This Ramadan, I'm committed to reading the entire Quran. To stay on track and encourage others, I'll be sharing 4 pages of the Quran after each Fard Salah. With determination and faith, I'll achieve my goal. May Allah guide and support me on this spiritual journey.
Bismillah
What he is quoting and teaching is from the Sharia. That’s the law. I swear by the Almighty who created me, if the sections of the Sharia on capital punishment are borrowed by the government to tackle banditry, kidnapping, and insurgency, in 6 months, it will be a thing of the past. Nobody will dare call himself a bandit, identify with a kidnapper, not to mention kidnapping somebody for ransom. But when we are ready as a nation, we will do the right thing.
May the Almighty preserve Dr. Lafiaji in goodness.
10 hot takes on afrobeat:
1. Burna boy is the biggest in the
big three.
2. Asake is the most
pampered artist like wizkid in
the past years.
3. Rema is the biggest and most
influential new gen artist.
4. With musical achievements.
fire boy is still far bigger than
asake international despite
months of not active.
5. Mavo is a wack artist that is
been hyped.
6. Omahlay is a very Lazy artist
that used pity card to enter
limelight but he is good no
doubt.
7. Arya star is the most bullied
female artist just like Davido.
8. Musically wizkid is
exhausted.
9. Rema is the most hated new
gen artist by Nigerians.
10. Rema upcoming project will
change how you all sees
afrobeat.
#Beibersl
Broke people keep complaining about World Cup ticket prices man, it’s disgusting
I would’ve gone to every game if not that i enjoy listening to the commentators from my TV
Thank God my people now know what should be done in situations like this.
Let me also clear one thing: many of you may think this child is a burden to the woman, but she may be a path to paradise for her.
A child who may never commit a sin due to their incapacity, or who requires constant care, is a specialized mission from the Creator.
Ibn al-Qayyim argued this in Miftah Dar al-Sa'adah that the existence of deficiency in the world is proof of the Perfection of the Creator.
He made a profound intellectual point: if everything were perfect, we would never know what mercy, completeness, patience, or gratitude looked like. In this context, a child with this condition forces the parents and the community to practice mercy (Rahmah) and humility.
Again in Islam, there is a paradox in how we look at strength. While the world thinks a disabled child takes away your resources, the Prophet, peace be upon him, taught us that victory and provision (Rizq) come because of the weak among us.
That child might be the secret reason you have a job, health, wealth, or safety. They are not the ones dependent on you. You are the one dependent on the blessings that come with their presence in your home.
So, when this happens before 120 days, you have a medical choice to make based on strict scholarly guidelines. But if it happens after that mark, you submission to the decree of Allah becomes your ultimate strength.
May the Almighty not test us with what will overburden us.
Allah knows best
I remember we were talking about terminating pregnancy some days ago. Now, let’s ask ourselves: is Down Syndrome a legitimate reason to terminate a pregnancy?
For us to understand the position of Islam, we first need to understand that deformity is not just one blanket category. The Islamic law looks at abnormalities differently based on how severe they are and how they impact life.
The first category covers defects that are minor or correctable, such as a cleft lip, an extra finger, or a clubfoot. These are things modern medicine can easily fix or manage, and they do not threaten the child's life.
The second category covers conditions that are completely incompatible with life. This means gross abnormalities, e.g: a fetus missing a major part of the brain or skull, where doctors know the child has zero chance of survival after birth or will face immediate, excruciating medical agony.
Then we have the category of general genetic conditions, which is exactly where Down syndrome sits.
With Down syndrome, there is a physical or intellectual disability, however, the individual can still live, breathe, experience joy, and survive with the right care and family support. It is a lifelong challenge, but it is not a terminal deformity that makes life impossible.
Now that we know where Down Syndrome falls, what does the rule says:
First of all, as far as terminating pregnancy is concern in Islam, the timing is everything. And the major boundary is 120 days from conception. This is the point where the soul is blown into the fetus.
Before 120 days, major juristic councils, such as the Islamic Fiqh Council of the Muslim World League, do permit a concession for termination under strict medical duress.
If a panel of trustworthy, expert doctors confirms that a fetus falls into that severe category of being incompatible with life, or faces extreme, continuous medical agony, a concession is granted.
Because of the anticipated severe hardship on families, many contemporary scholars allow Down syndrome to fall under this early window, but ONLY if it is proven by specialized experts before the 120-day deadline.
But once you cross the 120-day mark, the door closes completely. The fetus is now a full human soul with an absolute right to life.
After that threshold, terminating a pregnancy for Down syndrome, or ANY deformity, is strictly haram. It is viewed as a direct transgression against a living soul. The only exception that overrides the law after 120 days is if keeping the pregnancy will literally kill the mother.
As for the minor or correctable deformities, it is strictly haram to abort them at ANY stage, even before 120 days. You cannot terminate a life over something that can be managed.
Islam does not allow abortion based on the secular idea of my body-my choice, financial fear, or lifestyle disruption. Islam understands the boundary so we do not turn a medical mercy into an excuse for convenience or eugenics.
Allah knows best.
I think we still don’t understand what we’re watching yet, Let’s not forget, Yamal would have won Ballon d’Or at 18 years old, and that alone already sounds crazy . We’re not talking about young talent with potential, we’re talking about arguably the best player in world football already at that age, at 18. There’s no 18 years old in the history of the sport that has ever peaked like this
And this is not just hype or social media excitement. Usually when teenagers break through, you can still point to flaws in their game maybe they lack decision making, physicality, consistency, or influence in big games. With Yamal, it genuinely feels like he already understands football at a crazy age. Goals, assist, dribbles, chances creation. Bro is playing at a crazy level.
The manipulation of space, the tempo control, the way he pauses before exploding, the weight of pass selection, the composure in big moments those are things players normally master around 26-28, not 17 or 18. He doesn’t play like a wonderkid, he plays like a footballer already in his prime.
And historically, I genuinely don’t think we’ve seen an 18-year-old attacker this complete. Not even young Lionel Messi had this level of responsibility this early. Ronaldo at 18 was still raw. Neymar was still in Brazil.
He’s already dictating matches. Teams already defend him like a superstar. Double marking, aggressive pressing traps, physical fouls and he still looks like the best player on the pitch.
His game isn’t even built on pure athleticism alone. That means it’s sustainable. His intelligence, technical security and understanding of rhythm are what make him special, and those qualities usually age incredibly well.
We might genuinely be watching the beginning of the next era-defining footballer in real time.
I’m a muslim first and last. All other things are embedded within. Whatever ISLAM negates from yoruba culture is not permissible for me, and whatever it allows or encourages from it, i accept.
Just as my parent birthed me as a MUSLIM, May i breathe my last as a MUSLIM🤲.
Imam al-Ghazali in his great book Ihya’ Ulum al-Din described six types of women we MUST not marry as men if we want to live a good married life. This Gen-Z wife matches two out of the six: Al-Ananatu and Al-Baraqatu.
This Gen-Z wife is the perfect example of Ananatu. A woman who finds the natural responsibilities of marriage to be an undue burden and constantly voices her reluctance to fulfill them.
On the other end, she mirrors Al-Baraqatu. A woman who spends all her time grooming herself to an obsessive degree. Also, the one who shows anger and act superior over her husband. He has to wash my clothes yen yen yen 😂😂
May we not make mistake of marrying them in our lives 🙏🙏😩