Search results
Results From The WOW.Com Content Network
Turbah Karbala (Arabic: تربة کربلاء, lit. 'Soil of Karbala'), [1] [2] [3] or Khāk-e Shifā (Lisan al-Dawat, Persian, and Urdu: خاکِ شِفاء, lit. 'Medicinal Soil'), [4] [5] [6] or "Turbah of Imam Hussain" [7] [8] is the soil taken from Hussain ibn Ali's grave in the city of Karbala. Shia Muslims use it to make turbah and ...
In Majmoo' al-Fatawa (Arabic: مجموع الفتاوى, lit. 'compilation of fatwas'), Ibn Taymiyyah, issued a fatwa that prayer on a turbah from the site of Imam Husayn's martyrdom is an innovation. [9] As a result, the turbah is highly stigmatized or even banned in most Muslim majority countries outside predominantly Shiite Iran and Iraq.
The word is derived from the Arabic تُرْبَة turbah (meaning "soil/ground/earth"), which can also mean a mausoleum, but more often a funerary complex, or a plot in a cemetery. [ 1 ] Famous türbes
Black Misbaha . A Misbaha (Arabic: مِسْبَحَة, romanized: misbaḥa), subḥa (Arabic: سُبْحَة) (Arabic and Urdu), tusbaḥ (), tasbīḥ (Arabic: تَسْبِيح) (Iran, India, Afghanistan, Tajikistan, Bangladesh, Pakistan, Malaysia and Indonesia), or tespih (Turkish, Bosnian and Albanian) is prayer beads often used by Muslims for the tasbih, the recitation of prayers, the ...
The English word assassins is said to have been derived from the Arabic word Hasaseen meaning annihilators as mentioned in Quran 3:152 or Hashasheen meaning both "those who use hashish" and "throat slitters" in Egyptian Arabic dialect, and one of the Shia Ismaili sects in the Syria of the eleventh century. [55]
Al-Tall Al-Zaynabiyya, Karbala, Iraq Al-Tall Al-Zaynabiya (at night) Al-Tall Al-Zaynabiyya ( Arabic : التل الزینبیة ) is the name of a Shi'a Islamic holy place in Karbala , Iraq. [ 1 ] [ 2 ] [ 3 ] It overlooks the site of the martyrdom of Husayn ibn Ali , who was killed during the Battle of Karbala on the day of Ashura .
The word Marsiya is derived from the Arabic word marthiyya (Arabic: مارْثِيَّه ; root R-TH-Y), meaning a great tragedy or lamentation for a departed soul. [2] Marsiya is a poem written to commemorate the martyrdom of Ahl al-Bayt, Imam Hussain and Battle of Karbala. It is usually a poem of mourning. [3]
Lisaan ud-Da'wat or Lisaan o Da'wat il Bohra or Lisan ud-Dawat (Arabic: لسان الدعوة, lit. 'language of the Da'wat', da'wat ni zabaan; abbreviated LDB) is the language of the Dawoodi Bohras and Alavi Bohras, a Isma'ili Shi'a Muslim communities primarily in Gujarat, following the Taiyebi doctrines and theology. [2]