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Jam' Al-Qur'an - The Compilation of the Qur'an in Perspective
CHAPTER 6:
THE COMPILATION OF THE QUR'AN IN PERSPECTIVE
1. THE QUR'AN'S TESTIMONY TO ITS OWN COMPILATION.
Notwithstanding the efforts of writers like Desai and Siddique to
maintain the hypothesis of the Qur'an's perfect compilation it must
surely be obvious from all that we have considered that the Qur'an
went through a number of stages during which actions were taken
to limit the variations in the written text and in its verbal
recitation to establish, as far as each intervener could, a single
text for the whole Muslim community. A mushaf waahid was the goal
of the redactors, it was not their possession by divine preserve.
The Hadith records testify consistently to the imperfection of the
Qur'an text and what has come down through the ages to a single
text can only be regarded as relatively authentic.
Some Muslim scholars are well aware that it is impossible to maintain
the popular sentiment against the records in the Sirat, Hadith and
Tafsir literature which testify quite unambiguously to the contrary.
The shortcomings and inadequacies of the writings of apologists like
Desai and Siddique are all too obvious. So these scholars take another
line. By rejecting the Hadith records, they maintain that the Qur'an
itself testifies to its own compilation and that this testimony is
sufficient to prove that the Qur'an text, as it now stands, is
absolutely authentic.
This is the theme of the article by Abdus Samad Abdul Kader titled
How the Quran was Compiled referred to in the Introduction and it
seems appropriate, in summing up our study of this subject, to begin
with a review of his argument and the verses he quotes from the
Qur'an to support it.
Right from the start Abdul Kader expresses the notion that indirectly
underlies all Muslim studies on this subject. It is the assumption
that, if the Qur'an was the Word of God revealed to Muhammad, then
it must have been preserved to perfection throughout the ages since
its deliverance. The fear is that, if it can be proved that the
Qur'an has in any way been amended, or that passages have been lost,
or that there is some confusion as to exactly what the original
readings were, then the Qur'an's divine origin and authenticity in
consequence must fall to the ground and be discounted. We have
already seen that this is the motivating consideration behind
Desai's booklet and Siddique's article and it explains why their
approach to the subject is so sensitive, subjective and, at times,
highly irrational. Abdul Kader expresses the conviction directly
when he says in his article:
It was necessary that the Scripture that was to be for all
mankind and for all times, should be complete, perfect and
change-proof. An incomplete scripture, and one that men
changed from time to time, cannot be a guide to mankind. ...
A Scripture that is meant for the whole of mankind ... has
to be protected from being interpolated and changed by human
hands. (Al-Balaagh, Vol. 11 No.2, p.1).
In these statements the author gives sufficient proof that the
doctrine of the Qur'an's perfect preservation arises not from a
scholarly study of the history of the text but from a popular
sentiment that is imposed upon it, a presupposition that has to
be maintained at all costs. "It was necessary", he says, to
preserve the text; such a scripture "should be complete, perfect";
it "has to be protected from being interpolated". This is the
language of presupposition, it is the spirit of hypothesis, it
indicates that, before the scholar has even come to a study of
his subject, he has already decided long in advance what his
findings and conclusion will be. No matter what directions the
evidences may lead, the matter is predetermined. It is hardly
necessary to say that such an approach is subjective in the extreme
and will not yield a balanced or accurate perspective.
The Muslim approach to this whole subject is hard to understand
for, if a book never was the Word of God in the first place, no
amount of proof that it has been absolutely and perfectly preserved
will make it the Word of God. Conversely, if a book was indeed the
Word of God at the time when it was first inscribed, the later
existence of a few suspect passages and variant readings which do
not affect the overall content of the text would not negate its
original divine authenticity. Nevertheless, having thus briefly
considered the emotional Muslim approach to the subject, let us
return to it at a purely factual / interpretational level so that
we may conclude with a balanced perspective on what the history
of the Qur'an text really was and the extent to which the text,
as it stands today, can be regarded as authentic.
