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  2. Abdul Basit 'Abd us-Samad - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Abdul_Basit_'Abd_us-Samad

    Abdul Basit finished learning the Quran at age of 10 and then requested his grandfather and father to continue his education with the Qira’at (recitations). They both agreed and sent him to the city of Tanta (Lower Egypt) to study the Quranic recitations (‘ulum al-Quran wa al-Qira’at) under the tutelage of Sheikh Muhammad Salim, a well known teacher of recitaion of that time.

  3. Ya-Sin - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Ya-Sin

    Double-page with illuminated frames marking the start of Chapter Ya-Sin in a Malay Qur'an manuscript from Patani.Despite the special significance of surah Ya-sin in lives of all Muslims, "this is the only Southeast Asian Qur'an manuscript known in which the beginning of Surat Yasin is marked with illuminated frames".

  4. List of translations of the Quran - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/List_of_translations_of...

    Mawlana Abdullah and Mawlana Abdul Aziz: It is a translation of the Tafseer of Abdul Haq Darbangawi and Wa'iz Kashifi. Translated by Abdullah and Abdul Aziz, it was printed in 1930 in Mumbai, India. Din Muhammad Khan: It is a word by word translation of the Quran printed in early years.

  5. List of chapters in the Quran - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/List_of_chapters_in_the_Quran

    Al-Fatiha, the first surah in the Quran. The Quran is divided into 114 surahs (chapters), and 6236 (excluding "Bismillah") or 6348 (including Bismillah") ayahs (verses). ). Chapters are arranged broadly in descending order o

  6. Quran translations - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Quran_translations

    The Qur'an has been translated into most major African, Asian and European languages from Arabic. [1] Studies involving understanding, interpreting and translating the Quran can contain individual tendencies, reflections and even distortions [2] [3] caused by the region, sect, [4] education, religious ideology [5] and knowledge of the people who made them.

  7. Abdul Somad - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Abdul_Somad

    Abdul Somad was born on 18 May 1977 in Silo Lama, a village in Asahan Regency, North Sumatra, as the son of Bakhtiar and Rohana. [9] [10] From the mother's side, he is descended from Sheikh Abdurrahman, nicknamed Tuan Syekh Silau Laut I, a Sufi scholar of the Shattari Order who was born in Rao, Batu Bara.

  8. Abdul Basit Usman - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Abdul_Basit_Usman

    Ahmad Akmad Batabol Usman [3] (1974 – 3 May 2015), more commonly known as Abdul Basit Usman, was a Filipino terrorist and a bomb-making expert who led the Special Operations Group of the Bangsamoro Islamic Freedom Fighters and had links to the Abu Sayyaf and Jemaah Islamiyah militant groups. [4]

  9. Abd al-Basit - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Abd_al-Basit

    Abdul Basit 'Abd us-Samad (1927–1988), Egyptian Qari (reciter of the Qur-an) Abdelbaset al-Megrahi (1952–2012), Libyan convicted of the Lockerbie bombing; Abdulbaset Sieda (born 1956), Kurdish-Syrian academic and politician; Amr Abdel Basset Abdel Azeez Diab, known as Amr Diab (born 1961), Egyptian singer