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Hello, everyone! I'm thrilled to welcome the incredibly talented Laila Khan Furniturewalla to the show. Laila comes from a renowned and multitalented family, led by her father, the legendary Indian filmmaker, actor, and writer, Feroz Khan. While her roots are in film, Laila has carved her path in mixed media art, drawing inspiration from Ganesha—the beloved elephant god honored across and revered amongst various cultures. Listen as Laila recounts fond memories of her father and his dedication to perfecting his craft. As a special treat at the end of the episode, we'll hear a song dedicated to Laila by her father, Feroz Khan from the film Qurbani. See below for more information on Laila's upcoming art show!IN THIS EPISODE:(02:24) Laila shares the type of art she creates (05:32) Laila discusses her father and his contributions to the film industry in India(10:16) Why wasn't Laila encouraged to pursue acting(12:09) Laila explains how the song Laila O Laila was inspired (16:11) Discussion of the actresses' careers launched because of the film Qurbani(21:00) Listen to the song Laila O Laila from the film QurbaniKEY TAKEAWAYS:Laila Furniturewalla's artwork is deeply inspired by spirituality and Indian culture, especially the elephant-headed deity Ganesh. She explores themes of divinity, abstraction, and formlessness, using mixed media and textures to create almost sculptural canvases that invite the viewer to complete the interpretation.Laila is the daughter of legendary Indian filmmaker and artist Feroz Khan. Growing up in a creative, intellectual household filled with art, sculpture, and film, she was influenced by her father's aesthetic sensibilities. She chose to follow her artistic path, embracing the self-expression of visual art.The beloved Hindi film song Laila O Laila was named after and inspired by Laila Furniturewalla herself. The song became a generation's anthem. She pridefully recalls how her father predicted its success and how the original version remains unmatched in its emotional impact and artistry.ART SHOW“UNTAMED HEART “ is a celebration of raw emotion.”Born in the quiet storm of the COVID-19 crisis, these works respond to the fragility of life — interweaving survival, loss, and resilience.Ganesh appears not as an idol, but as an evolving force , a symbol of Shakti through Gauri, the feminine energy within.This exhibition marks a breaking free — from boundaries, from expectations and expresses how I feel about life, and the soul of things.We look forward to having you with us at Gallery Art & Soul - Worli, Mumbai from 16th -22nd April.Subscribe to Reenita's Storytelling Den on Substack for free, or become a paid subscriber to watch the video version of this episode. You will also be eligible for other extras, such as exclusive content from podcast guests, short stories, exclusive fiction, and more! https://substack.com/@reenitahora MUSICAL CREDITS:Inspired by Laila Furniturewalla and written by Feroz KhanGUEST RESOURCES:Laila Khan - WebsiteLaila Khan Art - InstagramHOST RESOURCESWebsiteLinkedIn Tiktok Instagram Facebook Twitter (X) Substack Threads LinkTree BIO:An Artist since childhood, Laila Khan Furniturewalla has trained in fine art from the Slade School of Fine Art & the Central Saint Martins School of Fine Art in London, UK. She has held numerous shows & her artworks are held in many esteemed private collections. Her work has been included in auctions and fundraisers & she has donated her work to many charitable causes in India & Internationally. She is also the creative head of Furniturewalla, one of India's largest & most renowned furniture & decor brands.Support this podcast at — https://redcircle.com/true-fiction-project/donationsAdvertising Inquiries: https://redcircle.com/brandsPrivacy & Opt-Out: https://redcircle.com/privacy
De toutes les pièces de Shakespeare, Richard III est sans doute celle qui se prête la plus à une réinterprétation contemporaine. Surtout dans une époque où les despotes les plus extravagants s'arrogent de nouveau le pouvoir, où la classe politique n'est plus que coups bas entre structures claniques. No Beast So Fierce transpose donc l'éternelle lutte entre les York et les Lancaster dans la pègre maghrébine berlinoise, Richard s'appelle ici Rachida et fomente dans l'ombre un complot pour arriver au sommet de l'empire mafieux. Comme elle le dira à sa mère : "tu connais le topo, je vais le réécrire un petit peu". Burhan Qurbani malaxe donc le classique de Sir William pour y incorporer propos sur le patriarcat, l'immigration et l'empouvoirement féminin. Tout transpire la guerre dans No Beast So Fierce : de clans, de sexe, voire tout court quand même l'écho du conflit au Moyen-Orient se fait entendre via un casting composé, dans les deux rôles clés, d'actrices syriennes (Kneida Hmeidan) et palestiniennes (Hiam Abbas) qui se sont exilées de leurs pays respectifs. Qurbani leur offre un ahurissant terrain de jeu, entremêlant environnement ultra-urbain et zones désertiques, radicalité du théâtre d'avant-garde et virtuosité formelle du cinéma. De même, la langue s'hybride entre monologues shakespeariens et argot de la rue, les mots claquant encore plus forts que les séquences de fusillades. No Beast So Fierce y construit un terrassant maelström, évacuant toutes les conventions dans un sidérant dernier acte, concentré sur la colère face à une Europe sombrant dans sa face obscure, prête à toutes les trahisons de ses promesses pour régner par la peur.Le 11 octobre 1975, Lorne Michaels aura dû surpasser la trouille de sa vie pour mener à bien la toute première émission du Saturday Night Live. En cinquante ans, le show télé est devenu une institution de la télé américaine, au point qu'on ait oublié combien il fut une bascule culturelle, en faisant entrer dans les foyers une nouvelle génération de comiques, dynamiteurs des mœurs. Saturday Night fait le compte à rebours de l'heure et demie qui va précéder la mise à l'antenne de l'émission, accroché aux basques de Michaels, jeune producteur naviguant entre avaries techniques, comédiens ultra-narcissiques et mise en place des numéros. Une véritable ruche bourdonnante racontant l'Amérique du milieu des années 70 dans son énergie comme dans ses excès. Brillant dans sa manière d'incarner en quelques secondes des anecdotes sur les piliers de l'émission, de Chevy Chase à John Belushi, faire monter la pression façon cocotte-minute ou résumer les coulisses du télé-business, Saturday Night est encore meilleur quand il rappelle que plus encore qu'un programme devenu mythique, cette aventure folle fut aussi celle d'un souffle de liberté.No Beast So Fierce en salles le 26 mars. / Saturday Night en location sur Apple TV+ et Prime Video.Distribué par Audiomeans. Visitez audiomeans.fr/politique-de-confidentialite pour plus d'informations.
(0:00) Intro(0:11) Listen to must-hear Tafseer lectures of Mufti Sahab on this channel.(0:48) Yarqan (jaundice) kin cheezon se phailta hai?(1:57) Anbia ke saath Jannat mein rehne wale?(3:19) Muharram mein haleem Pakistani rasam/tafreeh ki niyyat se banana?(5:25) Jamaat ki namaz bila uzar chhodna?(6:25) Family ke saath ludo khelna?(7:03) Jamaat ke peeche Sanaa parhna?(7:07) Munh se “Taa” nikalne ka wazifa?(7:42) Brailvi se shadi karna?(8:12) Muslim aur ghair Muslim ki hadood?(13:44) Mufti Sahab ke walid Sahab ki personality(15:43) Tauheed aur ghair tauheed mein farq ka masla?(17:45) TV dekhna kufr? Ek molvi sb ka fatwa(18:22) Kufr ke fatwon mein ta'weel ki hadd?(21:54) Mufti Tariq Masood Sahab ne Brailvi ulama ke haqq mein awaaz uthai(29:33) PakAid Welfare Trust?(30:59) Mard ke liye silver chain pehenna? + Makrooh aur halal ka farq?(33:23) Mufti sb ke clips ko ghalat rukh dene wale?(35:56) Madaaris mein aqraba parwari ka hal?(41:51) Juma ke khutba ke adab?(42:27) Esai qasai ko samjhana?(45:31) Tableegh mein nikalne ki sharaait?(45:57) Khandani khawateen?(46:44) Masjid-e-Nabvi ﷺ mein namaz?(47:06) Hazrat Abu Bakr (RA) ko Siddiq na maanna kufr?(47:48) Maa ki ghalti par kaise tokain?(50:41) Witr 3 rakaat ke dalaail?(52:57) Zakaat vs Qurbani?(53:35) Nikah ke 6 kalme?(54:07) Turkey mein bida'at?(54:31) Mtm's experience of the first Taraweeh in Turkey?(58:18) Turkey mein ek aur bida'at Hosted on Acast. See acast.com/privacy for more information.
