Ahmad Jabbar's seminal work, 'Arab Sciences in Its Golden Age: How Arab Sciences Saved Ancient Knowledge,' meticulously explores the pivotal role of Islamic civilization in safeguarding and advancing human understanding during a period often referred to as the 'Dark Ages' in the West. This book illuminates how scholars across the vast Islamic world diligently translated, studied, and expanded upon the scientific and philosophical traditions of ancient Greece, Rome, India, and Persia. Jabbar highlights their groundbreaking contributions to fields such as medicine, astronomy, mathematics, optics, and chemistry, which not only preserved invaluable knowledge but also laid the foundational groundwork for the European Renaissance. It is a compelling narrative that reasserts the profound and often understated impact of Arab-Islamic scholarship on the trajectory of global scientific progress.