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The texts actually offered on the IIC amounted to an eclectic collection: the
translation by Ahmad and his wife of the Koran and of a selection of Prophetic
Traditions (the beginnings of a project to translate 8,266 "adiths common to
both al-Bukhari’s and Muslim’s canonic collections); the couple’s Life of the
Prophet; a translation of Ghazali’s “Pure Faith Defined” (Qawa id al-aqaid, a
chapter from The Revival of the Religious Sciences of the famous twelfth-century
renewer of Sunni thought); a text by David Benjamin Keldani (1867–1940s), a
former Uniate-Chaldean bishop from western Iran who converted to Islam in
114 WEB HISTORY
1904 and later wrote the book Muhammad in the Bible under the name "Abd al-
Ahad Dawud; plus texts for children and texts denouncing other groups that had
originated from within Islam but are generally regarded as heterodox by mainstream
Muslims: the A"madiyya-Qadiyaniyya, the Ismailiyya, the Bahais, and
Rashad Khalifa’s “United Submitters International.”
For free downloading without registration, the site offered a selection of
“cool Islamic references”—mainly pamphlets and introductions to “what every
Muslim in the West should know.”14
Instruction was at first not to be free but was to be provided as a subscription
The texts actually offered on the IIC amounted to an eclectic collection: the
translation by Ahmad and his wife of the Koran and of a selection of Prophetic
Traditions (the beginnings of a project to translate 8,266 "adiths common to
both al-Bukhari’s and Muslim’s canonic collections); the couple’s Life of the
Prophet; a translation of Ghazali’s “Pure Faith Defined” (Qawa id al-aqaid, a
chapter from The Revival of the Religious Sciences of the famous twelfth-century
renewer of Sunni thought); a text by David Benjamin Keldani (1867–1940s), a
former Uniate-Chaldean bishop from western Iran who converted to Islam in
114 WEB HISTORY
1904 and later wrote the book Muhammad in the Bible under the name "Abd al-
Ahad Dawud; plus texts for children and texts denouncing other groups that had
originated from within Islam but are generally regarded as heterodox by mainstream
Muslims: the A"madiyya-Qadiyaniyya, the Ismailiyya, the Bahais, and
Rashad Khalifa’s “United Submitters International.”
For free downloading without registration, the site offered a selection of
“cool Islamic references”—mainly pamphlets and introductions to “what every
Muslim in the West should know.”14
Instruction was at first not to be free but was to be provided as a subscription