Abdul Kader quotes the following verse in proof of his contention
that the Qur'an testifies to its own completion and attendant
perfection:
Completed is the Word of thy Sustainer, in truth and in
justice; there is naught that may change his Words.
Surah 6.116
Even a superficial study of the text will show that the completion
spoken of is not the Qur'an as a book but rather the extent of the
words of God in truth and justice. Arberry translates this verse
"Perfect are the words of thy Lord in truthfulness and justice"
and Yusuf Ali gives the same application: "The Word of thy Lord
doth find its fulfilment in truth and in justice". The key word
here is tammat, meaning "to be fulfilled", and it is clear that
the subject of the perfection spoken of is the truth and justice
of God's words and not the text of the Qur'an as a book. The word
appears yet again in Surah 11.119 where it is said "the Word of
thy Lord shall be fulfilled (tammat): 'I will fill Hell with
jinns and men all together'". The context makes it quite clear
that we are dealing with a fulfilment of God's words and not of
the completion of a text.
As the Qur'an was still in the process of compilation at the time
when this verse (Surah 6.116) became a part of its text it is
hard to see in any event how it can testify to the Qur'an's
supposed perfect compilation. The book was very much incomplete
at this point and it is well-nigh impossible to see how this
text can be manipulated to prove that the Qur'an was eventually
perfectly compiled and preserved to the last dot and letter.
Although Abdul Kader concedes that the Qur'an was being delivered
piecemeal over a number of years and is aware that there were
many loose parchments and other materials upon which it was being
inscribed, to draw the conclusion that the Qur'an was, in fact,
perfectly preserved in a single text he argues that the following
text testifies to a collection of these parchments into a single
book:
And (by) a Book inscribed, on fine parchment, unrolled.
Surah 52.2-3.
The text, like the other one quoted, is very general in its
description and it requires no small amount of imagination to
make it testify to the perfection of the Qur'an text. Yet, when
it is studied in its context, it will be seen that the kitab
(translated by Abdul Kader "a Book") spoken of is not the Qur'an
at all but one of the five signs of the coming Day of Judgment.
The whole context reads:
By the Mount (at-Tuur), by a Decree (Kitaabin) inscribed
in a scroll unfolded, by the much-frequented House (al-Bait),
by the Canopy (as-saqf) raised high, and by the Ocean
(al-Bahr) filled with swell, verily the Doom of your Lord
will come to Pass. Surah 52.1-7.
Once again we see that the passage has nothing to do with the
actual compilation of the text of the Qur'an at all and it soon
becomes very obvious that Abdul Kader is devoid of evidences
for the perfection of the Qur'an in the Hadith records and, in
consequence, finds himself constrained to force texts of the
Qur'an to yield meanings never intended by the author of the
book to provide the required proofs. He concludes by claiming
that the Qur'an, in the following verse, actually testifies to
a "master copy" of its text that was being preserved:
That this is indeed a Noble Qur'an, in a Book preserved.
Surah 56.77-78.
What is the original Arabic word in this text which Abdul Kader
translates as "preserved"? It is maknuun which comes from the
root word kanna, meaning "to hide". From this word come the
following words used in the Qur'an: aknaan, meaning "a refuge"
or hiding-place in the mountains (Surah 16.81); akkinah, meaning
"veils" or coverings upon men's hearts (Surah 6.25, etc.); and
akanna, meaning "to hide" something in the heart (Surah 2.235).
Thus the clear underlying meaning of any form of this word is
to conceal or to hide, and Arberry translates Surah 56.78 as
"a hidden Book". It would appear that what the Qur'an is really
saying of itself is that it is "a concealed scripture" without
explaining what this means. In any event it once again is very
hard to see how this can be distorted into a testimony to the
Qur'an's textual perfection and completion at the end of
Muhammad's life. We again have a general and rather vague
statement taken right out of context to support a cherished
hypothesis.
