Sayyid Fadhil al-Hosseini al-Milani (; ; 30 May 1944 – 2 September 2024) was an Iranian-Iraqi Shia Islam academic, author and community leader. Al-Milani was the appointed representative of the late grand Ayatollah Abul Qasim Al-Khoei in the United Kingdom since his arrival in 1986, and was accredited on behalf of grand Ayatollah Ali al-Sistani.
Al-Milani was considered one of the main leading Islamic religious authorities in the United Kingdom and Europe. He was the Dean of the International University of Islamic Studies and the head of Islamic Law and Jurisprudence at the Islamic College. He was also the resident Ulama of the Imam al-Khoei Foundation in London.
He moved to Mashhad in 1971, and completed his advanced studies under the guidance of his grandfather, grand Ayatollah Sayyid Muhammad Hadi al-Milani. He was awarded ijtihad at the age of thirty. He remained in Mashhad for just under thirteen years, organising the seminary of Mashhad, that had 3,500 students at the time, under the supervision of his grandfather.
He briefly visited Damascus in 1983, and taught in the Zainabiya Seminary until 1986.
That same year, he immigrated to the United Kingdom, to pursue further academic studies. Whilst in London, he noticed that the West was hugely lacking in Islamic awareness, and the community was in dire need of services and religious guidance. So he wrote to al-Khoei, informing him of his observations, to which al-Khoei responded positively and informed him of his plans to establish an institution (later becoming the Imam al-Khoei Foundation). al-Milani graduated from Oxford University with a PhD in Islamic Philosophy in 1994.
However, in an act of unity with other Muslims, al-Milani met in the Palace Of Westminster with other Muslim leaders from cities across the UK, agreeing that there was nothing Islamic about the "Islamic state". They expressed grave concerns at the repeated attacks by ISIS on shrines and places of worship in Iraq, and other parts of the Muslim and non-Muslim world.
On the topic of donating blood to non-Muslims (a controversial topic within the faith), al-Milani was of the view that it was a form of religious sacrifice and 'īthār'' (altruism).
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