Who wrote the Quran?
The words of the Quran were
collected as they were revealed to the Prophet Muhammad, committed to memory by
the early Muslims, and recorded in writing by scribes.
Under Supervision of the Prophet Muhammad
As the Quran was being revealed, the Prophet
Muhammad made special arrangements to ensure that it was written down.
Although the Prophet Muhammad himself could neither read nor write, he dictated
the verses orally and instructed scribes to mark down the revelation on
whatever materials were available: tree branches, stones, leather, and bones.
The scribes would then read their writing back to the Prophet, who would check
it for mistakes. With each new verse that was revealed, the Prophet Muhammad
also dictated its placement within the growing body of text.
When the Prophet Muhammad died, the Quran had been fully
written down. It was not in book form, however. It was recorded on different
parchments and materials, held in the possession of the Companions of the
Prophet.
Under Supervision of Caliph Abu Bakr
After the death of the Prophet Muhammad, the entire Quran
continued to be remembered in the hearts of the early Muslims. Hundreds of the
early Companions of the Prophet had memorized the entire revelation, and
Muslims daily recited large portions of the text from memory. Many of the early
Muslims also had personal written copies of the Quran recorded on various
materials.
Ten years after the Hijrah (632 C.E.), many of these scribes
and early Muslim devotees were killed in the Battle of Yamama. While the
community mourned the loss of their comrades, they also began to worry about
the long-term preservation of the Holy Quran. Recognizing that the words of
Allah needed to be collected in one place and preserved, the Caliph
Abu Bakr ordered all people who had written pages of the Quran to
compile them in one place. The project was organized and supervised by one of
the Prophet Muhammad’s key scribes, Zayd bin Thabit.
The process of compiling the Quran from these various
written pages was done in four steps:
Zayd bin Thabit verified each verse with his own memory.
Umar ibn Al-Khattab verified each verse. Both men had
memorized the entire Quran.
Two reliable witnesses had to testify that the verses were
written in the presence of the Prophet Muhammad.
The verified written verses were collated with those from
the collections of other Companions.
This method of cross-checking and verifying from more than
one source was undertaken with the utmost care. The purpose was to prepare an
organized document which the entire community could verify, endorse, and use as
a resource when needed.
This complete text of the Quran was kept in the possession
of Abu Bakr and then passed on to the next Caliph, Umar ibn Al-Khattab. After
his death, they were given to his daughter Hafsah (who
was also a widow of the Prophet Muhammad).
Under Supervision of Caliph Uthman bin Affan
As Islam began to spread throughout the Arabian peninsula,
more and more people entered the fold of Islam from as far away as Persia and
Byzantine. Many of these new Muslims were not native Arabic speakers, or they
spoke a slightly different Arabic pronunciation from the tribes in Makkah and
Madinah. People began to dispute about which pronunciations were most
correct. Caliph
Uthman bin Affan took charge of ensuring that the recitation of the
Quran is a standard pronunciation.
The first step was to borrow the original, compiled copy of
the Quran from Hafsah. A committee of early Muslim scribes was tasked with
making transcripts of the original copy and ensuring the sequence of the
chapters (surahs). When these perfect copies had been completed, Uthman bin
Affan ordered all remaining transcripts to be destroyed, so that all copies of
the Quran were uniform in script.
All Qurans available in the world today are exactly
identical to the Uthmani version, which was completed less than twenty years
after the death of Prophet Muhammad.
Later, some minor improvements were made in the Arabic script (adding dots and diacritical marks), to make it easier for non-Arabs to read. However, the text of the Quran has remained the same.
Comments
Post a Comment