on to say, "We have no mention of Ahnaf in the Jahilieh nor in the classical writings of the Greeks and Romans. Therefore, our knowledge about them was only through Islamic literature."

Here we see clearly that the idea of a religion in Arabia called Hanafieh which claims an affiliation with the faith of Abraham is not based on history. If this religion had existed, it would have been practiced, not in Arabia, but in Israel, where Abraham lived most of his life. But neither Israelite nor Greek nor Roman historians ever mention a religion called Hanifieh built on Abraham. It's implausible that this kind of religion would be unknown to the historians  and still be practiced at the time of Mohammed in the desert of Mecca. No one has heard of it since the time of Abraham.

The Ahnaf, negative in behavior and conduct

However , Mohammed did have a connection with a group of people the Islamic tradition calls "Ahnaf." The first biography of the
life of Mohammed was written during the 8th century A.D. by Ibn Ishack and edited by Ibn Hisham. In it we read that the Honafa' was a small group "started when four persons at Mecca agreed. Those four were Zyed bin Amru bin Nafil, Waraqa bin Nofil, Obeid allah bin Jahsh, and Othman bin Al-Howerieth. They died as Sabians ."[iii]

The four founders of Ahnaf were all related to Mohammed. They  were descendants of Loui, one of Mohammed ancestors. Furthermore, Waraqa bin Nofel and Othman Ben Al-Huwereth were cousins of Khadijah. We know this from Mohammed's genealogy presented by Ibn Hisham.[iv] Khadijah was  the first wife of Mohammed. She played a major role in convincing Mohammed that he was a prophet, using Waraqa to achieve her goal.

Obeid Allah Ben Jahish was a maternal cousin to Mohammed. Mohammed married his widow, Um Habibeh. All this reveals the close connection between Mohammed and the founders of the group .

This group was unknown outside Mecca but Ummieh bin Abi Al Salet, a maternal cousin of Mohammed, who influenced the group by his poems, and is considered by some to be a member of the group, came to live in the city of Taif.  
We know many people joined them. They belonged to different religions, and thus had various doctrines. Each religion  contained forms of polytheism, paganism and occultism. This makes them the most unlikely group in history to claim they espoused the faith that Abraham and other prophets in the Old Testament professed and preached. It's ridiculous that Muslims would believe that this pagan group represented the true and devout faith.

The myths which they believed and incorporated into their poetry were also written into the Qu'ran because Mohammed belonged to the group from the time he was a youth. He boasted that he believed in their creed and he was known to have connections with many members of this group. He was influenced by their teachings, as well as by the  immoral concepts which I'll discuss later.  All this reflects the group's deep affiliation with the pagan mythological sects of the Middle East at the time of Mohammed.  We encounter the same myths In their books.


It was not known if this group called themselves Honafa'  or Ahnaf, or they were called this by the society as such. Especially if we know that the terminology had a negative meaning and reflected negative behavior. The word hanif means "Astrictive, confined, awry, biased and errant." The Arabic word comes from the verb hanafa which means to become Astrictive.[v] Although the Qu'ran would convey a positive meaning to the term hanif today, it was not so at the time of Mohammed.

Jawad Ali, the Iraqi scholar I referred to earlier, says, "The Hanaf is straying from the right way." Jawad Ali quotes many old Islamic authors who maintained this was the meaning of hanif at the time of Mohammed[vi].  According to Jawad Ali,  the word also is derived from an Aramaic word that means "atheist, guileful, hypocrite, infidel or perverted."[vii]

No matter how you look at it, the term hanif was a negative one at the time of Mohammed as we see it in the Arabic and  Aramaic languages.  This suggests that group members did not call themselves by that name, but they were given that name by the people of Mecca, the community in which they lived. Evidently, the Meccans observed their immoral conduct and the perversions which they practiced.

 
The immoral reputation of Ahnaf and its impact on Mohammed

Their immoral behavior is seen in their poems, such as the poem composed by Waraqa Ben Nofel, one of the four founders of the group. He boasted of his own experience raping a girl in her home and enjoying sex with her. In his poem he encourages others to enjoy experiences like this[viii].

 Waraqa's immoral ideas left a special impact on Mohammed who learned under him. Waraqa was a cousin of Mohammed's first wife, Khadejeh. She used Waraqa to convince Mohammed that he was a prophet. This was after Mohammed had negative experiences with a spirit who choked him three times in order to subjugate him to an oracle he wanted to use Mohammed to spread. Mohammed returned from his cave to his wife shaking, quavering and trembling. He alluded to having been possessed by a devil, and invaded by a spirit of Kahhaneh. This divination was used by the devils of Arabia to summons their priests which they called Kuhhan.

Without doubt, the example of Waraqa, as we saw through his poem, left a special impact on Mohammed's behavior . During his campaigns he waged against the non-Muslim tribes and cities in Arabia. He allowed his followers to have sex with all the females they captured after they had killed the husbands and the fathers of those poor victims. The practiced sex openly in the fields after most of their campaigns. Sometimes two or more Muslims shared a girl or woman together, as in the case of Thabit Bin Quis  who  shared one girl with his cousin whom they made as concubine. The girl they captured in an Islamic campaign against her city was Burrah Bint Al Hareth.  Afterward,  Thabit wanted to marry her, so he  gave his cousin several date trees he had, in exchange for his cousins' part in the girl.

Later Burrah wanted to get advice from Mohammed. When Aisheh, the youngest wife of Mohammed, saw the girl was very beautiful, she hated to see that Burrah was meeting with Mohammed, because she knew Mohammed would take her from her husband Thabit and keep her for himself. This was a something Mohammed had done before with the most beautiful women captured in the campaigns,  even though some of his followers may have had the woman before Mohammed. The prediction of Aisheh came true. Mohammed called Thabit and asked him to give him the girl. Thabit said, "She is for you, Oh prophet of Allah," and Mohammed took the girl and changed her name into Jwerieh.[ix]

Thabit turned her over to Mohammed with those words, because Mohammed granted rights to himself to have any female even those who were married to his followers. No one could oppose Mohammed in any thing. He married Aisheh when she was only six years old and Mohammed was 54. Abu Baker, the father of Aisheh, dared not oppose Mohammed's desire to take Abu Baker's child