Ultimately it is the gradual compilation of the Qur'an during
Muhammad's lifetime that is the strongest argument against any
evidence in the Qur'an (were any to exist) regarding its own
completion and perfection. Surah 56.78 and Surah 80.13-16,
which is also quoted by Abdul Kader and says no more than that
the Qur'an texts were being written on suhuf (parchments) by
pious scribes, both come from the very early Meccan period.
This was at the time when the Qur'an text was only just
beginning to take shape and there is no way that such passages
can be adduced in support of the Qur'an's ultimate supposed
textual completion and perfection. We find it strange that it
should be argued that a book which throughout Muhammad's final
years was still being supplemented by additional passages and
texts can, in the middle of its course, suddenly testify to
its own exactness and completeness!
As long as Muhammad lived there was always a possibility that
further passages might be added to the text and the Qur'an
nowhere draws the curtain upon itself. There is no verse in
the Qur'an stating that the text had been completed and that
no further passages could be expected. As we saw early in this
book, more was being added to the Qur'an just before Muhammad's
death than at any other time during his mission. It was the
death of Muhammad that fixed the extent of the Qur'an text, it
was this event alone that brought the compilation of the book
to a sudden conclusion. Throughout Muhammad's life the Qur'an
continued to expand and we must therefore conclude that the
Qur'an cannot possibly testify to its own completeness or the
extent of the preservation of its text.
There is only one place in the Qur'an where the word jama'ah
(to compile or collect together) is used in connection with
the text of the book itself, namely in Surah 75.17 where Allah
is quoted as saying "It is for Us to collect it and to recite
it". It is surprising that Abdul Kader overlooked this verse
altogether in his article as it is the closest the Qur'an comes
to saying anything significant about its own compilation.
Nonetheless it makes Allah speak of collecting the Qur'an before
it is recited from heaven to Muhammad, so it too cannot be
adduced as evidence for the collection of the text after the
time of its deliverance.
It is our opinion that none of the texts quoted by Abdul Kader
even remotely testify to the supposed textual perfection and
completion of the Qur'an as compiled by his companions at the
end of his life. As said already, a book that at all times
during its composition was still being supplemented by fresh
material cannot possibly give evidence as to the completeness
of the final product.
Abdul Kader's whole argument centres on the compilation of the
Qur'an during the lifetime of Muhammad and understandably so,
for the Qur'an could not testify historically in advance to the
course of the text after Muhammad's death. Yet it is precisely
this restriction to his lifetime that renders the Qur'an an
incompetent witness to the state of the text at the time of its
completion. That completion only came upon the death of Muhammad
and it is to independent historical records of the text thereafter
that we must turn for the evidences we require, namely the series
of Hadith records we have already considered.
2. A "MASTER COPY OF THE QUR'AN" IN THE MASJID AN-NABI?
In sharp contrast to the records we have been studying throughout
this book on the development and collection of the Qur'an text we
find Abdul Kader declaring that a "Master copy of the Qur'an" was
kept by Muhammad and that all other texts of the Qur'an in written
form were copied from this original text. He says:
The Master Copy of the collection of the portions of the
Quran was kept under special care in a safe in the
Masjid-e-Nabawee (Mosque of the Prophet) in Madeenah. It
had a special place near the column called astawaanah
mus-hif (the column of the Master Copy). This Master Copy
was called the Imam (leader) or Umm (source).
(Al-Balaagh, Vol. 11, No.2, p.2).
He goes on to allege that the copies made from this master copy
were transcribed "under the personal supervision of the Prophet".
These are all allegations of fact and yet the writer, like Desai,
gives no documentation or authority for his claims. The Qur'an
itself nowhere states that a perfect copy of its text was being
kept in a safe in the masjid an-nabi of Medina near a column named
after it, so Abdul Kader must have obtained this information from
another source, but he neglects to substantiate his statements
with disclosures of his sources and his claims therefore cannot
be tested or critically analysed.
