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Muqattaʿat

The mysterious letters[1] (muqaṭṭaʿāt, Arabic: حُرُوف مُقَطَّعَات ḥurūf muqaṭṭaʿāt, "disjoined letters" or "disconnected letters"[2]) are combinations of between one and five Arabic letters that appear at the beginning of 29 out of the 114 chapters (surahs) of the Quran just after the Bismillāh Islamic phrase.[3] The letters are also known as fawātiḥ (فَوَاتِح) or "openers" as they form the opening verse of their respective surahs.[4]

Four (or five) chapters are named for their muqaṭṭaʿāt: Ṭā-Hā, Yā-Sīn, Ṣād, Qāf, and sometimes Nūn.

The original significance of the letters is unknown. Tafsir (exegesis) has interpreted them as abbreviations for either names or qualities of God or for the names or content of the respective surahs. The general belief of most Muslims is that their meaning is known only to Allah.

Inventory edit

Muqatta'at occur in Quranic chapters 2–3, 7, 10–15, 19–20, 26–32, 36, 38, 40–46, 50 and 68. Multiple letters are written together like a word, but each letter is pronounced separately.

Table Number Surah Surah order Muqattaʿāt
1 al-Baqarah 2 ʾAlif Lām Mīm الم
2 Āl Imrān 3 ʾAlif Lām Mīm الم
3 al-Aʿrāf 7 ʾAlif Lām Mīm Ṣād المص
4 Yūnus 10 ʾAlif Lām Rā الر
5 Hūd 11 ʾAlif Lām Rā الر
6 Yūsuf 12 ʾAlif Lām Rā الر
7 Ar-Raʿd 13 ʾAlif Lām Mīm Rā المر
8 Ibrāhīm 14 ʾAlif Lām Rā الر
9 al-Ḥijr 15 ʾAlif Lām Rā الر
10 Maryam 19 Kāf Hā Yā ʿAin Ṣād كهيعص
11 Ṭā Hā 20 Ṭā Hā طه
12 ash-Shuʿārāʾ 26 Ṭā Sīn Mīm طسم
13 an-Naml 27 Ṭā Sīn طس
14 al-Qaṣaṣ 28 Ṭā Sīn Mīm طسم
15 al-ʿAnkabūt 29 ʾAlif Lām Mīm الم
16 ar-Rūm 30 ʾAlif Lām Mīm الم
17 Luqmān 31 ʾAlif Lām Mīm الم
18 as-Sajdah 32 ʾAlif Lām Mīm الم
19 Yā Sīn 36 Yā Sīn يس
20 Ṣād 38 Ṣād ص
21 Ghāfir 40 Ḥā Mīm حم
22 Fuṣṣilat 41 Ḥā Mīm حم
23 ash-Shūrā 42 Ḥā Mīm; ʿAin Sīn Qāf حم عسق
24 Az-Zukhruf 43 Ḥā Mīm حم
25 Al Dukhān 44 Ḥā Mīm حم
26 al-Jāthiya 45 Ḥā Mīm حم
27 al-Aḥqāf 46 Ḥā Mīm حم
28 Qāf 50 Qāf ق
29 Al-Qalam 68 Nūn ن

Structural analysis edit

 
A tree diagram of the Qur'anic initial letters, labelled with the respective numbers of occurrences. To be read right to left.

There are 14 distinct combinations; the most frequent are ʾAlif Lām Mīm and Ḥāʾ Mīm, occurring six times each. Of the 28 letters of the Arabic alphabet, exactly one half appear as muqatta'at, either singly or in combinations of two, three, four or five letters. The fourteen letters are: ʾalif أ, هـ, ḥā ح, ṭā ط, ي, kāf ك, lām ل, mīm م, nūn ن, sīn س, ʿain ع, ṣād ص, qāf ق, ر. The six final letters of the Abjadi order (thakhadh ḍaẓagh) are unused. The letters represented correspond to those letters written without Arabic diacritics plus yāʿ ي.[5] It is possible that the restricted set of letters was supposed to invoke an archaic variant of the Arabic alphabet modeled on the Aramaic alphabet.[6]

Certain co-occurrence restrictions are observable in these letters; for instance, ʾAlif is invariably followed by Lām. The substantial majority of the combinations begin either ʾAlif Lām or Ḥāʾ Mīm.

