1421/11/02 Hijri to Gregorian Date

Hijri date of 2 Dhu Al-Qidah 1421 AH in Gregorian

Well, the Hijri date 2 Dhul Qidah 1421 corresponds to the Gregorian date Saturday, 27 January 2001. This date lies in the eleventh month of the Hijri year 1421 AH, which is Dhu Al-Qidah of 1421 AH. Both this Hijri and Gregorian date occur on the single day that is Saturday without any doubt. The Arabic date 1421/11/02 is calculated using the Umm Al-Qura calendar and the sighting of the moon. One thing to remember is that this Arabic date may occur on different Gregorian date depending upon the region and country and obviously the moon.

If you are still not sure about the date then you can use our Arabic date converter.

Convert 2001/01/27 to Hijri Date

The following is the conversion of the Gregorian date 27 January 2001 to its equivalent Arabic date.

1421/11/02

Saturday, 2 Dhu Al-Qidah 1421 AH

Convert 1421/11/02 to Gregorian Date

The following is the conversion of the Arabic date 2 Dhul Qidah 1421 AH to its equivalent Gregorian date.

2001/01/27

Saturday, 27 January 2001

Qur'an Ayah of the day, 2 Dhul Qidah 1421

وَٱخْفِضْ جَنَاحَكَ لِمَنِ ٱتَّبَعَكَ مِنَ ٱلْمُؤْمِنِينَ

And lower thy wing (in kindness) unto those believers who follow thee.

Surah Ash-Shu'araa(26:215)

Hadith of the day, 2 Dhul Qidah 1421

Sahih al-Bukhari

Wedlock, Marriage (Nikaah)

Chapter: To accept the invitation to a Walima

Narrated Al-Bara' bin `Azib:

The Prophet (ﷺ) ordered us to do seven (things) and forbade us from seven. He ordered us to visit the patients, to follow the funeral procession, to reply to the sneezer (i.e., say to him, 'Yarhamuka-l-lah (May Allah bestow His Mercy upon you), if he says 'Al-hamduli l-lah' (Praise be to Allah), to help others to fulfill their oaths, to help the oppressed, to greet (whomever one should meet), and to accept the invitation (to a wedding banquet). He forbade us to wear golden rings, to use silver utensils, to use Maiyathir (cushions of silk stuffed with cotton and placed under the rider on the saddle), the Qasiyya (linen clothes containing silk brought from an Egyptian town), the Istibraq (thick silk) and the Dibaj (another kind of silk). (See Hadith No. 539 and 753).

Sahih al-Bukhari 5175