Sheikh Salah Al Budair




512Kb MPEG4 (3.93 MB)
Windows Media (5.22 MB)

13th April 2009 - 18th Rabee Ath-Thani 1430

Makkah Isha
(Surat An-Nahl 64-74) Sheikh Ghamdi


Awesome
Download Audio



Windows Media (23 MB)

13th April 2009 - 18th Rabee Ath-Thani 1430

Madinah Isha
(Surat Ad-Dukhan 1-29) Sheikh Hudhaify



Downlaod Audio




Windows Media (22 MB)

13th April 2009 - 18th Rabee Ath-Thani 1430

Makkah Maghrib
(Surat Luqman 29-34) Sheikh Sudais



Download Audio



Windows Media (35 MB)

13th April 2009 - 18th Rabee Ath-Thani 1430

Madinah Maghrib
(Surat Al-Kafiroon wa Al-Ikhlaas) Sheikh Qasim


Download Audio



Windows Media (24 MB)

Sheikh Kalbani on NYTimes

“Any qualified individual, no matter what his color, no matter where from, will have a chance to be a leader, for his good and The king is trying to tell everybody that he wants to rule this land as one nation, with no racism and no segregation.” SHEIK ADIL KALBANI

TWO years ago, Sheik Adil Kalbani dreamed that he had become an imam at the Grand Mosque in Mecca, Islam’s holiest city.
Waking up, he dismissed the dream as a temptation to vanity. Although he is known for his fine voice, Sheik Adil is black, and the son of a poor immigrant from the Persian Gulf. Leading prayers at the Grand Mosque is an extraordinary honor, usually reserved for pure-blooded Arabs from the Saudi heartland.
So he was taken aback when the phone rang last September and a voice told him that King Abdullah had chosen him as the first black man to lead prayers in Mecca. Days later Sheik Adil’s unmistakably African features and his deep baritone voice, echoing musically through the Grand Mosque, were broadcast by satellite TV to hundreds of millions of Muslims around the world.
Since then, Sheik Adil has been half-jokingly dubbed the “Saudi Obama.” Prominent imams are celebrities in this deeply religious country, and many have hailed his selection as more evidence of King Abdullah’s cautious efforts to move Saudi Arabia toward greater openness and tolerance in the past few years.
“The king is trying to tell everybody that he wants to rule this land as one nation, with no racism and no segregation,” said Sheik Adil, a heavyset and long-bearded man of 49 who has been an imam at a Riyadh mosque for 20 years. “Any qualified individual, no matter what his color, no matter where from, will have a chance to be a leader, for his good and his country’s good.”
Officially, it was his skill at reciting the Koran that won him the position, which he carries out — like the Grand Mosque’s eight other prayer leaders — only during the holy month of Ramadan. But the racial significance of the king’s gesture was unmistakable.
Sheik Adil, like most Saudis, is quick to caution that any racism here is not the fault of Islam, which preaches egalitarianism. The Prophet Muhammad himself, who founded the religion here 1,400 years ago, had black companions.
“Our Islamic history has so many famous black people,” said the imam, as he sat leaning his arm on a cushion in the reception room of his home. “It is not like the West.”
It is also true that Saudi Arabia is far more ethnically diverse than most Westerners realize. Saudis with Malaysian or African features are a common sight along the kingdom’s west coast, the descendants of pilgrims who came here over the centuries and ended up staying. Many have prospered and even attained high positions through links to the royal family. Bandar bin Sultan, the former Saudi ambassador to the United States, is the son of Prince Sultan and a dark-skinned concubine from southern Saudi Arabia.
But slavery was practiced here too, and was abolished only in 1962. Many traditional Arabs from Nejd, the central Saudi heartland, used to refer to all outsiders as “tarsh al bahr” — vomit from the sea. People of African descent still face some discrimination, as do most immigrants, even from other Arab countries. Many Saudis complain that the kingdom is still far too dominated by Nejd, the homeland of the royal family. There are nonracial forms of discrimination too, and many Shiite Muslims, a substantial minority, say they are not treated fairly.
“The prophet told us that social classes will remain, because of human nature,” Sheik Adil said gravely. “These are part of the pre-Islamic practices that persist.”
BLACK skin is not the only social obstacle Sheik Adil has overcome. His father came to Saudi Arabia in the 1950s from Ras al Khaima, in what is now the United Arab Emirates, and obtained a job as a low-level government clerk. The family had little money, and after finishing high school, Adil took a job with Saudi Arabian Airlines while attending night classes at King Saud University.

Sheikh Mahir

From Surah Al Araf Awesome



Windows Media(16 MB)
512Kb MPEG4(26 MB)

13th April 2009 - 16th Rabee Ath-Thani 1430

Makkah Fajr
(Surah Al-Maidah 27-40) Sheikh Juhany



Download Audio


Download Video

13th April 2009 - 16th Rabee Ath-Thani 1430

Madinah Fajr
(Surah Ale Imran 22-32) Sheikh Qasim



Download Audio


Download Video

12th April 2009 - 17th Rabee ath-Thani 1430

Madinah Isha
(Surah al-Furqan 61-71) Sheikh Hudhaifi


Download Audio (First Raka'ah only)

First Raka'ah only


Windows Media 11MB