Leaked emails from the UAE ambassador to the US show a sustained campaign against Qatar and Kuwait.
The Namaz Clock
As salamu-alaikum,
I have thought of an idea which can help all Muslims in reading their namaz at the correct time. This device will be called ‘The Namaz Clock’. It will be a normal clock with an inbuilt speaker and an integrated compass which shows us the Quibla. The speaker will start ringing on whatever sound you want- it could be the adhan, it could just be a small beep or it could also be an audio on your choice.
There will be five switches a the back. Each switch will turn on the sound for a time of Namaz. The name of the Namaz will be written on top of the switch. There will also be a dial below the switches which sets the volume of the sound. You can set the time of the beep manually or you can also download an app which allows you to set the time by connecting your phone to the clock by Bluetooth. This clock can be hung on a wall, kept on your side table or even in the kitchen .
I hope you all will help this idea become a true thing. Till then, assalamu-alaikum, and keep thinking.
-Humaam
Matter of Triple Talaq
On behalf of Ishrat bhai….
Assalamualaikum, Limitation of talaq to three times was done to prevent the harassment of women and to preserve their dignity. A men due to his status as husband doesn’t have right to harass his wife again and again on petty issues. Provision of talaq is given so that you can get separate twice in the life of your difference are not sorted out amicably. However if you separate thrice then you cannot unite and you have to explore other options and seek Allah’ s help with patience and salah. Allah is Gani. Unfortunately, this provision which was originally meant to prevent harassment of women is being used to harass them in the name of Shariah. When it comes to matter of women every one remember Shariah, other wise every body is following worldly desires. When nikah is performed between a men and women, from the needle to vehicle is provided by girl’s father as he has committed a grave sin by giving birth to girl child. He has to provide food and service to the family and friends of men. Why?. Nikah is a Sunnah of our beloved prophet and prescribed way of life by Allah. This is a requirement of both men and women and a way to get new generation. Then why whole burden is passed on to father of a girl. He is squeezed like juice from a sugarcane is taken out. This is clearly a zulm and we are subjecting ourselves with this grave sin. Recently one of my Hindu friend asked me regarding miserable situation of women in Muslim community. I told him that this situation is everywhere. Why a woman is required to bring the needle to car from her father home when marriage is a requirement for both. Then he became silent. I am requesting to my sisters to oppose these practices which are giving bad name to Islam.
JazakAllah Khair.
Beautiful Insight
http://hadithoftheday.com/why-people-leave-each-other-part-ii/
Why People Leave Each Other Part II
Leaving is hard. Losing is harder.
So a few weeks ago I asked the question, ‘Why do people have to leave each other?’ The answer took me into some of my life’s deepest realizations and struggles. But it has also led me to wonder: After people leave, do they ever return? After something we love is taken from us, does it ever come back? Is loss permanent—or just a means for a higher purpose? Is loss the End itself, or a temporary cure for our heart’s ailments?
There’s something amazing about this life. The very same worldly attribute that causes us pain is also what gives us relief: Nothing here lasts. What does that mean? It means that the breathtakingly beautiful rose in my vase will wither tomorrow. It means that my youth will neglect me. But it also means that the sadness I feel today will change tomorrow. My pain will die. My laughter won’t last forever—but neither will my tears. We say this life isn’t perfect. And it isn’t. It isn’t perfectly good. But, it also isn’t perfectly bad, either.
Allah (glorified is He) tells us in a very profound ayah (verse): “Verily with hardship comes ease.” (Qur’an, 94:5). Growing up I think I understood this ayah wrongly. I used to think it meant: after hardship comes ease. In other words, I thought life was made up of good times and bad times. After the bad times, come the good times. I thought this as if life was either all good or all bad. But that is not what the ayah is saying. The ayah is saying WITH hardship comes ease. The ease is at the same time as the hardship. This means that nothing in this life is ever all bad (or all good). In every bad situation we’re in, there is always something to be grateful for. With hardship, Allah also gives us the strength and patience to bear it.
If we study the difficult times in our lives, we will see that they were also filled with much good. The question is – which do we chose to focus on? I think the trap we fall into is rooted in this false belief that this life can be perfect—perfectly good or perfectly bad. But that’s not the nature of dunya (this life). That’s the nature of the hereafter. The hereafter is saved for the perfection of things. Jannah (paradise) is perfectly and completely good. There is no bad in it. And Jahannam (hell – may Allah protect us) is perfectly and completely bad. There is no good in it.
