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Online Course Details

Basic Quran Qaida

Noorani Qaida is a book which is designed for kids and beginners who don’t know how to read Quran.

Learners are taught the identification and pronunciation of the alphabet and the combination of letters to make Arabic words. There are 18 chapters in this book and every chapter is divided concerning the level of difficulty to learn Arabic step by step. it is designed with a few colors to make it easy for those students who have the first step in Quran learning.

In this short book, we teach alphabets, how to make a sound according to Tajweed accent, how the words are formed by joining the alphabet, how to make a word, how to join a word with the next word, how to read a few words The status of the one who memorizes Qur’an will be commensurate with the last ayah he memorized.

Nazra Quran

Nazra includes basic Islamic recitations. This is the basic step of learning the Quran online with tajweed. Any institute offering Islamic courses offers nazra courses.

This course encapsulates foundational prayers (masnoon duaen) like what to say before you start eating before you step into the washroom and before you drink water.

Similarly what you need to recite when you intend to travel, when it is raining and while drinking milk etc.

Tajweed Course

To recite Quran in a prescribed way is known as Tajweed. Arabic is ever known vast language having a vocabulary that has no end.

There are certain manners through which a specific word is to be pronounced. Knowing and implementing these rules while recitation is known as Tajweed.

Online Islamic Education is a platform that allows its clients around the world to learn online nazra Quran with Tajweed in the USA.

Quran with Tajweed

This would be a must question in your mind if you are new to Islam. You must be thinking what is the importance of learning tajweed in the Quran.

So first make your mind clear that without tajweed you are misleading the actual or intended meaning of the Quran. The strokes, when pronounced in the wrong way, automatically change the meaning.

Always remember that Arabic is a phonetic language, which implies that pronunciation matters a lot. Online Islamic Education is one of the best platforms providing quality services to clients.

Artical Faith

The Qur’an, the sacred text of Islam, is believed to be the Word of God as revealed to the Prophet. Here Dr. Mustafa Shah describes the historical context of its revelation, its transmission and codification, and its shared spiritual heritage with the other main Abrahamic faiths.
 
Preserved in the language of Arabic, the Qur’an is Islam’s sacred text. It is believed that the Qur’an enshrines the literal word of God and that it was revealed to Muhammad by the Archangel Gabriel. With its unique composition and style, the Qur’an is also considered the pre-eminent literary masterpiece of the Arabic language and one of the earliest extant Arabic literary sources. Its contents, which are constellated around the axial theme of God’s unity of being and his transcendence, provide the foundations of the doctrinal tenets and beliefs of Islam. Emphasizing the theme of continuation, the Qur’an does not present its teachings as representing a new religion, but rather the revivification of an ancient monotheistic tradition of faith that shares the same spiritual legacy with Judaism and Christianity.

Memorization of Quran

Hifz is the memorization of the Quran. Muslims believe that whoever memorizes the Quran and acts upon it will be rewarded and significantly honored by Allah, as Abdullah ibn Amr narrated that the Messenger of Allah said: “It shall be said – meaning to the one who memorized the Qur’an – ‘Recite, and rise up, recite (melodiously) as you would recite in the world. Indeed your rank shall be at the last Ayah you recited” (Jami` at-Tirmidhi 2914)

Having memorized the Quran, the hafiz or hafiz must then ensure they do not forget it. Ensuring perfect recall of all the learned verses requires constant practice. The memorization of the Quran was important to Muslims in the past and also in the present. Yearly, thousands of students master the Quran and complete the book with interpretation and memorization. The Quran is perhaps the only religious or secular book that has been memorized completely by millions of people.

Prayer Method

Before prayer, a Muslim should always perform wudu, an act in which the hands are first washed, the mouth and nose are cleaned, the face is cleaned, the arms up to the elbow are washed, and the head is wiped over with wet hands, including the ears, before finally the feet are washed. Intention, known as niyyah, is a prerequisite for salah, and what distinguishes real worship from ‘going through the motions. Some authorities hold that intention suffices in the heart, and some require that it be spoken, usually under the breath.

