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Satanic Verses

The Satanic Verses are words of "satanic suggestion" which the Islamic prophet Muhammad is alleged to have mistaken for divine revelation.[1] The words praise the three pagan Meccan goddesses: al-Lāt, al-'Uzzá, and Manāt and can be read in early prophetic biographies of Muhammad by al-Wāqidī, Ibn Sa'd and the tafsir of al-Tabarī. The first use of the expression in English is attributed to Sir William Muir in 1858.[2]

The incident is accepted as true by some modern scholars of Islamic studies under the criterion of embarrassment, citing the implausibility of early Muslim biographers fabricating a story so unflattering about their prophet.[3][4] Alford T. Welch, however, argues that this rationale alone is insufficient but does not rule out the possibility of some historical foundation to the story. He proposes that the story may be yet another instance of historical telescoping, i.e., a circumstance that Muhammad's contemporaries knew to have lasted for a long period of time later became condensed into a story that limits his acceptance of the Meccan goddesses’ intercession to a brief period of time and assigns blame for this departure from strict monotheism to Satan.[5]

Religious authorities embraced the story for the first two centuries of the Islamic era. However, beginning in the 13th century, Islamic scholars (Ulama) started to reject it as being inconsistent with Muhammad's "perfection" ('isma), which meant that Muhammad was infallible and could not be fooled by Satan.[1]

Basic narrative edit

 
The Arabian goddess Al-Lat, flanked by goddesses Manat and al-Uzza.

There are numerous accounts of the incident, which differ in the construction and detail of the narrative, but they may be broadly collated to produce a basic account.[6] The different versions of the story are recorded in early tafsirs (Quranic commentaries) and biographies of the Prophet, such as Ibn Ishaq's.[7] In its essential form, the story reports that Muhammad longed to convert his kinsmen and neighbors of Mecca to Islam. As he was reciting these verses of Sūrat an-Najm,[8] considered a revelation from the angel Gabriel:

"Have you thought of al-Lāt and al-'Uzzá? And about the third one, Manāt?"

Quran 53:19–20

Satan tempted him to utter the following line:

"These are the exalted gharāniq, whose intercession is hoped for."

Al-Lāt, al-'Uzzā, and Manāt were three pre-Islamic Arabian goddesses worshipped by the Meccans. Discerning the precise meaning of the word gharāniq has proven difficult, as it is a hapax legomenon (i.e. used only once in the text). Commentators wrote that it meant "the cranes". The Arabic word does generally mean a "crane" – appearing in the singular as ghirnīq, ghurnūq, ghirnawq and ghurnayq, and the word has cousin forms in other words for birds, including "raven, crow" and "eagle".[9] Taken as a segment, "exalted gharāniq" has been translated by Orientalist William Muir to mean "exalted women", while contemporary academic Muhammad Manazir Ahsan has translated the same segment as "high-soaring ones (deities)". Thus, whether the phrase had intended to attribute a divine nature to the three "idols" is a matter of dispute.[10] In either case, scholars generally agree on the meaning of the second half of the verse, "whose intercession is hoped for".

Tabarī's account edit

An extensive account of the incident is found in al-Tabarī's history, the Tarīkh (Vol. VI) (c. 915 CE):

The prophet was eager for the welfare of his people, desiring to win them to him by any means he could. It has been reported that he longed for a way to win them, and part of what he did to that end is what Ibn Humayd told me, from Salama, from Muhammad ibn Ishaq, from Yazīd ibn Ziyād al-Madanī, from Muhammad ibn Ka'b al-Qurazī:

When the prophet saw his people turning away from him, and was tormented by their distancing themselves from what he had brought to them from God, he longed in himself for something to come to him from God which would draw him close to them. With his love for his people and his eagerness for them, it would gladden him if some of the hard things he had found in dealing with them could be alleviated. He pondered this in himself, longed for it, and desired it.

Then God sent down the revelation. 'By the star when it sets! Your companion has not erred or gone astray, and does not speak from mere fancy…' [Q.53:1] When he reached God's words, "Have you seen al-Lāt and al-'Uzzā and Manāt, the third, the other?' [Q.53:19–20] Satan cast upon his tongue, because of what he had pondered in himself and longed to bring to his people, 'These are the high-flying cranes and their intercession is to be hoped for.'

When Quraysh heard that, they rejoiced. What he had said about their gods pleased and delighted them, and they gave ear to him. The Believers trusted in their prophet with respect to what he brought them from their Lord: they did not suspect any slip, delusion or error. When he came to the prostration and finished the chapter, he prostrated and the Muslims followed their prophet in it, having faith in what he brought them and obeying his command. Those mushrikūn of Quraysh and others who were in the mosque also prostrated on account of what they had heard him say about their gods. In the whole mosque there was no believer or kāfir who did not prostrate. Only al-Walīd bin al-Mughīra, who was an aged shaykh and could not make prostration, scooped up in his hand some of the soil from the valley of Mecca [and pressed it to his forehead]. Then everybody dispersed from the mosque.

Quraysh went out and were delighted by what they had heard of the way in which he spoke of their gods. They were saying, 'Muhammad has referred to our gods most favourably. In what he has recited he said that they are "high-flying cranes whose intercession is to be hoped for".'

Those followers of the Prophet who had emigrated to the land of Abyssinia heard about the affair of the prostration, and it was reported to them that Quraysh had accepted Islam. Some men among them decided to return while others remained behind.

Gabriel came to the Prophet and said, 'O Muhammad, what have you done! You have recited to the people something which I have not brought you from God, and you have spoken what He did not say to you.'

At that the Prophet was mightily saddened and greatly feared God. But God, of His mercy, sent him a revelation, comforting him and diminishing the magnitude of what had happened. God told him that there had never been a previous prophet or apostle who had longed just as Muhammad had longed, and desired just as Muhammad had desired, but that Satan had cast into his longing just as he had cast onto the tongue of Muhammad. But God abrogates what Satan has cast, and puts His verses in proper order. That is, 'you are just like other prophets and apostles.'

And God revealed: 'We never sent any apostle or prophet before you but that, when he longed, Satan cast into his longing. But God abrogates what Satan casts in, and then God puts His verses in proper order, for God is all-knowing and wise.' [Q.22:52]

So God drove out the sadness from His prophet and gave him security against what he feared. He abrogated what Satan had cast upon his tongue in referring to their gods: 'They are the high-flying cranes whose intercession is accepted [sic]'. [Replacing those words with] the words of God when Allāt, al-'Uzzā and Manāt the third, the other are mentioned: 'Should you have males and He females [as offspring]! That, indeed, would be an unfair division. They are only names which you and your fathers have given them'… as far as 'As many as are the angels in heaven, their intercession shall be of no avail unless after God has permitted it to whom He pleases and accepts' [Q.53:21–26] meaning, how can the intercession of their gods be of any avail with Him? When there had come from God the words which abrogated what Satan had cast on to the tongue of His prophet, Quraysh said, 'Muhammad has gone back on what he said about the status of our gods relative to God, changed it and brought something else', for the two phrases which Satan had cast on to the tongue of the Prophet had found a place in the mouth of every polytheist. They, therefore, increased in their evil and in their oppression of everyone among them who had accepted Islam and followed the Prophet.

The band of the Prophet's followers who had left the land of Abyssinia on account of the report that the people of Mecca had accepted Islam when they prostrated together with the Prophet drew near. But when they approached Mecca they heard that the talk about the acceptance of Islam by the people of Mecca was wrong. Therefore, they only entered Mecca in secret or after having obtained a promise of protection.

