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= Madakhilat bayna zilal al-qur'an wa tafsir al-azharZein, Ibrahim Mohamed(2007) = Madakhilat bayna zilal al-qur'an wa tafsir al-azhar.At-Tajdid (),11(22). pp.11-54. ISSN -A SHORT HISTORY OF THE ITALIAN RENAISSANCEBy Kenneth R. Bartlett
University of Toronto Press, Higher Education Division 2013
World Rights
416Pages
Award-winning historian Kenneth R. Bartlett applies his decades
of experience teaching the Italian Renaissance and leading tours
across Italy to this new and beautifully illustrated overview,A
Short History of the Italian Renaissance. Bartlett provides a
lively cultural history that emphasizes many of the themes
typically identified with the Italian Renaissance: the recovery of
antiquity, the dignity of man, the state as a work of art,
unbridled egoism, and naturalism.A Short History of the Italian
Renaissancetraces the roots of the Renaissance from Dante and
Petrarch right through to the end of the period. The narrative is
accompanied by72stunning colour illustrations, genealogies of the
Aragon, Este, Gonzaga, Medici, Montefeltro, Sforza, and Visconti
families, a map, a timeline of events, a bibliography, and an
index.Kenneth R. Bartlettis Professor of History and Renaissance
Studies at the University of Toronto. He is the author ofThe
English in Italy1525-1558: A Study in Culture and Politics(1991),
co-editor ofHumanism and the Northern Renaissance(2000), and
co-translator of Giovanni Della Casa'sGalateo(third edition1994). =
Al-hiwar al-islamiyy al-masihi fi al-SudanZain, Ibrahim
Mohamed(2007) = Al-hiwar al-islamiyy al-masihi fi
al-Sudan.Al-Tanwir (4). pp.56-79.1. Defining the Renaissance
2. Before the Renaissance
3. Petrarch
4. Humanism
5. The Republic of Florence
6. Rome and the Papacy
7. The Maritime States
8. The Principalities
9. Renaissance Neo-Platonism
10. The Age of Crisis
11. Medici Popes and Princes
12. The Counsel of Experience
13. Art and Architecture
14. The End of the Renaissance in ItalyKenneth Bartlett'sA Short
History of the Italian Renaissanceis Burckhardt re-engineered for
the21st century. Written with verve in a fluent and accessible
style, and copiously illustrated with lavish color plates that
bring the pageantry of the era vividly to life, the book
revitalizes Burckhardt's classic cultural understanding of the
Renaissance while also revising it in light of the best recent
scholarship. Helpful timelines, tables, and suggested
bibliographies further make this book arguably the best paper and
ink portal available for delving into this fascinating and
consequential era. Burckhardt found in the Italian Renaissance a
period of tumult and temerity productive of a new and more modern
way of life. Teachers seeking to convey that transformative
vitality to contemporary students can only be grateful to have
Bartlett's new book available to serve as their companion and
guide.J.B. Shank, Director, Center for Early Modern History,
University of Minnesota
Religions as a "Life Fact": Al-Faruqi's impact on the International Islamic University MalaysiaMohamed Zein, Ibrahim(2011)Religions as a "Life Fact": Al-Faruqi's impact on the International Islamic University Malaysia.American Journal of Islamic Social Sciences,28(3). pp.53-74. ISSN0742-6763
This study addresses the teaching of religion at the International Islamic University Malaysia (IIUM). The program was influenced by the thought and curricula developed along Faruqian lines. It is a program that delves into Faruqi's view of meta-religion rooted in an ethical paradigm giving it universal perspective and approach toward the study of IIUM and the religion study curriculum implemeted at IIUM is a development of Faruqi's earlier vision regarding the teaching of Islam as a civilization and worldview, which he had envisioned and hoped to apply to the academic program at the Central Instiute of Islamic Research,Karachi, Pakistan during his professorship there in1960s, but which was not realized.Item Type:Article (Journal)
Additional Information:1831/6896
Uncontrolled Keywords:Religion, Islam, teaching and learning, IIUM, Faruqi
= Nazariyyat al-qayyim 'inda al-faruqi wa silatuha bi al-altakamuli al-ma'rifiZein, Ibrahim Mohamed(2011) = Nazariyyat al-qayyim 'inda al-faruqi wa silatuha bi al-altakamuli al-ma'rifi.Tafakkur,11(2). pp.5-32. ISSN1858-5159
