Orientalists On The Qur'an-Hafsa Nasreen PDF
Orientalists On The Qur'an-Hafsa Nasreen PDF
Orientalists On The Qur'an-Hafsa Nasreen PDF
Hafsa Nasreen
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Orientalists have refused to acknowledge the Prophet Muhammad
p.b.u.h. as the seal of Prophets and the last messenger of Allah
Almighty. As they know that Qur'an is base of Islamic faith, so they are
trying their level's best to dislodge the citadel of Islamic faith i.e.
Quran. For this purpose they have directed all their efforts to prove it
a human-authored book and consequently Prophet Muhammad p.b.u.h.
as a false Prophet. In this article we have tried to reject the objections
of Western in the light of authentic historical sources.
Dr. Hafsa Nasreen, Senior Editor & Assistant Professor, Department of Urdu
Encyclopedia of Islam, University of the Punjab, Lahore.
Email: dr.hafsa105@gmail.com
Hafsa Nasreen
Qtkgpvcnkuvu"qp"Swt)cp<"C"Etkvkecn"Uvwf{""""
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Hafsa Nasreen
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ordained. It was only after the Ascension that five prayers became
obligatory and people began to repeat the verses of the Quran Five
times during their daily prayers. Indeed, it was the Prophet (p.b.u.h.)
who, for the first time, ordered the memorizing, together with the
writing of the scripture, i.e. the Quran.26
The allegation of orientalists that the prophet himself had no idea to write
down a book or to save the revelation is entirely baseless. The verse
mentioned above proves it. The verse goes as: he caused to be written
down, so that they might be read out to him at morning and evening.
There is no ambiguity now that what has been written by the
scribes it was read out to Prophet p.b.u.h. A hadith also supports this
fact: The Prophet has disallowed the carrying along of the Quran in
enemys land27
Some other historical evidences shed light on the written form of
Quran are: The well known report about Umar r.a. conversion shows
that large passages of the revelation had already been written down even
at a very early time, in Makka, long before hijra.28 Another report
informs us that when people came from Madina to learn about Islam,
they were provided with copies of the Surahs of Quran, to read and
learn them by heart.29 More over during his last pilgrimage, at the
sermon to the large gathering of Muslims, the Prophet said:
I have left with you something which if you will hold fast to it you will
never fall into error a plain indication, the book of God, and the
practice of his Prophet.30
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Hafsa Nasreen
Qtkgpvcnkuvu"qp"Swt)cp<"C"Etkvkecn"Uvwf{""""
Abu Bakr r.a. hesitated to do so but after a while he took the matter
carefully and agreed with Umar r.a. He called Zayd b. Thabit r.a.
because he was the well-known scribe of Prophet and Hafiz of the
Quran, he had checked through the text with the Prophet p.b.u.h. after
the Prophet p.b.u.h. had recited it in presence of Jibrail a.s.; he was
skilled at writing the Quran.34 Bukhari quoted the tradition of this
compilation:
Zayd was afraid of carrying out this task because he felt that he
could not do something that the Prophet had not ordered him to do. Abu
Bakr r.a. finally persuaded him, and he started the work by comparing
the Prophet's record with the memorized and written versions of those of
the Huffaz who were available in Madina. He then wrote out the entire
text in book form and presented the mushaf to Abu Bakr r.a.
The mushaf remained with Abu Bakr r.a. until he died, then with
Umar r.a. until the end of his life, and then with Hafsa r.a., the daughter
of Umar r.a. and the wife of the Prophet, who was the executor for her
father, and was herself a Hafiza.35 This was because Umar r.a. had died
before the final nomination of the third caliph.36 At this time disputes
arose about the reading of the Quran among the Qurra (i.e., readers)
because some of the Companions and the followers were teaching
students in the cities they were sent to in versions that differed in various
ways, and also because the Companions were reciting the Quran in the
seven ahruf they were permitted to use.
"
Compilation of Quran during the reign of Uthman r.a.
By the time of Uthman r.a., disputes among the readers became so heated
that they were accusing each other of unbelief (kufr). Many complaints
were brought before Uthman r.a., urging him to take action to avert
fighting and division among the Muslims. Such disputes occurred in
many places: Madina to Kufa, Basra, Syria, and the military camps
(ajnad). Hudhayfa b. al Yaman was in the battle zones of Armenia and
Azerbaijan and witnessed these disputes among Muslims. He got
annoyed and hastened to Madina to suggest to Uthman r.a. a unified
reading of the Quran. He addressed him saying: O Chief of the
Believers! Save this Umma before they differ about the Book as the Jews
and the Christians did before".37
Consequently, Uthman r.a. called the Muhajirun and Ansar for
consultation. All of them agreed and encouraged him to unify the reading
of the Quran.38 Bukhari narrated further actions as:
Uthman r.a. sent a message to Hafsa saying Send us the manuscript of
the Quran, so that we may compile the Quranic materials in perfect
copies and return the manuscript to you. Hafsa sent the manuscript to
Uthman r.a. Uthman r.a. then ordered Zayd b. Thabit, Abd Allah Ibn az
The Dialogue
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Hafsa Nasreen
Qtkgpvcnkuvu"qp"Swt)cp<"C"Etkvkecn"Uvwf{""""
Zubayr, Said bin al Aa, and Abd ar Rahman bin Harith b. Hisham r.a.
to write the manuscripts in perfect copies. Uthman r.a. said to the
Qurayshi men, If you disagree with Zayd b. Thabit on any point in the
Quran, write it in the dialect (lisan) of Quraysh as the Quran was
revealed in their tongue. They did so and when they had written many
copies, Uthman r.a. returned the original manuscript to Hafsa r.a. To
every Muslim region, Uthman r.a. sent one copy and ordered that all
the other Quranic materials, whether whole of fragmentary
manuscripts, be burnt.39
The Companions, the learned men, and the leading figures agreed with
Uthman r.a. and approved the decision he had made, including Ali r.a..
He is reported as having said:
"he did nothing without the consolation and consent of all
Companions, and, furthermore, that if he were in Uthman's position he
would have done the same thing."40
Ali r.a. is reported to have confronted those who rebelled against Uthman
r.a. and said to them that Uthman r.a. burnt only the masahif that varied
from the final revelation and preserved that which was agreed upon.
In fact, Muslims in general admired Uthman's action and agreed to it
unanimously (with exception of Ibn Masud) because Uthman r.a. united
them on one mushaf, cleansed from any abrogated versions, and freed it
from any aahaad reading or any interpretation that may have been added
to the text.41
Only Ibn Masud r.a. is reported to be angry with this action of
Uthman r.a.. It is said that he refused to give his mushaf back to Uthman
r.a. to be burnt and to have told his students to do the same.42 Some
reasons of his behaviour are mentioned by scholars as follows:
Ibn Masud is said to have felt ignored or insulted when he was not
asked to join the committee set up to compile the Quran. He is quoted
as having said that he had been taught seventy Suras by the Prophet
p.b.u.h., while Zayd b. Thabit was a young boy playing with
children.43
The reason Uthman r.a. did not include Ibn Masud is discussed by al
Asqalani, who points out that Ibn Masud was not in Madina at the time
when Uthman r.a. urgently appointed the committee. He was in Kufa.
Furthermore, Uthman r.a. did nothing more than reproduce the pages
compiled by the command of Abu Bakr into one mushaf. In the times of
Abu Bakr and of Uthman, Zayd bin Thabit r.a. had the privilege of being
the scribe in charge of compilation.44
Historical evidences shed light on the fact that the general
approval i.e. Ijma and confidence of the companions accorded the
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Hafsa Nasreen
Qtkgpvcnkuvu"qp"Swt)cp<"C"Etkvkecn"Uvwf{""""
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Another hadith is: Abu Huraira said: God's messenger recited in both
raka's of the dawn prayer Sura. Qul ya ayyuhal kafirun and Qul hu
Allah hu ahad51
The order of Suras and their arrangement was of course well known to
the Muslims due to the daily recitation of the Quran in the prayers at the
mosque of the prophet and at other places.
All authorities state that the Prophet p.b.u.h. and his Companions
recited Suras of the Quran in their order in and out of the prayers.52
In Madina, a delegation came to the Prophet and one in the
group, Abu Aws, reported the Prophet as having said: "I did not want to
come without completing the parts of the Quran I recite daily".
