Protecting the Ummah from shirk, fraud, and misinformation in spiritual healing — Know the Sunnah, protect your faith, guard your family
One of the most dangerous crises facing Muslims today in the realm of spiritual healing is not the afflictions themselves — it is the misinformation and exploitation that surrounds them. Millions of Muslims turn to practitioners who use forbidden methods, compromise their Tawheed (Islamic monotheism), and exploit their suffering for financial gain. Our mission is to educate — so that every Muslim can distinguish authentic Ruqyah Shariah from shirk-based healing, identify fraudulent practitioners, and protect themselves and their families with the correct Islamic knowledge.
The foundation of all Islamic spiritual healing is Tawheed — the absolute oneness of Allah. He is the only Healer (Ash-Shafi), the only Protector, and the only source of benefit and harm. Every authentic healing practice in Islam begins and ends with this principle. When a practitioner uses objects, symbols, unknown language, or jinn as the source of healing — rather than Allah alone — they have compromised the foundational principle of Islam. This is the line that separates Ruqyah Shariah from forbidden magic.
The Prophet ﷺ said: "Whoever hangs an amulet has committed shirk." (Ahmad 17458). The majority of classical Islamic scholars — including Ibn Taymiyyah, Ibn Qayyim, and the major contemporary scholars — consider taweez (amulets) to be forbidden. Even taweez containing Quranic verses are considered at minimum strongly disliked by most scholars, as they create a dependency on an object rather than direct reliance on Allah.
Jinn are real, created from smokeless fire, and confirmed in the Quran 29 times. An entire Surah (Al-Jinn, Chapter 72) is about them. Key facts: they cannot know the future; they cannot help with the unseen; most jinn-related "services" offered by fraudulent practitioners involve cooperation with jinn — which is categorically forbidden in Islam and constitutes major shirk.
Not every mental or physical symptom is spiritual in origin. Understanding when a problem is medical, psychiatric, or spiritual is critical. Medical causes must always be investigated and ruled out. Over-spiritualising natural conditions leads to delayed medical treatment. Under-spiritualising confirmed Islamic realities like Sihr and jinn leads to mistreatment through medicine alone. Balanced, evidence-based Islamic assessment is essential.
Fraudulent Raqis are extremely common and cause immense harm — financial, spiritual, and psychological. Knowing the warning signs protects you and your family from exploitation and shirk. See the complete list of warning signs below.
Many cultural healing practices — burning specific items, reading specific numbers of verses based on numerology, chanting non-Quranic formulae — have no basis in the Quran or authentic Sunnah. These are innovations (bidah) that can range from disliked to forbidden. The test: "Did the Prophet ﷺ do this or instruct it?" If not, it is not part of Ruqyah Shariah.
The best protection for your family is daily Quranic practice — morning and evening adhkar, Ayat ul-Kursi, Al-Mu'awwidhatain. These are not complicated. They require no practitioner, no payment, and no object. They are the direct Prophetic prescription for daily protection, and they work by the permission of Allah.
Islamic scholars have established three conditions that every valid Ruqyah must meet. If any of these conditions is absent, the Ruqyah is not from the Sunnah:
Our blog covers detailed Islamic topics on Sihr, jinn, evil eye, authentic Ruqyah, and protecting your family — with full Quranic and Hadith references.
Read Islamic ArticlesThe majority of Islamic scholars consider taweez (amulets) to be forbidden, based on the Hadith: "Whoever hangs an amulet has committed shirk." (Ahmad 17458). Seeking protection through objects rather than direct reliance on Allah contradicts the foundations of Tawheed.
Key warning signs: claiming to know who did the magic (kahanah); using taweez or symbols; using jinn assistants; diagnosing from photos alone; demanding large fees with guarantees; performing secret rituals; and creating long-term financial dependency without teaching self-Ruqyah.
Yes. Jinn are confirmed 29 times in the Quran and an entire Surah (Al-Jinn, Chapter 72) is devoted to them. They are created from smokeless fire, have free will, and some are Muslim and some are disbelievers. Their existence is a matter of Islamic aqeedah.
Yes. Confirmed in Surah Al-Baqarah (2:102) and Surah Al-Falaq (113:4). The Prophet ﷺ was himself affected by Sihr (Sahih Bukhari 3268), which confirms its reality beyond any doubt. Denying Sihr despite these clear evidences contradicts the Quran.
1. From the Quran and Sunnah only. 2. In clear, understandable language. 3. With firm belief that healing comes from Allah alone. Any Ruqyah missing these conditions is not from the Sunnah.
No. Seeking assistance from jinn — of any kind — is major shirk in Islam. It is explicitly forbidden. Any practitioner who claims to use jinn assistants, regardless of framing them as "Muslim jinn" or "helpers", is engaged in forbidden magic (sihr), not Ruqyah Shariah.
Daily morning and evening adhkar — Ayat ul-Kursi, Al-Falaq, An-Nas — is the Prophetic prescription for daily protection. No practitioner, no payment, no object required. This is the most powerful ongoing protection available to any Muslim family.
Ignorance makes Muslims vulnerable — to fear, to exploitation by fraudulent practitioners, and to shirk-based practices that corrupt their aqeedah. Knowledge of what is authentic and what is forbidden is the first line of defence for every Muslim household.
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