| The Holy Qur-an | | Print | |
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Unlike the Torah, which was revealed on tablets to Moses in one session, the Qur'an was revealed orally over the 23 year mission of the Prophet Muhammad. The revelation was usually tied to certain events, the questions of believers or non-believers and on needs that appeared as early Muslim society developed. Sometimes a few verses, at other times whole chapters, were revealed in a variety of ways (Qur'an, 42:51).
It is an essential part of Islam that Muslims are required to believe in all the prophets and the revelations sent to them throughout human history. Muslims believe that the Qur'an is the final version of God's revelation to humanity, confirming what was revealed before (Qur'an, 5:45). It is also a fact that Islam acknowledges the four inspired books - the Qur'an, the Laws of Moses, the Psalms of David and the Gospel of Jesus. (Also see my answers to Questions-14-15 on Islam's view of prophets and revelation.)
Even though Muslims take comfort in the Qur'anic claim that it is under the special protection of God (Qur'an, 15:9), they have been very careful to preserve the Qur'an themselves, starting with Muhammad himself. The Qur'an was preserved in three different ways in the lifetime of the Prophet Muhammad.
Since the Prophet Muhammad was illiterate, he had up to forty official scribes. The gradual revelation of the Qur'an over 23 years meant that the Prophet did not know when he would receive new revelation. Consequently, he would always have a scribe ready alongside him. When a new revelation was received, Muhammad would recite it to the scribe, who wrote it down on a parchment, a scroll of leather or whatever suitable material could be found. He would also mention the verse number or what part of the Qur'an the revelation belonged to. Muhammad then asked the scribe to read it back to him in order to check and correct it in case there were errors made in the writing process. Later, written passages of the Qur'an would be taken to the mosque for others to memorise and produce copies. Today, some of these orignal parchments are displayed in the Topkapi Museum in Istanbul, Turkey. From early times, Muhammad asked his companions to memorise the passages of the Qur'an which had been revealed to him. As a result, hundreds of people knew the complete book by heart. Moreover, every Muslim had memorised significant portions of the Qur'an. The educational campaign of Muhammad also ensured that many people learnt how to read or write and consequently wrote out parts of the Qur'an for their personal records. Even still, there was the possibility that people might make mistakes in the memorisation and copying process. This possibility was eliminated by a control mechanism of the public checking of the Qur'an. Every year in the month of Ramadan, the Prophet Muhammad would recite the whole Qur'an to an audience of all the Muslims, who in turn would check his words against their written copies and what they knew by heart. In the last Ramadan before his death, this control recitation was done twice in a row. The tradition of reciting the whole Qur'an in Ramadan and the memorisation of the whole Qur'an continues to the present day, and hundreds of thousands of Muslims know the whole Qur'an by heart. After the death of the Prophet and those of a significant numbers of memorisers, the first caliph Abu Bakr established a committee under the chairmanship of the chief scribe of the Prophet, Zayd bin Sabit, to collect the Qur'an into a single volume. Although many people, including Zayd, knew the whole Qur'an by heart, the objective criterion of "citing at least two written records for every verse" was applied. This process took place transparently in public in the mosque. Thus, the complete Qur'an was established in book form within a few years of Muhammad's passing away. Later on, as the Muslim world grew to include non-Arabic nations, new converts began to argue about the the correct way of pronouncing the Qur'an. People started to write personal copies of the Qur'an with the different ways of spelling some words. About twenty years after the Prophet, and upon the insistence of the companions of the Prophet, the third Caliph, Othman, decided to reproduce copies of the Qur'an from the original book written at the time of Abu Bakr. Seven copies of the Qur'an was reproduced from the original volume and sent to major Muslim capitals. This copying was done by a committee, again led by Zayd bin Sabit. The text of the Qur'an was also written more strictly to allow only the Meccan dialect so as to standardise its pronounciation and dialect in order to prevent difficulties and misunderstandings faced by non-Arabic speaking Muslims. He also stipulated that all subsequent copies of the Qur'an were to be produced from these copies. Two copies of the seven, one in Istanbul and one in Tashkent, survive to our time.
The Qur'an is a book of law, a book of prayer, a book of wisdom, a book of worship, a book or prophecy, a book of history and a unique Holy Book, comprising many books in one, and in which Muslims find wisdom and solutions for their spiritual and human needs. Nevertheless, the Qur'an essentially focuses on four main subjects:
Justice: The Qur'an describes justice, in the form of balance and harmony, seen in the universe. It asks humans to synchronise with this harmony by finding a wholesome balance within and with the social and natural environment. Every commandment of God contained in the Qur'an directs us to find the Sirat-al Mustakeem (the straight and balanced path) in our personal and social life. The legal verses in the Qur'an fall under the theme of "justice". The Qur'an has no more than 80 verses that can be categorised as strictly legal. It seeks to highlight principles of law rather than its detailed codification. |