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The Qur’an we have with us
today is the very one – word for word -- which was revealed to the Prophet
Muhammad (sws). It was collected both in the form of a book and learnt
by heart by many companions of the Prophet (sws) during his own life time
and then transferred verbally as well as in the written form to the next
generations. Such is the monumental nature of this transmission that the
inerrancy of the Qur’anic text is an incontestable reality.
In the following paragraphs, this
claim shall be corroborated through the Qur’an itself and through
the norms of established history.
Collection:
The Qur’an, as well as many
Ahadith, records the fact that the Qur’an was compiled in
the form of a book before the Prophet (sws) left for his heavenly abode.
The verses which record this testimony
of the Qur’an1
must be understood in the context and background of the whole Qur’an:
The Prophet (sws), it is evident from the Qur’an, was desirous of
the fact that his addressees accept faith. During the course of his hectic
struggle to achieve this end, he encountered stiff opposition from People
of the Book and from the Quraysh. However, if this hostility impelled
him to increase his efforts on the one hand, it also created in him the
yearning to receive the whole of the Qur’an as soon as possible
because he thought that the whole and completed message might answer all
the questions and doubts raised by his opponents and induce them to accept
faith. Furthermore, the piecemeal revelation of the Qur’an was objected
to by the Quraysh2.
They tauntingly commented on this in the following words:
Why is not the Qur’an revealed to him all at once?
Thus [is it revealed] that We may strengthen your heart thereby, and We
have revealed it gradually and painstakingly. (25:32)
As is evident from the later part of the
verse, the Prophet (sws) is solaced by the Almighty that for his proper
education and instruction and for that of the people, a gradual process
of revealing divine decrees has been employed. Consequently, at various
places in the Qur’an, he is told to exercise resolve and patience
until the whole of the Qur’an is revealed to him:
Be not in haste with the Qur’an before its revelation
is completed to you and pray: O Lord advance me in knowledge. (20:113-4)
The initial verses of Surah A‘la portray
another instance where the Prophet (sws) is told to exercise patience about
receiving the whole of the Qur’an. He is cited two distinct examples
which shed light on a common law of nature: there exists the principle
of gradual progression and development in all the phenomena of nature.
Everything reaches its culmination after passing through various stages.
Consequently, he need not worry. The revelation of the Qur’an will
also be gradually completed after passing through various stages:
Glorify the name of your Lord, Most High [O Prophet],
Who created [all things], then perfected [them], and Who set their destinies
[for them], then [accordingly] showed them the way [to follow], and Who
brought forth vegetation, then made it lush green. [In a similar manner,
this divine revelation will also gradually reach its end, then] soon We
shall [finally] recite it to you; then you will not forget except what
Allah pleases. (87:1-18)
With this background, consider now the
following verses of the Qur’an which are in fact similar to the
above quoted verses ((20:113-4) and (87:1-19)) in their purport. They also
direct the Prophet (sws) to exercise patience until all the Qur’an is
revealed. Only here, the assurance provided to the Prophet (sws) is through
a forceful declaration of the whole scheme of the Almighty about the revelation
of the Qur’an. He is assured that it is the responsibility of the
Almighty to collect and compile the Qur’an as well as to recite
it to him in a certain sequence. It is the Almighty Himself who will preserve
the text of the Qur’an as well as the mode of its recital:
[To reveal to them, as soon as possible, the whole of
the Qur’an O Prophet!] do not move your tongue swiftly to acquire
this [Qur’an]. Verily, upon Us is its collection and recital. So
when We have recited it, follow this recital [of Ours]. Then upon Us is
to explain it [wherever need be].3
(75:16-19)
Let us now reflect simultaneously on these
verses and on the following verse of Surah A‘la already quoted before:
Soon We shall [finally] recite it [ -- the Qur’an
–] to you; then you will not forget it except what Allah pleases. (87:18)
As a result, we arrive at the following
conclusions about the whole Qur’anic scheme of its own collection
and compilation:
1. The Qur’an was given piecemeal
to the Prophet (sws) according to the circumstances which arose and which
required divine guidance.
