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When the companions and friends of the Prophet of Islam asked him: "How should we send blessings, peace, and greetings upon you?" the Prophet of Islam included the word « آلِ », "Al" (meaning family, household or progeny) in his Salawat and asked for all the mercy and blessings that were requested from God for his family too, this meaning, the Prophet Muhammad wants all the mercy and ...
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]
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]
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.
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]
Balada Shalawat was released in August 2010, during Ramadhan, with all profits from the sales to be donated to the destitute. [2] "Lelaki Sempurna" and "Kisah 8 Dirham" were released as singles. [8] A music video was produced for "Balada Shalawat", with a Ramadhan theme. It was directed by Rizal Montavani and shot in Kota Tua, Jakarta. [9]
Jibril Rajoub (born 1953), also known by his kunya Abu Rami, Palestinian political and militant figure; Jibril Yakubu, Administrator of Zamfara State after it was created from part of Sokoto State in October 1996
Baal-e-Jibril (Published in 1935) is a Urdu philosophical poetry book written by Allama Muhammad Iqbal. Jibril-wa-Iblis (Gabriel and Lucifer) is one of its poem, a conversation between Gabriel and Lucifer. In his epic poem Paradise Lost, John Milton made Gabriel chief of the angelic guards placed over Paradise.