books of maulana rumi in urdu
I Desire (With English Translation) by Muhammed Iqbal. He was a central figure of Islamic spiritual, intellectual . Many of his writings have been translated into other languages., including Spanish, Turkish, German, Russian, Urdu, Arabic, French, and Italian. PDF Maulana Jalaluddin Rumi Unseen Rain - git.dstv.com By common consent ranks among the world's greatest masterpieces of religious literature. Search the history of over 752 billion All three books are written in the Persian language. Check Pages 1-50 of RUMI : THE BOOK OF LOVE in the flip PDF version. This book actually contains Persian poetry but has been translated by Qazi Sajjad into Urdu. The Book of Rumi Rumi 2018 Philip Pullman, author of 'His Dark Materials' trilogy, has remarked that "after nourishment, shelter, and companionship, stories are the thing we need most in the world." This new collection of Rumi stories fills that need. This fresh prose translation of 105 short teaching stories by Rumi, which form the core of the . Atom Konya, Turkey. In December 1273, Rumi fell ill and died on the 17th of December in Konya. (Masnavi Book 3: 20) The two Magicians who summoned their father from the grave, (Masnavi Book 3: 21) Comparison of the Qurn to the rod of Moses, (Masnavi Book 3: 22) The Elephant in the dark house, (Masnavi Book 3: 24) Infidelity and Predestination, (Masnavi Book 3: 25) The Barber and the Man with grizzled hair, (Masnavi Book 3: 26) The answer of Zayd to his assailant, (Masnavi Book 3: 27) The Companions of the Prophet and the Qurn, (Masnavi Book 3: 28) The Lover who read a love-letter in the presence of his Beloved, (Masnavi Book 3: 29) The Poor Man who prayed that he might gain a lawful livelihood without work, (Masnavi Book 3: 30) Knowledge and Opinion, (Masnavi Book 3: 31) The Teacher who fancied he was ill, (Masnavi Book 3: 32) Story of the dervish who had secluded himself in the mountains, (Masnavi Book 3: 33) The far-seeing Goldsmith, (Masnavi Book 3: 34) The Magicians whom Pharaoh threatened to punish, (Masnavi Book 3: 35) The complaint of the Mule to the Camel, (Masnavi Book 3: 37) The Shaykh who showed no grief at the death of his sons, (Masnavi Book 3: 38) The Blind Man who regained his sight when he read the Qurn, (Masnavi Book 3: 39) The patience of Luqman, (Masnavi Book 3: 40) Buhlul and the Dervish, (Masnavi Book 3: 41) The Visions and Miracles of Daquqi, (Masnavi Book 3: 42) Moses (AS) and Khizr (AS), (Masnavi Book 3: 43) The flight of Jesus from the Fool, (Masnavi Book 3: 44) The story of the people of Saba and their folly (The Childrens Tale of the Three Worldlings), (Masnavi Book 3: 45) The Hares and the Elephant, (Masnavi Book 3: 46) Noah and the building of the Ark, (Masnavi Book 3: 47) The Thief who said he was beating a Drum, (Masnavi Book 3: 48) The meaning of Prudence, (Masnavi Book 3: 49) The Vow made by the Dogs every winter, (Masnavi Book 3: 50) The Divine Providence manifested in the creation of Hell, (Masnavi Book 3: 51) Kings compared to the Bb-i Saghr at Jerusalem, (Masnavi Book 3: 52) The Sufi who fell into ecstasy on seeing an empty food-wallet, (Masnavi Book 3: 53) Jacobs love for Joseph, (Masnavi Book 3: 54) The Amir and the Slave who took delight in the ritual Prayer, (Masnavi Book 3: 55) The Faith of the Worldly, (Masnavi Book 3: 57) Anas and the Prophet's napkin, (Masnavi Book 3: 58) How the Prophet saved a caravan of Arabs from death in the Desert, (Masnavi Book 3: 59) Miracles wrought by the Prophet on the same occasion, (Masnavi Book 3: 60) Need and distress call forth the Bounty of God, (Masnavi Book 3: 61) The Baby that bore witness to the Prophet , (Masnavi Book 3: 62) The Eagle that carried off the Prophets boot, (Masnavi Book 3: 63) The Man who asked Moses to teach him the language of Beasts and Birds, (Masnavi Book 3: 64) The Woman whose twenty children all died in infancy, (Masnavi Book 3: 65) Why Hamza in his old age refused to protect himself with a coat of