2. Its chronological revelation is
of no significance. It was arranged in a new sequence by the Almighty.
Once its initial revelation was over, the Almighty through archangel Gabriel
read it out to the Prophet (sws) a second time. In this second recital,
temporary directives were revised or deleted permanently.
3. This final arrangement and recital
was done once the Qur’an had been collected and compiled in the
form of a book. It was read out to Prophet (sws) in a manner that it was
rendered absolutely secure from any loss or doubt.
4. After this final recital, the Prophet
(sws) was bound by the Almighty to follow this recital only. He was not
allowed to read it according to the previous recital.
5. In this final recital, if any directive
needed further explanation, it was furnished by the Almighty Himself at
this time of compilation4.
Consequently, it is clear from the
Qur’an that its collection was completed in the very life of the
Prophet (sws) by the Almighty. The final recital of the Qur’an,
which has been termed as the Arda-i-akhirah (the final presentation)5
by our scholars, constitutes the whole of the Qur’an as revealed
to Muhammad (sws).
Many Ahadith also record the compilation of the
Qur’anic text in the lifetime of the Prophet (sws). The Prophet
(sws) had appointed many amanuenses for this purpose. Zayd (rta)
is reported to have said:
We used to compile the Qur’an from small scraps
in the presence of the Messenger. (Hakim, Mustadrak)
The following account also bears witness
to the fact that the Qur’an existed as a written document in the
time of the Prophet (sws):
Malik said that no one should carry the Mushaf
by its strap, nor on a pillow, unless he is clean… (Mu’atta, Kitab
Al-Nida’ Li’l-Salah)
Another Hadith informs us about
some of the companions who had memorised the Qur’an in its entirety
and gone over it with the Prophet before his death:
Narrated Qatadah: I asked Anas Ibn Malik:
‘Who collected the Qur’an at the time of Prophet?’ He replied: ‘Four,
all of whom were from the Ansar: Ubay Ibn Ka‘ab, Mu‘adh Ibn Jabal,
Zayd Ibn Thabit and Abu Zayd.’(Bukhari, Kitab Fada’ilu’l-Qur’an)
One copy of the Qur’an was placed
in the Masjid-i-Nabawi so that people could make their own copies
from it or learn from it. The pillar of the mosque near which the Mushaf
was placed was called the Ustuwanah-i-Mushaf (The Pillar of
the Mushaf), and is referred to in various Ahadith; (See
for example: Sahih Muslim: Kitabu’l-Salah; Sahih Bukhari: Kitabu’l-Salah).
The completed Book was referred to
by the Prophet (sws) in his last sermon in the following words:
I have left you something, which if you hold steadfast
to, you will never fall into error: the Book of Allah and my established
practice…. (Ibn Hisham, Sirah, vol. 4, [Cairo: Maktabah Al-Kulliyyat
al-Azhariyyah], p. 186)
In the light of this evidence, it can
be safely concluded that Qur’an was collected and compiled in the
form of a book in the lifetime of the Prophet (sws). Consequently,
isolate reports which, contrary to this evidence, mention that this collection
actually took place after the Prophet (sws) by his companions can in no
way be accepted. The narratives, which describe that it was Abu Bakr
(sws) who collected the Qur’an in one Mushaf and it was
‘Uthman (rta) who fearing differences in reading the Qur’an ordered
to make official copies of it, contradict the Qur’an and the norms
of established history, and therefore cannot be accepted.6
To any one who objectively examines the material reported in history on
this subject, it becomes evident that in spite of the painstaking efforts
of the Prophet’s companions, some portions of the Qur’an were lost
forever before it could be compiled in book form7
while some others were found by a sheer stroke of luck at the initiative
of a person who had them8.
Notwithstanding these details, the mere contradiction of such reports with
the Qur’an is proof enough of their spurious nature. Moreover, the
Isnad (chain of narrators) of the narratives which mention this
collection has also been challenged quite convincingly in recent times9.
