R
Rodrigo_Bivar
Guest
No. I just won’t let you get away with making nonsensical nonsense to hoodwink people who aren’t familiar with Islam.since our new friend rodrigo seems to think that he has new arguments for this topic, i thought i’d bring back this thread, since it already has much of what needs to be said.
Jeez - thanks. That way, I’ll have a reference for future debates with Muslims who think their knowledge of Arabic can overcome common sense and logic.i’ll address this first point, because it’s going to take some time to dig up the original arabic for the various hadeeths quoted by rodrigo (the references aren’t the common ones found in the standard prints for saheeh al-bukhaaree).
Tafsirs are merely opinions from Islamic scholars - they can be wrong - particularly if what they say goes against common sense and historical evidence.first, let’s take a look at the verse in question. Allah says, “he is the one sent among the unlettered people, a messenger from them reciting His verses to them, purifying them (i.e., the unlettered people) and teaching them the Book (i.e., the Quran) and the wisdom (i.e., the sunnah) and surely, previously, they used to be in manifest misguidance.”
let us now look at what the Quranic commentators said about this verse, particularly the word ummiyyeen - unlettered people.
at-tabaree says, “they are the arabs, and we have clarified in what has passed the meaning for why illiterate is said about the illiterate one.” and previous to this, at-tabaree said regarding 2:78, “it is meant by unlettered people (ummiyyeen), those who do not write, nor read.”
al-baghawee says, “meaning, the arabs who were an illiterate nation, they did not write, nor read.”
tafseer al-jalaalain has, “the arabs. and the unlettered one is whoever do not write, nor read a book.”
al-qurtubee says, “the unlettered ones are the arabs, all of them; whoever of them wrote and whoever didn’t write because they were not the people of the Book. and it is said: the unlettered ones are those who do not write, and the quraish were like that.”
How can the Arabs be illiterate? I can find dozens of sahih Bukhari hadiths about the companions of Muhammad WRITING.
Abu Bakr wrote. Muawiya wrote. Ali bin Abu Talib wrote. Many many people wrote. You just have to do a check of Bukhari hadiths to find out writing was not uncommon among Arabs of that time. There was pre-Islamic Arab poetry. Now, you’re trying to tell me the poets were illiterate?
Was Asma bint Marwan illiterate? Was Thabit ibn Qurrah illiterate?
I know Muhammad in a fit of pique called his people illiterate - you can’t take that literally because we know many people wrote.
Here, Allah divided the world into the ‘People of the Book’ and the ummiyeen. This proves Ummi here means people who are unlettered, not illiterate (although some translators claim this). Here are the reasons:
- We know 7th century Arabs could read and write, despite Muhammad’s fit of pique.
- Allah made it clear ummiyyeen is opposite to the ‘people of the book’ in 3:20.
Transliterated Arabic Fa-in hajjooka faqul aslamtu wajhiya lillahi wamani ittabaAAani waqul lillatheena ootoo alkitaba waal-ommiyyeena aaslamtum fa-in aslamoo faqadi ihtadaw wa-in tawallaw fa-innama AAalayka albalaghu waAllahu baseerun bialAAibadi