mail, (Masnavi Book 3: 66) The advantages of Deliberation, (Masnavi Book 3: 68) The World and the Body, (Masnavi Book 3: 70) The reverence due to the Shaykhs from their disciples, (Masnavi Book 3: 71) Conventional and intuitive knowledge, (Masnavi Book 3: 73) The Wakl of Bukhara and his Master, (Masnavi Book 3: 74) The appearance of the Holy Spirit in human shape to Mary, the Mother of Jesus, (Masnavi Book 3: 75) The most beautiful city, (Masnavi Book 3: 76) The Lover in the haunted Mosque, (Masnavi Book 3: 77) The worldliness of Galen, (Masnavi Book 3: 78) How Satan deceived the Quraysh, (Masnavi Book 3: 79) The Boy who beat a tomtom in order to scare a Camel on which they were beating a drum, (Masnavi Book 3: 80) Comparison of the true Believer suffering tribulation to peas being boiled in a pot, (Masnavi Book 3: 81) The Mathnawi and its critics, (Masnavi Book 3: 82) The outer and inner sense of the Quran, (Masnavi Book 3: 83) Why the Saints take refuge in mountains and caves, (Masnavi Book 3: 84) How the mountains joined in the song of David, (Masnavi Book 3: 85) The Foal that would not drink, (Masnavi Book 3: 86) The cry of the Devil, (Masnavi Book 3: 87) How each element in the Body is drawn to its original source, and the Soul likewise, (Masnavi Book 3: 88) The Prophet and the Captives, (Masnavi Book 3: 89) The Gnat and the Wind in the presence of Solomon, (Masnavi Book 3: 90) The perfidious Lover, (Masnavi Book 4: 02) The perfidious Lover (continued), (Masnavi Book 4: 03) The Preacher who prayed for the wicked, (Masnavi Book 4: 04) The answer of Jesus to the question, What is the hardest thing to bear, (Masnavi Book 4: 05) The Suf who caught his wife with a strange man, (Masnavi Book 4: 07) Comparison of the World to a bath-stove, (Masnavi Book 4: 08) The Tanner who fainted on smelling otto and musk, (Masnavi Book 4: 09) The Jew who tempted Ali, (Masnavi Book 4: 10) The building of the Farther Mosque (the Temple of Solomon), (Masnavi Book 4: 11) The Faithful are naught but brothers, (Masnavi Book 4: 12) The unspoken Sermon of the Caliph Uthman, (Masnavi Book 4: 14) Comparison of the Prophet and the Moslem saints to the Ark of Noah, (Masnavi Book 4: 16) The Miracles of Shaykh Abdullah Maghrib, (Masnavi Book 4: 17) The Druggist and the Clay-eater, (Masnavi Book 4: 18) The Dervish and the Carrier of firewood, (Masnavi Book 4: 19) Ibrahim ibn Adham and his abandonment of his Kingdom, (Masnavi Book 4: 20) The thirsty man who climbed a walnut-tree and dropped walnuts into the water, (Masnavi Book 4: 21) Halima (RA) and the infant Muhammad (PBUH), (Masnavi Book 4: 22) The Worldly and the Spiritual, (Masnavi Book 4: 23) The Poet and the two Viziers, (Masnavi Book 4: 25) The Demon who sat on the throne of Solomon, (Masnavi Book 4: 26) How Cain learned the grave-diggers trade, (Masnavi Book 4: 27) The Sufi who contemplated the beauty of the Garden in his own heart, (Masnavi Book 4: 28) Worldly knowledge and power a dangerous weapon in the hands of the wicked, (Masnavi Book 4: 29) O thou that wrappest thyself, (Masnavi Book 4: 30) The Slave whose allowance was reduced, (Masnavi Book 4: 31) Man half angel and half beast, (Masnavi Book 4: 32) Majnun and his she-camel, (Masnavi Book 4: 33) The Divine and the Thief who stole his turban, (Masnavi Book 4: 34) The Worlds enticement and warning, (Masnavi Book 4: 35) The food of the Saints, (Masnavi Book 4: 36) Death the touchstone of pretension, (Masnavi Book 4: 37) The hypocritical Encomiast, (Masnavi Book 4: 38) The divine Physicians, (Masnavi Book 4: 39) How Abd Yazd (Bayazid) Bistami predicted the birth of Abul-Hasan Kharraqani, (Masnavi Book 4: 40) How the wind blew perversely against Solomon, (Masnavi Book 4: 41) Abul-Hasan at the tomb of Abu Yazid, (Masnavi Book 4: 42) The Man who took counsel with his enemy, (Masnavi Book 4: 43) The Prophets appointment of a Young Man of Hudhayl to command the army, (Masnavi Book 4: 44) The Ecstasy of Bayazid, (Masnavi Book 4: 45) The wise, the