Abstract

Diseases and viruses have always been a part of human history. In present, due to the frightening rise of the coronavirus globally, many people are understandably concerned about protecting themselves. According to Islam, as the religion is perceived by the majority of Muslims today, it is not only important to care for yourself, safeguarding larger communities and the most helpless is also of great importance. This study briefly surveyed the history of plague epidemics in the Muslim world, highlighting how Muslims throughout history, including the Prophet Muhammad and his companions, responded to the spread of contagious diseases, the strategies that were adopted for protection during outbreaks, and how these actions influenced modern-day responses to diseases by Muslim countries. Keeping in view the current international COVID-19 scenario, that is an unprecedentedly serious pandemic, it is high time to investigate the religions’ guidelines about contagious diseases and the adopted strategies used for protection during outbreaks in Muslim history. Furthermore, an analytical approach, along with a qualitative research methodology, was applied in this study to reach objective conclusions. The article concluded that religion can provide comprehensive guidelines relating to preventive and restorative aspects of health, and that these guidelines, in their original form, still remain applicable in terms of responding to epidemic outbreaks.

Highlights

  • Contagious diseases, epidemics, pandemics, and other natural disasters are a fact of life

  • When we study human history, we find many tribulations and natural disasters, such as floods, famines, droughts, earthquakes, and the outbreak of contagious disease

  • This increased the interest of scholars and readers in epidemic disease, marked as we are by our experiences with AIDS, Ebola, avian flu, swine flu (H1N1) and, COVID-19, an unprecedentedly serious pandemic (Rothan and Byrareddy 2020)

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Summary

Introduction

Contagious diseases, epidemics, pandemics, and other natural disasters are a fact of life. World Health Organization (WHO) declared the coronavirus a global pandemic It has killed more than 1.8 million people and infected more than 82.8 million globally according to the data compiled by Johns Hopkins University (Larry Corey 2020). This situation demands special, concerted, and extraordinary efforts by governments, organizations, and individuals (Zheng et al 2020). It seems the coronavirus is merely a symptom of the major problem (Cascella et al 2020). The present study attempted to highlight the existence of endemic outbreaks, in their various forms, during the early period of the Muslim empire to reveal how Muslims throughout history, including the Prophet Muhammad and his companions (al-S.ah.āba), responded to the spread of contagious diseases, the strategies that were adopted for protection during outbreaks, and how these actions influenced modern-day responses to diseases by Muslim countries

Epidemic in Arabic Literature
History of the Epidemic in the Early Muslim Empire
How Have Muslims throughout History Responded to the Spread of Contagious
Conclusions
A History the Evolution and al-Kitāb
Evaluation and Treatment
1: The three great
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