Imamat Day

From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia

Part of a series on
Islam


Beliefs

Allah · Oneness of God
Muhammad · Prophets of Islam

Practices

Profession of Faith · Prayer
Fasting · Charity · Pilgrimage

History & Leaders

Timeline of Muslim history
Ahl al-Bayt · Sahaba
Rashidun Caliphs · Shi'a Imams

Texts & Laws

Qur'an · Sunnah · Hadith
Fiqh · Sharia
Kalam · Tasawwuf (Sufism)

Major branches

Sunni · Shi'a

Culture & Society

Academics · Animals · Art
Calendar · Children · Demographics
Festivals · Mosques · Philosophy
Politics · Science · Women

Islam & other religions

Christianity · Hinduism · Jainism
Judaism · Sikhism

See also

Criticism of Islam · Islamophobia
Glossary of Islamic terms

Islam Portal  v  d  e 

Imamat Day is an Ismaili religious observance celebrating the anniversary of the day the present, or Hazar, Imam came to the throne of Imamat. Of all the Shi'a subgroupings, it is only the Ismaili branch whose line of Imamat continues to the present day. The Imam of the Nizari Ismaili Muslims is Aga Khan, and his Imamat day is the 11th day of July, an anniversary of the 11th day of July 1957.

It should be noted that the meaning of the term Imam in Shi'a Islam differs greatly from its understanding in Sunni Islam. In Sunni Islam, the Imam is simply the person leading prayers at a particular place of worship, or a scholar. In Shi'a Islam, it is a singular position held by a member of Ahl-ul-Bayt as designated by Allah (God). Shi'a Imams provide guidance according to place and time and are seen as legatees of the authority of Muhammad. As such the concept of Imamat is specific to Shi'a Islam.

[edit] References