They asked the Companions: How do you divide the Quran for
the recitation? They replied: We divide them three Suras, five Suras,
seven Suras, nine Suras, eleven Suras, thirteen Suras, and the part of alMufassal from Sura al-Qaf to the end.53
Prophet Muhammad p.b.u.h. himself did not know about the end
of a Sura until the revelation confirms it. A hadith goes as:
The basmala was a sign for the sealing of the Suras. Ibn Abbas stated
that
The Prophet did not know that a Sura had been sealed until the
revelation came to him with In the name of Allah, most Gracious, most
54
Merciful, when it was revealed he knew that the Sura was sealed.
The Quran present some evidences that the order and arrangement of
Suras is in accordance with divine guidance. For instance: in sura Hud
Allah almighty says: Say [unto them] Produce, then, ten suras of
similar merit, invent [by your self] 55
Sura Hud is eleventh sura of Quran. It comes on eleventh
number after ten Suras. It is a proof of its divine arrangement.
Likewise Allah almighty says: And all [kinds of] cattle have been made
lawful to you [for sacrifice and food], save what is mentioned to you [as
forbidden].56
All the animal have been allowed in Quran to eat, mentioned in
Quran are mentioned in al-Baqara, Maida, Anam. So there is no doubt
that the order of Suras is tawqifi.
Abu Bakr r.a. simply ordered the Quran to be rewritten and to
be assembled in one place. Different writings were found in the house of
the Prophet (peace be upon him) containing the Quran. These were
arranged and tied together by a cord to ensure that none were lost.57
In the light of above, it is clear that compilation during the reign
of Abu Bakr. r.a. and Uthman r.a. was not arranging of Suras. Baqilani
says: The whole Quran, whose compilation and writing Allah
commanded, excluding the abrogated verses, is what is contained in this
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Hafsa Nasreen
Qtkgpvcnkuvu"qp"Swt)cp<"C"Etkvkecn"Uvwf{""""
mushaf (of Uthman r.a.). It is the same arrangement and style revealed to
the Prophet in the very same manner of verses and Suras with no
difference in word order, and the Umma has received from the Prophet
the arrangement of every verse and Sura, and their places, as they have
received the recitation of the Quran.58
So the order of Suras in the Quran we have in hands is not a
patch work as the orientalists claimed. Authentic historical sources throw
light on the written and arranged Quran since the life of Prophet
Muhammad p.b.u.h. Interestingly, orientalists have to concede that: a
final arrangement of Suras is not possible yet. We would not have
arrived at a final decision in this regard.59
Rtkxcvg"Eqfkegu"qh"Eqorcpkqpu"
Another allegation of orientalists is that a number of the companions of
Muhammad p.b.u.h. had compiled their own codices of the text. Most
popular of them ascribed to Abd Allah b. Masud and Ubai b. Kab r.a.
These private collections were basically consistent with each other in
their general content, but a large number of variant readings, many
seriously affecting the text, existed in all the manuscripts. Likewise
number of Suras and their order were also differed each other.60 These
recessions gradually disappeared after the authorization of Uthman's
mushaf but several items of information regarding these private
collection are given in Exegesis (Tafasirs) and in some other books. If
the text of Quran was revealed by Allah then how this difference and
variation took place? The private collections and their variation proves
the human origin of Quran.
"
Eqfkegu"qh"vjg"Eqorcpkqpu"
Several companions of the Prophet p.b.u.h. had prepared their own
written collections of revelations. The best known among these are
attributed to Ibn Masud, Ubai b. Kab and Zayd b. Thabit.
A list of other Companions of whom it is related that they had
their own written collections included the following: Umar, Ibn AzZubair, Abd Allah Ibn Amr, Ayesha, Salim, Umm Salma, Ubaid bin
Umar r.a.61
It is also known that Ayesha and Hafsa r.a. had their own written
copies of Quran after the Prophet had died.62
Orientalists have raised objections on these personal codices in
regard of difference of order of Suras and variant Readings. Following is
a brief description of the codices of Ibn Masud and Ubai b. Kab, as they
are considered very important than other codices.63
"
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from the Prophet.70 However, this view seems not to be sound for the
reason that Ibn Masud himself is reported to have said I have been taught
seventy Suras directly from the mouth of the Prophet.71 Which indicates
that he learnt both the Suras he heard from the Prophet and those that he
learnt from the Companions.
