Fame, Fitnah And Music | Siedd, Essam | Ep. 1

Fame, Fitnah And Music | Siedd, Essam | Ep. 1

Up next

Muslim Women Are Reading Red Flags All Wrong | The Marriage Guide

What does it actually take to find the right person, and are most Muslims approaching it completely backwards? In this OnePath Podcast, relationship coach Hannah El-Gashingi joins us for an honest, Sharia-grounded conversation on love, marriage readiness, and what nobody teaches ...  Show more

The Biggest Fitnah of MY Life - Fighting Cancer | Dean Mousad

When Brother Dean Mousad received a Level 4 skin cancer diagnosis, he made a choice most people would not understand. He kept working, kept mentoring young people, flew to Indonesia, Bosnia, and performed Umrah, all with cancer in his body and uncertainty in his mind.In this OneP ...  Show more

Recommended Episodes

Safe Adam on Leaving the Music Industry for Islam | The Muslimi Experience w/ Boonaa Mohammed
The Muslimi Experience

In this episode of The Muslimi Experience Podcast, host Boonaa Mohammed sits down with internationally recognized nasheed artist Safe Adam. Once a part of the mainstream music scene, Safe Adam reflects on his journey of transformation, leaving behind the entertainment industry to ...  Show more

Episode 376: Arman Markar
Freshly Grounded

In this episode of Freshly Grounded, we sit down with Arman Markar, a social media creator whose journey took him from cybersecurity to content creation, and ultimately to using his platform for ...

  Show more

#61 Is Music Really Haraam? || Seerah Bonus Episode || Ustadh Abdulrahman Hassan
Al Madrasatu Al Umariyyah

Now more than ever, the music industry has grown bigger than it ever was. The fact that it has produced an immeasurable amount of filth, immorality & chaos in the society is not up for debate.

But the question comes, is it really haraam? Are there verses directly in the ...

  Show more

NEW BOOK: Dhamm Al-Maal Wal-Jaah | Ibn Rajab Al-Hanbali | Ustadh Abdulrahman Hassan #AMAU [Audio 2/2]
Al Madrasatu Al Umariyyah

Every day, Muslims chase something. A better job, a higher position, a name that people recognise. We tell ourselves it's just "for financial stability" or "to give my family a good life". But somewhere along the way, that chase stops being a means and becomes the purpose. The Pr ...  Show more