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Islam Overview
Islam, one of the
three major world religions, along with Judaism and Christianity,
that profess monotheism, or the belief in a single God. In the
Arabic language, the word Islam means “surrender” or
“submission”—submission to the will of God. A follower of Islam is
called a Muslim, which in Arabic means “one who surrenders to God.”
The Arabic name for God, Allah, refers to the same God worshiped by
Jews and Christians. Islam’s central teaching is that there is only
one all-powerful, all-knowing God, and this God created the
universe. This rigorous monotheism, as well as the Islamic teaching
that all Muslims are equal before God, provides the basis for a
collective sense of loyalty to God that transcends class, race,
nationality, and even differences in religious practice. Thus, all
Muslims belong to one community, the umma, irrespective of their
ethnic or national background.

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