In Islam, a (Arabic: [[wikt:حنيف|حنيف]]|ḥanīf; plural: Arabic: حنفاء,), meaning "renunciate", is someone who maintains the pure monotheism of the patriarch Abraham. More specifically, in Islamic thought, renunciates were the people who, during the pre-Islamic period or, were seen to have renounced idolatry and retained some or all of the tenets of the religion of Abraham (Arabic: إبراهيم,), which was submission to God in its purest form. The word is found twelve times in the Quran (ten times in its singular form and twice in the plural form) and Islamic tradition tells of a number of individuals who were .[1] According to Muslim tradition, Muhammad himself was a and a descendant of Ishmael, son of Abraham.[2]
The term comes from the Arabic root meaning "to incline, to decline"[3] or "to turn or bend sideways"[4] from the Syriac root of the different meaning “to deceive, to turn pagan, to lead into paganism”. The Syriac word refers to pagans and deceivers.[3] [5] [6] [7] The Arabic is defined as "true believer, orthodox; one who scorns the false creeds surrounding him/her and profess the true religion" by The Arabic-English Dictionary of Modern Written Arabic.[4]
According to Francis Edward Peters, in verse nosup. no. of the Quran it has been translated as "upright person" and outside the Quran as "to incline towards a right state or tendency". According to W. Montgomery Watt, it appears to have been used earlier by Jews and Christians in reference to "pagans" and applied to followers of an old Hellenized Syrian and Arabian religion and used to taunt early Muslims.
Michael Cook states "its exact sense is obscure" but the Quran "uses it in contexts suggestive of a pristine monotheism, which it tends to contrast with (latter-day) Judaism and Christianity". In the Quran is associated "strongly with Abraham, but never with Moses or Jesus".[8] The unique association of ḥanīf with Abraham underscores his foundational role in the development of monotheistic faith and his exemplary status in the Islamic tradition.
Oxford Islamic Studies online defines as "one who is utterly upright in all of his or her affairs, as exemplified by the model of Abraham"; and that prior to the arrival of Islam "the term was used [...] to designate pious people who accepted monotheism but did not join the Jewish or Christian communities."[9]
Others translate as the law of Ibrahim; the verb as "to turn away from [idolatry]". Others maintain that the followed the "religion of Ibrahim, the, the Muslim[.]" It has been theorized by Watt that the verbal term Islam, arising from the participle form of Muslim (meaning "surrendered to God"), may have only arisen as an identifying descriptor for the religion in the late Medinan period.
According to the Encyclopædia Britannica, "some of Muḥammad's relatives, contemporaries, and early supporters were called " – examples including Waraqah ibn Nawfal, "a cousin of the Prophet’s first wife, Khadija bint Khuwaylid, and Umayyah ibn Abī aṣ-Ṣalt, "an early 7th-century Arab poet".
According to the website "In the Name of Allah", the term is used "twelve times in the Quran", but Abraham/Ibrahim is "the only person to have been explicitly identified with the term." He is mentioned "in reference to" eight times in the Quran.[10]
Among those who, pre traditional Islamic belief, are thought to be are:
The four friends in Mecca from ibn Ishaq's account:
rejected both Judaism and Christianity
was an Nestorian priest and patrilineal third cousin to Muhammad. He died before Muhammad declared his Prophethood.
travelled to the Byzantine Empire and converted to Christianity
early Muslim convert who emigrated to the Kingdom of Aksum.
opponents of Islam from Ibn Isḥāq's account:
According to the Encyclopædia Britannica, "there is no evidence that a true cult existed in pre-Islāmic Arabia".[11]
A Greek source from the fifth century CE, The Ecclesiastical History of Sozomen, speaks of how "Abraham had bequeathed a monotheist religion" to Arabs, that the Arabs descended "from Ishmael and Hagar" and followed Jewish practices such as not eating pork.[12] No archaeological evidence has been found to support the idea that Abraham was a real person,[13] and most scholars do not consider the Book of Genesis to be an accurate history.
Sozomen was a historian of the Christian Church who is thought to have been a native of Gaza City[14] whose native tongue was Arabic and who lived from about 400-450 CE. Thus according to Ibn Rawandi, he provides a "reliable source" that Arabs – at least in northwest Arabia – were familiar with the idea there were pre-Islamic "Abrahamic monotheists [...] whether this was true of Arabs throughout the [Arabian] peninsula it is impossible to say".[12]