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Former Imam of Masjid al-Haram From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
Adil al-Kalbani (Arabic: عادل الكلباني) is a Saudi Arabian Muslim cleric who served as an Imam of the Great Mosque of Mecca.[2][3][4]
Adil bin Salim bin Sa'eed al-Kalbani | |
---|---|
عادل
بن سعيد الكلباني | |
Title | Sheikh[1] |
Personal life | |
Born | |
Nationality | Saudi Arabian |
Religious life | |
Religion | Islam |
Denomination | Sunni |
Muslim leader | |
Influenced by
|
Adil al-Kalbani was born in Riyadh on April 4, 1958 to poor emigrants from Ras Al Khaimah in the United Arab Emirates who came to Saudi Arabia in the 1950s.[2][5] His father used to work as a government clerk. Due to his family's financial situation, al-Kalbani took a job with Saudi Arabian Airlines after finishing high school, whilst attending evening classes at King Saud University.[2]
Al-Kalbani's first teacher in his further Islamic studies was Hasan ibn Gaanim al-Gaanim.[5] He studied Sahih al-Bukhari, Jami` at-Tirmidhi and the tafsir of Ibn Kathir with him.[5] He also studied with Mustafa Muslim who taught the tafsir of al-Baydawi at Imam Muhammad ibn Saud Islamic University.[5] He also studied Akhir Tadmariyah with Abdullah Ibn Jibreen and the Quran with Ahmad Mustafa.[5] In 1994, he passed the government exam to become an Imam.[2]
After a brief stint working at the mosque in Riyadh Airport, he moved on to working as an Imam at the more prominent King Khalid Mosque.[2] He once dreamed that he had become the imam at the Great Mosque of Mecca;[2] two years later, in 2008, he was selected by King Abdullah to lead the tarawih prayers at the mosque.[2]
In Japan's city of Bandu, a center of Minhaj-ul-Quran was visited by Al-Kalbani on June 30, 2013.[6]
Al-Kalbani has said he is not a Shaykh (an authority in religious matters) but a Qari.[7]
He has two wives and twelve children.[2]
In a tweet, al-Kalbani stated that the non-existence of church bells in Saudi Arabia pleased him.[8][9]
Al-Kalbani criticised a tweet from a Saudi poet that said that the cranes that collapsed in Mecca "fell to the ground in prayer". Al-Kalbani said that this was the "stupidest kind of nonsense". He sarcastically suggested that the other cranes did not collapse because they were "liberal".[10]
He criticised the current situation of gender segregation in mosques, where women are "completely isolated" from men and only connected via a microphone. He called this a "phobia of women".[11]
In an interview with the BBC, al-Kalbani declared Twelver Shias as apostates,[12] which triggered a backlash from followers of the sect in Saudi Arabia.[13] In 2019, however, he retracted his position after reading a book by fellow scholar Hatim al-Awni, stating that he no longer considers as apostates those who "believe in one God, eat our halal meat, and prostrate toward our Qibla direction of Mecca".[14]
In a fatwa, al-Kalbani considered singing to be permissible under Islamic law, but retracted it in 2010.[15][16][17][18] In 2019, he backtracked on his retraction and again considered it permissible.[19] A religious singing event was attended by al-Kalbani.[20] A flute was purportedly used.[21][22][23]
In November 2021 he appeared in a promotional video for Combat Field - Riyadh Season 2021.[24][25][26]
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