In all but 3 of the 29 cases, these letters are almost immediately followed by mention of the Qur'anic revelation itself (the exceptions are surat al-ʻAnkabūt, ar-Rūm and al-Qalam); and some argue that even these three cases should be included, since mention of the revelation is made later on in the surah. More specifically, one may note that in 8 cases the following verse begins "These are the signs...", and in another 5 it begins "The Revelation..."; another 3 begin "By the Qur'an...", and another 2 "By the Book..." Additionally, all but 3 of these suras are Meccan surat (the exceptions are surat al-Baqarah, Āl ʾImrān and ar-Raʻd.)

Lām and Mīm are conjoined and both are written with prolongation mark. One letter is written in two styles.[7][8] Letter 20:01 is used only in the beginning and middle of a word and that in 19:01 is not used as such. Alif Lām Mīm (الم) is also the first verse of Surah Al-Baqara,[9] Surah Al-Imran,[10] Surah Al-Ankabut,[11] Surah Ar-Rum,[12] Surah Luqman,[13] and Surah As-Sajda.[14]

Interpretations edit

Acrophony edit

Abd Allah ibn Abbas and Abdullah ibn Masud, as cited by Abu Hayyan al-Gharnati in his Bahr al-Muhit, are said to have favored the view that these letters stand for words or phrases related to God and His Attributes.

Sura content edit

Fakhr al-Din al-Razi, a classical commentator of the Qur'an, has noted some twenty opinions regarding these letters and mentions multiple opinions that these letters present the names of the Surahs as appointed by God. In addition, he mentions that Arabs would name things after such letters (for example, 'eye' as 'ع', clouds as 'غ', and whale as 'ن').[15][16] Amin Ahsan Islahi[year needed] supported al-Razi's opinion, arguing that since these letters are names for Surahs, they are proper nouns. Hamiduddin Farahi similarly attaches symbolic meanings to the letters, e.g. Nun (ن) symbolizing "fish" identifying the sura dedicated to Jonah, or Ta (ط) representing "serpent" introducing suras that mention the story of Prophet Moses and serpents.[17]

Ahsan ur Rehman (2013) claims that there are phonological, syntactic and semantic links between the prefixed letters and the text of the chapters.[18]

Scribal intrusion or corruption edit

Among Western orientalists, Theodor Nöldeke (1860) advanced the theory that the letters were marks of possession, belonging to the owners of Qur'anic copies used in the first collection by Zayd ibn Thābit during the reign of the Caliph 'Uthmān. The letters ultimately entered the final version of the Qur'an due to carelessness. It was also possible that the letters were monograms of the owners. Nöldeke later revised this theory, responding to Otto Loth's (1881) suggestion that the letters had a distinct connection with the mystic figures and symbols of the Jewish Kabbalah. Nöldeke in turn concluded that the letters were a mystical reference to the archetypal text in heaven that was the basis for the revelation of the Qur'an.[19] However, persuaded by Nöldeke's original theory, Hartwig Hirschfeld (1902) offered a list of likely names corresponding to the letters.[20] Keith Massey (1996), noting the apparent set ranking of the letters and mathematical improbability that they were either random or referred to words or phrases, argued for some form of the Nöldeke-Hirschfeld theory that the "Mystery Letters" were the initials or monograms of the scribes who originally transcribed the sūras. Though, Massey explains that "the letters, which appear alone (qaf, nun), may not have the same purpose as the collection themselves", he furthermore admits that the "Mystery Letters" in Surah 42 violate his proposed ranking-theory,[21] thus offering 2 possible scenarios for his theory.[21]

The Hebrew Theory[22] assumes that the letters represent an import from Biblical Hebrew. Specifically, the combination Alif-Lam would correspond to Hebrew El "god". Abbreviations from Aramaic or Greek have also been suggested.

