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Archive for the 'Quotes' Category

Sheikh Abdul Fattah Abu Ghudda

This is a loose abridged translation of one of the biographies from the book Prominent People in the Contemporary Islamic Movement and Call. Previously I put up posts on Dr. Mohammad Natsir, Sh. Muhammad al-Khidr Hussein, and Ustadh Mohamed Abdelhamid Ahmed.
Sheikh Abdul Fattah Abu Ghudda, rahimahullah, has been described by those that met him as […]

A Tradition of Humor

Note: This is the third part of an ongoing series on humor in classical Islamic texts. Here are links to part 1 and part 2. For those new to my blog or to this series, it arose out of discussion about specifically some of the racy humor in the TV show Little Mosque on the […]

The questions not asked

A couple of weeks ago I was blessed with the opportunity to be a speaker along sheikh Talal, one of the teachers that has had a great influence on me al-hamdulillah. The session was titled “Know Your Prophet” and was at the Halton Islamic Association (now on the blogroll :) ). I spoke on the […]

A couple of short answers

Things have been hectic, hence the last two week hiatus. I am still working on that loooong article on humor in classic texts, but in the meantime the buffer has filled up with things I’ve been meaning to post. So a few entries to follow. The long post will most likely come next week inshaa […]

Mohamed Abdelhamid Ahmed

This is the third abridged translation of a bio of one of the figures of the modern Islamic movement as told in the book by sh. Abdullah al-Uqail.
They called him “father of the collegians” because he was one of the first group of university students to work with Imam Hasan al-Banna to establish the Muslim […]

Five only answers

Apologies for staying away for so long. I’ve been trying to write my 3rd episode in the discussion on humor, and it’s taking a long time. The primary reason for that is that when I decided to do just a little bit of research I found many more sources, and so many more examples, than […]

Classic Humor — Step Two

When I referred to humor in classic texts in my first review of LM (seems so long ago now) I was thinking specifically of humor literature and humor in literature written by credible (in terms of scholarship and/or piety) authors in pre-modern times. When I started to think more carefully about what a piece on […]

Classic Humor - A Start (Finally)

Jazaakumullahu khayran to everyone that expressed interest in this subject and jazaakumullahu khayran for waiting (assuming you did :) ).
One disclaimer to begin with: this is a blog entry not a scholarly research paper :) . I will quote a given hadeeth if it was quoted in a credible source without myself attempting to check […]

الشريعة

I came across a pearl today as I was reading al-I’tisam by Imam al-Shatibi. I have reproduced it in Arabic below and done my best to translate it after. Inshaa Allah I will be referring back to it in the future when I get to write my follow-ups to the Little Mosque discussions. For […]

Back to the story of Taloot

Last week was a rather slow week for the blog :( . Last weekend was the LTP in Montreal, this weekend was the one at McMaster. Between preparing for these and catching up on work stuff I’m now falling behind again on my emails and on responding to comments. I did get a chance to […]


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    I live in Oakville, ON with Hebba and our two boys Mustafa and Mahmood, teach Electrical Engineering at McMaster University, and I am a director of the Muslim Association of Canada (MAC). I enjoy reading, writing, logic games, and intelligent discussion. I have a growing compilation of jokes about Egypt, marriage, and that moron in the White House. Life changing books: Ihya by Imam Ghazzaly and Said Hawwa's commentary on the Hikam by Ibn Ataa.