REFLEKSI: Pada akhir artikel ini ditulis : "dishonesty is forbidden in Islam"., 
Tetapi, bagaimana petinggi-petinggi  Republik Indonesia dan begundal-begundal 
mereka? 


http://www.arabnews.com/?page=5&section=0&article=83174&d=3&m=11&y=2006&pix=islam.jpg&category=Islam

            Friday, 3, November, 2006 (12, Shawwal, 1427)


                  Normal Form of Islamic Greetings
                  Adil Salahi, Arab News 

                    
                  Muslims all over the world use the Islamic form of greeting, 
assalamu alaikum, which means "peace be to you." The very wording helps 
generate a friendly and relaxed atmosphere. It is also common in its shorter 
and longer forms to all Muslim communities wherever they happen to be. Thus, 
when two Muslims meet who are total strangers to each other, the moment they 
use this greeting, they immediately feel that they have common ground, even 
though they do not speak each other's language. 

                  The Islamic greeting has different versions, the shortest of 
which is the one we have already mentioned. The rule in Islam is that when we 
are offered a greeting, we return it with a better one, or with its equal at 
least. God orders in the Qur'an: "When a greeting is offered you, answer it 
with an even better greeting, or (at least) with its like. God keeps count of 
all things." (4: 86) 

                  The better greeting and reply are illustrated in the 
following Hadith. Umar reports that he was riding with Abu Bakr on one mount. 
When they passed by people, Abu Bakr greeted them saying: "Assalamu alaikum" 
and they replied: "Wa alaikum assalam wa rahmatu Allah." Or he may greet them 
saying: "Assalamu alaikum wa rahmatu Allah," for which their reply was: "Wa 
alaikum assalam wa rahmatu Allah wa barakatuh." Abu Bakr commented: 'Today, 
people have gained much more than us.'" (Related by Al-Bukhari in Al-Adab 
Al-Mufrad) 

                  We note that every time Abu Bakr offered a greeting, its 
reply was the same with an addition. The first one was the short form of the 
greeting of peace. The reply stated: "Wa alaikum assalam wa rahmatu Allah." 
This means: "And to you be peace together with God's mercy." Thus, the reply 
adds a prayer that the person who offered us a greeting should be blessed with 
God's mercy, both in this life and in the life to come. When the person who 
starts the greeting includes in it this same prayer for mercy to the one being 
accosted, the latter replies with yet another addition, "wa barakatuh," which 
adds a wish for God's blessing to the one who took advantage and offered us a 
friendly greeting. Abu Bakr's comment at the end of the Hadith shows that he 
was pleased with the fact that people always replied to his greeting with a 
better one.

                  These are the normal form of greetings mostly used in Muslim 
communities. Rarely does a greeting go beyond these. It is reported that a man 
from the Yemen visited Abdullah ibn Abbas and greeted him with the full 
greeting "Assalamu alaikum wa rahmatu Allah wa barakatuh," but added something 
extra. Ibn Abbas told him: "A greeting of peace ends with the wish for God's 
blessings." This means that Ibn Abbas thought that such addition is 
unnecessary. However, Kharijah ibn Zaid, a scholar of very high standing who 
belonged to the generation that followed the Prophet's companions, i.e. the 
tabieen, used to write when he addressed the caliph: "Assalamu alaikum wa 
rahmatu Allah wa barakatuh wa maghfiratuh wa tayyib salawatih." 

                  The added last phrases express a prayer that the addressee 
will also have God's forgiveness and special blessings. Kharijah would not have 
added these phrases if he had the slightest doubt about such addition being 
appropriate. His father was distinguished among the Prophet's companions for 
his scholarship. When we have two reputable scholars expressing opposite views, 
we say that one of them was aware of something the other did not know. Perhaps 
Kharijah was aware that when addressing a person of eminence, the use of 
additional phrases would be in order. 

                  Another Hadith that speaks of the importance of the wording 
of the Islamic greeting quotes the Prophet as saying: "The Jews do not envy you 
for anything more than they do for the greeting of peace and saying Aameen." 
This Hadith stresses the special distinction given to the Islamic greeting. The 
Jews the Prophet refers to here are the ones with profound knowledge, such as 
the well-versed rabbis. They are the ones to appreciate the significance of the 
Islamic greeting, assalamu alaikum. Aameen is a word which we say when someone 
addresses a prayer to God. It signifies a request made to God to answer his 
prayer. This makes the prayer a collective one, with all those who are present 
joining their fellow Muslim in an appeal to God on behalf of the one who is 
saying that prayer. But why would the Jews be envious of our greeting? The word 
salam, which means peace, is also a name of God. Using it in our greeting is a 
constant reminder of the special relation between a believer and God. 

                  We have already mentioned that the Prophet has encouraged us 
to use the Islamic greeting often, and with all people. But how important is it 
to greet others? To answer this question we mention a Hadith reported by Abu 
Hurayrah who quotes the Prophet as saying: "A Muslim has a right against his 
fellow Muslim in six ways." Asked what were these, the Prophet said: "When you 
meet him, greet him; if he invites you, accept his invitation; if he seeks your 
advice, give him an honest and sincere advice; if he sneezes and praises God, 
bless him; if he falls ill, visit him; and if he dies, attend his funeral." 
(Related by Al-Bukhari and Muslim)

                  The Hadith is clear in making it a duty of a Muslim to offer 
a greeting to his fellow-Muslims when they meet. The one who takes the 
initiative is in a better position. Although offering a greeting is a Sunnah, 
which means that it is highly recommended, returning a greeting is obligatory. 
The other five aspects also help to cement relations within the Muslim 
community. All of them fall within the category of Sunnah, except for giving an 
honest advice, which is obligatory. A person who is asked for advice commits a 
sin if he deliberately and knowingly gives the wrong advice. To do so is 
dishonest, and dishonesty is forbidden in Islam.
                 
           
     


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