Monday 30 May 2022

Congratulations to all the brilliant minds

Congratulations to all the brilliant minds who have cleared this year’s UPSC civil services exam. 

Serving India is a great responsibility, Step ahead with utmost integrity and commitment.

Best wishes for your future careers.


Special mention of Shruti Sharma who topped the list followed by Ankita Agarwal and Gamini Singla.


Kudos to Jamia Islamia Residential coaching academy for making aspirants dreams come true, A total of 23 candidates including all India topper have qualified the Civil Services exam from Jamia RCA.



Thursday 19 May 2022

IPL final to start at 8 PM

 


The reason for an 8PM start, instead of 7:30, is the IPL closing ceremony


The final of the Indian Premier League (IPL) 2022 will start at 8PM IST. This, Cricbuzz understands, is in view of an additional feature lined up on the final day - a cultural closing ceremony.

The final of IPL 2022 will be played at the Narendra Modi Stadium at Motera in Ahmedabad next Sunday (May 29).

Cricbuzz has learnt from the BCCI and IPL authorities that the closing ceremony, involving Bollywood personalities, is scheduled to start at 6:30 PM IST and will run for a duration of 50 minutes. The toss will be held at 7:30 PM IST and the match will start 30 minutes later.


Incidentally, the news comes just a day after Cricbuzz reported that the BCCI's preferred timing for starting the evening IPL matches is 8PM, which used to be the schedule the league followed for the first 10 years, from 2008-17.

The opening and closing ceremonies involving Bollywood stars were regular features of the IPL in its first decade. It was discontinued under the Supreme Court-appointed Committee of Administrators (CoA) regime for three years which the current dispensation followed for the first two years of its charge.

Even this year there was no opening ceremony on March 26, when the IPL started. The decision to hold the closing ceremony was an afterthought, taken at an Apex Council meeting later.

The IPL has reached the business-end of the competition with the league stage concluding this Sunday (May 22). The four-match play-offs are being staged in Kolkata and Ahmedabad with the former hosting the Qualifier 1 and the Eliminator on May 24 and 25 and the last two games in Ahmedabad.


Wednesday 18 May 2022

Can you use perfumes and aftershaves that have alcohol in them?




Question:

Are we permitted to use deodorants, creams, perfumes, and other cosmetics containing alcohol?

ANSWER : 
Yes it is permitted to use deodorants and creams containing alcohol, as it is invariably synthetic alcohol and not the khamr (wine) that is absolutely impermissible and filthy.

Non-wine alcohol is not ritually impure. As a result, it is permitted in external uses, such as in perfumes and soaps.

 [Mufti Taqi Usmani, Takmilat Fath al-Mulhim; Shaykh Mustafa Zarqa, Fatawa]

However, it is more religiously precautious not to, because of the difference of opinion about it.

According to the Indian Hanafi scholars, the fatwa in our times is that synthetic alcohol (and all alcohol not considered ‘khamr’) is tahir (pure), and permitted to use and consume AS LONG AS:

• it is not used as an intoxicant;
• it is not used as intoxicants as used (i.e. for alcoholic consumption, even a little);
• it is not used in an amount that intoxicates;
• it is not used in vain (lahw).

This was Mufti Mahmoud Ashraf Usmani’s explanation, and it is supported by many fatwas in the great Indian Hanafi fatwa references of the 20th Century. This is the position of Imam Abu Hanifa himself. Later scholars said that the fatwa was on the position of Imam Muhammad ibn al-Hasan al-Shaybani, Abu Hanifa’s student, that all alcohol is najis and haram, even in small quantities, because of widespread fitna. In our times, because of the widespread use of alcohol in all sorts of things, it has become very difficult to avoid. This is why great Hanafis of our times gave the above mentioned fatwa.

Answered by Shaykh Faraz Rabbani
Executive Director, SeekersGuidance & SeekersHub Toronto


Saturday 14 May 2022

Mohabbat Kay Sajday.... Namazi kahan hai Lyrics

Allah Allah Allah Allah Allah

Allah Allah Allah Allah Allah 



Wo dhoopon me tapti zameenon pe sajde

Safar me wo ghodon ki zeenon pe sajde

Chattanon ki unchi jabeenon pe sajde
Wo sehra bayaban ke seenon pe sajde
Halalat pe sajde museebat me sajde
Wo faqon me hajat me ghurbat me sajde
Wo jangon jadal me harasat me sajde
Laga teer zakhmon ki halat me sajde
Wo gharon ki wahshat me purnoor sajde
Wo khanjar ke saye me masroor sajde
Wo raton ko khalwat se maamoor sajde
Wo lambi rakaton se mashoor sajde
Wo sajde muhafiz madadgar sajde
Ghamon ke moqabil 'atardar sajde
Najaat aur bakhshish ke salar sajde
Jhuka sar to bante the talwar sajde
Wo sajdon ke shauqeen ghazi kahan hain
Zameen poochhti hai namazi kahan hain
Allah Allah Allah Allah Allah
Allah Allah Allah Allah Allah
Hamare bujhe dil se bezar sajde
Khayalon me uljhe huye char sajde
Musallen hain resham ke beemar sajde
Chamakti deewaron me laachar sajde
Riyakar sajde nadar sajde
Benoor bezauq murdar sajde
Saron ke sitam se hain sangsar sajde
Dilon ki nahoosat se masmar sajde
Hai mafroor sajde hain maghroor sajde
Hai kamzor be jaan m'azoor sajde
Gunahon ki chakki me hai choor sajde
Ghaseete ghulamon se majboor sajde
Ke sajdon me sar hai bhatakte hain sajde
Sarasar saron par latakte hain sajde
Nigahen khuzu me khatakte hain sajde
Du'aon se daman jhatakte hain sajde
Wo sajdon ke shauqeen ghazi kahan hain
Zameen puchhti hai namazi kahan hain
Allah Allah Allah Allah Allah
Allah Allah Allah Allah Allah
Chalo aao karte hain tauba ke sajde
Bahut tishnagi se tawajjo ke sajde
Maseeha ke aage madawa ke sajde
Nidamat se sarkham shikasta se sajde
Raza wale sajde wafa wale sajde
Amal ki taraf rahnuma wale sajde
Sarapa adab iltija wale sajde
Bahut 'ajizi se haya wale sajde
Nigahon ke darban rudar sajde
Wo chehre ki zohra chamakdar sajde
Sarasar badal de jo kirdar sajde
Ke ban jayen jeene ke atwar sajde
Khuzu ki quba me yaqeen wale sajde
Lahad ke makeen hamnasheen wale sajde
Hon Sh'afi ya Mehshar jabeen wale sajde
Hon Sh'afi ya Mehshar jabeen wale sajde
Wo sajdon ke shauqeen ghazi kahan hain
Zameen poochhti hai namazi kahan hain
Allah Allah Allah Allah Allah
Allah Allah Allah Allah Allah


