Friday, August 19, 2011

fresh Amy Whinehouse

Bismillah Al-Ra7man Al-Ra7eem


Asalamo 3leichom






so here is a look at young Amy whinehouse


so she did pass away and ... yall already kno


young 27 yrs old jewish girl from England


so um... i do pray for her all the time when back to black album had came out aroudn 2006 i was soo obsessed wif her
and i loved her...


i mean we all knew she had huge drugs an cocaine an other problems an always in an out of rehab


but here is her before


she was always talented




so either way check her out and her smooth beautiful voice..

Allah Yar7amach  insha'Allah

Inna lillahi wa inna ilayhi raji'un (إِنَّا لِلّهِ وَإِنَّـا إِلَيْهِ رَاجِعونَ

In Islam, Inna lillahi wa inna ilayhi raji'un (إِنَّا لِلّهِ وَإِنَّـا إِلَيْهِ رَاجِعونَ) is part of the Quran, Sura Al-Baqara, Verse 156. The full verse is as follows:
الذين اذا اصابتهم مصيبة قالوا انا لله وانا اليه راجعون "Who, when a misfortune overtakes them, say: 'Surely we belong to Allah and to Him shall we return'." [1]
This is the phrase that Muslims recite when a person is struck by calamity in life,[2][3] and is usually recited upon hearing the news of someone's death.[3] This can also be recited in any situation involving risk of any sort. The phrase is commonly translated as "Verily we belong to God, and to God we return."
Muslims believe that God is the One who gives and that it is He who takes away; He is testing humankind. Hence, a Muslim submits to God and is grateful and thankful to God for whatever they receive. On the other hand, they are patient and say this expression in times of turmoil and calamity.


Abu Musa al-Ashari reported that the Prophet Muhammad ( صلى الله عليه وسلم) said, "When a son of a servant of Allah dies, Allah Says to the angels, 'Have you taken the son of My servant?' They say, 'Yes.' Then Allah Says, 'Have you taken the fruit of his heart?' They say, 'Yes.' Allah Says, "What has My servant said?' They say, 'He has praised You and said, Inna lillahi wa inna ilaihi raji'un (To Allah we belong and to Him is our return). Then Allah Says, 'Build a house for My servant in Paradise and call it the house of praise.' From Tirmidhi, Musnad Ahmad and ibn Habban

Commentary
A brief (grammatical) dissection of the phrase, for understanding the words better (and not mixing them up or mispronouncing them):[4]
Inna: Inna is really inna-na. The first part is “verily”, the last part is “we”–but Arabic tends to simplify, so it is written as inna (with only 1 noon and shadda for stress). It means “Indeed, we” or “verily, we”.
Li-llahi: Li is a harfu jarr (preposition) meaning “to” or “is for.” It is used as a kind of possessive case. “a laka akhun” (the la is really the same as li) means “is for you a brother?” or “do you have a brother?” So here, “lillahi” means “belong to Allah SWT ” or “are for Allah SWT”. (It’s also because of the 'li' that 'allah' takes kasra.)
Wa: Wa means “and”.
Inna: Same as above.
Ilay-hi: This is two parts, it means “toward him”. Ilay is actually a form of ila (a preposition), which means “to”. A grammatically similar phrase is “thahabtu ila masjidin” — "I went to a masjid". “Hi” is actually “hu“, the third-person possessive pronoun (”his”). (It takes kasra because of "ila".) So the overall translation is “toward him”.
Raji3oon: This is a form of raja3a, "return" (the 3 represents the letter 'ain, which is voiced with a tightened throat). Raji3 is a noun/adjective form, meaning 'a person who is returning'. The oon at the end makes it plural (so that it refers to 3 or more people). Raji3oon basically means 'returners', or better 'returning ones'.
Taken together, the phrase can be translated as “We indeed belong to God, and we indeed toward him are returning.”

R.I.P. Amy joon :'( Sniff Sniff

Allah Yar7amach








ok yalla am out ma3asalama

wardah for y'all

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