
O Allah; safeguard me for the month of Ramadhan (to be able to perform duties), and safeguard Ramadhan for me (to be within my capacity to observe); and accept it from me..
Ameen

O Allah; safeguard me for the month of Ramadhan (to be able to perform duties), and safeguard Ramadhan for me (to be within my capacity to observe); and accept it from me..
Ameen

بسم الله الرحمن الرحيم And Noah called to his Lord. He said, “O My Lord, my son is of my family, and Your promise is true, and You are the Wisest of the wise He said, “O Noah, he is not of your family. It is an unrighteous deed. So do not ask Me about something you know nothing about. I admonish you, lest you be one of the ignorant He said, “O My Lord, I seek refuge with You, from asking You about what I have no knowledge of. Unless You forgive me, and have mercy on me, I will be one of the losers Hud 45-47 |
It is never that hard o lose orientation and be misguided.. Therefore, Quran and Hadeeth includes lots of precautions and advices to avoid the thin demise between wrongdoing and righteous.. Certainly temptation and illusions would develop indefinite number of attempts to distract and disturb the faith..
Just be consciously and cautiously aware..
Ramadhan Kareem
It seems a nice applications to download..
Order and Time have great deal in Islam; which give it a distinction among other religions..
Prayer times are excellent tool to schedule, plan and organize the entire day and night; with perfect correspondence to all activities.. A Muslim can relate her/his daily schedule to the prayer; Wake up, Lunch, Comfort, Dinner and Sleep.. Try it..!
Also, the entire week can be organized by preferred days for voluntary fasting, on Mondays and Thursdays..
The month can be planned using Friday prayers, voluntary fasting on the Trio-mid days (14, 15 & 16)
The entire year can be organized in relation to Hajj, Ramadhan, sacred Months and holy occasions

The New York Times recently published a “guide“ to Muslim headscarves. The article intended to illuminate an Islamic concept that promotes modesty, but the associated images showed styles specific to a few countries and all of the silhouettes were faceless. These types of portrayals can contribute to a misperception among some that Muslim women who don the headscarf may lack agency.
In today’s political climate, the headscarf has become more than just a spiritual symbol of modesty. At one point, women working in government positions were not allowed to wear it in Turkey. In France, the niqab — a version of the headscarf that covers the face — is banned. In the field of counterterrorism, some view the headscarf as a manifestation of extremism. And as the number of Islamophobic attacks continues to rise in the United States so, too, does the fear among Muslim women, especially those who wear hijab, that they’ll be victims of violence.
In light of this, The Huffington Post asked women from all over the Internet to show just how beautifully diverse the hijab can be using the hashtag #HijabToMe. By showing the many different ways women choose to tie their hijab and the various meanings it takes for them, we hope to offer readers a glimpse into the diversity of Muslim women who don the headscarf. Muslim women were asked to post a picture of themselves along with a brief description of what wearing the hijab means to them.
Check out the compelling images and join the conversation in the comments section below using the hashtag #HijabToMe.


An ISIS prisoner captured by the Peshmerga near Mosul demanded to be executed immediately since he had to be in heaven by 4pm.
He informed his captors the day of his capture was the Muslim festival of Isra and Mi’iraj, which celebrates the famous night journey of the founder of Islam Muhammed to Jerusalem and his temporary ascension to heaven to receive instruction from Allah. The fighter claimed he wanted to attend a commemoration ceremony for this event in heaven, which he said would start at 4pm.
One of the fighters of the Peshmerga who was assigned to the prisoner said the armed man told him “Don’t take care of me, you are an infidel.”
A lieutenant-colonel in the forces of the Peshmerga, Salim al-Surji, bandaged the wounds of the prisoner. He spoke to Rudaw media after a battle at Telskuf in which several Peshmerga fighters were killed.
“While I was filming the ISIS men on my phone” Surji said, “I saw that one of them was moving his ankle. So that’s when I put my hand on his chest and found that he was breathing. He was also conscious and talking. His explosive belt had not detonated and he was hurt in his ankle due to the explosion of one of his comrades. He was unable to walk. He told me ‘you are infidels, kill me.’”
Al-Surji didn’t listen to him and bandaged his ankle.
“While I was bandaging his wound I asked him where he was from and he said he’s from Samarra (a city in Iraq) and that he came to fight here with 50 other armed men. They were supposed to commit suicide using their suicide belts because today is the anniversary of the Isra and Mi’iraj celebration. He told me ‘all of us must be in heaven by 4pm, kill me.’”
https://www.clarionproject.org/news/kill-me-now-i-have-be-heaven-four
لعل هذا المقطع والتعليقات عليه تدل بما لا يدعو للشك أن غالب الناس لا يملكون متطلبات النقاش العقلاني والمنطقي، منذ أن قاموا ضد محمد شحرور، ...