Link for video:
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=CmpmdEUM6aw&ab_channel=shifaclinic%26ayurvedicnaturopathycentre

Tuesday 10 May 2022

May Motivation




Improve Your Life Now:- 1. Face your fears. 2. Eat better. 3. Admit your mistakes. 4. Refine your goals. 5. Believe in yourself. 6. Ask for wisdom. 7. Conserve your time.

8. Invest your profits. 








 







Tuesday 3 May 2022

Eid ul Fitr 2022 - What Eid means for Muslims

What Eid means for Muslims



Eid in Arabic means “feast, festival, holiday.”

Eid is a worldwide festival and celebration for Muslims. During the calendar year there are two Eid’s that are celebrated by Muslims. Eid ul Fitr, which means “festival to break the fast”, is at the end of the holy month of Ramadan in which Muslims fast for a whole month.

Eid ul Fitr is also known as the lesser Eid, and is determined by the confirmed sighting of the new moon. Eid is a time for reflection and starting afresh, a time to rejoice with family and friends, but also a time for remembering those who are less fortunate. It’s a time to count our blessings while also giving charity to those in need. Fasting teaches empathy and compassion for those less fortunate. In this time of year it provides Muslims belief and the opportunity to feel closer to God by carrying out various works of charity to benefit the poor and by offering prayers imposed and enacted. There are special morning Eid prayers offered in congregation to accompany the 5 daily prayers to mark the occasion. Prophet Muhammad (peace be upon him) reported that servants who get cleaned by fasting and worshipping should wish for whatever they want from Allah in Eid prayers.

Eid is a momentous, happy and joyous occasion shared with family and friends, Muslim and non-Muslim. A celebration of this nature, with family and friends following a month fasting, is a reminder and expression of trying to be a better person in all aspects (health, spiritual, belief and faith)




Eid’ul Adha

The second Eid is Eid ul Adha, which means “Festival of Sacrifice” and occurs two months after Eid’ul Fitr in which Muslims sacrifice animals for the sake of Allah. The date of Eid al-Adha also varies in accordance with the Islamic lunar calendar, falling on the tenth day of Dhu al-Hijjah (the twelfth month).

Eid ul Adha is known as the greater Eid and commemorates the willingness of the Prophet Abraham to sacrifice his son Ishmael as an act of obedience to Allah at which point Allah showed great mercy by switching a ram with Ishmael at the last moment of sacrifice. Muslims believe that the very moment Abraham raised the knife, Allah instructed him to stop, that Abraham had passed the test, and to replace Ishmael with a sacrificial ram. In Britain, anyone wishing to sacrifice a sheep is required to make arrangements for the sheep to be slaughtered humanely.

Eid ul Adha also marks the end of Hajj, the annual pilgrimage to Saudi Arabia. Hajj is the pilgrimage to Mecca, Islam’s holiest site, and is an integral part of the Muslim faith. According to the Koran, all Muslims who can afford to should make the journey to Saudi Arabia at least once in their lifetime. Every year, at least two million Muslims will make the pilgrimage and stand before the Kaaba, a shrine built by Ibrahim, and pray to Allah. The prophet Muhammad Peace be upon him, said that a person who performs Hajj properly “will return as a newly born baby and hence free of all sins”.

Islam teaches Muslims how to celebrate Eid. The day begins with morning prayers, followed by visits to family and friends and the exchange of food and gifts. Muslims are obliged to share food and money with the poor so that they can take part in the celebrations. On these days, Muslims bathe and wear their best clothes. Even though fasting is not permitted on Eid days and food plays a big part in Eid, the major part of the celebration is not eating or drinking; rather, it is a prayer that brings Muslims together to remember Allah’s bounties and celebrate in his glory and greatness. Eid is a chance to multiply good deeds by bringing happiness and pleasure to the hearts of other Muslims, helping and supporting the poor and needy and by getting involved in pastimes that emphasize the strong and caring Islamic character.




Eid is a day to cheer and to laugh with all your heart. It’s a day to be grateful to Allah for all of his heavenly blessings on us.
Wishing you a happy Eid.


Jameel Aahmed Milansaar
Asst. General Secretary.
All India Milli Council Karnataka.