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#Al Kurdi
sscarletvenus · 4 months
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this pride, i learnt about the Palestinian trans woman Oscar Al-Halabiye, dancer and resistance fighter against the israeli occupation in Southern Lebanon. she named herself Oscar after Lady Oscar from the "The Rose of Versailles", a Japanese manga series written and illustrated by Riyoko Ikeda.
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her story is documented in Cinema Fouad(1993). zionists use pink washing to reinforce their genocidal terrorist narrative when queer Palestinians have been fighting against the occupation since the very beginning. you can watch it here with english subtitles. long live the intifada!
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sufimuda · 11 months
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SANG PEMBURU
Ath-Thayyibi berkata, “Seorang ulama, meskipun dia amat mendalam ilmunya hingga tidak ada yang menyamai zamannya, tidak pantas merasa puas dengan ilmunya sendiri. Dia mesti berkumpul bersama ahli thariqah (para penempuh jalan ruhani) agar mereka menunjukkan jalan istiqamah, hingga dia menjadi bagian dari mereka yang DIAJAK BICARA oleh AL-HAQQ di dalam sirr-nya karena bathinnya menjadi amat bening…
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farisjax · 27 days
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I guess I'm not too late but we replaced music with nasheeds ? We were supposed to replace music with the Qur'an ( the speech of Allah, we can literally read the words that Allah said )
My favourites are ;
Haitham Al Dhokin
Raad Al Kurdi
Muhammad Luhaidan
Anas Lahboubi
Ibi idris
Al Karee Omar Ebn diaa
Naseem Alqatami
Yaseer Al Dosri
Tareeq Mahmood
Who's yours ?
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mirkobloom77 · 5 months
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‼️🇵🇸💚 WHO says trying to restore partial functionality at Gaza's Nasser Hospital
🔸 Sources: Al Jazeera, UN News, WHO
“The good news, out of six theatres now, we can operate in five of them. Only one anaesthesia machine is broken and the remaining are functional.”
- Dr. Mohammed Kurdi, Program officer, Medical Aid for Palestinians.
“It’s a whole team that is here, right now on ground. We have experts from health, surgeons, WASH, but we also have the engineering team with us.”
- Dr. Husna Daffala, WHO Health Cluster Coordinator, Gaza
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newsfrom-theworld · 6 months
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24/03/24
Today's breaking news:
•A series of heavy Isr@eli air strikes on the southern and southeastern regions of the city of Khan Yunis.
•Martyrs and injuries in the bombing of a house belonging to the Furwanah family in Al-Janina neighborhood, east of Rafah, south of the Gaza Strip.
•The home of the Farawneh family was bombed by Isr@eli warplanes in Rafah, southern Gaza. 8 residents were killed in the bombardment.
•Palestinians collect their belongings from the rubble of their homes which were destroyed during the aggression against Gaza.
•Several Isr@eli air strikes target a number of homes in Rafah, southern Gaza.
•Isr@eli warplanes bombed the home of the Satri family in Rafah, near the borders with Egypt.
•The Isr@eli occupation forces force Palestinian children to take off their clothes whilst passing from Gaza city to the middle of the strip.
•A number of Palestinians were killed and others were injured by the occupation forces that targeted the committees that secure the humanitarian aid at the Kuwait roundabout in the northern Gaza Strip.
•A girl bids farewell to her mother who was killed by an Isr@eli air strike that targeted the home of the Kurdi family in Rafah.
•An Isr@eli soldier assaults a child and forces him to take off his shirt because of a gun printed on it in Hebron.
•Two residential buildings were bombed by Isr@eli warplanes in Deir Al Balah city, central Gaza. Residents are still missing under the rubble.
•Four Palestinians were killed, including two girls, several were also wounded in the bombing of a house belonging to the Eissa family in Al-Juneina neighborhood, east of Rafah Governorate, southern Gaza Strip.
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jordanianroyals · 1 year
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From Princess Alia bint Al Hussein's album: Princesses Alia bint Al Hussein, Rym Ali, Jalilah bint Ali, Zein bint Al Hussein, Sarvath El Hassan, Jumana Al Saleh and Zein El Sharaf al-Kurdi at the henna party of Rajwa Al Saif on 22 May, 2023. The Yassin family (Queen Rania's side) members are also present, including Ilham Yassin, Dina Yassin and Rania's sister in law Reem.