Bellamy (1973) proposed that the letters are the remnants of abbreviations for the Bismillah.[23] Bellamy's suggestion was criticized as improbable by Alford T. Welch (1978).[24]

Christoph Luxenberg in The Syro-Aramaic Reading of the Koran (2000) proposed that substantial portions of the text of the Qur'an were directly taken from Syriac liturgy. His explanation of the disjoined letters is that they are remnants of indications for the liturgical recitation for the Syriac hymns that ended up being copied into the Arabic text.[25]

Numerology edit

There have been attempts to give numerological interpretations. Loth (1888) suggested a connection to Gematria.[26] Rashad Khalifa (1974) claimed to have discovered a mathematical code in the Qur'an based on these initials and the number 19, namely the Quran code or known as Code 19. According to his claims, these initials occur throughout their respective chapters in multiples of nineteen.[27] The number 19 is directly mentioned in the 30th verse of Surah Al-Muddaththir to refer to the 19 keeper angels of Hell.[28]

The Báb used the muqaṭṭaʿāt in his Qayyúmu'l-Asmáʼ.[29][30] He writes in an early commentary and in his Dalá'il-i-Sab'ih (Seven Proofs) about a hadith from Muhammad al-Baqir, the fifth Shiʻi Imam, where it is stated that the first seven surat's muqaṭṭaʿāt have a numerical value of 1267, from which the year 1844 (the year of the Báb's declaration) can be derived.[31][32]

Mystical edit

Sufism has a tradition of attributing mystical significance to the letters. The details differ between schools of Sufism; Sufi tradition generally regards the letters as an extension to the ninety-nine names of God, with some authors offering specific "hidden" meanings for the individual letters.[33]

In 1857–58, Baháʼu'lláh, founder of the Baháʼí Faith, wrote his Commentary on the Isolated Letters (Tafsír-i-Hurúfát-i-Muqattaʻih, also known as Lawh-i-Áyiy-i-Núr, Tablet of the Light Verse).[34][35] In it, he describes how God created the letters. A black teardrop fell down from the Primordial Pen on the "Perspicuous, Snow-white Tablet", by which the Point was created. The Point then turned into an Alif (vertical stroke), which was again transformed, after which the Muqatta'at appeared. These letters were then differentiated, separated and then again gathered and linked together, appearing as the "names and attributes" of creation. Baháʼu'lláh gives various interpretations of the letters "alif, lam, mim", mostly relating to Allah, trusteeship (wilayah) and the prophethood (nubuwwah) of Muhammad. He emphasizes the central role of the alif in all the worlds of God.[34]

By removing the duplicate letters (leaving only one of each of the 14 initials) and rearranging them, one can create the sentence "نص حكيم قاطع له سر " which could translate to: "A wise and conclusive text has a secret".[citation needed]

One Western mystical interpretation of the muqattaʿat is given by Rudolf von Sebottendorf in his work Die Praxis der alten türkischen Freimauerei; von Sebottendorf interprets them as mantra-like formulas (Formel) to be meditated upon (in association with certain gestures) during a set of elaborate meditation exercises. He claims that these exercises are the basis of Freemasonry and alchemy, and that they are practiced by a secret society of Sufis; Muhammad is said to have learned these exercises from a hermit named "Ben Khasi", taught them to the innermost circle of his successors, and incorporated them into the text of the Qur'an in order to preserve them unchanged in perpetuity. Commentators, however, note that the practices recommended by von Sebottendorf "bear little resemblance to either Sufism or Masonry".[36]

Chants edit

Devin J. Stewart argues the letters are integral to the text and establish a rhyme and a rhythm, similarly to rhyming chants such as, intended to introduce spells, charms or something connected to the supernatural.[37]

