ماشاء االلہ ۔۔۔ بہت پیاری انداز سہ اپنے پڑا ہے۔۔ ہم تو درود حضور میں پڑتے تھے اللہ تعالی صحت و سلامت رکھے دعا طالب 🙏
@houzydjazair550119 күн бұрын
Shoukran shaykh
@Uzair_Of_Babylon46520 күн бұрын
Great video keep it up you're doing amazing things 😁👍
@monahaque166020 күн бұрын
Very informative.
@Mahmood4297819 күн бұрын
Masha'Allah, what are the sources for these tadhkirat/memoirs of Abdal-Kadir al Jazairi and Imam Sham'il Daghestani (raHmatullah 'alayhum)?
@HasanAnyabwile20 күн бұрын
Very interesting and informative.
@Fellagha-d9z18 күн бұрын
Whilst living in Damas he fedended and saved a great number of Christians from murderous mob.
@BarryH90dz20 күн бұрын
I appreciate that you referred to the algerians as berbers, although it would have been even better if you said amazigh 😁
@Blue_Appple-es5ul18 күн бұрын
❤❤
@EthanKironus806718 күн бұрын
0:28 - Please pardon my ignorance, but are the hassaneen and hussaineen descendants of the grandsons of the Prophet Muhammad, may the peace and blessings of Allah be upon him?
@legndo545615 күн бұрын
Possibly yes
@legndo545615 күн бұрын
Music no good in intro 0:04 JazakALLAH kharian
@TheBigSavvyBoss9 күн бұрын
There's a lot of controversy and commotion about this guy actually. He surrendered to the French and swore to NEVER EVER raise a finger against France. Before that he shamefully signed the Tafna treaty allowing France to crush the Moqranj resistance further east. Abdelkader was getting a stipend from the French government all his life after he surrendered, and so did all his kids after him He was a freemasonry member and got soooooo many decorations from the "occupier"... All in all, this guy is not a good example to follow seriously.
@foufoua19 күн бұрын
When are u give a dars about mohamad ibn abdelkarim el khattabi who in the 1920's united the riffian people in northern morocco and started a jihad against the spain and french colonisers and kicked them out and started a new state for about 6 years
@SunsetNova19 күн бұрын
In the end he sold himself to the devil by becoming a Free Mason.
@ahmedbenchikhlehocine942519 күн бұрын
@@SunsetNova get your facts right you will be judged by the greater don't spread lies
@SunsetNova19 күн бұрын
@ The lodge Les Pyramides of Alexandria in Egypt initiated Abdelkader into Freemasonry on June 18, 1864. Abdelkader was awarded a Star of Magnificence from the Masonic Order of France. Brother as much as you dislike it this is historical fact. As Muslims we have to speak the truth.
@Mahmood4297819 күн бұрын
@@SunsetNova source?
@Mahmood4297818 күн бұрын
@@SunsetNova waiting on the sources.
@dhuss1418 күн бұрын
@@Mahmood42978 Where are my comments?
@YuvaJuba19 күн бұрын
THERE WAS NO "JIHAD" DURING THE ALGERIAN REVOLUTION. IT WAS A BLOODY WAR FOR THE INDEPENDENCE AND FREEDOM. ALGERIAN WERE FIGHTING FOR THEIR EXISTENCE. I FIND THE USE OF WORD "JIHAD" AS IF ALGERIAN WERE FIGHTING FOR RELIGION AND FAITH, IS INAPPROPRIATE.
@هدى-م2ل18 күн бұрын
Yes it was a jihad whether you like it or not, the type of fights emir abd elkader took are jihad , maybe some people were fighting to save their honor and not for the sake of God but this doesn't apply for the rest especially the revolutions lead by local zawayas
@YuvaJuba18 күн бұрын
@هدى-م2ل I see your profile says it all. . You're completely out of your minds people. Algeria was colonized for over a century. At one point, they want their independence. Maybe your Amir fought for religious purposes but my grand parents and millions more algerians wanted their independence end of story.
@Chems-Eddine18 күн бұрын
Why are u trying so hard to distort historical facts , algerian resistance and Algerian revolution was fought for freedom and identity and one of the core components of our identity is Islam , the leaders of the revolution themselves adopted the Islamic tone and context the writings are out there for every one to read so stop it with the historical revisionism that only serves ur narrow world view .
