Abdul-Rahman bin Nasir al-Barrak
| Jinsu | gorko |
|---|---|
| Ɓii-leydiyankaaku | Aarabe Sawdiyanke |
| Inditirde | عبد الرحمن البراك |
| Innde | Abdurrahman |
| Ɗuubi daygo | 1933 |
| Ɗemngal | Arabic |
| Wolde | Arabic |
| Sana'aji | scholar |
| Student | Abd al-Aziz al-Sadhan |
| Diina | Sunni Islam |
| Medical condition | blindness |
Abdul-Rahmaan bin Nasir al-Barak (arab: عبد الرحمن بن ناصر البراك, jibinaa ko hitaande 1933 walla 1934[1]) ko diine salafiyanke Sawuudnaajo.
E hitaande 1994, al-Barrak e diineeji Sawudit goɗɗi cifaaɗi e inɗe mum en, Osama bin Laden ina njetta ɗum en sabu mum en luulndaade Mufti mawɗo e oon sahaa Abd al-Aziz ibn Baz e nder ɓataake mum udditiiɗo feewde e Sayku Bin Baz ko fayti e ŋakkeende Fatwa mum e dow jam e Yahuudiyankooɓe.
Lowre makko ndee haɗaama to Sawuud sabu nde "ƴellitde miijooji e teskuyaaji cuusal".[2]
Fatwaaji
[taƴto | taƴto ɗaɗi wiki]Al-Barrak ƴettii hakkillaaji ngam yaltinde fatwaaji, walla jamirooje diine, luulndiiɗe. Gooto e fatwaaji ɗii noddi ko seerndude rewɓe e worɓe no feewi.[3] Fatwa oo wiyi "mo jaɓi ndee jillondirde ... ina jaɓi geɗe harminaaɗe, kadi kala jaɓɗo ɗum ko kafirɗo kadi ɗum firti ko ruttaade e Lislaam ... So tawii ko o rewtinoowo walla o foti warde ... sabu o salii, o rewaani." ko Sharia."
E lewru mars 2008, Al-Barak yaltinii fatwa ngam wiyde winndooɓe ɗiɗo jaaynde Al Riyaad, hono Abdullaah bin Bejad al-Otaibi e Yuusuf Aba al-Khail, ina poti ñaaweede sabu mum en murtude sabu "binndanɗe fenaande" maɓɓe jowitiiɗe e cate "keefeeɓe". e warde so ɓe tuubaaki.[4]
Tuugnorgal
[taƴto | taƴto ɗaɗi wiki]- ↑ "About Sheikh", Hijri calendar birthdate 1352 Archived 2016-03-03 at the Wayback Machine albarrak.islamlight.net
- ↑ Christian Science Monitor: "Saudi Arabia presses 'YouTube imams' to toe the line on Yemen - Popular Muslim clerics are using social media to stir dissent beyond the purview of government-controlled mosques and satellite TV stations. Saudi Arabia is sensitive to criticism of its war in Yemen" By Taylor Luck June 2, 2015 |Now Saudi authorities are cracking down on online dissent, blocking several popular sites – such as those of clerics such as Mohammed Munajjid and Abdulrahman Barrak – for “promoting bold ideas and thesis.”
- ↑ Saudi cleric backs gender segregation with fatwa, Reuters, 2010-02-23
- ↑ Top Saudi cleric calls for writers' deaths Archived 2016-03-04 at the Wayback Machine Reuters, 2008-03-15