Al Qurtubi attributes to Yazid b. Harun the view that Ibn Masud
died before he had completed memorizing all the Suras. However, al
Qurtubi objects to this view,72 which indeed has no evidence to support
it. The alleged exclusion of these Suras from the mushaf of Ibn Masud
does not mean that they were not memorized by him for, as is well
known, they are among the shortest and easiest Suras of the Quran.
Furthermore, al Baqilani states that all these riwayas are isolated
reports (ahaad) that should not be regarded as reliable. In addition, he
considers all differences attributed to Ibn Masud as false and related by
ignorant (people), although he does not deny that Ibn Masud, like any
other hafiz, might fall into error in certain haruf. He adds that if Ibn
Masud had denied these two sealing Suras, the Companions would have
disagreed with him, and that this would have become widely known,
since lesser quarrels have been reported to us. Also, he says that the
consensus of the Companions on the compilation of the mushaf cannot
be impugned by these anomalous invented narrations.73
Finally, a considerable number of Ahadith refer to the position of
these suras, the story behind their revelation and, above all, to the
recitation of them to by the Prophet while at home and traveling, which
indicate that Ibn Masud was aware of them.
"
Codex of Ubai b. Kab r.a.
Ubai b. Kab r.a. was one of the scribes of Prophet p.b.u.h.. He wrote the
Quran, and prepared a copy of mushaf. It is said that two additional
suras and an aya were found in his mushaf. The order of Suras is also
differed from mushaf of Uthman r.a. and as well as Ibn Masud.
Following is the order of Suras in the copy (of mushaf) attributed to Ubai
b. Kab r.a.
1, 2, 4, 6, 7, 5, 10, 8, 9, 11, 19, 26, 22, 12, 18, 17, 39, 45, 20, 21, 24, 23,
40, 13, 28, 27, 38, 36, 15, 42, 30, 43, 41, 14, 35, 48, 47, 57, 52, 25, 32,
71, 46, 50, 55, 56, 72, 53, 68, 69, 59, 60, 77, 78, 75, 81, 79, 80, 83, 84,
95, 96 ,49, 63, 62, 66, 89, 67, 92, 82, 91, 85, 86, 87, 88, 74?, 108, 97,
109, 110, 111, 106, 112, 113, 114.74
Why the sequence of suras is different in codices of companions,
it has been discussed earlier. Another objection about the codex of Ubai
b. Kab r.a. raised by western scholars is that Ubai had included an extra
sura in his codex.75
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Hafsa Nasreen
Qtkgpvcnkuvu"qp"Swt)cp<"C"Etkvkecn"Uvwf{""""
Another explanation of this problem is that Ubai and Ibn Masud were
confused, since they first heard the Prophet recite qunut in the prayers,
particularly in the witr prayer, the most important sunna after the
obligatory five daily prayers, and that Ubai r.a. came to believe that they
were from the Quran.76
The author of Kitab al Mabani states that Ubais profound
knowledge of the Quran would have enabled him to distinguish what is
the Quran from what is not. This is supported by the fact that the
transmission of qiraa from him to the Imams (leading experts in qiraat)
does not mention that Ubai taught them qunut as part of the Quran.77
Baqilani suggests that Ubai might have written qunut on the back of his
mushaf as a Dua, as we do on our masahif.78 Moreover, he studies in a
special chapter the stylistic differences between the Quran and the
sayings of the Prophet.79 On this basis, he concludes that it is impossible
that the Companions could not distinguish between the Quran and what
is not the Quran and that the number of Suras was known to them.80
Indeed, many authorities confirm that what is attributed to Ubai is no
more than dua, and they call it Dua al Qunut.81
Thus, these narrations attributed to Ubai Ibn Kab r.a. and Abd
Allah Ibn Masud cannot be regarded as authentic.
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Another objection often raised by orientalists is the theory of abrogation.
