Arabian Legend
SENIOR MEMBER
- Joined
- Mar 7, 2012
- Messages
- 5,155
- Reaction score
- 9
- Country
- Location
Very informative.
Thanks to OP.
Thanks to OP.
Follow along with the video below to see how to install our site as a web app on your home screen.
Note: This feature may not be available in some browsers.
Very informative.
Thanks to OP.
this is gross propaganda. secondly, such tolerance was not shown in many cases because of the idol worshiping.. anyway I believe none of the places of worship should have been destroyed, be it idol worshiping houses !!
Because Kaaba was created as a worship place for monotheists.....idol worshippers took over it.....it did not originally belong to them!how can you say that because as per Islam their is only one god and tjat is Allah ..... remember even prophet destroied kabba idoles post take over of mekka
Because Kaaba was created as a worship place for monotheists.....idol worshippers took over it.....it did not originally belong to them!
who ali sina? lol bro we ain't blind what do you think we don't know what people say about islam?
we know what you people think but to actually convince us of something try giving us something worth reading, we don't care if you hate islam because that laws are too tough for you. prove the quran wrong and islam will fall apart and i have yet to seen that and I've been surfing sites like ali sina for almost a decade.
well jeez thanks.
thank god for indian right? who besides being all so secular and liberal are still right next to us in the third world lol.
your shit-hole of a country faces the same problems our country faces, your country is actually worse in most cases.
we will protect our is laic culture and heritage so no need for you to hurry.Muslim countries should protect this culture and there should be king rule every where. Thumbs down for democracy
One of the problems that I think, our muslim youth has is that we are disconnected from our past; the good past, we are always given the impression that there is nothing good to look at, but I guess if we connect ourselves with our past, there is alot to learn and alot to inspire !
The Muslim Who Was China’s Greatest Explorer – Zheng He
When people think of great explorers, they think of the usual names: Marco Polo, Ibn Battuta, Evliya Çelebi,Christopher Columbus, etc. But not many know of one of the most interesting and influential of all time. In China, he is well known, although not always recognized or glorified. He is Zheng He, the Muslim who became China’s greatest admiral, explorer, and diplomat.
Origins
Zheng He was born in 1371 in the southern China region of Yunnan to a Hui (a Muslim Chinese ethnic group) family. His birth name was Ma He. In China, the family name is said first, followed by the given name. “Ma” is known in China as short for “Muhammad”, indicating Zheng He’s Muslim heritage. Both his father and his grandfather were able to travel to Makkah and complete the Hajj, so Zheng He came from a practicing Muslim family.
At a young age, his town was raided by the Ming Dynasty’s army. He was captured and transported to the capital, Nanjing, where he served in the imperial household. Despite the oppressive and difficult circumstances he was in, Zheng He actually befriended one of the princes, Zhu Di, and when he became the emperor, Zheng He rose to the highest positions in government. At this time, he was given the honorific title “Zheng” and was known as Zheng He.
Expeditions
In 1405, when emperor Zhu Di decided to send out a giant fleet of ships to explore and trade with the rest of the world, he chose Zheng He to lead the expedition. This expedition was massive. In all, almost 30,000 sailors were in each voyage, with Zheng He commanding all of them. Between 1405 and 1433, Zheng He led 7 expeditions that sailed to present day Malaysia, Indonesia, Thailand, India, Sri Lanka, Iran, Oman, Yemen, Saudi Arabia, Somalia, Kenya, and many other countries. It is probable that during one of his journeys, Zheng He was even able to go to Makkah to complete the Hajj.
A map showing the routes taken by Zheng He on his 7 expeditions in the 1400s
Zheng He was not the only Muslim on these expeditions. Many of his advisors and were also Chinese Muslims, such as Ma Huan, a translator who spoke Arabic and was able to converse with the Muslim peoples they encountered on their journeys. He wrote an account of his journeys, titled the Ying-yai Sheng-lan, which is an important source today for understanding 15th century societies around the Indian Ocean.
Seeing these expeditions must have been an event that people did not easily forget. The ships Zheng He commanded were up to 400 feet long, many times the size of Columbus’s ships that sailed across the Atlantic. For hundreds of years, people thought that the giant proportions of these ships were exaggerations. However, archaeological evidence from the shipyards where they were built in the Yangtze River prove that these ships were in fact even larger than modern football pitches.
Everywhere they sailed, they commanded the respect (and sometimes fear) of the local people, who offered tributes to the Chinese emperor. Because of this tribute and trade with all the peoples they encountered, Zheng He would sail back to China with exotic goods such as ivory, camels, gold, and even a giraffe from Africa. The expeditions sent one message to the world: China is an economic and political superpower.
Spreading Islam
Economics and politics were not the only effects of this great fleet that was commanded by Zheng He. He and his Muslim advisors regularly promoted Islam wherever they traveled. In the Indonesian islands of Java, Sumatra, Borneo and others, Zheng He found small communities of Muslims already there. Islam had started to spread in Southeast Asia a few hundred years before through trade from Arabia and India. Zheng He actively supported the continued growth of Islam in these areas.
A replica in Dubai that compares the size of Zheng He’s ships with those of Columbus
Zheng He established Chinese Muslim communities in Palembang, and along Java, the Malay Peninsula, and the Philippines. These communities preached Islam to the local people and were very important to the spread of Islam in the area. The fleet built masjids and provided other social services the local Muslim community would need.
Even after the death of Zheng He in 1433, other Chinese Muslims continued his work in Southeast Asia, spreading Islam. Chinese Muslim traders in Southeast Asia were encouraged to intermarry and assimilate with the local people on the islands and Malay Peninsula. This brought more people to Islam in Southeast Asia, as well as strengthened and diversified the growing Muslim community.
