Al-Mulk
From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
Mulk, or with the article al-mulk or ul-mulk, is an oriental word (an alternative form is molk), derived from the ruler's title Malik, for realm, also used in a more generic term, regardless of the royal (or, as in Persia, imperial) style.
In Islam, Malik al Mulk (Arabic: مالك الملك) 'The Owner of All Sovereignty', literally 'king of the realm', is one of the 99 Names of Allah.
Surat Al-Mulk (Arabic: سورة الملك ) (The Sovereignty, Control; literally 'the kingdom') is the 67th sura (chapter) of the Qur'an, comprising 30 ayat.
It has been told in Hadith that Muhammad has said that if every night Sura Al-Mulk is recited, then the reciter shall be protected from the tortures of the grave.
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