al-Lat (Arabic: اللات, romanized: al-Lat, pronounced [alːaːt]), also spelled Allat, Allatu, and Alilat, is a pre-Islamic Arabian goddess worshipped under various associations throughout the entire Arabian Peninsula, including Mecca, where she was worshipped alongside
The Qur'an declares "the reality of Allah, His inaccessible mystery, His various names, and His actions on behalf of His creatures." Allah does not depend on anything. God is not a part of the Christian Trinity. God has no parents and no children.
While the common idea is that these goddesses are “daughters of Allah” or “Banat Allah,” in the vast majority of the early Islamic sources, such a identifiation is not attributed to them and even the daughters of Allah have mostly been specified as angels.
Just as the Prophet (Sallallahu Alaihi Wasallam) said that daughters are a gift from Allah, and the love and the affection that he had shown to his daughters should be our ideal.
There is no one in the heavens and earth but that he comes to the Most Merciful as a servant. Allah has not taken any son, nor has there ever been with Him any deity. [If there had been], then each deity would have taken what it created, and some of them would have sought to overcome others.
Allah is not a trinity of three persons and has no son who was incarnate (made flesh) as a man. Some Christians therefore deny that Allah is the god they acknowledge.
Sunni sources often describe Ali as the first child to embrace Islam, and the significance of his Islam has been questioned by Watt, and also by the Sunni historian al-Jahiz ( d. 869).
Allah Almighty says (what means): “To Allah belongs the dominion of the heavens and the earth; He creates what He wills. He gives to whom He wills female [children], and He gives to whom He wills males. Or He makes them [both] males and females, and He renders whom He wills barren.
Yet there are instances where women are addressed in the Qur'an on their own, with matters that apply to them only. We do not find in these any instance where women are told that their position is inferior or subordinate to that of men. On the contrary, Islam stresses equality of treatment of sons and daughters.
Islamic depictions of angels resemble winged Christian angels, although Islamic angels are typically shown with multicolored wings. Angels, such as the archangel Gabriel, are typically depicted as masculine, which is consistent with God's rejection of feminine depictions of angels in several verses of Quran.
Israfil is mentioned in a hadith as the angel nearest to God, mediating the commands of God to the other archangels.
Each person is assigned four Hafaza angels, two of which keep watch during the day and two during the night. Muhammad is reported to have said that every man has ten guardian angels. Ali ben-Ka'b/Ka'b bin 'Ujrah, and Ibn 'Abbas read these as angels.
In Islam, Allah is not depicted as male or female — Allah has no gender. Yet Allah has traditionally been referred to, and imagined by many, as a man. Some Muslim women have begun to refer to Allah with feminine or gender neutral pronouns.
In another, Allah (swt) describes the righteous in Paradise as being those who took care of orphans during their worldly life. Allah (swt) and Prophet Muhammad (saw) repeat this promise of Jannah across the Quran and Sunnah, which makes you realise the importance of taking care of orphans and children.
English Translation
Does he not know that Allah sees? Knoweth he not that Allah doth see? Does he not know that Allah sees everything? Knows he not that Allah does see (what he does)?
For Allah loves those who turn to Him constantly and He loves those who keep themselves pure and clean. They ask about the monthly course. Say, “It is a state of impurity; so keep apart from women during their monthly course and do not go near them until they are clean.
When a female is born into an Islamic family, she plays the role of a daughter to the members of the family. It is said that when a boy is born, then he brings one Noor (light) and when a girl is born, then she brings two Noors”. They are a blessing to the family.
Al-Lat was also called as a daughter of Allah along with the other two chief goddesses al-'Uzza and Manat. According to the Book of Idols, the Quraysh were to chant the following verses as they circumambulated the Kaaba: By al-Lat and al-'Uzza, And Manat, the third idol besides.
Real daughter: one-half when alone, and two-thirds if more than one. If the deceased is survived by a male child also. the daughters are then treated as Asaba and the male child would get double of what falls to the lot of daughters.
However, according to Nawawi, the age of 15 lunar year is self-evident for both boys and girls to become full adults.
They are the “Mothers of the Believers,” yet most did not have children. Juridically, the purpose of sex in marriage is not solely procreation, and birth control and abortion are permissible. However, the right to have children is a basic spousal right, and infertility and impotence form legitimate grounds for divorce.