Main Page: Difference between revisions

From WikiIslam, the online resource on Islam
Jump to navigation Jump to search
[unchecked revision][unchecked revision]
mNo edit summary
No edit summary
Line 37: Line 37:
|-
|-
|style="color:#000" |
|style="color:#000" |
<div id="importantnote" style="width:100%;text-align:left;font-size:95%;">Please note: Many of the very problematic issues and views within Islam and its history are denied, rejected, or are unknown by many believers, though there are also those who support such things. Muslim cultures and people who identify as Muslim today have widely varying knowledge, interpretations, and opinions (if any) on these topics.</div>
<div id="importantnote" style="width:100%;text-align:left;font-size:95%;">Please note: Many of the very problematic issues and views within Islam and its history are subject to widely varying degrees of acceptance, knowledge, interpretations, and opinions (if any) by Muslim cultures and people who identify as Muslim today</div>
|}
|}
|}
|}

Revision as of 04:52, 29 November 2017

Welcome to WikiIslam,
a resource to critically examine history, texts and beliefs within Islam
978 articles hosted on WikiIslam
Please note: Many of the very problematic issues and views within Islam and its history are subject to widely varying degrees of acceptance, knowledge, interpretations, and opinions (if any) by Muslim cultures and people who identify as Muslim today
Qur'an

Information on the Qur'an

Science and Miracles

Prophet Muhammad

Muhammad's Wives

Non-Muslims

Islamic Persecution

Jihad and Terrorism

Women
Series/Studies
New Articles
Ex-Muslim Testimonies

WikiIslam:Testimonies Mainpage

General Information
Translations

Recently Added

Featured

Miscellaneous

Multimedia
Video | Images | Literature
Humor and Satire

Useful Links
Websites | Ex-Muslims | Jihad Text
Pro-Islamic Content

Dihya the Berber Queen (Al-Kaahina)
Error creating thumbnail: Unable to save thumbnail to destination

Dihya was a Berber queen who led her people in resisting the Islamic conquest of her home in North Africa. She is better known as Kahina or al-Kahina, a title given to her by the Arab Muslims, which means "the witch" or "the sorceresses." (read more)

Hub Pages:
Abdullah AzzamAbrogationAdulteryAishaAlcoholAllahAmputationAnimalsAntisemitismApologistsAtheistsBanu QurayzaBeautyBin LadenBook ReviewsCartoonsChildrenConspiraciesContradictions and ErrorsConvertsCorruption of ScriptureCosmologyCreationCritics of IslamDhimmitudeDhul-QarnaynDrinksEmbryologyFake ConversionsFarewell SermonFastingFoodFree SpeechGabriel‎GeniesGenocideGolden AgeHadithHarun YahyaHealthHeavenHellHelp & AdviceHijabHoaxesHonor ViolenceHuman RightsHygieneI. A. IbrahimIbn WarraqImagesIslamic ClericsIslamic TermsJesusJihadistsJizyahLegendsLibraryLinksListsLiteratureLogical FallaciesLyingMahrMarriageMaryMathematical MiraclesMichael H. HartMilkMischiefMisinterpreted VersesMistranslated VersesMoonMoon Split MiracleMosquesMuhammadMuhammad's DeathMuhammad in Other ScripturesMuhammad's RevelationsMuhammad's WivesMusicMuslim BrotherhoodNatural DisastersNazismNewsNon-MuslimsPact of UmarPaganismPareidoliaPersecutionPersecution by CountryPhilosophyPhobiaPolygamyPornographyPrayersPredestinationPublic FiguresPunishmentsQuizzes & GamesQuotationsQur'anRacismRapeRashad KhalifaRefutationsReproductionRevelationsSalafSatanic VersesSexShari'ahShi'itesSlaverySoft DrinksStoningTabari‎TaxesTerrorismTimelinesTop 10 ListsTu QuoqueUnderstanding the Qur'anUrineViolence Against WomenViolence by MuhammadVirginsWebsitesWife BeatingWitchcraftZakir NaikZakatZamzam