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  1. The Hanafi school or Hanafism (Arabic: ٱلْمَذْهَب ٱلْحَنَفِيّ, romanized: al-madhhab al-ḥanafī) is one of the four major schools of Islamic jurisprudence within Sunni Islam. It was established by the 8th-century scholar , jurist , and theologian Abu Hanifa , a follower whose legal views were primarily preserved by his ...

  2. Oct 4, 2017 · Hanafi – only stick out the forefinger when saying the shahadah (la ilaha illallah…) Maliki – make a fist and stick out the forefinger and wave it back and forth. Shafii – stick out the forefinger only when saying the name of God (ill..allah) Hanbali – stick out the forefinger throughout the sitting – but do not move it back and forth

  3. Jul 12, 2024 · Hanafi school, in Islam, one of the four Sunni schools of religious law, incorporating the legal opinions of the ancient Iraqi schools of Kufah. The Hanafi legal school developed from the teachings of the theologian Imam Abu Hanifah, as spread by his disciples Abu Yusuf and Muhammad al-Shaybani.

  4. en.wikipedia.org › wiki › Abu_HanifaAbu Hanifa - Wikipedia

    Today, the Hanafi school is followed by 45% of Muslims and Abu Hanifa is popularly known amongst Sunni Muslims as a man of the highest personal qualities: a performer of good works, remarkable for his self-denial, humble spirit, devotion and pious awe of God.

  5. Hanafi is one of the four schools (madhabs) of Fiqh or religious law within Sunni Islam. Founded by Imam Abu Hanifa, it is considered to be the school most open to modern ideas. Its followers are sometimes known in English as Hanafites or Hanifites (cf Malikites, Shafiites, Hambalites for the other schools of thought).

  6. Short Biography of Imam Abu Hanifa. Al-Numan bin Thabit, commonly known as Abu Hanifah or Abu Hanifa, is considered the founder of one of the four schools or rites of Islamic legal knowledge (fiqh) within the Sunni schools of law. He is also widely known as Al-Imam Al-Aẓam (The Great Imam) and Siraj Al-Aimma (The Lamp of the Imams).

  7. May 28, 2013 · The Hanafi School is one of the four major schools of Sunni Islamic legal reasoning and repositories of positive law. It was built upon the teachings of Abu Hanifa (d. 767), a merchant who studied and taught in Kufa, Iraq, and who is reported to have left behind one major work, Al-Fiqh al-Akbar.

  8. From the groundbreaking wisdom of Imam Abu Hanifa to the influential guidance of contemporary Hanafi scholars like Shaykh Ashraf Ali Thanwi and Shaykh Taqi Usmani, this course is an expansive journey through Hanafi Fiqh's rich 14-century history.

  9. Imām Abū Ḥanīfah, (699 — 767 CE / 80 — 148 AH) was the founder of the Sunni Hanafi school of fiqh (Islamic jurisprudence).

  10. Jul 17, 2024 · Abu Hanifah, Muslim jurist and theologian whose systematization of Islamic legal doctrine was acknowledged as one of the four canonical schools of Islamic law. The Hanafi school established a uniform code for applying Islamic norms to legal problems and remains widely followed into the present.

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