Shiekh Abdul hakims lecture on hagar is most unique and shows her in a different light. It makes me wonder why haven't our new and old scholars devoted much time and attention to her , she is really the foundress of ishmaeli. Her sacrifice and patience by most of us is seen as given and nothing extraordinary which is sad. After today's lecture I see her as an inspiration. Thank u sheikh hakim murad. May Allah swt preserve u ,u r indeed a blessing to the ummah
Mind-blowing perspective. While pondering other than Khadija Ra , Fatima Ra Ayisha Ra, Asia Ra, Mariam Ra - only of late i was pondering on , and inspiring women in Islam Was Thinking of Hagar and the memories of Safwa Marwa sayii and your lecture just came as light from above ,( i did not have resource to delve) W would request if you can share any thing on Sumaiya bin Khattab the first woman martyr, We pray for you, from Bangladesh, Jazakallah Khairan
Uhibbuka fee Allah ❤️ May Allah Safeguard you and increase you in barakah and knowledge. May Allah rain his Rahmah upon you internally and outwardly. May The Most High grant you success in this life and the Hereafter. May Allah keep flooding you with these sublime lights with which he nourishes the hearts and the souls of those He loves. AMEEN
Excellent presentation. Lots of food for thought. Would have been nice if Sheikh Murad included Hajira’s profile from Hadith. Would have been interesting to see the contrasts of this fascinating leader from both the biblical and the Islamic perspectives with quotes from Quraan and Hadith just like references from the bible was quoted.
Great video, but the Shayk gets the narration of the four perfect women wrong. In the authentic narrations, Aisha (ra) is not of the four women, it is only Asiya, Khadija, Fatima, and Maryam.
It is important to see spiritual leaders as those who would be who they were, if they were not influences. It is also important to realize that there are different models for different people and those are viewed differently by different people.
- Judaeo-Islamic realities- a shared theological and cultural inheritance - Hagar at the heart of Islamic tawadduh, ibaadah through her story and burial in Mecca - Hagar as emancipatory figure for female, anti-slavery, feminist blackness - Pauline, evangelical inheritance of otherisation i.e. of Hagarian, Ishmaelic line that gives us Muhammad and the 'Saracens' - Islam and the sacredness of the weak, vulnerable and the outcasted- a timeless, spiritual mapping out of challenging hegemony, tyranny and elitism - God's elevation of the single mother - Western notions of the Other, the 'Turk' - the collective psychosocial longing for racial and cultural homogenisation- psychic projections
@@bosbanon3452 Western Europeans have called Muslims Turks or Saracens for very long. Also Mohamedans, doesn't mean all Muslims have a Turkic racial background.
Salaam frm Indian Administered Kashmir. Plz.provide some clue of Time,as Time Zone Difference make it Difficult to Understand Time for Video Stream Correctly
Wasalam, it will premiere at 7.30pm Kashmir time every weekday this Ramadan. You may find the schedule for our entire Ramadan programme here bit.ly/RL21-timetable
Incredible point made around 45:00, it always felt like the distaste of Muslims by (primarily Western) Christians today came from previous narratives. I remember reading about St. Thomas Aquinas' views of Muslims and the way he described them as animalistic creatures who're slaves to their lusts is pretty similar to how Sam Harris and those types describe Muslims today (but with obviously more polite language). It's interesting but also a little disconcerting. Muslim communities in the West need to build productive relationships with Christians in the general response against the problems of modernity, but how can you overcome such a history?
Is this idea of Hagar being the outcast or those that are Egyptian, as you suggest the Egypt is where the Israelites were exiled to. Is this a Kings James Version idea or something post KJV was the view of the Christian belief and Hagars ethnicity always fround upon as not from the house of Judah. Or is this a later more contemporary view post KJV?
“Are we persuaded by this idea that this foundress of Islam happens to be America’s famous biblical feminist icon? Is there any irony or strangeness there? Do we make anything of it?”
Maghreb King who lost to Ancient Egyptian Pharaoh (that he was still descended from Nabi Saleh, previous prophet of Abraham) That means Hagar was adopted or became the leader of all Pharaoh's slaves
Utterly fantastic presentation, msA!
Alhamdulillah! If you'd like the slides and reading list, please enrol in the Paradigms of Leadership online lecture series at bit.ly/cmc-pol
How can anyone be so sophisticated and eloquent.. Alhamdulillah for bringing so much beauty and excellence to this sublime religion 🌹
I believe the sublimity and beauty of our religion is what has beautified him and not the other way around:)
@@yahya2925 well said
@@yahya2925 my thoughts exactly brother.
Incredible how he tied this together with our lives now... Amazing
Shiekh Abdul hakims lecture on hagar is most unique and shows her in a different light. It makes me wonder why haven't our new and old scholars devoted much time and attention to her , she is really the foundress of ishmaeli. Her sacrifice and patience by most of us is seen as given and nothing extraordinary which is sad. After today's lecture I see her as an inspiration.
Thank u sheikh hakim murad. May Allah swt preserve u ,u r indeed a blessing to the ummah
May Allah swt raise your station to His most exalted standards here and in the hereafter Ameen ❤❤
Shaykh Is ❤ Keep guiding us, I owe you my life.
Absolutely amazing insight. Many thanks to the sh Abdul Hakim.
Fabulous ..... Thank you so much respected Sheikh Abdal Hakim. Utterly brilliant.
Mind-blowing perspective. While pondering other than Khadija Ra , Fatima Ra Ayisha Ra, Asia Ra, Mariam Ra - only of late i was pondering on , and inspiring women in Islam Was Thinking of Hagar and the memories of Safwa Marwa sayii and your lecture just came as light from above ,( i did not have resource to delve) W
would request if you can share any thing on Sumaiya bin Khattab the first woman martyr,
We pray for you, from Bangladesh, Jazakallah Khairan
Uhibbuka fee Allah ❤️ May Allah Safeguard you and increase you in barakah and knowledge. May Allah rain his Rahmah upon you internally and outwardly. May The Most High grant you success in this life and the Hereafter. May Allah keep flooding you with these sublime lights with which he nourishes the hearts and the souls of those He loves. AMEEN
I have absolutely loved and enjoyed this lecture Jazakallah for covering it.
Fascinating our mother Hagar, story! thanks
Excellent and highly thought provoking lecture mashAllah. JazakAllahu khair
Masha-Allah. May Allah reward you immensely and protect you.
Thank you so much
Excellent presentation. Lots of food for thought. Would have been nice if Sheikh Murad included Hajira’s profile from Hadith. Would have been interesting to see the contrasts of this fascinating leader from both the biblical and the Islamic perspectives with quotes from Quraan and Hadith just like references from the bible was quoted.
This is the first time I see a video on Hagar, interesting
Great video, but the Shayk gets the narration of the four perfect women wrong. In the authentic narrations, Aisha (ra) is not of the four women, it is only Asiya, Khadija, Fatima, and Maryam.
Thanks for the knowledge
It is important to see spiritual leaders as those who would be who they were, if they were not influences.
It is also important to realize that there are different models for different people and those are viewed differently by different people.
Excellent lecture. Very informative. Thank you for this content.
Thanks fantastic
Allahu Akbar
Ali Shariati, a great Muslim thinker.
- Judaeo-Islamic realities- a shared theological and cultural inheritance
- Hagar at the heart of Islamic tawadduh, ibaadah through her story and burial in Mecca
- Hagar as emancipatory figure for female, anti-slavery, feminist blackness
- Pauline, evangelical inheritance of otherisation i.e. of Hagarian, Ishmaelic line that gives us Muhammad and the 'Saracens'
- Islam and the sacredness of the weak, vulnerable and the outcasted- a timeless, spiritual mapping out of challenging hegemony, tyranny and elitism
- God's elevation of the single mother
- Western notions of the Other, the 'Turk' - the collective psychosocial longing for racial and cultural homogenisation- psychic projections
Turk? What's the relation to thr Turk ? Are you meaning europe view ottoman as thw only representative because they'rr close
@@bosbanon3452 Western Europeans have called Muslims Turks or Saracens for very long. Also Mohamedans, doesn't mean all Muslims have a Turkic racial background.
Aisha is not one of the 4 G. woman. Surat Tahreem 66, Al-Ahzab
Salaam frm Indian Administered Kashmir.
Plz.provide some clue of Time,as Time Zone Difference make it Difficult to Understand Time for Video Stream Correctly
Paradigms of leadership by shaikh Abdal Hakim Murad will be live everyday around 7:30 pm Indian time.
Wasalam, it will premiere at 7.30pm Kashmir time every weekday this Ramadan. You may find the schedule for our entire Ramadan programme here bit.ly/RL21-timetable
Also from occupied Kashmir, what a wonderful surprise to see another one here. May God protect everyone back home.
From Afghanistan
Did anyone catch the name or know the French author that he mentioned? at around 16:40?
Charles-André Gilis
@@sulpage123 JAK
Incredible point made around 45:00, it always felt like the distaste of Muslims by (primarily Western) Christians today came from previous narratives. I remember reading about St. Thomas Aquinas' views of Muslims and the way he described them as animalistic creatures who're slaves to their lusts is pretty similar to how Sam Harris and those types describe Muslims today (but with obviously more polite language).
It's interesting but also a little disconcerting. Muslim communities in the West need to build productive relationships with Christians in the general response against the problems of modernity, but how can you overcome such a history?
Is this idea of Hagar being the outcast or those that are Egyptian, as you suggest the Egypt is where the Israelites were exiled to. Is this a Kings James Version idea or something post KJV was the view of the Christian belief and Hagars ethnicity always fround upon as not from the house of Judah. Or is this a later more contemporary view post KJV?
Aasiah is one of the four perfect women.
“Are we persuaded by this idea that this foundress of Islam happens to be America’s famous biblical feminist icon? Is there any irony or strangeness there? Do we make anything of it?”
♥️♥️
♥️
Sub-titles might have helped.
Press captions
Who are Hagars parents ?
Maghreb King who lost to Ancient Egyptian Pharaoh (that he was still descended from Nabi Saleh, previous prophet of Abraham)
That means Hagar was adopted or became the leader of all Pharaoh's slaves
Was hagar the daughter of pharoah
Not really , Moses came much much later in the timeline .
18:40 - 19:04 shaykh has humour
2:11 CEO of AstraZeneca *camera shakes*, the sheikh predicted it 😭😭
Ehat do you mean? Maybe he knew more because he is very smart and. Live in the west so he can read news fater
This lecture is amazing, but that word doesn't do it justice!
Why music in beginning ?
It's by TH-cam , when some thing is being premiered