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  1. Treatise On Rights (Risalat al-Huquq) Translator’s Introduction; The Treatise On Rights; The Rights of Allah against oneself. 1. The Greatest Right of Allah; 2) The Right of your self; 3) The Right of the Tongue; 4) The Right of the Hearing; 5) The Right of the Sight; 6) The Right of the Hand; 7) The Right of the Legs; 8) The Right of the Stomach

  2. Risalat al-Huquq ( Arabic: رسالة الحقوق, lit. 'treatise of rights') is an early Islamic text about social and religious responsibilities. The book is attributed to Ali al-Sajjad ( d. c. 712 CE ), an imam in Shia Islam, and the great-grandson of the Islamic prophet, Muhammad.

  3. Risāla al-Ḥuqūq (Arabic: رِسالَة الحُقُوق) is the title of a long narration from Imam al-Sajjad (a). This narration, which contains over 50 duties of any individual toward others, is in fact a treatise on moral conducts in both personal and social life.

  4. El texto traducido como el ‘Tratado de los derechos’ (Risalat al-huqūq) fue escrito por el cuarto imam chiita, Zayn al-‘Abidin (659-713). La traducción es, a la vez, acertada e imprecisa, pues huqūq incluye el sentido de ‘derechos’ pero no se reduce, en absoluto, a él.

  5. The famed "Treatise of Rights" (Risālat al-Ḥuqūq) by Imam Zayn al-ʿĀbidīn (as) is an important work in regards to how man should conduct himself. As its name suggests, the book focuses on the rights that is incumbent upon man to fulfill, which includes his rights to his Lord, his society, his family and his own body.