Among those of them who came to Mecca at that time and remained there until emigrating to Medina and taking part in the battle of Badr alongside Muhammad there was, from the family of 'Abd Shams b. Abd Manāf b. Qussayy, 'Uthmān b. 'Affān together with his wife Ruqayya the daughter of the Prophet. Abū Hudhayfa b. 'Utba with his wife Shal bint Suhayl, and another group with them, numbering together 33 men.[11]

Reception in Muslim exegesis edit

Early Islam edit

Shahab Ahmed, author of a book on the satanic verses in early Islam, observed that in the era of early tafsirs and sīrah/maghazi literature, the satanic verses incident was near universally accepted by the early Muslim community and illustrative of a concept of prophethood involving an ongoing struggle. Later, the logic of the era of hadith collections and subsequent orthodoxy required an infallible prophet.[12]: 294, 300 

According to Ibn Taymiyyah: "The early Islamic Scholars (Salaf) collectively considered the Verses of Cranes in accordance with Quran. And from the later coming scholars (Khalaf), who followed the opinion of the early scholars, they say that these traditions have been recorded with authentic chain of narration and it is impossible to deny them, and Quran is itself testifying it."[13]

The earliest biography of Muhammad, Ibn Ishaq (761–767) is lost but his collection of traditions survives mainly in two sources: Ibn Hisham (833) and al-Tabari (915). The story appears in al-Tabari, who includes Ibn Ishaq in the chain of transmission, but not in Ibn Hisham, who admits in the preface of his text that he omitted matters from Ibn Ishaq's biography that "would distress certain people".[14] Ibn Sa'd and Al-Waqidi, two other early biographers of Muhammad relate the story.[15] Scholars such as Uri Rubin and Shahab Ahmed and Guillaume hold that the report was in Ibn Ishaq, while Alford T. Welch holds the report has not been presumably present in the Ibn Ishaq.[16] Shahab Ahmed states that "Reports of the Satanic verses incident were recorded by virtually every compiler of a major biography of Muhammad in the first two centuries of Islam: 'Urwah b. al-Zubayr (23–94), Ibn Shihab al-Zuhri (51–124), Musa b. 'Uqbah (85–141), Ibn Ishaq (85–151), Abu Ma'shar (d. 170), Yunus b. Bukayr (d. 199), and al-Waqidi (130–207)."[12]: 257 

Later medieval period edit

Due to its controversial nature, the tradition of the Satanic Verses never made it into any of the canonical hadith compilations (though possible truncated versions of the incident did).[16] The reference and exegesis about the Verses appear in early histories.[17][18][19] In addition to appearing in Tabarī's tafsīr, it is used in the tafsīrs of Muqātil, ʽAbd al-Razzaq al-Sanʽani and Ibn Kathir as well as the naskh of Abu Ja'far an-Nahhās, the asbāb collection of Wāhidī and even the late-medieval as-Suyūtī's compilation al-Durr al-Manthūr fil-Tafsīr bil-Mathūr.

Objections to the incident were raised as early as the fourth Islamic century, such as in the work of an-Nahhās and continued to be raised throughout later generations by scholars such as Abu Bakr ibn al-‘Arabi (d. 1157), Fakhr ad-Din Razi (1220) as well as al-Qurtubi (1285). The most comprehensive argument presented against the factuality of the incident came in Qadi Iyad's ash-Shifa'.[6] The incident was discounted on two main bases. The first was that the incident contradicted the doctrine of isma', divine protection of Muhammad from mistakes. The second was that the descriptions of the chain of transmission extant since that period are not complete and sound (sahih).[6]

However, Uri Rubin asserts that there exists a complete version of the isnad continuing to the companion Ibn 'Abbās, but this only survives in a few sources. He claims that in another form of the isnad the name of Ibn 'Abbās was removed so that the incident could be deprived of its sahih isnad and discredited. Rubin makes similar comments about an isnad involving another companion, Makhrama bin Nawfal.[20]

Another modern academic scholar, Shahab Ahmed, carefully examined 50 riwayahs (transmissions) of the hadith narrated from the companion Ibn 'Abbās, and successors (tabi'un) including Muhammad bin ka'b Al-Qurazi, Sa'id b. Jubayr, 'Urwah b. al-Zubayr, Qatada b. Di'amah, Abu Bakr 'Abd al-Rahman b. al-Harith, al-Hasan al-Basri, and Mujahid b. Jabr. He notes that many of these are sahih mursal (i.e. sound except that the chain of narration ends at the successor instead of a companion of the prophet). He also discusses some narrations whose chains go back to Ibn 'Abbās, including one (riwayah 40 in Ahmed's book) which was considered reliable by some scholars, though al-Albani rejected it due to limited biographical information on one of the transmitters, and a similar one (riwayah 41) which Ahmed describes as "an equally - if not more - reliable isnād that has apparently gone unnoticed by later commentators". This, he says, has an "immaculate isnād" and lacks the deficiency noted by al-Albani.[12]: 224–228  Ahmed states that "all the first and early second century reports are agreed that the Prophet uttered the satanic verses".[12]: 56 

Imam Fakhr al-Din al-Razi commenting on Quran 22:52 in his Tafsir al-Kabir stated that the "people of verification" declared the story as an outright fabrication, citing supporting arguments from the Qur'an, Sunnah and reason. He then reported that the preeminent Muhaddith Ibn Khuzaymah said: "it is an invention of the heretics" when once asked about it. Al-Razi also recorded that al-Bayhaqi stated that the narration of the story was unreliable because its narrators were of questionable integrity.

Those scholars who acknowledged the historicity of the incident apparently had a different method for the assessment of reports than that which has become standard Islamic methodology. For example, Ibn Taymiyyah took the position that since tafsīr and sira-maghazi reports were commonly transmitted by incomplete isnads, these reports should not be assessed according to the completeness of the chains but rather on the basis of recurrent transmission of common meaning between reports.[6]

Al-Qurtubi (al-Jāmi' li ahkām al-Qur'ān) dismisses all these variants in favor of the explanation that once Sūra al-Najm was safely revealed the basic events of the incident (or rumors of them) "were now permitted to occur to identify those of his followers who would accept Muhammad's explanation of the blasphemous imposture" (JSS 15, pp. 254–255).

Ibn Hajar al-Asqallani wrote:

All the chains of this narration are weak, except of Said Ibn Jubayr. And when one incident is reported from many different chains, then it means there is something real in this incident. Moreover, this incident has also been narrated through 2 Mursal (where chain goes up to Successor, i.e., Tabari) traditions, whose chains of narration are authentic according to the standards of Imam Bukhari and Imam Muslim. First one is what Tabari recorded from Younus bin Yazid, he from Ibn Shahab that Abu Bakr Ibn Abdul Rehman narrated me. While second one which Tabari recorded from Mutabar bin Sulayman and Hammad bin Salama, and they from Dawud bin Abi Hind, and he from Abu Aliya [...] Ibn Arabi and Qadhi Ayyad say there is no proof of this incident, but contrary to their claim when one incident comes through different chain of narrations, then it means that this incident is real. While there are not only multiple chain of narrations about this incident, but also 3 of them are authentic while 2 of them are Mursal narrations.[21]

Modern Islamic scholarship edit

While the authors of the tafsīr texts during the first two centuries of the Islamic era do not seem to have regarded the tradition as in any way inauspicious or unflattering to Muhammad, it seems to have been universally rejected by at least the 13th century, and most modern Muslims likewise see the tradition as problematic, in the sense that it is viewed as "profoundly heretical because, by allowing for the intercession of the three pagan female deities, they eroded the authority and omnipotence of Allah. But they also hold... damaging implications in regard to the revelation as a whole, for Muhammad's revelation appears to have been based on his desire to soften the threat to the deities of the people."[22] Different responses have developed concerning the account.

Many modern Muslim scholars have rejected the story. Arguments for rejection are found in Muhammad Abduh's article "Masʾalat al-gharānīq wa-tafsīr al-āyāt",[year needed] Muhammad Husayn Haykal's Hayat Muhammad (1933), Sayyid Qutb's Fi Zilal al-Quran (1965), Abul Ala Maududi's Tafhim-ul-Quran (1972) and Muhammad Nasiruddin al-Albani's Nasb al-majānīq li-nasf al-gharānīq.[year needed][6]

Haykal points out the many forms and versions of the story and their inconsistencies and argues that "the contextual flow of Surah 'al Najm' does not allow at all the inclusion of such verses as the story claims". Haykal quotes Muhammad Abduh who pointed out that the "Arabs have nowhere described their gods in such terms as 'al gharaniq'. Neither in their poetry nor in their speeches or traditions do we find their gods or goddesses described in such terms. Rather, the word 'al ghurnuq' or 'al gharniq' was the name of a black or white water bird, sometimes given figuratively to the handsome blond youth." Lastly, Haykal argues that the story is inconsistent with Muhammad's personal life and is completely against the spirit of the Islamic message.[23]

Aqa Mahdi Puya has said that these fake verses were shouted out by the Meccans to make it appear that it was Muhammad who had spoken them; he writes:

Some pagans and hypocrites planned secretly to recite words praising idolatry alongside the recitation of the Holy Prophet, while he was praying, in such a way that the people would think as if they were recited by him. Once when the Holy Prophet was reciting verses 19 and 20 of Najm one of the pagans recited: "Tilkal gharani-ul ula wa inna shafa-atahuma laturja"-(These are the lofty (idols), verily their intercession is sought after.) As soon as this was recited the conspirators shouted in delight to make the people believe that it was the Holy Prophet who said these words. Here, the Quran is stating the general pattern the enemies of the messengers of Allah followed when they were positively convinced that the people were paying attention to the teachings of the messengers of Allah and sincerely believing in them. They would mix their false doctrines with the original teachings so as to make the divine message a bundle of contradictions. This kind of satanic insertions are referred to in thus verse, and it is supported by Ha Mim: 26. It is sheer blasphemy to say that satanic forces can influence the messengers of Allah.[24][25]

Salman Rushdie edit

This entire matter was a mere footnote to the back-and-forth of religious debate,[citation needed] and was rekindled only when Salman Rushdie's 1988 novel, The Satanic Verses, made headline news. The novel contains some fictionalized allusions to Islamic history, which provoked both controversy and outrage. Muslims around the world protested the book's publishing, and Iran's Ayatollah Khomeini issued a fatwa sentencing Rushdie to death, saying that the book blasphemed Muhammad and his wives.