References edit

  1. ^ Sale G Preliminary Discourse 3
  2. ^ مقطعات is the plural of a participle from قطع "to cut, break".
  3. ^ Massey, Keith. Jane Dammen McAuliffe (ed.). Mysterious Letters. Vol. 3. p. 242. doi:10.1163/1875-3922_q3_EQCOM_00128. {{cite encyclopedia}}: |journal= ignored (help)
  4. ^ "Fawātiḥ | Islam". Encyclopedia Britannica. Retrieved 20 February 2021.
  5. ^ nun ن and qaf ق have no variant written without dots in modern script; Steward (2012): "the mysterious letters include no letters with dots. There is an apparent exception to this rule, the occurrences of ya in [suras 19 and 36 ...]"
  6. ^ Devin J. Steward, "The mysterious letters and other formal features of the Qur'an in light of Greek and Babylonian oracular texts", in: New Perspectives on the Qur'an ed. Reynolds, Routledge (2012), 323–348 (p. 341).
  7. ^ Quran 19:01
  8. ^ Quran 20:01
  9. ^ Quran 2:1
  10. ^ Quran 3:1
  11. ^ Quran 29:1
  12. ^ Quran 30:1
  13. ^ Quran 31:1
  14. ^ Quran 32:1
  15. ^ Michael R. Rose; Casandra L. Rauser; Laurence D. Mueller; Javed Ahmed Ghamidi; Saleem (July 2003). "Al-Baqarah (1–7)". Renaissance.
  16. ^ Amatul Rahman Omar and Abdul Mannan Omar, "Derivation of Vocabulary from its Root Alphabets", Exegesis of the Holy Qur'an – Commentary and Reflections, 2015
  17. ^ Islahi, Amin Ahsan (2004). Taddabur-i-Quran. Faraan Foundation. pp. 82–85.
  18. ^ Ahsan ur Rehman 26 June 2015 at the Wayback Machine, "Morpho Phonemic Patterns in the Prefixed Chapters of the Qur'an: A Stylistic Approach" (2013) lasjan.page.tl A stylistic study of the consonant Șād (ﺹ) in three Qurʼanic chapters:Șād (38), Maryam (19) and Al Aʻrāf (7) (2013)
  19. ^ Nöldeke, Theodor; Schwally, Friedrich; Bergsträßer, Gotthelf; Pretzl, Otto (2013). The History of the Qur'ān. Translated by Behn, Wolfgang. Boston: Brill. pp. 270–273. ISBN 978-9004212343.
  20. ^ Hirschfeld, Hartwig (1902). New Researches into the Composition and Exegesis of the Qoran (2010 reprint ed.). London: Royal Asiatic Society. pp. 141–142. ISBN 978-1-166-29458-8.
  21. ^ a b Massey, Keith (1996). "A New Investigation into the 'Mystery Letters' of the Quran". Arabica. 43 (3): 499. doi:10.1163/1570058962582804. JSTOR 4057368 – via www.academia.edu.
  22. ^ Sajah Suaeed. "Muqatta'at". www.academia.edu. Retrieved 17 November 2015.
  23. ^ Bellamy, James A. (1973) The Mysterious Letters of the Koran: Old Abbreviations of the Basmalah. Journal of the American Oriental Society 93 (3), 267–285. [1]
  24. ^ A. Welch, "al-Ḳurʾān" in: Encyclopedia of Islam 2nd ed. (1978).
  25. ^ Luxenberg, Christoph (2009). The Syro-Aramaic Reading of the Koran: A Contribution to the Decoding of the Language of the Koran 1st Edition.
  26. ^ Otto Loth, "Tabaris Korankommentar" ZDMG 35 (1888), 603f.
  27. ^ Rashad Khalifa, Quran: Visual Presentation of the Miracle, Islamic Productions International, 1982. ISBN 0-934894-30-2
  28. ^ "Quran 74:30".
  29. ^ Lawson, Todd. "Reading Reading Itself: The Bab's 'Sura of the Bees,' A Commentary on Qur'an 12:93 from the Sura of Joseph". Retrieved 19 March 2007.
  30. ^ See the following source for more about Bábí letter symbolism: Editors (2009). "Letters of the Living (Hurúf-i-Hayy)". Baháʼí Encyclopedia Project. Evanston, IL: National Spiritual Assembly of the Baháʼís of the United States. {{cite encyclopedia}}: |last= has generic name (help)
  31. ^ Lambden, Stephen N. A note upon the messianic year 1260 / 1844 and the Bābī-Bahā'ī interpretation of the isolated letters of the Qur'an 28 September 2011 at the Wayback Machine.
  32. ^ Saiedi, Nader (2008). Gate of the Heart: Understanding the Writings of the Báb. Waterloo, ON: Wilfrid Laurier University Press. pp. 109–110. ISBN 978-1-55458-035-4.
  33. ^ An example is given by Siddiq Osman Noormuhammad of the Naqshbandi order in Salawaat by Sufi Mashaaikh Nairobi (2004).
  34. ^ a b Marshall, Alison. "What on earth is a disconnected letter? - Bahaʼu'llah's commentary on the disconnected letters". Retrieved 19 March 2007.
  35. ^ Lambden, Stephen N. "Tafsír-al-Hurúfát al-Muqatta'át (Commentary on the Isolated Letters) or Lawh-i Áyah-yi Núr (Tablet of the Light Verse) of Mírzá Husayn ʻAlí Núrí Baháʼ-Alláh (1817–1892)". Retrieved 29 January 2022.
  36. ^ Sedgwick, Mark (2004). Against the Modern World: Traditionalism and the Secret Intellectual History of the Twentieth Century. New York: Oxford University Press. ISBN 0-19-515297-2. P. 66.
  37. ^ Stewart, Devin J. (2008). "Notes on Medieval and Modern Emendations of the Qur'an". In Reynolds, Gabriel Said (ed.). The Quran in its Historical Context. Routledge. p. 234.