They are of the view that the Quran contains several contradictions. The
Prophet got over this by inventing a theory of abrogation which is
supposed to have received divine sanction. As the prophet claimed the
Quran to be a complete divine book then it is very difficult to
understand the need for change or abrogation, when the text of the whole
book is supposed to have been written from all eternity upon a tablet in
heaven. It means that there are contradictions in the text preserved in
heaven.82 So this theory of abrogation which fit the requirements of one
specific man and his friends in a specific area and time confirms it as the
book of Muhammad (p.b.u.h.)83 who made the concept of nasakh to hide
his mistakes in long suras due to his bad memory.84
"
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Abrogation literally means to erase, to compensate. Its technical
definition is: To repeal a legal order through legal argument.85
Sometimes a legal order enforced by Allah for a particular time. Then at
a later time, he cancelled that order and enforced a new order.
The allegation raised by orientalists is not a new one. The Jews
of Arabia also raised the same point in the life of prophet Muhammad
p.b.u.h.. They thought that there can be no abrogation in the commands
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Hafsa Nasreen
Qtkgpvcnkuvu"qp"Swt)cp<"C"Etkvkecn"Uvwf{""""
As far as, the objections of Jeffery, Bell, Watt, Mingana, Noldeke and
the other members of this growing group of orientalists are concerned,
they are based only on their prejudice against Islam and prophet
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Hafsa Nasreen
Qtkgpvcnkuvu"qp"Swt)cp<"C"Etkvkecn"Uvwf{""""
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Hafsa Nasreen
Qtkgpvcnkuvu"qp"Swt)cp<"C"Etkvkecn"Uvwf{""""
Pqvgu"("Tghgtgpegu"
1
Arthur Jeffery, The Quran As Scripture (New York: R. F. Moore Co, 1952), 5
Richard C. Martin, Islam: a Cultural Perspective (New Jersey: Prientice Hall,
1982), 6
3
R.V.C Bodley, The Messenger, 2nd ed (Lahore: Orientalia, 1954), 98
4
Fazlur Rahman, Major Themes of the Quran (Chicago: University of Chicago
Press, 2009), vi
5
Richard C. Martin (ed.): Approaches to Islam in religious Studies (Arizona:
University of Arizona Press, 1985)
6
John Tackle, The Faith of Islam (New Delhi, 1980), 110
7
James Kritzeck, Anthology of Islamic Literature, 1st ed (New York,. 1966), 33;
Koran in The New Encyclopedia Brittanica; Alfred Guillaume, Islam (Beirut:
Khayats, 1978), 56, T.P. Hughes, Notes on Mohammedanism (London: 1975),
13
8
John, L. Esposito, Islam the Straight Path, (London: Oxford University Press
1988), 20; Gaston Wiet, History of Mankind, v:3 (New York: Unesco, 1975),
542; Julie Scott and Paul Starkey, "Quran" in Encyclopedia of Arabic
Literature. R.V.C. Bodley, The Messenger, op.cit.,198; Clement Haurt, A
History of Arabic Literature, (London: Good Word, 2011), 34-40; Kenneth
Cragg, The House of Islam, 3rd ed. (New York: 1988), 85; G.E. Von
Grunebaum, Islam (London: Routledge and Kegan Paul, 1955), 81; Seigmund
Fraenkel, Koran in The Jewish Encyclopedia
9
James A-Bellamy, Some Proposed Emendations to the Text of the Koran in
What the Koran Really Says, ed. by Ibn Warraq (New York: 1999), 489
10
Ibid., 491-505
11
Al-Furqan, (25): 5
12
The Ushub: palm stalks, likhaf: thin white stones, alwah: pieces of wood,
aktaf shoulder bones, as mentioned by al-Bukhari
13
al-Baghawi Muhammad Husain b. Masud, Sharh as-Sunna, ed. by: Zuhair
ash-Shawish, al-Maktab al-Islami, 2nd ed. v: 4 (Beirut: 1997), 522
14
For example: al-Bukhari, al-Jami as-Sahih, in Mausu al Kutub as-Sitta, Dar
as Salam: Riyahd, 2000), 433"
15
al-Asqalani, Fathul Bari, v: 9, 6
16
Ibn Kathir abi al-Fida Ismail, Al-Bidaya wa an-Nihaya, v:3, part:5, 339-355
17
Ibn Kathir, Al-Bidaya wa an-Nihaya, v: 3, part:5 (Beirut: Dar al-Kutub al
Ilmiya, 1987), 340-341
18
al-Asqalani, Fathul Bari, v: 9, 16-18
19
Bukhari, al-Jami, 433
20
Jalal ad-Din abd ar-Rahman Suyuti b. Abi Bakr, al-Itqan fi Ulum al-Quran,
v:1,144
21
Abu Yala Ahmad b. Ali, Musnad Abu yala, 289
22
al-Asqalani, Fathul Bari, v: 9, 10
23
Ibn abi Daud, Kitab al-Masahif (Matba ar-Rahmaniya Misr, 1936), 252
24
Bukhari, al-Jami, 433
25
Ahmad Kamal Adil, Ulum al-Quran, 3rd ed. (Beirut: Dar al-Irshad, 1968), 37
2
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Hafsa Nasreen
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26
Dr. Muhammad Hamidullah, The Emergence of Islam, tr. Afzal Iqbal, 1st ed.