Historicity debate edit

Since William Muir, the historicity of this episode has been largely accepted by secular academics.[4] Some orientalists, however, argued against the historic authenticity of these verses on various grounds.[26] Sean Anthony observes a trend of more recent scholarship towards rejecting the historicity of the story after a period in which scholars were more divided.[27]: 220 

William Montgomery Watt and Alfred Guillaume claim that stories of the event were true based upon the implausibility of Muslims fabricating a story so unflattering to their prophet: "Muhammad must have publicly recited the satanic verses as part of the Qur'ān; it is unthinkable that the story could have been invented by Muslims, or foisted upon them by non-Muslims."[3]

Alford T. Welch, however, argues that this rationale alone is insufficient but does not rule out the possibility of some historical foundation to the story. He proposes that the story may be yet another instance of historical telescoping, i.e., a circumstance that Muhammad's contemporaries knew to have lasted for a long period of time later became condensed into a story that limits his acceptance of the Meccan goddesses’ intercession to a brief period of time and assigns blame for this departure from strict monotheism to Satan.[5]

John Burton argued for its fictitiousness based upon a demonstration of its actual utility to certain elements of the Muslim community – namely, those legal exegetes seeking an "occasion of revelation" for eradicative modes of abrogation.[further explanation needed] Burton supports his theory by the fact that Tabari does not discuss the story in his exegesis of the verse 53:20, but rather in 22:52.[28] Disagreeing with Burton, G.R. Hawting writes that the satanic verses incident would not serve to justify or exemplify a theory that God reveals something and later replaces it himself with another true revelation.[29] Burton, in his rejection of the authenticity of the story, sided with Leone Caetani, who wrote that the story was to be rejected not only on the basis of isnad, but because "had these hadiths even a degree of historical basis, Muhammad's reported conduct on this occasion would have given the lie to the whole of his previous prophetic activity."[30]

Maxime Rodinson finds that it may reasonably be accepted as true "because the makers of Muslim tradition would never have invented a story with such damaging implications for the revelation as a whole."[31] He writes the following on the genesis of the verses: "Obviously Muhammad's unconscious had suggested to him a formula which provided a practical road to unanimity." Rodinson writes that this concession, however, diminished the threat of the Last Judgment by enabling the three goddesses to intercede for sinners and save them from eternal damnation. Further, it diminished Muhammad's own authority by giving the priests of Uzza, Manat, and Allat the ability to pronounce oracles contradicting his message. Disparagement from Christians and Jews, who pointed out[where?] that he was reverting to his pagan beginnings, combined with opposition and indignation from his own followers influenced him to recant his revelation. However, in doing so he denounced the gods of Mecca as lesser spirits or mere names, cast off everything related to the traditional religion as the work of pagans and unbelievers, and consigned the Meccan's pious ancestors and relatives to Hell. This was the final break with the Quraysh.[32]

Fred Halliday states that rather than having damaging implications, the story is a cautionary tale, the point of which is "not to malign God but to point up the frailty of human beings," and that even a prophet may be misled by shaytan – though ultimately shaytan is unsuccessful.[33]

Since John Wansbrough's contributions to the field in the early 1970s, though, scholars have become much more attentive to the emergent nature of early Islam, and less willing to accept back-projected claims of continuity:

To those who see the tradition as constantly evolving and supplying answers to question that it itself has raised, the argument that there would be no reason to develop and transmit material which seems derogatory of the Prophet or of Islam is too simple. For one thing, ideas about what is derogatory may change over time. We know that the doctrine of the Prophet's infallibility and impeccability (the doctrine regarding his 'isma) emerged only slowly. For another, material which we now find in the biography of the Prophet originated in various circumstances to meet various needs and one has to understand why material exists before one can make a judgment about its basis in fact... [34]

In Rubin's recent contribution to the debate, questions of historicity are completely eschewed in favor of an examination of internal textual dynamics and what they reveal about early medieval Islam. Rubin claims to have located the genesis of many prophetic traditions and that they show an early Muslim desire to prove to other scriptuaries "that Muhammad did indeed belong to the same exclusive predestined chain of prophets in whom the Jews and the Christians believed. He alleges that the Muslims had to establish the story of Muhammad's life on the same literary patterns as were used in the vitae of the other prophets".[35] The incident of the Satanic Verses, according to him, conforms to the common theme of persecution followed by isolation of the prophet-figure.

As the story was adapted to include Qur'ānic material (Q.22:52, Q.53, Q.17:73–74), the idea of satanic temptation was claimed[by whom?] to have been added, heightening its inherent drama as well as incorporating additional Biblical motifs (cf. the Temptation of Christ). Rubin gives his attention to the narratological exigencies which may have shaped early sīra material, as opposed to the more commonly considered ones of dogma, sect, and political/dynastic faction. Given the consensus that "the most archaic layer of the biography, [is] that of the stories of the kussās [i.e. popular story-tellers]" (Sīra, EI²), this may prove a fruitful line of inquiry.

Rubin also claimed that the supposed temporary control taken by Satan over Muhammad made such traditions unacceptable to early hadith compilers, which he believed to be a unique case in which a group of traditions are rejected only after being subject to Qur'anic models, and as a direct result of this adjustment.[16]

Building on Rubin's views, Sean Anthony has proposed that an early tradition attributed to ʿUrwa b. al-Zubayr about the mass conversion and prostration of the Meccans but which does not mention the satanic verses was at a later stage connected with Q. 53:19-20, Q. 22:52 and Q. 17:73-74.[27]: 241–245 

Some scholars believe there is evidence in the Quranic text of surah 53 itself relevant to the question of historicity. Nicolai Sinai argues that the conciliatory satanic verses would make no sense in the context of the scathing criticism in the subsequent verses, whether they were uttered before Q.53:21-22 or (if those replaced the satanic verses) Q. 53:24-25.[36]: 10–11  Patricia Crone makes a similar point but regarding the preceding verses, Q. 53:19-20. She argues that "Have you seen al-Lat...?" should be taken as a hostile question about literally seeing the three deities, particularly since the preceding half of the surah repeatedly claims that Allah's servant saw the heavenly being, and noting also other verses where a similar question is asked (Q. 35:40 and Q. 46:4).[37]: 18–22 

On the other hand, Tommaso Tesei builds on the common observation (also mentioned by Crone) that verses 23 and 26-32 of Q. 53 appear to be an interpolation of long verses into a surah of otherwise short verses. Tesei argues that those verses display stylistic incoherence as well as a theological tension with the rest of Q. 53, a surah which is consistent with evidence external to the Islamic tradition regarding pre-Islamic deities and star worship. Of relevance to the possibility of historical elements in the satanic verses story, Tesei notes that the interpolation (as he sees it) coincides exactly with the traditional account that an explanatory comment was inserted to rectify the identification of the pagan deities as divine intercessors.[38]: 192–196 

Shahab Ahmed noted that the Quran is at pains to deny that the source of Muhammad's inspiration is a shaytan (Q. 81:19–20, 25) because for his immediate audience, the sources for the two categories of inspired individuals in society, poets and soothsayers, were shaytans and jinn, respectively, whereas Muhammad was a prophet.[12]: 295 

Related traditions edit

Several related traditions exist, some adapted to Qur'ānic material, some not. One version, appearing in Tabarī's tafsīr[39] and attributed to Urwah ibn Zubayr (d. 713), preserves the basic narrative but with no mention of satanic temptation. Muhammad is persecuted by the Meccans after attacking their idols, during which time a group of Muslims seeks refuge in Abyssinia. After the cessation of this first round of persecution (fitna) they return home, but soon a second round begins. No compelling reason is provided for the caesura of persecution, though, unlike in the incident of the satanic verses, where it is the (temporary) fruit of Muhammad's accommodation to Meccan polytheism. Another version attributed to 'Urwa has only one round of fitna, which begins after Muhammad has converted the entire population of Mecca, so that the Muslims are too numerous to perform ritual prostration (sūjud) all together. This somewhat parallels the Muslims and mushrikūn prostrating themselves together after Muhammad's first, allegedly satanically infected, recitation of Sūra al-Najm, in which allegedly[40] the efficacy of the three pagan goddesses is acknowledged.[41]