Legacy
As an admiral, diplomat, soldier, and trader, Zheng He is a giant of Chinese and Muslim history. He is seen as one of the greatest figured in the spread of Islam in Southeast Asia. Unfortunately, after his death, the Chinese government changed its philosophy to a more Confucian one which did not support such expeditions like Zheng He’s. As a result, his accomplishments and contributions were mostly forgotten or overlooked for hundreds of years in China.
His legacy in Southeast Asia, however is quite different. Numerous masjids in the region are named after him to commemorate his contributions. Islam spread in Southeast Asia through many forms, including trade, travelling preachers, and immigration. Admiral Zheng He was also a major part of its spread in that region. Today, Indonesia has the largest Muslim population of any nation in the world, and much of that could be attributed to the activities of Zheng He in the region.
Sources
Aqsha, D. (2010, July 13). Zheng he and islam in southeast asia. The Brunei Times. Retrieved from Zheng He and Islam in Southeast Asia | The Brunei Times
Ignatius, A. (2001, August 20). The asian voyage: In the wake of the admiral read more. Time Magazine, Retrieved from
The Muslim Who Was China’s Greatest Explorer – Zheng He | Lost Islamic History
One should always know their history and learn not to repeat it...If there is success stories in it, there is hope with which people get strength and lessons to go for a successful future..Well, there's Mecca where one can one day hope and pray to be able to perform pilgrimage. That's always somewhere to look back at. We are always looking back at the history of our faith. We are bound to.
Apart from that, I do not see how a bunch of ancient buildings dotted around the world would connect young Muslims to the past. And for what? Unity?
What matters is the present and the future. It is critical that they connect to that during these.....difficult times. And not live in a wrapped reality.
Bro if you are talking about slatey that is different from these...people engraved in these rocks...not something in todays world...but that only preserved history and reached us...when i went to school in pakistan i did the same.
The Moplah tribe fantasy story is all fake,
Arab traders who came from Arabia married local women and settled down in Northern Kerala.
These people were not the ruling class but when Tipu Sultan invaded Malabar in the late 18th century,he brutally converted hindus under the sword and the moplahs started thinking they ll become the viceroys now.
But after Tipu died,Hindus as an educated class became the powerful ones and these guys were frustrated as what they never got what they wanted so they did something in furstration.
No wonder these guys are working as cab drivers and grocery shop owners in the GCC now.
why go to Mekkah? good to know you think its a sin to pray to GOD when Hindus do roughly the same just not 5x...Its not gross propaganda.
Maybe propaganda is fed to you in Pakistan that Muslims had a very pleasant rule in India.
There are hundreds of mosques in India which were built after razing temples there. Notably in UP and Bihar. That or they removed the upper structure of temple and used temple foundations to build over mosques.
Im sorry but thats bull$hit reason you are giving. As if idol worshiping is a sin and the Muslim rulers were justified.
To us, what you do bend over 5 times a day to Mecca is a sin and a joke. Doesnt mean we go over and destroy Mecca or Muslim places of worship.
Pranāma or charaṇa-sparśa, the touching of the feet in Indian culture, is a show of respect and it is often an integral part of darshan, or "visions of the divine" in sanatan dharma worship. When greeting, children touch the feet of their family elders while people of all ages will bend to touch the feet of a great guru, deity of a Deva (God) (such as Rama and Krishna).
@Leader condemned it but you want to live in history? What can be done about it? If you live in negativity you will end up lost...Plus dont tell me Hindus didnt burn anything (Babri Masjid is one of the incidents that happened in the 20th century in civilized India) so am sure there were more if you want to scan the eras...If its idol worship or table worship or fire worship. As long as people's temples were destroyed by Muslim rulers, people of India will hate them.
They did the same in Iran. Thousands of fire temples were destroyed by Muslim rulers. Its almost systematic wherever Muslims rule, they demolish other people's places of worship.
Dont try to pull wool over what they have done.
1. Here is a reference to an excerpt of an interview of Richard Eaton, shared by Truth Finder:
The big temples that were politically irrelevant were never harmed. Those that were politically relevant — patronised by an enemy king or a formerly loyal king who becomes a rebel — only those temples are wiped out. Because in the territory that is annexed to the State, all the property is considered to be under the protection of the State. The total number oftemples that were destroyed across those six centuries was 80, not many thousands as is sometimes conjectured by various people. No one has contested that and I wrote that article 10 years ago.
Last words of Aurangzeb on his death-bed | Page 2
I hope you understand that your claim of Hundreds of temples being destroyed is absurd. It is not unreasonable to surmise that the rest of your claims are also of similar quality.
2. You may also note from the above that the temples that were destroyed suffered for their role as political opposition, not as places of worship.
3. Where ever Islam went, people converted peacefully. As example of Malaysia, Indonesia, and Turkish nations attest, Islam's spread did cause abandonment of older religious establishments. You can not call it destruction as such.
PS>
4. In India, some temples were converted to mosques. In my view, their status should be reversed, since it was wrong to begin with.
The Life of Imam Abu Hanifa
The Life of Imam Abu Hanifa | Lost Islamic History
Imam Abu Hanifa was a non-arab.
Imam Abu Hanifa was a firm believer that a code of laws cannot stay static for too long, at the risk of no longer meeting the needs of the people. Thus he advocated interpreting the sources of Islamic law (usul al-fiqh) in response to the needs of the people at the time. This dynamic form of legalism did not supersede the Quran and Sunnah (sayings and doings of the Prophet ﷺ), of course. Instead, he promoted the use of the Quran and Sunnah to derive laws that addressed the issues that people dealt with at that time