Re: Khuda Hafiz vs Allah Hafiz
Lajawab:
If you ever read Ibn Battuta’s travels, the one thing that he found in the Muslim lands was the homogeneity of religious customs despite the differences in culture…
In all the countries he travelled, wherever he went, he could walk into any city and fulfill his religious obligations easily, because the Islamic terms were kept Islamic…
In those times, if you said ‘Salaat’ in India, you would be understood from Turkey to Djobouti to Tashkent to Samarkand, because that is the real Islamic term for Salaat…
If in those days, if you said ‘Namaaz’, the only people who would’ve understood you would be the Hindustani Muslims being led by the first of the many in the line of mod-Muslim rulers, Akbar…
Islam is a universal religion…The reason it can be claimed as one is that because when the first Muslim reaches Mars by the end of this century :insha:, the first words uttered there would be those which the whole Muslim world would understand…
Allah Hafiz…
when did Ibn e Batuta or his narration of his travels and his findings on the state of Islamic empire at that time become any authority or ideal of Islam?