Holy Quran

Love of Quran
It is an undeniable fact that no book was ever held as dear as the Quran. There are numerous inspiring stories of people’s love of Quran. We need not go in the distinct past; a look at the biographies of our Ulama who passed away in the recent years is enough to prove this fact. Ramadan is the month of Quran, so we mention a few stories of the servants of Quran.

(1) Syed Ata Ullah Shah Bukhari (rahimahullah) was blessed with immense love of Quran. He used to say in his speeches: “In my life, there is only one thing that I love and only one thing that I hate. It is Quran that I love and it is the British that I hate.” In fact his love of Quran would force him to hate the British. Jews and Christians harbour hardnosed enmity towards Islam and this fact is spread over the holy pages of Quran.

(2) Hazrat Maulana Qari Fateh Muhammad had devoted himself for the service of Quran. Mufti Taqi Usmani rightly says: “Qari Fateh Muhammad was a living miracle of Quran. His tongue was all the time busy reciting the Quran. He was always engrossed in thinking the best ways of spreading Quran education. He was at home in different accents of recitation. During Ramadan, he would lead the prayer of traveeh and recite seven to ten parts of Quran in one night. In this way he would complete the Quran in three or four days. Then he would again recite the whole Quran in some other accent. By the end of Ramadan he would recite the Quran for about ten times in traveeh alone.

(3) Sheikh-ul-Hadith Maulana Zakariya (rahimahullah) was a hafiz and recite the Quran immensely. For 42 years, it had been his routine that he would recite the whole Quran in each day of Ramadan. About his family women, he used to say, “Our family women spend most of their night time in listening to Quran and in the day time, it is their routine to recite about one half of the Quran. My grandmother was hafiz and it was her routine to recite one manzil of the Quran daily. And during Ramadan, she would recite the whole Quran plus one-third of it again in one day. In addition to this, she would recite thousands of tasbeeh as her permanent routine.

(4) Hazrat Mufti Rasheed Ahmad (rahimahullah) memorized the whole Quran in just three months at the age of 46 years. He did this in such a way that he would easily memorize one part of the Quran in one hour. Despite his tough scholarly engagements, he would spend a large amount of his time in reciting the Quran. He would recite five parts in day and as many at night in tahajjud prayer.

(5) Maulana Subhan Mahmud, sheikh-ul-hadith of Darul Uloom Karachi, was blessed with a special fondness of reciting the Quran. For a long time, it was his routine to recite the whole Quran daily. On becoming old and weak, he would recite more 18 parts of Quran. He continued with this routine till the day he breathed his last. During Ramadan, he would set aside all other activities and remained busy reciting the Quran day and night.

(6) Hazrat Qari Raheem Bukhsh was blessed with such immense love of Quran that except for natural human needs, he would not spend a single moment in which he was not teaching or reciting the Quran. His punctuality was proverbial. He never absented himself from teaching duty during 40 years. Whatever salary he withdrew from the madrasah, he returned it to the madrasah in a short period. His son Qari Abdullah said, “Since childhood, I never see my father miss his tahajjud prayer. He would recite three parts of Quran in tahajjud prayer.”

Our history is full of Quran lovers. They were the people who not only recited the Quran by tongue but their every word and action gave the fragrance of Quran, and their routines and prayers were practical explanation of Quran.

Re: Holy Quran

in the days when i read Quran in a manner so fast that hardly any word cud be distinguished from the other, I cud finish one parah in around half an hour....
that wud take me 15 hours of continous reading to finsh the whole of Quran reading it without anyone, including me, being able to pick up any sense from it....

i wonder how these people used to finish the Quran in one night....
did they actually read it or just gazed across the words????

in contrast i find those stories more inspiring which tell of people who spent the whole night reciting just one verse....

Re: Holy Quran

Quran sharif should be read slowly as Quran itself advises to be read slowy and with understanding.

Re: Holy Quran

If one knows the correct tajweed and knows the Quran by heart then it is do able. Its an authentic Rivayat that Abu Bakr (RA) used to finish one Quran between Isha and Fajr prayer.

Re: Holy Quran

Unlikely.

Correct Tajweed would just make recitation longer, due to the pulling etc.

Not sure about some of these, still the Quran is a miraculous book from Allah.

Allah knows best.

Re: Holy Quran

Here is an authentic Hadith form Bukhari

*Volume 6, Book 61, Number 572: *

Narrated 'Abdullah bin Amr bin Al-As: My father got me married to a lady of a noble family, and often used to ask my wife about me, and she used to reply, "What a wonderful man he is! He never comes to my bed, nor has he approached me since he married me." When this state continued for a long period, my father told the story to the Prophet who said to my father, "Let me meet him." Then I met him and he asked me, "How do you fast?" I replied, "I fast daily," He asked, "How long does it take you to finish the recitation of the whole Quran?" I replied, "I finish it every night." On that he said, "Fast for three days every month and recite the Qur'an (and finish it) in one month." I said, "But I have power to do more than that." He said, "Then fast for three days per week." I said, "i have the power to do more than that." He said, "Therefore, fast the most superior type of fasting, (that is, the fasting of (prophet) David who used to fast every alternate day; and finish the recitation of the whole Qur'an In seven days." I wish I had accepted the permission of Allah's Apostle as I have become a weak old man. It is said that 'Abdullah used to recite one-seventh of the Qur'an during the day-time to some of his family members, for he used to check his memorization of what he would recite at night during the daytime so that it would be easier for him to read at night. And whenever he wanted to gain some strength, he used to give up fasting for some days and count those days to fast for a similar period, for he disliked to leave those things which he used to do during the lifetime of the Prophet.

My point again is that reciting Quran in a night is do able and its done by Sahaba (maybe not advisable, though)

Re: Holy Quran

the part of "understanding" is most. The Quran stresses the individual understanding. we have left all that to the so called "Ulamas"

Re: Holy Quran

^you're absolutely right. in facts kids must learn Quran sharif in their own language and then also learn arabic.
because Quran is delivered in arabic. and literal understanding makes it most fulfilling and enables us to adopt in life.
ulemas, mulvis and mualims might be useful if they know and deliver Quranic teachings honestly.

Re: Holy Quran

Its better to read the Quran in arabic with translation in your own language. And yes, constant reading can speed up ur reading and one can finish it in one night. It all depend person to person. I personally, in a matter of the Quran, slow reader. I take my sweet time to read each n everyword n recite it and when time permits read with translation.

Thats leads me to ask one question since we r on the topic, is reading the Quran equivalent to listening to the Quran?

Re: Holy Quran

It might be the case, if we practice the same respect we do when we read it. After all we all finish one Quran in Taraweeh just by listening to it and it has its Ajar (sawaab)

Re: Holy Quran

When did he sleep?

Re: Holy Quran

^^^I dont know, but I am sure he did.

I will ask him and let you know if it is such a concern for you:)

Re: Holy Quran

It is a concern. 3 pages per min for 7 hrs ... do the math (960 pages on an average Quran). You can do it only if you do not sleep, do not eat.

Re: Holy Quran

It was not a daily practice. Every now and then is not unusual. I heard of one night Khatmul Quran in Taraveeh during Ramadhan in Karachi.

Re: Holy Quran

What is logic of putting a religious topic in philosophy and science section,
Because i cant find any sicence or philosophy in this topic.

Re: Holy Quran

^^^ and you can find religion in religious threads:blush:

Re: Holy Quran

Too trivial :hoonh: