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PERSIAN TALES IN THE QUR'AN |
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songs of Iran were spread abroad among the tribes of Arabia. Thus Ibn Hisham
tells us that in the days of the Prophet, stories of Rustem, Isfandiyr, and the
ancient kings of Persia, were not only current at Medina, but that some of the
Coreish used delightedly to compare them with the similar tales in the Qur'an. He
adds as follows:
The Prophet of the Lord, when he sat in the assembly, used to pray there to
the Almighty, read to them from the Qur'an, and warn the Coreish of what in times
past had happened to the unbelieving nations. It so came to pass that one day
after he had left, Nadhr son of Al Hrith came in and told them stories of the
great Rustem and of Isfandiyr and the kings of Persia. Then he said, "I
swear by the Lord, that the stories of Muhammad are not better than my own; they
are nothing but tales of the past which he hath written out, just as I have written mine out." Then descended this passage:
They say these are
fables of the ancients which he hath caused to be written down, dictated by him
morning and evening. Say, He hath revealed the same who knoweth the sacred
things in heaven and earth; verily he is gracious and merciful.1 ...When
our verses are recited unto him, he saith, - Fables of the ancients.2 Woe
unto every lying and wicked one that heareth the verses of God read unto him,
then proudly resisteth, as if he heard them not; wherefore denounce unto him a
fearful punishment.3
These stories of Rustem, Isfandiyr, and other ancient kings of Persia, are
similar to what Ferdosi, some centuries after the Prophet, turned into song in
his Shahnma. Certainly as the Arabs used to read of the ancient sovereigns,
they could not have been ignorant of stories such as those of Jamshid, the
ascent of Ahriman out of darkness, Art Vrf, the bridge Chinavad, and such
like. Our object is by careful
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search to ascertain whether these stories and the like had any effect on the Qur'an
and Tradition. We are sure that they had; and that Persian tales and
doctrines form one of the Sources of Muslim faith. Many also of the stories,
literary, imaginative, and religious, were not confined to Iran, but were
current among the Hindus in India, and spread abroad amongst the people
travelling by Herat and Merve, and so westward. It will be asked what our proof
of all this is; and we propose accordingly to quote some passages from the Qur'an
and Tradition, and then to compare these with what may be found in ancient
Zoroastrian and Hindu writings.
We begin with the ascent, Mirjof the Prophet. The following account of it
is in Surah xvii. 1:- Praise be to him who transported his servant by night from
the Sacred temple (of Mecca) to the farther Temple (Jerusalem) the surroundings
of which we have blessed, that we might shew him some of our signs, for he is
both the hearing and the seeing One. In the interpretation of this verse the
greatest difference has prevailed. Thus Ibn Ishac gives this account from Ayesha:
"The body of the Prophet did not disappear, but the Lord carried off his soul by
night." Tradition also tells us that the Prophet himself said: "Mine eyes
slept, but my heart was awake." 1 Mohee ood Deen is of the
same opinion; writing of the Ascent and Night Journey, he says, in explanation
of the above passage:
Praised be he that transported his servant; that is, released him from
material surroundings, and caused a spiritual separation
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