What the Koran Really Says explained

What the Koran Really Says: Language, Text and Commentary
Author:Ibn Warraq
Country:United States
Language:English
Subject:Quran
Genre:Islamic history
Publisher:Prometheus Books
Pub Date:October 2002
Media Type:Print (Hardcover, Paperback), E-book
Pages:782
Isbn:978-1573929455
Oclc:633722447

What the Koran Really Says: Language, Text and Commentary (2002) is a book edited by Ibn Warraq and published by Prometheus Books. The book is a collection of classical essays, some translated for the first time, that provide commentary on the traditions and language of the Koran, discussing its grammatical and logical discontinuities, its Syriac and Hebrew foreign vocabulary, and its possible Christian, Coptic and Qumranic sources. The title is taken from German author Manfred Barthel's 1980 book Was wirklich in der Bibel steht ("What the Bible Really Says").

Within the book is an article written by Gerd R. Puin titled "Observations on Early Qu'ran Manuscripts in Sana'a". Professor Puin is a German scholar and an authority on Qur'anic historical orthography, the study and scholarly interpretation of ancient manuscripts, and a specialist in Arabic calligraphy. Professor Puin was the head of a restoration project, commissioned by the Yemeni government, which spent a significant amount of time examining the ancient Qur'anic manuscripts discovered in Sana'a, Yemen, in 1972. In an article in the 1999 Atlantic Monthly,[1] Puin is quoted as saying that:

Included papers

Introduction

Background

A Question of Language

Sources of the Koran: Essenian, Christian, Coptic

Suras, Suras, Suras

Emendations, Interpolations

Richard Bell: Introduction and Commentary

Poetry and the Koran

Manuscripts

Reviews

In his review of the book, political scientist, anarchist, and "angry Arab" As'ad AbuKhalil states that Ibn Warraq collected old writings by Orientalists who have been long discredited and added that "the more rigid and biased the Orientalists, the better for Warraq".[2]

Black Hills State University professor Ahrar Ahmad (2004) appreciated that this book and The Quest for the Historical Muhammad were 'less abrasive [and Warraq's] tone less mocking' than in his earliest work, which Ahmad deemed less scholarly.[3] He noted that "What the Koran Really Says has the ambitious objective to “desacralize” (...) the Arabic language, script, and scripture. He seems to think that simply placing Islam in the Middle Eastern milieu in terms of language, social influences, intellectual origins, or theological affinities with other religions and rituals is enough to question its authenticity."[3] Ahmad wondered further how the etymology of the Quran's language could possibly "destroy its legitimacy and authority", believing that Warraq criticised positions nobody held.[3]

Notes and References

  1. News: What Is the Koran? . Lester . Toby . The Atlantic . January 1999 . 10 April 2019 . en-US .
  2. AbuKhalil . As'ad. 2004. "The Islam Industry" and Scholarship: Review Article. Middle East Journal . 58. 1. 130–137. 4329978. Middle East Institute.
  3. Ahmad . Ahrar . 2004 . Warraq's War: A Critical Review . American Journal of Islam and Society . International Institute of Islamic Thought . 120–130 . 9 February 2022.