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ޝަހީދު ޙުސައިން އާދަމް ( ޅެމެއް)

ލިޔުމުގެ ބާވަތް: ޅެމެއް ލިޔުމުގެ މަޢުޟޫ: ޝަހީދު ޙުސައިން އާދަމް ވަޠަނަށް ޓަކައި ފުރާނަ ދެއްވި ޝަހީދު ޙުސައިން އާދަމްގެ ނަން ހިތުގައި ދިވެހިންގެ ތާއަބަދު ފިލައިނުދާނެ ޒިކުރާއެއް ކަން ޤައުމީ ޚިދުމަތުގައި ހޭދަކުރި އަގުހުރި އުމުރުފުޅު ހަނދާންވޭ ދިވެހި ދަރިންނަށް މިސާލަކަށް ވެގެން ދިޔައީ ތިޔަ ހިތްވަރުގައި ޝަހާދަތުގެ ދަރަޖަ ލިބިވަޑައިގަތް މަތިވެރި ވަގުތު އެ ހަނދާންވޭ ޤުރުބާނީގެ ރަމްޒަކަށް ވެގެން އަބަދުމެ ތިޔަ ނަންފުޅު ދެމިއޮންނާނޭ ޝުކުރާއި ތަޢުރީފު އަދާކުރަމުން ދުޢާ ދަންނަވަމޭ ތިޔަ ރޫޙަށް ޖަންނަތުލް ފިރުދައުސް ދެއްވާށި ކީރިތި ﷲ ތިޔަ މާތް ނަފުސަށް
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ފަލަސްތީނާއެކު ދިވެހިން

ދުނިޔޭގެ އެކި ކަންކޮޅުތަކުގައި ހިނގަމުންދާ އިންސާނީ ހަމަނުޖެހުންތަކުގެ ތެރެއިން އެންމެ ދިގު މުއްދަތަކަށް ދެމިގެންދާ އަދި އެންމެ ބޮޑަށް ސަމާލުކަން ދެވޭ އެއް މައްސަލައަކީ ފަލަސްތީނުގެ މައްސަލައެވެ. މި މައްސަލައިގައި ދިވެހިރާއްޖެއިން ވަނީ އަބަދުވެސް ފަލަސްތީނު ރައްޔިތުންގެ ޙައްޤުގައި އަޑުއުފުލައި، އެމީހުންނަށް ތާއީދުކޮށް އައިސްފައެވެ. ދިވެހިރާއްޖެއާއި ފަލަސްތީނާ ދެމެދު އޮތް ގުޅުމަކީ ވަރަށް ގާތް ގުޅުމެކެވެ. މި ގުޅުން ބިނާވެފައިވަނީ އިސްލާމީ އުޚުއްވަތްތެރިކަމުގެ މައްޗަށެވެ. ދިވެހިރާއްޖެއިން ވަނީ ފަލަސްތީނުގެ މިނިވަންކަމަށް ތާއީދުކޮށް، އިސްރާއީލުގެ އަނިޔާވެރި ޢަމަލުތަކާ ދެކޮޅަށް ބައިނަލްއަޤްވާމީ މައިދާނުގައި އަޑުއުފުލައިފައެވެ. އދ. ގެ މަޖިލީސްތަކުގައި ދިވެހިރާއްޖެއިން ވަނީ ފަލަސްތީނުގެ ޙައްޤުގައި ވޯޓުދީ، އެ ޤައުމުގެ މިނިވަންކަމަށް ތާއީދުކޮށްފައެވެ. ދިވެހި ރައްޔިތުންގެ ހިތްތަކުގައިވެސް ފަލަސްތީނު ރައްޔިތުންނާ މެދު ވަރަށް ބޮޑު ހަމްދަރުދީއެއް އޮވެއެވެ. ފަލަސްތީނުގައި ހިނގާ އަނިޔާވެރި ޢަމަލުތަކާ ގުޅިގެން ދިވެހިރާއްޖޭގައި އެކި ފަހަރު މަތިން މުޒާހަރާތައް ބޭއްވި، ފަލަސްތީނު ރައްޔިތުންނަށް އެހީތެ...

