Where stars descend Chapter 8 (Blessed time) Part I
100 Years Ago...
The untold story of Black Muslims
“Mark that the sun of Islam will now rise from the West”
Page 8
A
Under the wings of the Caliph: A response to “Far From the Caliph’s Gaze”
The Mufti and the sheikhs
Part II
Page 15
Page 10
Page 12
THE WEEKLY
www.alhakam.org AL HAKAM | Friday 16 October 2020 | Issue CXXXV Ahmadiyya Archive & Research Centre (ARC), 22 Deer Park Road, London, SW19 3TL. UK info@alhakam.org | F: +44(0)208 544 7673
Islam contains all commandments needed for improving present-day world Hazrat Khalifatul Masih offers guidance to Atfal in Australia
Hadith-e-Rasul – Sayings of the Holy Prophet Muhammadsa
Prayer for recovery from fever Hazrat Ibn Abbasra relates that the Holy Prophetsa taught him this prayer for fever and various aches and pains: َّ َ َ ْ ّٰ ُ ُ َ ْ َ ْ ّٰ ْ َّ ْ ار ٍ يم ِمن ش ِر ِع ْر ٍق نع ِ بِس ِم الل ِه الك ِبي ِر أعوذَ بِالل ِه العَ ِظ ّ َو ِم ْن ش ّر َح ّر النا ِر ِ ِ “In the name of Allah, the Most High. We seek refuge in Him, the Greatest, from the evil of every over-active blood vessel. We seek His shelter from the affliction of the heat of the fire.” (Sunan Ibn Majah, Kitab al-Tib)
Hazrat Mirza Ghulam Ahmadas, In His Own Words
The spirit in the essential parts of Salat
In his Friday Sermon of 1 April 1938, with regard to the moral training and upbringing of youth, Hazrat Mirza Bashiruddin Mahmud Ahmad, Khalifatul Masih IIra, said, “A nation cannot be reformed without first reforming its youth.” (Al Fazl, 10 April 1938)
In July 1940, during his Friday Sermon, Hazrat Khalifatul Masih IIra, addressing Majlis Khuddam-ul-Ahmadiyya, introduced a new auxiliary body, which he named Majlis Atfal-ul-Ahmadiyya, to cater for the young boys of the Jamaat.
Since its inception, Majlis Atfal-ul-Ahmadiyya along with Majlis Khuddam-ul-Ahmadiyya has played an important and pivotal role in looking after the moral training, education and upbringing of the youth of Continued on page 4
In actuality, the essential parts of the Prayer are a symbolic representation of the form observed in spirituality. Man is required to stand in the presence of God Almighty and standing is also from among the etiquettes of servants. The bowing position, which is the second posture in Prayer, demonstrates that one submits themselves by lowering their head in preparation to fulfil any command that may be given to them, as it were. Moreover, the prostration expresses, through action, the greatest possible reverence, utmost humility and lowliness, which are the objectives of Prayer. These reverential practices and rites have been appointed by God Almighty to serve as a reminiscence of the deeper reality and so that the physical body may partake of the inner, spiritual essence. In addition to this, in order to reinforce in man the Continued on page 3