Death and Dying
Death and Dying
Death and Dying
Front Matter
Foreword
Introduction
1. What’s in a Funeral? Korean, American-Mormon and Jewish Rites Compared
2. Death and Dying in the Middle East
3. Distinctions in the Mormon Approach to Death and Dying
4. A Comparative Study of Ascension Motifs in World Religions
5. Reverence for Life in Religion: Eastern and Western Views
6. Why Are There So Many Gods in Japan? Ethos and Pathos in Japanese Religion
7. Objectifying Divine Power: Some Chinese Modes
Symposium Participants
Sami A. Hanna, “Death and Dying in the Middle East,” in Deity & Death, ed. Spencer J.
Palmer (Provo, UT: Religious Studies Center, Brigham Young University, 1978), 33–60.
According to the Traditions, as depicted by Hughes’ account, [1]Muhammed was taught that
it is sinful to wish for death:
“Wish not for death, not even if thou art a doer of good works, for peradventure thou mayest
increase them with an increase [of life]. . . . Not even if thou art a sinner, for which increase
of life thou mayest obtain God’s pardon.”
The ceremonies attending the death of a Muslim are described by Jafir Sharif in
Herklot’s Qanun-i-Islam, “Islamic Law” page 80. Four or five days before a sick man’s
dissolution, he makes his will in favor of his son or any other person in the presence of two
or more witnesses and either delivers this will to others or retains it. In it he likewise
appoints his executor. When he is about to expire, any learned reader of the Qur’an is sent
for and requested to repeat, with a loud voice, “Surat Ya Sin” (or Chapter 36 in the Qur’an),
in order that the spirit of the man, by the hearing of its sound, may experience an easy
concentration. It is said that when the spirit was commanded to enter the body of Adam, the
soul looked into it once and observed that it was a bad and dark place and unworthy of its
presence. Then the Just and Most Holy God illuminated the body of Adam with “lamps of
light” and commanded the spirit to re-enter. It went in a second time, beheld the light, saw
the whole dwelling and said, “There is no pleasing sound here for me to listen to.” It is
generally understood from the best works of the mystics of the East that it was because of
this circumstance that the Almighty created music. The Holy Spirit, on hearing the sound of
this music, became so delighted that it entered Adam’s body.
Commentators on the Qur’an and expositors of the Traditions and divines have written that
the sound resembled that produced by the repeating of the Surat Ya Sin; it is therefore
advisable to read at the hour of death this chapter from the Qur’an for tranquilizing the soul.
The Kalimatu ‘sh-shahada (the [creed]) is also read with an audible voice by those present.
They do not require the patient to read it himself, since at that time he is in a state of
distress and not in a fit state of mind to repeat the Kalimah.
Most people lie insensible and cannot even speak, but the pious retain their mental faculties
and converse till the very end. There is a most serious religious rule amongst Muslims that if
there is a desire for the dying person to repeat the Kalimah, and the sick man expires
without being able to do so, his faith is considered dubious, and the man who directed him
to repeat the Kalimah incurs guilt. It is therefore best that those sitting with the dying person
read it, in hopes that the sick man, hearing the sound of it, may bring it to his recollection
and repeat it either aloud or in his own mind. Usually when a person is on the point of
death, someone pours sharbat, [5] made of sugar and water, down his throat to facilitate the
exit of the vital spark, and someone procures the holy water of the Zamzam well at
Mecca. [6]
The moment the spirit has fled, the mouth is closed, because it would present a
disagreeable spectacle. The two great toes are brought in contact and fastened with a thin
strip of cloth to keep the legs together. Perfumes [7] are burned near the corpse. If the
individual died in the evening, the shrouding and burial take place before midnight; if he
died at a later hour, he is buried early the next morning. The sooner the sepulchral rites are
performed, the better; for it is not proper to keep a corpse long in the house. [8] For this
reason the Prophet said that the sooner a good man is buried, the more quickly he will
reach heaven. If a bad man, he should be speedily buried so that his unhappy lot will not fall
upon others in the house, and so that the relatives of the deceased may not, by holding the
corpse, weep too much or go without food. [9]
There are male and female washers [10] who are hired to wash and shroud the corpse.