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politicalblade · 4 months
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Israel is literally torturing detainees by making them stick hot metal up their butts and putting them on an electric chair.
Zionists would have you believe that Israel is moral. The Biden administration would have you believe that Israel is moral. Israel would have you believe that they are moral.
There is nothing moral about this.
The full article under the cut:
The men sat in rows, handcuffed and blindfolded, unable to see the Israeli soldiers who stood watch over them from the other side of a mesh fence. They were barred from talking more loudly than a murmur, and forbidden to stand or sleep except when authorized.
A few knelt in prayer. One was being inspected by a paramedic. Another was briefly allowed to remove his handcuffs to wash himself. The hundreds of other Gazan detainees sat in silence. They were all cut off from the outside world, prevented for weeks from contacting lawyers or relatives. This was the scene one afternoon in late May at a military hangar inside Sde Teiman, an army base in southern Israel that has become synonymous with the detention of Gazan Palestinians. Most Gazans captured since the start of the war on Oct. 7 have been brought to the site for initial interrogation, according to the Israeli military. The military, which has not previously granted access to the media, allowed The New York Times to briefly see part of the detention facility as well as to interview its commanders and other officials, on condition of preserving their anonymity. Once an obscure barracks, Sde Teiman is now a makeshift interrogation site and a major focus of accusations that the Israeli military has mistreated detainees, including people later determined to have no ties to Hamas or other armed groups. In interviews, former detainees described beatings and other abuse in the facility.
By late May, roughly 4,000 Gazan detainees had spent up to three months in limbo at Sde Teiman, including several dozen people captured during the Hamas-led terrorist attacks on Israel in October, according to the site commanders who spoke to The Times. After interrogation, around 70 percent of detainees had been sent to purpose-built prisons for further investigation and prosecution, the commanders said. The rest, at least 1,200 people, had been found to be civilians and returned to Gaza, without charge, apology or compensation. “My colleagues didn’t know whether I was dead or alive,” said Muhammad al-Kurdi, 38, an ambulance driver whom the military has confirmed was held at Sde Teiman late last year.
“I was imprisoned for 32 days,” said Mr. al-Kurdi. He said he had been captured in November after his convoy of ambulances attempted to pass through an Israeli military checkpoint south of Gaza City. “It felt like 32 years,” he added. A three-month investigation by The New York Times — based on interviews with former detainees and with Israeli military officers, doctors and soldiers who served at the site; the visit to the base; and data about released detainees provided by the military — found those 1,200 Palestinian civilians have been held at Sde Teiman in demeaning conditions without the ability to plead their cases to a judge for up to 75 days. Detainees are also denied access to lawyers for up to 90 days and their location is withheld from rights groups as well as from the International Committee of the Red Cross, in what some legal experts say is a contravention of international law. Eight former detainees, all of whom the military has confirmed were held at the site and who spoke on the record, variously said they had been punched, kicked and beaten with batons, rifle butts and a hand-held metal detector while in custody. One said his ribs were broken after he was kneed in the chest and a second detainee said his ribs broke after he was kicked and beaten with a rifle, an assault that a third detainee said he had witnessed. Seven said they had been forced to wear only a diaper while being interrogated. Three said they had received electric shocks during their interrogations.
Most of these allegations were echoed in interviews conducted by officials from UNRWA, the main U.N. agency for Palestinians, an institution that Israel says has been infiltrated by Hamas, a charge the agency denies. The agency conducted interviews with hundreds of returning detainees who reported widespread abuse at Sde Teiman and other Israeli detention facilities, including beatings and the use of an electric probe. An Israeli soldier who served at the site said that fellow soldiers had regularly boasted of beating detainees and saw signs that several people had been subjected to such treatment. Speaking on condition of anonymity to avoid prosecution, he said a detainee had been taken for treatment at the site’s makeshift field hospital with a bone that had been broken during his detention, while another was briefly taken out of sight and returned with bleeding around his rib cage. The soldier said that one person had died at Sde Teiman from trauma injuries to his chest, though it was unclear whether his injury was sustained before or after reaching the base.