It is by disregarding the testimony
of the Qur’an and by insisting on accepting such spurious reports
that the collection of the Qur’an has become a subject of worthy
and weighty criticism from the Orientalists10.
In the opinion of this writer, Muslim scholarship must cling to the Qur’an
for its own testimony on its collection for something decisive and
certain as well as consistent in this regard. It is this testimony which
they should present to their non-Muslim brethren since the authenticity
of the words of the Qur’an is beyond doubt; all other sources like
Sirat Literature , the Hadith Literature and the Tafsir
Literature are subservient to it. The nature of all these three sources
obviously is such that they cannot be termed as error free by any Muslim.
Whilst their promiscuous heap may contain pearls of wisdom, yet the presence
of unauthentic material in them can in no way be denied. Their ‘credit
stands on slippery grounds’, and contradictory details about the same event
may simultaneously exist in their corpus. Therefore, conclusions drawn
on their bases cannot be termed as absolutely true. At best, they can be
regarded as possibly true.
The situation becomes very grave if
one considers the fact that in reality it is the authenticity of scripture
that actually draws the dividing line between Muslims and the followers
of other divinely revealed faiths. For it is the Muslims who claim that
all previous divine scriptures have been interpolated and corrupted and
that it is they who have with them a complete authentic script from the
Almighty. If the data from which they prove the authenticity of their scripture
provides dubious results, then they really have a very heavy task at their
hands to reckon with since the sincere seekers of truth in their non-Muslim
counterparts are provided with a possible legitimate excuse to reject the
Qur’an as the unadulterated word of God.
Consequently, only material from these sources which
is in consonance with the view of the Qur’an should be accepted
and that which contradicts this view should be rejected.
Transmission:
Once the Qur’an was collected
in the lifetime of the Prophet (sws) and memorised by many of his companions,
it was transmitted to the next generations both verbally and in script
form. In fact, the verbal transmission superseded the written one. For
it is this transmission that has actually safeguarded the Qur’anic text
which can be read variously if the actual vocalization is not known. Hundreds
and thousands of the Prophet’s companions learnt it by heart and then passed
it on verbally to the next generation, which in turn memorised the text
in great numbers and this process is still continuing. This generation
to generation transmission is so overwhelming and all-embracing that the
transmitted text has been rendered safe and secure from any alteration.
Consequently, such is the prodigious nature of this transmission that solitary
reports which convey even a slight difference are of no value. In other
words, like established historical events which are also conveyed through
such generation to generation transfer and which as result cannot be challenged,
the text of the Qur’an we have with us, on similar grounds, is also
established beyond any doubt. For example, the facts that Napolean was
defeated at Waterloo by the Duke of Wellington or that Genghiz Khan ravaged
Baghdad are reports that have been transmitted from the generations that
saw and witnessed these events to the next to the extent that no one can
challenge the established nature of these reports. Similar is the case
of the mechanism of the transmission of the Qur’an. The Qur’an
we have with us today has been transferred by thousands of the companions
of the Prophet (sws) with a consensus on the report that this was the very
Qur’an revealed to Muhammad (sws). In turn, this generation transferred
this Qur’an and this report to the next generation. So, just as
the contentions that Napolean never met his fate at Waterloo or that Baghdad
was never devastated by Genghis Khan cannot be entertained in the world
of reason and rationality since they belie established history, the contention
that the Qur’an we have today is not the same as what was revealed
to Muhammad can in no way be accepted.11
Also, in this regard, the following points need to be
appreciated:
(i) All written texts of the Qur’an
are actually compiled and written on the basis of the oral transmission.
In other words, written texts are not the real source of the transmission
of the Qur’an. They are totally dependent on the oral tradition
of transmission, which is the real mode of transmission of the Qur’anic
text. Even today, each written text must be attested by the oral tradition
of transmission through a Hafiz who has learnt the Qur’an.
(ii) It is the oral transmission which
was used later on by the Ummah to write the vowel sounds on the
Qur’anic text for the benefit of non-Arab readers.