By not truly understanding this reality, I myself would become consumed by the momentary circumstances of my life (whether good or bad). I experienced each situation in its’ full intensity—as if it was ultimate or would never end. The way I was feeling at the moment transformed the whole world and everything in it. If I was happy in that moment, past and present, near and far, the entire universe was good for that moment. As if perfection could exist here. And the same happened with bad things. A negative state consumed everything. It became the whole world, past and present, the entire universe was bad for that moment. Because it became my entire universe, I could see nothing outside of it. Nothing else existed for that moment. If you wronged me today, it was because you no longer cared about me—not because this was one moment of a string of infinite moments which happened to be tinted that way, or because you and I and this life just aren’t perfect. What I was experiencing or feelings at that instant replaced context, because it replaced my entire vision of the world.
I think in our experiential nature, some of us may be especially susceptible to this. Perhaps that is the reason we can fall prey to the “I’ve never seen good from you” phenomenon which the Prophet ? (peace be upon him) referred to in his hadith. Perhaps some of us say or feel this way because at that moment, experientially we really haven’t seen good, because our feeling at that instant replaces, defines and becomes everything. Past and present becomes rolled up into one experiential moment.
But, the true realization that nothing is complete in this life transforms our experience of it. We suddenly stop being consumed by moments. In the understanding that nothing is limitless here, that nothing here is kamil (perfect, complete), Allah enables us to step outside of moments and see them for what they are: not universes, not Reality, past and present, just that—a single moment in a string of infinite moments…and that they too shall pass.
When I cry or lose or bruise, so long as I am still alive, nothing is ultimate. So long as there is still a tomorrow, a next moment, there is hope, there is change, there is redemption. What is lost, is not lost forever.
So in answering the question of whether what is lost comes back, I study the most beautiful examples. Did Yusuf return to his father? Did Musa return to his mother? Did Hajar return to Ibrahim? Did health, wealth and children return to Ayoub? From these stories we learn a powerful and beautiful lesson: what is taken by Allah is never lost. In fact, it is only what is with Allah that remains. Everything else vanishes. Allah (swt) says, “What is with you must vanish: what is with Allah will endure. And We will certainly bestow, on those who patiently persevere, their reward according to the best of their actions.” (Quran 16:96)
So, all that is with Allah, is never lost. In fact the Prophet ? has said: “You will never give up a thing for the sake of Allah (swt), but that Allah will replace it for you with something that is better for you than it.” (Ahmad) Did not Allah take the husband of Umm Salimah, only to replace him with the Prophet ??
Sometimes Allah takes in order to give. But, it’s crucial to understand that His giving is not always in the form we think we want. He knows best what is best. Allah says: “… But it is possible that you dislike a thing which is good for you, and that you love a thing which is bad for you. But Allah knows, and you know not.” (Quran 2:216)
But if something is going to be returned in one form or another, why is it taken at all? Subhan’Allah. It is in the process of ‘losing’ that we are given.
Allah gives us gifts. But then we often become dependent on those gifts, instead of Him. When He gives us money, we depend on the money—not Him. When He gives us people, we depend on people—not Him. When He gives us status or power, we depend on, and become distracted by these things. When Allah gives us health, we become deceived. We think we will never die.
Allah gives us gifts, but then we come to love them as we should only love Him. We take those gifts and inject them into our hearts, until they take over. Soon we cannot live without them. Every waking moment is spent in contemplation of them, in submission and worship to them. The mind and the heart that was created by Allah, for Allah, becomes the property of someone or something else. And then the fear comes. The fear of loss begins to cripple us. The gift—that should have remained in our hands—takes over our heart, so the fear of losing it consumes us. Soon, what was once a gift becomes a weapon of torture and a prison of our own making. How can we be freed of this? At times, in His infinite mercy, Allah frees us…by taking it away.
As a result of it being taken, we turn to Allah wholeheartedly. In that desperation and need, we ask, we beg, we pray. Through the loss, we reach a level of sincerity and humility and dependence on Him which we would otherwise not reach—had it not been taken from us. Through the loss, our hearts turn entirely to face Him.
What happens when you first give a child a toy or the new video game he’s always wanted? He becomes consumed by it. Soon he wants to do nothing else. He sees nothing else. He doesn’t want to do his work or even eat. He’s hypnotized to his own detriment. So what do you do, as a loving parent? Do you leave him to drown in his addiction and complete loss of focus and balance? No.
You take it away.
Then, once the child has regained focus of his priorities, regained sanity and balance, once things are put in their proper place in his heart and mind and life, what happens? You give the gift back. Or perhaps something better. But this time, the gift is no longer in his heart. It is in its proper place. It is in his hand.
Yet in that process of taking, the most important thing happened. The losing and regaining of the gift is inconsequential. The taking of your heedlessness, your dependence and focus on other than Him, and the replacing it with remembrance, dependence and focus only on Him was the real gift. Allah withholds to give.
