...f worship that form the foundation of Muslim life: Shahada, Salah, Zakat, Sawm, and Hajj.
The five daily prayers: their times, conditions, pillars, obligations, and recommended acts according to all four madhabs.
The communal obligation of praying over the deceased: its method, conditions, and rulings across the madhabs.
How to seek Allah's guidance when facing decisions: the prayer, its dua, and common misconceptions.
The voluntary night prayers of Ramadan: their origin, number of rak'ahs, and the scholarly discussion.
...hool that systematized usul al-fiqh: Imam al-Shafi'i, his Risalah, and the school's global influence.
The Crusader invasions, Muslim resistance, Salahuddin's reconquest of Jerusalem, and lasting lessons.
...ayer and the fourteen pillars (arkan) that constitute valid salah in Islamic jurisprudence.
The life of the Kurdish Muslim leader who united the Muslim world and recaptured Jerusalem with chivalry and mercy.
...gi who united Muslim Syria and Egypt, setting the stage for Salahuddin's liberation of Jerusalem.
When and how to perform the prostration of forgetfulness for mistakes in prayer, with the positions of the four madhabs.
The weekly congregational prayer, its obligation, conditions, the khutbah, and rulings for those who miss it.
The prayer of the two Eids, its method, additional takbirat, and the rulings according to the four schools.
The confirmed Sunnah prayers accompanying each of the five daily prayers, their virtues, and the scholarly consensus on their importance.
The voluntary prayer performed after sunrise, its timing, number of rak'ahs, and the hadith encouraging its observance.
The special congregational prayer performed during solar and lunar eclipses, its description in the Sunnah, and the etiquette of observing eclipses.
The congregational prayer performed during drought, its description, the Prophet's practice, and the supplication for rain.
Salahuddin al-Ayyubi's unification of Muslim lands, the Battle of...
...ogy of Islamic jurisprudence in his revolutionary work al-Risalah, uniting the Hijazi and Iraqi schools of thought.
The inner dimension of prayer that transforms it from mere physical movements into a conversation with Allah, and practical steps to develop concentration.