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  2. Shahada - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Shahada

    The Shahada (Arabic: الشَّهَادَةُ aš-šahādatu; Arabic pronunciation: [aʃʃahaːdatʊ], 'the testimony'), [note 1] also transliterated as Shahadah, is an Islamic oath and creed, and one of the Five Pillars of Islam and part of the Adhan.

  3. Six Kalimas - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Six_Kalimas

    I bear witness that there is no deity but Allah (God), the One, there is no partner to Him, and I bear witness that Muhammad is His servant and His messenger. ʾashhadu ʾan lā ilāha ʾillā -llāhu waḥdahū lā sharīka lahū wa-ʾashhadu ʾanna muḥhammadan ʿabduhū wa-rasūluh ū

  4. Status of women's testimony in Islam - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Status_of_women's_testimony...

    A testimony must involve certain knowledge of an affirmed event, and cannot be based on conjecture. [2] In the second chapter of the Quran, Al-Baqarah, verse 2:282 provides a basis for the rule that two women are the equivalent of one man in providing a witness testimony in financial situations. [3] O you who believe!

  5. Attributes of God in Islam - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Attributes_of_God_in_Islam

    In Islamic theology, the attributes (ṣifāt, also meaning "property" or "quality" [1]) of God can be defined in one of two ways. Under divine simplicity, the attributes of God are verbal descriptions understood apophatically (negatively). God being "powerful" does not impute a distinct quality of "power" to God's essence but is merely to say ...

  6. Islamic honorifics - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Islamic_honorifics

    In Islamic writings, these honorific prefixes and suffixes come before and after the names of all the prophets (of whom there are 124,000 in Islam, the last of whom is the Prophet of Islam Muhammad [2] [3]), the Imams (the twelve Imams in the Shia school of thought [4]), specially the infallibles in Shia Islam [5] and the prominent individuals ...

  7. Zahiri school - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Zahiri_school

    Admission in an Islamic court of law is seen as indivisible by Ẓāhirīs, meaning that a party cannot accept some aspects of the opposing party's testimony and not other parts. The Ẓāhirīs are opposed by the Hanafi and Maliki schools, though a majority of Hanbalites share the Ẓāhirī position.

  8. The four-part series is a powerful and haunting addition to the streamer’s onslaught of true-crime fare, capturing a place and time that many Angelenos regretfully claim as part of their city's ...

  9. Testimony - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Testimony

    Christians in general, especially within the Evangelical tradition, use the term "to testify" or "to give one's testimony" to mean "to tell the story of how one became a Christian". Commonly it may refer to a specific event in a Christian's life in which God did something deemed particularly worth sharing .