(0:00) Intro(0:17) Aayaat Surah Ma'arej(3:42) Growth Ratio Benefits In Pakistan & IndiaMadaris & Business(5:20) Madaris Government Custody mein?(6:38) Indian Gujrati Tajir ki Karguzari(8:18) Job vs Business(10:22) Aisi Job Jihad hai(11:14) Gujratiyon ki Kamyabi ki Waja(13:34) Deen ki Tabligh mein Ghareeb ka ProtocolNamaz & Stress Management(16:12) Namaz se Stress Door(17:44) Bekari/Susti: Stress ki Waja(20:26) Namaz Timings vs Clock Timings(21:32) Tension utha kar kaam karne mein maza(23:12) Madaris mein 2 mah ki chhuttiyon ki Khushi(26:26) Khush rehne walon ki Routine (24 hours)Planning & Habits(31:42) Doosron ki Planning ka Hissa banne walay(34:14) Clickbait Thumbnails dekhne ka Nuqsan(37:32) Namaz se Mamlat ki Ibtida(38:38) Hafizon ko Pehla Para kyun Pakka Yaad hota hai?(39:03) Namaz mein Excellency(40:58) Khud ko Namaz ka Aadi banane ka Tariqa(42:04) Hakeem Akhtar sb ka Qoul(42:48) Fajar aur Subah ki Dhoop ka FaidaReflection & Spirituality(48:38) Mufti Sahab ka Tajzia 18 Saal se (10 mins pehle aane walay Buzurg)(49:45) Mufti Rasheed Ahmed Sahab ki Namaz(50:14) Pehli Saff mein Taraweeh parhne ka Sakoon(50:56) Har Kaam mein Excellency(51:20) Doosri Shadi CaseControversial Topics(56:05) Ghamdi ne Darrhi ka Inkar kar ke Deen mein Tehreef kyun ki?(1:01:46) 5 Waqt ki Namaz: Musalman aur Kafir mein Farq ki Cheez(1:04:06) Namaz Chhorrne ke Bahane(1:06:20) Qeemti Cheez ki Planning?(1:10:29) Comments mein Mufti sb par Aitraz: Halal Trip App Installation par!(1:11:36) DuaQuestions(1:11:47) Mufti Rasheed Ahmed Khursheed Sahab ki Seerat Series?(1:13:54) Darrhi walay Hafiz ki Shadi par Larki walon ki Demand?(1:15:40) Drop shipping Ko halal karnay ka tariqa(1:28:02) Mayyat ke Ghar walon ke Rone se Rooh par Azab hota hai?(1:29:44) Berozgar, Ghair Zimmedar Betay ki Shadi ka Case?(1:37:20) Mayyat ki Jhooti Tareefon ke Pul Bandhne se Kya Hota hai?(1:38:44) Nikah ke Baad Pata Chale ke Biwi ke Aqeede Shirkia hain to?(1:39:42) Ghair Muslim ki Personality Achhi Lage to?(1:42:25) Munafiq Mushkil mein Saath Nahi Deta(1:43:40) Mufti sb ke Bachpan ka Waqia: Bike par se Dost Kaise Bhaga?(1:44:48) Kafiron ki Achhi Sifat aur Bure Amaal(1:45:30) Susar Doosri Shadi Nahi Karne de Rahe to?Fiqhi Questions(1:52:58) Mufti sb ki Purani Video: Karbala ka Pani Band? Mubahalay ke Waqt Nabi ﷺ ne Apni Chadar mein Jinhein Liya, wo Ehl-e-Bait? Aur Nabi ﷺ ki Biwiyan Ehl-e-Bait mein Shamil hain?(1:55:16) Qurbani aur Aqeeqa Aik Janwar mein?(1:55:32) Sajda-e-Sehv Karna?(1:55:39) Baghair Mehram ke Umrah Karna?(1:55:51) Nabi ﷺ ki Basharat Khwab mein?(1:59:48) Esha ka Waqt?(2:00:38) Bemar Bacha Theek Hone ki Mannat Poori Karna?(2:02:00) Allah ko Maloom tha ke Insan Dozakh mein Jayenge to Kyun Paida Kiya?(2:06:36) Zyada Log Dozakh mein Jayenge, Allah Ghafoor Raheem hai to Na Paida Karta?(2:10:43) Zaeef Hadis Sunana?(2:12:39) Garments Business mein Commission Agent ka Frokht ka Tariqa?Credit for the timestamps goes to @mrs.masroor8476 Hosted on Acast. See acast.com/privacy for more information.
KRAFT Kampsport representerade med bravur på debutgalan Superior Academy 1 med flera stora vinster. Sina Qurbani vann sin fight på decision efter tre spännande ronder medan Rabouni Mbuta stod för galans snyggaste knockout med en frontkick mot kroppen. Senare under kvällen blev Martin Karlsson historisk som första champion i Superior Academy. I det här avsnittet gästar alla tre för att prata om sina vinster, hemligheterna bakom KRAFTs succé och mycket mer. Programmet leds av Zebzebba och Ashah Tafari.
In this powerful episode, Sahil Adeem explores the inspiring story of Hazrat Khubaib (R.A) and his deep love for Prophet Muhammad (PBUH). Learn how Hazrat Khubaib's unwavering devotion and bravery stand as timeless examples of sacrifice and strength. Hosted on Acast. See acast.com/privacy for more information.
As part of the Islamic festival of Eid al-Adha, local NGO Awqaf SA, in partnership with Diyanet, the religious body of Türkiye, is in the process of delivering meat packs to vulnerable communities after successfully completing the three-day Qurbani sacrifice. This food security and religious initiative aims to feed thousands of people in Cape Town, Northern Cape, KwaZulu Natal, Johannesburg, Namibia, and Mozambique.See omnystudio.com/listener for privacy information.
Content warning for discussion of genocide, torture, mutilation, rape, and slavery Hey, Hi, Hello, this is the History Wizard and welcome back for Day 14 of Have a Day w/ The History Wizard. Thank you to everyone who tuned in for Day 13 last week, and especially thank you to everyone who rated and/or reviewed the podcast. I hope you all learned something last week and I hope the same for this week. This week marks the 5th part of our mini series of currently ongoing genocides and humanitarian crises. Episode 2 was on Palestine, Episode 11 was on Congo, episode 12 was on Sudan, episode 13 was on Xinjiang, and today's episode will talk about the genocide of the Rohingya people of Myanmar. It's officially the end of week 2! We made it. Congratulations one and all on surviving 2 weeks worth of weeks. As a gift for you all we're going to visit the Alchemist's Table. Today;s libation is called Prohibition Sweet Tooth. It's 1.5 ounces each of Redemption Bourbon and Creme de Cacao, followed by .75 oz of Frangelico. Shake well and pour over ice. Officially the Rohingya genocide began around 2016 and continues to this day, but as we know from every other episode we've had so far, genocide's don't just pop up out of nowhere all of the sudden. There is context, there is a roadmap of hindsight that we can follow back to, if not a starting point at least a starting line. So, first, let's talk about Myanmar. There have been homonid species living on Myanmar for about 750,000 years, first in the form of Homo erectus and then Homo sapiens starting around 25,000 years ago. Then a whole lot of history happened that, while fascinating and important, isn't strictly relevant to what we're going to discuss today. Starting on January 1, 1886 Myanmar (then called Burma) was officially annexed by the British Empire under the control of the British East India Company. Burma would remain under British rule until 1948. Burma was officially declared an independent state by an act of Parliament, specifically the Burma Independence Act 1947. Burma then remained under a civilian government until 1962, at which point it was overthrown in a coup detat and Burma (which became Myanmar officially in 1989) has been under military rule since then. Between 1962 and 1974, Myanmar was ruled by a revolutionary council headed by the general. Almost all aspects of society (business, media, production) were nationalised or brought under government control under the Burmese Way to Socialism, which combined Soviet-style nationalisation and central planning. A long series of anti-government protests resulted in a popular uprising in 1988, sometimes called the 8888 Uprising. This would lead directly to the renaming of the country from Burma to Myanmar and the country's first free, multiparty elections in 30 years. So, as you can see Myanmar has had an interesting and contentious history born of a desire for a strong sense of national unity, stability, and growth. It was the instability of the civilian government, the lack of growth, the skyrocketing crime rates, and the fear of the disintegration of Burma into several smaller nations that would lead to the 1962 coup after all. When your country has such a strong, almost rabid desire for unity and strength and national identity it always goes hand in hand with a desire for a homogenous society. The Germans in World War 2 felt it. The Ottomans in World War 1 felt it. It's what nations who fear their own collapse DO. They look for the divisive elements, the ones who don't fit the majority mold and they say “Hey, these people won't fall in line. They're dividing out country, threatening it with their different religion, culture, values, etc. We can solve all of our problems, save our country if we just… get rid of them”. Myanmar is a Buddhist majority country, by an overwhelming margin. According to the 2014 Myanmar census 90% of the country's population (of about 56 million) is Buddhist. 6.3% is Christian and just over 2% is Muslim. The Rohingya people, the subjects of our episode for today and Mulsim, so let's dive back and take a look at the history of Muslim persecution in Myanmar. The first Muslim documented in Burmese history (recorded in the Glass Palace Chronicle) was Byat Wi during the reign of Mon, a Thaton king, circa 1050 AD. The two sons of Byat Wi's brother Byat Ta, known as Shwe Byin brothers, were executed as children either because of their Islamic faith, or because they refused forced labor. Throughout the premodern era various restrictions were placed on Muslim communities in Burma. The Burmese king Bayinnaung banned Islamic ritual slaughter, thereby prohibiting Muslims from consuming halal meals of goats and chicken. He also banned Eid al-Adha and Qurbani, regarding killing animals in the name of religion as a cruel custom. Burma having largely adopted Buddhism by the 12th century CE. Although, in a strange, cruel, and somewhat ironic twist King Bodawpaya from 1782–1819 arrested four prominent Burmese Muslim Imams from Myedu and killed them in Ava, the capital, after they refused to eat pork. According to the Myedu Muslim and Burma Muslim version, Bodawpaya later apologized for the killings and recognised the Imams as saints. During the "Burma for Burmese" campaign in the late 1930s, a violent demonstration took place in Surti Bazaar, a Muslim area. When the police, who were ethnically Indian (there was a lot of anti-Indian sentiment in Burma in the 1930s, and because most Indian people living in Burma were Muslim, this also affected Muslim Burmese people), tried to break up the demonstration, three monks were injured. Images of monks being injured by ethnically Indian policemen were circulated by Burmese newspapers, provoking riots. Muslim properties, including shops and houses were looted. According to official sources, 204 Muslims were killed and over 1,000 were injured. 