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Lorem ipsum dolor
sit amet, consectetuer
adipiscing elit,
sed diem nonummy nibh euismod tincidunt
ut lacreet dolore magna aliguam erat volutpat.
Ut wisis enim ad minim veniam, quis nostrud
exerci tution ullamcorper suscipit lobortis
nisl ut aliquip ex ea commodo consequat Bukhari:V1B4N139 “I asked Allah’s Apostle about a person who imagined they passed wind during prayer. He replied: ‘He should not leave his prayer unless he hears sound or smells something.
Bukhari:V1B4N139 “I asked Allah’s Apostle about a person who imagined they passed wind during prayer. He replied: ‘He should not leave his prayer unless he hears sound or smells something.’”
~Bukhari Volume 5, Book 58, Number 236 Khadija died three years before the Prophet departed to Medina. He stayed there for two years or so and then he married 'Aisha when she was a girl of six years of age, and he consumed that marriage when she was nine years old
(Al Hadis, Vol. 2, p. 686) Ibn Masud reported, "We were fighting with the Messenger of Allah, and our wives were not with us. We asked the Messenger of Allah, 'Should we castrate ourselves?' The Holy Prophet forbade us from that, and then he allowed us Muta (temporary) marriage. So, we all married wives for a fixed time (usually three days) for the dowry of a piece of cloth."
~Bukhari Volume 5, Book 58, Number 236 Khadija died three years before the Prophet departed to Medina. He stayed there for two years or so and then he married 'Aisha when she was a girl of six years of age, and he consumed that marriage when she was nine years old
(Al Hadis, Vol. 2, p. 686) Ibn Masud reported, "We were fighting with the Messenger of Allah, and our wives were not with us. We asked the Messenger of Allah, 'Should we castrate ourselves?' The Holy Prophet forbade us from that, and then he allowed us Muta (temporary) marriage. So, we all married wives for a fixed time (usually three days) for the dowry of a piece of cloth."
IN 1972, during the restoration of the Great Mosque of Sana'a, in Yemen, laborers working in a loft between the structure's inner and outer roofs stumbled across a remarkable gravesite, although they did not realize it at the time. Their ignorance was excusable: mosques do not normally house graves, and this site contained no tombstones, no human remains, no funereal jewelry. It contained nothing more, in fact, than an unappealing mash of old parchment and paper documents—damaged books and individual pages of Arabic text, fused together by centuries of rain and dampness, gnawed into over the years by rats and insects.
Some of the parchment pages in the Yemeni hoard seemed to date back to the seventh and eighth centuries A.D., or Islam's first two centuries—they were fragments, in other words, of perhaps the oldest Korans in existence. What's more, some of these fragments revealed small but intriguing aberrations from the standard Koranic text. Such aberrations, though not surprising to textual historians, are troublingly at odds with the orthodox Muslim belief that the Koran as it has reached us today is quite simply the perfect, timeless, and unchanging Word of God. MORE
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Lorem ipsum dolor
sit amet, consectetuer
adipiscing elit,
sed diem nonummy nibh euismod tincidunt
ut lacreet dolore magna aliguam erat volutpat.
Ut wisis enim ad minim veniam, quis nostrud
exerci tution ullamcorper suscipit lobortis
nisl ut aliquip ex ea commodo consequat
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Lorem ipsum dolor
sit amet, consectetuer
adipiscing elit,
sed diem nonummy nibh euismod tincidunt
ut lacreet dolore magna aliguam erat volutpat.
Ut wisis enim ad minim veniam, quis nostrud
exerci tution ullamcorper suscipit lobortis
nisl ut aliquip ex ea commodo consequat
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Lorem ipsum dolor
sit amet, consectetuer
adipiscing elit,
sed diem nonummy nibh euismod tincidunt
ut lacreet dolore magna aliguam erat volutpat.
Ut wisis enim ad minim veniam, quis nostrud
exerci tution ullamcorper suscipit lobortis
nisl ut aliquip ex ea commodo consequat
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