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Comprehensive Program Overview
Maximum number of active accounts per trader: 4 ( one $250K account + one $100K account + two $20K accounts). Each account must have a different trading method.
Accounts without activity for more than 30 consecutive days will be closed.
Holding open trades overnight and over the weekend is allowed. Holding Indices over the weekend carries very high swaps.
Leverage for all accounts: 1:30. Margin requirements applies. Check FAQs below.
Any account with 5 violations will be automatically terminated
Maximum number of active accounts per trader: 4 ( one $250K account + one $100K account + two $20K accounts). Each account must have a different trading method.
Accounts without activity for more than 30 consecutive days will be closed.
Holding open trades overnight and over the weekend is allowed. Holding Indices over the weekend carries very high swaps.
Leverage for all accounts: 1:30. Margin requirements applies. Check FAQs below.
Any account with 5 violations will be automatically terminated
The first three repetitions were clumsy. His tongue felt thick. Then, a whisper came: “This is nonsense. It’s just words. Look at your empty cupboard.”
On the third night, while reciting the 41 repetitions, a profound silence fell over the room. He felt a coolness in his chest, as if a hot coal had been removed. Aisha stirred in her sleep, and for the first time in weeks, her brow was not sweating. The next morning, a heavy knock came at the door. Yusuf’s heart raced. It was the creditor, Malik , a man known for his cruelty, flanked by two officers.
Sheikh Umar explained, “The ‘Arsh’ is not a physical throne. It is the ultimate seat of divine authority. When you say this dua, you are not begging. You are wrapping yourself in the cloak of Allah’s kingship. You are reminding the universe—and your own soul—that no debt, no disease, and no tyrant has any power except what He allows. Recite it 7 times after Fajr, 7 times after Maghrib, and 41 times in a single sitting for dire need.” Yusuf returned home. At dawn, before Aisha woke, he performed ablution, faced the Qibla, and began to recite. dua ganjul arsh
Yusuf paused. This was the waswasa . He realized that his true enemy was not the creditor or the fever, but this despair. He took a deep breath and continued.
“Yusuf,” she said, smiling weakly. “Last night, I dreamed of a green dome suspended over our house. A voice said, ‘We have removed your burden because My servant declared My kingship over the Throne.’ The fever broke at dawn.” The first three repetitions were clumsy
His small shop had been seized due to a false debt. His wife, Aisha, was bedridden with a mysterious fever that drained her spirit more than her body. And worst of all, a deep, gnawing waswasa (whispering of doubt) had settled into his heart. He felt that Allah had abandoned him.
Yusuf fell to his knees and wept. He realized the dua had not been a magic spell. It had been a . It broke his attachment to fear, broke the spiritual arrogance of his despair, and rebuilt his tawakkul (reliance on God). The external miracles followed the internal one. It’s just words
By the seventh recitation, something shifted. The words “Al-Malikul Haqqul Mubin” (The King, the Clear Truth) hit him like a light. He understood: If Allah is the Clear Truth , then his fear of poverty was a lie. If Allah is Razzaq (The Provider), then his belief that he was alone was a delusion.
Note for the reader: Dua Ganjul Arsh is a known supplication in Sufi and traditional Islamic circles, often attributed to Imam Ali (AS) or other saints. While its chain of transmission varies, the core theme—declaring Allah’s absolute kingship, truth, and power—is rooted firmly in Quranic verses (e.g., Ayat-ul-Kursi, Surah Al-Hadid 57:3). Always consult a qualified scholar for practice.
Part 1: The Crumbling World In the sprawling, forgotten lanes of Old Cairo, lived a young calligrapher named Yusuf . He was a man of quiet faith, known for his meticulous hand in transcribing the Asma ul-Husna (the Beautiful Names of God). But for three months, Yusuf’s world had collapsed.
Malik’s face turned white as ash. The officers looked at the royal seal and bowed. Within an hour, the false debt was exposed as a forgery—committed by Malik himself. He was arrested. Yusuf rushed home. He found Aisha sitting up in bed, eating a piece of bread with honey—a thing she had not done in months.