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  2. Asma bint Abi Bakr - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Asma_bint_Abi_Bakr

    Asma died a few days after her son who was killed on Tuesday 17 Jumada al-Ula in 73 AH". [27] Asma died when she was 100 years (lunar) old. [28] [29] [30] Asma was 17th person who became Muslim and she was 10 years older than her sister, Aisha. She passed away ten days after death of her son while she was 100 years old and all of her teeth were ...

  3. Maut Ka Manzar - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Maut_Ka_Manzar

    Maut Ka Manzar maa Marnay Ke Baad Kya Hoga (Urdu: موت کا منظر مع مرنے کے بعد کیا ہو گا) is a 1973 Urdu Islamic book by Khawaja Muhammad Islam. [1] The book has been translated into several languages, including English under the title The Spectacle of Death and Glimpses of Life Hereafter .

  4. Mazhar ul Islam - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Mazhar_ul_Islam

    Mazhar ul Islam (Urdu: مظہرالاسلام) is a Pakistani short story writer and novelist. His short stories weave together themes of love, pain, ecstasy, separation and death. His short stories weave together themes of love, pain, ecstasy, separation and death.

  5. Hind bint Utba - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Hind_bint_Utba

    Hind's son was Mu'awiya. [4] [5] Her first husband was Hafs ibn Al-Mughira from the Makhzum clan, to whom she bore one son, Aban. [6] Hafs died young after an illness. Hind then married his brother al-Fakah, who was much older than she was, but she accepted him because she wanted her son to grow up within his father's family. [7]

  6. Islamic view of death - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Islamic_view_of_death

    Probably the most-frequently quoted verse of the Quran about death is: "Every soul shall taste death, and only on the Day of Judgment will you be paid your full recompense." At another place, the Quran urges mankind: "And die not except in a state of Islam" (3:102) [41] because "Truly, the religion in the sight of Allah is Islam" (3:19). [42]

  7. Pir-e-Kamil - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Pir-e-Kamil

    The story's protagonist, Imama Hashim, belongs to an influential Ahmadiyya Muslim family living in Islamabad. She decides to convert to Sunni Islam after being influenced by her friends. She attends her senior Shabiha's lectures in secrecy from her family and her roommates, Javeria and Rabia.

  8. Umm Jamil - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Umm_Jamil

    She was a sister of Abu Sufyan and one of the leading women of the Quraysh. [2] [3] She married Abū Lahab, a paternal uncle of Muhammad. They had at least six children: Utbah, [4] [5] Utaybah, [6] [7] Muattab, [6] Durrah (Fakhita), 'Uzzā and Khālida. [8] It is not clear whether she was also the mother of Abu Lahab's son Durrah. [citation needed]

  9. Nusaybah bint Ka'ab - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Nusaybah_bint_Ka'ab

    A member of the Banu Najjar tribe living in Medina, Nusaybah was the sister of Abdullah bin Ka'ab, and the mother of Abdullah and Habib ibn Zayd al-Ansari. [1]When 74 leaders, warriors, and statesmen of Medina descended on al-Aqabah to swear an oath of allegiance to Islam following the teaching of the new religion by Mus`ab ibn `Umair in the city, Nusaybah and Umm Munee Asma bint ʿAmr bin ...