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The Mujeer supplication (Arabic: دعاء المجير, romanized: Mujeer Du'a) is an Islamic prayer or Dua said on the 13th, 14th, and 15th days of the month of Ramadan. [1] [unreliable source?] [2] Jibra'il (Gabriel) is said to have taught the prayer to Muhammad when he was praying at Maqam Ibrahim.
Abu Hamzah is the first narrator of this supplication from Zayn al-Abidin. The supplication appears in Eqbal al-A'mal by Sayyed ibn Tawus, who also includes the following chain of transmission for the supplication: Sayyed ibn Tawus received the supplication on the authority of Harun ibn Musa ibn Ahmad Talla'ukbara, who, in turn, received it from Hassan bin Mahboob Srad, who received it from ...
An Indonesian Muslim man doing dua. Muslims regard dua as a profound act of worship. Muhammad is reported to have said, "Dua is itself a worship." [3] [4]There is a special emphasis on du'a in Muslim spirituality and early Muslims took great care to record the supplications of Muhammad and his family and transmit them to subsequent generations. [5]
Du'a al-Sabah (Arabic: دُعاء الصَّباح) (literally the supplication of Sabah, means: orison of the morning) is a prayer advised by the first Imam of the Shiites, Ali ibn Abi Talib, to be recited in the morning. [8]
The Gaza Strip refers to a narrow strip of land wedged between Israel and Egypt on the Mediterranean Sea that is roughly the size of Washington, D.C. Occupied in turn by the Ottoman Empire and ...
At least 8,000 people have died in Gaza, over 3,000 of them children, since Israel began launching retaliatory airstrikes in the wake of Hamas’s Oct. 7 massacre that left 1,400 people dead in ...
The International Court of Justice ordered Israel to prevent genocide in Gaza but not to cease fire. Here's what to know.
Du'a al-Faraj (Arabic: دُعَاء ٱلْفَرَج) is a dua which is attributed to Imam Mahdi. It begins with the phrase of "ʾIlāhī ʿaẓuma l-balāʾ", meaning "O God, the calamity has become immense". [1] [2] The initial part of [3] the dua was quoted for the first time in the book of Kunuz al-Nijah by Shaykh Tabarsi. [4]