And so sometimes, the ‘something better’ is the greatest gift: nearnesss to Him. Allah took the daughter of Malik Ibn Dinar in order to save him. He took his daughter, but replaced her with protection from the hell-fire and salvation from a painful life of sin and distance from Him. Through the loss of his daughter, Malik ibn Dinar was blessed with a life spent in nearness to Allah. And even that which was taken (his daughter) would remain with Malik ibn Dinar forever in Jannah.
Ibn ul Qayyim (may Allah be pleased with him) speaks about this phenomenon in his book, Madarij Al Salikin. He says: “The divine decree related to the believer is always a bounty, even if it is in the form of withholding (something that is desired); and it is a blessing, even if it appears to be a trial and an affliction that has befallen him; it is in reality a cure, even though it appears to be a disease!”
So to the question, ‘once something is lost, does it return?’ the answer is yes. It returns. Sometimes here, sometime there, sometimes in a different, better form. But the greatest gift lies beneath the taking and the returning. Allah tells us: “Say, ‘In the bounty of Allah and in His mercy – in that let them rejoice; it is better than what they hoard.’” (Quran, 10:58)
Written by Yasmin Mogahed
Meet the Iranian tycoon smashing gender stereotypes | Middle East | Al Jazeera
Umbrella politics of Hindutva
Hindu nationalism is dominating India by smothering minorities and encroaching on regional Hindu traditions.
Trump Administration Asks Indian-American Surgeon General To Step Down
http://www.ndtv.com/world-news/indian-american-surgeon-general-asked-to-step-down-by-trump-government-1684567?type=news&id=1684567&category=world-news
Shared via NDTV News App (Android – ndtv.com/android | iPhone – ndtv.com/iPhone )
The Great Significance, Virtues, And Rewards of Adhan | Islamic Articles
http://www.quranreading.com/blog/the-great-significance-virtues-and-rewards-of-adhan/
Benefits of Adhan
1. There is a great rank of Muezzin (the one who invites to Namaz) in the Religion of Peace. Abdullah bin `Abdur-Rahman reported: Abu Sa`id Al-Khudri (R.A) said to me:
“I see that you like living among your sheep in wilderness. So whenever you are with your sheep or in wilderness and you want to call Adhan, you should raise your voice because whoever hears the Adhan, whether a human or jinn or any other creature, will testify for you on the Day of Resurrection.” Abu Sa`id added: “I heard this from the Messenger ﷺ of Allah.” (Bukhari)
It means that the Caller of Salah will benefit from the greatest bounties of Allah SWT on the Day of Resurrection, as everyone who hears him saying Adhan will testify in his favor on that day.
2. Abu Hurairah (May Allah be pleased with him) reported: The Messenger of Allah (sallallaahu ’alayhi wa sallam) said:
“When Adhan for Salat is pronounced, the devil takes to his heels and breaks wind with noise so as not to hear the call. When the Adhan is finished, he returns. When the Iqamah is announced, he turns his back, and after it is finished, he returns again to distract the attention of one and makes him remember things which he does not recall in his mind before the Salat, and says `Remember this, and this,’ and thus causes one to forget how many Rak`at he performed.” (Bukhari and Muslim)
This Hadith shows that Adhan is not any simple announcement; rather it is that powerful in its effect that Shaitaan (Satan) cannot bear hearing it as it contains the message about righteousness and leads one towards spirituality of heart and soul.
3. Abdullah bin `Amr bin Al-`As (May Allah be pleased with them) reported:
“I heard the Messenger ﷺ of Allah saying, “When you hear the Adhan, repeat what the Mu’adhdhin says. Then ask Allah to exalt my mention because everyone who does so will receive in return ten rewards from Allah. Then beseech Allah to grant me Al-Wasilah, which is a high rank in Jannah, fitting for only one of Allah’s slaves; and I hope that I will be that man. If anyone asks Al-Wasilah for me, it becomes incumbent upon me to intercede for him.” (Muslim)
The above mentioned saying of the Holy Prophet ﷺ tells us about the huge advantage of duplicating the words said by Muezzin. It not only makes one able to get Allah`s blessings, but also leads towards achieving the Greatest Assistance one could ever get, i.e. the support of Rasulullah ﷺ in the hereafter.
So, to conclude, one can say that Islamic way of calling people towards prayers is not merely a method of collecting them at one place for venerating God, but also serves as a means of reminding Muslims about their utmost religious duty of carrying out Namaz. It also describes the entire Islamic faith, pays Homage to Allah SWT, and last but not the least portrays Salah as the best source of success.
The Ambassadors
As salam alaikum!
