Sadr al-Din bin Saleh

Grand Ayatollah Sadr al-Din bin Saleh (Arabic: صدر الدين ابن صالح) (Heart of the religion) (1779-1848) from Qom, Iran was a Twelver Shi'a religious scholar belonging to Sharefeddine & Noureddine families of Lebanese Shia Society.[1]

The as-Sadr Family

Sadr ed-Deen is also the patriarch of the Sadr family, a branch of Sharafeddine (Arabic: شرف الدين) family from Jabal Amel in Lebanon. The Sharafeddine family itself is a branch of the Nour eddine family, which traces its lineage to Musa al-Kazim (the seventh Shi'a Imam and through him to the first Imam, Ali ibn Abi Talib and Fatima Zahra, the daughter of Muhammad (died 632). The as-Sadr family has produced numerous Islamic scholars in Iran, Lebanon, and Iraq, including his son Ismail as-Sadr (died 1919/1920) and his grandsons Musa as-Sadr (disappeared in Libya in 1978) and Mohammad Baqir as-Sadr (died 1980).[1]

gollark: Instead of forgetting to remember, just forget to forget.
gollark: Fun!
gollark: Well, it turns out that in real reality™, making things think turned out waaaay harder than moving things around and manufacturing things and such, and the things we have gotten out of this are not remotely humanlike or peoplelike.
gollark: ???
gollark: ↓ you, as a result

See also

References

  1. Abedin, Mahan (2019). Iran Resurgent: The Rise and Rise of the Shia State. Oxford University Press. p. 78. ISBN 978-1-84904-955-9. Retrieved 10 July 2020.
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