Rambut Muhammad bagian tubuh yg mana tuch yg disimpen :)

Berarti para Muhammedan perlu ziarah ke Srinagar juga, karena ada rambut 
Muhammad. Ga perlu jauh2 ke Saudi, karena belatung sudah 14 abad nangkring di 
mayat Muhammad & pasti udah memakan abis tubuh Muhammad.

Betul ga?


--- In [email protected], "Jusfiq" <kesayangan.allah@...> wrote:
>
> Saya kutip:
> 
> "It contains a relic believed by many Muslims of Kashmir to be a hair of the 
> Islamic prophet Muhammad."
> 
> Dan anda yang percaya...
> 
> ----
> 
> The Hazratbal Shrine (Kashmiri: &#1581;&#1590;&#1585;&#1578; &#1576;&#1604;, 
> &#2361;&#2332;&#2364;&#2352;&#2340;&#2348;&#2354;; Urdu: 
> &#1581;&#1590;&#1585;&#1578; &#1576;&#1604;, literally: Majestic Place), is a 
> Muslim shrine in Srinagar, India. It contains a relic believed by many 
> Muslims of Kashmir to be a hair of the Islamic prophet Muhammad. The name of 
> the shrine comes from the Arabic word Hazrat, meaning holy or majestic, and 
> the Kashmiri word bal, meaning place.[1]
> 
> The shrine is situated on the left bank of the Dal Lake, Srinagar and is 
> considered to be Kashmir's holiest Muslim shrine.[2] The Moi-e-Muqqadas (the 
> sacred hair) of Mohammed is believed to be preserved here. The shrine is 
> known by many names including Hazratbal, Assar-e-Sharief, Madinat-us-Sani, or 
> simply Dargah Sharif.
> Contents
> [hide]
> 
>     * 1 History of the relic
>     * 2 See also
>     * 3 References
>     * 4 External links
> 
> [edit] History of the relic
> 
> According to legend, the relic was first brought to India by Syed Abdullah, a 
> descendant of the Islamic prophet Muhammad who left Medina and settled in 
> Bijapur, near Hyderabad in 1635. When Syed Abdullah died, his son, Syed 
> Hamid, inherited the relic. Following the Mughal conquest of the region, Syed 
> Hamid was stripped of his family estates. Finding himself unable to care for 
> the relic, he sold it to a wealthy Kashmiri businessman, Khwaja Nur-ud-Din 
> Eshai.
> 
> However, when the Mughal Emperor Aurangzeb came to know of what had 
> transpired, he had the relic seized and sent to the shrine of Khwaja 
> Moinuddin Chishti at Ajmer, and had Khwaja Nur-ud-Din Eshai imprisoned in 
> Lahore for possessing the relic. Later, realizing his mistake, Aurangzeb 
> decided to restore the relic to Khwaja Nur-ud-Din Eshai and allowed him to 
> take it to Kashmir. However, by that point, Khwaja Nur-ud-Din Eshai had 
> already died in imprisonment. In the year 1700, the relic finally reached 
> Kashmir, along with the body of Khwaja Nur-ud-Din Eshai. There, Inayat Begum, 
> daughter of Khwaja Nur-ud-Din Eshai, became a custodian of the relic and 
> established the shrine.
> 
> Inayat Begum was married into the prominent Banday family in Kashmir, and 
> since then, her descendants from the Banday family have been the keepers of 
> the relic, known as Nishaandehs (literally: givers of the sign).[3]
>




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