Jump to content

Gharqad

Extended-protected article
From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia

The gharqad (Arabic: غرقد) tree is mentioned in several hadiths that describe Islamic eschatology. It is considered likely that the gharqad tree is genus Nitraria[1] or genus Lycium.[2][3]

An excerpt from a hadith attributed to Abu Huraira (one of Muhammad's companions) is famously quoted in the 1988 founding charter of Hamas, Article 17, stating that every stone and tree—except for the gharqad tree—will speak aloud to reveal if a Jew is taking cover, so that the Muslim army can find and kill the Jew.[4]

Members of the genera Nitraria and Lycium do not have any significance in Judaism.

In Sunni Islam

It is prophesied that shortly before Judgement Day, the evil al-Masih ad-Dajjal will falsely claim to be the Mahdi; his followers will mostly be the Jewish people. The genuine Mahdi will arrive to lead a Muslim army against Dajjal and his followers in an apocalyptic battle known as al-Malhamat al-Kubra, until the Second Coming of Jesus, after which the Dajjal will be killed.[5]

Hadith

In Sunni tradition, Abu Huraira reported that the Islamic prophet Muhammad said:[4][6]

The last hour would not come unless the Muslims will fight against the Jews and the Muslims would kill them until the Jews would hide themselves behind a stone or a tree and a stone or a tree would say: "Oh Muslim, oh servant of Allah!, there is a Jew behind me, come and kill him!" – But the tree Gharqad will not say, for it is the tree of the Jews.

Narrations that explicitly mention the gharqad tree are:

Narrations that do not mention the gharqad tree, only mentioning talking rocks or trees are:

There is a similar version allegedly narrated by Hudhayfah ibn al-Yaman (one of the Sahabah, a companion of the Prophet) mentioned in Aqeedah of Ahlus-Sunnah Wal Jama'ah Hadith 21: "They (the Muslims) will break the Cross, slaughter the swine and abolish Jizya".[7]

Interpretation

Within Sunni Islam, these narrations are understood as part of Sunni eschatology's description of a great war at the end times against the forces of Dajjal which should occur after the second coming Jesus according to Islam. Then, according to this eschatology, Jesus will lead an army of Muslims, some of whom are righteous Christians and righteous Jews converting to Islam in the eve of the battle, to fight the army of Dajjal consisting of Jews believing Dajjal is a god, and if a Jew of Dajjal's army hides behind a stone or a tree, this stone or tree will miraculously talk to Muslims to expose the Jew unless it is a Gharqad tree, because it is "their (the Jews') tree".[8][9]

Sunni moderate writers debate the subject in eschatological terms, emphasizing that this should happen only in the end times after the second coming of Jesus in accordance with Sunni thought and should not damage current Islamic–Jewish relations.[10]

According to Sunni interpretation in Ashrat al-sa’a (“the signs of the hour”) by Yusuf al-Wabil, the Dajjal’s army will be made up of Jews, Persians, Turks, Bedouins, and women. Traditions from Bukhari’s and Ibn Maja’s hadith collections also include Persians, Turks, and Bedouins as well as Jews.[11]

The general message of the text is often alleged as a prophecy, but it does not appear in the Quran, which Muslims believe is Allah's revelation to Muhammad.

According to Memri TV, Yasir Qadhi described this text as referring to an end times war which is "a fight between good and evil"[12] and that the text is "predictive and not prescriptive".[12]

Other Islamic sects

Not all Muslims accept all hadiths as reliable and may conclude somewhat different eschatology; most Shia Muslims reject Sunni hadiths as unreliable and have their own hadiths such as The Four Books. While according to Karimov, Zaydi Shia may hold Sunni hadiths with high esteem,[13][better source needed] Zaydis have their own primary hadith traditions.[14] While some Ibadi Muslims do not consider Sunni hadiths as reliable and rely on Tartib al-Musnad, Hoffman noted that contemporary Ibadis often approve of the standard Sunni collections.[15]

Dajani Daoudi concluded that by comprehensive review of the Quran, no such hadith would exist since it openly contradicts Islamic faith and that Muslims believe a hadith is the word of man while the Quran is the word of God.[16] Daoudi added that "this hadith" (that which he quoted) was collected 150 years after the death of Muhammad, that the authenticity of such a hadith is disputed, and that this particular hadith has become controversial for promoting anti-Jewish sentiments among Muslims.[17]

Critical assessment

Insignificance of the tree in Judaism

Neither Nitraria nor Lycium have any sanctity in Judaism; they are not one of the four species of Sukkot, they are not one of the Seven Species of the Land of Israel and they are not one of the incense plants of the Torah; they are also not used for Havdalah and there is no Jewish tradition of eating their fruits in Tu BiShvat.

Fundamentalism around the concept

Freyer Stowasser describes 19th and early 20th century views about apocalyptic hadiths of the sort introduced by Muhammad Abduh and the young, pre-Salafiist Rashid Rida:[11]

The narratives on the Dajjal's end time reign and ultimate defeat were unreliable because of: questionable origin and transmitters, weak chains of hadith authentication, internal contradictions on this topic within the hadith corpus as a whole (that invalidate all of its parts), and the fact that these narratives contradict the Qur'anic text.

These modernist, deconstructionist approaches were unacceptable to Sunni clerical traditionalists. They have remained loyal to the more "literalist and inherited form" of apocalyptic hadiths, although they tend not to interpret them as calling for revolutionary political movements.[11]

Use in anti-semitic incitement

The Gharqad narrative is often quoted to disparage and invoke blood libels, e.g. all Jews anywhere, anytime are "killers of prophets", "greedy", "arrogant", "enemies of god", and "enemies of humanity before they are enemies of Muslims", causing incitement against Jews.[18] In fact, people of Jewish ancestry have free will to choose not to self-define themselves as "enemies" of anything. Also, there are different and often conflicting Israelite and Jewish perspectives (Rabbinic Jews, Karaites, Reform Jews, non-believers, and others) on religious issues, peaceful interpretations of scripture, and tolerance.[18] Few or none are considered in cases of incitement caused by extremist radicals, most often fueled by political conflicts.[19]

Conspiracy and the Grand Mufti

Some Sunni Islamists who strongly advocate for the destruction of Israel have propagated a false allegation that Israeli Jews are planting millions of gharqad trees throughout Israel in preparation for a dire war.[20] In 2012, the Grand Mufti of Jerusalem, Muhammad Ahmad Hussein, appointed by the secular Palestinian Authority (in contrast to Hamas), proclaimed:[21]

“Palestine in its entirety is a revolution... The Hour [of Resurrection] will not come until you fight the Jews. The Jew will hide behind stones or trees. The stones or trees will call: ‘Oh Muslim, servant of Allah, there is a Jew behind me, come and kill him.’ Except for the Gharqad tree [which will keep silent].” “Therefore, it is no wonder that you see Gharqad [trees] surrounding the [Israeli] settlements and colonies.”

This is entirely false as forests planted by Israeli authorities are typically pine and cypress, with around 240 million such trees planted.[22][23][24] Olive trees are planted to a lesser extent, but none of the Lycium or Nitraria are actively cultivated. Even in Israeli nurseries, no one seems to know the ‘tree of the Jew.’[21]

See also

References

  1. ^ ""Nitraria retusa, Nitraria tridentata, Salt tree, Hebrew: ימלוח פגום, Arabic: دقرغ/قدرغ"". Flowers in Israel.
  2. ^ Divakar, Madhu C.; Al-Siyabi, Amani; Varghese, Shirley S.; Al Rubaie, Mohammed (July 2016). "The Practice of Ethnomedicine in the Northern and Southern Provinces of Oman". Oman Medical Journal. 31 (4): 245–252. doi:10.5001/omj.2016.49. PMC 4927734. PMID 27403235.
  3. ^ Ojalvo, Denis (15 September 2015). "The Jewish Tree 'Gharqad'". Şalom.
  4. ^ a b Muslim 2922, it is narrated by Abu Huraira in Sahih Muslim 2922 (Book 54, Hadith 103; Book 41, Hadith 6985)
  5. ^ Cook, David (2021) [2002]. Studies in Muslim Apocalyptic. Berlin and London: Gerlach Press. pp. 93–104. ISBN 9783959941211. OCLC 238821310.
  6. ^ Muhammad Mustafa Azmi (1978). Studies in Early Hadith Literature. Indianapolis. p. 36.{{cite book}}: CS1 maint: location missing publisher (link)
  7. ^ "Major Signs Before the Day of Judgement". www.islaamnet.com. Retrieved 17 June 2024.
  8. ^ Suleiman, Omar; Khan, Nazir; Parrot, Justin (2017). "The Myth of An Antisemitic Genocide In Muslim Scripture" (PDF). Yaqeen Institute for Islamic Research.
  9. ^ "Tafsir Ibn-Kathir or Surah An-Nisa". Quran.com.
  10. ^ Elias, Abu Amina (February 27, 2013). "Hadith of Gharqad Tree: A good deed to kill Jews in Islam?".
  11. ^ a b c Stowasser, Freyer. "The End is Near: Minor and Major Signs of the Hour in Islamic Texts and Contexts" (PDF). Georgetown University. p. 6.
  12. ^ a b "American Islamic Scholar Sheikh Yasir Qadhi Defends Antisemitic Comments: MEMRI Jumps on Any Preacher Who Quotes Hadith about the Trees and the Rocks, But the Killing of Jews Is Prediction, Not Prescription; Muslims Cannot Be Antisemites". Memri TV. August 31, 2019.
  13. ^ Karimov, N. R. (2019). "Some brief information on al-Sihah al-Sitta". Theoretical & Applied Science. 5 (5): 611–620. doi:10.15863/TAS.2019.05.73.96. S2CID 195456153.
  14. ^ "The Zaidi Dilemma: Shia Hadith Sources". TwelverShia.net. March 7, 2019.
  15. ^ Hoffman, Valerie Jon (2012). The Essentials of Ibadi Islam. Syracuse, New York: Syracuse University Press. pp. 3–4. ISBN 9780815650843.
  16. ^ Dajani, Mohammed (May 13, 2016). "On the Significance of Dialogue". Fikra Forum. Washington Institute for Near East Policy.
  17. ^ Dajani, Mohammed (September 5, 2017). "Dealing with Hate Sermons". Fikra Forum. Washington Institute for Near East Policy.
  18. ^ a b Lasson, Kenneth (2005). "Incitement in the Mosques: Testing the Limits of Free Speech and Religious Liberty". Whittier Law Review. 27 (3). University of Baltimore Law.
  19. ^ Hayden, Michael Edison (1 October 2018). "Three U.S. Imams have Called for Death of Jews Since Trump's Jerusalem Announcement". Newsweek. Retrieved 25 November 2023.
  20. ^ Oliver, Anne Marie; Steinberg, Paul F. (April 2006). "The Gharqad Tree". The Road to Martyrs' Square: A Journey into the World of the Suicide Bomber. Oxford Academic. pp. 20–24. doi:10.1093/acprof:oso/9780195305593.003.0007. ISBN 978-0-19-530559-3.
  21. ^ a b Gerloff, Johannes (23 August 2021). "'Gharqad', the Tree of the Jews". Christians for Israel International. Retrieved 25 November 2022.
  22. ^ Liphshiz, Cnaan (January 14, 2022). "How planting a tree in Israel became controversial". The Jerusalem Post. Jewish Telegraphic Agency.
  23. ^ Czederpiltz, D. L. L.; Wikler, K.; Radmacher, M. R.; Volk, T. J.; Hadar, Y.; Micales, J. (2004). "Biodiversity of wood-inhabiting fungi in Israeli pine forests". Memoirs of the New York Botanical Garden. 89. USDA: 191–202.
  24. ^ אסם, יגיל (2013). "סוגיות עיקריות בחקר היערות המחטניים של ישראל – סיכום ארבעים שנות מחקר (1972–2012)". אקולוגיה וסביבה. 4 (4/2013).