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Why Did They Become Muslims

WHY DID THEY BECOME MUSLIMS? The book Why Did They Become Muslims consists of 3 sections. Section I is a book of Islam and Christianity. Information about Prophets, books, religions (Judaism, Christianity and Islam) is given, conditions of being a true Muslim are explained, the words of those filled with admiration for Islam and the lives of 42 people who being a member of other religions chose Islam are narrated. Section II is a book of the Qur’an-ı Karîm and the Torah and the Bibles as of Today. Information about today’s Torah and Bibles is given, errors in the Bible are explained; that the Qur’an-ı Karîm is the last and unchangeable book is explained scientifically. Besides, explained are miracles, virtues, moral practices and habits of Muhammad ´alayhissalâm. Section III is a book of Islam and Other Religions. That Islam is not a religion of savageness, that a true Muslim is not ignorant, that there can be no philosophy in Islam are explained along with explanations of primitive religions and celestial religions.

WHY DID THEY BECOME MUSLIMS?

The book Why Did They Become Muslims consists of 3 sections. Section I is a book of Islam and Christianity. Information about Prophets, books, religions (Judaism, Christianity and Islam) is given, conditions of being a true Muslim are explained, the words of those filled with admiration for Islam and the lives of 42 people who being a member of other religions chose Islam are narrated. Section II is a book of the Qur’an-ı Karîm and the Torah and the Bibles as of Today. Information about today’s Torah and Bibles is given, errors in the Bible are explained; that the Qur’an-ı Karîm is the last and unchangeable book is explained scientifically. Besides, explained are miracles, virtues, moral practices and habits of Muhammad ´alayhissalâm. Section III is a book of Islam and Other Religions. That Islam is not a religion of savageness, that a true Muslim is not ignorant, that there can be no philosophy in Islam are explained along with explanations of primitive religions and celestial religions.

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first experience with figures was in the ninth century, when the<br />

<strong>Muslims</strong> taught them numbers, beginning with zero. In actual fact,<br />

Indians were the explorers of zero. It was the <strong>Muslims</strong>, however,<br />

who transmitted it to Europeans. Likewise, the <strong>Muslims</strong> were the<br />

earliest tutors who taught trigonometry to Europeans. The Muslim<br />

teachers in Muslim universities taught sine, cosine and, some time<br />

later, trigonometry to their European pupils. Whatsoever progress<br />

was made in the name of knowledge in the world between the<br />

ninth and twelfth centuries originated from one source of<br />

knowledge: Muslim universities.<br />

[The number of the men of knowledge and science educated in<br />

the Ottoman Empire defies computation. The great services that<br />

those people rendered to today’s civilization are reflected in their<br />

books. One of those great people is Mustafâ bin Alî Efendi<br />

‘rahima-hullâhu ta’âlâ’, the muwaqqit (timekeeper) of the<br />

mosque of Yavuz Sultân Selîm ‘rahima-hullâhu ta’âlâ’, [d. 926<br />

(1520 C.E.)] in Istanbul, and the Reîs-ul-munajjimîn (Chief<br />

Astrologer of the Sultân). He passed away in 979 [1571 C.E.]. His<br />

geography book I’lâm-ul-ibâd and his books of astronomy, Teshîl-ul-mîqât<br />

fî-’ilm-il-awqât, Teysîr-il-kawâkib and Kifâyat-ulwaqt<br />

fî rub’-i-dâira, contain astounding information. Also, the<br />

book Kifâyat-ul-waqt li-ma’rifat-i-dâir, by Abd-ul-’Azîz Wafâî<br />

‘rahima-hullâhu ta’âlâ’ [d. 874 (1469 C.E.)], provides modern<br />

astronomical information.]<br />

“Because books of medicine written by the ancient Greeks<br />

were burned by the ignorant Christians of the Middle Ages, we do<br />

not have their original copies today. A few pieces of those original<br />

texts were forgotten here and there and thereby survived the<br />

barbarous destructions. Those pieces were translated into Arabic<br />

by Huseyn ibni Johag of Baghdâd. That great celebrity translated<br />

also the works of Plato and Aristotle into Arabic.<br />

“Muhammad bin Mûsâ Harazmî, one of the three brothers<br />

educated as scholars of arithmetics, geometry and astronomy in<br />

Baghdâd during the caliphate of Ma’mûn, [1] calculated the altitude<br />

of the sun and the length of the equator, and made the<br />

instruments called usturlâb (astrolabe) [rub’i-dâira] and used to<br />

determine the prayer times. His book entitled Jebr (Algebra) was<br />

[1] The seventh Abbâsid Khalîfa. A son of Hârûn-ur-reshîd, the fifth<br />

Khalîfa. He was born in the vicinity of Baghdâd in 786, and passed away<br />

in 833. He was buried in Tarsus.<br />

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