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  2. Guru Gembul - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Guru_Gembul

    Guru Gembul then highlighted the use of false hadith in Bahar's statement which asserted that he was truly a descendant of the Islamic prophet Muhammad. [15] [16] Rhoma Irama and Zein Assegaf, other public figures who were also in conflict with Bahar at that time, agreed with Guru Gembul's statement, regretting that this had happened to a ...

  3. List of non-Muslim authors on Islam - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/List_of_non-Muslim_authors...

    Sebeos (fl. 651), Armenian historian, documented in his History the rise of Muhammad and the early Muslim conquests. Joannis Damasceni (c. 676–749), official of the Caliph at Damascus, later a Syrian monk, Doctor of the Church, his Peri Aireseon [Concerning Heresies] [t], its chapter 100 being "Heresy of the Ishmailites" (attribution questioned).

  4. PERSIS (organization) - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/PERSIS_(organization)

    H. Zamzam founded the organization along with his close friend H. Muhammad Yunus. Both of them were born in Palembang. Muhammad Yunus, a trader who was quite successful, in his youth earned a traditional religious education and mastered the Arabic language, so he could self-taught through the scriptures of interests.

  5. Muhammadiyah University of Yogyakarta - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Muhammadiyah_University_of...

    Prof. Dr. Kahar Muzakkir began throwing ideas about the need the establishment of University of Muhammadiyah. When the Central Leadership Muhammadiyah Teaching Council inaugurated the Faculty of Teacher Training and Education in Yogyakarta on November 18, 1960, its founding charter explicitly included it as part of the Guidance and Counseling, University of Muhammadiyah.

  6. Muhammad al-Shaybani - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Muhammad_al-Shaybani

    Abū ʿAbd Allāh Muḥammad ibn al-Ḥasan ibn Farqad ash-Shaybānī (Arabic: أبو عبد الله محمد بن الحسن بن فرقد الشيباني; 749/50 – 805), known as Imam Muhammad, the father of Muslim international law, [1] was an Arab Muslim jurist and a disciple of Abu Hanifa (later being the eponym of the Hanafi school of Islamic jurisprudence), Malik ibn Anas and Abu Yusuf.

  7. Y. B. Mangunwijaya - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Y._B._Mangunwijaya

    Romo Mangun was the son of Yulianus Sumadi and Serafin Kamdaniyah. [3] At the age of sixteen, he joined the People's Security Army during the Indonesian National Revolution and was shocked by the way the troops treated the villagers. [2]

  8. Quraish Shihab - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Quraish_Shihab

    Muhammad Quraish Shihab (Arabic: محمّد قريش شهاب; Muḥammad Qurayš Šihāb; born 16 February 1944) is an Indonesian Muslim scholar in the sciences of the Qur'an, an author, an Academic Scholar, and former Minister of Religious Affairs in the Seventh Development Cabinet (1998).

  9. Sheikh Ali Jaber - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Sheikh_Ali_Jaber

    Ali Jaber has been devoted to reading the Qur'an since childhood. It was his father who initially motivated Ali Jaber to study the Qur'an. Although at first what he lived was the wish of his father, over time he realized it was his own need and by the age of eleven, he had memorized 30 juz of the Qur'an.