Namaz Me Rafa Yadain Karne Ka Tarika | By Farhat Hashmi |
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#FarhatHashmiQuranForEveryone #ShortVideosFarhatHashmi #IslamiAqaaid2012
Islami Aqaaid https://www.youtube.com/playlist?list=PLgWtzr2mgrK0lfF30wg2H95JZwuj4cJcX Book link: https://books.kitabosunnat.com/Books_Data/1802/Islami-Aqaid%20(%20Zubaida%20Aziz%20).pdf All Short Videos: https://www.youtube.com/playlist?list=PLgWtzr2mgrK0Pg1TC7ZWjBJ2lylhj-31E Taleem Ul Quran 2022 - 2023 https://www.youtube.com/playlist?list=PLgWtzr2mgrK2OHRV68uRfnnUubHxMnmYu You can listen all audios at : https://www.farhathashmi.com/seerah-section/seerat-e-sahabiyyat/ Short Clips https://www.youtube.com/playlist?list=PLgWtzr2mgrK0Pg1TC7ZWjBJ2lylhj-31E All Playlists of Seerat e Sahabiyyat : https://www.youtube.com/playlist?list=PLgWtzr2mgrK1NHB3yGAbMeBfu9a-aL12n Taleem ul Quran 2022 https://www.youtube.com/playlist?list=PLgWtzr2mgrK2bPNdGq_90qfVFIfZPJTa9 ------------------ Farhat Hashmi (Urdu: فرحت ہاشمی) (born December 22, 1957) is an Islamic scholar, preacher and muslim televangelist from Pakistan. Website: http://www.farhathashmi.com/ [1] She holds a PhD degree in Islamic studies from the University of Glasgow, Scotland and was formerly a lecturer and assistant professor at the Faculty of Usul-al-Din at International Islamic University, Islamabad.[2][3] Hashmi founded Al-Huda International Welfare Foundation in 1994. The foundation started a number of schools to teach the Quran and Hadith to women in order to "help women become better observant muslims by helping them understand the Quran". The foundation now runs a network of schools, seminaries and social welfare projects.[4][5][6] In 2004, the foundation established the Al-Huda Institute in Mississauga (Toronto area), Ontario, Canada. This institute offers courses on exegesis of the Quran and Hadith and attracts students from a number of foreign countries such as Australia.[7][8] She has gained popularity as a feminist scholar both in Pakistan and abroad, as evidenced by crowds of up to ten thousand that attend her religious lessons, called "Dars". Most followers come from liberal, literate and modern backgrounds; and most are women.[9][10] She has stated that her mission is to bring a renewal in Islam, through better understanding of the core scriptures. In contrast to rigid and confrontational styles of proselytising, Hashmi has emphasized the need for her students to engage in voluntarily educating others through their examples. |