Of the 4,000 detainees housed at Sde Teiman since October, 35 have died either at the site or after being brought to nearby civilian hospitals, according to officers at the base who spoke to The Times during the May visit. The officers said some of them had died because of wounds or illnesses contracted before their incarceration and denied any of them had died from abuse. Military prosecutors are investigating the deaths. During the visit, senior military doctors said they had never observed any signs of torture and commanders said they tried to treat detainees as humanely as possible. They confirmed that at least 12 soldiers had been dismissed from their roles at the site, some of them for excessive use of force. In recent weeks, the base has attracted growing scrutiny from the media, including a CNN report later cited by the White House, as well as from Israel’s Supreme Court, which on Wednesday began to hear a petition from rights groups to close the site. In response to the petition, the Israeli government said that it was reducing the number of detainees at Sde Teiman and improving conditions there; the Israeli military has already set up a panel to investigate the treatment of detainees at the site.
In a lengthy statement for this article, the Israel Defense Forces denied that “systematic abuse” had taken place at Sde Teiman. Presented with individual allegations of abuse, the military said the claims were “evidently inaccurate or completely unfounded,” and might have been invented under pressure from Hamas. It did not give further details.
“Any abuse of detainees, whether during their detention or during interrogation, violates the law and the directives of the I.D.F. and as such is strictly prohibited,” the military statement said. “The I.D.F. takes any acts of this kind, which are contrary to its values, with utmost seriousness, and thoroughly examines concrete allegations concerning the abuse of detainees.” The Shin Bet, Israel’s domestic intelligence agency, which conducts some of the interrogations at the base, said in a brief statement that all of its interrogations were “conducted in accordance with the law.” Yoel Donchin, a military doctor serving at the site, said it was unclear why Israeli soldiers had captured many of the people he treated there, some of whom were highly unlikely to have been combatants involved in the war. One was paraplegic, another weighed roughly 300 pounds and a third had breathed since childhood through a tube inserted into his neck, he said. “Why they brought him — I don’t know,” Dr. Donchin said. “They take everyone,” he added.
How Detainees Are Captured
Fadi Bakr, a law student from Gaza City, said he was captured on Jan. 5 by Israeli soldiers near his family home. Displaced by fighting earlier in the war, Mr. Bakr, 25, had returned to his neighborhood to search for flour, only to get caught in the middle of a firefight and wounded, he said.
The Israelis found him bleeding after the fighting stopped, he said. They stripped him naked, confiscated his phone and savings, beat him repeatedly and accused him of being a militant who had survived the battle, he said. “Confess now or I will shoot you,” Mr. Bakr remembered being told. “I am a civilian,” Mr. Bakr recalled replying, to no avail. The circumstances of Mr. Bakr’s arrest mirror those of other former detainees interviewed by The Times. Several said they had been suspected of militant activity because soldiers had encountered them in areas the military thought were harboring Hamas fighters, including hospitals, U.N. schools or depopulated neighborhoods like Mr. Bakr’s. Younis al-Hamlawi, 39, a senior nurse, said he was arrested in November after leaving Al-Shifa Hospital in Gaza City during an Israeli raid on the site, which Israel considered a Hamas command center. Israeli soldiers accused him of having ties to Hamas.
Mr. al-Kurdi, the ambulance driver, said he had been captured while he attempted to bring patients through an Israeli checkpoint. Israeli officials say that Hamas fighters routinely use ambulances. All of the eight former detainees described their capture in similar ways: They were generally blindfolded, handcuffed with zip ties and stripped naked except for their underwear, so that Israeli soldiers could be sure they were unarmed. Most said they were interrogated, punched and kicked while still in Gaza, and some said they were beaten with rifle butts. Later, they said, they were crammed with other half-naked detainees into military trucks and driven to Sde Teiman. Some said they had later spent time in the official Israeli prison system, while others said they were brought straight back to Gaza. During his month at the site, Mr. Bakr spent four days, on and off, under interrogation, he said. “I consider them the worst four days of my entire life,” said Mr. Bakr.
