Grace Seeker
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I feel a lot of misunderstandings occur over connotations of words and the semantics used. there is difference in the way people of different cultures will perceive statements made in a language that is not their native tongue.
Celebration is one of these things. I believe the concept of celebration differs very differently among native English speakers and those who come from non English speaking heritage. Celebration is a term widely used in English and it often has no reference to a religious practice. westerners celebrate, waking up to a new day, national pickle week, ground hog day, the first day of anything, Friday nights, the birth of a child, a win at foot ball, a good pay check, last day at work, moving to a new home, not having to move, arrival of mail, sending mail, the list is endless.
Some western people consider every meal a celebration. So to carry things to extreme we are partaking in the Western custom of celebrating a meal every time we eat. I doubt if any of us would view eating as an innovation. I believe intent and ritual or lack of ritual will determine if what we do is a celebration, in our concepts of celebration. I know that is an extreme, but I point that out hopefully to give an example of what some of the things are that can be called celebrations in the English Language, yet not meet our own definition of a celebration.
So the question of Thanksgiving becomes: "Is it a celebration by our concept of celebration or is it more in line with our concept of sharing a meal with family and friends."
Thank-you, Woodrow. If celebration has a more specific sense within Islam, I was not using it that way, but the way that Woodrow used it here.
To "celebrate" Thanksgiving, is to take advantage of the day off that most people have and use it as an opportunity to gather as a family. It involves no act of worship, nor any religious ritual that one would not otherwise be engaged in as part of one's daily activities. For Christians, that typically involves a prayer before the meal (Muslims would call this dua, not rituallized prayer) in which we give God thanks for the food, one another, and any other blessings in our lives that one might feel inclined to include in giving thanks. I would think that a Muslim household would gather in much the same manner, grateful to Allah for his blessings in their lives, whether they would express it the same way that I would is not important, but such a gather because they wanted to be together to give thanks to Allah together would be, in my way of thinking, a celebration of Thanksgiving, with thanks being given to Allah for his care and providence in their lives.
With this new, and hopefully better understanding, and in light of the previous comments made regarding bid'ah, would this type of thanksgiving celebration still be seen as wrong for Muslims?