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5-Endless Bliss Fifth Fascicle - Hakikat Kitabevi

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These lies of lâ-madhhabî people have been rejoined with<br />

documentaries and examples by the savants of Ahl-as sunna<br />

(rahmatullâhi ta’âlâ ’alaihim ajam’în). Even Âlûsî quotes the<br />

hadîth, “Whoever says salawât by my grave, I shall hear<br />

him. And an angel shall inform me of those who say it in<br />

far-away places,” in his book Ghâliyya. When anyone who<br />

has reason and understanding reads the following passage,<br />

which has been derived from the book Jâmi’u-karâmât-il<br />

awliyâ, he will easily distinguish between the benevolent and<br />

the mischievous:<br />

Fakhr-ud-dîn-i Râdî says is his explanation of the Sûrat-ul<br />

Kahf: They brought the janâza of Abû Bakr Siddîq near<br />

Rasûlullah’s grave, as it had been his last will. They gave their<br />

salâm and said, “Abû Bakr has come to your door, o<br />

Rasûlallah.” The door of the mausoleum opened and there<br />

came a voice from within: “Put the beloved with the<br />

beloved!” Bayhakî conveys from Abdullâh-i Ansârî: Thâbit bin<br />

Qays was martyred in the battle of Yamâma. As we interred him<br />

we heard a voice saying, “Muhammadun Rasûlullah wa Abû<br />

Bakr-i Siddîq wa ’Umar-i shehîd wa ’Uthmân-i rahîm.” Abû<br />

Nu’aym and Ibn Asâkir relate that “A miscreant relieved himself<br />

on the grave of Hadrat Hasan. Right after that he went mad,<br />

and then died.” As Bayhakî and Wâqidî relate, Fâtima-i<br />

Huzâ’iyya visited Hadrat Hamza’s grave. When she gave her<br />

salâm she heard a voice saying, “Wa alaikum salâm.” When<br />

Shaikh Mahmûd-i Kurdî visited Hadrat Hamza’s grave and gave<br />

his salâm he heard a voice from the grave, saying, “Wa alaikum<br />

salâm. Name your son Hamza!” When he was back home he<br />

had a son. So he named him Hamza. It is written in Usud-ul<br />

ghâba: When the ship on which Safîna, Rasûlullah’s slave,<br />

sank, she got hold of a piece of board, and the waves brought<br />

her to the shore. When she was on land she saw a lion, and<br />

said to it, “O thou lion! I am Safîna, Rasûlullah’s slave.” In<br />

sheepish submission the lion took her up to the road, and then<br />

wagged its tail to bid farewell. Ibn Menda conveys from Talha<br />

bin Ubaydullah: One night Talha visited the grave of Abdullah<br />

bin Amr bin Hirâm. He heard a voice reciting the Qur’ân in the<br />

grave. He went to Rasûlullah and told him what had happened.<br />

Rasûlullah said, “He is Abdullah. Allâhu ta’âlâ puts the souls<br />

of martyrs in Paradise. Every night their soul and body<br />

come together. In the morning they return to Paradise.”<br />

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