113 mosques were damaged. Panglong, a Chinese Muslim town in British Burma, was entirely destroyed by the Japanese invaders in the Japanese invasion of Burma in World War 2. And, after the 1962 coup all Muslim troops were expelled from the Army. And, of course, we need to talk about the 1997 Mandalay Riots. Mandalay is the second largest city in Myanmar. a mob of 1,000–1,500 Buddhist monks and others shouted anti-Muslim slogans as they targeted mosques, shop-houses, and vehicles that were in the vicinity of mosques for destruction. Looting, the burning of religious books, acts of sacrilege, and vandalizing Muslim-owned establishments were also common. At least three people were killed and around 100 monks arrested. The unrest in Mandalay allegedly began after reports of an attempted rape of a girl by Muslim men, though there's no way to know if that story is true or not. In 2001, anti-Muslim pamphlets, most notably The Fear of Losing One's Race, were widely distributed by monks. Many Muslims feel that this exacerbated the anti-Muslim feelings that had been provoked by the destruction of the Buddhas of Bamiyan in Afghanistan. (The Buddhas are two giant statues in the Bamiyan Valley of Afghanistan that daye from about the 6th century CE, they have long been considered a holy site by Buddhists and they were destroyed by the Talbian in 2001). And that's why on 15 May 2001, anti-Muslim riots broke out in Taungoo, Pegu division, resulting in the deaths of about 200 Muslims, in the destruction of 11 mosques and the setting ablaze of over 400 houses. On 15 May, the first day of the anti-Muslim uprisings, about 20 Muslims who were praying in the Han Tha mosque were killed and some were beaten to death by the pro-junta forces. Now, something that we need to discuss before I forget to is that since 1982 the Rohingya have been denied voting rights and citizenship within Myanmar thanks to the 1982 Citizenship Law. The law created three categories of citizenship: the first category applied to ethnic Burmans and members of the Kachin, Kayah, Karen, Mon, Arakan Buddhists, Shan, and any other ethnic group present in Myanmar prior to 1823 (though they did not include Rohingya Muslims, rendering them stateless), granted them full citizenship. The second category granted partial “associate” citizenship to the children of mixed marriages where one parents fell into the first category, as well as to individuals who had lived in Myanmar for five consecutive years, or to individuals who lived in Myanmar for eight out of the ten years prior to independence. Associate citizens could earn an income, but could not serve in political office. The third category applied to the offspring of immigrants who arrived in Myanmar during the period of British colonial rule. When we look at the state of Myanmar during the 20th century we can very clearly see Levels 3 and 4 of the Pyramid of Hate. The Pyramid of Hate was created in the mid aughts and was based on the Alport Scale of Prejudice created by psychologist Gordon Alport in the 1950s. Simply put the five levels, going from bottom to top are thoughts, words, discriminatory policy, violence towards individuals because of their membership to the group and violence against the cultural markers of the group, and finally genocide. Myanmar, very obviously has and had discriminatory policy and violence towards individuals and their cultural markers. Massacres, riots, burning Qurans and mosques all fit under level 4. But, of course, things can and did get worse. There was the 2012 Rakhine State riots. Sectarian violence erupted between the Rakhine ethnic group and the Rohingya and ended with most of the Rohingya population of Sittwe, the capital of the Rakhine State being expelled. Over the course of the riots that lasted most of June and erupted again in October a little over 160 people were killed and over 100,000 Rohingya were displaced. We are now in our time of rapid escalation of violence as the next major anti Rohingya event would occur in March of 2013. But before we talk about the 2013 riots we need to talk about the 969 Movement. The 969 is a violently Islamophobic Buddhist Nationalist organization founded and run by Ashin Wirathu. Time for a slight diversion for a fun fact: The three digits of 969 "symbolize the virtues of the Buddha, Buddhist practices and the Buddhist community". The first 9 stands for the nine special attributes of the Buddha and the 6 for the six special attributes of his Dharma, or Buddhist Teachings, and the last 9 represents the nine special attributes of Buddhist Sangha (monastic community). Those special attributes are the Three Jewels of the Buddha. Wirathu claims that he does not advocate for violence against Muslims and that all he wants is peace, and yet in a Time magazine article he had this to say: "You can be full of kindness and love, but you cannot sleep next to a mad dog", Wirathu said, referring to Muslims. "If we are weak", he said, "our land will become Muslim". The 2013 riots were particularly brutal. One incident involved several Muslim teenagers dragging a Buddhist man off of his bike and setting him on fire. As well as the deadliest incident of the riot which occurred when a Buddhist mob attacked and torched the Mingalar Zayone Islamic Boarding School. While outnumbered security forces stood by, rioters armed with machetes, metal pipes, chains, and stones killed 32 teenage students and four teachers. Now, while 2016 would be the “official” start of the genocide we would be remiss if we skipped over the 2015 refugee crisis. In 2015, hundreds of thousands of Rohingyas in Myanmar and Bangladesh fled from religious persecution and continued denial of basic rights in their home countries by means of boat travel, often through previously existing smuggling routes among the Southeast Asian waters. Many Rohingyas fled to Indonesia and Malaysia, which both adopted a stance open to acceptance of the Rohingya refugees still at sea in mid-May. And now we're at the genocide itself, though before we do that, let's take a look at that the US State Department had to say about Myanmar and Rakhine shortly before the shit hit the fan. The situation in Rakhine State is grim, in part due to a mix of long-term historical tensions between the Rakhine and Rohingya communities, socio-political conflict, socio-economic underdevelopment, and a long-standing marginalisation of both Rakhine and Rohingya by the Government of Burma. The World Bank estimates Rakhine State has the highest poverty rate in Burma (78 per cent) and is the poorest state in the country. The lack of investment by the central government has resulted in poor infrastructure and inferior social services, while lack of rule of law has led to inadequate security conditions. Members of the Rohingya community in particular reportedly face abuses by the Government of Burma, including those involving torture, unlawful arrest and detention, restricted movement, restrictions on religious practice, and discrimination in employment and access to social services. In 2012, the intercommunal conflict led to the death of nearly 200 Rohingya and the displacement of 140,000 people. Throughout 2013–2015 isolated incidents of violence against Rohingya individuals continued to take place. In 2016 a Rohingya resistance group known as Harakah al-Yaqin formed and attacked several border police posts leaving 9 officers dead and looting as many munitions as they could. In response to this the government of Myanmar immediately began cracking down on all Rohingya people as quickly and viscously as they could. In the initial operation, dozens of people were killed, and many were arrested. Casualties increased as the crackdown continued. Arbitrary arrest, extrajudicial killings, gang rapes, brutalities against civilians, and looting were carried out. Media reports stated hundreds of Rohingya people had been killed by December 2016, and many had fled Myanmar as refugees to take shelter in the nearby areas of Bangladesh. Those who fled Myanmar to escape persecution reported that women had been gang raped, men were killed, houses were torched, and young children were thrown into burning houses. Boats carrying Rohingya refugees on the Naf River were often gunned down by the Burmese military. In a report published in March 2024, the IIMM stated the military had in a "systematic and coordinated" manner "spread material designed to instil fear and hatred of the Rohingya minority". The report found military was used dozens of seemingly unrelated Facebook pages to spread hate speech against the Rohingya prior before the 2017 Rohingya genocide. This is similar in intent to the use of radio stations to spread constant anti Tutsi propaganda during the Rwandan genocide, though obviously as information technology advances methods get more sophisticated. Though I hesitate to call Facebook sophisticated.. In August 2018, a study estimated that more than 24,000 Rohingya people were killed by the Burmese military and local Buddhists since the "clearance operations" which had started on 25 August 2017. The study also estimated that over 18,000 Rohingya Muslim women and girls were raped, 116,000 Rohingyans were beaten, and 36,000 Rohingyans were thrown into fires. It was also reported that at least 6,700 to 7,000 Rohingya people including 730 children were killed in the first month alone since the crackdown started. In September 2018, the U.N. Independent International Fact-Finding Mission on Myanmar released a report stating that at least 392 Rohingya villages in Rakhine State had been razed to the ground since 25 August 2017. Earlier, Human Rights Watch in December 2017 said it had found that 354 Rohingya villages in Rakhine state were burnt down and destroyed by the Myanmar military. In November 2017, both the UN officials and the Human Rights Watch reported that the Armed Forces of Myanmar had committed widespread