External links edit

  • A comprehensive exposition of the theories surrounding the Muqatta'at

muqattaʿat, alif, laam, meem, redirects, here, muslim, fraternity, alpha, lambda, ottoman, instrument, financing, state, expenses, muqata, mysterious, letters, muqaṭṭaʿāt, arabic, وف, ات, ḥurūf, muqaṭṭaʿāt, disjoined, letters, disconnected, letters, combinatio. Alif Laam Meem redirects here For the Muslim fraternity see Alpha Lambda Mu For the Ottoman instrument for financing state expenses see Muqata ah The mysterious letters 1 muqaṭṭaʿat Arabic ح ر وف م ق ط ع ات ḥuruf muqaṭṭaʿat disjoined letters or disconnected letters 2 are combinations of between one and five Arabic letters that appear at the beginning of 29 out of the 114 chapters surahs of the Quran just after the Bismillah Islamic phrase 3 The letters are also known as fawatiḥ ف و ات ح or openers as they form the opening verse of their respective surahs 4 Four or five chapters are named for their muqaṭṭaʿat Ṭa Ha Ya Sin Ṣad Qaf and sometimes Nun The original significance of the letters is unknown Tafsir exegesis has interpreted them as abbreviations for either names or qualities of God or for the names or content of the respective surahs The general belief of most Muslims is that their meaning is known only to Allah Contents 1 Inventory 2 Structural analysis 3 Interpretations 3 1 Acrophony 3 2 Sura content 3 3 Scribal intrusion or corruption 3 4 Numerology 3 5 Mystical 3 6 Chants 4 References 5 External linksInventory editMuqatta at occur in Quranic chapters 2 3 7 10 15 19 20 26 32 36 38 40 46 50 and 68 Multiple letters are written together like a word but each letter is pronounced separately Table Number Surah Surah order Muqattaʿat 1 al Baqarah 2 ʾAlif Lam Mim الم 2 Al Imran 3 ʾAlif Lam Mim الم 3 al Aʿraf 7 ʾAlif Lam Mim Ṣad المص 4 Yunus 10 ʾAlif Lam Ra الر 5 Hud 11 ʾAlif Lam Ra الر 6 Yusuf 12 ʾAlif Lam Ra الر 7 Ar Raʿd 13 ʾAlif Lam Mim Ra المر 8 Ibrahim 14 ʾAlif Lam Ra الر 9 al Ḥijr 15 ʾAlif Lam Ra الر 10 Maryam 19 Kaf Ha Ya ʿAin Ṣad كهيعص 11 Ṭa Ha 20 Ṭa Ha طه 12 ash Shuʿaraʾ 26 Ṭa Sin Mim طسم 13 an Naml 27 Ṭa Sin طس 14 al Qaṣaṣ 28 Ṭa Sin Mim طسم 15 al ʿAnkabut 29 ʾAlif Lam Mim الم 16 ar Rum 30 ʾAlif Lam Mim الم 17 Luqman 31 ʾAlif Lam Mim الم 18 as Sajdah 32 ʾAlif Lam Mim الم 19 Ya Sin 36 Ya Sin يس 20 Ṣad 38 Ṣad ص 21 Ghafir 40 Ḥa Mim حم 22 Fuṣṣilat 41 Ḥa Mim حم 23 ash Shura 42 Ḥa Mim ʿAin Sin Qaf حم عسق 24 Az Zukhruf 43 Ḥa Mim حم 25 Al Dukhan 44 Ḥa Mim حم 26 al Jathiya 45 Ḥa Mim حم 27 al Aḥqaf 46 Ḥa Mim حم 28 Qaf 50 Qaf ق 29 Al Qalam 68 Nun نStructural analysis edit nbsp A tree diagram of the Qur anic initial letters labelled with the respective numbers of occurrences To be read right to left There are 14 distinct combinations the most frequent are ʾAlif Lam Mim and Ḥaʾ Mim occurring six times each Of the 28 letters of the Arabic alphabet exactly one half appear as muqatta at either singly or in combinations of two three four or five letters The fourteen letters are ʾalif أ ha هـ ḥa ح ṭa ط ya ي kaf ك lam ل mim م nun ن sin س ʿain ع ṣad ص qaf ق ra ر The six final letters of the Abjadi order thakhadh ḍaẓagh are unused The letters represented correspond to those letters written without Arabic diacritics plus yaʿ ي 5 It is possible that the restricted set of letters was supposed to invoke an archaic variant of the Arabic alphabet modeled on the Aramaic alphabet 6 Certain co occurrence restrictions are observable in these letters for instance ʾAlif is invariably followed by Lam The substantial majority of the combinations begin either ʾAlif Lam or Ḥaʾ Mim In all but 3 of the 29 cases these letters are almost immediately followed by mention of the Qur anic revelation itself the exceptions are surat al ʻAnkabut ar Rum and al Qalam and some argue that even these three cases should be included since mention of the revelation is made later on in the surah More specifically one may note that in 8 cases the following verse begins These are the signs and in another 5 it begins The Revelation