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Download as PDF; Printable version; In other projects Wikidata item; ... Pages in category "Works of Ahmed Raza Khan Barelvi" The following 6 pages are in this ...
Husamul Haramain (Ḥusām al-Haramayn) or Husam al Harmain Ala Munhir kufr wal mayn (The Sword of the Two Holy Mosques to the throats of non-believers) 1906, is a treatise written by Ahmad Raza Khan (1856- 1921) which declared the founders of the Deobandi, Ahle Hadith and Ahmadiyya movements as heretics.
It was founded by scholar and 19th-century Mujadid Ahmed Raza Khan Barelvi on 17 December 1920 in Bareilly, India, to propagate Islamic teachings in accordance with Ahle Sunnah wal Jama'ah. The self-described aim of the group is to "deny misguided sects and safeguard the beliefs (Aqaa'id) of the Ahle Sunnah wal Jama'ah."
Ahmed Raza Khan Barelvi [a] (14 June 1856–28 October 1921), known reverentially as A'la Hazrat, [b] was an Indian Islamic scholar and poet who is considered as the founder of the Barelvi movement.
'Garden of Mercy') is a poetic work composed by Indian Islamic scholar Ahmad Raza Khan. Its first part was compiled in 1907 (1325 Hijri). According to research so far, its first two volumes were published in 1926. Apart from Urdu, some verses in this collection are in Persian and Arabic.
Malfuzat-i A'la Hazrat (Urdu: ملفوظات اعلیٰ حضرت, romanized: Malfūẓāt-i Aʿlā Ḥaẓrat) is a 1919 book published by Indian Islamic scholar Mustafa Raza Khan. It is a compilation of his father Ahmad Raza Khan 's questions and answers during his life.
Hassan Raza Khan Barelvi (1 October 1859–18 October 1908) popularly known as Hasan Barelvi was an Indian islamic scholar, sufi and poet and the younger brother of Imam Ahmed Raza Khan Barelvi, the main leader of the Ahle Sunnat movement. [1] He was a disciple of Syed Shah Ale Rasool Marehrawi, a Sufi master from Marehra, Etah, Uttar Pradesh.
Usha Sanyal is an Indian scholar and historian of Islam specializing in the Barelvi movement. She was a visiting assistant professor of history at Wingate University in North Carolina. [citation needed] Her PhD dissertation analysed the Islamic legal scholar Ahmed Raza Khan Barelvi. [1]