Sometimes, however, the relatives do it themselves. They dig a hole in the earth to contain
the water used in the washing and to keep it from spreading over a large surface, as some
men and women consider it bad to tread on such water. Some women who are particular in
these matters are afraid even to venture near the place where the body has been washed.
The corpse is placed on a bed, a country cot, a plank, or on straw then stripped and laid on
its back with its head to the east and feet to the west. The washers cover it with a cloth that
reaches, for a man, from the navel to the calves of the legs, or for a woman, from the chest
to the feet. They wash the corpse with warm or cold water, raising the body gently and
rubbing the abdomen four or five times. Then they pour plenty of water on the corpse and
wash off all the dirt and filth with soap, using flocks of cotton or cloth. Next they wash the
sides of the body, then the back and the rest of the body, gently, because life has just
departed and the body is still warm and sensitive to pain. The body is cleaned well so that
no offensive smell remains. The washers never throw water into the nostrils or mouth but
clean them with wicks of cloth or cotton. Then they perform wudu’k [11] for the person; they
wash his mouth, and arms to the elbows; they make masah on his head and they throw
water on his feet—these actions constituting the four parts of the ceremony. They then put
some camphor with water into a new large earthen pot and with another new earthen pot
they take out water and pour it on the body three times: first from the head to the feet, then
from the right shoulder to the feet, finally from the left shoulder to the feet. Every time a pot
of water is poured the Kalimatu ‘sh-shada (the words of testimony) is repeated: “Ash-
hahadu an la ilia Allah,” which means “I testify that there is no deity but God”), either by the
person washing or someone else. After the body is bathed and wiped dry with a new piece
of cloth, it is placed in the shrouds.
The shrouds consist of three pieces of cloth for a man and five for a woman. The shroud for
men is a special set of burial clothes: first, a lungior izar [12] that reaches from the navel to
the knees or ankle joints; second, a qamis or kurta or alfa, [13] that hangs from the neck to
the knees or ankles; third, a lifafah [14] or sheet that extends above the head to below the
feet. Women have two additional pieces of cloth: a sinah-bandor breast-band, that extends
from the armpits to just above the ankle joints; the other a damini which encircles the head
once and has two ends dangling on each side.
Having placed the shrouds on a new mat and fumigated them with the smoke of perfumes,
the lifafah is spread first on the mat, over it the lungior izar, and above that the qamis and
on that the sinah-band, if it is a woman. The damini is kept separate and tied on afterwards.
The corpse must be carefully brought from the place it was bathed and laid on the shrouds.
Surmah is applied to the eyes with a tent made of rolled up paper with a ring or with a pice.
Camphor is applied in seven places: on the forehead including the nose, on the palms of
the hands, on the knees, and on the great toes. Then the different shrouds are put on
properly, one after another as they lay. The color of the shroud is to be white; no other is
admissible. It is of no consequence if a colored cloth is spread over the bier. After the
funeral or after the fortieth day, this cloth is given to the faqir [15] who resides in the
burying-ground or to any other person deserving of charity. Before shrouding the body, the
family tears shreds from the clothes. After shrouding is completed, these shreds are tied on
the body: one band above the head, a second below the feet, and a third about the chest,
leaving six or seven fingers’ breadth of cloth above the head and below the feet to permit
the ends to be fastened. In the case of a deceased female, if relatives are present, they
undo the cloth of the head to expose the face and ask the dead person, in the presence of
two witnesses, to remit the dowry which had been given her. However, it is preferable that
this dowry be remitted while the person is still alive.
If the mother of the deceased is present, she says, “The milk with which I suckled thee I
freely bestow on thee”; but this is primarily a custom in India. It is neither enjoined in books
of theology nor by the law of Islam. Finally the family places a flower-sheet or wreath of
flowers on the corpse. [16]
JacFar b. Burqan has related from Maymun B. Mihran that the Prophet said to a man, as he
was exhorting him:
Lay hands on the opportunity for five things before five: on your youth before you become
decrepit; on your health before you become sick; on your leisure before you become busily
occupied; on your wealth before you become poor; and on your life before you die.
From these five precepts a man can gather much wisdom; for a man is capable of works
during his youth of which he is incapable in the years of his old age. If a youth becomes
accustomed to doing deeds of disobedience, he cannot refrain from them in his later years.
