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The Fazaail-e-Aamaal, of Hadhrat Sheikhul Hadith, Moulana Muhammad Zakariyya Khandelwi (RA), is among the most famous and well known Islamic books in the world. Allah Ta'ala has granted this book great acceptance and popularity throughout the globe. Thousands of people read this book and benefit from it. To date it has been translated into more than a dozen languages.
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Imam Tirmidhi's Ash-Shama'il al-Muhammadiyyah is a distinguished compendium of Hadith discussing the perfect features, lofty attributes, and and qualities of the Messenger of Allah ﷺ. Throughout history, many scholars have penned commentaries on the Shama'il and the great scholar, Shaykh al-Hadith Muhammad Zakariyya Kandhlawi, has also added an invaluable addition in the Urdu language, titled Khasa'il Nabawi - a beneficial and invigorating commentary for scholars and the general public alike. This English translation presents the Hadith compiled by Imam Tirmidhi alongside Shaykh Zakariyya's commentary. Readers can anticipate beautiful examples of the Messenger of Allah's ﷺ blessed lifestyle, his perfect characteristics, habits, style, morals and worship in a clear, coherent and comprehensible style.
The Messenger of God said, "Whenever the door of supplicatory prayer du'a is opened unto any of ye, the doors of Mercy too shall be opened unto him."--Qur'an Doors of the Kingdom is a unique collection of photographs depicting the ancient and disappearing craft of doormaking in Arabia. The Islamic concept of hurma, or sanctity of a place of dwelling or worship, is recurrent throughout Arabic poetry and literature. The door (bab), preserver of sanctity, becomes symbolic of the boundary between public and private space, and between the profane and the sacred. In 1995, Haajar Gouverneur traveled throughout the Arabian Peninsula photographing each region's distinctive doorways and the remaining artisans who make them. The doors of Arabia, painstakingly hand-carved from the wood of the Al-Athel trees, last in their exquisite variety for hundreds of years. This ancient craft, passed down from generation to generation in the central and northern regions of Saudi Arabia, is now nearly extinct.Modern materials, technology, and changing priorities threaten the continuity of the sacred and artisanal tradition of doormaking.
The essays in this volume, written over the course of the last quarter century, are intended to contribute to understanding the role that Islamic symbols and identities have come to play in Northern India and, since 1947, in Pakistan. Above all these essays offer a challenge to current negative stereotypes of the Muslim faith, demonstrating that the religion is not characterised by political militancy nor dominated by static traditionalism.