How the Site Developed
During previous wars with Hamas, including the 50-day conflict in 2014, the Sde Teiman military base intermittently held small numbers of captured Gazans. A command center and warehouse for military vehicles, the base was selected because it is close to Gaza and houses an outpost of the military police, who oversee military detention facilities. In October, Israel started using the site to detain people captured in Israel during the Hamas-led attack, housing them in an empty tank hangar, according to the site commanders. Once Israel invaded Gaza at the end of that month, Sde Teiman began receiving so many people that the military refitted three other hangars to detain them and converted a military police office to create more space for interrogations, they said. By late May, they said, the base included three detention sites: the hangars where detainees are guarded by military police; nearby tents, where detainees are treated by military doctors; and an interrogation facility in a separate part of the base that is staffed by intelligence officers from Israel’s military intelligence directorate and the Shin Bet. Classified as “unlawful combatants” under Israeli legislation, detainees at Sde Teiman can be held for up to 75 days without judicial permission and 90 days without access to a lawyer, let alone a trial.
The Israeli military says these arrangements are permitted by the Geneva Conventions that govern international conflict, which allow the internment of civilians for security reasons. The commanders at the site said that it was essential to delay access to lawyers in order to prevent Hamas fighters from conveying messages to their leaders in Gaza, hindering Israel’s war effort. After an initial interrogation at Sde Teiman, detainees still suspected of having militant ties are usually transferred to another military site or a civilian prison. In the civilian system, they are supposed to be formally charged; in May, the government said in a submission to Israel’s Supreme Court that it had started criminal proceedings against “hundreds” of people captured since Oct. 7, without giving further details about the exact number of cases or their status. There have been no known trials of Gazans captured since October. Experts on international law say Israel’s system around initial detention is more restrictive than many Western counterparts in terms of the time it takes for judges to review each case, as well as in the lack of access for Red Cross staff. Early in its war against the Taliban in Afghanistan, the United States also delayed independent review of a detainee’s case for 75 days, said Lawrence Hill-Cawthorne, a law professor who wrote an overview of the laws governing detention of nonstate combatants. The U.S. shortened that delay in 2009 to 60 days, while in Iraq cases were reviewed within a week, the professor said. Israel’s decision to delay judicial review of a case for 75 days without providing access to lawyers or the Red Cross “looks to me like a form of incommunicado detention, which itself is a violation of international law,” Professor Hill-Cawthorne said. After Mr. Bakr disappeared suddenly in January, he said, his family had no way of finding out where he was. They assumed he was dead.
Where the Detainees Live
Inside Sde Teiman, Mr. Bakr was held in an open-sided hangar where he said he was forced, with hundreds of others, to sit handcuffed in silence on a mat for up to 18 hours a day. The hangar had no external wall, leaving it open to the rain and the cold, and guards watched him from the other side of a mesh fence. All the detainees wore blindfolds — except for one, known by the Arabic word “shawish,” which means sergeant. The shawish acted as a go-between the soldiers and the prisoners, doling out food and escorting fellow prisoners to a block of portable toilets in the corner of the hangar. Weeks later, Mr. Bakr said, he was appointed as a shawish, allowing him to see his surroundings properly. His account broadly matches that of other detainees and is consistent with what The Times was shown at the site in late May. The commanders at the site said detainees were allowed to stand up every two hours to stretch, sleep between roughly 10 p.m. and 6 a.m. and pray at any time. For a brief period in October, they said, detainees were allowed to take off their blindfolds and move around freely within the hangars. But that arrangement ended after some detainees became unruly or tried to unlock their handcuffs, the commanders said. Exhausted after the journey to Sde Teiman, Mr. Bakr fell asleep soon after his arrival — prompting an officer to summon him to a nearby command room, he said. The officer began beating him, Mr. Bakr said. “This is the punishment for anyone who sleeps,” he recalled the officer saying. Others described similar responses to minor infractions. Rafiq Yassin, 55, a builder detained in December, said he was beaten repeatedly in his abdomen after trying to peek from underneath his blindfold. He said he began vomiting blood and was treated at a civilian hospital in the nearby city of Beersheba. Asked about the claim, the hospital referred The Times to the health ministry, which declined to comment.