Masjid Al Aqsa

About Al – Aqsa: What is Al Aqsa? Al Masjid Al Aqsa: The name “Al Masjid Al Aqsa” refers to the entire sanctuary (144,000 sq metres) and all the buildings in it. It includes the famous grey domed building (Masjid Qibli), and the gold domed building (the Dome of the Rock), as well as many other buildings within the sanctuary (including Masjid Marwani, Masjid Buraq etc.). The picture below shows the boundaries of Al Masjid Al Aqsa: (Visit Masjid Al Aqsa, 2018) As we will recurrently be making mention of Masjid al Aqsa in this series, it is critical for us to correctly grasp what ‘Masjid al Aqsa’ actually entails, right from the inception. A significant amount of confusion exists regarding this matter, with messages purporting to clarify in fact only serving to befuddle the understanding even further. Is Masjid al Aqsa the black domed structure or the gold domed structure? Does one hold a greater significance than the other? In the most authentic Islamic understanding of these question...

11 REASONS WHY WE LOVE AL AQSA

1. the first qiblah for Muslims; 2. the station of al-Isra’ and al-Mi’raj; 3. the second house of Allah built on earth; 4.the place where hundreds of Messengers of Allah are buried; 5. the place where many Companions are buried; 6. a place where miracles were shown by Allah’s will; 7. a place which Allah Himself calls a ‘blessed place’; 8.referred to directly and indirectly, seventy times in the Holy Qur’an; 9. the place where angels have descended with Allah’s message; 10. the only place on earth where all the Messengers of Allah prayed at the same time led by the Prophet Muhammad SAW; 11. the only Masjid mentioned by name in the Holy Qur’an apart from the Ka’bah. Reference: https://masjidalaqsa.net/2016/12/21/masjid-al-aqsa-in-a-nutshell/

PALESTINE IN THE QUR’AN

The Noble Qur’aan mentions the noble sanctuary of Masjid al Aqsa and the blessed land of Al Quds and the wider Shaam directly and indirectly over 70 times. Masjid al Aqsa is the only Masjid besides the Ka’bah in Makkah that is mentioned by name in the Qur’an. This mention is contained in the famous opening verse of Surah Isra, Chapter 17 that recounts the miraculous Isra and Mi’raj journey of the Prophet Muhammad SAW: “Glorified is He Who carried His servant by night from the Holy Masjid[in Makkah] to the farthest Masjid[in Jerusalem] whose surroundings We have blessed that We may show him some of Our Signs. Indeed, He Alone is All Hearing, All Seeing”. This verse not only makes mention of Masjid al Aqsa, but also empahsizes its surroundings to be blessed. Likewise, in chronicling the stories of a succession of Prophets of Allah, the Qur’aan refers to the land of Shaam, Palestine and Masjid al Aqsa, as “Holy Land”, “blessed land,” and a land “blessed for the nations”. The Q...

How to Set Up 2-Step Verification?

Account Setup Set Up 2-Step Verification Keep your Viber account safe with 2-step verification. Set up a PIN that you will be prompted to enter when you activate a new phone or make changes to your Viber account. What is the PIN used for? You will be prompted to enter your PIN when you need to do the following: Set up a new phone. Reactivate an account after uninstalling and reinstalling Viber. Change your PIN. Change your phone number. Change your email address. Deactivate Viber on your desktop or tablet via your phone. Deactivate your Viber account. Set up a PIN To set up a PIN: Open Viber on your Phone Tap More (Android) (iOS) Tap Settings Tap Privacy Tap 2-step verification Enter a 6 digit PIN Tap Next Enter your PIN again Tap Next An email address that you have previously used to set up your Viber account will appear on the email confirmation page Tap Next to continue and complete the 2-step verification set up Alternatively, enter an email address if you don’t have an em...

Question:What is the ruling regarding riba as permissible in Islam? Thank you very much.

Riba in Islam: Permissible?  22339 Question What is the ruling regarding riba as permissible in Islam? Thank you very much. Summary of answer: Riba in Islam is not permissible according to the Quran and Sunnah, and definitive scholarly consensus. Riba is one of the major sins. For more, see the detailed answer Answer: Is riba permissible in Islam? The ruling on those who regard riba as permissible Praise be to Allah. Is riba permissible in Islam? Riba is forbidden according to the Quran and Sunnah, and definitive scholarly consensus. Whoever regards it as permissible is a kafir, because the basic principle is that whoever rejects something on which there is obvious scholarly consensus is guilty of kufr.  Shaykh al-Islam Ibn Taymiyah (may Allah have mercy on him) said:  “The belief that the well-known obligations are obligatory and that the well-known prohibitions are forbidden is one of the most important basic principles of faith, and the one who rejects that is a kafir ...