another 3 begin By the Qur an and another 2 By the Book Additionally all but 3 of these suras are Meccan surat the exceptions are surat al Baqarah Al ʾImran and ar Raʻd Lam and Mim are conjoined and both are written with prolongation mark One letter is written in two styles 7 8 Letter 20 01 is used only in the beginning and middle of a word and that in 19 01 is not used as such Alif Lam Mim الم is also the first verse of Surah Al Baqara 9 Surah Al Imran 10 Surah Al Ankabut 11 Surah Ar Rum 12 Surah Luqman 13 and Surah As Sajda 14 Interpretations editThis section may require cleanup to meet Wikipedia s quality standards The specific problem is partly garbled account partly of doubtful notability Please help improve this section if you can February 2016 Learn how and when to remove this message Acrophony edit Abd Allah ibn Abbas and Abdullah ibn Masud as cited by Abu Hayyan al Gharnati in his Bahr al Muhit are said to have favored the view that these letters stand for words or phrases related to God and His Attributes Sura content edit Fakhr al Din al Razi a classical commentator of the Qur an has noted some twenty opinions regarding these letters and mentions multiple opinions that these letters present the names of the Surahs as appointed by God In addition he mentions that Arabs would name things after such letters for example eye as ع clouds as غ and whale as ن 15 16 Amin Ahsan Islahi year needed supported al Razi s opinion arguing that since these letters are names for Surahs they are proper nouns Hamiduddin Farahi similarly attaches symbolic meanings to the letters e g Nun ن symbolizing fish identifying the sura dedicated to Jonah or Ta ط representing serpent introducing suras that mention the story of Prophet Moses and serpents 17 Ahsan ur Rehman 2013 claims that there are phonological syntactic and semantic links between the prefixed letters and the text of the chapters 18 Scribal intrusion or corruption edit Among Western orientalists Theodor Noldeke 1860 advanced the theory that the letters were marks of possession belonging to the owners of Qur anic copies used in the first collection by Zayd ibn Thabit during the reign of the Caliph Uthman The letters ultimately entered the final version of the Qur an due to carelessness It was also possible that the letters were monograms of the owners Noldeke later revised this theory responding to Otto Loth s 1881 suggestion that the letters had a distinct connection with the mystic figures and symbols of the Jewish Kabbalah Noldeke in turn concluded that the letters were a mystical reference to the archetypal text in heaven that was the basis for the revelation of the Qur an 19 However persuaded by Noldeke s original theory Hartwig Hirschfeld 1902 offered a list of likely names corresponding to the letters 20 Keith Massey 1996 noting the apparent set ranking of the letters and mathematical improbability that they were either random or referred to words or phrases argued for some form of the Noldeke Hirschfeld theory that the Mystery Letters were the initials or monograms of the scribes who originally transcribed the suras Though Massey explains that the letters which appear alone qaf nun may not have the same purpose as the collection themselves he furthermore admits that the Mystery Letters in Surah 42 violate his proposed ranking theory 21 thus offering 2 possible scenarios for his theory 21 The Hebrew Theory 22 assumes that the letters represent an import from Biblical Hebrew Specifically the combination Alif Lam would correspond to Hebrew El god Abbreviations from Aramaic or Greek have also been suggested Bellamy 1973 proposed that the letters are the remnants of abbreviations for the Bismillah 23 Bellamy s suggestion was criticized as improbable by Alford T Welch 1978 24 Christoph Luxenberg in The Syro Aramaic Reading of the Koran 2000 proposed that substantial portions of the text of the Qur an were directly taken from Syriac liturgy His explanation of the disjoined letters