Unscripted #20 | Shaykh Abu Eesa Niamatullah in da house

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  • čas přidán 7. 07. 2024
  • Join us this week on our highly anticipated Unscripted podcast #20 with Shaykh Abu Eesa Niamatullah!
    In classic AE style, he takes a dig at Salman's doctorate, insults Man United fans (despite being one himself), highlights problems with modern-day Khutbahs while advocating no mobile phones for teenagers, all while enjoying a rap about himself by Umer.
    P.S. If you're a Pharmacist, watch at your own peril...
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    #AbuEesa #ManUnited #Banter

Komentáře • 38

  • @billybob3279
    @billybob3279 Před 4 lety +1

    MashaAllah this was very beneficial. Jzk

  • @noorulainsohail3620
    @noorulainsohail3620 Před 4 lety +5

    Waiting for the Shaykh to visit Karachi, Pakistan for the annual LiveDeen Conference IA. Great episode MA!

  • @abdullahahmed7604
    @abdullahahmed7604 Před 4 lety +4

    Great podcast

  • @yesyoureright
    @yesyoureright Před 4 lety +3

    Excellent. This should be on peace tv channel.

  • @NAFISALAM08
    @NAFISALAM08 Před 4 lety +1

    Jazak Allah Khair. Very very honest advice towards the end. And it comes to mind.
    Sahl bin Sa'd (May Allah be pleased with him) reported:
    The Prophet (ﷺ) said to 'Ali (May Allah be pleased with him), "By Allah, if a single person is guided by Allah through you, it will be better for you than a whole lot of red camels."
    [Al-Bukhari and Muslim].
    May Allah bless both of you. Especially towards the end it was a very very honest talk. Living in the Indian subcontinent, I can surely say things are very different here. May Allah ease our affairs for us.

  • @Abdullah12794
    @Abdullah12794 Před 4 lety +2

    The intro to the sheikh was 👌👌👌👌👏☺️

  • @kindlydols1215
    @kindlydols1215 Před 4 lety

    salaamu alaykum wr wb , thank you all.. I was wondering what article of AE the brother with the straigh outta t-shirt mentioned , that he used quite often.

    • @us1087
      @us1087 Před 4 lety

      Asalaam alaykum.. you can find it here: sunnahonline.com/library/purification-of-the-soul/194-best-of-the-best-the
      Umer - Straight Outta SW16 ;)

  • @syedanabihah1292
    @syedanabihah1292 Před 3 lety

    Aslaamualykum, yet another beneficial podcast MashAllah please can you comment the link to Sheikh's article you mentioned in 1:10?

  • @adeel.travel
    @adeel.travel Před 3 lety +1

    I think Sh Abu Eesa's point about technology is flawed. The gadgets are not the issue, its people's lack of focus. Whether a kid gets a phone at 14 or 18 or 25 doesn't matter - it's the lack of focus which is the deep underlying emotional trigger. Having focus is a superpower and nurturing that is far more important than having rules on when you can have a phone.
    Humans have evolved, and our attention spans, too.

  • @Sheen023
    @Sheen023 Před 4 lety +1

    Jazakallah khairan

  • @Bearded_Bro
    @Bearded_Bro Před 4 lety +3

    Anyone a pharmacist or studying/studied pharmacy 🤐

  • @yunush2003
    @yunush2003 Před 4 lety

    abu eesa would approve

  • @protectyourthaghr
    @protectyourthaghr Před 4 lety +1

    Alhamdulillah, I'm so relieved that Shaykh Abu Eesa Niamatullah made the following comment (at 1:32:57):
    ...I don't consider success and advancement the state of Muslims in the country. I've always been selfish in that way. My focus is upon that person. So for me, if that person loses their hijab or loses their iman or loses a result and saves all the Muslim community it doesn't matter because each person is going to be judged accordingly. I don't believe a person sacrifices their iman for everybody. That's not worth it. Our deen doesn't teach that...I can't see the system allowing people to practice the deen to how it should be to get to the top...
    This is what I meant when I mentioned previously about our sisters studying medicine or being happy when Muslims win competitions (or elections) that propel them into the mainstream.
    Also, brother Umer posed an interesting question regarding if Muslims in the UK have become more and more disconnected from the rest of the Ummah. I think that to a certain extent we need to be focused on ourselves because we are here and unless we make hijrah to a Muslim country our children and grandchildren will also grow up here. We need to be alert to the challenges that we and our children are facing and will face in the future, and we need to guide them towards the good and warn them against the mistakes and the bad, in others. As a mother, I worry that if we as parents were to pass away and our children are still here in the UK, the children need to know who they can go to for knowledge about fiqh, matters of the heart, Islamic finance etc. That means listening to and engaging with the people who ultimately will be their teachers.
    I think that Dr. Salman Butt mentioned once something about us possibly being in a 'post groups' phase and I think that many Muslims do have 'groups fatigue' and over the years have become better at using the Qur'an and Sunnah as a yardstick for knowing how to take the good in others while leaving the bad without boycotting whole groups. For the sake of our children's aakhira, we do need to realise that we can't shun entire groups for things that we disagree on when they do have some khayr as then we and our children will be left alone for shaytan to attack more easily. As the adults, we need to vet people and their ideas so that our children are not left alone and confused when we're not around.
    When it comes to the rest of the Ummah though, our children should know that they are always on our tongues and at the end of our pens/keyboards if we have the knowledge to help them, in our du'aas, in our hearts and minds and that they have a rightful share of our money either through zakah or sadaqah.
    At 1:20:40 there was an interesting discussion on correcting your teacher/scholar on issues he deems to be correct but which you consider to be falsehood. I think that this is really important especially when addressing the issue of scholars replacing previous, well-known fatwas because they were too 'hard-core' for our local context.