Department of Usul al-Din and Comparative Religion,
Kulliyyah of Islamic Revealed Knowledge and Human Sciences,
International Islamic University Malaysia,
P.O. Box10,50728Kuala Lumpur,
Malaysia.Extension No.:+603 6196 5561
Joseph in the Torah and the Quran: an assessment of Malik Bennabis narrativeZein, Ibrahim Mohamed(2008)Joseph in the Torah and the Quran: an assessment of Malik Bennabis narrative.Intellectual Discourse,16(2). pp.187-208. ISSN0128-4878A SHORT HISTORY OF THE ITALIAN RENAISSANCEBy Kenneth R. Bartlett
University of Toronto Press, Higher Education Division 2013
World Rights
416Pages
STATEMENT OF CONCERN AND COMMON UNDERSTANDINGIBRAHIM MOHAMED
ZEIN, THEODORE CARDINAL MCCARRICK, PROF. ABDULLAH AL-AHSAN, STEPHEN
B. YOUNGHumanity stands in relation to the rest of creation
differently from all other creatures and things. (Genesis2:7)
(Quran,2:31;17:70;16:78;55:3-4) Blessed and burdened by a
contemplative intelligence embracing both mind and moral
discernment, each human person has a destiny shaped by free will
and intentional action. (Compendium114,131)
(Quran,6:161-164;18:46;33:71;84:6;103:3) Each individual is called
to work and service in response to that which gives purpose.
(Genesis9:1;Laborem Exercens) (Quran,2:30;6:165;11:61;51:56-57) The
good things that are and can be done in such service can serve as
the basis for collaboration in seeking better lives for all human
persons everywhere.Humanity, by reason of its creation, serves a
purpose. Human persons were endowed with stewardship capacities to
live and die in the midst of an unfinished work started but not yet
finished by the Creator of all the heavens and the earth and
everything therein. (Genesis9:1;Laborem Exercens, Centesimus
Annus32) (Quran,2:30;6:165;11:61;35:39)Human persons so share in
the powers and hopes of the Creator, specially endowed to live by
the loving gift of His spirit within them, that each human person
has a profound association with dignity, an association that cannot
be expunged or terminated. (Quran,38:82-83;7:16-18;4:117-120)This
dignity universally elevates the human person and gives moral
direction to our lives. We are called to honor that dignity within
ourselves and within others.But pride in self, contumacious
stubbornness, envy and fear, inhabit the human mind and heart as
well, giving rise to thoughts and acts in derogation of our own
dignity and that of others. (Centesimus Annus,17)
(Quran,2:204-206;10:75;20:78-79;26:18-29;28:38-41&76-78;97:6-13)
In accepting these tendencies, we elevate the merely human over the
divine and put ourselves at odds with the well-being of creation
and the end to which we are called by our Creator, which is his
service and not our own.Embracing human dignity has consequences.
The least among us is worthy and may claim rights and powers to act
in accordance with reason and conscience.
(Matthew25;Compendium186,189;Centesimus Annus13,58)
(Quran,2:110,177,254,261-262,265-268,273-278;9:60,57:7;71;24;55-56;27:3;58:12-13)
We should act so that all in the boat will arrive safely in port.
The dignity of others around us both near and far calls us to moral
relationships of solidarity and justice with them. (Compendium193)
(Quran,4:58,127;5:8;6:152;16:76,90;49:9;60:8) Justice demands a
role for them; they too may aspire to right action and a share in
the service of the Creator. (Centesimus Annus17)
(Quran,5:8;6:152;16:76,90;49:9;60:8)Since the source of our dignity
is a mission of service, our talents, our wealth, our powers are
held in trust for a larger good. (Compendium174,177)
(Quran,5:48;33:72;57:7) We are most correctly stewards in all that
we do. (Compendium177) (Quran,6:165;43:32) Our stewardship over
self is most necessary to prevent unfaithful disruption of the
moral sense. Especially our share of material wealth comes with
responsibilities to those around us; we have benefited from those
who have gone before and need to provide for those who will come
after. (Centesimus Annuschapter4) (Quran,43:32;24:33;59:7)Living in
concert with the demands of human dignity is a work of dedication
and service; it is neither idle play nor selfish indulgence.
(Quran,2:25,82,277;3:57;4:57,122;5:9;7:42;10:9;13:29;18:30, etc.)