half-wise, and the foolish, (Masnavi Book 4: 46) Story of the lake and the fishermen and the three fishes, (Masnavi Book 4: 47) The ablutionary Prayers, (Masnavi Book 4: 48) The Man who failed to profit by the wise counsels of a Bird, (Masnavi Book 4: 49) Moses and Pharaoh as types of Reason and Imagination, (Masnavi Book 4: 50) The spiritual vision in which all the senses become one, (Masnavi Book 4: 51) The Worlds assault on the Unseen, (Masnavi Book 4: 52) The Purification of the Heart, (Masnavi Book 4: 53) I was a Hidden Treasure, (Masnavi Book 4: 54) "Speak ye unto men according to the measure of their understandings", (Masnavi Book 4: 55) The Prophets promise of Paradise to Hazrat Ukkasha (R.A), (Masnavi Book 4: 56) The royal Falcon and the Old Woman, (Masnavi Book 4: 57) Ali's advice to the Mother whose child was in danger of falling from the top of the water-spout, (Masnavi Book 4: 59) The Prophet and the Arab Chiefs, (Masnavi Book 4: 60) Paradise and Hell are the effects of Divine Mercy and Wrath, (Masnavi Book 4: 61) The Argument between the Atheist and the Mystic, (Masnavi Book 4: 62) The Purpose of Creation, (Masnavi Book 4: 63) Why Moses was loved by God, (Masnavi Book 4: 64) The King and his Boon-companion and the Courtier who acted as intercessor, (Masnavi Book 4: 65) Abraham rejects the proffered help of Gabriel, (Masnavi Book 4: 66) The mystery of Life and Death, (Masnavi Book 4: 68) The Prince and the Witch of Kabul, (Masnavi Book 4: 69) The Ascetic who laughed while the people were dying of hunger, (Masnavi Book 4: 70) Live in harmony with Universal Reason, (Masnavi Book 4: 72) Verily, I ask pardon of God seventy times every day, (Masnavi Book 4: 73) The weakness of the discursive Reason, (Masnavi Book 4: 74) Submission to the Saints, (Masnavi Book 4: 75) The Mule and the Camel, (Masnavi Book 4: 76) The Egyptian and the Israelite, (Masnavi Book 4: 77) The Pear-tree of Illusion, (Masnavi Book 4: 78) The spiritual Evolution of Man, (Masnavi Book 4: 79) Divine immanence in Creation, (Masnavi Book 4: 80) Dhul-Qarnayn and Mount Qaf, (Masnavi Book 4: 81) The Ant that saw the pen writing, (Masnavi Book 4: 82) The Prophets vision of Gabriel in his real form, (Masnavi Book 5: 02) Parable of the Four Birds, (Masnavi Book 5: 03) The Prophet and the Greedy Infidel, (Masnavi Book 5: 04) The Light which is the Food of the Spirit, (Masnavi Book 5: 05) Description of the Peacock, (Masnavi Book 5: 06) Diversity of Intelligences, (Masnavi Book 5: 07) The Arab of the Desert and his Dog, (Masnavi Book 5: 08) The Sage and the Peacock, (Masnavi Book 5: 09) No monkery in Islam, (Masnavi Book 5: 10) Description of the Crow, (Masnavi Book 5: 11) The Gazelle in the Donkey-stable, (Masnavi Book 5: 12) Muammad Khwarizmshah and the people of Sabzawar, (Masnavi Book 5: 13) Description of the Cock, (Masnavi Book 5: 14) The Lowest of the Low, (Masnavi Book 5: 17) And He is with you, (Masnavi Book 5: 18) The Man who claimed to be a Prophet, (Masnavi Book 5: 20) The Disciple who imitated the Shaykh, (Masnavi Book 5: 21) The Maidservant and the Donkey, (Masnavi Book 5: 22) Parable of the Parrot which is taught to speak by seeing its image in a mirror, (Masnavi Book 5: 23) The Puppies that barked before they were born, (Masnavi Book 5: 24) The People of Zarwn, (Masnavi Book 5: 25) The Creation of Adam, (Masnavi Book 5: 26) The illusion of causes, (Masnavi Book 5: 27) Death and Resurrection, (Masnavi Book 5: 28) The infinite mercy of God, (Masnavi Book 5: 31) The Ascetic and his Honorable Wife, (Masnavi Book 5: 32) The repentance of Nasuh, (Masnavi Book 5: 33) The Fox and the Donkey, (Masnavi Book 5: 34) The donkey that envied the Arab horses, (Masnavi Book 5: 35) The Ascetic who made trial of his trust in God, (Masnavi Book 5: 36) Parable of the Camel, (Masnavi Book 5: 37) The effeminate Youth, (Masnavi Book 5: 38) The Man who was afraid of being taken for an Ass, (Masnavi Book 5: 39) Shaykh Muhammad Sar-raz of Ghazna, (Masnavi Book 5: 40) The