  • @ailmlvr5905
    @ailmlvr5905 Před 3 lety

    Masha Allah Pattan represent

  • @m_saqibali
    @m_saqibali Před 4 lety +1

    7:20 😠

  • @jedjah4612
    @jedjah4612 Před 4 lety

    I'm the other Hanafi🤣

  • @maxali5215
    @maxali5215 Před 4 lety +1

    What is abu Essa’s real name?

  • @ailmlvr5905
    @ailmlvr5905 Před 3 lety +1

    hahaha 'shia flex'

  • @queenofbeauty
    @queenofbeauty Před 3 lety

    Whats his real name? I’m sure he wasn’t born with the name Abu Eesa. Maybe its Junaid but he’s too ashamed of his Pakistani heritage

    • @raihanhussain7993
      @raihanhussain7993 Před 3 lety +2

      The same could be said to you, whats your real name? Maybe its bushra? You're too ashamed of your Pakistani heritage lol 🤐

  • @ThatsWasupFool
    @ThatsWasupFool Před 4 lety +2

    Tawheed boring?
    Allah hu musta'an

    • @khoyrulislam
      @khoyrulislam Před 4 lety +1

      Time stamp?

    • @ThatsWasupFool
      @ThatsWasupFool Před 4 lety +2

      @@khoyrulislam 14:35

    • @khoyrulislam
      @khoyrulislam Před 4 lety

      Wow. I wonder what he makes of the farewell khutbah 🤔

    • @ThatsWasupFool
      @ThatsWasupFool Před 4 lety

      @@khoyrulislam
      Subhan'Allah it reminds me of the following narration, and that the people of knowledge said this shows us the importance of tawheed. It's what differentiates us from most other religions
      Allah knows best
      Muslim (811) narrated from Abu’l-Dardaa’ that
      the Prophet (peace and blessings of Allaah be upon him) said:
      “Is any one of you unable to recite one-third of the Qur’aan in one night?”
      They said,
      “How could anyone read one-third of the Qur’aan?”
      He said,
      “Qul Huwa Allaahu Ahad is equivalent to one-third of the Qur’aan.”

    • @protectyourthaghr
      @protectyourthaghr Před 4 lety +2

      I think that the brother could have slowed down a bit while making this point and explained himself better. Alhamdulillah, you get a lot of khutbas that are live-streamed from all over the UK and from Makkah and Madinah. It's not the topic that is the problem but the way that it is delivered which makes it not as relevant to the lives and problems of the audience that it is being delivered to, as it could be. I've watched some excellent khutbas that are the right topic at the right time and delivered with the right tone to hit home whatever concepts are necessary for that particular audience. Unfortunately, there are many that are not thought out deeply enough beforehand to make an impact but their purpose is to have an impact on the people listening to them. There was a Muslim in the past giving reminders to the people and he complained that they were not being moved by his words. Another person of knowledge (Muhammad ibn Waasiyah?) replied that their heedlessness was due to the heedlessness of him, the advice giver. The tawheed issue is obviously not about the sincerity of the khateebs but it does show an important point which is that just because you deliver a khutbah or give advice on important topics from the Qur'an and the Sunnah doesn't mean that they will have the desired impact and the problem can lie with the ones delivering the message not just the ones receiving it. Some khateebs just really need to put more thought into their khutbas.

  • @maxali5215
    @maxali5215 Před 4 lety +3

    The hosts need to learn how to interview the guests. Learn from Howard stern or joe rogan