Beardo-Weirdo

1.1K posts

Beardo-Weirdo

Beardo-Weirdo

@TheeAbda

🇰🇪🇵🇸 Bookworm. To be ballin,you gotta b-all-in. Next Stop,the Top

Katılım Ekim 2020
78 Takip Edilen10 Takipçiler
arrryyyy 🐐
arrryyyy 🐐@dube1286·
Great poets like Pablo Neruda, Khalil Gibran, Sylvia Plath, and Wole Soyinka are timeless. I read their poems and always feel deeply inspired.
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arrryyyy 🐐
arrryyyy 🐐@dube1286·
yu can never separate Cushites with evening tea.
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George Tsitati
George Tsitati@Tsitati_George·
You cannot hurt someone who has read Tolstoy, Dostoevsky, Kafka, Nietzsche, Kierkegaard, and Camus for fun. Their serotonin left the chat years ago.
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SNEAKO
SNEAKO@sneako·
Prophet Mohammed’s rules of war • Do not mutilate dead bodies • Do not kill women or children • Do not cut down trees • No treachery, or breaking pledges • No mutilation of the dead • No torture or excessive cruelty This is why “Sharia Law is incompatible with the west.”
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Guled mohammed
Guled mohammed@mohammed_g18811·
@KeenNomad As long as the men are Muslim, I don’t see any problem, when you die and leave this dunya, you won’t be asked about your ethnicity but your religion Islam
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Hamza Dagane
Hamza Dagane@KeenNomad·
I have attended 6 Gen Z nikkahs this year and 5 of them were gabdho somali ah iyo ajnabi. It’s a growing trend of intermarriage that should raise some eyebrows. Are the guys not leveling up?
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Beardo-Weirdo
Beardo-Weirdo@TheeAbda·
لا يزال الرجل عالماً ما تعلم، فإذا ترك العلم وظن أنه قد استغنى واكتفى بما عنده، فهو أجهل ما يكون
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Xavier
Xavier@xavierjp__·
As much as I enjoyed my time in Türkiye, exploring its rich history, being hosted by its hospitable people, tasting its lovely food and witnessing its amazing architecture As a Muslim, I have to be objective I was saddened to see so many graves within the boundaries of mosques. I visited suleimaniye mosque as part of my tour of Istanbul and upon entering was going to pray Tahiyyatul masjid, but right outside the window next to the mimbar you can see dozens and dozens of graves and mausoleums so big they could be mistaken for masajid themselves I was saddened to see practices in the masajid that are not upon the Quran and sunnah People hanging up 🧿 amulets in their shops or outside their flats believing it’ll keep them safe Others trying to sell key rings or plaques with ayaat written on them, stating that these talismans will protect us and ward off evil I was saddened that at night the masajid would be closed so you could not do itikaf overnight; but if you wanted to drink and dance with women, then bars/clubs were open And it was sad seeing how secularised and liberal many Turks have become Those who don’t fast Those who don’t pray Those who are what you would call “culturally Muslim” They are not a small minority, trading their Muslim heritage for western hedonism and values in the name of “progress” Allah’s aid is sought One particularly sad event I was in a famous mosque, Fajr prayer was done and the sun had not long risen, A few metres behind me, a woman removed her hijab whilst she was inside the mosque Note that this was outside of tourist visiting hours I assumed it was because she was adjusting it A few minutes go by and she’s still got her hair out. So I politely ask her to cover her hair A few more minutes go by and she’s still got her hair out, so I go to her and ask her again to cover her hair as this is a mosque and it’s about showing respect It is well known even amongst non Muslim tourists that women should cover their hair when visiting mosques But She gives me a dirty look, kisses her teeth in arrogance and (in Turkish) says “I know I know, you said it already” in a mocking tone The lack of respect was astounding Not for me Not even for herself But for Allah, IN A MOSQUE Was very sad to see Even some of the Turkish brothers I met in the mosques would lament the state of Islam and Muslims in the country May Allah guide the people and rulers of our nations, protect us from shirk and innovation and enable us to stand for and spread tawheed for Allah’s sake alone
Xavier tweet mediaXavier tweet media
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De Prof™
De Prof™@rahmandeprof·
Even though I haven't watched it, I believe Shaykh is going to be right. Football exceeds being just entertainment for most people. It is identity, it is allegiance, and it often tends to be emotional investment that rivals what they give to their deen. You see grown men devastated for days because their team lost. You see people whose mood, productivity, and peace are held hostage by the performance of strangers kicking a ball. You see rivalries that breed genuine hatred, mockery that cuts deeper than banter, and loyalty to clubs that supersedes loyalty to principles. That supercedes spouse to spouse connection. The Prophet (SAW) said a person will be with those he loves on the Day of Judgment. If our heart is attached to these players, if we defend them with more passion than we defend the Companions, if we know their stats better than we know our obligations as Muslims...well, where does that leave us? These footballers become role models. Their lifestyle, their arrogance, their disbelief, their immoral choices, even if human—all of it gets excused because they're good at a sport. And slowly, imperceptibly, our standards start reflecting theirs instead of the Sunnah. I think it is okay to watch football. I follow the opinion that says it is permissible. But we must ask ourselves if it controls us, or if we control it. Does losing a match ruin our day? Do we skip salāh and family obligations to catch a game? Do we feel more connected to a club than to our Muslim brothers? Do we idolize men who live in open rebellion against Allah? Because if any of that is true, Sheikh Abdurrahman won't be exaggerating by any standards in this video. The reality of football (and every other sport and movie actors) is that they have become a substitute religions for millions, and Muslims aren't immune. Safeguard your īmān. Know where your heart actually is.
🏵️الجبرتي🏵️@KingDarood

Idk why people taking this guy seriously same nigga who said football is haram 😹

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zāād al-Ma’aād
zāād al-Ma’aād@Alghurabaaaaaa·
Four living men — take your fatwas from them and leave the scholars of misguidance: • Saleh Al-Fawzan • Abdul Razzaq Al-Badr • Saleh Al-Sindi • Abdul Salam Al-Shuwa'ir"
zāād al-Ma’aād tweet mediazāād al-Ma’aād tweet mediazāād al-Ma’aād tweet mediazāād al-Ma’aād tweet media
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Jvnior
Jvnior@Jvnior·
Piers Morgan blocked me for this. Repost it.
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Reads with Ravi
Reads with Ravi@readswithravi·
What’s one book you’ll never stop recommending?
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Narnia
Narnia@Narniaki·
@ReplyingBot_ Why should we? We don’t need no validation from strangers so why put ourselves at risk?
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Khaerpath.
Khaerpath.@ReplyingBot_·
Mad respect for the girlies who haven’t uploaded their Eid photos on social media.
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Moe
Moe@moneyacademyKE·
OnlyFans owner Leonid Radvinsky has died at 43 after a battle with cancer. -Bloomberg
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SNEAKO
SNEAKO@sneako·
Leonid Radvinsky OnlyFans CEO just died from cancer at 43. Not only is OnlyFans uniquely responsible for destroying souls of an entire generation, he was also the largest ever individual AIPAC donor. $11 mil from nut, sweat, and tears, sent to bomb kids. Say it for me.
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Johan
Johan@Adityapandeydev·
"I never removed anyone from my life, but they all died in the accident of trust."
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Champ✨
Champ✨@Ib_ra_himm·
"Ships don’t sink because of the water around them... ships sink because of the water that gets in them." I'm not talking about ships
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