gang rapes and other forms of sexual violence against the Rohingya Muslim women and girls for the prior three months. HRW stated that the gang rapes and sexual violence were committed as part of the military's ethnic cleansing campaign while Pramila Patten, the United Nations Special Representative of the Secretary General on Sexual Violence in Conflict, said that the Rohingya women and girls were made the "systematic" target of rapes and sexual violence because of their ethnic identity and religion. In February 2018, it was reported that the Burmese military bulldozed and flattened the burnt Rohingya villages and mass graves in order to destroy the evidence of atrocities committed. These villages were inhabited by the Rohingya people before they were burnt down by the Burmese military during the 2017 crackdown. Since the 25 August incident, Myanmar blocked media access and the visits of international bodies to Rakhine State. Rakhine State has been called an information black hole. According to the Mission report of OHCHR (released on 11 October 2017 by the United Nations Office of the High Commissioner for Human Rights), the Burmenese military began a "systematic" process of driving hundreds of thousands of Rohingya from Myanmar in early August 2017. The report noted that "prior to the incidents and crackdown of 25 August, a strategy was pursued to": Arrest and arbitrarily detain male Rohingyas between the ages of 15–40 years; Arrest and arbitrarily detain Rohingya opinion-makers, leaders and cultural and religious personalities; Initiate acts to deprive Rohingya villagers of access to food, livelihoods and other means of conducting daily activities and life; Commit repeated acts of humiliation and violence prior to, during and after 25 August, to drive out Rohingya villagers en masse through incitement to hatred, violence, and killings, including by declaring the Rohingyas as Bengalis and illegal settlers in Myanmar; Instill deep and widespread fear and trauma – physical, emotional and psychological, in the Rohingya victims via acts of brutality, namely killings, disappearances, torture, and rape and other forms of sexual violence. In addition to the massive and horrific amounts of violence that are occuring, even now, inside Myanmar there is also the refugee crisis we mentioned earlier. There are over 700,000 Rohingya people who have been displaced from their homes and are living in refugee camps in surrounding countries. Most fled to Bangladesh while others escaped to India, Thailand, Malaysia, and other parts of South and Southeast Asia. On 12 September 2018, the OHCHR Independent Fact-Finding Mission on Myanmar published its report to the United Nations Human Rights Council. Following 875 interviews with victims and eyewitnesses since 2011, it concluded that "the [Burmese] military has consistently failed to respect international human rights law and the international humanitarian law principles of distinction, proportionality and precaution." Even before the most recent incident of mass Rohingya displacement began in 2011, the report found that the restrictions on travel, birth registration, and education resulting from Rohingya statelessness violated the Rohingya people's human rights. During the mass displacement of almost 725,000 Rohingya by August 2018 to neighbouring Bangladesh, as a result of persecution by the Tatmadaw, the report recorded "gross human rights violations and abuses" such as mass rape, murder, torture, and imprisonment. It also accused the Tatmadaw of crimes against humanity, genocide, and ethnic cleansing. The mission report recommended that six Burmese generals in the Tatmadaw stand trial in an international tribune for atrocities committed against the Rohingya. Despite all this the UN refuses to do anything substantive. Instead they are still trying to cooperate with the Tatmadaw and convince them to stop committing genocide. The UN has always been a useless tool of appeasement, Western imperialism, and white supremacy that refuses to hold anyone accountable. Of course, if the UN held genocidal regimes accountable they'd have to arrest the entire permanent Security Council so, the lack of accountability isn't surprising. It's why cops don't arrest other cops. You may have noticed that the dates in this episode stop after 2018, you also might remember that Myanmar has been called an information black hole. The genocide is still ongoing, nothing has gotten better and it's probably gotten worse, but getting verifiable information out of Myanmar is all but impossible at this point. Keep Myanmar in your sight. That's it for this week folks. No new reviews, so let's get right into the outro. Have a Day! w/ The History Wizard is brought to you by me, The History Wizard. If you want to see/hear more of me you can find me on Tiktok @thehistorywizard or on Instagram @the_history_wizard. Please remember to rate, review, and subscribe to Have a Day! On your pod catcher of choice. The more you do, the more people will be able to listen and learn along with you. Thank you for sticking around until the end and, as always, Have a Day, and Free Rakhine.
Date : Fri, 14 Jun 2024 Speaker : Ash Sheikh M.F Abdul Wajid (Hafili) at Muhiyadeen Jumuah Masjid, Dehiwala Language : Tamil
Friday Bayan ( Qurbani Special ) 14-06-2024 | Mufti Tariq Masood Speeches
Everything you need to know about QurbaniClick here to join our facebook community of MuslimsIt's essential as part of our Deen that we keep increasing our knowledge of Islam and I make this promise to you that all our blog topics have carefully been written only to add beneficial Islamic knowledge to your life inshallahLearn and share with your family and friends inshallah as full reward is given for thosewho share beneficial knowledge of our beautiful Deen
Topic: Qurbani Special - Friday Bayan (14-06-2024) | Mufti Tariq Masood Speeches(0:00) Intro (0:28) Bhains Ki Qurbani Jaiz Kiyun Hai? (3:43) Jungli Bhainsa (Yak) Ki Qurbani Jaiz Hai? (4:01) Gaaye Aur Bhains Mein Farq? (7:06) Shariat Ka Authentic Difference? (8:15) Bhainsa Ka Gosht Zyada Faida Mand Kaisy? (9:08) Pakistan Mein Katta Kiyun Nahi Zibah Kiya Jata? (9:40) Mushkil Janwar Girane Par Funter Geeri Karna? (11:33) Goli Se Janwar Ka Halal Zabeeha? (14:07) ✨✨Nabi ﷺ Ka Farman (15:26) Eid ul Azha Ke Baad Karachi Ka Haal? (17:12) Eid ul Azha 2023 Mein Mufti Sb Ka Oont Jab Nahar Hua? (19:42) Islam Ki Badnami Aur
அய்யாமுத் தஷ்ரீக் குர்பானி கொடுக்கலாமா?மவ்லவி அலி அக்பர் உமரி | Ali Akbar Umari07-06-2024, JummaTaqwa Masjid, Trichy
அய்யாமுத் தஷ்ரீக் குர்பானி கொடுக்கலாமா?மவ்லவி அலி அக்பர் உமரி | Ali Akbar Umari07-06-2024, JummaTaqwa Masjid, Trichy
The post 10 Days of Dhul Hijjah and Udhiya (Qurbani) appeared first on Mahmood Habib Masjid and Islamic Centre - We came to give, not to take..
Raoul Mörchen www.deutschlandfunk.de, Zwischentöne
3rd Bayan in America - Mufti Tariq Masood at Maryum Masjid (Houston)(0:00) Intro (0:36) Khutba(0:41) Two Qur'anic Verses and Dua(3:31) Mufti Sahab Ka America Jany Ka Silsila?(5:18) Mtm's Tours And Negative Comments On Other Channels(7:41) Mufti Sahabb Khawateen K Dushman?(10:13) Today's Topic(10:40) Nizam e Virasat Pr Aetraz Ka Jawab(11:53) MUfti Tariq Masood's USA visit = Allah Ka Msg Deliver Krna (20:59) Hazrat Sulaiman (AS),Usman (RA) Ki Dolat Aor Molviyon Pr Aetraz(24:45) Luxurious Lifestyle Of King Sulaiman (AS)(25:17) Queen Saba Ko Dawat K Waqt Style?(25:41) Awesome Letter(26:44) Badshahon Ka Kalam = Kalamon Ka Badshah(27:18) UN Laws?(28:50) Nabi ﷺ Ki Ghurbat Pr Aetrazat(29:59) Nabi ﷺ K Nikaah(30:27) Hazrat Ayesha (RA) Aor Khadija (RA) Se Mohabbat Ki Wja(30:40) Hazrat Ayesha (RA) Ki Raaye Hazrat Khadija (RA) K Bary(33:40) Age Difference of Nabi ﷺ And Hazrat Ayesha (RA)(34:31) Surah Hijab: Azwaj Ko Talaq Ka Ikhtiyar Daina(35:51) Nabi ﷺ Ki Ghurbat Ikhtiyari(36:16) Ghurbat Door Kaisy Hooi?(37:27) Sawal Ka Jawab(37:51) Masla: Sahih Hadis (39:04) Fuqaha Ki Research(41:13) Brilliant Sahaba VS Jaahli Peer(41:51) Sahaba Ki Aqeedat (jb ye aayat nazil hoi)(42:19) Mohabbat K Taqazay(43:42) Abu Talha Ansari ra Ka Sadqa(44:41) Qurbani = Leader Ki Pehchan(45:16) Tawwakul Ka Behtereen Waqia(47:28) Nabi ﷺ Ka Faisla e Bagh(48:10) Jb Azwaj e Mutahharat ny Nabi ﷺ Se Paison Ka Mutalba Kiya?(48:46) Sharai Hukam?(49:09) Jb Nabi ﷺ Ny Azwaj Ko Talaq Ka Ikhtiyar Diya?(51:12) Successful Marriage = Nabi ﷺ K Sacha Hony Ki Daleel(51:51) Nahi aa rahi maira khyal hai bat(51:54) Attractive Personality Of Nabi ﷺ = Sacrifice Of Hazrat Ayesha (RA)(53:04) Pehla Ilzam; Nabi ﷺ Pr Jhoot Ka(56:34) Mushrikin ki Offers(56:56) Qalam (Pen) Ki Qasam Se Saboot(1:01:38) World's Expensive Festivals?(1:02:18) Sabse Zuada Sadqa e Fitar
Falsafa e Qurbani Aur Usool Malkiyat Ka Aapas Main Talluq - by Qibla Syed Sarfraz Ahmad Shah Sahabفلسفۂ قربانی اور اصول ملکیت کا آپس - قبلہ سید سرفراز احمد شاہ صاحبFollow Syed Sarfraz Ahmad Shah (Official) channel on WhatsApp
Main Topic:Emphasizing Unity, Correct Practice, and Addressing Misconceptions in Islamic PracticesFor updates, suggestions and inquiries. follow us me Twitter: [@SOFIConnect](https://twitter.com/SOFIConnect)Summary:Mufti Tariq Masood's Sunday bayan focused on the importance of unity among Muslims and the need for correct Islamic practices. He discussed various aspects of Islamic worship, clarified common misconceptions, and highlighted the role of scholars in guiding the community. Below are key points discussed during the bayan:Key Points and Brief Keywords with Timestamps:•Unity and correct practice emphasized. (00:05:20)•Avoid extremism, stay united. (00:10:45)•Significance of Surah Al-Fatiha. (00:25:30)•Explanation of “Witr” prayer. (00:40:15)•Different practices among schools. (00:50:10)•Proper prayer pronunciation. (01:15:40)•Clarification about Zakat and Qurbani. (01:30:55)•Role of Islamic scholars. (01:45:20)•Benefits of congregational prayers. (01:55:10)•Addressing misconceptions. (02:05:30)•Respect for all prophets. (02:10:25)•Establishing Islamic education. (02:15:10) Hosted on Acast. See acast.com/privacy for more information.