The Israeli soldier who witnessed abuses at a hangar said one detainee was beaten so hard that his ribs bled after he was accused of peeking beneath his blindfold, while another was beaten after talking too loudly too often. The Times did not witness any beatings during the visit to the hangar, where some detainees were seen praying while others were assessed by paramedics or brought by the shawish to wash in a sink at the back of the hangar. One man could be seen peeking beneath his blindfold without immediate punishment. Like the other former detainees, Mr. Bakr recalled receiving three meager snacks on most days — typically bread served with small quantities of either cheese, jam or tuna, and occasionally cucumbers and tomatoes. The military said that the food provisions had been “approved by an authorized nutritionist in order to maintain their health.” According to several former detainees, it was not enough. Three said they lost more than 40 pounds during their detention. Some medical treatment is available on site. The commanders brought The Times to an office where they said medics screened every detainee on arrival, in addition to monitoring them every day in the hangars. Serious cases are treated in a nearby cluster of tents that form a makeshift field hospital. Inside those tents, patients are blindfolded and handcuffed to their beds, in accordance with a health ministry document outlining policies for the site, which was reviewed by The Times. During the visit, four medics at the hospital said those measures were necessary to prevent attacks on the medical staff. They said that at least two prisoners had tried to assault medics during their treatment. But others, including Dr. Donchin, said that in many cases the handcuffs were unnecessary and made it harder to treat people properly.
Two Israelis who were at the hospital last year said that its staff members were much less experienced and more poorly equipped during earlier phases of the war. One of them, who spoke on condition of anonymity to avoid prosecution, said that at the time patients were not given enough painkillers during painful procedures. Physicians for Human Rights, a rights group in Israel, said in a report in April that the field hospital was “a low point for medical ethics and professionalism.” The hospital’s current leadership acknowledged that it had not always been as well-equipped as it has become, but said its staff was always highly experienced. Dr. Donchin said in some respects the treatment at the field clinic was now “a little better” than in Israeli civilian hospitals, mainly because it was staffed by some of the best doctors in Israel. Dr. Donchin, a lieutenant colonel in the military reserve, was a long-serving anesthesiologist at a major hospital in Jerusalem and now teaches at a leading medical school. The facilities and equipment seen by The Times included an anesthesia machine, an ultrasound monitor, X-ray equipment, a device for analyzing blood samples, a small operating theater and a storeroom containing hundreds of medicines. Doctors serving at Sde Teiman who spoke to The Times said they were also told not to write their names on any official documentation and not to address each other by name in front of the patients. Dr. Donchin said that officials feared they could be identified and charged with war crimes at the International Criminal Court. During The Times’s visit, three doctors said they did not fear prosecution but sought anonymity to prevent Hamas and their allies from attacking them or their families.
How the Interrogations Work
Roughly four days after his arrival, Mr. Bakr said he was called in for interrogation. Like others who spoke to The Times, he remembered being brought to a separate enclosure that the detainees called the “disco room” — because, they said, they were forced to listen to extremely loud music that prevented them from sleeping. Mr. Bakr considered it a form of torture, saying it was so painful that blood began to trickle from inside his ear. The Israeli military said that the music was “not high and not harmful,” played within earshot of Israelis and Palestinians alike, and was meant to prevent the detainees from easily conferring with each other before interrogation. The Times was not shown any part of the interrogation complex, including the area where music was played. Wearing nothing but a diaper, Mr. Bakr said, he was then brought to a separate room to be questioned. The interrogators accused him of Hamas membership and showed him photographs of militants to see if he could identify them. They also asked him about the whereabouts of hostages, as well as a senior Hamas leader who lived near Mr. Bakr’s family home. When Mr. Bakr denied any connection to the group or knowledge of the pictured men, he was beaten repeatedly, he said. Mr. al-Hamlawi, the senior nurse, said a female officer had ordered two soldiers to lift him up and press his rectum against a metal stick that was fixed to the ground. Mr. al-Hamlawi said the stick penetrated his rectum for roughly five seconds, causing it to bleed and leaving him with “unbearable pain.” A leaked draft of the UNRWA report detailed an interview that gave a similar account. It cited a 41-year-old detainee who said that interrogators “made me sit on something like a hot metal stick and it felt like fire,” and also said that another detainee “died after they put the electric stick up” his anus. Mr. al-Hamlawi recalled being forced to sit in a chair wired with electricity. He said he was shocked so often that, after initially urinating uncontrollably, he then stopped urinating for several days. Mr. al-Hamlawi said he, too, had been forced to wear nothing but a diaper, to stop him from soiling the floor. Ibrahim Shaheen, 38, a truck driver detained in early December for nearly three months, said he was shocked roughly half a dozen times while sitting in a chair. Officers accused him of concealing information about the location of dead hostages, Mr. Shaheen said. Mr. Bakr also said he was forced to sit in chair wired with electricity, sending a current pulsing through his body that made him pass out.