is that they are remnants of indications for the liturgical recitation for the Syriac hymns that ended up being copied into the Arabic text 25 Numerology edit There have been attempts to give numerological interpretations Loth 1888 suggested a connection to Gematria 26 Rashad Khalifa 1974 claimed to have discovered a mathematical code in the Qur an based on these initials and the number 19 namely the Quran code or known as Code 19 According to his claims these initials occur throughout their respective chapters in multiples of nineteen 27 The number 19 is directly mentioned in the 30th verse of Surah Al Muddaththir to refer to the 19 keeper angels of Hell 28 The Bab used the muqaṭṭaʿat in his Qayyumu l Asmaʼ 29 30 He writes in an early commentary and in his Dala il i Sab ih Seven Proofs about a hadith from Muhammad al Baqir the fifth Shiʻi Imam where it is stated that the first seven surat s muqaṭṭaʿat have a numerical value of 1267 from which the year 1844 the year of the Bab s declaration can be derived 31 32 Mystical edit Further information Hurufism Sufism has a tradition of attributing mystical significance to the letters The details differ between schools of Sufism Sufi tradition generally regards the letters as an extension to the ninety nine names of God with some authors offering specific hidden meanings for the individual letters 33 In 1857 58 Bahaʼu llah founder of the Bahaʼi Faith wrote his Commentary on the Isolated Letters Tafsir i Hurufat i Muqattaʻih also known as Lawh i Ayiy i Nur Tablet of the Light Verse 34 35 In it he describes how God created the letters A black teardrop fell down from the Primordial Pen on the Perspicuous Snow white Tablet by which the Point was created The Point then turned into an Alif vertical stroke which was again transformed after which the Muqatta at appeared These letters were then differentiated separated and then again gathered and linked together appearing as the names and attributes of creation Bahaʼu llah gives various interpretations of the letters alif lam mim mostly relating to Allah trusteeship wilayah and the prophethood nubuwwah of Muhammad He emphasizes the central role of the alif in all the worlds of God 34 By removing the duplicate letters leaving only one of each of the 14 initials and rearranging them one can create the sentence نص حكيم قاطع له سر which could translate to A wise and conclusive text has a secret citation needed One Western mystical interpretation of the muqattaʿat is given by Rudolf von Sebottendorf in his work Die Praxis der alten turkischen Freimauerei von Sebottendorf interprets them as mantra like formulas Formel to be meditated upon in association with certain gestures during a set of elaborate meditation exercises He claims that these exercises are the basis of Freemasonry and alchemy and that they are practiced by a secret society of Sufis Muhammad is said to have learned these exercises from a hermit named Ben Khasi taught them to the innermost circle of his successors and incorporated them into the text of the Qur an in order to preserve them unchanged in perpetuity Commentators however note that the practices recommended by von Sebottendorf bear little resemblance to either Sufism or Masonry 36 Chants edit Devin J Stewart argues the letters are integral to the text and establish a rhyme and a rhythm similarly to rhyming chants such as intended to introduce spells charms or something connected to the supernatural 37 References edit Sale G Preliminary Discourse 3 مقطعات is the plural of a participle from قطع to cut break Massey Keith Jane Dammen McAuliffe ed Mysterious Letters Vol 3 p 242 doi 10 1163 1875 3922 q3 EQCOM 00128 a href Template Cite encyclopedia html title Template Cite encyclopedia cite encyclopedia a journal ignored help Fawatiḥ Islam Encyclopedia Britannica Retrieved 20 February 2021 nun ن and qaf ق have no variant written without dots in modern script Steward 2012 the mysterious letters include no letters with dots There is