Nouman Ali Khan
En podcast av Muslim Central
1761 Avsnitt
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What Will Women Get In Jannah
Publicerades: 2015-05-09 -
Story of the People of the Cave - Surah Al-Kahf
Publicerades: 2015-05-04 -
Speak up - Make a Difference
Publicerades: 2015-05-04 -
Praying For Success
Publicerades: 2015-05-04 -
don't Underestimate Any Good Deed
Publicerades: 2015-05-03 -
Things That Should Be Fix
Publicerades: 2015-04-30 -
When you disobey Allah Scary Reminder
Publicerades: 2015-04-30 -
What Kind Of Salah Are You Praying
Publicerades: 2015-04-30 -
Science vs Religion
Publicerades: 2015-04-30 -
Why Do Bad Things Happen Quran's Perspective
Publicerades: 2015-04-29 -
Do not insult People
Publicerades: 2015-04-27 -
Mocking Others And Arrogance
Publicerades: 2015-02-10 -
Amir Abdel Malik Taking Back Our Narrative
Publicerades: 2015-02-06 -
The Real Task Ahead
Publicerades: 2015-02-01 -
My Thoughts On Paris Shooting
Publicerades: 2015-01-14 -
Speaking The Common Language
Publicerades: 2015-01-02 -
The Month Of Forgiveness
Publicerades: 2015-01-02 -
Quran's Solution To Muslims Fighting Each Other
Publicerades: 2015-01-02 -
One Of Our Relationships With Allah
Publicerades: 2015-01-02 -
Greed
Publicerades: 2015-01-02
Nouman Ali Khan is the founder and CEO of Bayyinah and serves as a lead instructor for several programs including Dream, traveling seminars and Bayyinah TV. His serious Arabic training began in the U.S. in 1999 under Dr. Abdus-Samie, founder and former principal of Quran College in Faisalabad, Pakistan. Khan served as a professor of Arabic at Nassau Community College until 2006 when he decided to take Bayyinah on as a full-time project. Since then he has taught more than 10,000 students through traveling seminars and programs. He currently resides in Dallas, Texas and is focusing on teaching his students, developing Arabic curricula and filming material for Bayyinah TV. Nouman Ali Khan, who was of Pakistani descent and was born in Germany on May 4, 1978, spent his early years in the former East Berlin. Khan attended the Pakistan Embassy school from second through eighth grade while his father was employed by the Pakistani Embassy in Riyadh, Saudi Arabia. Khan was a teenager when his father decided to relocate the family to New York.