Released Without Charge
After more than a month in detention, Mr. Bakr said, the officers seemed to accept his innocence. Early one morning in February, Mr. Bakr was put on a bus heading to Israel’s border with southern Gaza: After a month of detention, he was about to be released. He said he asked for his phone and the 7,200 shekels (roughly $2,000) that had been confiscated from him during his arrest in Gaza, before he reached Sde Teiman. In response, a soldier hit and shouted at him, Mr. Bakr said. “No one should ask about his phone or his money,” the soldier said, according to Mr. Bakr. The military said all personal belongings were documented and placed in sealed bags after detainees arrived at Sde Teiman, and returned on their release.
Around dawn, the bus arrived at the Kerem Shalom crossing point, near the southern tip of Gaza. Like other returned detainees, Mr. Bakr walked for roughly a mile before being greeted by aid workers from the Red Cross. They fed him and briefly checked his medical condition. Then they brought him to a nearby terminal where, he said, he was briefly interrogated by Hamas security officials about his time in Israel. Borrowing a phone, he called his family, who were still 20 miles away in Gaza City. It was the first time that they had heard from him in more than a month, Mr. Bakr said. “They asked me, ‘Are you alive?’”
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Hello, a Palestinian family asked me for help. I am not a big presence online so I am reaching out to others. Her name is Suad and she, her husband, and three children are living in a tent in Rafah. Her insta is suad_kurdi and adam2017289
Her gofundme is https :// gofund.me / 34c13db2
I don't know if tumblr blocks asks with links so I'm breaking it up just in case
I missed this somehow. I definitely can boost this.
10,925/50,500
Vetted by @el-shab-hussein here.
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biliyorsansoyle · 5 months
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Hadid Suresi 21. Ayet /Muhammed Al Kurdi
Rabbiniz tarafından büyük bir mağfirete ve öyle değerli bir cennete doğru yarışın ki onun eni bile gökle yerin eni gibidir. O, Allâh’a ve rasûllerine inanmış olan o kimseler için hazırlanmıştır! İşte bu, ancak Allâh’ın fazlıdır ki, onu dilediği kimseye verir. Zaten Allâh pek büyük fazlu kerem sahibidir.
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ynx1 · 2 years
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Muhammad Ibn Kab Al-Kurdy [rahimahullaah] said:
If Allaah wishes good for a slave, He places three qualities in him: [Sound] understanding in the religion, abstinence from [the unnecessary worldly pleasures] & being aware of his faults.
Source: ‘Az-Zuhd- By Ibnul Mubaarak. 282
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bettercallrobin · 11 months
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من السور المفضلة ليا بصوتة ولو ان النسخة اللي على اليوتيوب احلى 🤍
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dedi-ashour · 11 months
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ما هي مئذنتك المفضلة؟
Which is your favorite minaret?
الصورة من مئذنة خانقاة الأمير شيخو الناصري بشارع صليبة
Photograph taken from the minaret of the Khanqah of Amir Shaykhu on Saliba Street
1. Sonqor al-Saadi Madrasa
2. Ulmas al-Hajib Mosque
3. Ganim al-Bahlawan Mosque
4. Ganibek al-Ashrafi Mosque
5. Mahmoud al-Kurdi Mosque
6. Al-Mu’ayyad Sheikh Mosque
7. Al-Mu’ayyad Sheikh Mosque
8. Al-Fakahany Mosque
9. Al-Ghuri Complex
10. Al-Ashraf Barsbay Mosque
11. Sheikh Mutahhar Mosque
12. Al-Mansur Qalawun Complex
13. Al-Nasir Muhammad ibn Qalawun
14. Al-Zahir Barquq Complex
15. Al-Hakim bi-Amr Allah Mosque
16. Al-Hakim bi-Amr Allah Mosque
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sabaryangindah · 2 years
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MEMBACA AL-QURAN DENGAN AURAT TERBUKA
Pertanyaan:
Assalamu alaikum, Ustadz bolehkah membaca Ayat suci Al-Quran dengan keadaan aurat terbuka seperti mengaji baik laki-laki maupun perempuan?
