Who are Muslims

Islam, Muslims, On Faith | who are Muslims



Muslims are men and women who have professed belief in Islam. As believers, that they worship the One God and revere Prophet Muhammad (), as the final messenger of Allah. Furthermore, they also have faith in all the prophets which preceded Prophet Muhammad () and the holy books that they brought, such as the Psalms, Torah, and also the Gospel. A fundamental article of faith in Islam is belief in the Day of judgment, when all mankind will be recompensed with regards to their deeds in this world. Muslims believe in angels, along with predestination.

Muslims around the globe


After Prophet Muhammad (), the very first Muslims were people from his own circle of family and friends along with the poor and needy in Mecca significantly more than 1400 years ago. During the life of Muhammad (), this small band of followers increased by tens of thousands. As centuries passed, Muslims only have grown in number. Today, Muslims take into account about one quarter of the whole world population.

   There are around 1.2 and 1.6 billion Muslims throughout the world. Most of the Muslims are saturated in Muslim-majority countries, such as Saudi Arabia and Jordan in the Middle East, Pakistan and Bangladesh in southeast Asia, Azerbaijan and Albania in Europe, Mali and Tunisia in Africa, Kyrgyzstan and Uzbekistan in central Asia, and Indonesia and Malaysia in Asia Pacific. At the same time, an expanding Muslim diaspora has taken root in many areas at the same time, such as China, Australia, Europe, America and Canada, Latin America, and parts of western, central, and southern Africa. It is approximated that there are around 7 million Muslims within the United States.

Islam and Muslims


Islam can not be judged according to the actions of Muslims. Islam, the perfected religion of God, is totally separate from the imperfect humans who call them selves Muslims.
   Just as other religious bodies, there are certainly practicing and non-practicing Muslims, liberal and traditional Muslims, tolerant and extremist Muslims. However, their personalized actions should not be used to scrutinize or mark Islam.