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Al-Adiyat or The War Horses which run swiftly [1] (Arabic: العاديات, al-ʿādiyāt, also known as "The Courser, The Chargers") is the 100th chapter of the Qur'an, with 11 āyāt or verses. Regarding the timing and contextual background of the revelation ( asbāb al-nuzūl ), it is an earlier " Meccan surah ", which means it is believed ...
Al-Makki is said to have written a number of theological and juristic writings, some of which Fakhr al-Din occasionally cites. An authentic copy of the second volume on his most significant work, the Ash'ari theology summa, Nihayat al-Maram fi Dirayat al-Kalam ("The acme of aspirations in the study of kalam"), has just shown up. It is a huge ...
Al-Makki was a mawla ("freedman") of Amr ibn Alkama al-Kinani. [ 5 ] Al-Makki met the companions of Prophet Muhammad Anas ibn Malik and Abd Allah ibn al-Zubayr , [ 4 ] and he learned his recitation method from a student of Prophet Muhammad's companion Abd Allah ibn Abbas who in turn learned from Ubay ibn Ka'b and Zayd ibn Thabit who both ...
The U.S. Central Command said in a statement that its forces had killed Abu Abdul Rahman Makki, a senior leader in the group Horas al-Din, or “Guardians of Religion,” in a “kinetic strike ...
This map shows the journey Sayyid Muhammad al-Makki undertook from his birthplace to his resting place. Sayyid Muhammad ibn Shuja' al-Din al-Husayni al-Makki (Arabic: السيد محمد الحسيني المكي), 1145–1246, also known as Sayyid Mahmood Shah al-Makki (Urdu: سيد محمود مكي) was the ancestor of the Bukkuri or Bhaakri Sayyids (Urdu: بهاكري سادات), who ...
An Indonesian woman who felt duped into joining the Islamic State’s ”caliphate“ in Syria tells TIME of the challenges of returning home—and what it means to be granted a second chance.
WARSAW (Reuters) -The Polish government said on Thursday it would ensure free and safe participation in the 80th anniversary of the liberation of the Auschwitz Nazi death camp for the highest ...
The Meccan Revelations (Arabic: كِتَابُ الفُتُوحَاتِ المَكِّيَّة, romanized: Kitâb Al-Futūḥāt al-Makkiyya) [1] is the major work of the philosopher and Sufi [2] Ibn Arabi, written between 1203 and 1240.