Work opens the path to experience of our own dignity and to our
ability to honor the dignity of others. Work is relational and so
deeply moral. Work challenges us to go beyond the comfortable and
the accustomed; work is a struggle for meaning and the achievement
of human dignity in the eyes of our Creator. (Laborem Exercens)
(Quran,9:205;84:6;90:4;99:7-8) Work without faith, therefore, can
be mean and selfish. Work with faith, however, brings us to our
proper stewardship and is not disconnected from our salvation hopes
and possibilities. (James2:17)
(Quran,2:25,82,277;3:57;4:57,122;5:9etc.)Work expresses our free
will and our choices as to the application of our dignified powers
and thoughts. In using freedom, we open ourselves to the
possibility of work.Moreover, faith alone without works lacks
substance and falls short of our stewardship responsibilities
within creation.Yet the dimension of faith revealed in our
understanding of morality, our capacity for ethics, our upholding
of social standards calls us to work as we apply ourselves to the
challenges of living in the created world. (Laborem Exercens6)
(Quran,2:25,82,277;3:57;4:57,122;5:9;95:6;103:1-3etc.)Our potential
and capacity for work and for achievement of our proper dignity in
the world come from our family. Family gave us life and family gave
us identity and our first experiences of solidarity. The calling of
men and women in family, the giving of life as our Creator gave
life to us, sustains through time human hopes and human
responsibilities to our Creator. (Compendium, chapter5)
(Quran,4:1;6:98;7:189;30:21)The dignity of each human person, no
matter to what degree realized by such person, ties us all in one
inter-connected destiny within creation. The spark of dignity draws
forth compassion, which embodies the loving kindness and mercy of
the Creator who seeks a universal benefit, making no invidious and
destructive distinctions within the human family which is one from
the perspective of its role and purpose in the world.
(Compendiumchapter3) (Quran,2:213;4:1;10:19)Human dignity drives
out chauvinisms of all kinds. Where man is wolf to man, it is mans
doing and not our Creators responsibility or intent. No racism or
other dream of sectarian or ethnic superiority can stand before the
fact of universal human dignity. (Compendium, chapter3)
(Quran;2:213;4:1;10:19)And yet, we human persons, not fully
possessed of Godlike mercy and justice, do each other harm in many
ways. We stand in need of guidance and teaching.
(Quran,2:38;3:3-4;6:71&88-90;7:100;17:97;39:37;67:1-3;96:1-3etc.)
All teachings that help us overcome our limitations of pride are a
blessing to creation and fulfill the will of our Creator.
(Compendium, chapter2) (Quran,79:37-41;96:6-14)Such beliefs and
practices such a binding to each other and to the transcendent,
such a way of life are to be admired and emulated.
(Quran,6:162-163;8:24;30:30) That which derogates from such a
working out of faith in the world is as dangerous to our dignity as
is a sickness compromising our health.Teachings are most needed in
a human community overcome by material concerns and secular
suspicions of religion. (Laborem Exercens,7;Centesimus
Annus36,37,41) (Quran,3:14;18:32-38;30:41;57:20;102:1) Where
religiosity, however, devours our capacity for having dignity of
self and respecting the dignity of others, such conformity to
sectarian biases turn us away from our highest and best nature.
(Mathew23:23;Compendium144,153) (Quran,49:11-12)We recognize that
gratitude is due to our Creator as well as praise for the
opportunity we have been given to serve and to enhance the meaning
of our lives. Cultivating both the sense of service and acts of
service within ourselves and among all peoples will bring together
the human family in mutual respect, cooperation, with peace and
justice in all the world.CONVENERS OF THE DIALOGUE AND CO-AUTHORS
OF THE ABOVE STATEMENT:
Ibrahim Mohamed Zein, Dean of the International Institute of
Islamic Thought and Civilization, International Islamic University
MalaysiaTheodore Cardinal McCarrick, former Archbishop of
Washington, DCProf. Abdullah Al-Ahsan, International Islamic
University MalaysiaStephen B. Young, Global Executive Director, The
Caux Round TableWORKS CITED:The Qur'an
The Bible
John Paul II Encyclical:Laborem Exercens
Encyclical:Centissimus Annus
Pontifical Council for Justice and Peace:Compendium of the Social
Doctrine of the Church(Vatican City: Libreria Editrice Vaticana;
Wash.: D.C.: U.S. Conference of Catholic Bishops,2004)
! . : (Manhaj al-Ghazali fi al-radd 'ala al-batiniyah min khilal kitab al-Mustazhari : 'ard wa tahlil)Samari, Nunah 'AmmarandZein, Ibrahim Mohamed(2009) : (Manhaj al-Ghazali fi al-radd 'ala al-batiniyah min khilal kitab al-Mustazhari : 'ard wa tahlil).(al-Risalah),9(9). pp.1-30. ISSN1675-3593
. . . .
: - - . . .
HYPERLINK
"http://www.iium.edu.my/at-tajdid/index.php?link=more"...Bismillah
Walhamdulillah Was Salaatu Was Salaam 'ala Rasulillah
As-Salaam Alaikum Wa-Rahmatullahi Wa-Barakatuhu
23rd Ramadan1434(1st August2013)
Narrated Abu Huraira (Radi-Allahu 'anhu):
The Prophet (Sallallahu 'Alaihi Wa Sallam) said, "Whoever fasted
the month
of Ramadan out of sincere Faith (i.e. belief) and hoping for a
reward from
Allah, then all his past sins will be forgiven, and whoever stood
for the
prayers in the night of Qadr out of sincere Faith and hoping for a
reward
from Allah, then all his previous sins will be forgiven ."
Bukhari Vol.3: No.231Once the applicant have done the conference
payment, kindly email the bank deposit copy (before31July2013= for
participant from outside Saudi Arabia) for the attention of Mr
Mohammed Shaaban, Account Manager of MILE (email
[email protected]) and cc
[email protected],[email protected],[email protected]"[email protected],[email protected]&[email protected].
Otherwise, the visa will not be processed and the participation of
the applicant will be cancelled. The conference registration fee
includes the meals during the conference and conference materials
only. Participant have to cover their own cost of transportation
and accommodation.If applicable, the applicant may also request an
invoice from Mr Mohammed Shaaban, Account Manager of MILE (email
[email protected]).Hotel AccommodationFurthermore, if you're
looking for a hotel accommodation with a special corporate rate and
the location is nearby the conference venue & walking distance
to Masjid Nabawi, kindly email [email protected] Of
Registration For The Conference As ParticipantDateline for online
registrationParticipant from outside Saudi Arabia which they need
to get a visa:25July2013
Participant from Saudi Arabia:20August2013
Selection of participant and visa application procedureAfter the approval from the chairman of the conference (Emeritus Professor Dato' Dr Osman Bakar from SOASCIS-UBD Brunei), the organizers (headed by Mr Airulamri from IKIP International College Malaysia) will contact the successful applicant in regards to the visa application. The successful applicant need to submit the completed visa form and a copy of passport to the person in-charge before30July2013.By15August2013, the visa can be obtained at the nearest Saudi's Embassy as mentioned in the visa application form (the visa application form will be sent to the successful applicant).Conference Registration Fee and Payment procedureThe conference registration fee of USD1000should be made before31July2013(for participant from outside Saudi Arabia) to the bank details as follows;Ob behalf of Emeritus Professor Dato Dr Osman Bakar (the conference chairman), our humble feedback in regards to your request to join the conference as participant are as follows;1)Alhamdulillah, your request to join the conference has been approved by Professor Osman Bakar, the chairman of the conference. Indeed, were very honored to have your name in the list of the participant for the said conference.2)In regards to the conference fee payment, kindly visithttp://www.mile.org/icihe/registration.php. Attached please find the visa application form, we look forward to receive from you the completed form and a copy of your passport (please make sure the passport is clearly scan) before31thJuly2013. As mentioned previously in the conference website, the visa will not be processed unless the payment is done (before31stJuly2013)3)In regards to the special umrah package if you wish to join, for details information, kindly visithttp://www.mile.org/icihe/special-umrah-package.php.4)If youre looking for a hotel accommodation (other than Medina Oberoi Hotel) which is near to the conference venue and walking distance to Masjid Nabawi at a special corporate rate, kindly email [email protected])If youre requesting the invitation letter, you may directly communicate with Emeritus Professor Dato Osman Bakar, the chairman of the conference (email:[email protected]).Thanks again & we look forward to meeting you in Madinah, insya-allah. Have a blessed Ramadhan & meaningful Eid! Wassalam.