(Islamabad: Islamic Research Institution, 1993), 12
27
Ibn abi Shaiba, abu Bakr abd ar-Razzaq, al-Mussanaf, 2nd ed. v: 3 (Beirut: alMaktab al-Islami, 1983), 212
28
For details please see books on Seerah and history of Islam
29
Dr. Hamid Allah, Sahifa Hammam b. Munabba, 64
30
Bukhari, al-Jami, 435
31
William Muir, The Life of Muhammad (Edinburgh, 1923), preface
32
al-Qurtubi Abu Abd Allah Muhammad b. Ahmad, al-Jami li Ahkam alQuran, v:1 (Beirut: Dar Ihya at-Turath al Arabi, 1952), 30
33
Waqidi Muhammad b. Muhammad, Maghazi, v: 1 (Oxford: Matbaa Jamia,
1966), 23; Bukhari, al-Jami, 431
34
Ibn Hajr, Fathul Bari, v: 9, 20
35
Bukhari, Al-Jami, 433
36
Ibn Hajr, Fathul Bari, v: 9, 10-16
37
Bukhari, al-Jami, 433
38
Ibn al-atir, Al-Kamil fi at-Tarikh, v: 1, 111
39
Bukhari, al-Jami, 433
40
Ibid.
41
As-Suyuti, al-Itqan, v:1, 120; Dr. Subhi Salih, Mubahith fi Ulum al-Quran,
86
42
Abu Muhammad Makki al-qisi, al-Ibana an maani al-Qiraat, 1st ed (Dar alMamun at-Turath al-Arabi, 1979), 22-23
43
Ibn Hanbal, al-Musnad, al-Maimaniya, nd, v:2, 22; Ibn Abi Daud, Kitab alMasahif, 13; Al-Musali Ahmad b. Ali, Musnad Abi Yala al-Musali, v:5, 90-92;
Abu Naim, Hilyatu al-Auwliya, v:1 (Beirut: Dar al-Kutub al-Arabi, 1967), 669;
Ahmad Mukhtar Umar, Abd al-Al Salim al-Mukarram, Mujam al-Qiraat alQuraniya, v: 1 (Iran: Intasharat Uswa, 1991), 37; Ibn Hanbal, Musnad, v: 1,
669;644; Ibn abi Daud, Muqqadimatan fi Ulum al-Quran, 20
44
Ibn Hajr, Fathul Bari, v: 9, 23
45
.S. Peters, Muhammad and The Origins of Islam (New York: State University
of New York Press, 1994), 203-205
46
N.J. Dawood, The Koran 4th ed., (Butler and Tanner LTD, 1974), 10
47
Al-Labib as-Saeed, al-Mushaf al-Murrattal, Dar al-Maarif, 2nd ed., (Misr,
n.d.), 37; Abd al-Munim an-namr, Ilm at Tafsir, 1st ed. (Dar al-Kitub al-Misri,
1984), 20
48
Nisaburi Nizamad Din abu al-Hasan, Gharaib al-Quran wa Raghaib alFurqan, v: 1(Dar al-Kutub al-Ilmiya, 1966), 16
49
Bukhari, al-Jami, 430
50
An-Nasai, Sunan an-Nasai, 2149
51
An-Nasai, Sunan an-Nasai, 2149
52
Rashid Raza, Al-Manar, v:1, (Beirut: Dar al-Maarif, 1953), 7
53
Abi Daud, as-Sunan, 1327; Baghawi, Sharh as-Sunna, v:4, 218; Abu
Shamma, al-Murshid al-Wajiz, 146
54
Abu Daud, as-Sunan
55
Hud (11):13
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Hafsa Nasreen
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56
Hajj (22):30
See Bukhari, Al-Jami, 433, Baghawi, Sharh as-Suna, v:4, 522
58
Abu Shamma, al-Murshid al-Wajiz, 146; Suyuti, al-Itqan, v:1, 120
59
Neal Robinson, Western Attempts at Dabing the Revelations in The Quran,
ed. by: Collin Turner, v: 2, p:141
60
G.E. Von Grunebaum, Islam, p: 80; H.A.R. Gibb and J.H.V. Krammers,
"Koran in Shorter Encyclopedia of Islam; Joseph Smith, The Quran
61
Jeffery, Materials, (detailed study)
62
Ibn Kathir, al-Bidaya wa an Nihaya, v:3, part:5, 343
63
Because all Orientalists considers these two codies as original and of basic
importance and the rest are secondary codies.
