For
thousands of years people have tried to bring good luck and avert bad
luck from them and their property by employing charms, amulets, and
talismans. A charm is a practice or expression believed to have magic
power, similar to an incantation or a spell.[1] A talisman is an object
bearing a sign or engraved character, and thought to act as a charm to
avert evil and bring good fortune.[2] Amulets were used to protect man,
or his possessions, such as houses and cattle from the evil influences
of witches, demons, and other mischievous powers, or to counteract
misfortune and illness. The amulet is found both in the Orient and in
the West, among tribes and nations down to the present day. Assyrians
and Egyptians, Greeks and Romans, Jews and Christians, fostered this
ancient superstition, and, in varying degrees, foster it today.[3]
Despite technical and scientific advancements, superstitions and amulets
continue to pervade the Western society. Some of the amulets popular
in the West are:
(1)
A horseshoe. The most commonly encountered lucky charm in modern North
America is the horseshoe and its representative models in the form of
jewelry, wall hangings, and printed images. The use of worn-out
horseshoes as magically protective amulets - especially hung above or
next to doorways - originated in Europe, where one can still find them
nailed onto houses, barns, and stables from Italy through Germany and up
into Britain and Scandinavia.
(2)
The four-leaf clover. The four-leaf clover is among the commonest of
North American lucky emblems and is an especially frequent image on good
luck coins, and good luck postcards.
(3)
The wishbone or “merry thought.” The wishbone is the third most
popular American amulet, next only to the horseshoe and the four-leaf
clover. It is a bone overlying the breastbone of fowl, as in a chicken,
or turkey. It is the custom to save this bone intact when carving the
bird at dinner and to dry it over the stove or by the fire until it is
brittle. Once dry, it is given to two people, who pull it apart until
it cracks, each one making a wish while doing so. The person who gets
the “long half” of the wishbone will have his or her wish “come true.”
If the wishbone breaks evenly, both parties get their wishes.
(4) The Rabbit’s Foot.
(5) Charm bracelets.
(6) Good Luck coins or ‘pocket pieces.’
(7) The Lucky or Smiling Buddha commonly found in Oriental shops and restaurants.
The Crucifix. When blessed, it is considered an important sacramental.
Hebrew Amulets: Grape-Leaf Star of David pendant. One of its ancient uses was as a magical Kabalistic symbol.
Charms & Amulets in Pre-Islamic Arabia:
Arabian
amulets (tameemah in Arabic) are made from pearls or bones that are
worn on the necks of children or adults, or are hung up in houses or
cars, in order to ward off evil – especially the evil eye – or to bring
some benefits. The Arabs in the time of Prophet Muhammad used to wear
arm bracelets, bangles, beaded necklaces, shells, and similar amulets to
bring good luck or avert bad fortune.
Islamic Ruling on Amulets:
Allah
is the sole Lord and Ruler of the physical world. ‘Lord’ means He is
the Creator and controls all affairs in the universe; the Kingdom of the
heaven and the earth belongs exclusively to Him, and He owns them. He
alone brought existence out of non-existence and it depends on Him for
its conservation and continuance. His power is required at every moment
to sustain all creatures. Angels, prophets, human beings, and the
animal and plant kingdoms are under His control. Only Allah knows what
the future holds. Good luck and bad fortune are from Allah alone.
Faith
in charms, amulets, and talismans contradict belief in Allah’s Lordship
by attributing the ability to bring good luck or avert bad fortune to
these created brings whereas only Allah can bring good and avert harm.
Consequently, the Prophet, may Allay praise him, opposed these
superstitious practices and taught people to have firm belief in their
Lord, rather than amulets, which cannot change what Allah has destined
and can bring no good fortune to anyone. Even though they are not
capable of averting any harm, belief in amulets usually leads to
idolatry over time. This can be seen among Catholics where the
crucifix, statues, and medallions of saints are worn or kept for
blessings and good fortune.
