@RIPP7R313@TotBillel14442 Unsurprisingly you didn’t address the point at all. Ali ra or anyone else didn’t use ghadir khum as a evidence for the caliphate. Also that fairy tale about Fatimas ra door being burned etc has not one authentic narration in either shia or sunni books lol
@RIPP7R313@TotBillel14442 Worst point I’ve ever seen. The Prophet ﷺ did not assign Ali ra as a chaliph at ghadir khum, Ali ra himself didn’t understand it as such and never ever even once used that as a proof for his caliphate and neither did anyone else who was there to witness it.
I went to my office yesterday, turned on the TV and the World Cup came on.
England vs Ghana were playing.
I don’t watch football.
But it took me over 30 seconds to figure out which were the brit’s and which were the ghanaians.
Almost half the english team were black/brown.
So.
If you’re white.
Understand that the whites are vanishing faster than herpes zoster on a full course of antivirals.
And no amount of racism will preserve your white kind.
Being able to set aside your ego to acknowledge this,
is an advantage.
Because then,
you can start recalibrating your approach on how to engage with the new world,
a world where whites wont exist.
An ordeal your kind brought upon themselves.
@paralax777 Except that Shaykh Fawzan never said that. He merely said that focus on other things than this matter. He didn’t say he’s not a kafir or takfir can’t be made on him. He even said that takfir is for the scholars if the matter needs clarifying and if NOT it shouldn’t be focused on
🚨🚨🎙️| Senegal coach: "Even if we were in a world cup final, we would leave for jumuah prayer...even if it meant losing the trophy. you fear the wind; we fear Allah, who created the wind." 🕌
A man said to the Prophet (ﷺ), "Advise me!" The Prophet (ﷺ) said, "Do not become angry." The man asked (the same) again and again, and the Prophet (ﷺ) said in each case, "Do not become angry."
Ibn Hajar Al-asqalani رحمة الله loved his wife so much that, once she was absent, he would write her love letters:
"Do not speak to her of my illness, nor of my sleepless nights, nor of my tears, so as not to cause her pain; rather, tell her that I remain faithful to our love despite the distance."
Most marriages don't end over betrayal. They erode in small moments, both people angry at once, and neither willing to be the one who softens first. The Salaf understood this danger, and one Companion built his whole marriage around avoiding it.
Abū'd-Dardā' (رضي الله عنه) gave his wife Umm'd-Dardā' a single rule to live by:
«إذا غضبتُ فرضِّيني، وإذا غضبتِ رضَّيتُكِ، فإذا لم نكن هكذا ما أسرعَ ما نفترق»
"If I become angry, then win me back. And if you become angry, I will win you back. For if we are not like this, how quickly we would part."
Notice it runs both ways. He doesn't wait for her to repair things. He commits to being the one who mends it, and asks the same of her. Anger met with anger has only one ending.
Someone has to choose to fix it. Every time.
Ibn Ḥibbān in Rawḍat al-ʿUqalāʾ
Americans be like: "9/11, the most shocking day in world history, when we knew we werent safe at home"
The rest of the world on a daily basis for the past century under Isreal and american t*rrorism: