Showing posts with label Islamic History. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Islamic History. Show all posts

Sunday 11 January 2015

Jhang History In Urdu | Jhang Geography In Urdu | Jhang Culture In Urdu | Jhang District History In Urdu | History of Jhang In Urdu

Jhang History In Urdu | Jhang Geography In Urdu | Jhang Culture In Urdu | Jhang District History In Urdu | History of Jhang In Urdu
 
 Jhang History In Urdu
 
Jhang Geography In Urdu
 
  
Jhang District History In Urdu
 
Jhang History In English

The city of Jhang was built in 1288 by Rai Sial with the advice of Hazrat Shah Jalal Bukhari (his peer). The first ruler of Jhang was Mal Khan in 1462. Sial tribe ruled this city for 360 years and the last ruler of the Sial Tribe was Ahmad Khan from 1812 to 1822 before the Sikhs took over. And from the rule of the Sikh, Jhang was taken over by the British.
Jhang is more famous for its people than for its products. The Jhangvis are hardy peasants, healthy, tall, strong and of whitish complexion. The people live in the plains and therefore are plain and straight-forward, broad minded, hospitable and progressive. Jhang is the centre of a purely agricultural based society. Agriculture is the chief source of income and employment in Jhang. About 85 percent of the Jhang’s cultivable land is irrigated. Wheat and cotton are the principal crops. Other crops grown include rice, sugarcane, corn (maize), oilseeds, fruits, and vegetables. Livestock and poultry are also raised in large numbers in district Jhang.
Jhang is characterised by extreme climate – the temperature is generally hot, with marked variations between summer and winter. The monsoon reaches the area exhausted and therefore the rainfall is quite meager. There is also occasional rain during the winters. The summer may be somehow discomforting, but for the greater part of the year the climate is ideal and invigorating. The best part of the year is from the middle of February to the middle of April, which is the spring in the Jhang. It is neither cold nor hot but simply pleasant and enjoyable. The entire district-side becomes a vast stretch of greenery. The mustard fields are covered with yellow flowers, trees put on new leaves, fruits begin to blossom and there are flowers every where.
Jhang is connected by road or railway to some main cities of the country. Multan Sargodha road passes through the centre of the city. It is on this road that I used to travel from Multan to come to Mandi Bahauddin during my long stay in Multan. And, that is when I got acquainted with the place.
Every time I passed through the city, I was reminded of Heer Ranjha – the story performed in the form of an opera as well as a ballet and sung by youth and vocalists. This is a part of our literature heritage. Heer was the daughter of a feudal landlord Chuchak Sial who lived in a village in the suburbs of Jhang. Before Heer’s sacrifice for Ranjha, she proved herself to be a very courageous and daring young girl. It is said that Sardar Noora from the Sambal clan, had a really beautiful boat made and appointed a boatman called Luddan. Noora was very ruthless with his employees. Due to the ill treatment one day Luddan ran away with the boat and begged Heer for refuge. Heer gave him moral support as well as shelter. Sardar Noora was enraged at this incident. He summoned his friends and set off to catch Luddan. Heer collected an army of her friends and confronted Sardar Noora. When Heer’s brothers learnt of this incident they told her, “If a mishap had befallen you why did not you send for us?” To which Heer replied, “What was the need to send for all of you? Emperor Akbar had not attacked us.” It is the same Heer who, when she in love with Ranjha, sacrifices her life for him and says, “Rangha Rangha kardi ni mein aape Rangha hoi, menu Heer na aakhe koi (Ranjha, Ranjha all time I myself have become Ranjha. No one should call me Heer, call me Dheedho Ranjha.)
Heer Ranjha is the most famous true love story of the South Asian history. Similar to Shakespeare’s Romeo and Juliet it tells a story of two lovers “Heer” and “Ranjah”; whose families were in conflict with one another and became separated for many years. Heer is known to have been an extremely beautiful woman with a wealthy father named “Chuchak.” Ranjha was the youngest of four brothers, all of which were married except him. In his late teens he set of to find work in a distant village where he found Chuchak who offered him a job to take care of his cattle. Having met Ranjha, Heer became mesmerised by the way he played the flute and eventually fell in love with him. They would meet each other secretly for many years until they were caught by her parents and found who Dido really was. Heer was married against her will to another man, while Ranjha was left broken hearted and left to walk the quiet villages on his own until eventually met Gorak, a Jogi (devoted believer in God). Having entering Gorak’s Tilla (Shrine), Dido could only see his departed lover and being emotionally scared he voluntarily became a Yogi. Reciting the name of the lord on his travels around the Punjab he found the village of “Kher” where he was reunited with his devoted lover. They both escaped and came back to Heer’s Village, where her parents agreed to their marriage and end the conflict between the two families. The marriage preparations went well but on the wedding day, Heer’s jealous uncle, “Kedoh” (who was a limp having been beaten by Ranjha’s brothers many years earlier) poisoned her so the wedding wouldn’t take place. Having heard the news Dido rushed to aid Heer but was too late as she died in his arms, but tragically becoming broken hearted once again, Dido also died holding Heer to his chest. Now only the poet’s poetry remains in everlasting remembrance for no one has written such a beautiful Heer as Waris Shah.
But there is no “romance” left in the sleepy and dusty district headquarters Jhang. Those who take chance through the rustic city have to muscle their way to the city through waves of Tongas, rickshaws, donkey and bullock carts and lines of vendors selling gandeerian. And that is the first taste (and smell) of the city. Jhang is so full of animal transport that its avenues are like roads of respiratory illness and fatal accidents. Over crowding, population increase, litter, power outages and water shortages have all played a part in turning small hamlet, founded by the Sials in early thirteenth century, into a teeming sprawling slum. Rai Sial would not be able to recognize the city if he comes back. A short walk in the city reveals the neglect of all concerned. First thing a city needs is a By Pass.
Lalamusa-Sargodha-Khanewal railway is a profitable rout that passes through Jhang. At present only one Peshawar-Karachi train – Chenab Express – runs on this route. It could be useful to introduce at least one more Peshawar-Karachi express train for passengers, agricultural products produced in the area. Moreover, this track is strategically important in case of any threat to Peshawar-Lahore-Karachi main railway track. In that case, Lalamusa-Sargodha-Khane
wal rail route could take all the rail traffic.

 Famous People of Jhang

  • AL- Haaj Sheikh Muhammad Akram– Bussiness man and politition
  • Shiekh Waqas Akram S/O Sheikh akram– Present M N A
  • Abdus Salam – Nobel laureate in physics
  • Syeda Abida Hussain – politician (former federal minister and Pakistani ambassador to the United States)
  • Dr Abul Hasan Ansari – politician
  • Nazeer Naji – journalist
  • Shaykh Muhammad Imdad Hussain Pirzada – leading Islamic scholar and mufassir
  • Tahir-ul-Qadri – Islamic scholar and politician
  • Faisal Saleh Hayat – politician
  • Gulshan Esther, a Christian writer and evangelist now residing in England
  • AL-Haaj Ghulam Ahmad Khan– politician
  • Dr. Muhammad Ajaz Hussain Sial Assistant Professor Sargodha University, Sargodha
  •  

                                    Most Famous Darbar's in Jhang

  • Darbar Hazrat Shah Sheikhan (RA) – Sheikhan Shehar, Tehsil Chiniot, Jhang Lalian
    Lalian
    Lalian is a city in the Chiniot District of Punjab province, in Pakistan. It is located at 31°49'21N 72°47'50E with an altitude of 171 metres and is situated on the Faisalabad-to-Sargodha road. It is named after Mian Muhammad Siddiq Lali, a Muslim saint. According to the census of 1998, Lalian...
     Road
  • Darbar Hazrat Sultan Bahoo (RA) – Tehsil Shorkot
  • Darbar Hazrat Hafiz Faiz Sultan (RA) – Tehsil Shorkot
  • Darbar Hazrat Manzoor Sultan (RA)– Tehsil Shorkot
  • Darbar Hazrat Dr. Mujeeb Sultan (RA) – Tehsil Shorkot
  • Darbar Hazrat Sultan Noor Muhammad, Sultan Muhammad Nawaz and Sultan ul Asr Hazrat Ghulam Dastgir Al-Qadiri near Darbar Hazrat Sultan Bahoo
  • Darbar Hazarat Peer Maharaj Syed Shabbar Raza of Pubbarwalla Sharif
  • Darbar Hazrat Sultan Noor Hassan and Sultan Abdul Majeed near Darbar Hazrat Sultan Bahoo
  • Hazrat Peer Jabbo Shaheed (RA), Mouza Uch Noori Gul Imam
  • Darbar Hazrat Sultan Muhammad Azeez near Darbar Hazrat Sultan Bahoo
  • Darbar Hazrat Sultan Dost Muhmmad near Darbar Hazrat Sultan Bahoo
  • Darbar Hazrat Sultan Ahmad Bakhsh near Darbar Hazrat Sultan Bahoo
  • Darbar Hazrat Sultan Muhammad Hassan near Darbar Hazrat Sultan Bahoo
  • Darbar Sultan Shah Sakhira At Mari Shah Sakhira
  • Darbar Mahni Sharif – Kot Lakhnana, 6th Mile, Gojra Road, Jhang
  • Darbar Mangani Sharif Hazrat Pir Karam Hussain
  • Hazrat Shah Jewana (RA) – Shah Jewana, Tehsil
  • Sial Sharif – Sial Sharif, Sargodha Road, Jhang
  • Maai Heer – Faisalabad Road, Jhang Saddar
  • Peer Hathy Wan – Jhang City
  • Darbar Shah Kabir – Jhang City
  • Shrine of Athara Hazari – Athara Hazari Jhang
  • Peer Hazrat Syed Dargahi Shah
  • Peer Uch Gul Imam
  • Baloki Shareef – Mochi Wala, Faisalabad Road, Jhang
  • Hazrat Shah Sadiq Nahang – Shorkot Multan road, Jhang
  • Darber Rodoo Sultan – Garrh MahaRaja road, Jhang
  • Darbar Peer Gohar Shah
  • Darbar Peer Mohammad Shah Bukhari
  • Darbar Peer Noor Ahmad Hashmi kot sai singh jhang
  • Darbar Mian Murad
  • Peer Mirak Sial
  • Darbar Mae Bap – Shorkot, Jhang. (Bahoo Sultan)
  • Peer Abdr Rehman
  • Peer Hasu Balail
  • Darbar Noori Nahra
  • Dhaji Peer
  • Peer Durki Shah
  • Darbar Hazarat Farid-e-Millat Dr. Farid-ud-Din Qadri (RA) Basti Saleh Shah, Jhang
  • Peer Hafiz Abdulkarim Yousaf Shah Road, Jhang
  • Jagat Guru Nanak Dev Ji – This sacred shrine of Jagat Guru Nanak Dev Ji is on Toba road outside Jhang. Buses or mini buses going to this place from Jhang are easily available. Its bus stop is on the bridge after Bagha Wala. From the bus stop one has to walk upstream along the canal. A Gurdwara was built by the followers on the mound where Sat Gur Dev Ji had stayed. A primary school is housed in the Gurdwara now.
  • Mazar Hazrat Shah Balail in Hassu Balail
  • Mazar Hazrat Noor Ashab Near Hassu Balail
  • Mazar Hafiz Abdur Razzaq in Imam Kot Hassu Balalil
  • Darbar Peer Chiragh Shah Bokhari at Thana Mason Taseil Jhang
  • Darbar Baba Ghareeb Ali in chak no. 211 J.B. Titraanwala
  • Darbar Baba Haji Ahmad Darvesh Baghdadi – Shaheed road Jhang
  • Darbar Noor Muhammad Awan Marhoom – Mai heer Jhang
  • Derbar peer fatah Shah Chak Hundlan Bhowan Painsra Road Chiniot
  • Darbar Peer Muhammad Shah Chak Ramana (Khushal Ka) Bhowana Painsra Road Chiniot
  • Darbar Peer Hazrat Shah Sharief Chund Jhang City
  • Darbar Lal Shah Wara Thatta Mohammad Shah, Chiniot Road, Jhang
  • A Mandar (name unknown) at Wara Suleman, Chiniot Road, Jhang
  • Darbar Mian Bakha Sharif Moza Balo Shahbal, Chiniot Road, Jhang
  • Darbar Hazarat Peer Shahbal Shah Moza Balo Shahbal Jhang (by Malik Aman Ullah) Karodia Autos Jhang
  • Derbar Tiban Piran Shrif, Hazrat Pir Muhammad Hussain Shah Hamdani, Purana Khushab Road, Via 18 Hazari, Near Kurhianwala
  • Darbar Sultan Pakra(Syed Johdi Jamal ud Din) Chak No.259/JB Te.& District Jhang.
  • Darbar Hazrat Hafiz Jamal (Mian Wadda) Barana tehsil Lalian, Distt. Chiniot




Ibn e Battuta | Ibn e Battuta History in Urdu | Ibn e Battuta Biography in Urdu

Ibn e Battuta | Ibn e Battuta History in Urdu | Ibn e Battuta Biography in Urdu | Ibn e Battuta in Urdu | Ibn e Battuta Life History
 
 Ibn e Battuta History in Urdu
 
 
 

                            Ibn e Battuta History in English

Contributed by IT-ILM.COM
Ibn Batuta embodies the universal spirit of humankind to explore, learn, document and teach. Born in 1304 in the Moroccan city of Tangier, he set out to perform his Hajj as a young man of twenty-one. From Mecca, he embarked on a journey that took him, over a span of 25 years, to all the major centers of world culture. Undoubtedly, one of the greatest travelers the world has known, Ibn Batuta belongs to a select group of explorers like Fah-yen (China, 6th century), Ibn Jubayr (Spain, 12th century) and Marco Polo (Venice, 13th century).
The historical importance of Ibn Batuta lies in his Rehla (travelogue), which provides a snapshot of the Islamic world, as it existed in the first half of the 14th century and its relationships with the other centers of global and regional power. Ibn Batuta personally met some of the major figures who have left their imprint on history, including Ibn Khaldun of the Maghrib, Ibn Taymiyah of Syria, Sultan Abu Saeed of Persia-Iraq, Sultan Nuruddin Ali of East Africa, Sultan Orkhan of the Ottoman Empire, Sultan Muhammed bin Tughlaq of India, Sultan Al Zahir of Indonesia, Emperor Toghun Timur of China, Mansa Sulaiman of Mali and some of the most prominent Sufi shaykhs of the era. His impressions of these men provide invaluable information about the movers and shakers of the era. His observations on the customs, values and institutions of the societies he visited provide a first-hand account of the unity as well as the cultural diversity in the Muslim world as it existed at that time.
In the first half of the 14th century, the world was in relative peace. The Crusades had ended and the Mongol slaughters were a thing of the past. In the Maghrib, there existed a balance of power between the Muslims and the Christians. The Al Muhaddith dynasty in the Maghrib had broken up and its place taken by four separate powers, the Merinides of Morocco, Wadids of Algeria, Hafsids of Tunisia and the Nasirids of Granada. There was relative quiet between these sultanates and the Christian kingdoms of Castile and Aragon. This equilibrium allowed the Straits of Gibraltar to be open to shipping and Venetian and Genoese vessels were able to cross the Straits and trade with the western shores of France and England. The prosperous city-states of Italy experienced the first wave of the Renaissance. Egypt, Syria and Hejaz were under the Mamlukes of Egypt who had earned the respect of the Islamic world by their victory over the Mongols. Moreover, after the destruction of Baghdad, Cairo had become the seat of the Caliphate. Cairo and Damascus became world-class cities due to their trade with India and China through Yemen. Persia was back in the fold of Islam and there began tremendous reconstruction works in Persia, Iraq and Khorasan. The Silk Road to China was reopened. The Ottoman Turks were continuing their relentless advance into Europe, while the Byzantine emperors tried to contain them through treaties and marriage ties. In India and Pakistan, the rich and powerful Tughlaq dynasty ruled, heir to the mighty Khiljis who had left a consolidated subcontinent under the military-political control of Delhi. Islam had entered Malaysia and Indonesia and the Sultanate of Acheh eagerly sought scholars and jurists who were fleeing the Mongol devastations of the previous century. China was still ruled by the Mongol (Yuan) dynasty, which had brought the northern and southern halves of China under one flag. West Africa witnessed the great Mali Empire at its zenith.
The cement that held this far-flung Islamic world together was the Shariah. Ibn Batuta was trained in the Shariah and its application in the Maliki School of Fiqh. As such, he carried the credentials of a kadi that was to serve him well in a world that was at relative peace with itself under the umbrella of a Sunni vision of Islam. Second only to the Law, as a universal binding force was the Arabic language. Even in the eastern parts of the Islamic world wherein Farsi was the literary language, Arabic enjoyed a unique place as the language of the Qur’an and Hadith and as the medium of transmission of the Law. The Law and the language were the universal forces that held the Muslims together, even as they fought amongst themselves and with non-Muslims for power and position. Political power and the mastery of the great land mass extending from Mauritania to Bengal gave them control of the trade routes linking the principal seats of civilization, namely China, India, Persia, Egypt, Italy and West Africa. This vast network of trade routes was jealously guarded and protected by the regional monarchs who knew that their own prosperity depended on international trade. A traveler could move from Mali to Delhi without leaving the familiar religious and linguistic framework of the Muslims.
Trade as well as the competition among the rulers for prestige facilitated the movement of scholars, architects, doctors, engineers, poets and men of learning who sought gainful employment at the various courts. This movement provided a powerful engine for the spread of knowledge and the diffusion of faith. The beneficiaries were the peripheral territories that had recently come under the political sway of Islam. These territories included India and Pakistan, Indonesia, Malaysia, Turkey and West Africa. It was during this period that the technology of gunpowder moved from China to west Asia and from there to Europe. The 14th century transformed the Islamic landscape and shifted the center of gravity of Islam from its traditional Arab-Persian heartland to the regions that hold the largest number of believers today: Indonesia, Pakistan, India, Bangladesh and Nigeria.
The importance of the external links provided by the Divine Law, the Arabic language and trade routes is obvious. Of equal importance was the spiritual unity of Islam, which had asserted itself at the height of the Mongol catastrophe and now was the principal vehicle for religious expression. Like a vast subterranean lake of fresh water linking small islands, this spirituality linked the lands inhabited by the Africans, the Arabs, the Persians, the Turks, the Indians and the Malays. Transcending geography and culture, it provided the motive force for the migration of great Sufi shaykhs into the heartland of Hindustan and the dispersed islands of the East Indies. It was also the engine that propelled the Turkish advance into southeastern Europe, as one Sufic order or the other influenced the ghazi brigades of the Turks.
The Chishtiya order had penetrated the jungles of central India and Mallams (religious teachers) traversed the African grasslands carrying with them not just water bags to quench bodily thirst but the universal spirituality of Islam to quench the spiritual thirst of all human beings. By the first half of the 14th century, this spirituality had moved forward from mere contemplation and recitation to social activism and had established powerful institutions to sustain this activism. A traveler could find peace and solace at various stations not only in the karavanserais (places of rest for travelers) built by the rulers, but also in the qanqas (places of retreat) built by the Sufis. Among the better known of the Sufis whose hospitality Ibn Batuta enjoyed were Shaykh Burhanuddin of Alexandria, Shaykh Abdur Rahman ibn Mustafa of Jerusalem, Shaykh Qutbuddin of Isfahan, Chirag-e-Dehli of India and Shah Jalal of Sylhet.
Ibn Batuta received his early education in the Maliki School of Fiqh, a vocation that was to serve him well in his interactions with the learned men in far-away lands. He was also trained in the urbane manners becoming of a gentleman of the era. Tasawwuf pervaded the Islamic social milieu and Ibn Batuta was at home with the Sufi masters. Indeed, Ibn Batuta personified the new Muslim personality, imbibed with Sufi spirituality, which was fully integrated with the rules and regulations of the Shariah. Ibn Batuta, as a native of Morocco, was fluent in the language. Familiarity with Arabic ensured that he would find companionship with the kadis, ulema and the Sufis who formed the literary and spiritual elite of Islam.
In 1325, he set out from Tangier to fulfill his obligation for Hajj. At that time, performance of the Hajj was not just a visit to Mecca but an adventure through the many cities that lay in the pilgrim’s path and an opportunity to visit great mosques, madrasas and to learn from master teachers. It was also a unique opportunity to give expression to the universal brotherhood and sisterhood of humankind. Ibn Batuta’s caravan, which included the noted scholar Abu Abdullah al Zubaidi and Abu Abdullah al Nafzawi, Kadi of Tunis, passed through some of the principal cities of the Maghrib including Tlemchen (capital of the Wadids), Algiers and Tunis. Tunis was at the time a major trade depot and a cultural center. From Africa came gold, ivory and nuts. From Egypt it imported embroidery and woodwork as well as trans-shipped products of the east such as Indian herbs, medicines, spices and Chinese porcelain. These products were sold to the city-states of southern Europe as well as to the other cities of the Maghrib. It was the eastern capital of the Al Muhaddith who embellished it with mosques and built higher schools of learning. With the breakup of the Al Muhaddith Empire, Christian armies had overrun much of Spain and had expelled most of the Muslims. North Africa, Tunis in particular, benefited from this forced migration of scholars, artisans, poets, musicians, horticulturalists and men of letters. The Hafsids, who succeeded the Al Muhaddith, continued the tradition of encouraging learning and Tunis with a population of over 100,000, became a center that attracted noted ulema from as far away as Cairo, Damascus and Fez. Ibn Batuta stayed in Tunis for about two months acquiring in the process some of the Andalusian refinement and court manners that would serve him well later in his travels.
From Tunis, the caravan traversed the harsh Libyan Desert until it arrived at the city of Alexandria. This city, located at the mouth of the Nile Delta, was a busy commercial center with a brisk trade with Venice, Genoa, Tunis, Tangier, Valencia, Sicily and the Syrian coast. It was here that the caravan routes leading from India and the sea routes from East Africa met. All the products of Asia and Africa passed through the city. In Alexandria, Ibn Batuta met the noted Sufi Shaykh Burhanuddin and spent some time in his zawiyah. The elderly Shaykh gave the young traveler robes to signify his initiation into the Sufi order and showered upon him his spiritual radiance. From Alexandria, the Hajj caravan reached the great city of Cairo.
Cairo at that time had a population in excess of half a million, which was more than fifteen times that of the city of London, three times that of the city of Tabriz, twice that of the city of Delhi. It was the capital of the Mamlukes. The Mamlukes, like their counterparts in India, originated from European and Central Asian slaves who were bought and adopted by the Turks, accepted Islam, married into noble families and through their sheer resilience rose up to become kings. The Mamlukes of Egypt were called Bahri Mamlukes because some of them inhabited the islands in the River Nile. They displaced the ailing Ayyubid dynasty in 1250 and brought Egypt, Syria and the Red Sea coasts of Arabia and the Sudan under their control. The Mamlukes proved themselves to be excellent administrators and outstanding patrons of learning. Ibn Batuta arrived in Cairo during the reign of Sultan Al Nasir Muhammed ibn Qalawun who ruled from 1293 to 1341. A great builder, Al Nasir built more than thirty mosques and numerous schools and hospitals. The great mosque of ibn Qalawun still stands in the old city of Cairo. The Mongol plunders in Persia, Iraq and Central Asia had pushed a large number of scholars, Sufis, poets, linguists, architects, fuqahah, mathematicians, philosophers and doctors into Cairo.
Cairo had become the pre-eminent center of culture, art and learning in the Islamic world. After the destruction of Baghdad (1258), a surviving member of the Abbasids had been installed as the Caliph in Cairo and the city had become the seat of the Caliphate and hence the focus of Islamic political life. The hospital (maristan as it was called) of Qalawun was a marvel of the age. It contained more than 300 wards for patients and was equipped with the most advanced surgical tools of the era. The hospital was well staffed with doctors, surgeons and attendants. There were lecture rooms, baths, libraries and dispensaries attached to the building. Recitations from the Qur’an soothed the soul. Music was played to help the healing process. Treatment was free. Rich and poor were treated alike.
Madrasas (schools) were attached to the mosques. The concept of a mosque-madrasa grew out of Masjid al Nabawi, the mosque of the Prophet, in Madina. The idea found patronage at the highest level during the intense rivalry between the Fatimids and the Abbasids (969-1100). Both Cairo and Baghdad became great centers of learning. Al Azhar grew in Cairo and the Nizamiya College flourished in Baghdad. The example of these two capital cities was copied by the provincial centers of Merv, Nishapur, Bukhara, Samarqand, Damascus, Fez, Timbuktu and Cordoba, as well as the cities that came under Islamic influence in later centuries such as Delhi, Tabriz, Istanbul and Lahore. Ibn Batuta records that the schools in Cairo were too numerous to count. Each mosque-madrasa had a courtyard wherein great teachers gave lectures and eager students learned the Qur’an, Fiqh, Arabic grammar, mathematics, medicine and philosophy, although the study of more secular sciences such as mathematics, medicine and philosophy was not available in all schools.
The hajj caravan with whom Ibn Batuta was traveling was delayed. Impatient to reach the Hejaz, Ibn Batuta, took the southern route down the River Nile and through the desert to the Sudanese port of Aydhab. He described the Nile valley as a veritable garden, full of life and vitality, serving as the breadbasket for the Mamluke Empire. Aydhab was a sultry harbor town, dusty, hot, without water, crammed with import-export merchandise. Forced by inhospitable weather, Ibn Batuta turned back to Cairo and from there he traveled through the Sinai to Palestine and Syria. He prayed at the mosque of Abraham in al Khalil (Hebron) and spent several days at Masjid al Aqsa in Jerusalem. By 1326, Jerusalem had ceased to be a bone of contention between the Christians and the Muslims. The Crusades in Palestine had ended and the chief attraction of the city was its pilgrimage sites for Muslims, Christians and Jews. Ibn Batuta spent several nights in prayer at Masjid al Aqsa and at the Dome of the Rock, recalling the events of Isra and Meraj. He also spent many days at the zawiyah of Sufi Shaykh Abdul Rahman ibn Mustafa who belonged to the Rifai order.
After receiving his ijazat (literally meaning permission, also a diploma) from Shaykh ibn Mustafa, Ibn Batuta moved on to Damascus, where he met the well-known reformer Ibn Taymiyah (d. 1328). The two were on different wavelengths. Ibn Batuta was a man of the new Sufic age. Indeed, wherever he went, he sought the company of well-known Sufis. By contrast, Ibn Taymiyah foresaw inherent dangers in the Sufic approach, which had no empirical proofs and lent itself to exploitation by pretenders. The Sufis would respond to this charge by asserting that the best empirical proof of their approach was the noticeable transformation of human character that it brings about. Ibn Taymiyah was very much against the allegorical interpretations given to the Qur’an by certain Sufi schools and felt that the Qur’an had to be understood in its literal sense, as emphasized by Imam Shafi’i. Ibn Taymiyah fought a life-long struggle to alert his generation against the risks that he felt lurked in the Sufi approach. He urged Muslims to return to what he felt was the vibrant, outward, empirical Islam of the Umayyad and the Abbasid periods. Needless to say, the two men did not see eye to eye. As history would have it, the Islamic world embraced the Sufis and relegated Ibn Taymiyah to scholars respected but forgotten. It is only in the last 200 years, since the advent of European colonialism, that the Islamic world has once again turned to the ideas of Ibn Taymiyah to find some answers to the challenge of the West.
Damascus was the second capital of the Mamlukes and was a great city in its own right. During the struggle between the Mamlukes and the Il Khans of Persia-Iraq (1258-1315), Damascus had suffered. With the onset of peace between the two dynasties in 1315, the city had regained its former preeminence as a pivotal station in the trade routes linking Egypt and North Africa to the Black Sea, Persia, China and India. It had a population of over 250,000 and was known for its high quality steel, called Damascus steel, which was valued and sought after the world over.
The trade in iron and its processing provides one illustration of how Islam had welded together the old world into a single trading block. Iron ore was exported from East Africa to Gujrat in India where it was smelted into pig iron and re-exported to Syria. In Damascus, it was re-smelted, alloyed and formed into steel, using a process that was only re-discovered in the 1960s and is referred to as super-plasticity. Ibn Batuta records that the bazaars of Damascus were thriving with imported goods which included spices, gems, embroidery, perfumes and medicinal herbs from India, porcelain from China, furs from the Black Sea area and Turkish horses from Central Asia. The nobility in Damascus, emulating the example of the Sultan in Cairo, had built numerous mosques, schools, hospitals, rest houses for travelers, canals and public baths. He spent a great deal of time at the magnificent Umayyad mosque of Damascus, learning among other subjects, the Hadith according to Shaykh Bukhari.
In September 1326, Ibn Batuta finally set out to perform his Hajj. Modern conveniences that Hajjis take for granted these days did not exist and the 800 miles from Damascus to Mecca were a trial for the hardy. Pilgrims usually traveled in large caravans, some as large as 30,000, with full provisions for the journey, led by an emir (leader), accompanied by imams, judges, doctors and protected by soldiers. Even so, many perished on the road, caught in the unpredictable desert sand storms, or attacked by bandits. It took almost a year to perform the Hajj and from some parts of Africa, such as Mali, it took almost two years. Yet they came, the sons and daughters of Adam, from all corners of the earth, to the hallowed sanctuary of Mecca, to celebrate the Name of the Creator and to cement the pristine brotherhood of humankind.
The rites of Hajj have not changed in the fourteen hundred years since the Prophet perfected them. A pilgrim today would experience the same emotions and express himself the same way, as did Ibn Batuta in the year 1326. Approaching from the north, the caravan from Damascus first stopped in Madina, the City of the Prophet. There, surrounded by the radiance of the Prophet’s Mosque, Ibn Batuta prayed, remembering often the name of the beloved Apostle of God. At Dhul Halifa, he discarded his urbane attire, donned the Ihram and marched forth with his companions reciting Talbiya: “Here I am, O Lord, Here I am! Indeed, Thee alone is worthy of all Praise. Thine is the Bounty. Thine is the Sovereignty. Here I am at your Command, O Lord!”. Emotions swelled in him as he first saw the Haram (the word Haram is used only for the sanctuaries around the Ka’ba in Mecca, the Prophet’s Mosque in Madina and the Al Aqsa Mosque in Jerusalem), circled by thousands, invoking the name of God in a hundred different tongues. He melted into the human mass, completing the circles.
Thereafter, he marched forth to the hills of Safa and Marwa, recalling the struggle of Hajira to find water in the desert, after Prophet Ibrahim left her there with her infant son Ismail. He remembered that moment when Divine mercy intervened to answer the supplication of a mother and caused water to gush forth from a rock. The mother, Hajira, cried out, “Zumi, Ya Mubaraka” (Stop! O, blessed water!). After traversing the hills of Safa and Marwa seven times, Ibn Batuta drank to his heart’s content from the well of Zamzam. (The word Zamzam derives from Zumi, the exclamation of Hajira when she saw water burst forth from a rock).
From Mecca, he proceeded to Mina and on to the great gathering at Arafat. On this plain stood the children of Adam, black and white, rich and poor, Arabs and Turks, Persians and Spaniards. Where in this gathering were the kings and where the mendicants? All were equal in the sight of God and equal in the sight of man, in supplication before the Creator, celebrating only His Name, invoking His mercy and His munificence. From Arafat, Ibn Batuta returned to Muzdalifa and on to Mina and Mecca to complete the rites of the Hajj and joined his fellow Hajjis in celebration of this blessed opportunity. He had now fulfilled the goal he had set for himself when he set out from Tangier, but farther horizons beckoned him.
In 1326, Ibn Batuta joined a caravan of Persian pilgrims returning home from Hajj. The caravan took the northerly route from Mecca to Madina, through central Arabia to Kufa. Along the route, Ibn Batuta saw the many wells, aqueducts and rest stops that had been built by Empress Zubaida, wife of Harun al Rashid, during her celebrated Hajj (799). Najaf and Karbala were pilgrimage sites. From Najaf, the young traveler turned south in the direction of Basra, visiting along the road the tomb of Shaykh Ahmed ibn Rifai, founder of the Rifai Sufi order. He stayed at the zawiyah, participating in the Sufi rites of the order, including prayer, music and rapturous movements of the dervishes. Farther south, in the city of Abidjan, Ibn Batuta spent more time in the company of Sufis. Ascending the Persian plateau, he crossed the Zeros mountains to the beautiful city of Isfahan. Isfahan had escaped the Mongol devastations, partly because it was far from the main route of the advancing Mongol armies and partly because it had avoided taking a defiant stand and had accepted a measure of Mongol over- lordship. Ibn Batuta stayed with Shaykh Qutbuddin Hussain of the Suhrawardi order. He then proceeded to the magnificent city of Shiraz, which, like its sister city of Isfahan, had escaped the Mongol devastations and had become the hub of Sufi activity in Persia. Shiraz was referred to as “Burj e Awliya” (bridge to the Beloveds of God, the great Sufis) and it was here that the well-known Farsi poet Shaykh Sa’adi and the venerated Sufi Shaykh Ibn Khafif were buried. Ibn Batuta found the Persian people to be generous, given to culture and good deeds and the cultivation of piety.
Turning around, Ibn Batuta visited Baghdad but found the city struggling to lift itself out of its ruins. Persia was at this time ruled by the Mongol prince, Abu Said (1316-1335), an accomplished scholar, a pious man, a master builder and an able administrator. Under him Persia had prospered and had started to dig itself out of the ashes of the Mongol onslaught. The Mongols had made Tabriz their capital. Ibn Batuta visited this city and found it to be a prosperous commercial town comparable to Damascus, embellished with gardens, mosques and palaces.
Returning back to Baghdad, the world traveler took an excursion north towards Mosul where he visited a great Sufi, a lady named Sitt Zahida, who was the patron saint and teacher for a great many Sufis. In early Islamic history, tasawwuf was not a privilege only of men. A great many women stand out as towers of light, beckoning all men and women to that spirituality that is innate in humankind. Rabia al Adawiyyah (d. 802) was one of the earliest women Sufis in Islam who expressed the love of God in exquisite and sublime Arabic poetry and was a teacher to many a great shaykh. It was much later in Islamic history that Muslim women were pushed into the background and were largely denied the privilege of learning and teaching.
After returning to Mecca and studying there for two years (1327-1329), Ibn Batuta embarked on a journey that took him to the coastal cities along the western shores of the Indian Ocean. Since the time of the Prophet, Muslims had sought their economic well-being in trade. The location of West Asia astride the major trade routes between Asia, Europe and Africa provided them a strategic geographical position. The East African coast was connected by sea to India, Indonesia and China. Towns such as Abadan and Muscat on the Persian Gulf, Zafar on the southern shores of the Arabian Peninsula and Aden in Yemen were principal seaports. Included in this trade network were Mogadishu, Mombasa, Kilwa and Shofala along the African coast. These became thriving cities ruled by local Muslim emirs.
The land further south was called the land Zanj. The movement of people and goods was two-way. As early as the 8th century, there was a Zanj colony in southern Iraq. Ibn Batuta’s itinerary took him from Mecca to Suakin (Sudan), Aden (Yemen), Zeila (Eritrea), Mogadishu (Somalia), Mombasa (Kenya) and further south to Zanzibar and Kilwa. East Africa exported gold, ivory, animal hide and hardwood. In turn it imported spices, fine cotton fabrics and medicines from India, porcelain and silk from China, steel from Damascus, brocades and brass-work from Cairo. The African seacoast was integrated through Sufi missions with the rest of the Muslim world. Scholars as well as merchants from as far away as Samarqand immigrated, intermarried with African women and created the rich, composite culture of the Sahel. Ibn Batuta found the inhabitants of these cities quite affluent. They wore fine cotton clothes and fine gold jewelry, prayed in domed mosques, dined on fine porcelain from China. Their cities were peaceful, with no outer fortresses, offering a warm and open welcome to the merchants from far-away lands. This peaceful, no-walled character of the African coastal cities was to prove their undoing in the 16th century, when Portuguese ships appeared offshore and mercilessly bombarded the towns into submission one after the other.
The year 1332 saw Ibn Batuta explore the Anatolian plateau and the lands around the Black Sea. Three of his observations about Anatolia are noteworthy. First, the spirit of ghazzah was widespread among the Turks. By 1332, the Turks had conquered most of Anatolia and the budding Ottoman principality was soon to blossom into a world empire. Ever since the 9th century, Turkish tribes had burst forth from their homeland on the outskirts of Mongolia, first into Khorasan, then into Persia and onwards into Anatolia and beyond. These migrations were later sanctified in the form of a valiant struggle (ghazzah) for faith.
Islam provided an over-arching faith for the Turkish tribes whose intercontinental movements would have been inevitable with or without their mass conversion to Islam. Secondly, Ibn Batuta noted the participation of women in public life. Turkish women rode horses, went to war, attended state functions and engaged in trade on an equal footing with men, a situation not known in the strict atmosphere of the Maliki Maghrib from which Ibn Batuta came. It was no surprise that the only women sovereigns, the queen-monarchs of Islam came from the Turks. (In the 16th century, there was a succession of five Muslim queens in Indonesia). Third, Ibn Batuta records the strong presence of youth movements in Anatolia, attached to Sufi brotherhoods. The akhi youth movement reinforced fraternal bonds and taught young men the virtues of integrity, generosity, courage and nobility. Akhi fraternities provided hospitality to scholars and wayfarers. The akhi movement was to the youth what the ghazi movement was to the general population.
Ibn Batuta’s vision now turned east towards Delhi, which had become a magnet for Sufis, scholars and merchants. Setting out in late 1332, he traveled through the Volga region, which was even in his time noted for its brisk trade in slaves. Then through Khorasan and the Khanate of Chagatai, Ibn Batuta saw the ruins of Bukhara, Samarqand, Balkh and Herat. These were cities that were once the crown jewels of Islamic civilization but were laid waste by the Mongols. Ibn Batuta visited Kabul, Ghazna and Multan where he stayed with Shaykh Ruknuddin Abul Fatha of the Suhrwardi order. Arriving in in 1334, he was pressed into service as the chief kadi by the Emperor Muhammed bin Tughlaq, a monarch noted for his intellectual and literary attainment as well as for his impulsiveness. During the previous century Delhi had grown from a small Rajput garrison town into a bustling world-class cosmopolitan city and the seat of a mighty empire. The consolidation of the subcontinent under the central power of Delhi had brought unparalleled power and prosperity to India. Embassies from all of the Asian powers frequented the capital. The Qutub Minar was already a hundred years old and the great mosque of Quwwatul-Islam served as the Jamia Masjid for the metropolis.
Indeed, it was Ibn Batuta’s description of the wealth and magnificence of the Delhi court that made him suspect in the eyes of his contemporaries when he returned home to Morocco. No less a person than Ibn Khaldun thought that the stories of Ibn Batuta (“the Shaykh from Tangier”) were not credible. Ibn Batuta records that in 1340, an embassy arrived from the Emperor Toghon Timur, Yuan Emperor of China, seeking the Sultan’s permission to establish a Buddhist monastery near Delhi. Muhammed bin Tughlaq denied the request. In historical hindsight, the denial prevented a more vigorous interaction between the Muslim Sufis of India and the Buddhists of the Yuan Empire and the spread of Islam into the Chinese mainland. So as not to send the Chinese ambassadors empty handed, the Sultan entrusted Ibn Batuta to accompany them to Beijing, along with gifts of gold, diamonds and pearls. As ordered by the Emperor, Ibn Batuta set out with a large entourage in 1340, visiting Gwalior, Gujrat and Daulatabad on his way to Surat in western India from where he planned to embark on his voyage to China. But his ships capsized in a great storm off the coast of Malabar and Ibn Batuta found himself moving from city to city along the coast. Further travels took him to the MaldiveIslands , Sri Lanka and Bengal where he visited with Sufi Shaykh Jalal of Sylhet. Traveling eastward to Indonesia, he was received by Sultan Ahmed al Malik al Zahir of Sumatra. Finally, he did make his way to Beijing Canton where he found a thriving community of Muslim traders.
Returning home to Morocco in 1349, the restless Ibn Batuta found himself on a journey to the south, to the great empire of Mali. During the years 1351-1355, his travels took him through the trade centers of Sijilmasa, Walata, Timbuktu and Gao on the Niger River. At this time Mansa Sulaiman, successor to the great Mansa Musa, ruled Mali.
Ibn Batuta’s account of Muslim life in Mali is noteworthy for the differences in the way women were treated in African and Arab societies. In Mali, Ibn Batuta found that women were not secluded from men as they were in North Africa. Like their sisters in Turkish Anatolia, the Muslim African women frequented the markets, participated in court life and were free to consult with kadis and ulema without hiding their faces in hijab, a situation Ibn Batuta, a Maliki jurist, found objectionable. Ibn Batuta found the great cities of the Niger River rich and prosperous. The people were pious and steadfast in prayer, the scholars well versed in the Qur’an and Sunnah, the universities frequented by great scholars from Fez and Cairo and its great mosques filled with worshipers. Ibn Batuta returned home in 1355 and spent the remainder of his life in the service of his sovereign, Sultan Abu Inan of the Merinides. It was at the orders of this Sultan that the Rehla was composed and recorded by Ibn Juzayy using first hand accounts from Ibn Batuta.
The world that Ibn Batuta knew was soon to vanish, engulfed by the great plague of 1346, which moved like a black spider across the globe, obliterating entire cities with its sting and arresting the growth of Afro-Eurasian civilizations for more than a generation. It was this spent world that faced the invasions of Timurlane of Samarqand, circa 1385.





Friday 9 January 2015

Islam Mein Aurat Ke Huqooq In Urdu | Rights of Women In Islam | Islam Mein Khawateen Ke Huqooq | Aurat Ke Huqooq In Urdu

Islam Mein Aurat Ke Huqooq In Urdu | Rights of Women In Islam | Islam Mein Khawateen Ke Huqooq | Aurat Ke Huqooq In Urdu
 
 Islam Mein Aurat Ke Huqooq In Urdu
 
 
 Rights of Women In Islam In Urdu
 
 
 
 
 
 

 Islam Mein Khawateen Ke Huqooq

 islam aurat ko bht ehem aur khas tarjeeh deta hy,
aurat na hoti na hoti to shyed ye duniya b na hoti ,humara culture tehzeb rehen sehen,khana peena uthna jagnna soona ,hata ke her amal hmare liye mkahsoos rakha hy ALLAH Ne .esitrha duniya k liye kya se kya behter aur ese kstrha qyem rkhna hy ye b ALLAH ne mukarer ker rakha hy,


hum sochnge to to aik gheri soch me doob jyenge magr jahan tak hmare soch pochn nahi skti ALLAH ne estrha apne takhliq ko barkarar rkaha hy


insan es duniya me sirf ibadt aur islam k banye hue usoolon per laya gya hy ta ke apne mailk (paida kerne wala ,ibadt k lyek ,aik hi rab)
ki ibadat ker ske..
esi liye ALLAH ne insan ko duniya me bheja hy,


ab chlte hian us manzar ki taraf jahan duniya me sabse pehli bibi HAZART BIBI HAWA A.S
ko duniya me bheja gya ,,


Allah pak Rahim Karim hain onko Hazrat Adam(a.s) ka ghamghin rehna passand na aya isliay Allah pak nay ilm ramal ka nokta bazariay Jibrael(a.s) hazrat Adam(a.s) ko dia.
Yeh Aak tarah say chupi paheli ya qudrat ka raaz samaya hoa math kay equation ki tarah ak equation tha jisay Adam(a.s) ko apni zahanat say solve karna tha aur isi kay zariay Bibi Hawa(a.s) ko dhondna tha, yeh aak mission tha jis main hazrat Adam(a.s) nay apnay aap ko busy kar lia is equation ko samajnay main Hazrat Adam(a.s) ko kafi arsa lag gaya aur isi arsay main Aap(a.s) qudrat kay kafi raaz samajnay lagay aur Aap(a.s) nay Apnay RAB e karim ki khudai ka moshaida kia aur jab Aap(a.s) pori kainat kay system ko samjha, ghor kia to sajday main gir gay aur ro kar ghir gara kar apnay Rab say Maafi mangi aur Allah pak nay onko maaf kardia, yeh ilm to aak bahana tha is ak ilm say hazrat Adam(a.s) nay kai oloom seekh liay, kainat kay nizam ko samjha, Khuda kay 99 sifat ka moshaida kia aur apnay Rab ko pehchana, isi ilm kay zariay aap nay Bibi Hawa(a.s) ko dhond lia aur dil main khof e khuda payda hoa aur ro kar gir gira kar apnay Rab say maafi mangi, Allah pak yehi chahatay thay kay woh meri kainat main ghor wa fikar karay meray nizam ko samjhay mujhay samjhay kay ,main kon hon isi liay yeh muqadas ilm ramal wahi kia gaya Hazrat Adam(a.s) par.
Hazrat Adam(a.s) nay ilm ramal ki rayt par bani 2 figures main kistarah ghor kia aur is ilm ko samja iski muktasir tashreh ko yahan share ker rhi hoon,
Hazrat Jibrael(a.s) nay jo 4 dots rayt par dalay thay in 4 dots ko hazrat Adam(a.s) nay 4 elements yehni anasir say mansob kia woh 4 elements hain: Fire, Air, Water, Earth,


isitarah hazrat Adam(a.s) nay is ilm par abhor hasil kar lia aur Hazrat Bibi Hawa(a.s) kay halat is ilm say malum kiay aur ak din on say ja milay, aur apnay ilm say khuda kay 99 mubarik isma al-hosna main ghor kia aur kainat kay nizam ko samjha aur khuda ki raza onko hasil hoi aur jannat kay darwazay onkay liay dobara khol gay,


sureh nisa ayat no 11 me farmaya gya hy k
"ALLAH tmhne tmhari aulad k bare me takedi hukum deta hy 'mard k liye do aurtonk k hisse k baraber hy,
phr agr aurtein do se uper hoon to'unke liye jo us ne chora uska do tehayi hy,aur agr wo aik hi aurat hy to uske liye nisf hy,


aur tmhare liye jo tmhari biwiyun ne chora uska nisf hy,agr unki aulad na ho.
phr agr unki aulad ho to tmhare liye jo unhon ne chora unka chotha hissa hy.ye wasiyat jo wo kren ya qarza ada kerne k bad(yani uske walden aur aulad na ho)magr uske koi bhai ya bhen hoon to un se her aik ka chata (6) hissa hoga


aur agr aurat jiska virsa liya jana hy kalala ho


aik aur ayata me farmya gya hy


aur agr tum aik biwi ki jaga dosri biwi badlna chaho to,aur tum un me se ksi ko soney k dhere de chukey ho to,b us me se kuch na lo,kya tum wo buhtan bandh ker khula gunnah ker k lo gey."? surhe nisa ayat no 20


ayat no 21 me batya gya hy k
"magr tum wo ekse leskte ho ,jab tum aik dsorey se suhbat ker chukey ho,aur wo tum se pukhta iqrara le chuki hy,un aurtaon se nikah na karo jnse tmahre baap nikah kerchukey hian,jo guzar chuka ,
beshak wo ye behayayi aur nafrt ki bat hy aur ye buri raah hy."
tum per haram ki jati hian tmhari mayen ,tmhari betiyan,tmhari behnetmhari bhanjyan,tmhari phuphyan,tmhari khalayen,tmhari bhanjyan ,aur bathijayn,jinho ne tmhaen doodh pilaya,tmhrae dodh shreek behne,tmhari biwiyn ki mayen,aur tmahri hifazat me tmhari soteli betyan,
jo tmhari un aurtaon me se hian jin se tum taluq qayen kerchuke ho,han agr tum ne taluq qyem nahi kiya to tum per koi gunnah nahi,
tmhare un beton ki biwyan jo tmhare pusht se hoon,aur ye k tum do behen jama kero,magr jo guzar chuka
beshk ALLAH rehm kerne wala bakhshne wala hy. sureh nissa ayat no 23


aur shadi shuda aurtein b siwaye unke j n per tum ne jung me qabza kiya ho(haram hian)
aur tmhare liye ALLAH ka hukum hy aur unke siwa jo b hianwo tmhare liye halal hian,
ta ke tum apne maal se khana abadi chaho na ke azad shehwat rani karo,
phr us fayede ki aewaz,jo tum unse hasil kerte ho,unke mukarar kerdo,mehir unhen ada kerdo,
magr mehir mukarer hojne ka bad tum js bat per b baham razi hojao,us per tmahre liye koi gunnah nahi (sureh nissa ayat no 24 )


sureh nissa ayat no 25
aur jo tum me itni gunjaish na rakhta ho k momin sharif zadyun se nikah kare wo tmhari un momin larkyun se nikah kerle jotmhare qabze me hian,
aur ALLAH tmhare eman ko khoob janta hy aur tum aik dosre se hi ho,esliye unse unke ghar walon ki ijazat se niakh kerlo,aur unheh dastoor ke mutabik unke mahir ada kerdo."


ayat no 32 me farmya gya hy
"aur ALLAH ne tm se aik ko dosre per jo bartari di hy, uski tammana na kro,mard jo kamatey hian us me unka hissa hy,
aur jo aurat kamati hy,us me unka hisa hy,aur ALLAH se uska fazal mango, beshak wo dene wala hy


ye the kuch farman jo quran me wazih kiye aurton k mutabik ,



islam ne her mard chahe aurat k liye baraber hoqooq rkhey hian.beshak smjhne wala sirf insan aur hidayat dena wala sirf ALLAH hy,
duniay me jahan khawatein ka makam hy wo baizat tor per batane wala sirf hmara mahzhab islam hy jsne aurat k liye makhsoos izzat ka drja sunhere alfaon me diya hy ,
aj duniya bhr me agr dekha jaye to wo islam hi hy jahan aurat k liye anek naimatien rakhi gyi hian .aur zindagi serf kerne ka bht asan aur buland ,baizat tareek batya gya hy,
her aurat ,biwi bet bahu, wagera k apne apne makam diye gye hian ,ye sab batne wala seddah aur sacha rasta dikhne wala ALLAH hy .jahan islam me aurat pur aman aur izzat aur aram se zindgi basr ker skti hy,



" aurat pasli(bone) se paida hui hai, wah kisi tarah bhi (muqammal taur par) seedhi nahi ho sakti, agar tu usse fayeda uthaana chahe to is tedh ki maujodagi me hi faayeda utha sakta hai, aur agar tu use seedha karne lagega to use todh baithega, iske tootne se muraad talaaq hai"




( sahih muslim kitabur rijaa, baab wsaah bin-nisa hadith 1468)


ek dusri riwayat me hai


" main tumko wasiyat karta hun ki aurton se bhalaayi karte rahna, kyonki aurton ki paidaish pasli se hui hai, aur pasli uper ki taraf zyada tedhi hoti hai, agar tu use Seedha karna chahega to todh daalega, aur agar rahne dega to tedhi hi rahegi, main tumko wasiyat karta hun ki aurton ke saath bhalaayi ke rahna"

( sahih bukhari, kitabun nikaah, baab wasah bin nisa, h 4890)


Islam ne mard wa aurat ki zahni wa jismaani shakht aur banaawat ko madd'e nazar rakhte hue dono ke liye alag alag huqooq(rights) aur faraiz muqarrar kiye hain,
kuch umoor me dono ko baraabar ka darja diya gaya hai, kuch me kam aur kuch me zyada, jin umoor me baraabari ka darja diya gaya hai, uska tazkirah yahan munaasib hai
islam me izzat wa aabru ki hifaazat ke liye jo ahkaam mardon ke liye hain wahi ahkaam aurton ke liye hain,


izzat wa aabru ke taalluq se aurat ka maamla mard ki nisbat zyaada naazuk hai,


chunanche islam ne aurat ki izzat wa aabru ki hifaazat ke liye alag wa shakht ahkaam naazil farmaaye hain


allah taala farmata hai:


" jo log paak daaman , bholi bhaali, ba' imaan aurton par tohmat lagaata hai wah duniya wa aakhirat me maloon hai aur unke liye bada bhaari azaab hai"


(surah noor 23)


" ghafalaat" se muraad aisi bholi bhaali nek dil khwateen hain jinke zehan fahaashi ke kaamon aur cheezon se khaali hai, Aur is surah ki ayat no 4 me farmaya


" aur jo log paak daaman aurton par zina ki tohmat lagaayen phir 4 gawaah pesh na kar saken to unhe 80 kode lagaao, aur kabhi bhi unki gawaahi qubool na karo, yahi faasiq log hain"


yani is me qazaf (bohtaan taraashi) ki saza bayan ki gayi hai ke jo shakhs kisi paak daaman aurat ya mard par zina ki tohmat lagaaye ( isi tarah jo aurat kisi paak daman aurat ya mard par zina ki tohmat lagaaye) aur wah ba'taur saboot 4 gawaah pesh na kar sake to unke liye 3 ahkaam bayan kiye gaye hain


1- unhe 80 kode lagaao


2- unki gawaahi kabhi qubool na ki jaaye


3- wah faasiq hai
aur isi surah ayat no 20 me aurat ke liye saza ke taur par 100 kode bayaan kiye gaye hain aur agar koi unme se shadi shuda(married) hai to uski saza sang saari hai( yani pattar maar maar kar maut dena)


nabwi daur me ek aurat andhere me namaz ke liye nikli raaste me ek shakhs ne us aurat ko gira diya Aur zabardasti uski asmat dari ki, aurat ke shor machaane par log aagaye, aur zaani pakda gaya, rasool akram(sws) ne use sang saar karwa diya aur aurat ko chhod diya


(tirmizi, abu dawood)


aurat ki izzat wa aabru ke maamle me qaabil zikr aur aham baat ye hai ke shariat e islamiya ne uska koi maadi ya maali mu'aawza qubool karne ki izaazat nahi di


aik aur bat jo aik gehra sach hy wo me aap sbse se share kerna chahti hoon


aur ye baat bhi apni jagah musallam hai ke zamaana jahiliyat me aurton ki jaan ki koi keemat na thi, balke uski paidaish ko bahoosat ki alaamat tasawwur kiya jaata tha, isliye allah taala ne aurat ki jaan ki khaatir quraan kareem me bade ghazab naak lahze me aayat naazil farmayi


" aur jab zinda gaadi hui ladki se sawaal kiya jaayega ke kis gunaah ki wajah se wah qatl ki gayi"


(surah takweer ayat 9)

ye intehaai ghazab naak andaaz hai allah taala Zinda dafan karne waalon ko dekhna bhi pasand na karega aur us masoom se sawaal karega ke tum apna jurm bataao ke kis liye qatal ki gayi ho.


Ladki kahegi allah me jurm to bas itna tha ke tune mujhe ladki bana kar duniya ko raunak bakhsne ke liye bheja tha, magar insaaniyat se aari me walidain ne mere wajood ko tasleem nahi kiya


zamane jahiliyat ka yeh faal aaj bhi hamare culture me maujood hai jahan ladki ka pata chalte hi, uska maa ki god me hi qatl kar diya jaata hai,


jo family planning aur abortion ke naam se poori duniya me bade zor shor se jaari hai, kya kitab muqaddas par imaan rakhne waalon ki nigaahen quraan kareem ki tilaawat karte hue , is ayat kareema se nahi guzarti hain, jisme allah taala ne irshad farmaya

" aur (muflisi) ke khauf se apni awlaad ko qatl na karo, unhe aur tumhe bhi rizq ham hi dete hain,"


(surah bani israel 31)

yani gareebi ke khauf se aulaad ko qatal karna ye allah Taala ki razaqiyat par baraah raast hamla karna hai,
allah ham sabko is gunaah kabeera se bachne ki taufeeq bakhse...... Ameen
khawayein per wohi ehkam aur hoqoq banye gye hian jo mardon k liye banye gye hian,,
bazahir wo dekhne me mard se bilkul alag hy mgar wo b aik insan hy


jse es jahan me apne rab ki ibadat aur sunat e rasool s . a w k batye hue usoolon per amal kerne k liye bhjea gya hy..


Rights of Women In Islam In English

Exploitation of women rights is increasing day by day but at the international level, media is only blaming Islamic society for the suppression of the women rights. They never point out towards western society and they are just busy in damaging the image of Islam. In fact, Islam is the only religion which had defined the rights of women 1400 years ago. The reason behind writing this article is to guide those people who are getting the wrong perception of Islam.
It is totally wrong that western culture favors the rights of women. Actually, they are spoiling the actual image of a woman. In Islam, there is no difference between the rights of men and women. As it is said in Holy Quran, that women and men have got equal rights. Men got preference only because they have to give protection and respect to women.
But the women of this era made this a problematic point. It is sufficient to read the translation of Holy Quran to clear all the misconceptions about this war of rights. According to the western society, Islam is a conservative religion but it is not a truth.
Western society has derided the femininity of women who are also following the wrong ways. The so-called modern woman has lost herself in the modernism of the west. All these things lead them towards prostitution.
But we are Muslims and we should ponder that these things are against the teachings of our religion. If we take an unbiased look on the teachings of Islam, we will come to know that Islam is giving the proper protection to the rights of a woman. It is Islam which has defined the rights like:
  • Spiritual rights
  • Social rights
  • Educational rights
  • Legal rights
  • Political rights
Religious and spiritual rights of women in Islam:
Islam considers a woman and a man equally on religious and spiritual basis. They will get equal reward for their good deeds and punishment for the wrong doings. There is no difference between a man and a woman on the basis of wealth or beauty. It is also said that everyone will get a partner according to his/her nature i.e. noble persons will get noble wives and sinful individuals will marry with bad persons. So it is not right to say that Islam is a conservative religion without having knowledge of its teachings.





Abdul Sattar Edhi History In Urdu | Abdul Sattar Edhi In Urdu | Abdul Sattar Edhi Biography In Urdu

Abdul Sattar Edhi History In Urdu | Abdul Sattar Edhi In Urdu | Abdul Sattar Edhi Biography In Urdu | Abdul Sattar Edhi History In English

 

Abdul Sattar Edhi History In Urdu
“No religion is higher than humanity” 
 


Abdul Sattar Edhi In Urdu


Abdul Sattar Edhi 1928 mein Bharat ki riyasat Gujrat kay shehar Bantawa mein paida huye. Khidmat-e-khalq kay shube mein Pakistan aur duniya ki jani mani shakhsiyat Abdul Sattar Edhi al maroof moulana Edhi Pakistan mein Edhi Foundation kay sadar hain. Edhi Foundation ki shakhein tamam duniya mein pheli hoye hai. In ki wife mohtarma Bilquis Edhi Foundation ki sarbarah hain. Dono ko 1986 mein awami khidmat kay shube mein saman maksa award say nawaza gaya.

Abdul Sattar Edhi ka walid kapray kay tajir thay aur motawasit tabqon say taluq rakhtay thay. App paidaishi leder thay aur shuro say hi apnay doston ki chote chote kamo aur khel tamashe karne per hosla afzai karte thay. Jab in kay walida inhein school jate waqt do pese dete to woh in mein say aik paisa kharch karlate the aur aik paisa kisi zarurat mand ki zarurat puri karne kay liye de detay. 11 saal ki umar mein inhone apni maa ko dekh bhal ka kaam sambhala jo shadeed qisim kay ziya diabetes mein mubtala thein. Choti umar mein hi inhon nay apnay say phelay dusron ki madad karna sikh liya tha, jo agay ki zindagi kay liye kamyabi ki kunji ban gaya.

1947 mein Taqseem-e-Hind kay baad in ka khandan Bharat say hijrat kar kay Pakistan aya aur karachi mein abad huwa. 1951 mein app nay apni jama poungi say aik choti si dokan khareedi aur issi dokan mein app nay aik doctor ki madad say choti si dispensary khuli jinhone in ko tibi imdad ki mubadiyat sikhaye. Iss kay alawa app nay yeaha apne dosto ko tadrees ki taraf bhi ragab kiya. App nay sada tarz-e-zindagi apnaya aur dispensary kay samne bench per hi so late ta kay bawaqt zarurat fouri tour per madad ko pohunch sake.

