Report: Qari Abdul Rahman Mossad

Status: There is no official biography or entry for "Qari Abdul Rahman Mossad" on Wikipedia, nor is there a standard "portable" document (such as a PDF biography) widely circulated for this individual.

Reasoning: The name "Qari Abdul Rahman Mossad" appears to be a conflation or a misremembered name, likely combining two distinct, well-known figures in the field of Quran recitation.

  • Qari Abdul Rahman:

  • "Mossad":

  • Likely Intended Subject: If you are looking for a famous reciter whose name sounds similar, you are likely looking for Qari Abdul Basit Abdul Samad or Abdul Rahman Al-Sudais.

    If you have a specific audio file or a specific recitation style in mind, it is almost certainly attributed to one of the famous Egyptian or Saudi reciters. No prominent public figure with the exact name "Qari Abdul Rahman Mossad" exists in public records or Islamic media archives.

    Guide: Understanding Qari Abdul Rahman Mossad and "Portable" Recitations

    This guide clarifies who Qari Abdul Rahman Mossad is, the meaning of "portable" in the context of Quran recitations, and how to find reliable information about him.

    If you are looking for "portable" files (MP3s) of his recitations to listen to offline, here is a recommended guide:

    Method A: Trusted Websites

    Method B: Mobile Apps (The Modern "Portable") Instead of searching for "portable software," it is safer to use official mobile apps:

    Since no authoritative biography exists, crowdsource a reliable one:

    This is a “DIY portable Wikipedia” – and it’s legal because his biographical facts (birthplace, style, teachers) are public domain.

    Kiwix allows you to download compressed Wikipedia ZIM files and browse them offline. While Mossad lacks a page, you can:

    Steps:

    Wikipedia’s notability criteria require “significant coverage in reliable independent sources” (news, books, academic journals). While Mossad is immensely popular on YouTube (millions of views), he has been rarely featured in:

    Most information about him exists on user-generated platforms: YouTube descriptions, Islamic forums, and mobile apps. Wikipedia editors often delete such pages for lacking “verifiable secondary sources.”