(iii) The often undertook quest for
the oldest written codex of the Qur’an has academic importance only
since this has no role in determining the original text of the Qur’an,
which, as pointed out, is not dependent on written texts.12
In the light of this discussion, it can be safely concluded
that the promise of the Almighty mentioned in the Qur’an13
regarding its protection and safety has stood fulfilled ever since the
Qur’an was revealed and will continue to stand the test of time
until the end of this world is heralded.
________________
This article has thus far ventured
forth to explain the collection and transmission of the Qur’an.
However, owing to certain prevailing concepts, three questions may spring
in the mind of the readers:
1. What about the verses of the Qur’an
which are thought to be operational yet are not found within the Qur’an?
2. What were the seven readings of
the Qur’an on which it was supposed to have been revealed?
3. What are the extant variant readings
of the Qur’an?
This article ends with an attempt
to answer these questions.
The_Extraneous_Verses:
There exists a consensus among Muslim
scholars that there are some verses of the Qur’an which do not exist
in it yet are operational. In technical parlance, they are called ‘Mansukhu’l
Tilawah Dun Al-Hukm’ (whose reading has been withdrawn but whose ruling
still exists). Writes Amidi:
Scholars unanimously concede that there are verses which
do not exist in the Qur’an whose directive still remains. (Amidi,
Al-Ahkam Fi Usuli’l-Ahkam, vol. 2, [Beirut: Daru’l-Kutub al-‘Ilmiyyah,
1980], p. 201)
In this regard, the most striking example
is the verse of stoning found in some of the major books of Hadith literature.
One of its texts is reported as follows:
‘Umar said: ‘Refrain from destroying yourself
by denying the verse of stoning. Matters should not reach the stage that
people should begin to say: "We do not find mention of two punishments
(stripes and stoning) in the Book of Allah." No doubt the Prophet did Rajam
(stoning to death) and so did we. I swear by Him in whose hands is
my life that if I were not fearful of the fact that people would say that
‘Umar has made an addition in the Book of Allah, I would have written
the verse: "Stone to death the old man guilty of fornication and the old
woman guilty of fornication" in the Qur’an. The reason is that we
ourselves have recited this verse [from the Qur’an]’. (Mu’atta,
Kitabu’l-Hudud)
While Muslim scholarship14
try to explain this by saying that the directive of Rajam found
in such Ahadith abrogates the directive of punishing fornicators
found in the Qur’an (24:2), some of the critics of the Qur’an
by citing this and other similar examples of such verses found in the
Hadith literature say:
It is far more reasonable to conclude that most of the
various passages said to have been omitted from the Qur’an were
either overlooked, or not known to all the companions, or quite simply
forgotten (such as the passage said by Abu Musa to have contained
the verse about the insatiable greed of man. cf Sahih Muslim).15
This opinion of our scholars cannot be
accepted and requires serious reconsideration. No verse which is thought
to exist outside the Qur’an can be considered as still operational
in any way. How can a part of the Qur’an be extraneous to it? The
Qur’an we have today is itself a proof on the fact that everything
outside it is not its part in any way.
Also, since the doctrine of abrogation16
is used by both Muslims and non-Muslims to justify or refute such verses,
it seems appropriate here to allude to some important statutes of this
doctrine:
(i) Only a Qur’anic verse can
abrogate another verse. Consequently, both the abrogating and the abrogated
verses exist in the Qur’an. For example: 58:13 abrogates 58:12;
similarly 4:11 abrogates 2:180-2. In other words, no abrogated verse of
the Qur’an is found outside the Qur’an, and no Hadith
can abrogate a Qur’anic directive.
(ii) The word Naskh (abrogation)
is not used in the Qur’an as a term, as is generally understood.
It was centuries later that ‘Naskh’ became a term coined by the
scholars of Usul. In 2:106, where it occurs, it refers to abrogation
of certain directives of previous divine scriptures by the Qur’an.
The Qur’an itself does not comment on whether any verse of its verses
has been abrogated or not.
(iii) The abrogation found in the
Qur’an concerns only laws and directives; it does not in any way
relate to beliefs, morality or historical accounts.
