Abstract

Al-Sira Al-Nabawiyya is often used as a reference to violence in Islam, mainly because war narration is so dominantly displayed. The tendency of using Al-Sira Al-Nabawiyya as the basis of violence conception in Islam drives Islamic teaching practices to become violence-oriented. This article presents a re-reading of Al-Sira Al-Nabawiyya by Wakhiduddin Khan, Tariq Ramadan and Satha-Anand, with a mimetic anthropology framework. The reading on Al-Sira resulted in three conclusions. Firstly, there are many non-violence stories at all stages in the life of Prophet Muhammad, since the pre-prophetic era until his death. Secondly, the Prophet Muhammad was a teacher who based his activities on the principles of tawhîd, patience, love, forgiveness and appreciation for humanity. Thirdly, educational activities are Muhammad’s exemplary activities which are full of non-violent values. The findings of this article can be used as the basis for the reformulation of Al-Sira Al-Nabawiyya teaching materials in Islamic Education as well as the basis of teaching activities for Islamic teachers.Contribution: This article contributes to a paradigm shift in teaching the History of the Prophet Muhammad in a peaceful Islamic education system. The peaceful paradigm in this article can also divert the tendency of Islamic extremism to become an Islam that provides peace and prosperity to the universe (rahmatan lil ‘alamin).

Highlights

  • Education is an essential means to provide children with the knowledge, skills and competencies needed to maintain harmonious relationships with different people

  • Education in Indonesia has been interrupted when it is alleged that there is a tendency for religious teachers, prospective teachers, spiritual activist students and students in general to have an intolerance understanding that is susceptible to violent extremism (Azca 2013; Burhanuddin 2016; Fuad 2020; Muhammad & Pribadi 2013; PPIM UIN Syarif Hidayatullah Jakarta 2017, 2018)

  • Islamic theology asserts that the life of the Prophet expresses practical instruction for everyone, whether Muslim or not

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Summary

Introduction

Education is an essential means to provide children with the knowledge, skills and competencies needed to maintain harmonious relationships with different people. The existing discourse on non-violence or multicultural Islam, this article makes Al-Sira Al-Nabawiyya as the core values of the theology of education. There is no biography of Muhammad that uses the perspective of non-violence at least two writers of Al-Sira Al-Nabawiyya who have an orientation to describe the Prophet as a peaceful figure are Ramadan (2007) and Wahiduddin Khan (1998).

Results
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