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Part 2: The True State Of The Qur’an
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Again, though, it is obvious that the lack of ‘certain knowledge’
about both the history and content of its Qur’an has resulted in Islam’s
scholars seeking to defend the Qur’an according to their own opinion (ikhtilaf)
of what the evidence says, and not upon ‘facts’, of which there seem to
be very few in Islam. This has resulted in a conflicting array of ‘stories’,
not a ‘history’, and has placed Islam in the embarrassing position of having
several explanations for the presence of such divergences in the early
written texts, when it has been telling everyone that such variations
have never existed! Islam has been leading everyone to believe that
the Qur’an has only ever had one text (usually stated as "the one Muhammad
left us"), and not ‘7’! This is obviously another ‘outwitting’ by the hierarchy
of Islam upon the unsuspecting Ummah.
However, the reason that Islam must hide the truth about itself
seems obvious. How could it openly attack the Bible’s many manuscripts
all representing one text, and every one of them able to be compared with
each other as a safeguard against error, if Islam were to admit that
it never had just ‘one’, but ‘7’, and it can’t even tell anyone what was
in them!?
Therefore it has become not only convenient but necessary
for Islam’s survival, to avoid discussing early details about the
Qur’an, such as what Tabari recorded about the accusation made between
the various groups that the other’s version was ‘heresy’, and claim that
the followers of Islam in Iraq and Syria were simply "non-Arabic speaking",
a people ignorant of how to pronounce the Arabic text of
the Qur’an. The claim is then made that it was to correct this that `Uthman
sent them a complete and ‘official’ transcript of the Qur’an. However,
it is obvious that this would never have alleviated a problem like error
in pronunciation, since, as was earlier noted, the ability to distinguish
such things was not yet available and the written text was a bare consonantal
symbol text, and nothing else!
b/ What Happened to the ‘Originals’?
Von Denffer raises another issue, the demise of Hafsah’s
manuscripts, the only ‘originals’:
"Later,
Marwan b. Hakam (d.65/684), according to a report in Ibn Abi Da’ud, collected
it from her heirs and had it destroyed, presumably fearing it might become
the cause for new disputes." (Ulum, p.56).
One must not bypass the fact that the burning of Hafsahs copy to
avoid further contentions means that ‘UTHMAN DID NOT IN FACT MAKE ‘AN EXACT
COPY’ OF HAFSAH’S MANUSCRIPT, as some claim. If he had, there would have
been no need to burn it. Rather, according to
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