Book contents
- Frontmatter
- Contents
- Acknowledgments
- Glossary
- Chronology
- 1 Martyrs in religions
- 2 Martyrdom in the genesis of Islam
- 3 Legal definitions, boundaries and rewards of the martyr
- 4 Sectarian Islam: Sunni, Shiʿite and Sufi martyrdom
- 5 Martyrs: warriors and missionaries in medieval Islam
- 6 Martyrs of love and epic heroes
- 7 Patterns of prognostication, narrative and expiation
- 8 Martyrdom in contemporary radical Islam
- 9 Martyrdom in Islam: past and present
- Appendix: The classical story of the Ashab al-ukhdud and translated contemporary martyrdom narratives
- Bibliography
- Index
Appendix: The classical story of the Ashab al-ukhdud and translated contemporary martyrdom narratives
Published online by Cambridge University Press: 05 June 2012
- Frontmatter
- Contents
- Acknowledgments
- Glossary
- Chronology
- 1 Martyrs in religions
- 2 Martyrdom in the genesis of Islam
- 3 Legal definitions, boundaries and rewards of the martyr
- 4 Sectarian Islam: Sunni, Shiʿite and Sufi martyrdom
- 5 Martyrs: warriors and missionaries in medieval Islam
- 6 Martyrs of love and epic heroes
- 7 Patterns of prognostication, narrative and expiation
- 8 Martyrdom in contemporary radical Islam
- 9 Martyrdom in Islam: past and present
- Appendix: The classical story of the Ashab al-ukhdud and translated contemporary martyrdom narratives
- Bibliography
- Index
Summary
Story of the king, the monk and the boy
There was a king among those prior to you [the Muslims], and he had a magician. When he became aged, he said to the king: I have become aged; so send me a youth (ghulam) so that I can teach him magic. So he sent him a youth to teach him, and along the way, he passed a monk, sat down beside him, listened to his words and they amazed him. Whenever he came to the magician he would pass the monk, and sit with him, and when he got to the magician the latter would beat him, and say: “What took you [so long]?” And then when he returned to his family, he would sit with the monk listening to his words, and when he returned to his family they would beat him and say: “What took you [so long]?” He complained about that to the monk, and the latter said: If you fear the magician, say: “My family kept me”; and if you fear your family then say: “The magician kept me.”
While they were in this situation, one day a great beast passed by on the road, stopped the people and would not let them pass. The boy said: “Now I will know – is the magician more favorable to God or the monk?”
- Type
- Chapter
- Information
- Martyrdom in Islam , pp. 172 - 183Publisher: Cambridge University PressPrint publication year: 2007