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Al Hejr

15th chapter of the Qur'an


15th chapter of the Qur'an

FieldValue
Name_of_SurahAl-Ḥijr
Arabic_nameالحِجْرْ
ClassificationMakkan
Meaning_of_the_nameThe Stoneland
Other_namesAl-Hijr Valley
Sura_number15
Number_of_verses99
Juz'_number13-14
Hizb_number27
Number_of_Rukus6
Number_of_words657
Number_of_letters2882
Harf-e-Mukatta'atʾAlif Lām Rā الر
Previous_SuraQuran 14
Next_SuraQuran 16
soundChapter 15, Al-Hijr (Murattal) - Recitation of the Holy Qur'an.mp3
Note

the Quranic sura

|Juz'_number=13-14 |Harf-e-Mukatta'at= ʾAlif Lām Rā الر

مَدَائِن صَالِح ٱلْحِجْر Hegra

Al-Ḥijr () is the 15th sūrah (chapter of the Quran). It has 99 verses (āyāt).

The asbāb al-nuzūl (timing and contextual background) is that it was revealed in Mecca revealed during the middle period and received by Muhammad shortly after sura Yusuf. Like other surahs of this period, it praises God. Parts of the verses 4-74 are preserved in the Ṣan‘ā’1 lower text.

This surah takes its name from its 80th āya, which refers to a pre-Islamic archaeological site called Hegra ().

Summary

:**1-3 ** Unbelievers will one day wish themselves Muslims :**4-5 ** Every nation has its day of grace :**6 ** Muhammad charged with demoniacal possession by the disbelievers (the Quraysh) :7 The unbelievers say a true prophet would have come with a company of angels :**8 ** Angels are not sent to gratify curiosity, but to minister judgment :**9 ** God the revealer and preserver of the Quran :**10-11 ** The former prophets were laughed to scorn :**12-15 ** The scoffing Quraysh judicially blinded :**16-20 ** God declares his glory in the heaven and the earth :**21-22 ** He is active in every part of Nature :**23-25 ** He is the God of life, death, and judgment :**26-29 ** God says men created of clay—the Jinn of fire :**29-33 ** Iblis, unlike the angels, refuses to prostrate to Adam :**34-38 ** He is cursed and respited until the judgment :**39-40 ** Satan declares to God his purpose to seduce men :**41-42 ** The elect are safe from Satan’s power :**43-44 ** The seven gates of hell will receive Satan’s followers :**45-50 ** Paradise joys in store for true believers :51-77 The story of Abraham and Lot's conflict :**78-79 ** The unbelieving Midianites are destroyed :**80-81 ** The scoffing inhabitants of al Hijr reject their prophets though accompanied with miracles :82-84 ** Rock-hewn houses fail to save them :85-86 The heaven and earth created in righteousness : 87 ** Command to repeat the seven verses (al-Fatiha) :88-90 Muhammad not to consider the prosperity of infidels :**91-93 ** The enemies of God will surely be punished :94-96 Muhammad commanded to preach boldly :**97-99 ** He is exhorted to praise and serve God until death

Central theme

This surah contains brief mentions of Tawhid, and provides an admonition to the disbelievers. The primary subjects of the surah are:

  1. cautioning the individuals who dismissed the message and
  2. providing solace and support to Muhammad,

The Quran never limits itself to mere rebuke; reproach and reprimand. It depends on its statute. The surah contains brief contentions for Tawhid and admonition in the tale of Adam and Satan.

Exegesis

15:9 Preservation of the Quran

Ibn Kathir says, "God, may He be exalted, stated that He is the One Who revealed the Dhikr to him, which is the Qur'an, and He is protecting it from being changed or altered".

Notes

References

  • Abdullah, A. (2011). Role of context and objectives of the Surah in shaping the episodes of the Qurʼanic narrative: the narrative of Lot as an example. American Journal of Islamic Social Sciences, 28(4), 31–64.
  • Boullata, I. J. (2000). Literary structures of religious meaning in the Qurʼān. London: Curzon Pr.
  • Haggar, D. A.Repetition: A key to qur'anic style, structure and meaning. (Order No. AAI3447474, Dissertation Abstracts International, A: The Humanities and Social Sciences, 1661.
  • Neuwirth, A. (2000). Referentiality and textuality in Sūrat al-Hijr: Some observations on the Qur'anic "canonical process" and the emergence of a community. (pp. 143–172). Curzon.
  • Ohlander, E. S. (2010). Qur'anic studies. (pp. 81–93). De Gruyter.

References

  1. Ibn Kathir. "Tafsir Ibn Kathir (English): Surah Al Hijr". Quran 4 U.
  2. (January 2012). "Ṣan'ā' 1 and the Origins of the Qur'ān". Der Islam.
  3. "The Quranic Arabic Corpus - Word by Word Grammar, Syntax and Morphology of the Holy Quran".
  4. (1896). "A Complete Index to [[Sale's Text]], Preliminary Discourse, and Notes". Kegan Paul, Trench, Trubner, and Co.
  5. Muhammad Farooq-i-Azam Malik (translator), Al-Qur'an, the Guidance for Mankind - English with Arabic Text (Hardcover) {{ISBN. 0-911119-80-9
  6. "Quran 15:9 Translation Yusuf Ali (Orig. 1938)". Islam Awakened.
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