The image of Muslims and pagans prostrating themselves together in prayer in turn links the story of the satanic verses to very abbreviated sūjud al-Qur'ān (i.e. prostration when reciting the Qur'ān) traditions found in the authoritative mussanaf hadīth collections, including the Sunni canonical ones of Bukhāri and Tirmidhī. Rubin claims that apparently "the allusion to the participation of the mushrikūn emphasises how overwhelming and intense the effect of this sūra was on those attending". The traditions actually state that all cognizant creatures took part in it, humans as well as jinns.[42]

Rubin further argues that this is inherently illogical without the Satanic Verses in the recitation, given that in the accepted version of verses Q.53:19–23, the pagans' goddesses are attacked. The majority of traditions relating to prostration at the end of Sūra al-Najm solve this by either removing all mention of the mushrikūn, or else transforming the attempt of an old Meccan to participate (who, instead of bowing to the ground, puts dirt to his forehead proclaiming "This is sufficient for me") into an act of mockery. Some traditions even describe his eventual comeuppance, saying he is later killed at the battle of Badr.[43] Thus, according to Rubin, "the story of the single polytheist who raised a handful of dirt to his forehead… [in]… attempt of an old disabled man to participate in Muhammad's sūjud… in… a sarcastic act of an enemy of Muhammad wishing to dishonor the Islamic prayer". And "traditions which originally related the dramatic story of temptation became a sterilized anecdote providing prophetic precedent for a ritual practice".[44]

See also edit

Notes edit

  1. ^ a b Ahmed, Shahab (1998). "Ibn Taymiyyah and the Satanic Verses". Studia Islamica. Maisonneuve & Larose. 87 (87): 67–124. doi:10.2307/1595926. JSTOR 1595926.
  2. ^ John L. Esposito (2003). The Oxford dictionary of Islam. Oxford University Press. p. 563. ISBN 978-0-19-512558-0. from the original on 11 June 2016.
  3. ^ a b Watt, Muhammad at Mecca
  4. ^ a b EoQ, Satanic Verses. For scholars that accept the historicity, see
    • Michael Cook, Muhammad. In Founders of Faith, Oxford University Press, 1986, p. 309.
    • Etan Kohlberg, A Medieval Muslim Scholar at Work: Ibn Tawus and His Library. Brill, 1992, p. 20.
    • F.E. Peters, The Hajj, Princeton University Press, 1994, p. 37. See also The Monotheists: Jews, Christians, and Muslims in Conflict and Competition, Princeton University Press, 2003, p. 94.
    • William Muir, The Life of Mahomet, Smith, Elder 1878, p. 88.
    • John D. Erickson, Islam and Postcolonial Narrative. Cambridge University Press, 1990, p. 140.
    • Thomas Patrick Hughes, A Dictionary of Islam, Asian Educational Services, p. 191.
    • Maxime Rodinson, Prophet of Islam, Tauris Parke Paperbacks, 2002, p. 113.
    • Montgomery Watt, Muhammad: Prophet and Statesman. Oxford University Press 1961, p. 60.
    • Daniel J. Sahas, Iconoclasm. Encyclopedia of the Qur'an, Brill Online.
  5. ^ a b Buhl & Welch 1993.
  6. ^ a b c d e Ahmed, Shahab (2008), "Satanic Verses", in Dammen McAuliffe, Jane (ed.), Encyclopaedia of the Qurʾān, Georgetown University, Washington DC: Brill (published 14 August 2008)[permanent dead link]
  7. ^ Ibn Ishaq, Muhammad (1955). Ibn Ishaq's Sirat Rasul Allah - The Life of Muhammad Translated by A. Guillaume. Oxford: Oxford University Press. p. 165. ISBN 9780196360331. from the original on 26 December 2016.
  8. ^ (Q.53)
  9. ^ Militarev, Alexander; Kogan, Leonid (2005), Semitic Etymological Dictionary 2: Animal Names, Alter Orient und Altes Testament, vol. 278/2, Münster: Ugarit-Verlag, pp. 131–132, ISBN 3-934628-57-5
  10. ^ "The "Satanic Verses" | Common Errors in English Usage and More | Washington State University". 8 February 2017.
  11. ^ translated in G. R. Hawting, The Idea of Idolatry and the Emergence of Islam: From Polemic to History, pp. 131–132
  12. ^ a b c d e Ahmed, Shahab (2017). Before Orthodoxy: The satanic verses in early Islam. Cambridge, Massachusetts; London, England: Harvard University Press. ISBN 978-0-674-04742-6.
  13. ^ Ibn Taymiyyah. . Archived from the original on 13 June 2018. Retrieved 13 June 2018.
  14. ^ Holland, Tom (2012). In the Shadow of the Sword. Doubleday. p. 42. ISBN 978-0385531368.
  15. ^ Rubin, Uri (14 August 2008), "Muḥammad", in Dammen McAuliffe, Jane (ed.), Encyclopaedia of the Qurʾān, Georgetown University, Washington DC: Brill[permanent dead link]
  16. ^ a b c Rubin, Uri (1997), The eye of the beholder: the life of Muḥammad as viewed by the early Muslims: a textual analysis, Princeton, NJ: Darwin Press (published 1995), p. 161, ISBN 0-87850-110-X
  17. ^ ibn Isḥāq ibn Yasār, Muḥammad; Ibn Hishām, ʻAbd al-Malik, Sīrat Rasūl Allāh
  18. ^ Ṭabarī, Ṭabarī, Tārīkh ar-Rusul wal-Mulūk
  19. ^ Ṭabarānī, Sulaymān ibn Aḥmad, al-Mu'jam al-Kabīr
  20. ^ Rubin, Uri (1997), The eye of the beholder: the life of Muḥammad as viewed by the early Muslims: a textual analysis, Princeton, NJ: Darwin Press (published 1995), pp. 256–258, ISBN 0-87850-110-X
  21. ^ Ibn Hajar al-Asqallani. . Archived from the original on 13 June 2018. Retrieved 13 June 2018.
  22. ^ John D. Erickson (1998), Islam and Postcolonial Narrative, Cambridge, UK: Cambridge University Press
  23. ^ Muhammad Husayn Haykal, Hayat Muhammad, 9th edition (Cairo, Maktaba an-Nahda al-Misriya, 1964, pp. 164–167)
  24. ^ Puya, Aqa Mahdi. (2008), (PDF), Mahdi Puya, archived from the original (PDF) on 2 June 2021
  25. ^ . www.al-islam.org. Archived from the original on 25 December 2008. Retrieved 12 December 2009.
  26. ^ EoQ, Satanic Verses. For scholars that do not accept the historicity, see
  27. ^ a b Anthony, Sean (2019). "The Satanic Verses in Early Shiʿite Literature: A Minority Report on Shahab Ahmed's Before Orthodoxy". Shii Studies Review. 3 (1–2): 215–252. doi:10.1163/24682470-12340043. S2CID 181905314. Retrieved 16 August 2022.
  28. ^ Burton, "Those are the high-flying cranes", Journal of Semitic Studies (JSS) 15
  29. ^ G.R. Hawting, The Idea of Idolatry and the Emergence of Islam. Cambridge University Press, 1999, p. 135.
  30. ^ Quoted by I.R Netton in "Text and Trauma: An East-West Primer" (1996) p. 86, Routledge
  31. ^ Maxime Rodinson, Mohammed. Allen Lane the Penguin Press, 1961, p. 106.
  32. ^ Maxime Rodinson, Mohammed. Allen Lane the Penguin Press, 1961, pp. 107–108.
  33. ^ Halliday, Fred, 100 Myths about the Middle East,
  34. ^ G. R. Hawting, The Idea of Idolatry and the Emergence of Islam: From Polemic to History, pp. 134–135
  35. ^ Eye of the Beholder, p. 21
  36. ^ Sinai, Nicolai (2011). "An Interpretation of Sūrat al-Najm (Q. 53)". Journal of Qurʾanic Studies. 13 (2): 1–28. doi:10.3366/jqs.2011.0018.
  37. ^ Crone, Patricia (2015). "Problems in sura 53". Bulletin of the School of Oriental and African Studies. 78 (1): 15–23. doi:10.1017/S0041977X15000014. JSTOR 24692173. S2CID 161476552.
  38. ^ Tesei, Tommaso (2021). "The Qurʾān(s) in Context(s)". Journal Asiatique. 309 (2): 185–202.
  39. ^ Tafsir, Vol. IX
  40. ^ "Surah An-Najm - 1-62". Quran.com. Retrieved 24 August 2023.
  41. ^ Rubin, pp. 157–158
  42. ^ Rubin, p. 165.
  43. ^ . University of Southern California. Archived from the original on 18 August 2000.
  44. ^ Rubin, p. 166