@YuvaJuba18 күн бұрын
@Chems-Eddine I'm going to say it again; there wasn't jihad revolution during Algerian war against the French imperialism. It's a fact. Religious orthodox like you are the ones who are actually trying to distort the meaning of the war and make it sound more like "a religious revolution". This is pure BS. The majority of Algerian war leaders at the time, thought they might be Muslim for their majority but they never claimed that the fight was solely religious. You're desperately trying to show to the world the wrong facts just like the Algerian authorities did in public schools where real history never thought. Good day
@mustafamar143719 күн бұрын
Remember that Algeria had a painful civil war between muslims. Today the majority of prisoners in France are from Algerian and other muslim backgrounds. French culture is beneficial and should have been kept.
@Mahmood4297819 күн бұрын
Colonial astroturf comment.
@bilsid19 күн бұрын
That’s the opposite of what Muslims need.
@هدى-م2ل18 күн бұрын
No it's not and we didn't have a civil war it was a conflict btw the Algerian army and an islamic party that lead to devastating results upon the people, the French colonialism was one of the reasons why we ended up like that
@Chems-Eddine18 күн бұрын
A culture that was predicated on opression , genocide and subjugation of algerians , beautiful culture indeed , unfortunately one can't teach people like u to have honor , pride and dignity , learn to live like a free man or be quiet .
@Mahmood4297818 күн бұрын
@@هدى-م2ل Indeed, if people dare to be honest, French colonialism and culture are likely the largest contributing factors to the situation of Muslims in France.
@dhuss1420 күн бұрын
Guénon’s initiation was effected by Swedish convert to Islam Ivan Aguéli, who was also interested in Kabbalah, and performed under the authority of the friend of Abdul Qadir al Jazairi, Sheikh Abder Rahman Illaysh al Kabir, a Freemason and head of the Maliki Madhhab at Al Azhar University. As a Freemason, al Kabir also aimed to demonstrate the relationship between the symbols of Freemasonry and Islam.[4]
@Tamar-sz8ox20 күн бұрын
Right , you know ? Kabbalah = Allah Kabba + Allah which means to receive
@dhuss1419 күн бұрын
@@Tamar-sz8ox People are still doing this? Laughable etymology..
@dhuss1420 күн бұрын
Most important to the transmission of Sufism to the West was Réne Guénon, a one-time member of the Hermetic Brotherhood of Light. Guénon founded the occult school of Traditionalism, which suggests that all exoteric religions share a single underlying occult tradition Therefore, according to Guénon, one could choose any religion as one’s outward belief, and so he chose Islam.
@dhuss1420 күн бұрын
Al Jazairi the famous Freemason: The lodge Henry IV at the Orient of Paris invited him to join the masonic brotherhood, but because of unspecified difficulties in doing so in France, they asked the lodge Les Pyramides of Alexandria in Egypt to carry out his initiation. The lodge accepted, and ʿAbd alQādir was initiated there in the first degree on June 18, 1864. Abdul Qadir was also friends with Jane Digby and Sir Richard Burton, the famous British explorer, spy and fellow Freemason, who had been made consul in Damascus in 1869. Digby, or Lady Ellenborough (1807-1881), was an English aristocrat who lived a scandalous life of romantic adventures, having had four husbands and many lovers. Burton and Digby were also close friends of Wilfred Scawen Blunt and his wife Lady Anne, a grand-daughter of poet Lord Byron. Blunt was the handler of British agent Jamal ud Din al Afghani and his disciple, Mohammed Abduh, the founders of the fundamentalist tradition of Islam known as Salafism, from which emerged the Muslim Brotherhood.
@n.a.139720 күн бұрын
Stop the cut n paste, najdi.
@dhuss1420 күн бұрын
@@n.a.1397 I'm not a najdi
@dhuss1420 күн бұрын
Burton was also an avid occultist, and like Abdul Qadir, a member of the Qadiriyya Sufi order, because “Sufism,” he claimed, is “the Eastern parent of Freemasonry.”[3] Burton was also a member of the Theosophical Society of Blavatsky, who visited him in Damascus. According to historian K. Paul Johnson, Afghani was one of Blavatsky’s “Ascended Masters,” from whom she learned her central doctrines. Afghani was the reputed head of a mysterious order known as the Hermetic Brotherhood of Luxor (or Light), which exercised a profound influence over the occult societies of the period, culminating in the Ordo Templi Orientis (OTO) of the scandalous Aleister Crowley.