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Bismillaahir Rahmaanir Raheem
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Translators: Ahmed Ali ● Amatul Rahman Omar ● Daryabadi ● Faridul Haque ● Hamid S. Aziz ● Maulana Mohammad Ali ● Pickthall ● Sarwar ● Shakir ● Yusuf Ali
Recitation by Mishary Al-Alfasy
The words used in the original are humazat il-lumazah. In Arabic hamz and
lamz are so close in meaning that they are sometimes used as synonyms and
sometimes with a little difference in the shade of meaning. But this difference
is not definite and clear, for the meaning given to hamz by some Arabic speaking
people themselves is given to lamz by other Arabic speaking peoples. On the
contrary, the meaning given to lamz by some people is given to hamz by others.
Here, since both the words appear together and the words humazat il-lumazat have
been used, they give the meaning that it has become a practice with the
slanderer that he insults and holds others in contempt habitually. He raises his
finger and winks at one man, finds fault with the lineage and person of another,
taunts one in the face and backbites another; creates differences between
friends and stirs up divisions between brothers; calls the people names and
satirizes and defames them.
This second sentence after the first sentence
by itself gives the meaning that he slanders others because of his pride of
wealth. The words jama a malan for collecting money suggest the abundance of
wealth; then the words counting it over and over again depict the person’s
miserliness and his selfish hoarding of wealth.
Another meaning also can
be: He thinks that his wealth will make him immortal. That is, he is so
engrossed in amassing wealth and counting it over and over again that he has
forgotten death and he never bothers to consider that a time will come when he
will have to depart from the world empty-handed, leaving everything behind.
The word in the original is la yunbadhanna. Nabdh in Arabic is used for
throwing away a thing regarding it as worthless and mean. This by itself
indicates that because of his wealth he thinks that he is a great man but on the
Day Of Resurrection he will be hurled into Hell as a mean and contemptible
object.
The word hutamah in the original is from hatm, which means to
smash, crush and break into pieces. Hell has been described by this epithet
because it will crush and break to pieces whatever is thrown into it because of
its depth and its fire.
Nowhere else in the Quran has the fire of Hell
been called the fire of Allah. Here, its ascription to Allah not only expresses
its dreadfulness but it also shows how the wrath and contempt of Allah envelops
those who become proud and arrogant with the worldly wealth. That is why Allah
has described that fire as His own Fire into which they will be hurled.
Tattaliu is from ittalaa, which means to climb and mount to the top, and also to
be aware and informed. Afidah is plural of fuwad, which means the heart. But
this word is not used for the organ which throbs in the breast, but for the seat
of man’s understanding and consciousness, his feelings and desires, beliefs and
thoughts, motives and intentions, Thus, one meaning of the rising of the fire to
the hearts is that this fire will reach the place which is the centre of man’s
evil thoughts, false beliefs, impure desires and feelings, and wicked motives
and intentions. The second meaning is that the Fire of Allah will not be blind
like the fire of the world, which burns up the deserving and the non-deserving
alike, but it will reach the heart of every culprit and discover the nature of
his crime and then punish him according to his guilt.
That is, after the
culprits have been thrown into it, Hell will be closed in upon them without
leaving any slit or opening anywhere, in order to choke and suffocate them.
Fi amad-im-mumaddahah can have several meanings:
(1) That the gates
of Hell will be closed and tall columns will be erected on them.
(2) That the
culprits will be tied to the tall columns.
(3) According to Ibn Abbas, the
flames of the fire shall be rising high like tall columns.