Al-Waqi'a Explained

Number:56
Number-3:056
Al-Wāqiʻah
Name-Ar:الواقعة
Name-En:The Event
Prev Sura:Quran 55
Next Sura:Quran 57
Classification:Meccan
Othernames:The Event, The Inevitable
Juz:27
Rukus:3
Verses:96
Words:428
Letters:1723
Audio:Chapter 56, Al-Waqi'a (Mujawwad) - Recitation of the Holy Qur'an.mp3

Al-Wāqiʻa[1] (ar| الواقعة; "The Inevitable"[2] or "The Event") is the 56th surah (chapter) of the Quran. Muslims believe it was revealed in Mecca (see Meccan surah), specifically around 7 years before the Hijrah (622), the migration of Muhammad to Medina.[3] The total number of verses in this surah is 96. It mainly discusses the afterlife according to Islam, and the different fates people will face in it.

Summary

The afterlife (akhirah) is the main topic discussed in the chapter. Picking up from the preceding chapter, Ar-Rahman, which discusses the rewards of Paradise (jannah), this chapter also mentions them and then contrasts them with the punishment of hell. The chapter also distinguishes the three classes of people in the afterlife, "the foremost", "the companions of the right" and "the companions of the left": the first two groups will enter paradise while the companions of the left will go to hell. Here, "the right" is associated with goodness, the righteous will be seated to the right of God's throne and receive their records of deeds in their right hand. The "foremost" refers to a special group of people who will have an even better fate than the companions of the right in the afterlife. Quranic commentators differ on understanding who the foremost is. They variously identify the foremost with the prophets, the saints, the truthful, the martyrs, the first to accept Islam, and others.

Ayat (verses)

Revelation history

According to Quranic commentators, the chapter is a Meccan sura, that is, it was revealed during the Meccan period of Muhammad's prophethood. Some commentators, although not in the majority, argue that part of it was revealed during the Medinan period. Some of such commentators maintain that verses 39–40 are the verses that was from the Medinan period, while some say 81–82, and others say 83.

The traditional Egyptian chronology puts the chapter as the 41st chapter by the order of revelation (after Al-Tur), while the Nöldeke Chronology (by the orientalist Theodor Nöldeke) puts it as the 46th.[5] The chapter's position in the Quran, which is not determined by the revelation order, is as the 56th chapter, right after Ar-Rahman which discusses partly related topic.

Exegesis

Q56:22 Houri

See main article: Article.

According to Ibn Kathir, in paradise there will be,

In The Message of The Qur'an, Muhammad Asad asserts that the "noun hur - rendered as 'companions pure' - is a plural of both ahwar (masculine) and hawra' (female), either of which describes a person distinguished by hawar', which latter term primarily denotes 'intense whiteness of the eyeballs and lustrous black of the iris'. Asad as well as Yusuf Ali and Marmaduke Pickthall translate this verse as:[6] [7] [8]

The Enlightening Commentary into the Light of the Holy Qur'an says, "the people of Paradise shall have spouses from amongst houri with fair complexions and wide black eyes who are preserved like pearls in shells".[9] [10]

External links

Bibliography

Notes and References

  1. Web site: Tafsir Ibn Kathir (English): Surah Al Waqiah . Quran 4 U. Ibn Kathir. Ibn Kathir. 27 January 2020.
  2. Web site: Qur'anic Verses (56:77-9) on Carpet Page. World Digital Library. 1 March 2013.
  3. Book: The Message of the Quran, M. Asad, 1982, Introduction Surah Al-Waqi'a. According to all available evidence, this surah was revealed about seven years before the Prophet's hijrah..
  4. Book: Wherry . Elwood Morris . Elwood Morris Wherry . A Complete Index to Sale's Text, Preliminary Discourse, and Notes . 1896 . Kegan Paul, Trench, Trubner, and Co . London.
  5. Book: Ernst, Carl W. . How to Read the Qur'an: A New Guide, with Select Translations. 5 December 2011. Univ of North Carolina Press. 978-0-8078-6907-9 . 39.
  6. Book: The Message of the Quran, Muhammad Asad, 1982, Commentary on 56:22. And [with them will be their] companions pure, most beautiful of eye, like unto pearls [still] hidden in their shells. [And this will be] a reward for what they did [in life]..
  7. Book: The Quran, tranl. by Pickthall, Surah 56:22. "And (there are) fair ones with wide, lovely eyes".
  8. Book: The Holy Quran, Yusuf Ali, Surah 56:22 "And (there will be) Companions with beautiful big and lustrous eyes".
  9. Web site: An Enlightening Commentary into the Light of the Holy Qur'an vol. 17 . 380. Al Islam.org. 27 January 2020.
  10. Web site: Surah Al-Waqiah.