📍 Tudun Wada, Kaduna South LG — another Urban Poor community located in the heart of Kaduna City is wearing a new look.
Governor Uba Sani has vowed to ensure that development reaches every nook and crannies of Kaduna State, irrespective of social class or any affiliations.
#WorkingForKaduna
@IU_Wakilii There is a discussion you want to have with the woman you intend to marry that if she gives birth you will test the legitimacy of your children??..what exactly is she suppose to answer to that?..make it make sense please.
I want every Muslim to REPOST this video!
A Muslim sister educates some dumb islamophobes on why Muslim women don't go around naked and instead choose to cover their bodies.
They wanted to use that "oppression" propaganda on her, but our sister put them in their places! 🔥🔥
If you want to build a club, build it
If you want to build a hotel, build it
If a stadium is what you want to build, go ahead
But allow people who want to use their money for religious services do so.
You can’t decide what you want to do with your money and still decide what others do with theirs
If late Latif’s friends and family want to build a Masjid, it’s none of your business
Hold your government accountable to build health facilities not private individuals.
"Nobody fought Dangote when he was doing sugar.
Nobody panicked over cement.
But the moment he touched oil, all hell broke loose.
Because sugar doesn’t threaten empires.
Cement doesn’t break colonial supply chains.
Refining oil does.
Refining our own oil breaks the hidden colonial agreement.
Nigeria was designed to export crude and import refined products forever.
That’s the real “agreement” nobody talks about.
That’s why refineries never worked.
That’s why obstacles multiplied overnight.
That’s why Dangote suddenly became a problem.
Oil gives Nigeria 80% of government revenue.
The same system that looted us for decades still wants its money back.
This is bigger than one man.
Dangote isn’t just refining fuel.
He’s challenging a global order.
If Dangote succeeds, industries will rise and Nigeria changes forever.
And that’s exactly what some unseen hands are working tirelessly to destroy".
Professor Idris Bugaje, the Executive Secretary of the National Board for Technical Education (NBTE), has achieved another milestone with the formal launch of a call center. This development is expected to enhance the board's service delivery and improve communication with
It took me a long time to understand this, but it’s important to realize that no matter how good you are to people, it doesn’t guarantee they’ll be good to you. You can show up for someone, care for them, support them, and still end up feeling unseen or unappreciated. And that’s not your failure. That’s not a sign that you weren’t enough. It’s just a reminder that people give love at the level they’re capable of, not at the level you deserve.
For those who do not understand the image. The cartoon image is a meme that depicts a man in traditional Arab attire (thobe and ghutra) holding a stack of five large books labeled Qalun, Hafs, Warsh, Al-Duri, and Khalaf.
What the meme is referring to
These labels are not different "books" or separate versions of the Quran. They are names of authentic canonical recitations (Qirā'at) of the same Quran:
1. Hafs (full: Hafs 'an 'Asim): The most widespread recitation today, used in about 95% of printed Qur'ān worldwide (including most Muslim countries outside North Africa).
2. Warsh (Warsh 'an Nafi'): Commonly used in parts of North Africa (e.g., Algeria, Morocco, Tunisia).
3. Qalun: (Qalun 'an Nafi'): Another transmission from the same reader as Warsh, popular in Libya and parts of Tunisia.
4. Al-Duri; (Al-Duri 'an Abu 'Amr): Used in some regions of Sudan and West Africa.
5. Khalaf (Khalaf 'an Hamzah): One of the less common ones today but still authentic.
There are traditionally 7 or 10 canonical Qirā'at (depending on scholarly classification), all tracing back through unbroken chains of transmission to the Prophet Muhammad (peace be upon him). These are different styles of recitation, primarily in pronunciation, intonation, vowel lengthening, and minor word forms similar to regional accents or dialects in a language.
Why the differences exist (Islamic perspective)
The Qur'ān was revealed in classical Arabic, which had various tribal dialects. Authentic hadiths state it was revealed in seven ahruf (modes/dialects) to make recitation easier for different Arab tribes. Over time, these developed into the standardized Qirā'at, all considered fully authentic and divinely permitted. The skeletal text (rasm) of the Qur'ān remains identical across all; differences are mostly in how words are vocalized or minor synonyms that complement rather than contradict the meaning.
The meme plays on a common criticism (often from non-Muslim polemicists) suggesting these Qirā'at prove "multiple Qur'ān" or textual corruption. In reality:
a. All Qirā'at convey the same core message and doctrines.
b. Differences are subtle (e.g., pronunciation of a word like "maliki" vs. "maaliki" in Al-Fatihah, or minor grammatical forms).
c. They enrich understanding by providing layered meanings, not conflicts.
d. The vast majority of Muslims recite in Hafs today, but switching to another authentic Qira'ah is perfectly valid.
The "confusion" portrayed is satirical exaggeration, there's no genuine doubt among scholars that all these are the one Qur'ān, perfectly preserved in its authentic forms.
Take every attack they throw against Islam as an opportunity to teach Muslims about Islam. In a way, they are helping to spread Islam but they do not know it because they are not different from the beasts, unable to think, research or see things properly. In fact, they are even more astray than the breasts.