Loading...
Loading...
...-Fudul: a sworn covenant to stand together to restore any injustice in Mecca, regardless of which tribe was responsible. The Pr...
...hra, and Banu Taym. The immediate catalyst was a specific injustice: a Yemeni merchant had traveled to Mecca to sell goods, was...
...ng the stone inscribed the Prophet's instinct for inclusive justice into one of the most sacred moments of Meccan history.
...egus Ashama ibn Abjar of Abyssinia — who would not permit injustice under his authority. Muslims who could reach that land woul...
... written agreement, individual accountability, and communal justice — not arbitrary authority or tribal precedent.
...of Islam and the foundational mechanism of Islamic economic justice. The Quran mentions it 82 times, almost always paired with ...
...s shaped Islamic civilization's understanding of martyrdom, justice, and the willingness to stand for truth against overwhelmin...
..., perseverance in calling to truth, the certainty of divine justice, and the reality that nearness of blood does not guarantee ...
... robbing travelers, and practicing every form of economic injustice. Shuaib's mission focused specifically on economic and com...
...e Day of Judgment to confirm the truth of Islam and restore justice on earth. His return is among the major signs of the Hour. ...
...le Abu Talib. In a society marked by idolatry, tribalism, injustice, and ignorance, the young Muhammad ﷺ was known as Al-Amin —...
...n the date palm orchards — and Salman, for all the bitter injustice of his situation, immediately recognized the landscape. The...
...n Ubaydullah, and Zubayr ibn al-Awwam led a force demanding justice for the blood of Uthman and opposing Ali's caliphate. Ali h...
...remains a beloved martyr and a symbol of standing against injustice, with the day of Ashura retained as a day of voluntary fast...
Umar ibn Abd al-Aziz's short caliphate of two and a half years (99–101 AH) was distinguished by an extraordinary program of reform that touched fiscal policy, p
...d to give allegiance until Uthman's killers were brought to justice. The two armies faced each other for months on the banks of...
...ied in Cairo. He was renowned for his fearless advocacy for justice.
...ledge allegiance to Yazid ibn Muawiyah. His stand against injustice became one of the most defining moments in Islamic history.
...aliph, often called the fifth Rightly Guided Caliph for his justice and piety. Umar ibn Abd al-Aziz reversed oppressive policie...
... fifth Rightly-Guided Caliph, an Umayyad ruler who restored justice and is counted among the Tabiin.
...ent of Abu Hanifah and the first to hold the title of Chief Justice (Qadi al-Qudat).
...owned in both Muslim and European sources for his chivalry, justice, and piety.
...Yusuf, the chief student of Abu Hanifah and the first Chief Justice of the Abbasid Caliphate, covers land tax, poll tax, trade ...
... testimony, oaths, documentation, and the administration of justice. An essential reference for understanding the Islamic judic...
... al-Qayyim argues that Islamic law is built upon wisdom and justice, and that legal rulings must serve the welfare of people. H...
... Islamic governance addressing rulers' responsibilities and justice.
What children are owed: a good name, education, love, justice between siblings, and spiritual upbringing.
...t, shared risk and reward, and its role in Islamic economic justice.
...he second caliph whose conversion strengthened Islam, whose justice became legendary, and whose reign saw massive territorial e...
... will appear before the end of times to fill the earth with justice, according to Sunni hadith sources.
...l fraud, and the destruction of Madyan for their economic injustice.
The comprehensive Islamic concept of justice as a divine attribute, a prophetic mission, and an individu...
...ic permission for up to four wives, the strict condition of justice, historical context, and common misconceptions.
...t during his last Hajj, its timeless teachings on equality, justice, and human rights.
The centrality of justice in Islam, Quranic mandates for fairness, the Prophet's exam...
...e has obligations toward the other rooted in compassion and justice.
The Umayyad caliph who transformed his rule to follow the model of the Rashidun, his radical reforms, and how he is remembered as a renewer of the faith.