So a youth in the period of his youthfulness ought to become accustomed to doing good
deeds and then doing good deeds will be easy for him when he becomes old. Likewise, a
healthy person can carry effectively through matters which concern his property or his
person; therefore, a healthy person ought to seize the opportunity his health gives him to be
diligent in using his property and his body for doing deeds of obedience. “On your leisure
before you are busily occupied,” means that by night one is at leisure but by day is busily
occupied, therefore one ought to say prayers at night during the period of his leisure and
fast by day. When he said: “On your life before you die,” he means that so long as man is
alive he is capable of works, but when he is dead there is an end to his works. Therefore, a
true believer ought not to squander his days, which pass so quickly, but should seize the
opportunity of such days as remain to him.
c
Ali reported that Muhammed saw the Angel of Death at the head of a man of the Ansar, so
the Prophet said to him:
“Be gentle with my friend, for he is a true believer.”
He answered: “Be of good cheer, O Muhammed, for I am gentle with every true believer. By
Allah, O Muhammed, if any of the family starts screaming when I am taking a man’s spirit, I
say, What is this screaming? By Allah, we are doing him no injustice. We have not come
before his time. We have not accelerated his fate, so what sin are we committing in taking
him? If you are well pleased with what Allah has done you will receive your reward, but if
you are displeased or sore afflicted [by it], you are committing sin and being rebellious. You
have no cause for discontent with us, and we are going to return for you, so let him who will
beware, beware, for there are no dwellers whether in hair tents or in villages, whether on
land or on sea, but we examine their faces five times daily and at night, so that I know them
both small and great, know them individually. By Allah, O Muhammed, did I desire to take
the spirit of a gnat I could not do it till Allah gave me commandment to take it.”
It is related that the Apostle of Allah said: “Did the animals [i.e. domesticated beasts] know
what you know about dying you would never eat fat meat.” [20]
It is recorded that Abu Hamid al-Laffaf said:
One who reminds himself frequently of death gains three precious things, viz., an urge to
speedy repentance, a contentment with his daily provision, and a liveliness in worship,
whereas one who is forgetful of death will be punished for three things, for postponing
repentance, for not being content with a sufficiency, and for laziness in [matters of] worship.
It is recorded in Muslim sources that Jesus used to raise the dead by Allah’s permission.
Some of the unbelievers said to him:
“You have been raising to life those who had but recently died and who maybe were not
quite dead. Raise to life for us someone who died in ancient times.”
He said to them: “Choose whomsoever you will.”
They replied: “Raise for us Shem, Noah’s son.”
So he went to Shem’s grave, prayed a prayer of two rakcas, and made supplication to
Allah—exalted be He—whereupon Allah raised to life Shem the son of Noah, and lo, his
head and beard had gone white.
They said: “What is this? Folks used not to go grey in your time.”
He said: “I heard the summons, and I thought it was the resurrection, so out of fear my head
and my beard went white.”
Someone asked: “How long have you been dead?” and he answered, “Four thousand
years, yet the anguish of dying [21] has not left me.”
One Muslim authority has observed:
Blessed is he to whom Allah gives provision of understanding, rouses from the slumber of
heedlessness, and leads to ponder over the matter of his end. Let us, therefore, ask Allah to
appoint us a good ending, to grant us an ending that is accompanied by a message of good
tidings, for there is a message of good tidings from Allah—exalted be He—for the true
believer when death comes to him, and it is the words of the Most High.
Verily, those who have said, “Our Lord is Allah,” and then have kept the straight course, on
them will the angels descend [saying]: “Fear not! Grieve not! But rejoice in good tidings of
the Garden which ye have been promised.”
By keeping the straight course he means believing in Allah and in His Apostle, and standing
firm in the faith, though others say that it means performing the required duties and avoiding
things forbidden.
Man was created for death. There is no running away from it. Thus Allah has said: “Flight
will not benefit you at all if you are fleeing from death or being killed.” So it is incumbent on
each Muslim to make preparation for death before it comes. Allah has said: “Then wish for
death if ye are those who speak truth.” But they will never wish for it because of what their
hands have sent forward.