The_Seven_Readings:
The following Hadith is generally
presented to contend that the Qur’an was actually revealed on seven
different readings:
Yahya narrates from Malik who narrates
from Ibn Shahab Zuhri who narrates from ‘Urwah Ibn Zubayr who
narrates from ‘Abdu’l-Rahman Ibn ‘Abdu’l-Qari that ‘Umar Ibn
Khattab said before me: ‘I heard Hisham Ibn Hakim Ibn Hizam reading
Surah Furqan in a different way from the one I read it, and the
Prophet (sws) himself had read out this surah to me. Consequently,
as soon as I heard him, I wanted to get hold of him. However, I gave him
respite until he had finished the prayer. Then I got hold of his cloak
and dragged him to the Prophet (sws). I said to him: "I have heard Hisham
Ibn Hakim Ibn Hizam reading Surah Furqan in a different way
from the one you had read it out to me". The Prophet (sws) said: "Leave
him alone [O ‘Umar]". Then he said to Hisham: "Read [it]".
[‘Umar says:] He read it out in the same way as he had done before me.
[At this,] the Prophet said: "It was revealed thus". Then the Prophet (sws)
asked me to read it out. So I read it out. [At this], he said: "It was
revealed thus. This Qur’an has been revealed on seven Ahruf.
You can read it in any way you find easy from among them"’. (Mu’atta,
Ma Ja’ Fi’l-Qur’an)
On the following grounds, this Hadith
cannot be accepted:
Firstly, the very meaning of this
Hadith has baffled everyone, and no one has ever been able to present
a convincing explanation of it. Suyuti has cited forty different
interpretations of it in his treatise Al-Itqan fi ‘Ulumi’l-Qur’an and
after realizing their weakness has admitted in Tanwiru’l-Hawalik,
a commentary on the Mu’atta of Imam Malik, that this Hadith
should be regarded among the Mutashabihat (ie something whose
meaning is not known):
To me the best opinion in this regard is that of the
people who say that this Hadith is from among matters of Mutashabihat,
the meaning of which cannot be understood. (Suyuti, Tanwiru’l-Hawalik,
2nd ed., [Beirut: Daru’l-Jayl, 1993], p. 199)
Secondly, even if the most plausible meaning
that the word Ahruf means the various accents and pronunciations
which existed in the various tribes of Arabia is taken, the text of the
Hadith itself negates this meaning. It is known that both ‘Umar
(rta) and Hisham (rta) belonged to the same tribe: the Quraysh.
Thirdly, even if it is accepted that
this difference was of accent and pronunciation between various tribes,
the verb unzila (was revealed) is certainly very inappropriate. The Qur’an
has specified that it was revealed in the language of the Prophet’s
tribe: the Quraysh (See for example: 19:97, 44:58). How can it be
accepted that the Almighty Himself revealed the various accents and pronunciations?
Fourthly, it is known that Hisham
had accepted Islam on the day Makkah was conquered. If this
Hadith is accepted, it would mean that for almost twenty years even
the closest companions of the Prophet (sws) like ‘Umar (rta) was
unaware of the Qur’an being revealed in some other reading. This
clandestine teaching of course directly contradicts many verses of the
Qur’an which direct the Prophet (sws) to convey and communicate
each and every verse of the Qur’an. See for example 5:67.
The_Variant_Readings:
It is alleged that there exist several
variant readings of the Qur’an. In this regard, it is said that
their amount cannot be fixed and every reading which fulfils the following
criteria is acceptable:
Any reading which is grammatically correct by any means17,
is according to the script of the Uthmanic codices in any way18
and whose chain of narration is Sahih cannot be rejected. In fact,
it is from among the seven Ahruf on which the Qur’an was
revealed whether the reading be narrated from the seven great readers or
the ten or anyone of acknowledged status besides these. (Ibn al-Jazari,
Al-Nashr Fi’l-Qira’at al-‘ahsr, vol. 1, [Egypt: Maktabah al-Tujjariyyah],
p. 9)
It is further understood that:
When any of these three criteria is not fulfilled for
a reading then such a reading shall be considered weak, or unknown (Shazah),
or unacceptable whether it be from the seven readers or the ten or from
those who are even greater than these. This is the correct opinion according
to the researchers of the past and recent times19.