an apparent exception to this rule the occurrences of ya in suras 19 and 36 Devin J Steward The mysterious letters and other formal features of the Qur an in light of Greek and Babylonian oracular texts in New Perspectives on the Qur an ed Reynolds Routledge 2012 323 348 p 341 Quran 19 01 Quran 20 01 Quran 2 1 Quran 3 1 Quran 29 1 Quran 30 1 Quran 31 1 Quran 32 1 Michael R Rose Casandra L Rauser Laurence D Mueller Javed Ahmed Ghamidi Saleem July 2003 Al Baqarah 1 7 Renaissance Amatul Rahman Omar and Abdul Mannan Omar Derivation of Vocabulary from its Root Alphabets Exegesis of the Holy Qur an Commentary and Reflections 2015 Islahi Amin Ahsan 2004 Taddabur i Quran Faraan Foundation pp 82 85 Ahsan ur Rehman Archived 26 June 2015 at the Wayback Machine Morpho Phonemic Patterns in the Prefixed Chapters of the Qur an A Stylistic Approach 2013 lasjan page tl A stylistic study of the consonant Șad ﺹ in three Qurʼanic chapters Șad 38 Maryam 19 and Al Aʻraf 7 2013 Noldeke Theodor Schwally Friedrich Bergstrasser Gotthelf Pretzl Otto 2013 The History of the Qur an Translated by Behn Wolfgang Boston Brill pp 270 273 ISBN 978 9004212343 Hirschfeld Hartwig 1902 New Researches into the Composition and Exegesis of the Qoran 2010 reprint ed London Royal Asiatic Society pp 141 142 ISBN 978 1 166 29458 8 a b Massey Keith 1996 A New Investigation into the Mystery Letters of the Quran Arabica 43 3 499 doi 10 1163 1570058962582804 JSTOR 4057368 via www academia edu Sajah Suaeed Muqatta at www academia edu Retrieved 17 November 2015 Bellamy James A 1973 The Mysterious Letters of the Koran Old Abbreviations of the Basmalah Journal of the American Oriental Society 93 3 267 285 1 A Welch al Ḳurʾan in Encyclopedia of Islam 2nd ed 1978 Luxenberg Christoph 2009 The Syro Aramaic Reading of the Koran A Contribution to the Decoding of the Language of the Koran 1st Edition Otto Loth Tabaris Korankommentar ZDMG 35 1888 603f Rashad Khalifa Quran Visual Presentation of the Miracle Islamic Productions International 1982 ISBN 0 934894 30 2 Quran 74 30 Lawson Todd Reading Reading Itself The Bab s Sura of the Bees A Commentary on Qur an 12 93 from the Sura of Joseph Retrieved 19 March 2007 See the following source for more about Babi letter symbolism Editors 2009 Letters of the Living Huruf i Hayy Bahaʼi Encyclopedia Project Evanston IL National Spiritual Assembly of the Bahaʼis of the United States a href Template Cite encyclopedia html title Template Cite encyclopedia cite encyclopedia a last has generic name help Lambden Stephen N A note upon the messianic year 1260 1844 and the Babi Baha i interpretation of the isolated letters of the Qur an Archived 28 September 2011 at the Wayback Machine Saiedi Nader 2008 Gate of the Heart Understanding the Writings of the Bab Waterloo ON Wilfrid Laurier University Press pp 109 110 ISBN 978 1 55458 035 4 An example is given by Siddiq Osman Noormuhammad of the Naqshbandi order in Salawaat by Sufi Mashaaikh Nairobi 2004 a b Marshall Alison What on earth is a disconnected letter Bahaʼu llah s commentary on the disconnected letters Retrieved 19 March 2007 Lambden Stephen N Tafsir al Hurufat al Muqatta at Commentary on the Isolated Letters or Lawh i Ayah yi Nur Tablet of the Light Verse of Mirza Husayn ʻAli Nuri Bahaʼ Allah 1817 1892 Retrieved 29 January 2022 Sedgwick Mark 2004 Against the Modern World Traditionalism and the Secret Intellectual History of the Twentieth Century New York Oxford University Press ISBN 0 19 515297 2 P 66 Stewart Devin J 2008 Notes on Medieval and Modern Emendations of the Qur an In Reynolds Gabriel Said ed The Quran in its Historical Context Routledge p 234 External links editA comprehensive exposition of the theories surrounding the Muqatta at The consonant sad in three Qur anic chapters Sad Mary and al A raf Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title Muqattaʿat amp oldid 1221278408, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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