Where to begin —
and how to finish.
The library is a thousand years deep. These plans are curated paths through it. Pick one. Listen in order. Finish.
Seven Days at the Door
The gentlest possible introduction to the classical tradition.
Seven days. Seven short listening sessions. If you have never opened a book by Imam al-Ghazali or heard Ibn Kathir narrate the prophets, this is where you begin. By the end of a week you will have touched worship, character, and sacred history — the three pillars of the classical curriculum — without rushing.
Thirty Nights of the Iḥyāʾ
إحياء علوم الدين في رمضان
One chapter of Imam al-Ghazali every night of Ramadan.
One book of the Iḥyāʾ ʿUlūm al-Dīn every night of Ramadan — al-Ghazali's forty-book revival, paced to fit the month. A single sitting after Iftar, the whole of classical Islamic spirituality traced from worship through the heart to the remembrance of death. Whether you listen in the car, at the masjid, or in the stillness after Tarawih, the plan is waiting where you left it.
The Iḥyāʾ in Six Months
دليل القراءة المنهجية
al-Ghazali's forty books in a structured, paced reading.
Six months. Forty books. One hundred sixty-something hours of the greatest single work in Sunni Islamic spirituality, paced as Imam al-Ghazali himself intended: the outer acts first, then the social life, then the destructive vices, then the saving virtues. Each week points at one or two volumes and asks you to sit with them slowly.