குர்பானியும் அதன் சட்டங்களும்மவ்லவி சதக்கத்துல்லாஹ் உமரீ | Sadaqathullah Umari23-06-2023Salafi Masjid, Coimbatore, Tamil Nadu
Enlivening The Spirit of Qurbani - Mufti Yusuf Moosagie by Radio Islam
Dr. Sheikh Faiyaz Jaffer is the Research Scholar for the Islamic Center at New York University and an Associate Chaplain for the Center of Global & Spiritual Life at NYU. In addition, he is currently a doctoral candidate at NYU Steinhardt's School of Education. Sheikh Faiyaz attained an MA degree in Islamic Studies (UK), with a concentration on early Islamic history, after his undergraduate degree from SUNY Stony Brook University in Political Science and Religious Studies. He has had his research published by academic journals. In pursuing the classical course of Islamic education, Faiyaz studied in the Seminary of Karbala, Iraq, one of the most prominent centers for Islamic learning. As a faith leader and social activist, Faiyaz Jaffer has lectured at various universities, seminars, and workshops across the United States, Canada, Europe, East Africa, and the Middle East. Due to the political and social climate, he has been making strides in the greater New York area by taking part in a number of interfaith seminars and discussions in the aspiration of increasing dialogue with various faith leaders. His outreach efforts have allowed him to be featured in some of the country's most prominent media outlets. As a highly sought-after lecturer and religious leader, Faiyaz regularly leads prayer services and delivers sermons across North America. Support the Islamic Center at NYU Our operating and programmatic budget comes directly from donations and as our community grows, so do our expenses. If you are interested in making a one-time, monthly, annual, or general donation to the Islamic Center at NYU, please do so at https://icnyu.org/donate/.
Welcome to episode 27 of 'The Dawah Clinic' where we will be addressing your dawah dilemma's. If you have difficulty in answering certain questions or need help in responding to polemics towards Islam and Muslims, fear no more the dawah clinic is here to help empower you. So keep a note of your dawah dilemma's and call into the show or post your questions in the live chat. Please note : waiting lists are very high and clinic places are limited to a maximum of 10 placements at any given time so keep your questions concise, to the point and please be patient. © 2023 EFDawah All Rights ReservedTimestamps:00:00 - Intro00:52 - EF Dawah Panel join: Format of the Stream02:29 - Discussion on Umrah, Ibadah & Niyyah07:05 - Islamic view of Jesus pbuh as the Messiah07:52 - The Name of God: Allah ﷻ10:08 - Praying through Prostration in the Bible 12:26 - Marwa joins13:45 - Discussion on the Fate of Jesus pbuh24:43 - Muhammad Ali joins25:11 - Some Reverts leaving Islam due to family pressure28:18 - Responsibility of Muslims towards Reverts & Non-Muslims36:16 - Khulood joins36:34 - Dating (Historicity) of the Gospels42:03 - Resources for Female Daees43:58 - Maya joins44:58 - Dawah to Ugandan & African people52:48 - Mir joins53:20 - Responding to Atheists' arguments59:06 - Why can't Something come from Nothing?1:03:40 - Concubinage in Islam explained1:26:00 - Mohammed-Gowhar joins1:26:33 - Question regarding Zakat1:27:22 - Giving a Share of Qurbani for the Dead1:30:39 - Fiqh Question about Zakat1:33:01 - Nullu joins1:33:38 - Nullu shares her experience with Jinns1:37:00 - Prohibition of Black Magic in Islam1:42:31 - The Truth about Shamans1:45:00 - Making Dua for the Deceased1:50:31 - Just a Muslim joins1:51:48 - Explanation of Sahih Muslim 79 a1:58:44 - Harbi joins 1:59:02 - Dawah Advice for an Agnostic Friend2:10:43 - Osama joins2:11:30 - Dawah Advice for Non-Muslim Neighbours2:31:57 - Advice to Married Couples about Reconciliation2:39:23 - D joins: Technical Issues2:40:14 - Concluding Statements2:43:09 - AmetAllah joins: Fiqh Question2:46:05 - Closing Remarks & Wrapping UpWebsite : https://efdawah.com/EFDawah بالعربية (Arabic)https://www.youtube.com/channel/UCWDR...EFDawah Bosniahttps://www.youtube.com/channel/UCgcz...EFDawah Indonesiahttps://www.youtube.com/channel/UCSGJ...EFDawah Kurdishhttps://www.youtube.com/channel/UC-kA...Podcast Website (New)https://efdawah.buzzsprout.com/RSS FeedSupport the show
After learning that we both love Feroz Khan, we knew we had to do an episode on his films! We love his stylish, action-packed, surprisingly complex and nonjudgmental films in which MORE IS MORE! Or as Pitu phrases it, "Why half-a*s anything when you can go for the jugular?" This episode focuses on Qurbani, which maybe gets Beth's vote for most iconic FK film, and Janbaaz, because how can you resist a film with Dimple Kapadia AND Rekha AND Sridevi?!? Our Feroz Khan song playlist will make you cooler instantly. https://www.youtube.com/playlist?list=PLB10c826q9S5faNBzvWB6-JCm-YIWtX_l Subscribe to Filmi Ladies on Spotify https://open.spotify.com/show/7Ib9C1X5ObvN18u9WR0TK9 or Apple Podcasts https: //podcastsconnect.apple.com/my-podcasts/show/filmi-ladies/aacadcfe-4195-40a4-ba 16-e528118ec892 @filmiladies on Instagram and Twitter Pitu is @pitusultan on Instagram Beth is @bethlovesbolly on Twitter Email us at filmiladies at gmail Our logo was designed by London-based artist Paula Ganoo @velcrothoughts on Instagram https://www.art2arts.co.uk/paula-vaughan
Burhan Qurbani hat mit seinem kreativen Team aus Hochschulzeiten (Filmakademie Baden-Württemberg) Partner:innen fürs Leben gefunden. Seither gestaltet er mit seiner „Filmfamilie“ gesellschaftsrelevante Stoffe von großer sinnlicher Qualität, wie „Berlin Alexanderplatz“ oder „Wir sind jung. Wir sind stark.“. Sein erster Film „Shahada“ war nach über 20 Jahren der erste Abschlussfilm der im Wettbewerb der Berlinale lief. Mit unserem Gast-Moderator Toks Körner teilt Burhan Qurbani offen und schonungslos die Höhen und Tiefen seiner Kariere, spricht über das Hadern und Zweifeln genauso wie über seine unabdingbare Leidenschaft fürs Filmemachen und sein Bestreben mit seinen Filmen Worte zu finden wofür wir keine Worte haben, nur Gefühle.Handwerk, Hausaufgaben und Struktur sind ihm dabei genauso wichtig wie der rote Faden einer Geschichte, den er gemeinsam mit allen Teammitgliedern entwickelt und er beschreibt die Herausforderung, diesen roten Faden nie zu verlieren. Eindrücklich schildert er wie eigene Rassismuserfahrungen die Entwicklung seiner Stoffe geprägt haben und hält ein Plädoyer für die Förderung und eine bessere, breitere Ausbildung von Autor:innen.Präsentiert wird Close-up von MUBI, einem globalen, kuratierten Streaming-Service, der großartige und visionäre Filme aus der ganzen Welt zeigt.Jeden Tag stellt MUBI einen neuen Film vor, der handverlesen und mit großer Sorgfalt von Kurator:innen ausgewählt wird. Von neuen Regietalenten und Festival-Perlen bis hin zu den preisgekrönten Meisterwerken der Kinogeschichte: Auf MUBI gibt es immer etwas Neues zu entdecken.Close-up-Hörer·innen können MUBI jetzt exklusiv 30 Tage kostenlos ausprobieren: Unter mubi.com/close-upEin Podcast der Deutschen Filmakademie.Podcast Homepage · Facebook · InstagramMehr zum Gast:Auf www.agenturhomebase.de/clients/burhan-qurbani/Mehr zum Host:www.trinitymovie.de/toks-koerner/Foto: Malika Zouhali-Worrall / Urban RuthsSchnitt: Nicolai ZielAufnahme: SonnenstudioMusik: Martin TodsharowProduktion: Deutsche Filmakademie e.V. / Inga Goossens, Jule BartramTechnische Umsetzung: Sophie NietheKapitel00:01:30 Biografie Burhan Qurbani00:04:32 Gretchenfrage00:08:19 Flucht, Rassismus und Selbstverständnis als PoC00:20:39 Das Handwerk/die Kunst des Geschichtenerzählens00:27:19 Arbeit mit den Schauspieler:innen00:32:05 Entwicklung des visuellen Konzepts00:37:00 Durch die Höhen und Tiefen des Berufs, gemeinsam mit der „Filmfamilie“00:43:15 Verarbeitung eigener Erlebnisse von rechtsextremer Gewalt in „Wir sind jung. Wir sind stark.“00:55:38 Umgang mit Verletzungen/Kritik01:03:53 Handwerk, Hausaufgaben, Struktur01:08:54 „Berlin Alexanderplatz“01:16:30 Selbstverpflichtung gegenüber dem Publikum gesellschaftlich relevant und gleichermaßen sinnlich zu erzählen01:21:43 Was wünscht Du dem deutschen Kino?
