Forwarded from Islamic State of Mind
Forwarded from Fabihodahom
A message to Shia'a;
On the martyrdom of Hussein -Ψ±ΨΆΩ Ψ§ΩΩΩ ΨΉΩΩ-
On the martyrdom of Hussein -Ψ±ΨΆΩ Ψ§ΩΩΩ ΨΉΩΩ-
Forwarded from Muslim Memes [M. Inc]π§π§ββοΈ (mm π»)
Forwarded from Ψ§Ψ¨Ω ΩΩΨ³Ψ·ΩΩ
Ψ§ΩΨ³ΩΨ§Ω
ΨΉΩΩΩΩ
ΩΨ±ΨΩ
Ψ© Ψ§ΩΩΩ ΩΨ¨Ψ±ΩΨ§ΨͺΩ
please make the best du'a for my (or our) teacher/ustadh/mu'allim, he's undergoing brain surgery tomorrow
please make the best du'a for my (or our) teacher/ustadh/mu'allim, he's undergoing brain surgery tomorrow
Forwarded from Cool Guides
Important Etiquettes to Remember When Visiting the Sick:
Abd al-FattΔh AbΕ« Ghuddah (d. 1417) said:
"The visitor of the sick should be clean in clothing, pleasant in scent, and neat in cleanliness, so that his soul may be uplifted and his health may be refreshed.
It is not good to enter wearing decorative or festive clothes, nor is it good to be heavily perfumed, as this may disturb and harm the patient due to their weak tolerance and frail strength.
The visitor should not inform the patient or talk in their presence about what might cause them distress, such as news of a loss in trade, mention of the dead, bad news for the patient, or anything similar that might upset, sadden, or affect the patientβs health or feelings.
The visitor should not inquire about the patientβs illness with excessive questioning, as such detailed inquiry by the visitor does not benefit the patient unless the visitor is a specialist doctor in the illness.
Nor should the visitor suggest any medicine or food that was beneficial to them or that they heard to be beneficial, as this might lead the patientβdue to their ignorance or the severity of their conditionβto use it, which could harm them and disrupt the doctorβs treatment, and it might even be a cause of the patientβs death.
The visitor should not oppose the doctor in the presence of the patient, if they are not a person of knowledge and specialization, as this may cause the patient to doubt the doctorβs prescription."
β MΔ«n 'AdabΔ« al-Islam
Abd al-FattΔh AbΕ« Ghuddah (d. 1417) said:
"The visitor of the sick should be clean in clothing, pleasant in scent, and neat in cleanliness, so that his soul may be uplifted and his health may be refreshed.
It is not good to enter wearing decorative or festive clothes, nor is it good to be heavily perfumed, as this may disturb and harm the patient due to their weak tolerance and frail strength.
The visitor should not inform the patient or talk in their presence about what might cause them distress, such as news of a loss in trade, mention of the dead, bad news for the patient, or anything similar that might upset, sadden, or affect the patientβs health or feelings.
The visitor should not inquire about the patientβs illness with excessive questioning, as such detailed inquiry by the visitor does not benefit the patient unless the visitor is a specialist doctor in the illness.
Nor should the visitor suggest any medicine or food that was beneficial to them or that they heard to be beneficial, as this might lead the patientβdue to their ignorance or the severity of their conditionβto use it, which could harm them and disrupt the doctorβs treatment, and it might even be a cause of the patientβs death.
The visitor should not oppose the doctor in the presence of the patient, if they are not a person of knowledge and specialization, as this may cause the patient to doubt the doctorβs prescription."
β MΔ«n 'AdabΔ« al-Islam
Forwarded from Muslim Memes [M. Inc]π§π§ββοΈ (mm π»)