Muhammad Abu Zahra

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Sheikh Muhammad Abu Zahra (1898-1974) was a conservative Egyptian public intellectual, traditional scholar of Islamic law and author.

Abu Zahra was educated at the Ahmadi Madrasa, the Madrasa al-Qada al-Shari and the Dar al-Ulum. He taught at al-Azhar's faculty of theology and later, as professor of Islamic law at Cairo University. He also served as a member of al-Azhar's Academy of Islamic Research. His more than forty books include biographies of Abu Hanifah, Imam Malik, Shafi'i, Ibn Hanbal, Zayd ibn Ali, Jafar as-Sadiq, Zain al Abideen, Ibn Hazm, and Ibn Taymiyyah, as well as works on personal status, pious endowments (waqf), property, and crime and punishment in Islamic law.[1]

[edit] Notes

  1. ^ Esposito, The Oxford Dictionary of Islam, Oxford University Press 2003

This man has a crooked aqeedah, don't read his works. May Allah(swt) protect us from deviated 'scholars' of his kind.

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