References edit

  • Buhl, F.; Welch, A.T. (1993). "Muḥammad". Encyclopaedia of Islam. Vol. 7 (2nd ed.). Brill. p. 365. ISBN 978-90-04-09419-2.
  • Fazlur Rahman (1994), Major Themes in the Qur'an, Biblioteca Islamica, ISBN 0-88297-051-8
  • John Burton (1970), "Those Are the High-Flying Cranes", Journal of Semitic Studies, 15 (2): 246–264, doi:10.1093/jss/15.2.246.
  • Uri Rubin (1995), The Eye of the Beholder: The Life of Muhammad as Viewed by the Early Muslims: A Textual Analysis, The Darwin Press, Inc., ISBN 0-87850-110-X
  • G. R. Hawting (1999), The Idea of Idolatry and the Emergence of Islam: From Polemic to History, Cambridge University Press, ISBN 0-521-65165-4
  • Nāsir al-Dīn al-Albānī (1952), Nasb al-majānīq li-nasfi qissat al-gharānīq (The Erection of Catapults for the Destruction of the Story of the Gharānīq)
  • Shahab Ahmed (2018), Before Orthodoxy: The Satanic Verses in early Islam, Harvard University Press, ISBN 978-0-674-04742-6

External links edit

Commentators edit

  • "Those Are The High Flying Claims" (Refutation of the Christian missionary writings on the so-called "Satanic verses")
  • The "Satanic Verses" story was never taken seriously by Islamic scholars
  • STORY OF THE CRANES or "SATANIC VERSES"

