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Fadlallah was born in the Iraqi Shia shrine city of Najaf on 16 November 1935. His parents, Abdulraouf Fadlullah and al-Hajja Raoufa Hassan Bazzi, [7] had migrated there from the village of 'Aynata in south Lebanon in 1928 to learn theology. By the time of his birth, his father was already a Muslim scholar. [8]
Muhammad Asadullah Al-Ghalib (born 1948) Muhammad Faizullah (1892–1976) Muhammad Shahidullah (1885–1969) Muhammad Wakkas (1952–2021) Muhibbullah Babunagari (born 1935) Muhiuddin Khan (1935–2016) Mushahid Ahmad Bayampuri (1907–1971) Nur Hossain Kasemi (1945–2020) Nur Uddin Gohorpuri (1924–2005) Nurul Islam Farooqi (died 2014)
Abd al-Husayn Sharaf al-Din al-Musawi عبدالحسين شرف الدين الموسوي: 1872 () 31 December 1957 (aged 85) Najaf, Baghdad vilayet: Tyre, Lebanon [19] 68 Mirza Mahdi al-Hosseini al-Shirazi الميرزا مهدي الحسيني الشيرازي 8 May 1887 14 February 1961 (aged 73)
Allameh Tabataba’i. Al-Mizan fi Tafsir al-Qur'an (Arabic: الميزان في تفسير القرآن, "The balance in Interpretation of Quran"), more commonly known as Tafsir al-Mizan (تفسير الميزان) or simply Al-Mizan (الميزان), [1] is a tafsir (exegesis of the Quran) written by the Shia Muslim scholar and philosopher Allamah Sayyid Muhammad Husayn Tabataba'i (1892–1981).
Arguments for rejection are found in Muhammad Abduh's article "Masʾalat al-gharānīq wa-tafsīr al-āyāt", [year needed] Muhammad Husayn Haykal's Hayat Muhammad (1933), Sayyid Qutb's Fi Zilal al-Quran (1965), Abul Ala Maududi's Tafhim-ul-Quran (1972) and Muhammad Nasiruddin al-Albani's Nasb al-majānīq li-nasf al-gharānīq. [year needed] [9]
Muhammad Husayn Tabataba'i (Persian: سید محمدحسین طباطبائی, romanized: Muḥammad Ḥusayn Ṭabāṭabāʾī; 16 March 1903 – 15 November 1981) was an Iranian scholar, theorist, philosopher and one of the most prominent thinkers of modern Shia Islam. [1]
Shias also believe in the redemptive power of the pain and martyrdom endured by the Ahl al-Bayt (particularly by Husayn) for those who empathize with their divine cause and suffering. [27] [28] There are various views in Sunni Islam, though a typical compromise is to also include Muhammad's wives in the Ahl al-Bayt. [20]
' Wonders of the Qur'an '), [2] better known as Tafsir al-Nisaburi (Arabic: تفسير النيسابوري), is a classical Sunni–Sufi [1] [3] [4] tafsir of the Qur'an, [5] authored by the Shafi'i-Ash'ari scholar Nizam al-Din al-Nisaburi (died c. 730 AH; c. 1330 CE), who closely follows al-Fakhr al-Razi's tafsir in many places.