Allah here makes it clear that the one who speaks truth desires death, but the false speaker
flees from death because of the evil of his works. The truth-speaking believer has made
preparation for death, so he wishes for it, yearning for his Lord.
It is related that there is no soul, innocent or wicked, to which death is not a good thing. If it
is innocent Allah has said, “What is with Allah is a good thing for the innocent,” and if it is
wicked Allah has said, “We respite them only that they may increase in guilt, and for them is
humiliating punishment.”
The Torment and Distress of the Tomb
Al’Khalil b. Ahmad has reported:
We went out with the Apostle of Allah [to join] the funeral procession on a man from
the Ansar. [24] When we came to the grave it was not yet dug [completely], so the Prophet
sat down, and we also sat around about him, and it was as though the birds were over our
heads. In his hand was a rod with which he kept digging in the ground.
Presently he raised his head and said: “Seek refuge with Allah from the torment of the
tomb.”
This he said twice or thrice, and then went on: “When a man who is a true believer is
drawing near to the next world and is about to be cut off from this world, there descend to
him angels whose faces are white as the sun, bringing with them a shroud from Paradise
and celestial aromatics, and take a seat at his head and say, ‘O thou tranquil soul, come
forth to Allah’s favour and forgiveness.’
“Then,” said the Prophet, “it comes forth, flowing as easily as a drop from a water-skin,
whereupon [those angels] take it, not leaving it in his hand more than the twinkling of an eye
ere they take it, [wrap it] in the aforementioned shroud and aromatics so that the odor from
it is more redolent than the finest musk to be found on the face of the earth, and mount up
with it.
“There is not a single angel group whom they pass [as they mount upwards] but asks, ‘What
sweet-smelling spirit is this?’
“And they reply, ‘This is the spirit of so-and-so,’ using the finest names for him. Anon they
come with it to the gate of the lowest heaven and ask that it be opened for it. It is opened to
them and the chief personages in each heaven receive it and accompany it to that which
lies beyond it, till finally they arrive with it at the seventh heaven. There Allah says, ‘Write its
record in cIlliyun [25] and return it to the earth from which I created men, into which I make
them return, and out of which I shall bring them a second time.’ (Sura, xx, 55/57)
“The spirit is then returned to its body, whereupon two angels [26] come to it and ask it,
‘Who is the Lord?’
“It replies, ‘Allah is my Lord.’
“They ask, ‘And what is your religion?’
“‘Islam is my religion,’ it replies.
“Then they say, ‘And what say you about this man who was sent [on a mission] among
you?’
“And it answers, ‘He is the Apostle of Allah.’
“They ask, ‘What works have you?’
“And it answers, ‘I have read Allah’s Book, believed it, and in it put my trust.’
“Then a herald will call: ‘He has believed My servant (i.e. Muhammed). Spread for him a
bed (firash) from the Garden. Clothe him in a celestial garment, open for him a door giving
on the Garden through which may come to him its breezes and its aroma, and expand his
grave for him as far as eye can reach.’
“Then there approaches him a sweet-smelling man of handsome countenance, who says to
him: ‘Good tidings of that which please you. This is your day that you were promised.’
“He will ask, ‘And who are you?’
“To which the answer will come, ‘I am your pious works.’ Then [the deceased] will say: ‘O
Lord, bring on the hour that I may be again with my family and my servants.’”
The Prophet continued: “But when an unbeliever is drawing near to the next world and
being cut off from this world, there descends to him from heaven angels whose faces are
black, bringing with them hair-cloth, and take their seats just within his vision. Then the
Angel of Death arrives, takes a seat at his head and says, ‘O thou pernicious soul, come
forth to Allah’s discontent and wrath.’ Thereupon his soul is scattered through all his
members and [the angel] drags it forth like the dragging of an iron spit through moist wool,
tearing the veins and the sinews. Thus he takes it, but it is not in his hand more than the
twinkling of an eye ere [those angels] take it, put it in the hair-cloth where the odor from it is
like the stench of a decomposing carcass.
“They mount up with it, and there is not a single angel group whom they pass but asks,
‘What impure spirit is this?’
“They reply, ‘This is the spirit of So-and-so,’ using the least worthy name for him. Anon they
come with it to the gate of the lowest heaven and ask that it be opened for it, but it is not
opened.”