satanic, verses, this, article, about, religious, verses, novel, salman, rushdie, other, uses, satanic, verses, disambiguation, words, satanic, suggestion, which, islamic, prophet, muhammad, alleged, have, mistaken, divine, revelation, words, praise, three, pa. This article is about the religious verses For the novel by Salman Rushdie see The Satanic Verses For other uses see Satanic verses disambiguation The Satanic Verses are words of satanic suggestion which the Islamic prophet Muhammad is alleged to have mistaken for divine revelation 1 The words praise the three pagan Meccan goddesses al Lat al Uzza and Manat and can be read in early prophetic biographies of Muhammad by al Waqidi Ibn Sa d and the tafsir of al Tabari The first use of the expression in English is attributed to Sir William Muir in 1858 2 The incident is accepted as true by some modern scholars of Islamic studies under the criterion of embarrassment citing the implausibility of early Muslim biographers fabricating a story so unflattering about their prophet 3 4 Alford T Welch however argues that this rationale alone is insufficient but does not rule out the possibility of some historical foundation to the story He proposes that the story may be yet another instance of historical telescoping i e a circumstance that Muhammad s contemporaries knew to have lasted for a long period of time later became condensed into a story that limits his acceptance of the Meccan goddesses intercession to a brief period of time and assigns blame for this departure from strict monotheism to Satan 5 Religious authorities embraced the story for the first two centuries of the Islamic era However beginning in the 13th century Islamic scholars Ulama started to reject it as being inconsistent with Muhammad s perfection isma which meant that Muhammad was infallible and could not be fooled by Satan 1 Contents 1 Basic narrative 2 Tabari s account 3 Reception in Muslim exegesis 3 1 Early Islam 3 2 Later medieval period 3 3 Modern Islamic scholarship 3 3 1 Salman Rushdie 4 Historicity debate 5 Related traditions 6 See also 7 Notes 8 References 9 External links 9 1 CommentatorsBasic narrative edit nbsp The Arabian goddess Al Lat flanked by goddesses Manat and al Uzza See the complete text of Tabari s account belowThere are numerous accounts of the incident which differ in the construction and detail of the narrative but they may be broadly collated to produce a basic account 6 The different versions of the story are recorded in early tafsirs Quranic commentaries and biographies of the Prophet such as Ibn Ishaq s 7 In its essential form the story reports that Muhammad longed to convert his kinsmen and neighbors of Mecca to Islam As he was reciting these verses of Surat an Najm 8 considered a revelation from the angel Gabriel Have you thought of al Lat and al Uzza And about the third one Manat Quran 53 19 20 Satan tempted him to utter the following line These are the exalted gharaniq whose intercession is hoped for Al Lat al Uzza and Manat were three pre Islamic Arabian goddesses worshipped by the Meccans Discerning the precise meaning of the word gharaniq has proven difficult as it is a hapax legomenon i e used only once in the text Commentators wrote that it meant the cranes The Arabic word does generally mean a crane appearing in the singular as ghirniq ghurnuq ghirnawq and ghurnayq and the word has cousin forms in other words for birds including raven crow and eagle 9 Taken as a segment exalted gharaniq has been translated by Orientalist William Muir to mean exalted women while contemporary academic Muhammad Manazir Ahsan has translated the same segment as high soaring ones deities Thus whether the phrase had intended to attribute a divine nature to the three idols is a matter of dispute 10 In either case scholars generally agree on the meaning of the second half of the verse whose intercession is hoped for Tabari s account editAn extensive account of the incident is found in al Tabari s history the Tarikh Vol VI c 915 CE The prophet was eager for the welfare of his people desiring to win them to him by any means he could It has been reported that he longed for a way to win them and part of what he did to that end is what Ibn Humayd told me from Salama from Muhammad ibn Ishaq from Yazid ibn Ziyad al Madani from Muhammad ibn Ka b al Qurazi When the prophet saw his people turning away from him and was tormented by their distancing themselves from what he had brought to them from God he longed in himself for something to come to him from God which would draw him close to them With his love for his people and his eagerness for them it would gladden him if some of the hard things he had found in dealing with them could be alleviated He pondered this in himself longed for it and desired it Then God sent down the revelation By the star when it sets Your companion has not erred or gone astray and does not speak from mere fancy Q 53 1 When he reached God s words Have you seen al Lat and al Uzza and Manat the third the other Q 53 19 20 Satan cast upon his tongue because of what he had pondered in himself and longed to bring to his people These are the high flying cranes and their intercession is to be hoped for When Quraysh heard that they rejoiced What he had said about their gods pleased and delighted them and they gave ear to him The Believers trusted in their prophet with respect to what he brought them from their Lord they did not suspect any slip delusion or error When he came to the prostration and finished the chapter he prostrated and the Muslims followed their prophet in it having faith in what he brought them and obeying his command Those mushrikun of Quraysh and others who were in the mosque also prostrated on account of what they had heard him say about their gods In the whole mosque there was no believer or kafir who did not prostrate Only al Walid bin al Mughira who was an aged shaykh and could not make prostration scooped up in his hand some of the soil from the valley of Mecca and pressed it to his forehead Then everybody dispersed from the mosque Quraysh went out and were delighted by what they had heard of the way in which he spoke of their gods They were saying Muhammad has referred to our gods most favourably In what he has recited he said that they are high flying cranes whose intercession is to be hoped for Those followers of the Prophet who had emigrated to the land of Abyssinia heard about the affair of the prostration and it was reported to them that Quraysh had accepted Islam Some men among them decided to return while others remained behind Gabriel came to the Prophet and said O Muhammad what have you done You have recited to the people something which I have not brought you from God and you have spoken what He did not say to you At that the Prophet was mightily saddened and greatly feared God But God of His mercy sent him a revelation comforting him and diminishing the magnitude of what had happened God told him that there had never been a previous prophet or apostle who had longed just as Muhammad had longed and desired just as Muhammad had desired but that Satan had cast into his longing just as he had cast onto the tongue of Muhammad But God abrogates what Satan has cast and puts His verses in proper order That is you are just like other prophets and apostles And God revealed We never sent any apostle or prophet before you but that when he longed Satan cast into his longing But God abrogates what Satan casts in and then God puts His verses in proper order for God is all knowing and wise Q 22 52 So God drove out the sadness from His prophet and gave him security against what he feared He abrogated what Satan had cast upon his tongue in referring to their gods They are the high flying cranes whose intercession is accepted sic Replacing those words with the words of God when Allat al Uzza and Manat the third the other are mentioned Should you have males and He females as offspring That indeed would be an unfair division They are only names which you and your fathers have given them as far as As many as are the angels in heaven their intercession shall be of no avail unless after God has permitted it to whom He pleases and accepts Q 53 21 26 meaning how can the intercession of their gods be of any avail with Him When there had come from God the words which abrogated what Satan had cast on to the tongue of His prophet Quraysh said Muhammad has gone back on what he said about the status of our gods relative to God changed it and brought something else for the two phrases which Satan had cast on to the tongue of the Prophet had found a place in the mouth of every polytheist They therefore increased in their evil and in their oppression of everyone among them who had accepted Islam and followed the Prophet The band of the Prophet s followers who had left the land of Abyssinia on account of the report that the people of Mecca had accepted Islam when they prostrated together with the Prophet drew near But when they approached Mecca they heard that the talk about the acceptance of Islam by the people of Mecca was wrong Therefore they only entered Mecca in secret or after having obtained a promise of protection Among those of them who came to Mecca at that time and remained there until emigrating to Medina and taking part in the battle of Badr alongside Muhammad there was from the family of Abd Shams b Abd Manaf b Qussayy Uthman b Affan together with his wife Ruqayya the daughter of the Prophet Abu Hudhayfa b Utba with his wife Shal bint Suhayl and another group with them numbering together 33 men 11 Reception in Muslim exegesis editEarly Islam edit Shahab Ahmed author of a book on the satanic verses in early Islam observed that in the era of early tafsirs and sirah maghazi literature the satanic verses incident was near universally accepted by the early Muslim community and illustrative of a concept of prophethood involving an ongoing struggle Later the logic of the era of hadith collections and subsequent orthodoxy required an infallible prophet 12 294 300 According to Ibn Taymiyyah The early Islamic Scholars Salaf collectively considered the Verses of Cranes in accordance with Quran And from the later coming scholars Khalaf who followed the opinion of the early scholars they say that these traditions have been recorded with authentic chain of narration and it is impossible to deny them and Quran is itself testifying it 13 The earliest biography of Muhammad Ibn Ishaq 761 767 is lost but his collection of traditions survives mainly in two sources Ibn Hisham 833 and al Tabari 915 The story appears in al Tabari who includes Ibn Ishaq in the chain of transmission but not in Ibn Hisham who admits in the preface of his text that he omitted matters from Ibn Ishaq s biography that would distress certain people 14 Ibn Sa d and Al Waqidi two other early biographers of Muhammad relate the story 15 Scholars such as Uri Rubin and Shahab Ahmed and Guillaume hold that the report was in Ibn Ishaq while Alford T Welch holds the report has not been presumably present in the Ibn Ishaq 16 Shahab Ahmed states that Reports of the Satanic verses incident were recorded by virtually every compiler of a major biography of Muhammad in the first two centuries of Islam Urwah b al Zubayr 23 94 Ibn Shihab al Zuhri 51 124 Musa b Uqbah 85 141 Ibn Ishaq 85 151 Abu Ma shar d 170 Yunus b Bukayr d 199 and al Waqidi 130 207 12 257 Later medieval period edit Due to its controversial nature the tradition of the Satanic Verses never made it into any of the canonical hadith compilations though possible truncated versions of the incident did 16 The reference and exegesis about the Verses appear in early histories 17 18 19 In addition to appearing in Tabari s tafsir it is used in the tafsirs of Muqatil ʽAbd al Razzaq al Sanʽani and Ibn Kathir as well as the naskh of Abu Ja far an Nahhas the asbab collection of Wahidi and even the late medieval as Suyuti s compilation al Durr al Manthur fil Tafsir bil Mathur Objections to the incident were raised as early as the fourth Islamic century such as in the work of an Nahhas and continued to be raised throughout later generations by scholars such as Abu Bakr ibn al Arabi d 1157 Fakhr ad Din Razi 1220 as well as al Qurtubi 1285 The most comprehensive argument presented against the factuality of the incident came in Qadi Iyad s ash Shifa 6 The incident was discounted on two main bases The first was that the incident contradicted the doctrine of isma divine protection of Muhammad from mistakes The second was that the descriptions of the chain of transmission extant since that period are not complete and sound sahih 6 However Uri Rubin asserts that there exists