Disciple in dread of hunger, (Masnavi Book 5: 41) The Cow in the green Island, (Masnavi Book 5: 42) The Christian ascetic who went about with a lamp in the day-time, (Masnavi Book 5: 43) Debate between a Moslem and a Magian on the subject of free-will, (Masnavi Book 5: 44) The Dervish who reproached God, (Masnavi Book 5: 47) The Infidel and Bayazid, (Masnavi Book 5: 48) The Muezzin with the harsh voice, (Masnavi Book 5: 49) The Cat and the Meat, (Masnavi Book 5: 50) The Amr and the Ascetic, (Masnavi Book 5: 51) Ziya-yi Dalq and his Brother, (Masnavi Book 5: 52) Dalqaks game of Chess with the Shah of Tirmid, (Masnavi Book 5: 53) The Prophet on Mount Hira, (Masnavi Book 5: 54) The World that is living, speaking, and hearing, (Masnavi Book 5: 55) The Guest who took offence and departed, (Masnavi Book 5: 56) The Man who tormented his Carnal Soul, (Masnavi Book 5: 57) The Caliph and the Captain, (Masnavi Book 5: 58) The Magicians of Pharaoh, (Masnavi Book 6: 02) The Bird on the City-wall, (Masnavi Book 6: 03) The temptation of Free-will, (Masnavi Book 6: 04) The Hindu Slave and his Masters daughter, (Masnavi Book 6: 05) The Thief who put out the light, (Masnavi Book 6: 06) The Story of Ayz (continued), (Masnavi Book 6: 07) The Fowler and the Bird, (Masnavi Book 6: 08) The Man whose Ram was stolen, (Masnavi Book 6: 09) The Watchman who cried out after the Robbers had gone, (Masnavi Book 6: 10) The Lover who fell asleep, (Masnavi Book 6: 11) The Turkish Amir and the Minstrel, (Masnavi Book 6: 12) Hazrat Aisha (RA) and the Blind Man, (Masnavi Book 6: 14) A Poets rebuke to the Shites of Aleppo, (Masnavi Book 6: 16) The Man who gave the drum-call for breakfast at midnight, (Masnavi Book 6: 19) The Horse that went backward, (Masnavi Book 6: 20) Hazrat Muhammad (PBUH) and Hazrat Jesus (AS), (Masnavi Book 6: 21) The ugly old Hag who wanted a Husband, (Masnavi Book 6: 22) The Dervish and the Man of Gln, (Masnavi Book 6: 23) The Beggar and the House where nothing could be got, (Masnavi Book 6: 24) The Man who was desperately ill, and the Story of the Sfi and the Cadi, (Masnavi Book 6: 25) Sultan Mahmud and the Hindu Boy, (Masnavi Book 6: 26) The Turk and the Tailor, (Masnavi Book 6: 27) The Fakir and the Hidden Treasure, (Masnavi Book 6: 28) Shaykh Abul Hasan Kharraqani and his Disciple, (Masnavi Book 6: 29) Man the vicegerent of God, (Masnavi Book 6: 30) The Three Travellers and the sweetmeat, (Masnavi Book 6: 31) The Camel, the Ox, and the Ram, (Masnavi Book 6: 32) Dalqak and the King of Tirmid, (Masnavi Book 6: 33) The Mouse and the Frog, (Masnavi Book 6: 34) Sultan Mahmud and the Night-thieves, (Masnavi Book 6: 35) The Sea-cow and the Pearl, (Masnavi Book 6: 36) Abdul Ghawth and the Peris, (Masnavi Book 6: 37) The insolvent Dervish and the Police Inspector of Tabrz, (Masnavi Book 6: 38) Jafar-i Tayyar's irresistible attack on a fortress, (Masnavi Book 6: 39) Parable of the man who sees double, (Masnavi Book 6: 40) The Khwrizmshh and the beautiful Horse, (Masnavi Book 6: 41) The imprisonment of Joseph, (Masnavi Book 6: 42) The Three Princes who fell in love with the portrait of the Princess of China, (Masnavi Book 6: 43) The Sadr-i Jahan of Bukhara and the Jurist, (Masnavi Book 6: 44) Story of two Brothers, (Masnavi Book 6: 45) The King who forced a learned Doctor to drink wine with him, (Masnavi Book 6: 46) Imrau l-Qays and the King of Tabuk, (Masnavi Book 6: 47) The Man who dreamed of a Hidden Treasure, (Masnavi Book 6: 48) The Cadi and the Wife of Jh, (Masnavi Book 6: 49) The Prophet (PBUH) and Ali (RA), (Masnavi Book 6: 50) Hell and the true Believer, (Masnavi Book 6: 52) The miracles of Shayban Rai, (Masnavi Book 6: 53) The Man who left his property to the laziest of his three Sons, (Masnavi Book 6: 54) Parable of the Child and the Bogle, (Masnavi Book 6: 55) End by Maulana Baha-ul-Millat-ud-din QSA, (Masnavi Book 6: 56) End of Masnavi by Elahi Bakhs Kandhalvi, Post Comments
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