Question

The Tafsīr Ibn ‘Abbās explains that this principle was directed to an Anṣār woman who had vowed to raise her son as a Jew if he survived past infancy. For 10 points each:
[10m] Give this injunction followed by the words “Truth stands out clearly from falsehood” in Al-Baqarah 256. This phrase is traditionally taken as a principle of religious freedom.
ANSWER: “let there be no compulsion in religion” [or “lā ikrāha fī al-dīn”]
[10e] Abu Bakr suspended the principle of “no compulsion” during the Ridda Wars while fighting tribes who resisted this practice. This form of almsgiving is one of the Five Pillars.
ANSWER: zakat [or zakāh]
[10h] Abu Bakr vowed to fight those who refused to give an object used for this action as zakat. In a popular hadith on tawakkul, Muhammad advises a Bedouin to “trust in God” only after performing this more practical action.
ANSWER: tying a camel [accept a camel’s rope; accept variants on the phrase “trust in Allah, but tie your camel”; prompt on answers like tying or roping without mentioning an animal; prompt on answers like using a camel]
<JB, Religion>

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Summary

2024 Chicago Open07/28/2024Y712.86100%14%14%

Data

A Nervy Liberal Nanny Hencesticking out your guyot for the ridge push; you're so seafloor spread, you're so fracture zone010010
LMM's LLM MLMI’ll take a quiet 10 / A handshake of CO (Chicago Open)10101030
AMOGH QUIZ HACK? 英雄联盟 400 PPG 24 TUHLisan al-Quib010010
BHSU BThe Dyatlov Passement incident010010
Punished "Venom" BHSUThe Empire Bikes Back010010
The Jeam TeamLes Missourables010010
We Need New Namesit's the great pumpkinification objection, charlie brown010010