Rafed Network for Cultural Development

(Redirected from Rafed.net)

Rafed Network for Cultural Development is behind Rafed.net & Rafed.com (شبكة رافد للتنمية الثقافية), one of the most popular Shi'a websites.[1]

Rafed Network for Cultural Development
Company typePublic
IndustryPublications
FoundedLondon, UK
Headquarters
London
,
UK
Key people
Institute of Ahl al-Bayt (as) for Restoration of Books
Productsonline publications, books, etc.
Revenue?
Number of employees
?
Websitehttp://rafed.com

Origins

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The rafed network is based in Shi'a academic center of the world.[2] It was established by Institute of Ahl al-Bayt (as) for Restoration of Books (Arabic: Institute of āl al-bayt alayhumassalam li-ihya ul-turrāth, مؤسّسة آل البيت عليهم السلام لإحياء التراث), a large institute that was established in 1983[3] and has become one of the largest providers of documentation on Shia scholarship in the world,[4] having branches in UK, Germany, Turkey Lebanon and Syria.

Rafed.net & Rafed.com

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They are the owners of Rafed.net, a mainly Arabic site, as can be seen from its main page, but it also has an English section. The site is the most third most visited Shi'a site among Alexa Internet users, second only to Irna.com and al-shia.com.[1]

The site has Qur'an translations in multiple languages, including Spanish, French, Russian, English and the original Arabic.

The site is notable for spreading the scholarship of Grand Ayatollah Ali al-Sistani,[5] and is among several Shi'a sites blocked in Saudi Arabia.[6] Joshua Teitelbaum writes:

Many in Saudi Arabia’s minority (about 12%) Shi‘i population seem to spend much of their Internet time at Arabic-language Shi‘i sites. Rafed.net, and other such sites, report that 45% of their traffic comes from the Kingdom. These sites are apparently banned, but the owners switch domain names often and users have developed techniques to get around the Saudi censor.[7]

See also

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References

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  1. ^ a b "Most Popular In Shia". Alexa Internet.
  2. ^ "AlMujtaba Links Directory". AlMujtaba.com.
  3. ^ (in Arabic) "about us" on rafed.net
  4. ^ (in Arabic) https://www.rafed.com/ar/aal-ul-bayt
  5. ^ "Oil in the Gulf: Obstacles to Democracy and Development" By Daniel Heradstveit, page 140, on Google Books [1]
  6. ^ Saudi Institute. "Religious Freedom in the Kingdom of Saudi Arabia - Focus on Citizens". Shia News. Archived from the original on 2006-04-28.
  7. ^ Joshua Teitelbaum, a Senior Research Fellow at the Moshe Dayan Center for Middle Eastern and African Studies at Tel Aviv University, referencing Joseph Braude, “Iran: A Growing Internet Market Weathers a Temporal Storm,” Pyramid Research Advisory Service, May 18, 2001. "Archived copy" (PDF). Archived from the original (PDF) on 2004-12-27. Retrieved 2006-12-30.{{cite web}}: CS1 maint: archived copy as title (link)
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