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Fatawa Razawiyya or the full name al-Ataya fi-Nabaviah Fatawa-i Razawiyya (translates to Verdicts of Imam Ahmed Raza by the blessings of the Prophet) is the main fatwa (Islamic verdicts on various issues) book of his movement. [29] [30] It has been published in 30 volumes and in approx. 22,000 pages. It contains solutions to daily problems from ...
Alaul Haq Umar was born in 1301, in the city of Hazrat Pandua to a Muslim family descended from Khalid ibn al-Walid, an Arab commander and companion of the Islamic prophet Muhammad, who belonged to the Banu Makhzum clan of Quraysh.
Muhammad Ibrahim Raza Khan Qadri Razvi (1907–1965), commonly known as Mufassir-e-Azam-e-Hind and Jilani Miyan, was an Indian Islamic scholar, Sufi mystic, orator, author, and leader of Sunni Muslim’s Barelvi movement of Sunni Islam in the Indian subcontinent. He was the elder brother of Hammad Raza Khan.
Moḥammad Abū Bakr Ṣiddīque (15 April 1845 – 17 March 1939) was a Bengali Islamic scholar and the inaugural Pir of Furfura Sharif in West Bengal. [2] He is regarded by his followers, who are scattered across eastern India and Bangladesh, [3] [4] as a mujaddid (reviver) of Islam in the region, due to his significant contributions in religious propagation via the establishment of mosques ...
He was born in 1551 (958 AH) in Delhi, hence the suffix Dehlavi to his name. In 1587 (996 AH), he made the pilgrimage to Mecca, where he stayed remained for the next three years studying hadith and Sufism under various scholars.
al-Iklil ʻala Madarik al-tanzil wa-ḥaqaʼiq al-taʼwil lil-Imam al-Nasafi by Muhammad Abdul Haq bin Shah al-Hindi al-Hanafi (d. 1915 AD) - A commentary of An-Nasafi's Tafsir, with elements ofTafsir al-Baydawi by al-Baydawi and Tafsir Al-Kashshaf by Al-Zamakhshari, which is famous for its linguistic analysis, some of which al-Baydawi and then ...
Al-Qawl as-Sadeed fi al-Qir'at wa at-Tajweed, a comprehensive guide to the rule of correct Qur'anic recitation and an addition of the book by his teacher Al-Faqih Shaykh Ahmad Abdullah Mahmud Al-Hijazi Al-Makki. Composed originally in Urdu, it has been translated in Bengali by his son Murshid-e-Barhaq Allamah Muhammad Imad-ud-Din Chowdhury ...
'Abd al-Haqq al-Dehlawi mentions in his Akhbar al Akhyar, the name of Akhi Sirāj Gaurī; which suggests that Siraj was a native of Gaur in Bengal. [ 4 ] [ 5 ] He is thought to have been born around 1258 CE, when the region was under the rule of the Mamluk dynasty based in Delhi .