The
Holy Koran
'al-qur'anu l-karîm
The holy book of Islam.
The Koran as a book is the result of
Essential to the reading of the Koran are the interpretations, which are still conducted, but which were more normal and accepted in the first centuries of Islam. As the Koran has a structure and a language, as well as allusions, which often are difficult for the normal Muslim to understand, a whole science were built around the comprehension of the Koran. The early Muslims studied history, language and nature science in an effort of understanding the Koran better. The product is surprisingly well accepted by the whole Muslim society, and no Muslim child or adult of today, studying the Koran, does this without help from the interpretations built on the early science of the Koran.
'Fatiha', the first, and most central, sura in the Koran |
The early efforts of Koranic
science have given room for different approaches to the book and its content,
but apart from the interpretations of the , all interpretations are looked
upon as parallel, meaning that one can not be put ahead of the other. There
are today 7 ways of reading the Koran, each of these have two variances,
leaving the Muslims with 14 ways of reading the Koran. But in modern Koranic
science this applies only to Muslim scholars, the ordinary Muslim reads
the Koran without dealing with this complexity.
The Koran is divided into 114 suras, which are opened by indications on
their origin. The origin is either Mecca or Medina. But it is generally
accepted that some of suras have parts from the other city than the one
they have as their origin. The whole structure of the Koran is a science
in itself, as there is no chronology in it, like the one found in the Bible,
and as the most of it consists of commandments and warnings, and only a
part is stories.
The following can be said about its structure. Except the first sura, 'al-fâtiha,
'The Commencement', the longest suras are found in the beginning, and then
gradually decreases on to the end of the Koran. Sura 2. 'al-baqara, 'The
Cow' is 286 âya, verse, long, while sura 114 is 6 aya long. But the
shortest are sura 103, 106 and 108, all consisting of 3 aya.
USE OF THE KORAN:
The two main importances of the Koran for the believer are
The Koran's actual guidance in everyday life for Muslims, must not be overestimated. Muslim's think of the Koran as too complex to be a guide in daily matters, as interpreted by a Muslim layman. When a Muslim have a problem where the Holy Koran is involved, asking learned men or reading books written by men learned in Islamic sciences, is the choice of most. There are situations where Muslims look up the Koran for guidance, but this will be in cases where they know what to look for, and where to look.
TRANSLATIONS OF THE KORAN
Muslims not speaking Arabic will normally stick to an Arabic version
of the Koran. Most of them will learn how to read Arabic text, and learn
some Arabic words, and then read the Koran according to the way described
above. Translations of the Koran is in many cases a result of the need
of western scholars and others in the west interested in Islam. The first
translation of the Koran into another language was to Latin in 1143, and
this was performed by a monk, in the need of understanding the Crusaders
enemy. From the 18th century and up until now, the Koran has been translated
into most western languages, and with a steadily increasing quality, Today
most Muslims endorse this effort, with the hope that some misunderstandings
on Islam can be refuted, and also that Islam can reach more people in the
West.