When
people accepted Islam in the time of the Prophet, they carried with
them their old faith in amulets. The Prophet strictly forbade them to
adhere to such:
(1) The Messenger of Allah, may Allah praise him, said,
‘Spells, amulets and love-charms are shirk.” (Ahmad, Abu Dawud)
(2) The Messenger of Allah said,
“Whoever wears an amulet, may Allah not fulfill his need, and whoever wears a sea-shell, may Allah not give him peace.” (Ahmad)
(3)
A group came to the Messenger of Allah to pledge their allegiance to
him. He accepted the allegiance of nine of them. They said, “O
Messenger of Allah, you accepted the allegiance of nine but not of this
one.” The Prophet said,
“He is wearing an amulet.”
The man put his hand in his shirt and took it off, then the Prophet accepted his allegiance, saying,
‘Whoever wears an amulet has committed shirk.” (Ahmad)
The
companions strictly abided by the prohibition set by the Prophet on
amulets. They openly opposed such practices even among their family
members. For example, Hudhayfah, one of the companions of the Prophet,
visited a sick man, and seeing a bracelet on the man’s upper arm, he
pulled it off and broke it, then recited the verse,
“Most of them who believe in Allah, commit shirk.” (Quran 12:106)[4]
On
another occasion he touched the upper arm of a sick man and found a
cord bracelet tied to it. The man told Hudhayfah that it contained a
spell specially made for him, so Hudhayfah tore if off and said, ‘If
you had died with it on, I would never have prayed over your
funeral.’[5]
Once, ibn Mas’ood said, “I heard the Messenger of Allah say,
‘Spells, amulets and love-charms are shirk.”
Zaynab,
the wife of ibn Mas’ud said, “Why do you say this? By Allah, my eye
used to discharge and I kept going to so and so, the Jew, who put a
spell on it (indicating a charm necklace) for me, and it (the eye)
calmed down.” Ibn Mas’ud snatched it from her neck and broke it.
‘Surely, the family of Abdullah has no need for shirk,” he uttered…
“That was just the work of the devil who was picking it with his hand,
and when (the Jew) uttered the spell, he stopped. All you needed to do
was to say as the Messenger of Allah used to say:
‘Adhhib il-ba’s Rabb al-naas ishfi anta al-Shaafi laa shifaa’a illa shifaa’uka shifaa’an laa yughaadiru saqaman
“Remove
the harm, O Lord of mankind, and heal, You are the Healer. There is no
healing but Your healing, a healing which leaves no disease behind.”
(Abu Daud, Ibn Majah)
Wearing
an amulet is shirk because, instead of relying upon Allah, the heart
becomes attached to the amulet, trusting that it will bring good luck
and love, or avert bad fortune or disease.
Islamic Ruling on Quranic Charms & Amulets
Some
Muslims wear the Quran as a good luck charm either by hanging it in
their car, or on key chains, or wearing it on bracelets or necklaces. A
miniature Quran is worn in lockets. ‘Allah,’ ‘Bismillah,’ ‘La ilaha
ill-Allah,’ or specific verses of the Quran, sometimes written in small
illegible script, are worn as pendants or lockets are also used.
Wearing them for decoration is obviously not shirk, but most people wear
them for protection or blessings. Therefore, this practice of wearing
the Quran as a good luck charm should be discouraged for the following
reasons:
(i)
It may lead to wearing non-Quranic amulets that are considered shirk by
common people who cannot distinguish between the two.
(ii)
It is disrespectful to wear the Name or Word of Allah in the toilet and
it is not always possible for a person wearing Quranic amulets to
remove them every time she visits the toilet.
(iii)
The Prophet himself did not wear such amulets or put them on his family
members for protection or blessings, instead he cautioned against all
forms of amulets.
Footnotes:
[1]
“charm.” Encyclopædia Britannica from Encyclopædia Britannica Premium
Service. (http://www.britannica.com/eb/article-9125164)
[2]
“talisman.” Encyclopædia Britannica from Encyclopædia Britannica
Premium Service. (http://www.britannica.com/eb/article-9071049)
[3] Jewish Encyclopedia, p. 546.
[4] Ibn Abi Hatim
[5] Ibn Waki’
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