We have seen already that materials upon which the Qur'an was
being written were being kept in Muhammad's house at Medina
(as-Suyuti, Al-Itqan, p.137) but there are express statements in
the same compilation of early records of the Qur'an text which
make it plain that the Qur'an had not been brought together into
a single location during Muhammad's lifetime, whether in his own
home or anywhere else (as-Suyuti, Al-Itqan, p.96). Abdul Kader's
statements are set right against the evidences furnished in the
Hadith records and other historical sources we have mentioned
and, as his claims have no factual basis in the Qur'an, it would
be most interesting to know where he obtains his information.
His silence on these sources would appear to us to be most
significant.
All that he has shown is that, if the Hadith records of the
compilation of the Qur'an text are not accepted, there is really
no other source to consult. The Qur'an furnishes virtually no
useful information at all about its own codification and collection
into a single text and, in fact, when one considers the nature of
the Qur'an itself, one finds that it is a most improbable witness
to the completeness or otherwise of its text.
There is no chronological sequence of any kind in the Qur'an.
The surahs have generally been arranged from the longest to
the shortest so that the earliest passages appear at the end of
the book and the later passages at the beginning. There is nothing
of historical foundation in the Qur'an in that no event recorded
in the book is ever dated and no regard is paid to any kind of
historical sequence in the book.
If the Qur'an does not serve as a good history book, then nor
does it offer much of geographical value either. Only one place
is mentioned by name in the Qur'an - Mecca in Surah 3.96 (where
it is named Bakkah) - and nothing else is given any sort of
location in the book. No one reading the Qur'an alone could place
any event it records at any point in history or give a specific
geographical placement to any locality it mentions or otherwise
speaks about.
Many of the longer surahs are made up of passages dating from
both Muhammad's mission at Mecca and at Medina and within these
composite surahs we find the subject of the text varying from
legal restriction to prophetic narratives, from ethical teaching
to praises to God, etc., coupled with numerous catch-phrases.
More often than not the different subjects of the longer surahs
have no connection with each other at all.
The Qur'an is, in these respects, a quite disjointed book. As it
stands today it is a collection of fragmentary texts and passages
compiled into an unharmonious whole without respect to sequence
or theme. It is hardly the kind of book that can offer useful
testimony to its own textual accuracy or completion. It has no
definite beginning or conclusion and there is no way that a study
of the Qur'an text alone can assist one to determine whether it
has been completely preserved, nor is there anything in the book
to prove that nothing has been omitted from its pages or modified
in the process of compilation.
It is only in the Hadith records that we find any evidence as
to how the Qur'an really was originally compiled. The science
of the study of the Hadith literature has often centred on the
reliability or otherwise of the Hadith texts and some Muslim
scholars have rejected the Hadith records of the Qur'an's
compilation as unreliable because it was well-known that, in
the early days of Islam, some Hadith material was fabricated
and was handed down alongside material that was authentic.
Such inauthentic hadith records were usually related to opposing
schools of law or political issues. The rivalry between the
Umayyads and the Abbasids resulted in many records being fabricated
to favour the one or the other and as the fiqh (jurisprudence) of
Islam developed, so traditions were invented to provide authority
for different maxims of law. Many of these can be recognised as
fabrications merely through a cursory study of their contents,
but to determine the reliability of the rest of the Hadith
literature various means were applied to each specific tradition.
How sound was its isnad (its chain of transmitters)? How many
independent records of the same tradition existed - was it an
isolated (ahad) record, a generally accepted text (mashur),
or was it widely attested (mutawatir)? Then again, after a
consideration of these issues, could it be classed as sahih
(genuine), hasan (fair) or da'if (weak), or should it be
discounted entirely as mardud (to be rejected)?
