enow.com Web Search

Search results

  1. Results from the WOW.Com Content Network
  2. Al Kauthar fi Tafsir Al Quran - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Al_Kauthar_fi_Tafsir_Al_Quran

    Al Kauthar fi Tafsir Al Quran is a Shi'a Muslim tafsir or an exegesis of the Quran written and compiled by the renowned Shia Scholar Mohsin Ali Najafi. It is primarily in Urdu, and is one of the best urdu exegesis available of the Quran. This task started in 1990 and was completed in November 2014.

  3. List of Shia books - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/List_of_Shia_books

    These books seek to give a rational account of Shi'a theology in contrast with the Ash'ari, Mu'tazili and other theological schools of Islam. The contents of these books are taken from the 8th to the 13th century (2nd to 7th century of Islam). Eʿteqādātal-Emāmīya by Shaykh Saduq (923 AD - 991 AD) Al-Amali by Shaykh Saduq (923 AD - 991 AD)

  4. Talib Jauhari - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Talib_Jauhari

    Talib Jauhari (27 August 1929 – 21 June 2020) [1] (Urdu: طالب جوہری) was a Pakistani Islamic scholar, poet, historian and philosopher of the Shia Sect of Islam. [2] He is widely renowned as the most prominent Shia scholar, and his sermons were broadcast on PTV (Pakistan Television) Network.

  5. Peshawar Nights - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Peshawar_Nights

    Peshawar Nights (شبهای پیشاور در دفاع از حریم تشیع Shab-hā-ye Pishāwar) is a written firsthand account by Sultan al-Wa'izin Shirazi ("Prince of Preachers from Shiraz"), [1] recalling ten days of dialogues between two Sunni scholars and a Shia author about major topics relating to Shia Islam, [2] [3] which took place in Peshawar (now in Pakistan, which, at the time ...

  6. Tafsir al-Ayyashi - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Tafsir_al-Ayyashi

    Tafsir Ayyashi (Arabic: تفسیر العیاشي) is an Imami Shia exegesis of the Quran, written by Mohammad ibn Masoud Ayyashi also known as al-ʿAyyashi (العيّاشي d. 320 AH / 932 CE). The surviving text covers only up to the end of sura 18, 'The Cave'; more material is quoted by later Imami scholars, [ 1 ] for instance Tabrisi. [ 2 ]

  7. Al-Istibsar - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Al-Istibsar

    Al-Istibsar is one of the four major Shia collections of Hadith authored by Shaykh Tusi. [7] He authored this book after writing Tahdhib al-Ahkam, when his colleagues asked him to summarize the book and determined traditions which disagree and explain the reconciliation between the two without leaving out anything which was influential. [8]

  8. Al-Sahifa al-sajjadiyya - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Al-Sahifa_al-Sajjadiyya

    The attribution of al-Sahifa to al-Sajjad is often regarded as authentic, [6] although parts of the books may have been artistically edited by others. [26] In Shia tradition, the text is regarded as mutawatir, that is, handed down by numerous chains of transmission. [6] The addenda were collected by the prominent Shia scholar Muhammad ibn Makki (d.

  9. Kitab al-Jafr - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Kitab_al-Jafr

    In the Shia belief, Kitab al-Jafr is a mystical book with esoteric teachings of Muhammad for Ali. [2] [3] In support of its existence, Ali was once seen transcribing in the presence of Muhammad, as reported by the Shia scholar Ali ibn Babawayh (d. 939) and the Sunni scholars Ibn al-Sam'ani (d. 1166) and Siraj al-Din al-Bulqini (d. 1403). [4]