Al-Albani eventually left the school and became a staunch critic of following a for Islamic jurisprudence, which made him a controversial figure amongst traditionalist Sunni Muslims.
17 Facts About Al-Albani
Al-Albani was arrested twice by the Ba'athist Syrian authorities in the 1960s for promoting Wahhabism.
Al-Albani spent much of his life critically re-evaluating hadiths and believed many previously accepted hadiths were unsound.
Al-Albani's father, Nuh Najati, was a jurist of the Hanafi school of jurisprudence of Sunni Islam who had been trained in Istanbul.
Al-Albani learned the Arabic language from al-Is'af, a non-profit civil school where he was to be known as al-Albani just after he dropped out of school and began to write.
Al-Albani studied the book, which his native Syrian teachers helped to accomplish.
Al-Albani left his watch shop in the hands of one of his brothers.
Al-Albani moved a number of times between Syria and a couple of cities in Jordan.
Al-Albani returned to Syria, and sometime later moved to Jordan, living there for the remainder of his time.
Al-Albani was a proponent of Salafism, and is considered one of the movement's primary figureheads in the 20th century.
Al-Albani criticized the four mainstream legal schools, Hanafi, Hanbali, Maliki and Shafi'i, and rejected the traditional Sunni view that Muslims should automatically turn to a madhhab for fiqh.
Al-Albani was amongst some leading Salafi scholars who were preaching for decades against what they considered the warped literalism of extremists.
Al-Albani claimed that Qutb had deviated in creed and held the belief of Oneness of Being.
Al-Albani wrote a book in which he redefined the proper gestures and formula that constitute the Muslim prayer ritual abiding by the prophet Muhammad's teachings.
Al-Albani held a number of controversial views that ran counter to the wider Islamic consensus.
Al-Albani lacks trust in the Imams of law and hadith, as well as in the rich hadith and law tradition handed down to us, in which the umma has taken great pride.
Al-Albani was the author of 217 books on various topics; such as hadith, fiqh, and creed.