Students
Some of Abdalqadir's students both past and present and notable people influenced by him include:
- Abdalhaqq Bewley
- Aisha Bewley
- Umar Ibrahim Vadillo
- Yasin Dutton
- Asadullah Yate
- Idris Mears
- Abdalhasib CastiƱeira
- Ali Laraki
- Muhammad Qasbi, Imam of the Great Mosque of Granada
- Mawlana Muhammad Wazani
- Abdassamad Clarke
- Ahmed Thomson
- Anas Coburn
- Abd ul-Ghani Melara
- Abdullah Luongo
- Abd us-Samad Nana
- Fazlin Khalid
- Abdalbasir Ojembarrena
- Ali Azzali
- Kent D. Palmer
- Hakim Archuletta
- Hamza Yusuf
- Hajja Saba Khalid
- Ibrahim Musa Isa
- Celt Islam
- Zaim Saidi
- Umar Faruq Abd-Allah
- Abdu l-Rahman R Rachadi
- Muhammad al-Andalusi del Pozo
- Emir Ahmad Salah as-Sufi
- D.S.Hurrell
- Noor Deros
Read more about this topic: Abdalqadir As-Sufi
Famous quotes containing the word students:
“The fetish of the great university, of expensive colleges for young women, is too often simply a fetish. It is not based on a genuine desire for learning. Education today need not be sought at any great distance. It is largely compounded of two things, of a certain snobbishness on the part of parents, and of escape from home on the part of youth. And to those who must earn quickly it is often sheer waste of time. Very few colleges prepare their students for any special work.”
—Mary Roberts Rinehart (18761958)
“President Lowell of Harvard appealed to students to prepare themselves for such services as the Governor may call upon them to render. Dean Greenough organized an emergency committee, and Coach Fisher was reported by the press as having declared, To hell with football if men are needed.”
—For the State of Massachusetts, U.S. public relief program (1935-1943)
“I know that I will always be expected to have extra insight into black textsespecially texts by black women. A working-class Jewish woman from Brooklyn could become an expert on Shakespeare or Baudelaire, my students seemed to believe, if she mastered the language, the texts, and the critical literature. But they would not grant that a middle-class white man could ever be a trusted authority on Toni Morrison.”
—Claire Oberon Garcia, African American scholar and educator. Chronicle of Higher Education, p. B2 (July 27, 1994)