In the name of Allah, the
beneficent the merciful
Islamic calendar or Muslim calendar also called the Hijri calendar is
the calendar used to date events in many predominantly Muslim
countries, and used by Muslims everywhere to determine the proper day on
which to celebrate Islamic holy days or other Islamic Occasions.
Islamic calendar or Muslim calendar is based on the Glorious Qur'an
and its proper observance is a sacred duty for Muslims. Almighty Allah
says in the Glorious Qur'an:
The number of months in the sight of Allah is twelve (in a year) - so
ordained by Him the day He created the heavens and the earth ...
(Glorious Qur'an 9:36)
It is He Who made the sun to be a shining glory, and the moon to be a
light of beauty, and measured out stages for it, that you might know
the number of years and the count of time. Allah did not create this
except in truth and righteousness. And He explains His signs in detail,
for those who understand. (Glorious Qur'an 10:5)
They ask thee (O Muhammad) concerning the New Moons. Say: They are
but signs to mark fixed periods of time in (the affairs of) men and for
pilgrimage ... (Glorious Qur'an 2:189)
Islamic calendar or Muslim calendar is a lunar calendar having twelve
lunar months in a year, the beginnings and endings of which are
determined by the sighting of the crescent moon (new moon). These lunar
months (lunations) are based on the motion of the moon, and because 12
synodic months is only 12 x 29.53=354.36 days.
Therefore the Islamic calendar is consistently about eleven days
shorter than a tropical year or solar year. Islamic holy days, although
celebrated on fixed dates in their own calendar, usually shift eleven
days earlier each successive solar year, such as a year of the Gregorian
calendar or Christian calendar.
Muslims do not adjust their Islamic year by adding an extra month, as
the Jews do to keep their lunar calendar in synch with the seasons.
Hence the months of the Muslim Islamic year do not relate to the seasons
which are fundamentally related to the solar cycle. This means that
important Muslim festivals, which always fall in the same Hijri month,
may occur in different seasons. For example, the Hajj and Ramadan can
take place in the summer as well as the winter. It is only over a
33-year cycle that lunar months take a complete turn and fall during the
same season. |
|
As we already know the Islamic
calendar or Muslim calendar is derived from the phases of the moon, the
Fasting month of Ramadan
falls a little earlier each year. The effect of this is to balance out
the discrepancy between Fasting in the northern and the southern
hemispheres. It is often thought that in certain parts of the globe the
fast will be easier than in others, for the length of the day, as well
as its temperature, varies from season to season and from land to land.
But Ramadan, creeping forward at a rate of about eleven days in each
solar year, ensures that wherever one may be on the planet, the fast
will fall sometimes in winter and sometimes in summer. Similarly
although in high latitudes the days can be long, there is no heat. A
balance is thus obtained, so that Fasting is similarly efficacious all
over the world.
Although new moons may be calculated quite precisely, the actual
visibility (by a human observer's eye) of the crescent is much more
difficult to predict. It depends on many factors such as weather, the
optical properties of the atmosphere or atmospheric pollution, the
altitude of the moon at sunset and its closeness, the quality of the
eyesight of the observer, the location of the observer and etc. It is
therefore very difficult to give accurate information in advance about
when a new month will start.
Furthermore, some Muslims depend on a local sighting of the moon,
whereas others depend on a sighting by authorities somewhere in the
Muslim world. Both are valid Islamic practices, but they may lead to
different starting days for the months.
Islamic years are called as Hijra (Hijrah) years, these Hijra
(Hijrah) years are counted since the Hijra (Hijrah), which is when the Prophet Muhammad
(pbuh) migrated from Makkah to Madina (formerly known as Yathrib)
approximately July 622 CE. Thus each numbered year is designated either H
or AH, the latter being the initials of the Latin Anno Hegirae (in the
year of the Hijra).
All the events of Islamic history, especially
those which took place during the life of the Prophet Muhammad (pbuh)
and afterwards are quoted in the Hijri calendar era. |
|
Hijra (Hijrah) of the Prophet Muhammad (pbuh) is an
important turning point for the Muslim community. After the emigration,
the Muslims were able to organize and establish the first real Muslim
"community," with social, political, and economic independence. Life in
Madina allowed the Muslim community to mature and strengthen, and the
people developed an entire society based on Islamic principles.
It is indeed, a unique occasion to ponder that the Islamic Era did
not start with the victories of Islamic wars, nor with the birth or
death of the prophet (pbuh), nor with the Revelation itself. It starts
with Hijra, or the sacrifice for the cause of Truth and for the
preservation of the Revelation. It was a divinely inspired selection.
Allah wanted to teach man that struggle between Truth and Evil is
eternal. The Islamic year reminds Muslims every year not of the pomp and
glory of Islam but of its sacrifice and prepares them to do the same.
Hence, Muslims do not traditionally "celebrate" the beginning of a
new year, but we do acknowledge the passing of time, and take time to
reflect on our own mortality. The Islamic year begins on the first day
of Muharram with the remembrance of great sacrifice of Imam Hussain
(pbuh), the grandson of the Prophet Muhammad (pbuh) on the land of
Karbala for the sake of Truth.
The Islamic (Hijri) year consists of twelve (purely lunar) months:
- First Month of
Islamic calendar: Muharram al-Haram (Moharam, Moharram) - Fighting
is prohibited
- Second Month of
Islamic calendar: Safar al-Muzaffar - A Time of Mourning
- Third Month of
Islamic calendar: Rabi al-Awwal (Rabi-ul-Awwal, Rabi Awwal, Rabi
Awal)
- Fourth Month of
Islamic calendar: Rabi al-Thani (Rabi-us-Sani, Rabi-ul-Akhir)
- Fifth Month of
Islamic calendar: Jumada al-Awwal (Jamadi-ul-Awwal, Jamadi Awwal)
- Sixth Month of
Islamic calendar: Jumada al-Thani (Jamadi-us-Sani, Jumada al-Akhir)
- Seventh Month of
Islamic calendar: Rajab al-Murajab - Fighting is prohibited
- Eighth Month of
Islamic calendar: Sha'ban al-Moazzam (Shaaban, Shaban)
- Ninth Month of
Islamic calendar: Ramadan al-Mubarak (Ramadhan, Ramazan, Ramzan)
- Tenth Month of
Islamic calendar: Shawwal al-Mukarram (Shawal, Shawwaal)
- Eleventh Month of
Islamic calendar: Dhu al-Qa'dah (ZiQa'ad, Zul Qadah) - Fighting is
prohibited
- Twelfth Month of
Islamic calendar: Dhu al-Hijjah (ZilHaj, Zul Hijjah) - Fighting is
prohibited
|
|
Tidak ada komentar:
Posting Komentar