This science of classification has rarely been applied to the
traditions setting out how the Qur'an was compiled. The earliest
records of the collection of the Qur'an were generally taken at
face value as this subject was not one which spawned any motivation
for fabrication, although John Burton argues to the contrary in
his book The Collection of the Qur'an, suggesting that many of
the verses said to be missing from the Qur'an were invented after
Muhammad's death to give support and authority to the legal maxims
of those who made them up. He applies the same argument to some
of the recorded variant readings of the Qur'an. None of the three
writers who wrote articles in reply to my earlier notes on the
compilation of the Qur'an text, however, raised such a possibility,
nor did they make any attempt to define which traditions could be
accepted and which should be rejected.
There is no standard by which those early records can really be
distinguished. Any scholar seeking to separate them into those
which can be approved and those which cannot will have to rely
almost exclusively on his own initiative and his findings will
have to be purely subjective and speculative.
One cannot dispense with some of the Hadith records on this
subject without eventually doing away with them all as they
give an overall impression of how the Qur'an was codified into
a single text and, as we shall see in the last section of this
chapter, they are far more consistent in giving a general picture
of what actually occurred than some scholars are willing to admit.
The fact is that, without these records, there is no evidence as
to how the Qur'an was compiled. If they are to be rejected, then
nothing authoritative whatsoever can be said about the manner in
which the Qur'an was compiled into what it is today. The record
of the codification of the Qur'an text as found in the early Sirat,
Hadith and Tafsir literature is the only historical source in
Islam to consult - without it there is only a void and nothing
authoritative really can be said. No other thesis about the original
collection of the Qur'an can be documented or grounded in historical
evidences. Let us press on in closing to a review of the history of
the text as we have thusfar set it out.
3. A REVIEW OF THE HISTORY OF THE QUR'AN TEXT.
We are left with a sharp contrast between sentiment and reality
in Islam on the subject of the authenticity of the Qur'an text.
Popular sentiment opts for the claim that the Qur'an text has
been perfectly preserved by divine authority without so much as
an alteration in the text of any kind whatsoever. Reality,
however, testifies to a far more mundane and predictable history
of the text with much evidence as to passages that are now missing
from the Qur'an, substantial variant readings that existed in the
earliest codices, and other variants in dialect which have survived
more than one attempt to establish a universally accepted single
text. Yet another typical testimony to the loss of portions of the
Qur'an in the early days can be mentioned here.
In his short section on the codex of Abdullah ibn Umar, in speaking
of differences in reading between Abdullah and the other companions
of Muhammad, Ibn Abi Dawud quotes Abu Bakr ibn Ayyash as saying:
Many of the companions of the Prophet of Allah (saw) had their
own reading of the Qur'an, but they died and their readings
disappeared soon afterwards.
(Ibn Abi Dawud, Kitab al-Masahif, p.83).
What sort of evidence would have been required to substantiate the
Muslim hypothesis of a perfect text? Firstly, there would most
certainly have had to be a complete silence in the Hadith records
regarding missing passages, variant readings and the like. The
historical sources of Islam apart from the Qur'an itself would have
had to support the theory of an absolutely perfect text instead of
contradicting this theory as consistently as they do. We would have
required sound evidence that the Qur'an was carefully inscribed in
a single text during Muhammad's lifetime and that this text had
survived his death and been carefully looked after as the sole
authority from which other copies alone could be made. This is very
much what Abdul Kader alleges as the actual history of the text but
his claim is directly contrary to the evidences which show that it
was only after Muhammad's death that any attempt was made to collect
the Qur'an into a single text.
As pointed out already, Abdul Kader furnishes no proofs, evidences
or documentation for his theory and it appears that the wish has
become father to the thought. He rejects the Hadith not because they
are unreliable but because he finds them unacceptable in that they
solidly undermine the theory he cherishes so much. Instead, being
aware of the sort of evidences that would have been required, he
summarily sets forth the ideal as historical fact without offering
any source material that can be checked or critically reviewed.