(Ibn al-Jazari, Al-Nashr Fi’l-Qira’at al-‘ahsr, vol. 1, [Egypt:
Maktabah al-Tujjariyyah], p. 9)
It is said that the first person to record these readings
in the form of a book was Abu ‘Ubayd Qasim Ibn Salam (d:224 AH).
He recorded twenty five readings; Abu Ja‘far Tabari (d:310 AH) recorded
over twenty readings, while it was Abu Bakr Ibn Mujahid (d: 324
AH) who selected the seven famous ones20.
The number selected by Ibn Mujahid (seven) has been objected to
by many scholars since this number has led people to think that these seven
were the same as the seven Ahruf on which the Qur’an was
supposed to have been revealed:
Abu Shamah has said: A group of people say that
the seven readings found today are the ones implied by the seven Ahruf
mentioned in the Ahadith. However, this is totally against the
consensus of the scholars of Islam. This view has arisen only among certain
ignorant people. Abu ‘Abbas Ibn ‘Ammar has said: The compiler of
the seven readings has done an inappropriate thing. As a result, the masses
are faced with a complex situation. People with little knowledge think
that the seven Ahruf mean the seven readings. Ibn Mujahid should
have either selected a number greater than seven or a number less than
seven to avoid this confusion. (Suyuti, Itqan Fi ‘Ulumi’l-Qur’an,
2nd ed., vol. 1, [Baydar: Manshurat al-Radi, 1313 AH], p. 274)
In the opinion of this writer, none of
these readings can be accepted in any way owing to the following reasons:
(i) The following verses of the Qur’an
explicitly tell us that the whole of the Qur’an was recited
on ONE READING in a particular way by the Almighty Himself after its revelation
was completed:
Verily, Upon Us is its collection and recital. So when
We have recited it follow this recital [of Ours]. (75:17-18)
It is clear from these verses that the
Almighty recited the Qur’an in a single reading. The words leave
no room for multiple readings of the same word/verses. Furthermore, the
verse emphatically instructs the Prophet (sws) to follow ONLY this particular
recital.
(ii) The whole of the Muslim Ummah
today, except for a few North African countries, is united in reading
the Qur’an in just one way. The variation is so insignificant that
it cannot be accepted in any way. These areas of the African continent
did not even fall into the mainstream of the Muslim Ummah conquered
by the Companions of the Prophet (sws) during the time of the Rightly Guided
Caliphate. The only complete reading of the Qur’an which is in vogue
in all the mainstream areas from the time of the Prophet (sws) is the Qir‘at
al-‘Ammah (the universal reading) – the very reading read out to the
Prophet (sws) once the revelation of the Qur’an had been completed.
It was this very reading which existed among the companions of the Prophet
(sws). Abu ‘Abdu’l Rahman Sullami (d:105 AH21)
narrates:
The reading of Abu Bakr, ‘Umar, ‘Uthman and
Zayd Ibn Thabit and that of all the Muhajirun and the Ansar
was one. They would read the Qur’an according to the Qir‘at
al-‘Ammah. This is the same reading which was read out to the Prophet
(sws) in the year of his death by Gabriel. Zayd Ibn Thabit22
was also present in this reading [called] the ‘Ardah-i-Akhirah23.
It was in this very reading that he taught the Qur’an to people
till his death. (Zarkashi, Burhan, 2nd ed., vol. 1, [Beirut: Daru’l-Fikr,
1980] p. 237)
This reading is generally known today
as the Reading of Hafs (Qir’at-i-Hafs). However, its correct name
is the Qir‘at al-‘Ammah. In the words of Ibn Sirin (d:110
AH24):
The reading on which the Qur’an was read out to
the Prophet (sws) in the year of his death is the same according to which
people are reading the Qur’an today. (Suyuti, Itqan Fi Ulumi’l-Qur’an,
2nd ed., vol. 1, [Baydar: Manshurat al-Radi, 1343 AH], p. 177)
This is the testimony of a famous person
who died more than seventy years after the Prophet (sws).
