![]() ![]() The Burda is divided into 10 chapters and 160 verses all rhyming with each other. ![]() The original Burdah is not as famous as the one composed by al-Busiri even though Muhammad had physically wrapped his mantle over Ka'b not in a dream like in the case of al-Busiri. Muhammad was so moved that he removed his mantle and wrapped it over him. He recited this poem in front of Muhammad after embracing Islam. īānat Suʿād, a poem composed by Ka'b bin Zuhayr was originally called as Al-Burdah. It is entirely in praise of Muhammad, who is said to have been praised ceaselessly by the afflicted poet, to the point that Muhammad appeared in a dream and wrapped him in a mantle or cloak in the morning the poet discovers that God has cured him. ![]() The poem whose actual title is al-Kawākib ad-durriyya fī Madḥ Khayr al-Bariyya ( الكواكب الدرية في مدح خير البرية, "The Celestial Lights in Praise of the Best of Creation"), is famous mainly in the Sunni Muslim world. Qasīdat al-Burda ( Arabic: قصيدة البردة, "Ode of the Mantle"), or al-Burda for short, is a thirteenth-century ode of praise for the Islamic prophet Muhammad composed by the eminent Sufi mystic Imam al-Busiri of Egypt. A verse from the Qaṣīdat al-Burda, displayed on the wall of al-Busiri's shrine in Alexandria ![]()
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