Muhammad visits Jahannam. Artwork from Miraj Nameh.. In Islam, Jahannam is the place of punishment for unbelievers and evildoers in the afterlife, or hell. This notion is an integral part of Islamic theology, and has occupied an important place in the Muslim belief. It is often called by the proper name Jahannam. Simultaneously, jahannam is a term specifically for the uppermost layer of hell.
In Islam, nikah (Arabic: نِكَاح, romanized: nikāḥ) is a contract exclusively between a man and woman. Both the groom and the bride are to consent to the marriage of their own free wills. A formal, binding contract - verbal or on paper - is considered integral to a religiously valid Islamic marriage, and outlines the rights and responsibilities of the groom and bride.

Contract law in Saudi Arabia is governed by the conservative Hanbali school of Sharia law, which adopts a fundamentalist and literal interpretation of the Quran. Any contract that is not specifically prohibited under Sharia law is legally binding, with no discrimination against foreigners or non-Muslims.. The Hanbali school is the most liberal among the four Sunni schools with respect to the

There are two kinds of Riba: Riba Al-Fadhl and Riba An-Nasee'ah. Riba Al-Fadhl is taking a superior thing of the same kind of goods by giving more of the same kind of goods of inferior quality. [As defined in Lughatul Fuqahaa' Dictionary - page 218]
The concept of Islamic banking and finance originates from the aspiration to remove Riba (usury) from the Islamic community. The Quran prohibits Riba. Despite differing views on the concept of Riba in the pre-Islamic era and the present time, Islamic scholars have sought to design and implement Riba-free (usury-free) banking since the early 1950s.
TYPES OF RIBA Despite there are many types of Riba prevalent in the world and the Quran never stipulated any specified one, the fact of its prohibition in Quran is the prohibition of interests which were common in the pre-Islamic days1. Riba is forbidden on the basis of Quran, Sunnah and Ijma' (consensus) as the Prophet Muhammed (‫ )ﷺ The word riba appears in the Quran 1 and the basis for its unlawfulness is based both on Quranic verses and scholarly consensus (ijma) amongst classical Muslim jurists. 2 However, the meaning of the term riba is decidedly complex and contested in both classical Islamic law and modern interpretations of the sharia. qOf1.
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  • types of riba in islam