(iii) If the variant readings which
actually change the meaning of a verse are incorporated in the text and
reflected upon in light of the coherence of the Divine Book and its sublime
language, it becomes evident that the text of the Qur’an totally
rejects them on grounds contained within the text.
An example would help in understanding
this point:
According to the readings of Hamzah,
Abu Amr, and Ibn Kathir we find arjulikum in place of the standard
reading of arjulakum in the fifth verse of Surah Ma’idah.
This changes the meaning quite drastically. The reading arjulikum would
mean that in wudu feet are to be wiped (the Arabic verb for wiping
is Masah) as against arjulakum, the standard reading according
to which feet are to be washed. An indication within the verse rejects
the reading of arjulikum. If read thus (ie in the genitive), the
mention of the words ila al-ka‘bayn (up to the ankles) after arjulikum
means that feet are to be wiped up to the ankles. We know that Masah
is basically a symbolic expression signifying the attainment of purity
and has been allowed to produce ease. Whereas in case of water, it is necessary
that the extent to which the feet are to be washed be known, in case of
Masah a mention of this extent is an obvious redundancy. In other
words, the words ila al-ka‘bayn in this case are superfluous. They
only become meaningful if feet are to be washed. Consequently, another
verse of the Qur’an, which actually describes Tayammum (dry ablution),
mentions the Masah of the face and the hands without specifying
the extent to which this Masah is to be done:
… And if you find no water then take for yourselves clean
sand or earth and rub therewith your hands and faces. (4:43)
Redundant words, of course, do not exist
in the elegant diction of the Qur’an. Therefore, on the basis of
this internal testimony provided within the verse, the reading arjulikum
stands rejected as well.
This analysis should serve as a pointer
at all the variant readings and brings out their fallacy.
(iv) It has already been shown that
the Qur’an is Mutawatir (ie such a large number of people
have transmitted the Qur’an that the existence of any error in the
transmitted text is impossible). There exists a consensus of opinion among
the scholars of our Ummah on this as well.25
Consequently, Suyuti asserts:
There is no difference of opinion about the fact that
whatever is contained in the Qur’an is Mutawatir both in
totality and in part. To the Ahlu’l-Sunnah, the placements therein
and its arrangement are all Mutawatir so that it [the Qur’an]
becomes indisputable. This is because it is an acknowledged fact that the
Qur’an is a document whose details desire Tawatur …. Consequently,
whatever part of the Qur’an has been transmitted through the Ahad
(isolate reports) and is not Mutawatir is unquestionably not
the Qur’an by any means. (Suyuti, Itqan Fi ‘Ulumi’l-Qur’an,
2nd ed., vol. 1, [Baydar: Manshurat al-Radi, 1343 AH], p. 266)
Now, if the chains of narrators of these
variant readings are examined, none of them can be claimed as Mutawatir.
