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![]() | This article has been flagged as possibly containing fringe theories without giving appropriate weight to mainstream views.(September 2025) |
Muhammad Qasim bin Abdul Karim | |
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Born | 05 July, 1976 |
Nationality | Pakistani |
Occupation | Social media personality |
Known for | Publishing accounts of purported good dreams |
Website | muhammadqasimpk |
Muhammad Qasim bin Abdul Karim (born 5 July 1976) is a Pakistani social-media figure noted for publishing accounts of purported good dreams and for the online communities that discuss them. His claims and their amplification have received coverage in Malaysia and Indonesia. [1] [2] [3]
In June 2021, Malaysian outlets reported that posts promoting Qasim's "divine dreams" appeared widely on X/Twitter timelines, often via replies to popular accounts. [4] [1] Later analyses by ISEAS–Yusof Ishak Institute and GNET/ICSR discussed how millenarian and apocalyptic content of this kind is organised and amplified on social platforms, including coordinated cross-posting and, at times, manipulated or AI-generated media. [5] [3]
Indonesian outlets reported that in late June 2025 Qasim met Indonesia’s Minister of Religious Affairs, Nasaruddin Umar , at Jakarta’s Istiqlal Mosque; coverage linked subsequent Malaysian hashtag activity to that meeting. [6] [7] In related reports citing GetDayTrends data, the hashtag #MenteriJumpaQasim was placed at no. 4 and “Muhammad Qasim” at no. 7 among Malaysia’s trends on 20 July 2025 (figures as reported). [8] [9]
On 28 January 2022, the Selangor Islamic Religious Department (JAIS) advised Muslims not to be involved with teachings centered on Qasim's dreams. [10] [11]
On 9 July 2024, the Federal Territories Islamic Religious Department (JAWI) detained a Pakistani man identified as Muhammad Qasim Abdul Karim for investigation on allegations of teaching without accreditation (tauliah). [12] On 11 July 2024, MalaysiaGazette reported that he had been charged in the Syariah court under provisions related to teaching without accreditation; a subsequent mention date was set and the accused were released on bail. [13]
On 18 July 2024, MalaysiaGazette issued a public apology and retraction of a separate statement from earlier coverage that had described Qasim as claiming to be the Mahdi; the outlet called the statement libelous and removed it. [14]
Think-tank research has noted that networks discussing apocalyptic themes can use templated visuals and low-quality audio deepfakes to seek wider reach. [3] Coverage and the retraction above record that Qasim rejects deepfake-based associations and denies claiming to be the Mahdi. [14]
A 2018 feature in Pakistan’s youth newspaper The Dayspring presented an interpretive overview of Qasim’s dream narratives, highlighting anti-shirk messaging and apocalyptic warnings (reported as the outlet’s analysis). [15]