In thirty years four caliphs turned a community from Arabia into one of history's largest realms — yet they are remembered for justice, not conquest. An honest breakdown of the rule of Abu Bakr, Umar, Uthman, and Ali: both the greatness of the golden age and the tragedy of the first fitna.
Read more →Al-Bukhari filtered out more than 99% of the reports he collected about the Prophet ﷺ. A breakdown of hadith: how they differ from the Quran, what isnad and matn are, how scholars verified transmitters, what the grades sahih/hasan/weak mean, and why not every "quote of the Prophet" should be taken on faith.
Read more →The Muslim calendar begins not with the Prophet's birth ﷺ or the first revelation, but with a move. A breakdown of the Hijra: the persecution in Mecca, the plot, the night of departure, the Cave of Thawr, the brotherhood of Muhajirun and Ansar, and the Constitution of Medina — and why the count began here.
Read more →Around four billion people trace their lineage to Ibrahim ﷺ. A breakdown of his path through the Quran: how he reasoned his way to the One God, broke the idols, passed through fire, left his family in the desert, built the Kaaba, and endured the trial of sacrifice.
Read more →The Quran came down in parts over 23 years and was preserved first in memory, not on paper. A stage-by-stage breakdown: the first revelation, the role of the huffaz and scribes, the collection under Abu Bakr, standardization under Uthman, dots and vowel marks — and what the oldest manuscripts say.
Read more →In a single night the Prophet ﷺ was carried from Mecca to Jerusalem and raised through seven heavens. A calm, honest breakdown: what Isra and Mi'raj are, what the Quran and Sunnah say, where the scholars differed, and why the five daily prayers were given on that night.
Read more →The words "halal" and "haram" are now familiar even to people who have nothing to do with Islam. But behind them isn't simply a list of "do's and don'ts" — there's the entire structure of how Islam sees the human being and human choice. The scale is more nuanced than most people think.
Read more →When trouble strikes a Muslim, they don't go first to a psychologist or a pill. They make dua. They raise their hands, address God in their own words, and they speak. This is a central practice of Islam, often confused with prayer — and they are not the same thing.
Read more →Every Muslim on Earth recites these seven verses at least seventeen times a day. Over a lifetime — more than half a million repetitions. What is this text that God placed so deeply at the heart of Islam that prayer itself doesn't count without it?
Read more →Ask a Muslim to describe God and they won't begin with a philosophical concept. They'll start listing names. Ar-Rahman, Ar-Rahim, Al-Malik — ninety-nine in total. Each name describes Allah through one of the facets the human mind can grasp at all. It's the very heart of how Islam understands the relationship between a person and God.
Read more →Every year, two million people arrive at the same point on Earth, dress almost identically, and walk through a four-thousand-year-old ritual in five days. This isn't tourism. It's the fifth pillar of Islam — and one of the most powerful religious experiences in human history.
Read more →Every year, 1.8 billion people across the world stop eating and drinking from sunrise to sunset for thirty days straight. This isn't a diet or an endurance challenge. It's the month in which, according to Islam, the Quran was revealed — and a month that changes a person through the body.
Read more →A full breakdown of Islamic angelology: who the angels are, how they differ from jinn, what the Kiraman Katibun do, how Iblis disobeyed God, and why in Islam the human stands above the angels.
Read more →The history of the Kaaba — from its ancient origins and the era of 360 idols to the modern Sacred Mosque. The Quraysh reconstruction and al-Amin, the cleansing of 630 CE, the Ottoman rebuild of 1630, and the change of the qibla. Sourced, without idealization.
Read more →Is there radicalism in Islam, where does it come from, and how does it relate to the religion itself. Context of revelation, the Kharijites, classical conditions of jihad, the political roots of modern jihadism, and the voice of the ummah itself.
Read more →What sharia actually is — no apologetics, no demonization. The history of the word, the difference between sharia and fiqh, the four sources of law, the concept of maqasid, and contemporary debates within the ummah.