a complete version of the isnad continuing to the companion Ibn Abbas but this only survives in a few sources He claims that in another form of the isnad the name of Ibn Abbas was removed so that the incident could be deprived of its sahih isnad and discredited Rubin makes similar comments about an isnad involving another companion Makhrama bin Nawfal 20 Another modern academic scholar Shahab Ahmed carefully examined 50 riwayahs transmissions of the hadith narrated from the companion Ibn Abbas and successors tabi un including Muhammad bin ka b Al Qurazi Sa id b Jubayr Urwah b al Zubayr Qatada b Di amah Abu Bakr Abd al Rahman b al Harith al Hasan al Basri and Mujahid b Jabr He notes that many of these are sahih mursal i e sound except that the chain of narration ends at the successor instead of a companion of the prophet He also discusses some narrations whose chains go back to Ibn Abbas including one riwayah 40 in Ahmed s book which was considered reliable by some scholars though al Albani rejected it due to limited biographical information on one of the transmitters and a similar one riwayah 41 which Ahmed describes as an equally if not more reliable isnad that has apparently gone unnoticed by later commentators This he says has an immaculate isnad and lacks the deficiency noted by al Albani 12 224 228 Ahmed states that all the first and early second century reports are agreed that the Prophet uttered the satanic verses 12 56 Imam Fakhr al Din al Razi commenting on Quran 22 52 in his Tafsir al Kabir stated that the people of verification declared the story as an outright fabrication citing supporting arguments from the Qur an Sunnah and reason He then reported that the preeminent Muhaddith Ibn Khuzaymah said it is an invention of the heretics when once asked about it Al Razi also recorded that al Bayhaqi stated that the narration of the story was unreliable because its narrators were of questionable integrity Those scholars who acknowledged the historicity of the incident apparently had a different method for the assessment of reports than that which has become standard Islamic methodology For example Ibn Taymiyyah took the position that since tafsir and sira maghazi reports were commonly transmitted by incomplete isnads these reports should not be assessed according to the completeness of the chains but rather on the basis of recurrent transmission of common meaning between reports 6 Al Qurtubi al Jami li ahkam al Qur an dismisses all these variants in favor of the explanation that once Sura al Najm was safely revealed the basic events of the incident or rumors of them were now permitted to occur to identify those of his followers who would accept Muhammad s explanation of the blasphemous imposture JSS 15 pp 254 255 Ibn Hajar al Asqallani wrote All the chains of this narration are weak except of Said Ibn Jubayr And when one incident is reported from many different chains then it means there is something real in this incident Moreover this incident has also been narrated through 2 Mursal where chain goes up to Successor i e Tabari traditions whose chains of narration are authentic according to the standards of Imam Bukhari and Imam Muslim First one is what Tabari recorded from Younus bin Yazid he from Ibn Shahab that Abu Bakr Ibn Abdul Rehman narrated me While second one which Tabari recorded from Mutabar bin Sulayman and Hammad bin Salama and they from Dawud bin Abi Hind and he from Abu Aliya Ibn Arabi and Qadhi Ayyad say there is no proof of this incident but contrary to their claim when one incident comes through different chain of narrations then it means that this incident is real While there are not only multiple chain of narrations about this incident but also 3 of them are authentic while 2 of them are Mursal narrations 21 Modern Islamic scholarship edit While the authors of the tafsir texts during the first two centuries of the Islamic era do not seem to have regarded the tradition as in any way inauspicious or unflattering to Muhammad it seems to have been universally rejected by at least the 13th century and most modern Muslims likewise see the tradition as problematic in the sense that it is viewed as profoundly heretical because by allowing for the intercession of the three pagan female deities they eroded the authority and omnipotence of Allah But they also hold damaging implications in regard to the revelation as a whole for Muhammad s revelation appears to have been based on his desire to soften the threat to the deities of the people 22 Different responses have developed concerning the account Many modern Muslim scholars have rejected the story Arguments for rejection are found in Muhammad Abduh s article Masʾalat al gharaniq wa tafsir al ayat year needed Muhammad Husayn Haykal s Hayat Muhammad 1933 Sayyid Qutb s Fi Zilal al Quran 1965 Abul Ala Maududi s Tafhim ul Quran 1972 and Muhammad Nasiruddin al Albani s Nasb al majaniq li nasf al gharaniq year needed 6 Haykal points out the many forms and versions of the story and their inconsistencies and argues that the contextual flow of Surah al Najm does not allow at all the inclusion of such verses as the story claims Haykal quotes Muhammad Abduh who pointed out that the Arabs have nowhere described their gods in such terms as al gharaniq Neither in their poetry nor in their speeches or traditions do we find their gods or goddesses described in such terms Rather the word al ghurnuq or al gharniq was the name of a black or white water bird sometimes given figuratively to the handsome blond youth Lastly Haykal argues that the story is inconsistent with Muhammad s personal life and is completely against the spirit of the Islamic message 23 Aqa Mahdi Puya has said that these fake verses were shouted out by the Meccans to make it appear that it was Muhammad who had spoken them he writes Some pagans and hypocrites planned secretly to recite words praising idolatry alongside the recitation of the Holy Prophet while he was praying in such a way that the people would think as if they were recited by him Once when the Holy Prophet was reciting verses 19 and 20 of Najm one of the pagans recited Tilkal gharani ul ula wa inna shafa atahuma laturja These are the lofty idols verily their intercession is sought after As soon as this was recited the conspirators shouted in delight to make the people believe that it was the Holy Prophet who said these words Here the Quran is stating the general pattern the enemies of the messengers of Allah followed when they were positively convinced that the people were paying attention to the teachings of the messengers of Allah and sincerely believing in them They would mix their false doctrines with the original teachings so as to make the divine message a bundle of contradictions This kind of satanic insertions are referred to in thus verse and it is supported by Ha Mim 26 It is sheer blasphemy to say that satanic forces can influence the messengers of Allah 24 25 Salman Rushdie edit Main article Satanic Verses controversy This entire matter was a mere footnote to the back and forth of religious debate citation needed and was rekindled only when Salman Rushdie s 1988 novel The Satanic Verses made headline news The novel contains some fictionalized allusions to Islamic history which provoked both controversy and outrage Muslims around the world protested the book s publishing and Iran s Ayatollah Khomeini issued a fatwa sentencing Rushdie to death saying that the book blasphemed Muhammad and his wives Historicity debate editSince William Muir the historicity of this episode has been largely accepted by secular academics 4 Some orientalists however argued against the historic authenticity of these verses on various grounds 26 Sean Anthony observes a trend of more recent scholarship towards rejecting the historicity of the story after a period in which scholars were more divided 27 220 William Montgomery Watt and Alfred Guillaume claim that stories of the event were true based upon the implausibility of Muslims fabricating a story so unflattering to their prophet Muhammad must have publicly recited the satanic verses as part of the Qur an it is unthinkable that the story could have been invented by Muslims or foisted upon them by non Muslims 3 Alford T Welch however argues that this rationale alone is insufficient but does not rule out the possibility of some historical foundation to the story He proposes that the story may be yet another instance of historical telescoping i e a circumstance that Muhammad s contemporaries knew to have lasted for a long period of time later became condensed into a story that limits his acceptance of the Meccan goddesses intercession to a brief period of time and assigns blame for this departure from strict monotheism to Satan 5 John Burton argued for its fictitiousness based upon a demonstration of its actual utility to certain elements of the Muslim community namely those legal exegetes seeking an occasion of revelation for eradicative modes of abrogation further explanation needed Burton supports his theory by the fact that Tabari does not discuss the story in his exegesis of the verse 53 20 but rather in 22 52 28 Disagreeing with Burton G R Hawting writes that the satanic verses incident would not serve to justify or exemplify a theory that God reveals something and later replaces it himself with another true revelation 29 Burton in his rejection of the authenticity of the story sided with Leone Caetani who wrote that the story was to be rejected not only on the basis of isnad but because had these hadiths even a degree of historical basis Muhammad s reported conduct on this occasion would have given the lie to the whole of his previous prophetic activity 30 Maxime Rodinson finds that it may reasonably be accepted as true because the makers of Muslim tradition would never have invented a story with such damaging implications for the revelation as a whole 31 He writes the following on the genesis of the verses Obviously Muhammad s unconscious had suggested to him a formula which provided a practical road to unanimity Rodinson writes that this concession however diminished the threat of the Last Judgment by enabling the three goddesses to intercede for sinners and save them from eternal damnation Further it diminished Muhammad s own authority by giving the priests of Uzza Manat and Allat the ability to pronounce oracles contradicting his message Disparagement from Christians and Jews who pointed out where that he was reverting to his pagan beginnings combined with opposition and indignation from his own followers influenced him to recant his revelation However in doing so he denounced the gods of Mecca as lesser spirits or mere names cast off everything related to the traditional religion as the work of pagans and unbelievers and consigned the Meccan s pious ancestors and relatives to Hell This was the final break with the Quraysh 32 Fred Halliday states that rather than having damaging implications the story is a cautionary tale the point of which is not to malign God but to point up the frailty of human beings and that even a prophet may be misled by shaytan though ultimately shaytan is unsuccessful 33 Since John Wansbrough s contributions to the field in the early 1970s though scholars have become much more attentive to the emergent nature of early Islam and less willing to accept back projected claims of continuity To those who see the tradition as constantly evolving and supplying answers to question that it itself has raised the argument that there would be no reason to develop and transmit material which seems derogatory of the Prophet or of Islam is too simple For one thing ideas about what is derogatory may change over time We know that the doctrine of the Prophet s infallibility and impeccability the doctrine regarding his isma emerged only slowly For another material which we now find in the biography of the Prophet originated in various circumstances to meet various needs and one has to understand why material exists before one can make a judgment about its basis in fact 34 In Rubin s recent contribution to the debate questions of historicity are completely eschewed in favor of an examination of internal textual dynamics and what they reveal about early medieval Islam Rubin claims to have located the genesis of many prophetic traditions and that they show an early Muslim desire to prove to other scriptuaries that Muhammad did indeed belong to the same exclusive predestined chain of prophets in whom the Jews and the Christians believed He alleges that the Muslims had to establish the story of Muhammad s life on the same literary patterns as were used in the vitae of the other prophets 35 The incident of the Satanic Verses according to him conforms to the common theme of persecution followed by isolation of the prophet figure As the story was adapted to include Qur anic material Q 22 52 Q 53 Q 17 73 74 the idea of satanic temptation was claimed by whom to have been added heightening its inherent drama as well as incorporating additional Biblical motifs cf the Temptation of Christ Rubin gives his attention to the narratological exigencies which may have shaped early sira material as opposed to the more commonly considered ones of dogma sect and political dynastic faction Given the consensus that the most archaic layer of the biography is that of the stories of the kussas i e popular story tellers Sira EI this may prove a fruitful line of inquiry Rubin also claimed that the supposed temporary control taken by Satan over Muhammad made such traditions unacceptable to early hadith compilers which he believed to be a unique case in which a group of traditions are rejected only after being subject to Qur anic models and as a direct result of this adjustment 16 Building on Rubin s views Sean Anthony has proposed that an early tradition attributed to ʿUrwa b al Zubayr about the mass conversion and prostration of the Meccans but which does not mention the satanic verses was at a later stage connected with Q 53 19 20 Q 22 52 and Q 17 73 74 27 241 245 Some scholars believe there is evidence in the Quranic text of surah 53 itself relevant to the question of historicity Nicolai Sinai argues that the conciliatory satanic verses would make no sense in the context of the scathing criticism in the subsequent verses whether they were uttered before Q 53 21 22 or if those replaced the satanic verses Q 53 24 25 36 10 11 Patricia Crone makes a similar point but regarding the preceding verses Q 53 19 20 She argues that Have you seen al Lat should be taken as a hostile question about literally seeing the three deities particularly since the preceding half of the surah repeatedly claims that Allah s servant saw the heavenly being and noting also other verses where a similar question is asked Q 35 40 and Q 46 4 37 18 22 On the other hand Tommaso Tesei builds on the common observation also mentioned by Crone that verses 23 and 26 32 of Q 53 appear to be an interpolation of long verses into a surah of otherwise short verses Tesei argues that those verses display stylistic incoherence as well as a theological tension with the rest of Q 53 a surah which is consistent with evidence external to the Islamic tradition regarding pre Islamic deities and star worship Of relevance to the possibility of historical elements in the satanic verses story Tesei notes that the interpolation as he sees it coincides exactly with the traditional account that an explanatory comment was inserted to rectify the identification of the pagan deities as divine intercessors 38 192 196 Shahab Ahmed noted that the Quran is at pains to deny that the source of Muhammad s inspiration is a shaytan Q 81 19 20 25 because for his immediate audience the sources for the two categories of inspired individuals in society poets and soothsayers were shaytans and jinn respectively whereas Muhammad was a prophet 12 295 Related traditions editSeveral related traditions exist some adapted to Qur anic material some not One version appearing in Tabari s tafsir 39 and attributed to Urwah ibn Zubayr d 713 preserves the basic narrative but with no mention of satanic temptation Muhammad is persecuted by the Meccans after attacking their idols during which time a group of Muslims seeks refuge in Abyssinia After the cessation of this first round of persecution fitna they return home but soon a second round begins No compelling reason is provided for the caesura of persecution though unlike in the incident of the satanic verses where it is the temporary fruit of Muhammad s accommodation to Meccan polytheism Another version attributed to Urwa has only one round of fitna which begins after Muhammad has converted the entire population of Mecca so that the Muslims are too numerous to perform ritual prostration sujud all together This somewhat parallels the Muslims and mushrikun prostrating themselves together after Muhammad s first allegedly satanically infected recitation of Sura al Najm in which allegedly 40 the efficacy of the three pagan goddesses is acknowledged 41 The image of Muslims and pagans prostrating themselves together in prayer in turn links the story of the satanic verses to very abbreviated sujud al Qur an i e prostration when reciting the Qur an traditions found in the authoritative mussanaf hadith collections including the Sunni canonical ones of Bukhari and Tirmidhi Rubin claims that apparently the allusion to the participation of the mushrikun emphasises how overwhelming and intense the effect of this sura was on those attending The traditions actually state that all cognizant creatures took part in it humans as well as jinns 42 Rubin further argues that this is inherently illogical without the Satanic Verses in the recitation given that in the accepted version of verses Q 53 19 23 the pagans goddesses are attacked The majority of traditions relating to prostration at the end of Sura al Najm solve this by either removing all mention of the mushrikun or else transforming the attempt of an old Meccan to participate who instead of bowing to the ground puts dirt to his forehead proclaiming This is sufficient for me into an act of mockery Some traditions even describe his eventual comeuppance saying he is later killed at the battle of Badr 43 Thus according to Rubin the story of the single polytheist who raised a handful of dirt to his forehead in attempt of an old disabled man to participate in Muhammad s sujud in a sarcastic act of an enemy of Muhammad wishing to dishonor the Islamic prayer And traditions which originally related the dramatic story of temptation became a sterilized anecdote providing prophetic precedent for a ritual practice 44 See also editAllah as a lunar deity Criticism of the Quran Demolition of al Lat Demolition of al Uzza Demolition of Manat Sirat Rasul Allah one name for any traditional Muslim prophetic biography of MuhammadNotes edit a b Ahmed Shahab 1998 Ibn Taymiyyah and the Satanic Verses Studia Islamica Maisonneuve amp Larose 87 87 67 124 doi 10 2307 1595926 JSTOR 1595926 John L Esposito 2003 The Oxford dictionary of Islam Oxford University Press p 563 ISBN 978 0 19 512558 0 Archived from the original on 11 June 2016 a b Watt Muhammad at Mecca a b EoQ Satanic Verses For scholars that accept the historicity see Michael Cook Muhammad In Founders of Faith Oxford University Press 1986 p 309 Etan Kohlberg A Medieval Muslim Scholar at Work Ibn Tawus and His Library Brill 1992 p 20 F E Peters The Hajj Princeton University Press 1994 p 37 See also The Monotheists Jews Christians and Muslims in Conflict and Competition Princeton University Press 2003 p 94 William Muir The Life of Mahomet Smith Elder 1878 p 88 John D Erickson Islam and Postcolonial Narrative Cambridge University Press 1990 p 140 Thomas Patrick Hughes A Dictionary of Islam Asian Educational Services p 191 Maxime Rodinson Prophet of Islam Tauris Parke Paperbacks 2002 p 113 Montgomery Watt Muhammad Prophet and Statesman Oxford University Press 1961 p 60 Daniel J Sahas Iconoclasm Encyclopedia of the Qur an Brill Online a b Buhl amp Welch 1993 a b c d e Ahmed Shahab 2008 Satanic Verses in Dammen McAuliffe Jane ed Encyclopaedia of the Qurʾan Georgetown University Washington DC Brill published 14 August 2008 permanent dead link Ibn Ishaq Muhammad 1955 Ibn Ishaq s Sirat Rasul Allah The Life of Muhammad Translated by A Guillaume Oxford Oxford University Press p 165 ISBN 9780196360331 Archived from the original on 26 December 2016 Q 53 Militarev Alexander Kogan Leonid 2005 Semitic Etymological Dictionary 2 Animal Names Alter Orient und Altes Testament vol 278 2 Munster Ugarit Verlag pp 131 132 ISBN 3 934628 57 5 The Satanic Verses Common Errors in English Usage and More Washington State University 8 February 2017 translated in G R Hawting The Idea of Idolatry and the Emergence of Islam From Polemic to History pp 131 132 a b c d e Ahmed Shahab 2017 Before Orthodoxy The satanic verses in early Islam Cambridge Massachusetts London England Harvard University Press ISBN 978 0 674 04742 6 Ibn Taymiyyah Majmu al Fatawa Archived from the original on 13 June 2018 Retrieved 13 June 2018 Holland Tom 2012 In the Shadow of the Sword Doubleday p 42 ISBN 978 0385531368 Rubin Uri 14 August 2008 Muḥammad in Dammen McAuliffe Jane ed Encyclopaedia of the Qurʾan Georgetown University Washington DC Brill permanent dead link a b c Rubin Uri 1997 The eye of the beholder the life of Muḥammad as viewed by the early Muslims a textual analysis Princeton NJ Darwin Press published 1995 p 161 ISBN 0 87850 110 X ibn Isḥaq ibn Yasar Muḥammad Ibn Hisham ʻAbd al Malik Sirat Rasul Allah Ṭabari Ṭabari Tarikh ar Rusul wal Muluk Ṭabarani Sulayman ibn Aḥmad al Mu jam al Kabir Rubin Uri 1997 The eye of the beholder the life of Muḥammad as viewed by the early Muslims a textual analysis Princeton NJ Darwin Press published 1995 pp 256 258 ISBN 0 87850 110 X Ibn Hajar al Asqallani Fath ul Bari Archived from the original on 13 June 2018 Retrieved 13 June 2018 John D Erickson 1998 Islam and Postcolonial Narrative Cambridge UK Cambridge University Press Muhammad Husayn Haykal Hayat Muhammad 9th edition Cairo Maktaba an Nahda al Misriya 1964 pp 164 167 Puya Aqa Mahdi 2008 Aqa Mahdi Puya view Satanic Verses PDF Mahdi Puya archived from the original PDF on 2 June 2021 Multilingual Quran www al islam org Archived from the original on 25 December 2008 Retrieved 12 December 2009 EoQ Satanic Verses For scholars that do not accept the historicity see Kuran Encyclopaedia of Islam 2nd Edition Vol 5 1986 p 404 Muḥammad Encyclopaedia of Islam Second Edition Edited by P J Bearman Th Bianquis C E Bosworth E van Donzel W P Heinrichs et al Brill Online 2014 a b Anthony Sean 2019 The Satanic Verses in Early Shiʿite Literature A Minority Report on Shahab Ahmed s Before Orthodoxy Shii Studies Review 3 1 2 215 252 doi 10 1163 24682470 12340043 S2CID 181905314 Retrieved 16 August 2022 Burton Those are the high flying cranes Journal of Semitic Studies JSS 15 G R Hawting The Idea of Idolatry and the Emergence of Islam Cambridge University Press 1999 p 135 Quoted by I R Netton in Text and Trauma An East West Primer 1996 p 86 Routledge Maxime Rodinson Mohammed Allen Lane the Penguin Press 1961 p 106 Maxime Rodinson Mohammed Allen Lane the Penguin Press 1961 pp 107 108 Halliday Fred 100 Myths about the Middle East G R Hawting The Idea of Idolatry and the Emergence of Islam From Polemic to History pp 134 135 Eye of the Beholder p 21 Sinai Nicolai 2011 An Interpretation of Surat al Najm Q 53 Journal of Qurʾanic Studies 13 2 1 28 doi 10 3366 jqs 2011 0018 Crone Patricia 2015 Problems in sura 53 Bulletin of the School of Oriental and African Studies 78 1 15 23 doi 10 1017 S0041977X15000014 JSTOR 24692173 S2CID 161476552 Tesei Tommaso 2021 The Qurʾan s in Context s Journal Asiatique 309 2 185 202 Tafsir Vol IX Surah An Najm 1 62 Quran com Retrieved 24 August 2023 Rubin pp 157 158 Rubin p 165 Prostration During Recital of Qur an University of Southern California Archived from the original on 18 August 2000 Rubin p 166References editBuhl F Welch A T 1993 Muḥammad Encyclopaedia of Islam Vol 7 2nd ed Brill p 365 ISBN 978 90 04 09419 2 Fazlur Rahman 1994 Major Themes in the Qur an Biblioteca Islamica ISBN 0 88297 051 8 John Burton 1970 Those Are the High Flying Cranes Journal of Semitic Studies 15 2 246 264 doi 10 1093 jss 15 2 246 Uri Rubin 1995 The Eye of the Beholder The Life of Muhammad as Viewed by the Early Muslims A Textual Analysis The Darwin Press Inc ISBN 0 87850 110 X G R Hawting 1999 The Idea of Idolatry and the Emergence of Islam From Polemic to History Cambridge University Press ISBN 0 521 65165 4 Nasir al Din al Albani 1952 Nasb al majaniq li nasfi qissat al gharaniq The Erection of Catapults for the Destruction of the Story of the Gharaniq Shahab Ahmed 2018 Before Orthodoxy The Satanic Verses in early Islam Harvard University Press ISBN 978 0 674 04742 6External links editCommentators edit Those Are The High Flying Claims Refutation of the Christian missionary writings on the so called Satanic verses The Satanic Verses story was never taken seriously by Islamic scholars Muhammad The man and the message STORY OF THE CRANES or SATANIC VERSES Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title Satanic Verses amp oldid 1198023699, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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