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  2. Dihyah al-Kalbi - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Dihyah_al-Kalbi

    According to Muhammad's wife 'Aisha, he saw Jibril twice “in the form that he was created” and on other occasions as a man resembling Dihya ibn Khalifa al-Kalbi, an extraordinarily handsome disciple of Muhammad.

  3. Hadith of Gabriel - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Hadith_of_Gabriel

    In Sunni Islam, the Hadith of Gabriel (also known as, Ḥadīth Jibrīl) is a ninth-century hadith of the Islamic prophet Muhammad (the last prophet of Islam) which expresses the religion of Islam in a concise manner. [1]

  4. Ahmad Musa Jibril - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Ahmad_Musa_Jibril

    Jibril was convicted and sentenced for these crimes, to six and one half years in a high-security prison, and was subsequently imprisoned at Terre Haute Federal Correctional Complex, from where he was released sometime during 2012. [20] Jibril's Federal Bureau of Prisons inmate locator number was 31943–039. [9]

  5. Gabriel's Wing - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Gabriel's_Wing

    Bal-i-Jibril is regarded as the peak of Iqbal's Urdu poetry. It consists of ghazals , poems, quatrains , epigrams and advises the nurturing of the vision and intellect necessary to foster sincerity and firm belief in the heart of the ummah and turn its members into true believers.

  6. Isra' and Mi'raj - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Isra'_and_Mi'raj

    The Israʾ and Miʿraj (Arabic: الإسراء والمعراج, al-’Isrā’ wal-Miʿrāj); In Islamic culture, it is the name given to the narrations that the prophet Muhammad ascended to the sky during a night journey, saw Allah and the afterlife, and returned.

  7. Solomon ibn Gabirol - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Solomon_ibn_Gabirol

    Solomon ibn Gabirol or Solomon ben Judah (Hebrew: ר׳ שְׁלֹמֹה בֶּן יְהוּדָה אִבְּן גָּבִּירוֹל, romanized: Šəlomo ben Yəhūdā ʾībən Gābīrōl, pronounced [ʃ(e)loˈmo ben jehuˈda ʔibn ɡabiˈʁol]; Arabic: أبو أيوب سليمان بن يحيى بن جبيرول, romanized: ’Abū ’Ayyūb Sulaymān bin Yaḥyá bin Jabīrūl, pronounced ...

  8. Gibril Haddad - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Gibril_Haddad

    Gibril Haddad was born in 1960 in Beirut, Lebanon to a middle-class Lebanese Catholic family. [10] He has described his extended family as a mix of Eastern Orthodox and Roman/Maronite Catholics. [11]

  9. Jabril ibn Bukhtishu - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Jabril_ibn_Bukhtishu

    Jabril ibn Bukhtishu, (Jibril ibn Bakhtisha) also written as Bakhtyshu, was an 8th-9th century physician from the Bukhtishu family of Assyrian Nestorian physicians from the Persian Academy of Gundishapur. He was a Nestorian [1] and spoke the Syriac language. [2] Grandson of Jirjis ibn Jibril, he lived in the second half of the eighth century.