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=== Isra' and Mi'raj === {{Main|Isra' and Mi'raj}} [[File:Domeoftherock1.jpg|thumb|Quranic inscriptions on the [[Dome of the Rock]]. It marks the spot where Muhammad is believed by Muslims to have ascended to [[Jannah|heaven]].<ref>{{Cite book |last1=Bloom |first1=Jonathan M. |url=https://books.google.com/books?id=un4WcfEASZwC&pg=PA76 |title=The Grove encyclopedia of Islamic art and architecture |last2=Blair |first2=Sheila |publisher=Oxford University Press |year=2009 |isbn=978-0-19-530991-1 |page=76 |access-date=26 December 2011}}</ref>]] It is at this low point in Muhammad's life that the accounts in the {{tlit|ar|[[Sīrah]]}} lay out the famous Isra' and Mi'raj. Nowadays, Isra' is believed by Muslims to be the journey of Muhammad from Mecca to [[Jerusalem]], while Mi'raj is from Jerusalem to the heavens.{{sfn|Buhl|Welch|1993|p=366}} There is considered no substantial basis for the Mi'raj in the Quran, as the Quran does not address it directly.{{sfn|Sells|2002|p=176}} Verse 17:1 of the Quran recounts Muhammad's night journey from a revered place of prayer to the most distant place of worship. The [[Kaaba]], holy enclosure in Mecca, is widely accepted as the starting point, but there is disagreement among Islamic traditions as to what constitutes "the farthest place of worship". Some modern scholars maintain that the earliest tradition saw this faraway site as a celestial twin of the Kaaba, so that Muhammad's journey took him directly from Mecca through the heavens. A later tradition, however, refers to it as {{tlit|ar|Bayt al-Maqdis}}, which is generally associated with Jerusalem. Over time, these different traditions merged to present the journey as one that began in Mecca, passed through Jerusalem, and then ascended to heaven.{{sfn|Sells|2002|pp=176–177}} The dating of the events also differs from account to account. [[Ibn Sa'd]] recorded that Muhammad's Mi'raj took place first, from near the Kaaba to the heavens, on the 27th of [[Ramadan]], 18 months before the {{tlit|ar|[[Hijrah]]}}, while the Isra' from Mecca to {{tlit|ar|Bayt al-Maqdis}} took place on the 17th night of the [[Rabi' al-Thani|Last Rabi’ul]] before the {{tlit|ar|Hijrah}}. As is well known, these two stories were later combined into one. In [[Ibn Hisham]]'s account, the Isra' came first and then the Mi'raj, and he put these stories before the deaths of Khadija and Abu Talib. In contrast, [[al-Tabari]] included only the story of Muhammad's ascension from the sanctuary in Mecca to "the earthly heaven". Tabari placed this story at the beginning of Muhammad's public ministry, between his account of Khadija becoming "the first to believe in the Messenger of God" and his account of "the first male to believe in the Messenger of God".{{sfn|Buhl|Welch|1993|p=366}}
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