{"title":"Ghamidi’s Critique of the Seven Aḥruf Report","authors":"Tariq Mahmood Hashmi, Dr. Humaira Ahmad","doi":"10.54262/irjis.04.01.e02","DOIUrl":null,"url":null,"abstract":"Muslims have always upheld the multiplicity of the Qur’anic readings (qirāᵓāt), as sanctioned by the Prophet of Islam, who proclaimed that the Book was revealed in seven aḥruf. The Companions of the Prophet transmitted these readings faithfully to the next generations. These variant readings were subsequently standardized during the second and the third century of the Islamic era. The Muslims developed a consensus on reading the Qur’an according to one of the ten well-known canonical readings. This process continued until modern times when some Muslim modernists embraced scripturalism. Muslim modernists from Pakistan including Amīn Aḥsan Iṣlāḥī (d. 1997) and Javed Ahmad Ghamidi have rejected all the variant readings except the reading of Ḥafṣ ᶜan ᶜĀṣim, declaring the rest of the canonical readings as non-Qur’anic. Ghamidi has repudiated the seven-aḥruf narrative as militating against the Qur’an, commonsense, and history. This article studies Ghamidi’s criticism of the seven-aḥruf narrative through a historical-critical and philologicals method. This investigation shows that the Ḥadīth about the seven aḥruf enjoys overwhelmingly certain support, provides conclusive proof for the permissibility of the variant readings of the Qurᵓān, contrary to the claim of Ghamidi, who rejects it as militating against commonsense and the Qur’an.","PeriodicalId":310030,"journal":{"name":"International Research Journal on Islamic Studies (IRJIS)","volume":"47 1","pages":"0"},"PeriodicalIF":0.0000,"publicationDate":"2022-01-01","publicationTypes":"Journal Article","fieldsOfStudy":null,"isOpenAccess":false,"openAccessPdf":"","citationCount":"0","resultStr":null,"platform":"Semanticscholar","paperid":null,"PeriodicalName":"International Research Journal on Islamic Studies (IRJIS)","FirstCategoryId":"1085","ListUrlMain":"https://doi.org/10.54262/irjis.04.01.e02","RegionNum":0,"RegionCategory":null,"ArticlePicture":[],"TitleCN":null,"AbstractTextCN":null,"PMCID":null,"EPubDate":"","PubModel":"","JCR":"","JCRName":"","Score":null,"Total":0}
引用次数: 0
Abstract
Muslims have always upheld the multiplicity of the Qur’anic readings (qirāᵓāt), as sanctioned by the Prophet of Islam, who proclaimed that the Book was revealed in seven aḥruf. The Companions of the Prophet transmitted these readings faithfully to the next generations. These variant readings were subsequently standardized during the second and the third century of the Islamic era. The Muslims developed a consensus on reading the Qur’an according to one of the ten well-known canonical readings. This process continued until modern times when some Muslim modernists embraced scripturalism. Muslim modernists from Pakistan including Amīn Aḥsan Iṣlāḥī (d. 1997) and Javed Ahmad Ghamidi have rejected all the variant readings except the reading of Ḥafṣ ᶜan ᶜĀṣim, declaring the rest of the canonical readings as non-Qur’anic. Ghamidi has repudiated the seven-aḥruf narrative as militating against the Qur’an, commonsense, and history. This article studies Ghamidi’s criticism of the seven-aḥruf narrative through a historical-critical and philologicals method. This investigation shows that the Ḥadīth about the seven aḥruf enjoys overwhelmingly certain support, provides conclusive proof for the permissibility of the variant readings of the Qurᵓān, contrary to the claim of Ghamidi, who rejects it as militating against commonsense and the Qur’an.
穆斯林一直坚持古兰经读法的多样性(qirāᵓāt),正如伊斯兰教的先知所认可的那样,他宣称这本书是在七个aḥruf中启示的。先知的同伴们将这些读物忠实地传给下一代。这些不同的解读随后在伊斯兰时代的第二和第三世纪被标准化。穆斯林根据十种著名的经典读法之一来阅读古兰经,形成了一种共识。这个过程一直持续到现代,直到一些穆斯林现代主义者接受了圣经主义。来自巴基斯坦的穆斯林现代主义者,包括amurn Aḥsan Iṣlāḥī(1997年)和Javed Ahmad Ghamidi,拒绝了除了Ḥafṣ an Āṣim以外的所有变体解读,宣布其余的正典解读为非古兰经。Ghamidi否认seven-aḥruf的叙述是对古兰经、常识和历史的干扰。本文运用历史批判和语言学的方法研究了伽米迪对seven-aḥruf叙事的批判。这项调查显示,Ḥadīth关于七个aḥruf享有压倒性的肯定支持,为可兰经的不同解读的允许性提供了确凿的证据ᵓān,与Ghamidi的主张相反,他拒绝它,因为它与常识和可兰经相抵触。