They may be Mutawatir from their famous originators but they are
certainly not Mutawatir all the way from these originators up to
the Prophet (sws). At best, they can be classified as Ahad (isolate
reports). An example would suffice to illustrate this. Following are the
three ways26
in which one of the Qurra’, ‘Asim Ibn Abi Najwad Al-Bahdlah (d:
127 AH27)
has narrated his reading from the Prophet (sws):
I
|
|------------------------------------|------------------------------------|
|
Zirr Ibn Hubaysh
|
Abu ‘Abdu’l-Rahman Sullami
|
Abu ‘Amr Shaybani
|
|------------------------------------|------------------------------------|
|
|---------------------------------------------------|
|
Hafs Ibn Sulayman
|
Abu Bakr ‘Ayyash
|
II
|
|---------------------------------------------------|
|
Zayd Ibn Thabit
|
Ubayyi Ibn Ka‘ab
|
|---------------------------------------------------|
|
|
Abu ‘Abdu’l-Rahman Sullami
|
|
|
|---------------------------------------------------|
|
Hafs Ibn Sulayman
|
Abu Bakr ‘Ayyash
|
III
|
|-----------------------------------------------|
|-----------------------------------------------|
|
|-----------------------------------------------|
|
Zirr Ibn Hubaysh
|
Abu ‘Abdu’l-Rahman Sullami
|
|
|
|-----------------------------------------------|
|
Hafs Ibn Sulayman
|
Abu Bakr ‘Ayyash
|
Muslim scholars recognize this very
fact, but quite inexplicably most of them still insist on accepting these
variant readings:
The opinion of the majority is that these readings are
Mutawatir. However, one opinion is that they are Mashhur28
…. The truth in this regard is that they are Mutawatir from these
seven [Qurr’a]. As far as their Tawatur from the Prophet
(sws) is concerned, this is debatable. For the chain of narrators of these
seven are found in the books of Qira‘at. These chains are transmission
from a single person to another and do not fulfil the condition of Tawatur
neither from the first narrator to the last nor in between. (Zarkashi,
Burhan, 2nd ed., vol. 1, [Beirut: Daru’l-Fikr, 1980] p. 319)
(v) Not only are these readings isolate
reports (Ahad), but also many of the narrators of these readings
are not regarded as trustworthy by the scholars of ‘Ilmu’l-Rijal as
far as accepting Ahadith from them is concerned. As an example,
this is what is written about Hafs Ibn Sulayman, perhaps the most
famous and most widely acclaimed of all the disciples of the major Qurra’:
‘Abdu’l-Rahman Ibn Abi Hatim, ‘Umar Ibn Shu‘ayb Sabuni,
Ahmad Ibn Hambal, Bukhari, Muslim and Nasa‘i call him Matruku’l-Hadith
(From whom Ahadith are not accepted) .… In the opinion of Yahya
Ibn Mu‘in as quoted by Abu Qudamah Sarakhsi and ‘Uthman Ibn
Sa‘id he is not trustworthy …. ‘Ali Ibn Madini says: he is weak
in matters of Hadith and I have forsaken him voluntarily.
…. Abu Zur‘ah also says that he is weak in matters of Hadith
….. Salih Muhammad Al-Baghdadi says the Ahadith narrated by
him are not worth writing and all of them mention unfamiliar things in
religion. Zakariyyah Ibn Yahya Al-Saji narrates from Sammak and
‘Alqamah Ibn Marthad and Qays Ibn Muslim that his Ahadith
are not reliable …. ‘Abdu’l-Rahman Ibn Abi Hatim says that he asked
his father about Hafs. His father said that his Ahadith are
not even worth writing. He is weak in matters of Hadith, cannot
be attested to and his Ahadith are not acceptable. Abdu’l-Rahman
Ibn Yusuf says that he is a great liar, worthy of being forsaken and
forges Ahadith. Hakim Abu Ahmad says: He wastes Ahadith.
Yahya Ibn Sa‘id says that he took a book from him but never returned
it. He would take books from people and copy them. Abu Ahmad Ibn ‘Addi
narrates from Al-Saji and Ahmad Ibn Muhammad Al-Baghdadi
and Yahya Ibn Mu‘in that Hafs Ibn Sulayman and Abu
Bakr Ibn ‘Ayyash are the most competent of all who know the reading
of ‘Asim. Hafs is even more competent than Abu Bakr. However,
Hafs is a great liar while Abu Bakr is reliable.29
It seems quite strange that a person so
widely regarded as unreliable (even called a liar) in accepting Hadith
from be regarded as a very dependable person as far the Qur’an is
concerned.
It is clear from this analysis that
these extant readings which are found in books of Tafsir and read
and taught in religious schools can in no way be accepted. Whether they
originated from insistence by some to cling to the first recital of the
Qur’an30,
or were mere explanations of the actual verses written down by the companions
in their own codices or, like the extraneous verses, were concocted to
disparage the Qur’an is a mystery which perhaps may never be solved.
However, this much is certain that they have nothing to do with the text
of the Qur’an.
|