The person praying begins in a standing position known as qiyas, although people who find it difficult to do so may begin while sitting or lying on the ground. This is followed by the raising of the hands to the head and recitation of the takbīr, known in combination as takbīrat al-iḥrām or takbīrat at-taḥrīmah (consecratory takbīr). Takbīr is read as Allaahu Akbar (lit. ’God is The Greatest). One then lowers one’s hands. The first takbīr represents the beginning of prayer. From this point forward one praying may not converse, eat, or do things that are otherwise halal. A Muslim must keep their vision low during prayer, looking at the place where their face will contact the ground during prostration

Ablution Method

Before prayer, a Muslim should always perform wudu, an act in which the hands are first washed, the mouth and nose are cleaned, the face is cleaned, the arms up to the elbow are washed, and the head is wiped over with wet hands, including the ears, before finally the feet are washed. Intention, known as niyyah, is a prerequisite for salah, and what distinguishes real worship from ‘going through the motions. Some authorities hold that intention suffices in the heart, and some require that it be spoken, usually under the breath.

The person praying begins in a standing position known as qiyas, although people who find it difficult to do so may begin while sitting or lying on the ground. This is followed by the raising of the hands to the head and recitation of the takbīr, known in combination as takbīrat al-iḥrām or takbīrat at-taḥrīmah (consecratory takbīr). Takbīr is read as Allaahu Akbar (lit. ’God is The Greatest). One then lowers one’s hands. The first takbīr represents the beginning of prayer. From this point forward one praying may not converse, eat, or do things that are otherwise halal. A Muslim must keep their vision low during prayer, looking at the place where their face will contact the ground during prostration

Quran Tafseer

The word tafsīr is derived from the three-letter Arabic verbal root of ف-س-ر F-S-R (Cassara, ‘interpreted’). In its literal meaning, the word refers to interpreting, explaining, expounding, or disclosing. In Islamic contexts, it is defined as understanding and uncovering God’s will which has been conveyed by the Quranic text, by means of the Arabic language and one’s own knowledge.

Quran Translation

Translation of the Qurʻan from Arabic into other languages has always been a difficult issue in Islamic theology. Because Muslims revere the Qurʻan as miraculous and inimitable (iʻjaz al-Qurʻan), they argue that the Qurʻanic text should not be isolated from its true language or written form, at least not without keeping the Arabic text with it. Furthermore, an Arabic word, like a Hebrew or Aramaic word, may have a range of meanings depending on the context – a feature present in all Semitic languages, when compared to English, Latin, and Romance languages – making an accurate translation even more difficult.

According to Islamic theology, the Qurʻan is a revelation very specifically in Arabic, and so it should only be recited in Quranic Arabic. Translations into other languages are necessarily the work of humans and so, according to Muslims, they no longer possess the uniquely sacred character of the Arabic original. Since these translations necessarily subtly change the meaning, they are often called “interpretations” or “translation[s] of the meanings” (with “meanings” being ambiguous between the meanings of the various passages and the multiple possible meanings with which each word taken in isolation can be associated, and with the latter connotation amounting to an acknowledgment that the so-called translation is but one possible interpretation and is not claimed to be the full equivalent of the original). For instance, Pickthall called his translation The Meaning of the Glorious Koran rather than simply The Koran.

Dars e Nizami

Dars-i Nizami is a study curriculum or system used in many Islamic institutions (madrassas) and Dar Ul Ulooms, which originated in the Indian subcontinent in the 18th century and can now also be found in parts of South Africa, Canada, the United States, the Caribbean, and the UK.

The Dars-i Nizami system was developed by Nizamuddin Sihalivi (1161 AH/1748 CE) from the Firangi Mahal Ulama (Islamic scholars) group, after whom the Dars-i Nizami was named (Robinson, 2001: p72). Sihali is a village in Fatehpur Block in Barabanki District of Uttar Pradesh State, India

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