Portal: Qur'an, Hadith, and Scholars: Difference between revisions

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==Women==
==Women==


The sira, or life of the prophet, makes up the third cornerstone of Islamic scripture. The sira literature begins with the sirat rasul Allah, or Life of the Apostle of Allah by ibn Ishaq, which has not survived to the current day but which was retained by his student ibn Hisham and also partially in the history of the Islamic polymath [[Tabari]], and continued by other Islamic writers.  
The Islamic tradition has much to say about women, their characteristics, their relationship to men, their menstrual cycle, and the propriety of men having sexual relations with them.  


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{{PortalArticle|image=|title=Sirat Rasul Allah|summary=The sirat of ibn Ishaq is the earliest Islamic document now extant detailing the life of the prophet Muhammad in chronological order.|description=}}
{{PortalArticle|image=|title=Qur'an, Hadith and Scholars:Women|summary=This page provides an overview of what the tradition has to say about women.|description=}}
{{PortalArticle|image=|title=Qur'an, Hadith and Scholars:Al-'Azl|summary=This page provides primary sources from the Islamic tradition on al-'Azl, or coitus interruptus, an important topic for the early Islamic community.|description=}}





Revision as of 09:35, 10 February 2021


The Qur'an, Hadith, Scripture pages are a special category of pages here at WikiIslam. Rather than being encyclopedia articles, these pages bring together a unique collection Quranic verses, hadith, sira traditions, tafsir, writings of classical scholars and futuwa of contemporary Islamic sheikhs and ulemaa. The pages are organized by theme to assist the student, searcher or researcher.

The Islamic Tradition Itself

The Islamic tradition actually makes many claims for itself, and these are documented here.

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The tradition makes many claims for itself, documented here.

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The tradition provides much detail on the history of the text of the Qur'an itself, documented here.

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This page documents what the tradition has to say on the scriptures of the Christians and Jews, and how they have been preserved throughout history.

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This section documents what the tradition has to say of the famous gharaniq incident, where the prophet is suppossed to have inserted verses from Satan into the Qur'an


Muhammad

Muhammad is considered to be the "perfect man" in the Islamic tradition and his words and deeds form the basis for most of Islamic law. This section details what the tradition has to say about him.

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This page provides a broad overview of what the tradition has to say about Muhammad.

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Booty taken in war was an important subject for the early Muslim community, and this page documents what the tradition had to say about Muhammad and the taking and dividing of booty in war.

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This page details what the tradition has to say about Muhammad and his pursuit of jihad or holy war.

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This page brings together a number of the Islamic traditions about the death of the prophet.

Other articles in this section

Women

The Islamic tradition has much to say about women, their characteristics, their relationship to men, their menstrual cycle, and the propriety of men having sexual relations with them.

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This page provides an overview of what the tradition has to say about women.

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This page provides primary sources from the Islamic tradition on al-'Azl, or coitus interruptus, an important topic for the early Islamic community.


Other articles in this section

Jihad

The tafsir تفسير literally "explanation" is a genre of Islamic literature which explains the Qur'an, drawing on multiple traditions such as the stories of the Israelis (Israeliyyaat), the hadith and the sira.

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ِThe tafsir literature is essential to the orthodox Sunni understanding of the Qur'an, and forms a fourth source of scripture for orthodox Sunni Muslims.


Non-Muslims

Miscellaneous