With our hijabs or beards donned, it is easy for anyone to recognise Muslims in public, and our neighbours or friends associate us with being ambassadors of Islam and they way we conduct ourselves is the way they see Islam. We cannot change that, so we must take the responsibility of being an ambassador and behave in a manner that shows the true spirit of Islam.
We have been taught with example by the Prophet Muhammad SAW and commanded by Allah SWT in the Qur’an about the importance of good behaviour. Several times in the Qur’an, good habits and good behaviour is stressed upon the Believers, and doing that can be as simple as greeting a brother!
The Qur’an and the examples of Prophet SAW have always required Muslims to respect others (and each other), to be honest, to fulfill promises, to have tolerance and forbearance and to be kind to living beings in order to be of good akhlaq.
Believers, let not some men among you ridicule others: it may be that the latter are better than the former: nor should some women laugh at others: it may be that the latter are better than the former: do not defame or be sarcastic to each other, or call each other by offensive nicknames. How bad it is to earn an evil reputation after accepting the faith! (Surah al-Hujarat, verse 11)
The Prophet SAW was of such honest nature that he was known as as-Sadeeq and al-Ameen, and even his enemies did not deny that. When he spread the message of Islam, many said that he was mentally unstable or that he had been possessed but no one called him a liar since he never lied! And because of that virtue many also accepted Islam.
Despite the fact that nearly the entire city of Makkah was against him and his message, he was still good to his neighbours and asked the Believers to be so as well.
The Prophet Sallalahu alaihi wassalam, said: “By Allah, he is not a believer! By Allah, he is not a believer! By Allah, he is not a believer.’’ It was asked, “Who is that, O Messenger of Allah?’’ He said, “One whose neighbour does not feel safe from his evil” (Sahih Bukhari).
In another Hadith it is narrated :
The Messenger of Allah, (Peace and blessings be upon him) says:” He is not a believer who eats his fill whilst his neighbour beside him goes hungry” (Sahih Bukhari).
The Prophet SAW was also exceedingly patient and never stumbled in the face of adversity even though he was thrust out of his home, lost so many who were dear to him, buried six of his children in his lifetime and was boycotted by the society.
We shall certainly test you with fear and hunger, and loss of property, lives, and crops. Give good news to those who endure with fortitude. (Surah al-Baqarah, verse 155)
Fulfilling one’s promises is another virtue which Islam teaches us, with Prophet SAW being the best example.
Keep your promises; you will be called to account for every promise which you have made. (Surah al-Isra’a verse 34)
It is narrated in a Hadith, the traits of a hypocrite or a Munafiq, who will receive the greatest punishment in Hell.
“Three traits single out a hypocrite, even if he prays or fasts and claims to be Muslim: If he speaks, he lies. If he makes a promise, he does not keep it. If he is entrusted, he betrays the trust.” [Al-Bukhari and Muslim]
Let us, as Muslims and ambassadors of Islam, try to imbibe these beautiful qualities of the Prophet SAW and follow the teachings of Qur’an. Insha Allah they will not only benefit us but also those around us, for in trying times like these we must strive to reflect the true spirit of Islam rather than what the mainstream media is doing to get paid.
Seek Allah’s help with patient perseverance and prayer. It is indeed hard except for those who are humble. (Surah al Baqarah, verse 45)
Thank you for reading!
~Sanaa
Handling false information- in the light of the Quran
As Salam u Alaikum!
Today I would like to share with you an interesting ayah I came across while reading the Quran. It says;

(Al-Hujurat 49:6)
In this ayah, Allah (SWT) warns the believers about wicked people who come to us with false news or information. He says that when we hear such news, we must always verify it and find out the truth. We must ensure this to avoid harming any person by giving them false information, and later regretting the damage we have caused.
Such acts of transmitting misinformation are extremely prevalent in our modern society due to the advent of social media and instant messaging. Sometimes, we share or forward information that we have not checked or verified before telling our friends or posting it on the internet.
I commonly observe this taking place through WhatsApp. Many times, sly and vicious people with malignant intents fabricate videos and messages that are false, just to spread propaganda and hate. When we come across this, we blindly forward it to everyone we know without checking the authenticity of the material. The people receiving it also do the same. And as WhatsApp is such a widespread network connecting countless people, these fake messages spread like wildfire, and wrong accusations and opinions begin to form rapidly. Whereas, the vindictive and cunning fraudster who started this seemingly never ending chain is satisfied as he has been successful in deceiving the whole community.
I hope all of you have understood the importance of this lesson from the Quran and will implement this learning in your everyday life. I am awe-struck that Allah’s guide to mankind, the Quran, also teaches us this essential lesson which is not only useful for every individual, but also beneficial for the entire Ummah.
-Azzam