[Dari: Jumain]
Jawaban:
Wa alaikumussalam wa rahmatullahi wa barakatuh.
Syaikh Muhammad bin Sholeh Al-Utsaimin ditanya tentang hukum wanita yang membaca Al-Quran tanpa memakai jilbab. Apakah semacam ini dibolehkan?
Beliau menjawab: "Untuk membaca Al-Quran, tidak ada persyaratan bagi wanita untuk menutup kepalanya. Karena tidak disyaratkan untuk menutup aurat ketika membaca Al-Quran. Berbeda dengan shalat. Shalat seseorang bisa tidak sah kecuali dengan menutup aurat." [Fatawa Nurun ala Ad-Darb: http://www.ibnothaimeen.com/all/noor/article_4805.shtml]
Pertanyaan semisal juga pernah diajukan di Syabakah Al-Fatwa Asy-Syar’iyah. Syaikh Prof. Dr. Ahmad Hajji Al-Kurdi memberi jawaban: "Jika tidak ada dalil yang menunjukkan bahwa tindakan itu termasuk melecehkan atau tidak menghormati Al-Quran, maka perbuatan semacam ini tidak haram. Hanya saja tidak sesuai dengan adab yang diajarkan ketika membaca Al-Quran, Allahu a’lam." [Sumber: http://www.islamic-fatwa.net/fatawa]
والله أعلم، وبالله التوفيق وصلى الله على نبينا محمد وآله وصحبه وسلم
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jordanianroyals · 11 months
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Princess Basma bint Talal of Jordan with her granddaughter Alia Thomas (born 14 October 2021), from her daughter Zein Al Sharaf Al Kurdi and husband James Karim Thomas
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arrahmahcom · 3 months
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AS Akui Sekutu Milisi Kurdi-nya Rekrut Paksa Tentara Anak di Suriah
HASAKAH (Arrahmah.id) — Pemerintahan Presiden Amerika Serikat (AS) Joe Biden telah mengakui bahwa sekutu milisi Kurdi-nya, yang disebut Pasukan Demokratik Suriah (SDF), secara paksa merekrut tentara anak-anak dalam perjuangan melawan kelompok militan Islamic State (ISIS) dan pemerintah resmi Suriah. Dilansir Al Mayaden (28/6/2024), Departemen Luar Negeri AS mengungkapkan dalam laporan barunya…
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capsulaopinion · 5 months
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ACORRALADO
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ACORRALADO
                         No es una constante las veces que las grandes masas se equivocan al emitir su juicio habiendo muchos casos donde uno ha sido condenado, desprestigiado, hasta han acabado con la vida de quién ha defendido algo que en su momento iba contra la opinión de los poderosos y de las masas. Tenemos una manifestación masiva de estudiantes que tuvo su epicentro en la universidad de Columbia, se está extendiendo a varios condados de EE.UU. ha llegado a París, Francia, está haciendo eco en varias partes del mundo. Varios países han cortado parcial o totalmente relaciones con Israel. La CIJ (corte internacional de justicia) emitió un fallo dónde exhorta a Israel, a cesar las hostilidades, cosa que Israel, hizo caso omiso. La Haya, está amenazando con emitir orden de captura para altos cargos del estado israelí. Poco a poco se suman a la causa palestina y van acorralando el rango de acción política de Israel.
