Four things to do in Ramadan

…And in this month, four things which you should endeavour to perform in great numbers, two of which shall be to please your Lord, while the other two shall be those without which you cannot make do. Those which shall be to please your Lord, are that you should in great quantity recite the the Kalimah La Ilaha illallah and make much Istighfar. And as for those two without which you cannot make do, you should beg Allah for entry into Paradise and seek refuge with Him from the fire of Jahannum.

When having fever

بِسْمِ اللَّهِ الْكَبِيرِ أَعُوذُ بِاللَّهِ الْعَظِيمِ مِنْ شَرِّ كُلِّ عَرَقٍ نَعَّارٍ وَمِنْ شَرِّ حَرِّ النَّارِ

“I seek relief taking Allah’s great blessed name from all the evils of pulling (pulsating) nerves and from the evils of the hot fire”.

(Tirmidhi)

 

Fajr Salaah

“IslamicThinking: “you can go to the gym, lift as many weights as you want, but if you can’t bench press your blanket at fajr then it doesn’t mean anything.”” —http://twitter.com/IslamicThinking/

Bad friends

He who knows that his friends are bad but remains in their company must expect to become similar to them at some point. Lets not be fooled!” —http://twitter.com/muftimenk/

Days

Don’t count the days, make the days count.” – Muhammad Ali —http://twitter.com/IslamicThinking/

Martyrdom of Hazrat Hussain son of Ali | Haq Islam

http://www.haqislam.org/martyrdom-hazrat-hussain/

Friends

If freinds have a bad effect on us then WE have bad friends but if we have a good effect on them then THEY have a good friend!”
Mufti Ismail Menk

Dars hadeeth

I am really looking forward to Dars tonight at http://www.akacademy.eu.

Be sure to listen to it live via above link.

Moved

Assalam Alaykum

I will no longer be updating or posting here as I have moved to www.haqislam.org.  Please visit me over there from now on.

Remember me in your duas.

Wasalam
Abu Yaqub

Respect for Women wearing Hijab at Olympics

Extract of an article from the Guardian by Naomi Alderman

The Greeks, as we all know, used to compete in the original Olympic games stark naked and smothered in olive oil. That’s no longer the fashion – because we have different cultural ideas about what parts of the body are suitable for public display – and, in fact, some women have taken the trend for Olympic modesty one stage further. This year, several women, including Egyptian fencer Shaimaa El Gammal and Bahraini sprinter Rakia Al Gassra, will be competing wearing the hijab.

I suppose that as a good liberal feminist I ought to be appalled by this, seeing it as a symbol of patriarchal oppression. In fact, I find I rather admire these women.

I am appalled by the fact that some countries, including Saudi Arabia, have sent male-only teams to the games. But for these women, combining their religious beliefs with their athletic ambitions, I have nothing but respect.

A lot of rubbish is talked about the hijab. Since France banned girls from wearing them in schools in 2004, there has been a steady stream of media stories and comment suggesting that Britain should do the same. Feminist friends tell me that the headscarves are a symbol of female subjugation, a way to deal with male lust by forcing women to cover up, and that as such, they should not be tolerated in a gender-equal society. The women who wear them, they say, have been pressured into it by their communities.

Well, yes and no. We all wear the kind of clothes we wear partly because of social pressure – and our own culture still says, for example, that it is more acceptable, and less sexual, for men to walk down the street topless than it is for women. Many patriarchal religions do indeed hold highly disturbing views about women, which should be challenged, but we should confront those ideas via education and debate, not by forcing young women to reveal parts of their bodies they would rather keep covered. If women say that they want to wear a headscarf, I’m afraid we have to take them at their word. What could be more anti-feminist than telling women that they don’t really know what they think?