Description
Gratitude to Allah in Islam — Reclaiming the Forgotten Worship
Allah described the human being in Surat Al-‘Adiyat with a single sharp word: kanud — ungrateful, denier of blessings. Lakanud, the latest masterful work from Islam Jamal, takes this Qur’anic word as its centre and explores gratitude to allah in islam with the warmth, honesty, and literary touch his readers have come to love. The book begins with a strange title and an arresting opening, and by the time the reader closes it, they find alhamdulillah rising naturally to the tongue.
What This Book Explores
- The meaning of kanud in the Qur’an and the seriousness with which Allah named it
- How a believer surrounded by ni’am — sight, hearing, health, family — slowly forgets the Giver
- The worship of shukr as a daily practice, not an occasional mood
- Why gratitude is one of the surest paths to increased blessing and deeper iman
- How to master the forgotten craft of seeing blessings before complaining of lack
Why a Book on Gratitude to Allah in Islam Is Needed Now
We live in the most materially blessed generation in human history and arguably the least grateful. Gratitude to allah in islam is not an optional virtue; it is among the worships the Qur’an commands directly and repeatedly. Islam Jamal writes with the gentle, conversational voice of someone speaking across a table — never preaching, never scolding, but quietly bringing the reader face to face with the blessings they have stopped seeing.
Read it slowly. By the last page, the tongue will be moister with the dhikr of Allah, and the heart a little softer toward its Lord. May Allah save us all from being among al-kanud, and write us among the truly grateful.





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