I just discover through your post the Shadilya dikr which enlarge my appreciation of the samaa based on the Quadiryia and particularly the Moroccan Derkaouiya samaa and dikr . Thank you very much for the subtitle in arabic and English . God bless you
It's attributed to Owais al-Qarani in some places but without a reputable source this is unlikely, so to the best of my knowledge it's an original by Sheikh Mohammed al-Helbawy (the lead vocalist of the hadra and the rest of the La Chadhiliyya album) just like most of what's recited in the album. As a general rule if I haven't attributed a poem to anyone in the video description you can probably assume it's unknown/written by someone in the tariqah. "External" poetry tends to be rarer and from more classical poets which is why I like to clearly list it.
An earnest question, what is meant by the reciters when they ask the Prophet ﷺ to have mercy on them, is it meant literally? Something tells me this cannot possibly be right.
It is reported that if a person does good, rasul allah in his grave thanks allah for you, and you commit a sin, he asks Allah to forgive you, saw. He is the paracleet; the intercessor, so that is his role and title.
@@jawad9757 one correction I'd make is, we don't ask the prophet for mercy. We ask for his intercession. Only allah gives us mercy. There's a hadith in which the prophet told his daughter Fatima to ask allah for mercy because even he cannot help her on judgement day. The Prophets a human being. However, as I explained in the previous hadith, he asks for pardon for us in his grave, this is literal. However, since He is mercy to the world's, his mercy is his intercession and his pardon for us. I hope that is clearer.
I just discover through your post the Shadilya dikr which enlarge my appreciation of the samaa based on the Quadiryia and particularly the Moroccan Derkaouiya samaa and dikr .
Thank you very much for the subtitle in arabic and English .
God bless you
May Allah subhana wa ta'ala increase your rank in both worlds for translating these zikrs
God bless you akhi. Salam from Malaysia
I need to drink this lawful wine
What is that lawful wine? And how can one drink it?
@@frommoroccowithlove Hes talking about Wajd, which you get from DhikrUllah
@@duralumin_ 100%
This is supremely powerful
This is speaks to my heart. Thank you for sharing and translating this beautiful poem with us.
Thank you for this 🤍
MaashaAllah my brother, may Allah SWT bless you for your good work , we really appreciate it ❤
Swoonworthy.
Thank you for posting this with translations! Does the recitation starting at 5:40 have a title and/or known author?
It's attributed to Owais al-Qarani in some places but without a reputable source this is unlikely, so to the best of my knowledge it's an original by Sheikh Mohammed al-Helbawy (the lead vocalist of the hadra and the rest of the La Chadhiliyya album) just like most of what's recited in the album. As a general rule if I haven't attributed a poem to anyone in the video description you can probably assume it's unknown/written by someone in the tariqah. "External" poetry tends to be rarer and from more classical poets which is why I like to clearly list it.
@@HashimAziz1 thank you so much for the details!
Epic.
Now ive discovered true gnosis
Salamu alaykom, do you have the image you used here somewhere I can download?
في الترجمة توجد خطأ (اصبر على هذا العناـ وليس الأنا)not the ego ... 5:09
An earnest question, what is meant by the reciters when they ask the Prophet ﷺ to have mercy on them, is it meant literally? Something tells me this cannot possibly be right.
It is reported that if a person does good, rasul allah in his grave thanks allah for you, and you commit a sin, he asks Allah to forgive you, saw. He is the paracleet; the intercessor, so that is his role and title.
@@SlaveKing1444 if I understood you correctly it is meant metaphorically, right?
@@jawad9757 no, it's literal. It's not Metaphorical. It can't be. Because rhe Prophet is alive in his grave.
@@jawad9757 one correction I'd make is, we don't ask the prophet for mercy. We ask for his intercession. Only allah gives us mercy. There's a hadith in which the prophet told his daughter Fatima to ask allah for mercy because even he cannot help her on judgement day. The Prophets a human being. However, as I explained in the previous hadith, he asks for pardon for us in his grave, this is literal. However, since He is mercy to the world's, his mercy is his intercession and his pardon for us. I hope that is clearer.
@@jawad9757it's a topic of debate but according to the Quran it's highly unlikely to be litteral
A gad versoin 1970
Sorry I'm not sure what you're saying
@@HashimAziz1 i think he meant good version from 70s😂