Wednesday 22 July 2015

The origins of the Koran: From revelation to holy book

The Prophet Muhammad (Sallal la ho alay hay wassalum) disseminated the Koran in a piecemeal and gradual manner from AD610 to 632, the year in which he passed away.
A Koran manuscript believed to date back to the 7th Century on display at the University of Birmingham, 22 July 2015 (AFP)
What may be the world's oldest fragments of the Koran have been found by the University of Birmingham
The evidence indicates that he recited the text and scribes wrote down what they heard.
Some of the Prophet's(Sallal la ho alay hay wassalum) associates set out to collect into single volumes all the "suras" (chapters) that had been disseminated in this fashion.
This endeavour yielded a number of versions of the scripture belonging to different "Companions" of the Prophet(Sallal la ho alay hay wassalum), versions which today we call "Companion codices".
Shortly after the Prophet's (Sallal la ho alay hay wassalum) death, different Companion codices became popular in different parts of the Muslim lands.
For example, in Kufa, a new town in southern Iraq, the popular codex was that of the Companion Ibn Masud who had gone to live there.
Pilgrims try to enter a cave on Mount Hira on the outskirts of Mecca, Saudi Arabia, where Muslims believe the Angel Gabriel first revealed the Qur'an to the Prophet Muhammad (2 January 2006)
According to Islamic tradition, Muhammad (Sallal la ho alay hay wassalum) was confronted by the Angel Gabriel while in a cave on Mount Hira, outside Mecca, and commanded to recite what became the earliest revealed words of the Koran

Standardization

The Companion codices were highly similar. For example, the sequences of verses within the suras were the same, and so were most of the words within the verses.
Nonetheless, some words and phrases were different.
The differences reflected the partially oral transmission of the text, which is to say they are of the sort we expect to see when an oral text is written down.
These differences sometimes affected the meaning, but they did not change the basic ideas of the Koran.
For example, they did not affect the scripture's notions about the nature of God or change major religious obligations.
Shia Muslims pray at the shrine of the Imam Ali in the Iraqi city of Najaf during Laila al-Qadr (Night of Power), when Muslims believe the Koran was first revealed to the Prophet Muhammad 10 July 2015
The process of gathering all the revelations, from both written and oral sources, took some time
Around AD650, the Caliph Uthman, who himself had been a close associate of the Prophet (Sallal la ho alay hay wassalum), had a committee establish an official version of the Koran based on the existing copies of the scripture and the knowledge of experts.
It is reasonable to conjecture that he(Sallal la ho alay hay wassalum) worried about textual diversity and wanted to promote textual uniformity.
He(Sallal la ho alay hay wassalum) sent this official version to different cities and people began copying it.
This Uthmanic textual tradition dwarfed and ultimately replaced the traditions of Ibn Masud and other Companion codices everywhere in the Muslim world, thus fulfilling Uthman's aim of greater textual uniformity from place to place.
Indian Muslim students recite from the Koran in a classroom at the Madrasa Islamia Darul-Uloom Ashrafia in Hyderabad 24 June 2015
To begin with, the Koran was passed on orally by the Prophet's (Sallal la ho alay hay wassalum) followers. Today, millions of Muslim children still learn it by heart

Different readings

Uthman's act of standardization succeeded in reducing textual variation, but did not eliminate it altogether. The text established by Uthman accommodated multiple readings.
Because the script in which the early Korans were written lacked most of the vowels and marks that could distinguish several of the consonants, it was possible to read the text in different ways.
To be sure, oral tradition placed a check on variation, disallowing many otherwise feasible readings.
Nonetheless, numerous variant readings arose. Some of these affect the meaning, but none change the basic ideas of the Koran.
For example, reciters disagreed over whether verse 57 in sura 6 says God "tells" the truth (yaqussu) or "judges" truthfully (yaqdi), two words that look similar in the Arabic script. But since both ideas are ubiquitous in the Koran, the overall message of the scripture is not affected by either reading.
From the above, it is evident that Muslims have lived with a measure of diversity within an otherwise largely stable and uniform text since the beginnings of Islam.
Muslim theologies have assimilated this historical reality in various ways.
While opposing opinions have always existed and persist today, the predominant view has been that the different versions and readings of the Koran that are traceable to early Islam all enjoy God's endorsement.
This idea was embodied in the early statement that God revealed the Koran in multiple forms, and it was fleshed out later by authors such as the 15th-Century scholar, Ibn al-Jazari.
A Muslim pilgrim reads the Koran at the Great Mosque in Mecca, Saudi Arabia, with the Kaaba in the background 9 November 2010
The variant readings of the Koran do not change its basic ideas

New insights

For many centuries, there has been a rich and sophisticated tradition of Koranic scholarship. However, it is in the nature of knowledge to evolve.
Early Koranic manuscripts present one of the resources that can add new insights and nuance to our knowledge of the text's history.
Radiocarbon dating, thanks to technical advances in recent decades and the rigorous efforts of numerous scientists, has developed into an effective and accurate way of dating manuscripts, particularly when performed at the best labs, such as those in Oxford, Arizona, and Zurich.
However, experimental error can creep into the work of the best scientists.
One can control for error by testing more than one sample from a manuscript.
Several tests on a Koranic manuscript called "Sanaa 1" (including a new test that Mohsen Goudarzi and I will publish soon) have dated it to the first half of the 7th Century.
Researchers continue to test more and more manuscripts, many of them datable to the first century of Islam. All of this presents a pleasing prospect for Koranic scholarship.

No comments:

Post a Comment