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When Zainab grows up she wants to be just like the Prophet Muhammad, Rasulullah (PBUH) – Peace Be Upon Him. So Zainab and her mother practice some of the things the Prophet would do in his everyday life.
The Salam Kids Series are books designed to encourage young children to try their best and start to implement Islamic practices into their lives.
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On a visit to the zoo, Ashraf’s parents teach him how to praise and remember Allah. Ashraf is amazed by all the wonderful creations of Allah. Now Ashraf loves Allah even more.
The Salam Kids Series are books designed to encourage young children to try their best and start to implement Islamic practices into their lives.
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Ashraf is excited to be fasting for the first time. He hopes he can make it through the whole day, but he seems to be always hungry.
There’s a lot to learn about fasting and Ashraf is doing his best to please Allah.
The Salam Kids Series are books designed to encourage young children to try their best and start to implement Islamic practices into their lives.
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Selected essays on the importance on the establishment of a society where individuals are facilitated to grow as free and responsible citizens of the state; where their basic rights are guaranteed; where everyone is equal before law so long as he or she does not violate the fundamental norms and rules which make the foundation an Islamic state.
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In an era of fanaticism and polarisation, Dr Bari’s life is an example of a prominent Western Muslim rejecting extremes and finding balance
In this memoir, Dr. Muhammad Abdul Bari asks us to look beyond the extremism and violence that all too often defines the Muslim community toward those, like himself, navigating a middle-way life. A path defined in Islam as the “natural way,”
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Something always stops Sulaiman from having fun. First it’s Duhr prayer, then it’s the rain and then the car breaks down just as he is leaving to watch the quad bike races. He eventually gets to the races but then Asr prayer time comes around. Find out how Sulaiman soon realises the blessings of a perfectly-timed prayer.
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This book recognises and discusses the plurality and diversity of the modern networked world, and seeks to replace sterile and uniform approaches to knowledge with a broader and more creative understanding of reality as lived on different soils and different cultures. Moderation, balance and effective communication are paramount features of the underlying philosophy.
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This work charts new territory in Islamic scholarship by attempting to address the field of public policy from a maqasid (higher objectives of the Shariah) perspective. Public Policy is an independent discipline from both law and politics. Thus, Public Policy in Islam is introduced here as a qualitatively different enterprise from both fiqh (Islamic jurisprudence) and siyasah shari’yah (Shariah-oriented politics). The book deals with a number of critical topics that include methodology, governance, human rights, ethics, political power, and reform and renewal. It highlights how the maqasid approach is indispensable to the theory and practice of public policy in Islam, how it could resolve some of the most persistent governance dilemmas throughout Muslim history, but more significantly, how it forces a re-conceptualisation of the wealth of knowledge available in Islam’s primary sources to introduce Public Policy in Islam to mainstream policy studies.
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A lively and highly readable English rendering of Tafhim al-Quran. This Tafsir answers contemporary questions and makes the Quran fully relevant to the concerns of our day, yet it loses none of its timelessness nor sacrifices any of the traditional understanding. Each surah is prefaced by an account of the background and teachings.
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By Muhammad Abdul Bari
A concise, readable and impassioned book that explains the Rohingya people’s situation and ongoing suffering.Leading British Muslim figure Muhammad Abdul Bari has no doubt that what the Rohingya have been subject to, is genocide. In this concise but powerfully argued book, he brings to light the scale and barbarity of their suffering and argues that the international community, through the UN, must ensure their full repatriation with full citizen rights to their homeland.
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Allah Loves Me More,
Heba finds a sad cat in the park and takes it home, looking after it and loving it so much. Heba doesn’t believe that anyone could love anything more than she loves her cat.
But her father shows Heba how Allah’s love for his creations is even greater, and that Allah loves us more.