Dua
0 sources
Dua
Summary
Dua is an Islamic term[1]. Dua draws 240 Wikipedia views per month (islamic_term category, ranking #31 of 198).[2]
Key Facts
- Dua's religion is recorded as Islam[3].
- Dua's religion is recorded as Sufism[4].
- Dua's image is recorded as Men Iʿtikāf at Hakim Mosque of Isfahan - Rajab 1439 AH 02.jpg[5].
- Dua's instance of is recorded as Islamic term[6].
- Dua's instance of is recorded as Sufi terminology[7].
- Dua's item operated is recorded as Istighfar[8].
- Dua's operator is recorded as Muslim[9].
- Dua's operator is recorded as mu'min[10].
- Dua's operator is recorded as Muhsin[11].
- Dua's operator is recorded as Sufi[12].
- Dua's operator is recorded as Murid[13].
- Dua's operator is recorded as Sālik[14].
- invocation is named after Dua[15].
- Dua's ISSN is recorded as 2647-5693[16].
- Dua's Library of Congress authority ID is recorded as sh85106123[17].
- Dua's Bibliothèque nationale de France ID is recorded as 39166945x[18].
- Dua's location is recorded as Muslim world[19].
- Dua's location is recorded as Arab world[20].
- Dua's location is recorded as world[21].
- Dua's location is recorded as worldwide[22].
- Dua's subclass of is recorded as dhikr[23].
- Dua's DOI is recorded as 10.1163/1875-3922_DQU_SIM_000580[24].
- Dua's part of is recorded as Sirat al-Mustaqim[25].
- Dua's part of is recorded as Sabil Allah[26].
- Dua's part of is recorded as Suluk[27].
Body
Personal Life
Religious affiliations include Islam[3], a major religious group[28], founded in 0631[29] and Sufism[4], a religious movement[30].
Why It Matters
Dua draws 240 Wikipedia views per month (islamic_term category, ranking #31 of 198).[2] Dua has Wikipedia articles in 15 language editions, a strong signal of global cultural recognition.[31] Dua is known by 11 alternative names across languages and contexts.[32]