- BOOK ID
- point
- Introduction
- Preface
- This is the true Islam
- The Ahlul Bayt are the natural continuity of the Mission of their grandfather
- Keeping to religion in the past and the present
- Is Islam difficult so that people cannot comply with it?
- Does Islam accept development?
- The political problems created by civilization
- Enjoining of good and forbidding of the wrong
- Modern man and the lenient religion
- The Shia in brief
- Today, I have perfected for you your religion…
- Striving to remain firm on guidance
- The Shia are the followers of the Sunna, but…
- Every day is Ashura and every land is Karbala
- The Shia and the prayer
- The Shia and the Friday Prayer
- Smoking in the places of prayer
- I bear witness that Ali is the Friend of Allah
- Epilogue to the previous chapters
- The Shia and the Sunni refute the Wahabis
- Kharijites’ doubt in the past and Wahabis’ in the present are the same
- Argument with one of the Wahabi ulema
- The Prophet refutes the Wahabis and their misleading
- The companions seek the blessing of the Prophet’s hair
- Companions and caliphs seek blessings in the Prophet’s belongings after his death
- The Prophet admits seeking blessing and teaches it to his companions
- Muhammad is a human not like other humans, but as corundum among gems
- Seeking healing by the Prophet’s blessing
- Wahabism has historical roots
- Wahabism prohibits visiting of graves
- The Ahlul Bayt and a modern Muslim
- The solution is in the Ahlul Bayt’s school
- This is the wudhu’
- This is the prayer
- This is the Zakat
- Temporary marriage and its importance
- Woman is wronged among us
- Temporary marriage is the very solution
- Temporary marriage was legislated for woman’s welfare
- Temporary marriage and its benefits
- This is al-Mahdi
- “Then I was Guided” is the Ahlul Bayt’s book
- “Then I was Guided” in the court
- Reference Books
the falsehood, so that it breaks its head, and lo! it vanishes. Qur’an, 21:81
Since it is Allah who casts the truth against the falsehood, I do not and will never hesitate at all in announcing that what I believe is the truth - until Allah judges between me and those fanatics who approve of nothing except that which they have been accustomed to, even if it is false and deny nothing except that which they have ignored even if it is truth. Nevertheless, I pray Allah to endow them with guidance and success, for it is He who guides whomever He likes to the Right Path.
And since I communicate with a great number of readers and researchers through letters or direct reviews during the lectures that I give on different occasions, I have found that some people see what I have written (in my books) as the truth. Yet they often say: we are in no need to provoke these problems that may be against the unity of Muslims at a time when the West and the East have gathered together to do away with the Muslims.
I see an acceptable logic and reasonable opinion in their saying because they are trying their best to narrow the cycle of disagreement and to unite the rows (of Muslims). Therefore, I have followed their request obediently and accepted their advice with gratitude, calling to the mind a saying of Ameerul Mo'minin (a.s.):
“Let the most beloved of affairs to you be the most moderate
p: 3