You can lose yourself in cinema -- and you can find yourself in it. Jai Arjun Singh and Subrat Mohanty join Amit Varma in episode 294 of The Seen and the Unseen to talk about the films in their lives, why we should watch old films, why we should watch new films, why Bollywood and Hollywood and other woods are all great, and why we live in a wonderful technicolor world. This episode is a celebration of cinema! (For full linked show notes, go to SeenUnseen.in.) Also check out: 1. Jai Arjun Singh on Twitter and Instagram. 2. Haal-Chaal Theek Thaak Hai -- Subrat Mohanty and Pavan Jha's podcast. 3. Jai Arjun Singh Lost It at the Movies -- Episode 230 of The Seen and the Unseen. 4. Jabberwock — Jai Arjun Singh's blog. 5. Jaane Bhi Do Yaaron: Seriously Funny Since 1983 — Jai Arjun Singh. 6. The World of Hrishikesh Mukherjee -- Jai Arjun Singh. 7. Popcorn Essayists: What Movies do to Writers -- Edited by Jai Arjun Singh. 8. The Golden Era -- Subrat Mohanty's YouTube playlist of 100 lesser-known songs from the golden era of Hindi film music (mostly 1935-65). 9. The Unseen Lata -- Subrat Mohanty's YouTube playlist of 54 lesser-heard songs from Lata Mangeshkar, from 1948 to 1976. 10. Old posts by Subrat Mohanty from the Passion For Cinema web archives. 11. Some Spotify playlists, courtesy Nishant Shah, from Haal-Chaal Theek Thaak Hai episodes: 1, 2, 3, 4. 12. Pavan Jha's YouTube channel. 13. The only 1980s Maltova Mum commercial I could locate from the 1980s. (Couldn't find Singer.) 14. Kashmir Ki Kali -- Shakti Samanta. 15. Mughal-E-Azam -- K Asif. 16. Khuda Nigehbaan Ho -- Song from Mughal-E-Azam, sung by Lata Mangeshkar, music by Naushad, lyrics by Shakeel Badayuni. 17. Cinema Paradiso -- Giuseppe Tornatore. 18. Phool Khile Hain Gulshan Gulshan -- talk show by Tabassum. 19. Old episodes of Phool Khile Hain Gulshan Gulshan with RD Burman, Deepti Naval, Anand Bakshi and Bhupinder. 20. The Indiana Jones and Superman franchises. 21. The Evil Dead -- Sam Raimi. 22. Sam Raimi, Wes Craven and John Carpenter. 23. The Fugitive and The Bodyguard. 24. The Unbearable Lightness of Being -- Milan Kundera. 25. The Antichrist -- Friedrich Nietzsche. 26. The 400 Blows -- Francois Truffaut. 27. Salò, or The 120 Days of Sodom -- Pier Paolo Pasolini. 28. Łódź Film School and Andrzej Wajda. 29. Do the Right Thing -- Spike Lee. 30. On Exactitude in Science (Wikipedia) -- Jorge Luis Borges. 31. Titus Andronicus -- William Shakespeare. 32. A Chess Story (previously published as The Royal Game) -- Stefan Zweig. 33. The World of Yesterday -- Stefan Zweig. 34. The Friday the 13th franchise. 35. Tracy and Hepburn -- Garson Kanin. 36. Bhimsen Joshi, Mallikarjun Mansur, Kumar Gandharva and Lata Mangeshkar on Spotify. 37. Vijay Anand, Guru Dutt, Raj Kapoor, Bimal Roy and Hrishikesh Mukherjee. 38. Guide -- Vijay Anand. 39. Kaagaz Ke Phool -- Guru Dutt. 40. Jean-Luc Godard and Federico Fellini. 41. Shankar–Jaikishan, Hasrat Jaipuri, Shailendra, Mukesh, KA Abbas, Ramanand Sagar and Kidar Sharma. 42. Aag, Satyam Shivam Sundaram, Awaara, Barsaat and Shree 420.43. Nargis and Nadira. 44. Mud Mud Ke Na Dekh -- Song from Shree 420, sung by Asha Bhosle and Manna Dey, music by Shankar-Jaikishan, lyrics by Shailendra. 45. Orson Welles. 46. Squid Game on Netflix. 47. The Immediate Experience -- Robert Warshow. 48. Dil Dhadakne Do, Luck by Chance and Gully Boy -- Zoya Akhtar. 49. Casablanca -- Michael Curtiz. 50. Yudh and Tridev -- Rajiv Rai. 51. Amit Varma's Twitter threads on the MAMI festival from 2018 and 2019. 52. The Art of Translation -- Episode 168 of The Seen and the Unseen (w Arunava Sinha). 53. Dead Poet's Society -- Peter Weir. 54. The desire to help, and the desire not to be helped — Roger Ebert's review of Goodbye Solo. 55. Pauline Kael on Amazon. 56. Dekalog — Krzysztof Kieślowski. (And Roger Ebert's essay on it.) 57. The Dead — John Huston. 58. In the Bedroom -- Todd Field. 59. Devdas (Sanjay Leela Bhansali) and Parineeta (Pradeep Sarkar). 60. Salman Rushdie, Arundhati Roy and Vikram Seth. 61. Raag Darbari (Hindi) (English) — Shrilal Shukla. 62. PG Wodehouse on Amazon and Wikipedia. 63. Films, Feminism, Paromita — Episode 155 of The Seen and the Unseen (w Paromita Vohra). 64. Dharmyug and Dharamvir Bharati. 65. Andha Yug (Hindi) (English) -- Dharamvir Bharati. 66. Suraj ka Satvaan Ghoda -- Dharamvir Bharati. 67. Gunahon Ka Devta — Dharamvir Bharati. 68. Sara Rai Inhales Literature — Episode 255 of The Seen and the Unseen. 69. The Life and Times of Mrinal Pande — Episode 263 of The Seen and the Unseen. 70. Anil Biswas, SD Burman, Chitragupt, Roshan, C Ramchandra and Madan Mohan. 71. Naushad and Aan. 72. Maan Mera Ehsan -- Song from Aan, sung by Mohammad Rafi, music by Naushad, lyrics by Shakeel Badayuni. 73. Sebastian D'Souza, Anthony Gonsalves, Ghulam Mohammed and Mohammed Shafi. 74. Khayyam and RD Burman. 75. The Long Tail -- Chris Anderson. 76. The Sound of Music -- Robert Wise. 77. Do-Re-Mi -- Song from The Sound of Music. 78. Giacomo Puccini and Giuseppe Verdi on Spotify. 79. Tosca -- Giacomo Puccini -- performed at Arena di Verona. 80. Dua Lipa, Olivia Rodrigo, Lizzo and Billie Eilish on Spotify. 81. About That Time -- Lizzo. 82. Renaissance -- Beyoncé. 83. Ae Dil Hai Mushkil -- Karan Johar. 84. Aar Paar, Geeta Dutt and Eminem. 85. Pet Shop Boys, Guns N' Roses, U2, REM and Stone Temple Pilots on Spotify. 86. Bob Dylan and Leonard Cohen. 87. How This Nobel Has Redefined Literature -- Amit Varma. 88. Mera Joota Hai Japani -- Song from Shree 420, sung by Mukesh, music by Shankar-Jaikishen, lyrics by Shailendra. 89. Sahir Ludhianvi and Majrooh Sultanpuri. 90. Do Bigha Zamin -- Bimal Roy. 91. Dharti Kahe Pukaar Ke -- Song from Do Bigha Zamin, sung by Manna Dey and Lata Mangeshkar, music by Salil Chowdhury, lyrics by Shailendra. 92. Varun Grover Is in the House -- Episode 292 of The Seen and the Unseen. 93. Mondegreen. 94. Tragedy -- Bee Gees. 95. Aap Jaisa Koi -- Song from Qurbani, sung by Nazia Hassan, music by Biddu Appaiah, lyrics by Masth Ali & Shashi Pritam. 96. Ek Akela Is Shaher Mein -- Song from Gharaonda, sung by Bhupinder Singh, music by Jaidev, lyrics by Gulzar. 97. Jonathan Haidt on Amazon. 98. Amar Akbar Anthony and Andrei Tarkovsky. 99. 2001: A Space Odyssey -- Stanley Kubrick. 100. Mirza Ghalib (and the show on him by Gulzar). 