

The Virtues of Seclusion in Times of Confusion
This work by Shaykh 'Abd al-Ghani al-Nabulusi takes up a theme that feels as relevant now as when he wrote it: the value of seclusion, physically and virtually, as a protective measure during times of confusion and strife. Its original title, Takmil al-Nu'ut fi luzum al-buyut, translates literally as "The Perfection of Good Qualities Through Remaining in One's Home," and that is precisely its concern.
Translated by Abdul Aziz Suraqah and published by Ibriz Media in 2017, this edition brings the work to English readers. Dr. Shadee Elmasry has praised the translation, and separately spoken to the book's goal of putting an exclamation point on the importance of seclusion while building a nuanced, scholarly understanding of the matter, rather than a simplistic one.
For anyone trying to think clearly about how much of the world to let in — what to watch, whom to keep close, when to step back — this is a grounded companion, rooted in the words of a scholar who took the question seriously. It doesn't rush past the matter; it asks the reader to sit with it.
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This work by Shaykh 'Abd al-Ghani al-Nabulusi takes up a theme that feels as relevant now as when he wrote it: the value of seclusion, physically and virtually, as a protective measure during times of confusion and strife. Its original title, Takmil al-Nu'ut fi luzum al-buyut, translates literally as "The Perfection of Good Qualities Through Remaining in One's Home," and that is precisely its concern.
Translated by Abdul Aziz Suraqah and published by Ibriz Media in 2017, this edition brings the work to English readers. Dr. Shadee Elmasry has praised the translation, and separately spoken to the book's goal of putting an exclamation point on the importance of seclusion while building a nuanced, scholarly understanding of the matter, rather than a simplistic one.
For anyone trying to think clearly about how much of the world to let in — what to watch, whom to keep close, when to step back — this is a grounded companion, rooted in the words of a scholar who took the question seriously. It doesn't rush past the matter; it asks the reader to sit with it.























