Religious Practices: A True Religion in Afghanistan

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A True Religion

Religion in Afghanistan has an immense amount of history behind it and some of that history had just recently occurred. Islam is the number one religion in Afghanistan; in fact, 99% of people in the Afghanistan region are religious and not just any religion Islamic religion, and the other 1% are less practiced religions. Islam has two main types of sub-divisions, the Sunni Muslims and the Shia Muslims. Both practice Islam, but have totally different opinions on how to worship the Islamic god. Opinions so different that one of the sub-division religions are considered a radical practice. Afghanistan is a true religion because the people either follow the rules through and through, or they do not follow at all. Religion in Afghanistan is not only a choice, but it is a lifestyle. For a while in Afghan history, it became a mandatory lifestyle.

In Afghanistan, there are not many types of religious practices unlike countries such as the United States. In Afghanistan, there is one predominant religion and that is Islam. So, dominant that 99% of the county is Islamic; the other 1% is made up mostly of either Hindus or Sikhs (Samarin, 2013). The definition of Islam is to “surrender;” People who practice the Islamic religion state that they, “surrender” to the Will of God (Armstrong, 2000). The word is also extracted from the root word “salaam,” which means peace. In Islam, they follow one God and his name in Arabic is Allah. Another word to call someone who follows the Islamic faith is a Muslim. The Arabic word, “Muslim” means, “one who submits to God.” Muslims’ and the Islamic religion have greatly impacted the economic, military, and political history of mostly countries in the Middle East. It is said that the, “No...

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...Mohammed left his legacy to go on through his son-in-law. The Taliban affected the country by forcing Islamic religion on everyone even if someone did not follow it. If someone did not follow it the Taliban would go to the extreme and kill the non Islamic follow.

Works Cited

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Banuazizi, Ali, and Myron Weiner. The State, Religion, and Ethnic Politics: Afghanistan,

Iran, and Pakistan. Syracuse, NY: Syracuse UP, 1986. Print

"Islam." International Encyclopedia of the Social Sciences. 1968. 13 Apr. 2014

Marsden, Peter. The Taliban: War, Religion and the New Order in Afghanistan. Karachi:

Oxford UP, 1998. Print.

Sering, Senge. "Human Sacrifice and the Taliban | Sharnoff's Global Views." Sharnoff's

Global Views. SHARNOFF'S GLOBAL VIEWS, n.d. Web. 29 Apr. 2014.

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