101. Roy Lichtenstein, Drowning Girl, Jackson Pollock, René Magritte, Pablo Picasso and the Pre-Raphaelites. 102. The Wire, Breaking Bad and Better Call Saul. 103. Christopher Nolan, Martin Scorcese, Quentin Tarantino, Coen Brothers and Preston Sturges. 104. Ball of Fire -- Howard Hawks. 105. The Lady Eve -- Preston Sturges. 106. Barbara Stanwyck and Lawrence Olivier. 107. Francis Ford Coppola, Brian De Palma and Alfred Hitchcock. 108. How to Read and Why -- Harold Bloom. 109. Malayankunju -- Sajimon Prabhakar. 110. Muqaddar Ka Sikandar -- Prakash Mehra. 111. Agatha Christie on Amazon and Wikipedia. 112. Nayak -- Satyajit Ray. 113. Prakash Mehra and Kader Khan. 114. Laawaris -- Prakash Mehra. 115. Don and Majboor. 116. Sample SSR conspiracy theory: He's alive! 117. David Cronenberg. 118. Masaan — Directed by Neeraj Ghaywan and written by Varun Grover. 119. Moonlight — Barry Jenkins. 120. Chacha Bhatija, Parvarish, Amar Akbar Anthony and Dharam Veer -- Manmohan Desai. 121. Man, Woman and Child -- Erich Segal. 122. Man, Woman and Child (1983 film) -- Dick Richards. 123. Masoom -- Shekhar Kapoor. 124. Shyam Benegal, Govind Nihalani, Mani Kaul, Kumar Shahani, Mrinal Sen and Robert Bresson. 125. Au Hasard Balthazar -- Robert Bresson. 126. Uski Roti -- Mani Kaul. 127. Narendra Shenoy and Mr Narendra Shenoy — Episode 250 of The Seen and the Unseen. 128. Calcutta 71 -- Mrinal Sen. 129. Ivan's Childhood, Solaris and Andrei Rublev -- Andrei Tarkovsky. 130. Stanislaw Lem on Amazon and Wikipedia. 131. Cahiers du Cinéma and Mayapuri. 132. Black Friday and Paanch -- Anurag Kashyap. 133. Navdeep Singh, Sudhir Mishra, Neeraj Ghaywan, Raj Kumar Gupta and Rajkumar Kohli. 134. Nagin and Nagina. 135. Jaani Dushman -- Rajkumar Kohli. 136. Three Colors: Blue -- Krzysztof Kieślowski. 137. Three Colors: Red -- Krzysztof Kieślowski. 138. Three Colors: White -- Krzysztof Kieślowski. 139. The Double Life of Veronique -- Krzysztof Kieślowski. 140. The legendary Babbar Subhash. 141. Dance Dance -- Babbar Subhash. 142. Aagaya Aagaya Halwa Wala -- Song from Dance Dance. 143. Jaane Bhi Do Yaaro -- Kundan Shah. 144. Leke Pehla Pehla Pyar -- Song from CID, sung by Shamshad Begum, Asha Bhosle and Mohammad Rafi., music by OP Nayyar, lyrics by Majrooh Sultanpuri. 145. Rote Hue Aate Hain Sab -- Song from Muqaddar Ka Sikandar, sung by Kishore Kumar, music by Kalyani-Anandji, lyrics by Anjaan. 146. Kai Baar Yun Bhi Dekha Hai -- Song from Rajnigandha, sung by Mukesh, music by Salil Chowdhury, lyrics by Yogesh. 147. Rim Jhim Gire Saawan -- Song from Manzil, sung by Lata Mangeshkar, music by RD Burman, lyrics by Yogesh. 148. Andrew Sarris and André Bazin. 149. Sergei Eisenstein and the Odessa Steps sequence. 150. Court — Chaitanya Tamhane. 151. Khosla Ka Ghosla, Oye Lucky! Lucky Oye!, Love Sex Aur Dhokha, Shanghai and Detective Byomkesh Bakshy! -- Dibakar Banerjee. 152. Jean Renoir. 153. Akira Kurosawa and Yasujirō Ozu. 154. Tokyo Story -- Yasujirō Ozu. 155. Rashomon -- Akira Kurosawa. 156. The 2012 Sight and Sound poll of the 100 Greatest Films of All Time. 157. Early Summer -- Yasujirō Ozu. 158. Make Way for Tomorrow -- Leo McCarey. 159. Citizen Kane -- Orson Welles. 160. Vertigo -- Alfred Hitchcock. 161. Setsuko Hara. 162. Sara Akash -- Basu Chatterjee. 163. Bhuvan Shome -- Mrinal Sen. 164. KK Mahajan. 165. One Cut of the Dead -- Shin'ichirō Ueda. 166. Unsane -- Steven Soderbergh. 167. Promising Young Woman -- Emerald Fennell. 168. Psycho -- Alfred Hitchcock. 169. Hitchcock's Films Revisited -- Robin Wood. 170. Picnic at Hanging Rock, Gallipoli, Witness, Dead Poet's Society and The Truman Show -- Peter Weir. 171. Buster Keaton and Charlie Chaplin. 172. John Ford and Girish Shahane. 173. Everything is Cinema -- Don Palathara. 174. Hi Mom! -- Brian De Palma. 175. Taxi Driver -- Martin Scorcese. 176. Joyful Mystery -- Don Palathara. 177. The Postman Always Rings Twice -- Tay Garnett. 178. Treasure of the Sierra Madre -- John Huston. 179. Noir's arc - notes on an excellent anthology -- Jai Arjun Singh. 180. Key Largo -- John Huston. 181. Gun Crazy -- Joseph H Lewis. 182. Sullivan's Travels -- Preston Sturges. 183. O Brother, Where Art Thou? -- Coen Brothers. 184. Winchester '73 and Bend of the River -- Anthony Mann. 185. Shaheed (1948) -- Ramesh Saigal, starring Dilip Kumar. 186. Andaz -- Mehboob Khan. 187. Duniya Na Mane -- V Shantaram. 188. Some Like it Hot and Ace in the Hole -- Billy Wilder. 189. Ernst Lubitsch and James Wong Howe. 190. Sweet Smell of Success -- Alexander Mackendrick. 191. Mere Apne -- Gulzar. 192. Haal Chaal Thik Thak Hai -- Song from Mere Apne, sung by Kishore Kumar and Mukesh, music by Salil Chowdhury, lyrics by Gulzar. 193. Mr Sampat -- SS Vasan. 194. Miss Malini -- Kothamangalam Subbu. 195. Mr. Sampath: The Printer Of Malgudi -- RK Narayan. 196. Achhe Din Aa Rahe Hain -- Song from Mr Sampat, sung by Shamshad Begum and ML Vasantakumari, music by Balkrishna Kalla, lyrics by Pandit Indra Chander. 197. Parakh -- Bimal Roy. 198. O Sajna Barkha Bahaar Aayee -- Song from Parakh, sung by Lata Mangeshkar, music by Salil Chowdhury, lyrics by Shailendra. 199. Oonche Log -- Phani Majumdar. 200. Major Chandrakanth -- K Balachander. 201. Jaag Dil-E-Deewana -- Song from Oonche Log, sung by Mohammad Rafi, music by Chitragupt, lyrics by Majrooh Sultanpuri. 202. Birendranath Sircar, RC Boral and Timir Baran. 203. PC Barua, Bimal Roy and KL Saigal. 204. Devdas (1936) -- PC Barua. 205. President -- Nitin Bose. 206. Ek Bangla Bane Nyara -- Song from President, sung by KL Saigal, music by RC Boral, lyrcs by Kidar Sharma. 207. Street Singer -- Phani Majumdar. 208. Babul Mora Naihar Chhooto Hi Jaye -- Song from Street Singer, sung by KL Saigal, music by RC Boral, lyrics by Nawab Wajid Ali Shah. 209. Wajid Ali Shah. 210. Shatranj Ke Khilari -- Satyajit Ray. 211. Duniya, Yeh Duniya, Toofan Mail-- Song from Jawab, sung by Kanan Devi, music by Kamal Dasgupta, lyrics by Pandit Madhur. 212. Rajnigandha -- Basu Chatterjee. 213. Rajnigandha/राजनीगंधा -- Mannu Bhandari. 214. The Conversation -- Francis Ford Coppola. 215. Deer Hunter -- Michael Cimino. 216. The Godfather -- Francis Ford Coppola. 217. The Godfather: Part 2 -- Francis Ford Coppola. 218. Sisters -- Brian De Palma. 219. Blow Out -- Brian De Palma. 