Edhi Foundation Pakistan

1957 mein Karachi mein bohot bare pemane per flow ki wabah phali jis per Edhi sahab nay fouri tour per rade ammal kiya. inhone nay shehar kay nowah mein khemey lagwaye aur muft madafati adwaiyat farham kein. Mukhiyair hazrat nay in ki dil khul kar madad ki aur in kay kamo ko dekhte huwe baqi Pakistan nay bhi imdadadi raqam say inhone woh puri imarat kharedli jaha dispensary thein aur waha aik zachgi kay liye center aur nurseon ki tarbiyat kay liye school khula aur ye hi Edhi Foundation ka aghaz tha. Anay wale salao mein Edhi Foundation Pakistan kay baqi elaqo tak bhi phelti gai flu ki waba kay baad aik karobari shaksiyat nay Edhi ko kafi bari raqam ki imdad di jis say inhone aik ambulance khareedi jis ko woh khud chalate thay. Ajj Edhi foundation kay pass 600 say zada ambulance hain jo mulk kay tool o arz mein pheli hoi hain.

Karachi aur undorene Sindh kay liye woh khud rawana hote hain aur Edhi foundation ki hadsat per rade ammal ki raftar aur khidmat municipal ki khidmaat ziada taiz behtar hain. Hospital aur ambulance khidmaat kay alawa Edhi foundation nay clinic zachgi ghar pagal khana mazoro kay liye ghar blood bank yateem khane lawaris bacho ko goud lene kay marakaz panha hain aur school khule hai is kay elawa ye foundation nursing aur ghardari kay cource bhi karwati hain... Edhi marakazi aik khasiyat ye bhi hai kay Edhi marakz kay bahir bacha gari ka ahtemam hai ta kay khawateen bache ki dekh bhal nahi kar sakti apne bache ko yeaha chor kar ja sake is bache ko Edhi foundation apne yateem khane mein panha deti hai aur isko muft taleem di jati hai.

Edhi International Ambulance ka qiyam

Foundation nay sirf Pakistan mein hi nahi bal kay bain ul aqwami satah per bhi turraki ki hai. Islami duniya mein Edhi foundation har musibat aur mushkil waqt mein aham imadad farham karti hai. Jahaan imada aur nigrani Edhi bazat khud mutasira mumalik mein jakar kartay hain. Pakistan kay elawa foundation jin mumalik mein kam kar rahi hai in mein say chand naam Afghanistan,Iraq, Chechnya, Bosnia, Sudan, Ethiopia aur qudrati afaat sonami say mutasira mumalik kay hain.16 August 2006 ko Bilquis Edhi aur kubra Edhi ki janib say Edhi international ambulance kay qayam kiya gaya jis kay tehat duniya kay ameer gareeb ho ya diniya ka koi bhi mulk America,Uk, Israel, Shaam, Iran Bharat, Bangladesh hon, mein ye ambulance batour atiya di jarahi hain aur inhein hidiyat ki gaye hai kay woh ye ambulances ko 5 saal tak istemal karne kay baad frokht kar kay iss ki raqam kherati kaamo mein istemal karein.

Begum Bilquis Edhi aur Kubra Edhi nay is mouqe per kaha kay woh duniya ka ameer ya ghareeb mulk ho wahaan mareez mareez hi hota hai. ambulance ka maqsad insano ki jane bachana hota hai aur humay iss baat ki khushi ho gi kay Edhi International Ambulance Foundation ki ambulances duniya bhar mein insano ki janein bachayein khwa woh London, New York , Tokyo, Tilabib, Beirut aur Damishq hoon. inhon nay kaha kay insaniyat ki ban ul aqwami khidmat kay hawale say hamara aik qadam aur age bhar raha hai. Ajj Pakistan kay alawa Islami duniya mein bhi Edhi nay aik ghar khudgharz aur muhtarma shaks kay tour sherat pai hai shurat aur izat kay bawud inhone apni sada zindagi ko tarak nahi kiya woh sada rawati Pakistani libas pehante hain jo sirf aik ya do din in ki mumlikat hai iske alawa in ki malkiyat khele joto ka aik jora hai jis ko woh sabqa 20 sal say istemal kar rahe hain Aur ye bhi haqiqat hai kay Edhi foundation ka begat aik caror ka hai jis mein say woh apni zat per aik paisa bhi kharch nahi karte.
Edhi Foundation Ambulance Service
App kay beta Faisal batate hai jab Afghanistan mein markaz ka iftetah kiya ja raha tha to amla mehmano aur sahafiuo kay bethne kay liye kursiya kharedli jab Edhi wahan aye to woh is baat say sakht khafa huwe khun kay in kay khayal mein ye raqam kisi zarurat mand ki madad per kharch ki ja sakti thi. Iss raat clinic kay farash per ambulance kay drivers kay sath soye. Ajj Edhi foundation taraqi ki rah per gamazan hai. Edhi mustaqbil ki taraf dekhte huwe kahte hain, woh Pakistan kay har alaqay mein per hospital tameer karna chahte hain. Agar cheh in ko ahteram kay tour per moulana ka laqab diya gaya hai lakin woh zati tour per is ko pasand nahi kartay. Inhone kabhi kisi mazhabi school mein taleem hasil nahi ki. Woh apne app ko doctor kehalwana pasand kartay hain. khun kay insaniyat ki khidmaat per Pakistan mein Institute of Business Administration say doctorate ki azarai digri di gai hai.
Genis Book of world Record
Woh iss baat ko bhi sakht napasand karte hain jab log in ki ya in kay kam ki taref kartey hain. Woh hukumat ya sabqa mazhabi jamaton say imdad bhi nahi latay khun kay woh samjhte hain kay in ki imdad mashrot hoti hai. General zia ul huq aur atalvi hukumat ki imdad inhone issi khayal say wapas kardi thi. 1996 mein in ki khudnost sawane hayat “khuli kitab” shaya hoi 1997 ki Genis Book of world Record kay mutabiq Edhi foundation ki ambulance service duniya ki sub say bari falahi ambulance service hai. Edhi bazat khud bagair choti kiye taweel tareen arse tak kam karne kay alami record kay hamil hain aur record bane kay baad bhi abhi tak inhone nay chutti nahi li.

1988 mein inhe lenun aman inam mila. 1992 mein Pal Hires Rotary International foundation ka felo banaya gaya 2000 mein insaniyat, aman aur bhai charay ka International Balzan Prize mila aur 2005 mein almi Meman tanzeem ki taraf say life time achievement ka azaz diya gaya. 

Abdul Sattar Edhi History In English
Abdul Sattar Edhi is a philanthropist of Pakistan. He was born in 1928 in Bantva, a small village of Indian Province of Gujarat. His mother was paralyzed and mentally ill, died when he was 19 years old. This incident made him inclined to work for humanity like old, mentally ill and poor people. In 1947, Edhi and his family migrated to Pakistan. In order to earn his living Abdul Sattar Edhi initially started to work as a peddler. After a couple of years, he with the support of some members of his community decided to establish a free dispensary. Soon his personal vision made him decide to establish a Welfare trust named as “ABDUL SATTAR EDHI FOUNDATION”. A maternity home was also established and emergency ambulance service was started in the city Karachi. Now, his ambulance service is the world largest ambulance service. There are 8 hospitals and blood banks in Karachi. 50,000 orphans are in Edhi homes and 1 million children are delivered to Edhi homes.
He got a lot of international and national awards for his services for mankind. International awards are:

  • Ramon Magsaysay Award for Public Service in 1986.
  • Lenin Peace Prize in 1988
  • Paul Harris Fellow from Rotatory International Foundation in1993
  • Largest Voluntary Ambulance Organization of the World – Guinness Book of World Records in 2000
  • Hamden Award for volunteers in Humanitarian Medical Services in 2000, UAE
  • International Balzan Prize in 2000 for Humanity, Peace and Brotherhood, Italy
  • Honorary Doctorate degree from the Institute of Business Administration Karachi in 2006
  • UNESCO-Madanjeet Singh Prize 2009
  • Ahmadiyya Muslim Peace Prize in 2010
National awards are:
  • Silver Jubilee Shield by College of Physicians and Surgeons, Pakistan, from 1962–1987.
  • The Social Worker of Sub-Continent by Government of Sind, Pakistan in 1989.
  • Nishan-e-Imtiaz, civil decoration from Government of Pakistan in 1989.
  • Recognition of meritorious services to oppressed humanity during eighties by Ministry of Health and Social Welfare, Government of Pakistan in 1989.
  • Pakistan Civic Award from the Pakistan Civic Society in 1992.
  • Shield of Honor by Pakistan Army (E & C)
  • Khidmat Award by Pakistan Academy of Medical Sciences
  • Human Rights Award by Pakistan Human Rights Society
He and his life partner Balqees Edhi working for the welfare of society. They are busy in providing medical assistance, education to girls, taking care of old and orphans. He spends his whole life for the service of others. His relief camps were in Middle East, Africa, and US during 2005. He believes in humanity. Our society worth living, there is need of personalities like Mr. Abdul Sattar Edhi. He says “I am Muslim but I am a Humanitarian above all, because the basic principles of all religions are rooted in humanity.