A very different history of the text of the Qur'an would have had to
be recorded than the one that the heritage of Islam has preserved
for us to support the case for a text absolutely free of alteration,
omission or variation. We would have required very strong evidences
that only one text of the Qur'an ever came down through those early
years of Muslim history and these evidences would have had to show
quite convincingly that the whole text, verse for verse, is precisely
the same today as it was then. There would also have had to be no
evidences to show that other codices, differing from the standard
text, had ever existed. Such is the kind of proof we would require
to entertain seriously the claim that the Qur'an text had been
preserved to perfection without variations of any kind. Our study
shows that such proof and the evidences required therefor quite
simply do not exist.
The evidences that do exist for the history of the Qur'an text on
the contrary ruin the claim for the Qur'an's textual perfection
and relegate such a claim to the realms of popular sentiment and
wishful thinking. These evidences, in their broad outline, give us
a very reasonable picture of the development of the text and, in
fact, allowing for the unusual nature of the Qur'an as a book,
yield very much the kind of history that we would have been
inclined to expect. Instead of a case for divine preservation we
find a very mundane and predictable course.
The Qur'an was compiled piecemeal, was not compiled in a single
book during Muhammad's lifetime, was recited by many companions
and was read at the time by Muslims with varying Arabic dialects.
The course of the text thereafter down to the present day is
largely what one would have expected and is generally consistent
with itself, most certainly in its broad outline.
After Muhammad's death passages of the Qur'an were lost irretrievably
when a number of reciters died at the Battle of Yamama. This incident
together with the Qur'an's automatic completion as a book once its
mediator had passed away inspired a number of companions to compile
their own codices of the text. These 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 and no two codices were entirely the same. In addition
the text was being recited in varying dialects in the different
provinces of the Muslim world.
During the reign of Uthman a deliberate attempt was made to
standardise the Qur'an and impose a single text upon the whole
community. The codex of Zaid was chosen for this purpose because
it was close at hand and, having been kept in virtual seclusion
for many years, had not attracted publicity as one of the varying
texts as those of Abdullah ibn Mas'ud and Ubayy ibn Ka'b had done.
The other codices were summarily destroyed and Zaid's text became
the textus receptus for the whole Islamic world as a result.
Numerous records were retained, however, showing that key passages
were missing from this text. It also had to be reviewed and amended
to meet the Caliph's standard for a single approved text. After
Uthman's death, however, al-Hajjaj, the governor at Kufa, made
eleven distinct amendments and corrections to the text.
As the early codices were only written in consonantal form, however,
the varying dialects survived largely unaffected by Uthman's action
and it was only three centuries later that a scholar, Ibn Mujahid,
managed to limit these to seven distinctly defined readings in
accordance with a tradition which stated that the Qur'an originally
came in seven different readings although the tradition itself made
no attempt to define these readings.
Over the succeeding centuries the Qur'an continued to be read in
seven different forms until five of them largely fell into disuse.
Eventually only those of Hafs and Marsh survived and, with the
introduction of a printed Qur'an, the text of Hafs began to take
almost universal prominence.
The Qur'an text as it is read and printed throughout the Muslim
world today is only Zaid's version of it, duly corrected where
necessary, later amended by al-Hajjaj, and read according to one
of seven approved different readings. This is the reality - a far
cry from the popular sentiment which argues for a single text right
from the time of Muhammad himself. The reality, however, based on
all the evidences available, shows that the single text as it
stands today was only arrived at through an extended process of
amendments, recensions, eliminations and an imposed standardisation
of a preferred text at the initiative of a subsequent caliph and
not by prophetic direction or divine decree.
The Qur'an is an authentic text to the extent that it largely
retains the material initially delivered by Muhammad. No evidence
of any addition to the text exists and, in respect of the vast
number of variant readings and missing passages that have been
recorded, there does not appear to be anything actually affecting
or contradicting the basic content of the book. In this respect
one can freely assume a relative authenticity of the text in the
sense that it adequately retains the gist and content of what was
originally there. On the contrary there is no basis in history,
facts or the evidences for the development of the text to support
the cherished hypothesis that the Qur'an has been preserved
absolutely intact to the last dot and letter.
Jam' Al-Qur'an: Table of contents
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