220. Blowup -- Michelangelo Antonioni. 221. The Long Goodbye and Nashville -- Robert Altman. 222. The Missouri Breaks -- Arthur Penn. 223. The Last Picture Show, Paper Moon, What's Up, Doc? and Targets -- Peter Bogdanovich. 224. This is Orson Welles -- Orson Welles and Peter Bogdanovich. 225. Hitchcock -- Francois Truffaut. 226. Bringing Up Baby, His Girl Friday, The Big Sleep and To Have and Have Not -- Howard Hawks. 227. The Big Sleep -- Raymond Chandler. 228. William Faulkner and Ernest Hemingway on Amazon. 229. Johny Mera Naam and Jewel Thief -- Vijay Anand. 230. Sholay -- Ramesh Sippy. 231. Back to the Future -- Robert Zemeckis. 232. Mr India -- Shekhar Kapoor. 233. Rahul Rawail, JP Dutta, Mukul Anand and Rajiv Rai. 234. Hathyar and Ghulami -- JP Dutta. 235. Raat Bhat Jaam Se Jaam Takrayega -- Song from Tridev with galaxy of villains. 236. Naseeb -- Manmohan Desai. 237. Dan Dhanoa, Mahesh Anand, Dalip Tahil and Tej Sapru. 238. The Ramsay Brothers! 239. Don't Disturb the Dead: The Story of the Ramsay Brothers -- Shamya Dasgupta. 240. Do Gaz Zameen Ke Neeche -- Tulsi and Shyam Ramsay. 241. Veerana -- Ramsay Brothers. 242. Purana Mandir -- Ramsay Brothers. 243. Govinda! 244. Ilzaam -- Shibu Mitra. 245. I am a Street Dancer and Main Aaya Tere Liye from Ilzaam. 246. Jackie Brown and Pulp Fiction -- Quentin Tarantino. 247. Halloween -- John Carpenter. 248. A Nightmare on Elm Street -- Wes Craven. 249. Scream -- Wes Craven. 250. Terminator 2: Judgment Day -- James Cameron. 251. Mad Max: Fury Road -- George Miller. 252. Nicholas Cage and Keanu Reeves. 253. Wild at Heart -- David Lynch. 254. Red Rock West -- John Dahl. 255. The Last Seduction -- John Dahl. 256. Edward Norton in American History X and Rounders. 257. New Delhi Times -- Ramesh Sharma. 258. Drohkaal -- Govind Niahalani. 259. Gupt and Mohra by Rajiv Rai. 260. Sonam! 261. Wild -- Nicolette Krebitz. 262. Waves -- Trey Edward Shults. 263. Climax -- Gaspar Noé. 264. Mother! -- Darren Aronofsky. 265 Eho — Dren Zherka. 266. The Magic Mountain -- Thomas Mann. 267. Invisible Cities -- Italo Calvino. 268. Cosmicomics -- Itali Calvino. 269. If on a Winter's Night a Traveller -- Italo Calvino. 270. A House For Mr Biswas -- VS Naipaul. 271. A Bend in the River -- VS Naipaul. 272. Middlemarch -- George Eliot. 273. Mrs Dalloway -- Virginia Woolf. 274. To the Lighthouse -- Virginia Woolf. 275. Decline and Fall -- Evelyn Waugh. 276. Scoop -- Evelyn Waugh. 277. Brighton Rock -- Graham Greene. 278. Brighton Rock (1948 film) -- John Boulting. 279. Kingsley Amis and Martin Amis. 280. Lucky Jim -- Kingsley Amis. 281. The Siege Of Krishnapur -- JG Farrell. 282. Alfie -- Lewis Gilbert. 283. Get Carter -- Mike Hodges. 284. Blame it on Rio -- Stanley Donen. 285. Gangs of Wasseypur -- Anurag Kashyap. 286. Tamas -- Govind Nihalani. This episode is sponsored by Capital Mind. Check out their offerings here. Check out Amit's online course, The Art of Clear Writing. And subscribe to The India Uncut Newsletter. It's free! Episode art by Simahina, in a homage to Jackson Pollock.
Khutbah (7/8/2022): Rulings pertaining to Qurbani
Household Express: All about Qurbani Meat by Radio Islam
By Engineer Muhammad Ali Mirza --- Send in a voice message: https://anchor.fm/muhammad-imran984/message
The Overseas Qurbani Debate: What You Should Know! by Radio Islam
The Clear Evidence Marhoom ki taraf se Qurbani ( مرحومین کی جانب سے قربانی کا حکم ) (मरहूमीन की जानिब से क़़ुर्बानी का हुक्म ) (Urdu) Continue Reading: Videos and Books: Rulings of Sacrifice/Qurbani on Eid ul Adha - Dr. Mohammad Najeeb Qasmi (English, Urdu)
துல் ஹஜ் மாதத்தில் ஏற்படும் சந்தேகங்களும் அதற்கான பதில்களும் ஒரு குடும்பத்திற்கு ஒரு குர்பானி கொடுத்தால் போதுமா? | Is one Qurbani sufficient for one family? மரணித்தவர்களுக்காக குர்பானி கொடுக்கலாமா? | Can qurbani be given for the dead? குர்பானி பிராணியின் வயது என்ன? | What should be the age of the qurbani / sacrificial animal? “அய்யாமுத் தஷ்ரீக்” என்று சொல்லப் படக்கூடிய துல்ஹஜ் பிறை […] The post Ali Akbar Umari – FAQs on Udhiyah (Sacrifice / Qurbani) appeared first on Tamil Dawah.
The Clear Evidence Dhul-Hijjah keh pehle 10 din aur Qurbani (ذی الحجہ کا پہلا عشرہ اور قربانی کے احکام ومسائل) (ज़िलहिज्जा का पहला अशरा और क़ुर्बानी के अहकाम व मसाइल) (Urdu) Continue Reading: Videos and Books: Rulings of Sacrifice/Qurbani on Eid ul Adha - Dr. Mohammad Najeeb Qasmi (English, Urdu)
The Clear Evidence Ghar ke tamam logon ki taraf se aik qurbani kafi nahi (گھر کے تمام افراد کا صرف ایک قربانی کرنا کافی نہیں) (घर के सभी लोगों की तरफ़ से केवल एक क़ुर्बानी कर देना काफ़ी नहीं होगा) (Urdu) Continue Reading: Videos and Books: Rulings of Sacrifice/Qurbani on Eid ul Adha - Dr. Mohammad Najeeb Qasmi (English, Urdu)
The Clear Evidence Qurbani Wajib hai ( قربانی جمہور علماء کی رائے میں واجب ہے ) (क़ुर्बानी वाजिब है) by Dr. Mohammad Najeeb Qasmi (Urdu) Continue Reading: Videos and Books: Rulings of Sacrifice/Qurbani on Eid ul Adha - Dr. Mohammad Najeeb Qasmi (English, Urdu)
29-June-2022-Hajj-Qurbani-Advices-Mufti-AK-Hoosen.mp3
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This is a great bayan of Dr. Israr Ahmed which explains the great sacrifice and test of Hazarat Ibrahim (AS) Thanks for listening to this Podcast.
Hazrat Ibrahim ki Qurbani latest bayan by Muhammad Raza Saqib Mustafai. --- Send in a voice message: https://anchor.fm/the-knowledge3/message
This is an interesting bayan of Dr. Israr Ahmed which explain all about Qurbani. Thanks for listening to this Podcast.
This is a great bayan of Dr. Israr Ahmed which explains the importance of Qurbani. Thanks for listening to this Podcast.
This is a great bayan of Dr. Israr Ahmed which explains Eid ul Azha and its Philosophy Thanks for listening to this Podcast.
Ibrahim (pbuh) went against his fatherly instincts and attempted to take the life of his only son, as an act of sacrifice intended to offer Allah (swt) his utmost devotion. But in Ismael's stead, Allah (swt) called upon Ibrahim to sacrifice a ram. Ever since, offering an Udhiya, or a Qurbani, on the occasion of Eid-ul-Adha, has been a staple in the Sunnah and the beautiful tradition. What are some of the adab, virtues and rulings of offering a sacrifice? And what are the virtues of the first 10 days of Dhul-Hijjah? Join us today at Jumaa to learn more inshaa' Allah.