Music of Diverse Cultures
Cool Stuff #3 Arab World & India
By: Anna J. Micklatcher-Peterson
Arab World Worship
The Arab World is where
Judaism, Christianity, and Islam all began. These three religions are
monotheistic, which means they believe in only one God. All three believe in the Abrahamic tradition where
God (known as “Yahweh” in Hebrew/Judaism or Christianity and “Allah” in Arabic/Islam)
revealed himself to the prophet Abraham.
Yahweh is only one of the many names we call God in the Christian bible. Jewish believers will not say God’s name “Yahweh”
because they believe it is too sacred to be spoken. For the Christian believer, “Jehovah” is God’s
personal name. Alpha, Omega, Beginning, End, Creator, Father, I Am That I Am,
Redeemer, Rock, Shepherd, Savior and Lord are some of the many other names for
God in the Christian bible.
"I Call Him Lord"
The Collingsworth Family
Israel is the
biblical Holy Land of the Jews, Christians and Muslims. Jerusalem is the location of the most sacred
sights of all three of these religions.
The Western Wall or better known as the “Wailing Wall” is where Jews go
to pray and weep at the site because of the destruction of the Temple Mount by
the Romans in 70 CE. The Western Wall is
the spot closest to the Holy of Holies, which is the central focus of the
temple.
Although there are
many sites in Israel, especially Jerusalem, that are important to Christians,
The Church of the Holy Sepulchre is one of the most important sites to
Christianity. It is supposed to be the
location of Calvary or Golgotha, where Jesus was crucified and the empty tomb
of Jesus, where he was buried and resurrected.
The tomb is enclosed by a 19th century shrine called the
Aedicula.
The Dome of the Rock
is sacred to both Muslims and Jews. The Muslims
believe the Prophet Muhammad, founder of Islam, ascended into heaven from this
site. It is sacred to the Jews because
they believe it is the holiest site on the earth. They believe this is where Abraham prepared
to sacrifice his son Isaac.
India “Hindu” Religion
During my education
here at Converse College, my daughter and I visited a Hindu temple in Spartanburg
along with other Converse students. Their
customs were different from what I am used to.
As soon as we entered, we took our shoes off. We got there early, so it gave us an
opportunity to see the people as they came to worship.
There were two large
carpets and a runner carpet in the middle.
The men sat on the left and the women sat on the right carpet. Some of the elderly ladies sat in chairs to
the right. Those who wanted to pray or
leave gifts of fruit, flowers, or money walked up the middle carpet to the
altar where all the gods (statues) were.
Rose petals were put around the gods and goddesses. The fruit was laid on the altar and the money
put into an offering box that had a slot on the top.
As the service began,
the men spoke and sang in a language I was not familiar with, so I did not
understand what they were saying. They
were very courteous though to stop and explain it to all of us what was going
on. The elephant is their main god. Rama came eight times to India. They are waiting on the ninth. It has been thousands of years since he
came. I felt like this part of their
custom is similar to Christianity because we are waiting on “Jesus” to come
back from thousands of years, also.
They told us the
story of the god child before the service moved outside. The king wanted to kill his son, so he had
his sister who had favor with the fire gods take him into the fire to
burn. Since the god was in the child and
all the people were praying for him, the sister of the king who was the child’s
aunt burned and the child walked out.
The service moved
outside where a huge bonfire was built in memory of this story. We walked around the bonfire casting all our
bad thoughts into the fire and pouring water on it. This reminded me of Christianity where we
repent of our sins and the blood of Christ washes our sins away. The fire to me was symbolic to hell and the
water was symbolic to the blood of Christ or being baptized. I was also was reminded of Shadrach, Meshach,
and Abednego in the Book of Daniel (of the Christian bible) where the three
Hebrew men are thrown into a fiery furnace and walk out unharmed because they
are preserved by a fourth man whom the king sees walking in the flames, “the fourth…
like a son of God”.
We came back inside
where many put color on their faces. The
children threw the color into the air.
This represented a celebration of spring.
We had a meal
together that was a flat bread, green peppers, a spicy sauce to dip the bread
in, a yellow sugary sweet and cinnamon type of tea. While we ate, I had the opportunity to talk
to a man about his custom. He lived in
India and his wife was from America.
They had an arranged marriage by their parents before they ever
met. He moved to America when they were
married. They have since divorced. I asked how his culture felt about divorce. He said they look at it very badly. You are an outcast when you divorce. You have to force people to talk to you.
Before we finished
our meal, some of the fruit that had been offered to the gods and goddesses was
given to us to eat. The coconut that was
burned in the fire had been cut up into small pieces and offered to us to eat. I felt like this part of their custom was
like my custom of taking Communion in the Christian faith.
Islam
There was something I
wanted to add to what we learned about Muslim belief pertaining to their
pilgrimage to Mecca. Muslims try to go
on this journey at least once in their life, depending on their circumstances. As we learned in class, this is called a “Hajj.” What I found to be amazing about their
culture and belief is that they can only take this journey if they are “debt
free.”

Hi Anna,
ReplyDeleteI really enjoyed reading this. I have always been interested in other religions and what kind of beliefs other cultures have. Your blog did help me to understand some of the different ones. It's also really neat that you got to go to a Hindu temple. That had to have been a neat and different experience for you! I would like to visit a temple, such as that, at least once.
I like that you talk about the religions. I find it fascinating.
ReplyDeleteI don't know much about the Hindu religion. It was really interesting to read about what happens during a service, especially the part when they moved outside.
ReplyDeleteThis is all very interesting, Anna. I really need to remember to talk with Dr. Fohr and ask if I can tag along with her class the next time they visit the Hindu Temple--or the Buddhist one, for that matter.
ReplyDelete