Compendium of Muslim Texts: Difference between revisions

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Due to being one of the earliest [[Islam]]-orientated sites on the net, the hadith collections they have (in particular, those of Sunan Abu Dawud) are incomplete, but this has not affected their popularity.
Due to being one of the earliest [[Islam]]-orientated sites on the net, the hadith collections they have (in particular, those of Sunan Abu Dawud) are incomplete, but this has not affected their popularity.


The Qur'an translations included are those of [[The Holy Qur'an (Abdullah Yusuf Ali)|Yusuf Ali]], Marmaduke Pickthal and M. H. Shakir, all respected and widely accepted by Muslims, and their hadith collections include [[Sahih]] Al-Bukhari (translated by Muhsin Khan), Sahih Muslim (translated by Abd-al-Hamid Siddiqui), Sunan Abu Dawud (translated by Ahmad Hasan), Malik's Muwatta (translated by A'isha Abd-al-Rahman al-Tarjumana and Ya'qub Johnson), and Forty Hadith Qudsi (narrations which contain non-Qur'anic words from [[Allah]], repeated by Prophet [[Muhammad]]).  
The Qur'an translations included are those of [[The Holy Quran - Abdullah Yusuf Ali|Yusuf Ali]], Marmaduke Pickthal and M. H. Shakir, all respected and widely accepted by Muslims, and their hadith collections include [[Sahih]] Al-Bukhari (translated by Muhsin Khan), Sahih Muslim (translated by Abd-al-Hamid Siddiqui), Sunan Abu Dawud (translated by Ahmad Hasan), Malik's Muwatta (translated by A'isha Abd-al-Rahman al-Tarjumana and Ya'qub Johnson), and Forty Hadith Qudsi (narrations which contain non-Qur'anic words from [[Allah]], repeated by Prophet [[Muhammad]]).  


The Compendium was originally available on the USC website.<ref>[{{Reference archive|1=http://web.archive.org/web/20070828072937/http://www.usc.edu/dept/MSA/|2=2011-09-29}} USC-MSA Compendium of Muslim Texts] - Internet Archive Wayback Machine capture for http://www.usc.edu/dept/MSA/ dated August 28, 2007</ref> It was then made available on both the USC website and the MSA West website (MSA West being a West Coast regional council of the national MSA organization).  
The Compendium was originally available on the USC website.<ref>[{{Reference archive|1=http://web.archive.org/web/20070828072937/http://www.usc.edu/dept/MSA/|2=2011-09-29}} USC-MSA Compendium of Muslim Texts] - Internet Archive Wayback Machine capture for http://www.usc.edu/dept/MSA/ dated August 28, 2007</ref> It was then made available on both the USC website and the MSA West website (MSA West being a West Coast regional council of the national MSA organization).  
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