Skip to content
Licensed Unlicensed Requires Authentication Published by De Gruyter November 30, 2012

The Lure of a Controversial Prayer: Ṣalāt al-raghā’ib (the Prayer of Great Rewards) in Medieval Arabic Texts and from a Socio-legal Perspective

  • Daniella Talmon-Heller, EMAIL logo and Raquel Ukeles,
From the journal Der Islam

Abstract: A rich array of twelfth to fifteenth century Arabic texts captures the advent of a supererogatory prayer known as ṣalāt al-raghā’ib (the prayer of great rewards), on the eve of the first Friday of the month of Rajab in late eleventh-century Jerusalem, and its wide dissemination. This corpus offers an unusually vivid picture of the formation and the transformation of a medieval bid’a (to use the Islamic term), or, of an ‘invention of tradition’ (to use Hobsbawm’s term). Combining our expertise in Islamic law and in Ayyūbid and Mamluk era history, we use this corpus for an in-depth study of popular piety, power politics, scholarly polemics and legal discourse. Twenty eight translated excerpts of various texts are presented in this paper, preceded by a detailed introduction. Exploring legal reasoning in its concrete political and social context provides a nuanced understanding of the development, mass proliferation and ensuing debate over a highly controversial and extraordinary potent religious practice.

Published Online: 2012-11-30
Published in Print: 2012-11

©2012 by Walter de Gruyter GmbH & Co.

Downloaded on 11.5.2024 from https://www.degruyter.com/document/doi/10.1515/islam-2012-0008/html
Scroll to top button