Orientalist visions in the relationship of the Prophet Muhammad (PBUH) to women -German school Rudi Paret and his book Muhammad and the Qur'an as a model
DOI:
https://doi.org/10.57026/mjhr.v4i1.72Keywords:
Orientalism, - German School, Rudi Paret, - Biography of the ProphetAbstract
There is no doubt that the German Orientalist school, like other Western schools, has made some intentional or unintended lapses in line with what the Orientalist thought was proposing of knowledge patterns formed over time. The curriculum and began to quote the same image that was transmitted by the thinkers of the Middle European centuries, which was characterized by aggression and negative mostly towards Islam and his Messenger. Orientalism and the German school in particular gave it to authorship, but such works remain additions to the Arab-Islamic library worthy of standing and evaluating them according to the critical curricula advocated by Orientalism itself, so our choice was the German Orientalist school represented by the orientalist Rudy and his book Muhammad and the Qur’an to be the subject of study about what Orientalism provokes from The relationship of the Prophet with women is problematic, and to know the extent to which Orientalism was affected by I am not aware of other Western orientalist schools, and is the German school of a scientific and objective nature in everything it transmits about the life of the Messenger as it is rumored about, and this is what the study will try to find out.