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  2. Al-Ghayb - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Al-Ghayb

    Al-Ghayb (Arabic: الغيب) is an Arabic expression used to convey that something is concealed (unseen).It is an important concept in Islam, encompassing what cannot be perceived or known by humans. [1]

  3. Dunia Dalam Berita - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Dunia_Dalam_Berita

    Dunia Dalam Berita (The World In News) is an Indonesian world news program broadcast by TVRI on its main channel.Aired every Monday to Friday at 21.00 WIB (23.00 WIB in 2015 until late-2017), the program airs since 22 December 1978.

  4. Tafsir al-Razi - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Tafsir_al-Razi

    Mafatih al-Ghayb (Arabic: مفاتيح الغيب, lit. 'Keys to the Unknown'), usually known as al-Tafsir al-Kabir (Arabic: التفسير الكبير, lit. 'The Large Commentary'), is a classical Islamic tafsir book, written by the twelfth-century Islamic theologian and philosopher Fakhruddin Razi (d.1210). [1]

  5. Absentee funeral prayer (Islam) - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Absentee_funeral_prayer...

    Absentee funeral prayer in Islam, known as Salat al-Gha'ib (Arabic: صلاة الغائب), is a kind of funeral prayer performed upon a dead Muslim if they die in a place where there are no Muslims to pray for the dead.

  6. Malakut - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Malakut

    Al-Ghazali draws a sharp distinction between the alam al-mulk ("World of Dominion") and the malakut ("World of Sovereignty"). The first is a sensual world of here and now, while the latter an intelligible everlasting world over which God presides, jinn (angels and devils) [ 8 ] dwell, and revelation originates.

  7. Fakhr al-Din al-Razi - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Fakhr_al-Din_al-Razi

    Fakhr al-Dīn al-Rāzī (Arabic: فخر الدين الرازي) or Fakhruddin Razi (Persian: فخر الدين رازی) (1149 or 1150 – 1209), often known by the sobriquet Sultan of the Theologians, was an influential Iranian and Muslim polymath, scientist and one of the pioneers of inductive logic.

  8. Akhirah - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Akhirah

    al-Ākhirah (Arabic: الآخرة, derived from Akhir which means last, ultimate, end or close) [1] [2] is an Arabic term for "the Hereafter". [3] [4]In Islamic eschatology, on Judgment Day, the natural or temporal world will come to an end, the dead will be resurrected from their graves, and God will pronounce judgment on their deeds, [5] [6] consigning them for eternity to either the bliss ...

  9. Badre Alam Merathi - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Badre_Alam_Merathi

    Badre Alam was born in 1898 in a Sayyid family in the Budaun district of Uttar Pradesh. [4] His father, Tahur Ali, served as a police officer. [2] He received his initial education at an English school in Aligarh, and influenced by a sermon of Ashraf Ali Thanwi at the age of eleven, he developed an inclination towards Islamic studies. [5]