Read more →How a city in a waterless Arabian valley became the spiritual center of a civilization spanning three continents. The history of Mecca without idealization — from the Quraysh tribe to the modern
Read more →An entire surah of the Qur'an is named after them. Jinn aren't "evil spirits" — they're a parallel civilization with their own morality, believers and disbelievers. A survey without occultism: material, society, Iblis, sihr, protection.
Read more →"Eleven wives" — a frequent argument against Islam. But the Prophet ﷺ was married to one woman for 25 years; the other marriages came after age 50, mostly to widows of companions and for diplomacy. A survey without apologetics and without attack.
Read more →Allah commanded all to prostrate before Adam — every angel did, one refused. Who Iblis is, why he isn't an angel, the root of his fall, and why his story is an analysis of pride — not a horror tale about the devil.
Read more →Al-Aqsa is named only once in the Qur'an — but that single ayah about the night of Isra became the foundation of how Islam relates to Jerusalem. A survey: first qiblah, third sanctuary, the history from Umar to Salah ad-Din.
Read more →Jesus is named 25 times in the Qur'an — more than the Prophet Muhammad ﷺ himself. A theological survey of what Islam affirms about Isa ibn Maryam, and why his prophethood — rather than divinity — is a deliberate doctrinal position, not denial.
Read more →The Qur'an uses over 70 names for the same day. A grounded survey of what the Islamic tradition says about Yawm al-Qiyamah — from the signs to Paradise and Hell, without pressure and without idealization.
Read more →A detailed look at salah: its history from the Isra and Mi'raj, parallels with earlier traditions, the change of qibla, a walkthrough of each part (from wudu to taslim), Friday prayer, optional prayers. Without the dry ritual mechanics.
Read more →Biographies of the key companions of Prophet Muhammad ﷺ: the four Rightly Guided Caliphs, Bilal, Aisha, Khadija, Salman, Ibn Abbas. Who they were, what they did, how the first community split, how Sunnis and Shias were born.
Read more →The history of the Islamic Golden Age from the eighth to the thirteenth century: the House of Wisdom in Baghdad, al-Khwarizmi and the birth of algebra, Ibn Sina, Ibn al-Haytham and the scientific method, Ulugh Beg, Ibn Khaldun. How Muslim science shaped the European Renaissance.
Read more →The history of the Kaaba from the Semitic accounts of its founding by Abraham and Ishmael to the present day. Pre-Islamic Mecca, the rebuildings, the Black Stone, the change of qibla, modern challenges. A historical and archaeological approach without idealization.
Read more →A biography of Prophet Muhammad ﷺ without piety as decoration or oversimplification — from an orphan in Mecca to the founder of a civilization. Sixth-century Arabia, revelation, Khadija, persecution, hijra, Medina, the conquest of Mecca, and the farewell sermon. A historical approach with practical lessons.
Read more →A clear guide to Sufism — Islam's mystical tradition. What Sufis actually believe and practice, who the major figures are, and why this 1,400-year tradition has been both revered and persecuted across Islamic history.
Read more →A clear, non-sectarian explanation of the Sunni-Shia split — how it began at the death of Muhammad, what the actual theological and legal differences are, and where the two branches genuinely agree. No sides taken.
Read more →A clear, non-preachy guide to the Five Pillars of Islam — Shahada, Salah, Zakat, Sawm, Hajj. What each one is, why Muslims do it, and the common misconceptions. Honest explanation without religious pressure.
Read more →What it actually takes to become Muslim: the shahada, ghusl, and your first steps. An honest guide without religious pressure — for people making the decision themselves.
Read more →Uravnitel is a Muslim AI assistant answering questions about the Quran, Hadith, and fiqh based on authentic sources. Discover how Islamic artificial intelligence is reshaping religious learning and why Muslims worldwide are choosing AI-powered tools to deepen their faith.
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