Sayed ahmed qazwini biography books
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Sayed Ahmed Al-Qazwini was born in the holy city of Qom, close to the helgedom of the daughter of Imam Al-Kadhim, Al-Sayeda Fatimah Al-Masuma . He was born to a family renowned for its piety and knowledge, in a house of virtue and nobility akin to that of his honored förfäder. He fryst vatten the son of Sayed Hassan Al-Qazwini and the grandson of Ayatollah Sayed Murtadha Al-Qazwini, who left Holy Karbala to spread the call of the Ahlulbayt in the United States.
Sayed Ahmed studied in the University of Michigan. In 2004, he returned to the holy city of Qom to continue his Islamic studies that he started under his grandfather. He currently studies under a number of prominent scholars and also teaches several classes. He has translated a few books to English and continues to do so. Throughout the year, the Sayed continues to travel to cities to give lectures in Islam and is a regular speaker in United States and Canada.
Biography adopted from alrasoul.ca
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Al-Qazwini family
Iraqi religious Shia family
| House of Qazwini آل القزويني Qazwinis | |
|---|---|
| Founded | 1783; 242 years ago (1783) in Karbala |
| Founder | Muhammad-Baqir al-Qazwini Muhammad-Ali al-Qazwini |
| Current head | Murtadha al-Qazwini |
The family of al-Qazwini (Arabic: آل القزويني, romanized: ʾĀl al-Qazwīnī), also transliterated in a number of other ways, including al-Qazweeni or al-Qazvini are an Iraqi religious Shia family that settled in Karbala from Qazvin, in the late 18th century.[1]
The family rose to great prominence in Iraq .[2] Members of the family are notable for being the Ayatollahs of Karbala. Some of its members are founders of a number of Islamic centres in the United States.[3][4] Additionally the family claim agnatic descent from Muhammad's daughter Fatimah, carrying the honorific title of Sayyid, and the children of the females of this family whose fathers are non Sayyids carry t
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In our present era, it is most disturbing for many Muslims and non-Muslims alike to witness the escalating rise in sectarian violence between the Shia and Sunni followers of Islam, particularly in places such as Iraq, Afghanistan, and Pakistan. Some people, including Muslims, ask why the Shia and Sunni are violently murdering each other; is there something in the history of the Muslims that continues to spark such hatred and violence today; why does one sect accuse the other of heresy; and why is one sect of the Muslims considered as “mainstream,” while the other wing is branded unconventional and literally pacified?
Unquestionably, seeded in the history of Islam is the answer - in particular, the political course that was taken following the death of the Holy Prophet and the way in which the early history of Islam was written. They say that history is bound to repeat itself and this is much more apparent today because the remnants and unconsciousness of Muslims in regards to their