Adhan

Adhan (Arabic: أَذَان aḏān; also: aazan, athan) is the Islamic call to prayer, recited by the muezzin. It is pronounced as aathan (the first vowel is prolonged, and th is pronounced as in the English word the.) The root of the word is A/tha/na which means "to permit", and another derivative of this word is O/thon (the first O is pronounced as in u in the German word Gtterfunken) and means ear. The adhan was not written or said by Muhammad but by one of his Sahabah (the people who saw and believed in Muhammad); however, Muhammad did choose it to be the Muslims' call to prayer in preference to the bell or conch, used by Christians, or the shofar (ram's horn), used by Jewshttp://www.iad.org/Pillars/athan.html. The adhan is called out five times in the day for the Fard (mandatory) prayers. Made from one of the mosque's minarets, the call's purpose is to summon the people to enter the mosque, the second call to prayer, iqama, summons the people to line up for prayers. During the Friday prayer (Salat Al Jummah), there are two adhans; the first is to call the people to the mosque, the second is said before the Imam (in Sunni Islam) starts the khutbah, what might be called the sermon, religious lesson or speech before the Friday prayer. Just before the prayers start, someone will recite the iqama as in all prayers. Different sects of Islam have different adhans with the Sunni being the most common, as in the literal translation of the seven adhan formulations directly below:
#1575;لصلو ة خير من النوم ās-salatu khaīru min ān-naūm
od is Greatest, God is Greatest, الله اكبر الله اكبر āllahu ākbar, āllahu ākbar
assert that there is no god but God اشهد ان لا اله الا الله āsh'hadu ān lā ilaha illā-llah
assert that Muhammad is the Messenger of God اشهد ان محهدا رسول الله āsh'hadu ānna mūhammadār rasūlu-llah
ome to the prayer حي على الصلوة hayyā `alā-s-salah
ome to salvation حي على الفلا ح hayyā `alā-l-falāh
od is Greatest, God is Greatest الله اكبر الله اكبر āllahu ākbar, āllahu ākbar
here is no god but God لا اله الا الله lā ilaha illā-llah
*When used to summon the faithful to the first prayers of the day at dawn (fajr salat), the line "Prayer is better than sleep" is inserted in the adhan. After "I assert that Mohammad is God's messenger", Shia Muslims add "I assert that Ali is God's waliy", where "waliy" means either the friend of God in whom is placed the authority to lead the ummah in its spiritual and worldly life. Each phrase is followed by a longer pause and is repeated one or more times according to fixed rules. During the first statement each phrase is limited in tonal range, less melismatic, and shorter. Upon repetition the phrase is longer, ornamented with melismas, and may possess a tonal range of over an octave. The adhan's form is characterised by contrast and contains twelve melodic passages which move from one to another tonal center of one maqam a fourth or fifth apart. The tempo is mostly slow; it may be faster and with less melismas for the sunset prayer. During festivals it may be performed antiphonally as a duet. (ibid, p.157-158)

Sources

  • Habib Hassan Touma (1996). The Music of the Arabs, trans. Laurie Schwartz. Portland, Oregon: Amadeus Press. ISBN 0931340888.
  • http://www.iad.org/Pillars/athan.html

External links

 

<< PreviousWord BrowserNext >>
james phillips kay shuttleworth
burundi bwacu
henri wallon
geography of gestricia
james darmesteter
arsne darmesteter
michel bral
woad
nokoreach
canton of jura
chant de ralliement
gaston paris
beloved isles cayman
la renaissance
la tchadienne
mile thodore len gautier
friedrich christian diez
gilles mnage
blue winged teal
existence theorem
broad tailed parrot
udzima wa ya masiwa
houri
cinnamon teal
jean franois paul de gondi, cardinal de retz
tbingen (district)
red rumped parrot
richard mulcahy
deicide
john bright
twistor memory
plaka
stony brook university
coventry patmore
runescape
world's busiest airport
frank b. kellogg
barbara dennerlein
john toland
the watchtower
awake!
kingdom hall
charles lever
battle of resaca de la palma