Opentopia Directory Encyclopedia Tools

Kafir

Encyclopedia : K : KA : KAF : Kafir



 

Part of a of articles on
Islam
History of Islam
Beliefs and practices
Oneness of God
Profession of Faith
PrayerFasting
PilgrimageCharity
Major figures
MuhammadAli
Abu BakrUmar
Household of Muhammad
Companions of Muhammad
Prophets of Islam
Texts & Laws
Qur'anHadith
Jurisprudence • Theology
Biographies of Muhammad
Esotericism (Sufism)Exotericism (Sharia)
Branches of Islam
SunniShi'aIbadi
Societal aspects
AcademicsTheology
PhilosophyScience
ArtArchitecture • Cities
CalendarHolidays
Women..in the Qu'ran
LeadersPolitics
IslamismLiberalism
See also
Vocabulary of Islam
This box: [ view] • [ talk] • [ edit]

This article is about an Islamic term. For other uses of the word, see Kaffir (disambiguation).
Kafir (Arabic: كافر kāfir; plural كفّار kuffār) is an Arabic word meaning a person who hides, denies, or covers the truth. In cultural terms, it is a derogatory term [link] used to describe a Disbeliever, a Muslim of a differing sect, or an apostate from Islam. It is usually translated into English as "infidel" or "unbeliever" and can carry the equivalent weight as a racial epithet.

Debate exists between some Muslim scholars as to whether the term applies to Jews and Christians.

Etymology

The word kaafir is the active participle of the Arabic verb kafara which means "to cover" (from consonantal root K-F-R). As a pre-Islamic term it described farmers burying seeds in the ground, covering them with soil while planting. Thus, the word kaafir implies the meaning "a person who hides or covers the truth". In Islamic parlance, kafir is a word used to describe a person who rejects Islamic faith, [link] and carries the weight of a racial epithet.

Qur'anic reference

The word kafir (and related words, such as the abstract noun kufr "disbelief") is mentioned in the Qur’an in five different senses:

1. Kufr al-tawheed: to reject the belief in the Oneness of God. The Qur’an says:

2. Kufr al-ni`mah: to lack gratefulness to God or to people. The Qur’an says: 3. Kufr at-tabarri: to disown/clear oneself from. The Qur’an says: 4. Kufr al-juhud: to deny. The Qur’an says: 5. Kufr at-taghtiyah: to hide/bury something, like planting a seed in the ground. The Qur’an says: The word kufr can also be applied to a Muslim when he is doing something wrong, but not necessarily something that would place him or her outside the state of belief in Islam. For example, a Muslim who is able to go for Hajj but does not go, without denying the need to go, would be committing an act of kufr in a sense of ungratefulness to Allah

So, it is something that is said to them by Allah Almighty or by the angels, not by us.

2 . In Surat Al-Kafirun (109) that you mentioned in your question. It says what means:

This surah is addressing Prophet Muhammad and therefore must be understood in its historical context. Allah is asking Prophet Muhammad to address a group of leaders from Makkah who offered him the following deal: That they all —including Muhammad— worship God for one year and then they all worship the idols for the next year, and so on. That is why Allah asked him to address them in this term “rejecters of faith” and to refuse to accept this kind of deal.

In the rest of the Qur’an, the Qur’anic style follows two principals:

1. To label certain sayings or actions to be sayings or actions of kufr (disbelief or rejection of faith), without labeling any specific group of people with that name and calling them with it. For example, the Qur’an says what means:

Search Titles
0123456789
ABCDEFGHIJ
KLMNOPQRST
UVWXYZ?

E-mail this article to:

Personal Message: