Islamic law

From WikiMD's Wellness Encyclopedia

the most widespread type of religious law, it is the legal system enforced in over 30 countries, particularly in the near east, but also in central and south asia, africa, and indonesia. In many countries islamic law operates in tandem with a civil law system. Islamic law is embodied in the sharia, an arabic word meaning"The right path." sharia covers all aspects of public and private life and organizes them into five categories: obligatory, recommended, permitted, disliked, and forbidden. The primary sources of sharia law are the qur'an, believed by muslims to be the word of god revealed to the prophet muhammad by the angel gabriel, and the sunnah, the teachings of the prophet and his works. In addition to these two primary sources, traditional sunni muslims recognize the consensus of muhammad's companions and islamic jurists on certain issues, called ijmas, and various forms of reasoning, including analogy by legal scholars, referred to as qiyas. Shia muslims reject ijmas and qiyas as sources of sharia law.

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Contributors: Prab R. Tumpati, MD