The Causes of Doubt
There is no doubt that the irresistible fascinating force and challenging power
of the Holy Qur'an were the main means of conversion ever since the start of
the Holy Prophet's mission. Opponents did everything they could to prevent the
Holy Prophet and his disciples from reciting the Qur'an to the public, and to
obstruct people, the young in particular, from listening to it. There is
abundant historical evidence for this. Opponents also tried to overcome the
force and effect of the recital of the Holy Qur'an by trying to disturb its
recital by interjections:
And those who disbelieve say: "Listen ye not to this Qur'an and make noise
therein." (41:26)
One of the consequences of this is the story that, when the Holy Prophet while
reciting Sura 53 (Wan-Najm - The Star) reached verse 20, one of the infidels
among the audience uttered this passage of his own in continuation of the
verse, thus adulterating the lines and disturbing the sequence of the
succeeding verses. Whereupon the infidels prostrated themselves as a sign of
their approval and satisfaction. This shows that they had a pre- arranged plan
to disturb the recital of the Qur'an by the Holy Prophet, which is condemned by
the Qur'an as a satanic ploy need against all preceding prophets when they used
to deliver God's message:
And We sent not before thee any apostle or prophet but when he recited (Our
message), reading of the devil made his (interrupting) desire in (between) the
recital; but God annulleth that which the devil casteth; then God doth
establish His signs and God is All-Knowing, All- Wise. (22:52)
So that He may make what the devil casteth a trial for those in whose hearts is
disease and those whose hearts are hard, and verily the unjust are in a great
opposition . (22:53)
And that those who have been given the knowledge may know that it is the truth
from thy Lord, so they may believe in it and their hearts may be lowly before
it; and verily God is the Guide, of those who believe, towards the right path.
(22:54)
It is surprising that some critics and some ignorant commentators of the Holy
Qur'an attribute the satanic addition to the Holy Prophet himself, but the
internal evidence of Sura 53 itself (ie. the verses preceding and succeeding
verse 20) make the utterance by the Holy Prophet himself impossible. The
opponents, during the lifetime of the Holy Prophet and afterwards, did not
hesitate to use every means to divert the attention of Muslims from the Qur'an
and weaken its influence upon the minds of the people. An unauthorised attempt
was made by the immediate ruling Party to make their own collection of the
Qur'an, separate from the collection already prepared under the supervision and
instruction of the Holy Prophet by the scribes who were put in charge of
recording the Qur'an in writing as it was revealed, together with a commentary
by the Holy Prophet. The First Caliph, on the advice of the Second, entrusted
Zaid ibne Sabit with the task, a youth of no experience or standing when
compared with the official scribes appointed by the Holy Prophet, namely
Abdullah ibne Mas'ood and Obai ibne Kaab, besides Ali ibne Taleb who was
foremost in the knowledge of every letter and of the significance and
implications of the Holy Qur'an The incompetency of Zaid ibne Sabit concerning
the Qur'an is evident from the remarks of Obai ibne Kaab when a dispute arose
between the two about the recital of a certain passage of the Qur'an:
Thou teacheth me Qur'an? while I was reading the Qur'an with the Holy Prophet
while thou wert yet a child playing in the streets.
A similar remark was passed by the same Obai ibne Kaab against the Second
Caliph in a dispute about another point. Obai told the Second Caliph:
I used to read Qur'an with the Holy Prophet while you were yet busy in your
transactions in the Bazaar.
Neither Zaid nor Omar dared to refute the claim of Obai. Zaid ibne Sabit had to
refer to the ordinary people who possessed some scattered portions of the
Qur'an, either in writing or in memory, rather than the acknowledged
authorities mentioned above.
Unfortunately, neither the First nor the Second Caliph was an authority on the
Qur'an and there are authentic evidences of their ignorance of it in matters of
State adminstration Not only did Zaid lack academic qualifications to compile
the Qur'an, but the dispute between himself and the Second Caliph during his
reign are proof of the lack of regard both had for the revelation In this
dispute, the Second Caliph wanted something from Zaid, who declined to comply
The Second Caliph said:
Look! It is my command and not the revelation with which you could play.
This shows that playing with the revelation meant nothing to either of them as
long as their desires were served.
However, as history shows, they attempted the collection of the Qur'an in this
manner and something was collected; but it was not published and remained under
the bees of Ayesha or Hafsa. The Muslims had no access to it, and it is also
said that a goat devoured a portion of the collection. This anecdote is further
testimony to the lack of regard for their collection. The reign of the first
two Caliphs passed away and the collection remained where it has been left
years ago. But the Qur'an was being written, taught, learnt, memorised,
recited, discussed and applied in the daily lives of Muslims throughout the
fast- expanding Muslim Empire. The Second Caliph is said to have claimed that
even the ladies had a greater knowledge of the Qur'an than had those at the
helm of the administration. No one complained of lack of access to the collection
by Zaid, and no one asked the State to publish it The teachers of the Qur'an
continued to perform their duties directly and through their disciples
throughout the Muslim world quite independently of the collection in the
possession of the State.
The first half of the reign of the Third Caliph had also passed when a
variation in the recital of the Qur'an was noticed among Muslim soldiers who
were fighting the infidels on the remote borders of the Empire. This worried
Hozaifa-Yamani, one of the most trusted confidants and a prominent disciple of
the Holy Prophet. He advised the Third Caliph as a precaution to unify Muslims
and prevent diversity in recitals. The Third Caliph again entrusted the work to
Zaid. Zaid did what Hozaifa had suggested and it was adopted as the official
version to which the Third Caliph gave his assent. Several copies of that
official version were made and despatched to various parts of the Empire so
that people could revise their versions accordingly. There was no complaint of
any omissions, additions or alterations to the Caliph or his party. Even the
opponent parry who were making charge after charge against the Caliph about
deviation from the right path made no complaint The Third Caliph was blamed for
ordering that other variations from the official version be burnt or destroyed.
But no one charged him with adulteration of the text of the Qur'an. However, in
spite of the utmost care taken by the ruling party over the publication of the
official version and the destruction of other versions, they did not succeed;
all the other current recitations have come down to us in the form of the seven
or ten recitations. The Omayyid rulers could not stop the publication of the
other recitations.
The presence of the seven or the ten variations of the recitation, and the
absence of any copy or record of a different version of the Holy Qur'an after
the publication of the received version, is the best proof of the genuineness
of the received version. However, unwarranted remarks attributed to members of
the ruling party, before official assent was given to the received version,
provided an opportunity for Muslims and others who could not otherwise disturb
the miraculous force of the Qur'an, to spread rumours about the incompleteness
and incorrect arrangement of the received version. These rumours gained
currency alongside other religious and political diversifies. And, in spite of
the efforts of the Holy lmams of the
House of the Holy Prophet, these rumours found their way into the books of traditions,
first among the Sunni School and even Shia books of traditions were not
untouched by them. As a result, some of the scholars of both schools who failed
to make a proper examination of the external and internal evidence concerning
the traditions accepted these rumours in the face of the indisputable
genuineness of the Holy Qur'an.
Another reason for the rise of doubts was the traditions which assert that the
collection of the Qur'an by Ali was in one form and those by Abdullah ibne
Mas'ood and Obai ibne Kaab were in different forms. There are traditions about
the collection of Ali:whether he refused to place his collection at the
disposal of the ruling party and the public, or whether the ruling party
refused to accept it when it was offered, and whether this happened in the
reign of the First Caliph (as Majlisi maintains) or of the Second Caliph. The
collection remained with Ali and his successors in the office of Imamat out of
the reach of the public, and no one has claimed to have seen it or copied it,
except for a few traditionalists who maintained that the Sixth Holy Imam, Jafar
ibne Muhammad, showed the collection to them and allowed them to glimpse it,
and that in one small Sura they found the names of seventy Munafiqa. This is,
however, contrary to Ali's declaration that no one must see the collection
before the Last Imam appears. According t6 the tradition, the Sixth 'main gave
the collection to the traditionalist and ordered him not to look at it,
but he disobeyed him. The story seems absurd. Why would the Imam entrust the
collection to some one who would disobey him? In spite of all these
contradictory traditions, there is no doubt that the collection in question was
a fully detailed commentary on the Qur'an containing the revelations with their
interpretations alongside. This was not the only miraculous text presented to
mankind. The collections of Abdullah ibne Mas'ood and Obai ibne kaab and other
acknowledged early students of the Qur'an surely had notes and interpretations
for their own guidance, and may have had a different arrangement of the verses
and chapters for commentary purposes (chronologically and subjectwise). These
collections would be different from the current received version within the
reach of people today.
The commentary nature of the collection of the close companions of the Holy
Prophet is obvious from such traditions as the following: Abdullah ibne Mas'ood
would recite with the verse of Muta (temporary marriage) the phrase ila ajalin
(until a term) after 8 Famastamta tumbihi minhunna (when you commit Muta with
them). It is obvious that this phrase was used by him as an explanatory note of
guidance and of protest when the Muta was prohibited by the Second Caliph. Then
there is the account that ibne Abaas used to recite Fi Aliyin (about Ali) after
Maonzila ilaik (that which has already been sent unto thee) in verse 5:67 as a
reference to the significance of the revelation when the people were neglecting
it Or, in the verse Innallahastafa Aadama wa Noohan, there is a tradition that
.ibne Abbas added Aala Muhammad (the descendants of Muhammad) After Aala Imran,
or replaced Aala Imran by Aala Muhammad. if this tradition is true, Abdullah
ibne Abbas might have said that Aala Muhammad was meant, but not in the words
of the Qur'an; if the words of the Qur'an were Zorriyatun Ba-zahu min Ba'z, Ali
could not be included in Aale Muhammad and if Zorriyatun Ba'zuhu is omitted,
people other than the House of the Holy Prophet would be included in the Aal
(descendants) in the same way as all the followers of Pharaoh are included in
AaIe Firaun.
In short, the existence of the different collections of the Qur'an by different
companions of the Holy Prophet, which were never published and which never
gained currency among the Muslims (in part or in whole), can have value only as
a commentary to the text. And this is why no student of the Holy Book ever
raised objection to the received version, even though they voiced other
complaints and grievances of religious importance against the ruling party, and
did complain against the Third Caliph for committing an act of desecration by
burning some copies of the Qur'an.
In summary, causes of doubts were:
1 The unwarranted, unauthorised and unnecessary attempt of the First Caliph and
his party to make their own collections of the Qur'an
2 The unwarranted and irresponsible utterances of some members of the ruling
party about the incompleteness their own collection 3 The Claimed existence of
a special collection of the Qur'an by Ali, complete in all aspects and respects
4 The unsuccessful attempt of the Third Caliph to stop the other seven or ten
recitations of the Qur'an except for the official version by burning and
destroying some copies of the Qur'an with the other recitations
5 The system of dotting and the introduction of the vowel signs and the other
pronunciation marks by Hajjaj bin Yousuf about the end of the first century
A.H., the purpose of which was to guard the recitation of the Qur'an from
mispronunciation by non-Arabs
6 The above gave opportunities to the enemies of Islam, external and internal, to criticise the authenticity of the Qur'an, to resist its miraculous force by adulterating the text by making insertions, and to make false claims about the omission and alteration of certain verses of the Qur'an