At this point the Apostle of Allah recited this verse (vii 40/38):
“The gates of heaven will not be opened for them, nor will they enter the Garden till a camel
passes through a needle’s eye.
“[He continued,] Then Allah will say, ‘Write this record in sijjin, [27] then let his spirit be
thrown out.’”
When a true believer is placed in his grave, the grave is expanded for him seventy cubits,
strewn with sweet basil, and hung with silk. If he should be one who has memorized
somewhat of the Qur’an, the light of that will suffice him, but should he have nothing (of the
Qur’an) memorized, a light equivalent to that of the sun will be put in his grave, and he
himself will be like a sleeping bird who will not be wakened save by her best beloved.
At this point I feel safe in concluding that Islam in the Middle East gives more attention to
death than Christianity. The aforementioned details show clearly that in Islam afterlife for
good men is something to look forward to. It depicts both spiritual and material life.
Conversely, Christianity generally emphasizes afterlife more than being in the world.
Notes
[1] Hughes' Dictionary of Islam (London, 1885), 79–81.
[2] Muslims wear ihram or simple white robes when participating in the pilgrimage to Mecca.
The idea of paradisiacal clothing is also known among members of the Mormon faith.
[3] Italics added by the author. Again, such a belief resembles the Muslim beliefs, i.e., white is
the symbol of purity and blackness is the symbol of sin.
[4] Reminiscent of the words of Jesus in the New Testament, Mark 10:25.
[5] The origin of the American word sherbet?
[6] A water well which is considered holy water by all Muslims who perform the annual
pilgrimage to Mecca.
[7] In Arabic, Bukhur.
[8] As in the case of Eastern Christians and Jews.
[9] A common habit among Middle Eastern people.
[10] This has reference to washing the body of the deceased.
[11] A Muslim ritual of purification performed before entering the Mosque.
[12] A white sheet of cloth to cover the lower parts of the body.
[13] This means a “shirt.”
[14] Lifafah is an Arabic word delivered from the root laffa, “to wrap up.”
[15] A poor person.
[16] Hughes’ Dictionary of Islam, pp. 79–81. Nowadays in the Middle East the family of the
deceased goes to the grave carrying a palm tree leaf to put on the grave instead of flowers.
Here we can see cultural interplay. Flowers in the Middle East are still considered a sign of
joy, but a palm leaf is not so joyful.
[17] Arthur Jeffery, A Reader on Islam (Houston, 1962), 197.
[18] The two words bashir and nadhir, used in this Tradition, are said to have become technical
terms in pre-Islamic Mecca, the bashir being the announcer of good news of a caravan’s
safe arrival, and the nadhir being the announcer of the bad news that a caravan had been
lost. (Compare bashir with the term bisharah which is applicable only to the New
Testament.)
[19] Mararat al-mawt, “the distress of death,” has reference to one of the many expressions
used for death-pains or the agony of death.
[20] I.e., they would be so terrified that they would always be thin and lean.
[21] Sakrat al-mawt is another of the many expressions for the agony of death, or the last
moments before death.
[22] Those who are loyal or sincere.
[23] Plural of waliyy, which means a friend, a beloved, a tutor, a patron, a guardian, and in
some contexts, a saint. It may be noted that the Guardian Angels are beings identified here
with the Recording Angels, though generally they are kept distinct.
[24] An Arab word which means “the supporters of the Prophet.”
[25] Sura LXXXIII, 18–21. It is said to be a place in the uppermost heaven where the record of
the righteous is kept.
[26] These are Munkar and Nakir, the blue-eyed questioners of the dead.
[27] Sura LXXXIII, 7–9; in Arabic it means “prison.”
[28] This is elaborated in Frazer’s classic work, The Golden Bough.
[29] Unless death occurred at night. In this case, the funeral rites are administered next day as
early as possible.
[30] Peasants, especially in Egypt, instead of a suit wear a garment which is
called galabiyya or quftan.
[31] There is no serious research on the burial customs of the Copts in Egypt. However, the
writer is planning to conduct such research in the near future.
[32] The Christians and Jews follow the same procedures, with some variations from one
denomination to another.
[33] Among the upper classes, this pattern is not followed in most cases.