Bismillah Walhamdulillah Was Salaatu Was Salaam 'ala RasulillahAssalamualaikum Wa Rahmatullahi Wa Barakatuhu.Hadith - 1Narrated Anas bin Malik (May Allah Subhanahu wa ta'ala be pleased with him)The Prophet (May Peace,blessings and mercy of Allah Subhanahu wa ta'ala be on him) said, "Take Suhur as there is a blessing in it."Sahih Bukhari:Volume 3, Book 31, Number 146Hadith - 2Narrated 'Aisha (May Allah Subhanahu wa ta'ala be pleased with her)(the wife of the Prophet(May Peace,blessings and mercy of Allah Subhanahu wa ta'ala be on him) ) Hamza bin 'Amr Al-Aslami asked the Prophet (May Peace,blessings and mercy of Allah Subhanahu wa ta'ala be on him) , "Should I fast while traveling?" The Prophet replied, "You may fast if you wish, and you may not fast if you wish."Sahih Bukhari:Volume 3, Book 31, Number 164Hadith -3Narrated Jarir (May Allah Subhanahu wa ta'ala be pleased with him)When I gave the pledge of allegiance to Allah's Apostle (May Peace,blessings and mercy of Allah Subhanahu wa ta'ala be on him) and he (May Peace,blessings and mercy of Allah Subhanahu wa ta'ala be on him) stipulated that I should give good advice to every Muslim.Sahih Bukhari:Volume 3, Book 50, Number 875Hadith -4Narrated Sahl bin Sad (May Allah Subhanahu wa ta'ala be pleased with him)I used to take my Suhur meals with my family and then hurry up for presenting myself for the (Fajr) prayer with Allah's Apostle (May Peace,blessings and mercy of Allah Subhanahu wa ta'ala be on him).Sahih Bukhari:Volume 3, Book 31, Number 143Allah Hafiz.
Neil Armstrong, the astronaut who marked an epochal achievement in exploration with "one small step" from the Apollo 11 lunar module on July 20, 1969, becoming the first person to walk on the moon, has died at 82.
The family announced the death in a statement Saturday but did not disclose when or where he died. They attributed it to "complications resulting from cardiovascular procedures."
A taciturn engineer and test pilot who was never at ease with his fame, Mr. Armstrong was among the most heroized Americans of the 1960s Cold War space race.
Twelve years after the Soviet Sputnik satellite reached space first, deeply alarming U.S. officials, and after President John F. Kennedy in 1961 declared it a national priority to land an American on the moon "before this decade is out," Mr. Armstrong, a former Navy fighter pilot, commanded the NASA crew that finished the job.
The crew's trip to the moon — particularly the hair-raising final descent from lunar orbit to the treacherous surface — was history's boldest feat of aviation. Yet what the experience meant to him, what he thought of it all on an emotional level, he mostly kept to himself.
Like his boyhood idol, transatlantic aviator Charles A. Lindbergh, Mr. Armstrong learned how uncomfortable the intrusion of global acclaim can be. And just as Lindbergh had done,he eventually shied from the public and avoided the popular media.
In time, he became almost mythical.
Mr. Armstrong was "exceedingly circumspect" from a young age, and the glare of international attention "just deepened a personality trait that he already had in spades," said his authorized biographer, James R. Hansen, a former NASA historian.
In an interview, Hansen, author of "First Man: The Life of Neil A. Armstrong," cited another "special sensitivity" that made the first man on the moon a stranger on Earth.
"I think Neil knew that this glorious thing he helped achieve for the country back in the summer of 1969 — glorious for the entire planet, really — would inexorably be diminished by the blatant commercialism of the modern world," Hansen said.
"And I think it's a nobility of his character that he just would not take part in that."
A love of flying
The perilous, 195-hour journey that defined Mr. Armstrong's place in history — from the liftoff of Apollo 11 on July 16, 1969, to the capsule's splashdown in the Pacific eight days later — riveted the world's attention, transcending cultural, political and generational divides in an era of profound social tumult and change in the United States.
As Mr. Armstrong, a civilian, and his crewmates, Air Force pilots Edwin E. "Buzz" Aldrin Jr. and Michael Collins, hurtled through space, television viewers around the globe witnessed a drama of spellbinding technology and daring. About a half-billion people listened to the climactic landing and watched a flickering video feed of the moon walk.
At center stage, cool and focused, was a pragmatic, 38-year-old astronaut who would let social critics and spiritual wise men dither over the larger meaning of his voyage. When Mr. Armstrong occasionally spoke publicly about the mission in later decades, he usually did so dryly, his recollections mainly operational.
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