64
Ibn Nadim, al-Fihrist, 29
65
Jeffery, Materials, 23
66
Jeffery, Materials, 23; Bell, Introduction to the Quran, 41; A.T. Wellsh,
Quran in Encyclopedia of Islam
67
az-Zarkashi, Badar ad-Din Muhammad b. Abd Allah, al-Burhan fi Ulum alQuran, v:2 (Beirut: Dar al-Fikr, 1st ed. 1988), 127-128
68
Jeffery, Muqqadimatan fi Ulum al-Quran (Baghdad: Maktaba al-Khanji,
1954), 97
69
Ibid., 97
70
Ibid., 96
71
Ibn Hanbal, Musnad, v:1, 669
72
Qurtubi, al-Jami, v:1, 30
73
Al-Baqilani Muhammad abd al-Azim, Ijaz al-Quran, 291-292
74
Ibn an-Nadim, al-Fihrist, 29-30
75
Jeffery, Muqaddimatan, 74
76
Al-Baqilani, Ijaz al-Quran, op.cit., 291-292
77
Jeffery, Muqaddimatan, p:74
78
Ibid.
79
Al-Baqilani Muhammad abd al-Azim, Ijaz al-Quran, op.cit., 291-292
80
Ibid.
81
Az-Zurqani, Muhammad abd al-Azim, Manahil al-Irfan, Dar Ihya at-Turat
al-Arabi, v:1 (Beirut, n.d.), 271; Baqilani, al-Intisar fi al-Quran, (manuscript)
v:1, (Frankfort: University Library, 1986), 5-6
82
John Tackle, The Faith of Islam, 124; G.E.Von Grumbaum, Islam, 85; A.S.
Tritton, Islam, 18
83
Joseph Smith, The Quran
84
James Kritzeck, An Anthology of Islamic Literature, 37; J. Christy Wilson,
Introducing Islam, 29; Rev. F.A. Klein, The Religion of Islam, 44; Theodore
Noldek, The Koran, in The Origins of the Koran, ed. by: Ibn Waraq, 40
85
Dr. Subhi Salih, Mabahith fi Ulum al-Quran, 261
86
Az-Zarkashi, al-Burhan fi Ulum al-Quran, v: 2, 30
87
Az-Zurqani, Muhammad abd al-Azim, Manahil al-Irfan fi Ulum al-Quran, v:
2, 188
88
Genesis, 29:23-30
89
Ahbar, 18:18
57
The Dialogue
51
Hafsa Nasreen
Qtkgpvcnkuvu"qp"Swt)cp<"C"Etkvkecn"Uvwf{""""
90
Genesis, 9:3
Ahbar, 11:7 14:7
92
Istatna, 24:1, 2
93
Mutta, 19:15; Buacille, The Bible, The Quran and Science, 44
94
John Bowman, Holy Scriptures, Lectionaries and the Quran Lecture
Presented in International Congress for the study of the Quran at (Australian
National University, 1980), 31
91
The Dialogue
52