No sé emitirá juicio, sólo analicemos un panorama dónde la FDI ( fuerzas de defensa israelí) se retiran de Gaza, y el gobierno anuncia el fin de la guerra, Hamás, por su parte entrega los rehenes ¿Fin del problema? ¿Hamás, luego del atroz acto de terrorismo, porque no sé puede llamar de otra forma, continuará gobernando en Gaza, quedando su despreciable crimen impune? ¿Estaremos liberando un mounstro que será alimentado por odio? ¿Que será de Palestina, con el fiel apoyo del régimen iraní, tendremos más milicias en la región, bases militares iraníes y rusas, plantas nucleares y una fábrica de terroristas de exportación al mundo entero? ¿Se podría ver a Palestina, reflejada con un régimen igual o peor al de Irán, tendremos otra Siria? Con el tiempo se olvidarán de los palestinos como se olvidaron de los sirios y muchas otros pueblos de África, y del mundo entero. La visión que presento es la misma de Japón, luego de sobrevivir a una guerra mundial, a dos devastadoras bombas atómicas y ser conquistados básicamente por los estadounidenses ¿Que es hoy Japón? Es un país desarrollado, libre, soberano, una potencia asiática que no tiene en el mundo dedo que lo señale. Hasta hace pocos meses eso era Israel, sin un dedo que la señalará ¿Gozaba Irán, de las mismas condiciones..?
¿Cerramos un ojo ante los crímenes de Rusia, y abrimos otro ojo para Israel?
Si la demanda por los palestinos se hiciera paralela a los ucranianos sería creíble todo el montaje político contra Israel.
22 de marzo de 2022
Comité internacional de la cruz roja.
Informe:
                La guerra incesante dio lugar a una crisis migratoria siria, en la que millones de personas escaparon de sus hogares por los incesantes bombardeos y enfrentamientos, la mayoría apenas con lo puesto. Niños, ancianos, personas con discapacidades, hombres y mujeres sin otra opción que la de huir por sus vidas.
Muchos perecieron en el intento; algún caso saltó a los titulares de los diarios, como el del niño Aylan Kurdi, hallado sin vida en una playa turca. Pero en su inmensa mayoría, las penurias de los refugiados sirios son una tragedia ignorada y en muchos casos, encuentran hostilidad en sus lugares de destino.
Marianne Gasser, jefa de la delegación del CICR en Damasco, Siria
El campamento de refugiados de Al Hol, que visitamos en marzo de 2019, alberga a más de 55.000 personas. Tiene el tamaño de una ciudad pequeña.
Debido a los intensos enfrentamientos en el noreste de Siria, los pobladores se vieron forzados a huir de sus hogares y dejaron todas sus pertenencias. Si bien algunos de ellos encontraron refugio en casa de familiares o amigos, muchos otros permanecen en refugios, campamentos o asentamientos improvisados de desplazados internos.
En el resto de Siria, a ocho años del inicio de este desastroso conflicto, la violencia no ha llegado a su fin. Se ha registrado una escalada reciente de los enfrentamientos y de la violencia en algunas zonas del interior de Idlib y en los alrededores. Decenas de miles de personas han sido desplazadas como consecuencia de un rebrote de las hostilidades. Cualquier resurgimiento de la violencia empeorará aún más su situación. 
Los desplazados sirios narran tristes historias de desplazamiento de sus hogares, temor frente al crudo invierno y a la falta de agua, alimentos y electricidad. Sus opciones son crueles: o comprar alimentos para sus hijos o defenderlos del frío. La mayoría no tiene cómo costear ninguna de estas alternativas.
Para continuar leyendo más 
 👉 https://www.icrc.org/es/donde-trabajamos/medio-oriente/siria/refugiados
Hace algún tiempo leí que el presupuesto destinado para ayudar a los sirios se había agotado por la guerra en Ucrania.
También leí que eventualmente ingresaban hombres armados a los refugios mataban, secuestraban, violaban y robaban.
La gran mayoría de los refugiados sirios son mujeres y niños porque los hombres son más vulnerables a ser asesinados.
La información más reciente relacionada no apunta a resolver el problema, sino a evitar un problema en Europa, por los desplazamiento de sirios: La presidenta de la comisión europea (CE), Úrsula Von der Leyen, anunció este jueves (02.05.2024) un paquete de ayuda comunitaria al Líbano por valor de 1.000 millones de euros para apoyar la gestión de los refugiados sirios en su territorio, así como otros asuntos.
Lea lo que sucede en África, y otras partes del mundo, por ésto y mucho más es una gran hipocresía lo que se cierne en torno al conflicto de Gaza.
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