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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
It is derived from the word wan-nazi`at with which the Surah opens.
Period of Revelation
According to Hadrat Abdullah bin
Abbas, this Surah was sent down after Surah An-Naba. Its subject matter also
testifies that it belongs to the earliest period at Makkah.
Theme and Subject Matter
Its theme is affirmation of
Resurrection and the life hereafter; It also warns of the consequences of
belying the Messenger of God.
The Surah opens with oaths sworn by the
angels who take the soul at deaths and those who hasten to carryout Allah's
Commands, and those who conduct the affairs of the universe according to Divine
Will, to assure that the Resurrection will certainly come to pass and the second
life after death will certainly take place. For the angels who are employed to
pluck out the soul today can also be employed to restore the soul tomorrow, and
the angels who promptly execute Allah's Commands and conduct the affairs of the
universe today can also upset the order of the universe tomorrow by orders of
the same God and can also bring about a new order.
After this the people
have been told, so as to say: "This work which you regard as absolutely
impossible, is not any difficult for Allah, for which He may have to make
lengthy preparations. Just a single jolt will upset this system of the world and
a second jolt will be enough to cause you to appear as living beings in the new
world. At that time the same people who were wont to deny it, would be trembling
with fear and seeing with awe struck eyes all that they thought was impossible.
Then, relating the story of the Prophet Moses and Pharaoh briefly, the
people have been warned to the effect: "You know full well what fate the Pharaoh
met in consequence of belying the Messenger and rejecting the guidance brought
by him and endeavoring to defeat his mission by trickery and deceit. If you do
not learn any lesson from it and do not change your ways and attitude
accordingly, you also will have to meet the same fate.
Then, in vv.
27-13, arguments have been given for the Hereafter and life after death. In this
regard, the deniers have been asked the question:"Is your resurrection a more
difficult task or the creation of the huge Universe which spreads around you to
infinite distances with myriads of its stars and planets? Your recreation cannot
be difficult for the God for Whom this was an easy task. Thus, after presenting
in a single sentence, a decisive argument for the possibility of the Hereafter,
attention has been drawn to the earth and its provisions that have been arranged
in it for the sustenance of man and animal and of which everything testifies
that it has been created with great wisdom for fulfilling some special purpose.
Pointing to this the question has been left for the intellect of man to ponder
for itself and form the opinion whether calling man to account after having
delegated authority and responsibilities to a creature like him in this wise
system would be more in keeping with the demands of wisdom, or that he should
die after committing all sorts of misdeeds in the world and should perish and
mix in the dust for ever and should never be called to account as to how he
employed the authority and fulfilled the responsibilities entrusted to him.
Instead of discussing this question, in vv. 34-41, it has been said: "When the
Hereafter is established, men's eternal future will be determined on the
criterion as to which of them rebelled against his God transgressing the bounds
of service and made the material benefits and pleasures his objective of life
and which of them feared standing before his Lord and refrained from fulfilling
the unlawful desires of the self." This by itself provides the right answer to
the above question to every such person who considers it honestly, free from
stubbornness. For the only rational, logical and moral demand of giving
authority and entrusting responsibilities to man in the world is that he should
be called to account on this very basis ultimately and rewarded or punished
accordingly.
In conclusion, the question of the disbelievers of Makkah as
to when Resurrection will take place, has been answered. They asked the Holy
Prophet this question over and over again. In reply it has been said that the
knowledge of the time of its occurrence rests with Allah alone. The Messenger is
there only to give the warning that it will certainly come. Now whoever wishes
may mend his ways, fearing its coming, and whoever wishes may behave and conduct
himself as he likes, fearless of its coming. When the appointed time comes,
those very people who loved the life of this world and regarded its pleasures as
the only object of life, would feel that they had stayed in the world only for
an hour or so. Then they will realize how utterly they had ruined their future
for ever for the sake of the short lived pleasures of the world.
Here, the object for which an oath has been sworn by beings having five
qualities has not been mentioned; but the theme that follows by itself leads to
the conclusion that the oath has been sworn to affirm that the Resurrection is a
certainty, which must come to pass, when all dead men shall be resurrected. Nor
is there any mention as to what are the beings possessed of the qualities.
However, a large number of the Companions and their immediate successors and
most of the commentators have expressed the opinion that they are the angels.
Hadrat `Abdullah bin Mas`ud, Hadrat `Abdullah bin `Abbas, Masruq, Sa`id bin
Jubair, Abu salih Abud-Duha and Suddi; say that "those who pluck out from the
depths and those who draw out gently" imply the angels, who wrench out the soul
of man at death from the very depths of his body, from its every fiber. "Those
who glide about swiftly", according to Hadrat Ibn Mas`ud, Mujahid, Sa`id bin
Jubair and Abu Salih, also imply the angels, who hurry about swiftly in
execution of Divine Commands as though they were gliding through space. The same
meaning of "those who hasten out as in a race" has been taken by Hadrat `Ali,
Mujahid, Masruq, Abu Salih and Hasan Bari, and hastening out implies that each
one of them hurries on his errand as soon as he receives the first indication of
Divine Will. "Those who conduct the affairs" also imply the angels as has been
reported from Hadrat `Ali, Mujahid, 'Ata' Abu -Salih, Hasan Bari;, Qatadah,
Rabi` bin Anas and Suddi. In other words, these are the workers of the Kingdom
of the Universe, who are conducting all the affairs of the world in accordance
with Allah's Command and Will. Though this meaning of these verses has not been
reported in any authentic Hadith from the Holy Prophet, while this meaning has
been given by some major Companions and their immediate successors and pupils,
one is led to form the view that they must have obtained this knowledge from the
Holy Prophet himself.
Now the question arises: On what basis has the oath
been sworn by these angels for the occurrence of the Resurrection and life after
death when they themselves are as imperceptible as the thing for the occurrence
of which they have been presented as an evidence and as an argument. In our
opinion the reason is (and Allah has the best knowledge) that the Arabs were not
deniers of the existence of the angels. They themselves admitted that at the
death the soul was taken out by the angels; they also believed that the angels
moved at tremendous speeds; they could reach any place between the earth and the
heavens instantly and promptly execute any errand that was entrusted to them.
They also acknowledged that the angels are subordinate to Divine Will and they
conduct the affairs of the universe strictly and precisely in accordance with
Divine Will; they are not independent and masters of their will. They regarded
them as daughters of Allah out of ignorance and worshiped them as deities, but
they did not believe that they possessed the real authority as well. Therefore,
the basis of the reasoning from the above mentioned attributes for the
occurrence of the Resurrection and life after death is that the angels who took
the soul by the order of God, could also restore the soul by the order of the
same God; and the angels who conducted the affairs of the universe by the order
of God could also upset this universe by the order of the same God whenever . He
so ordered them and could also bring about a new world order. They would not
show any negligence or delay in the execution of His Command.
2The first
jolt implies the jolt which will destroy the earth and everything on it, and the
second jolt at which all dead men will rise up from death and from their graves.
This same state has been described in Surah Az-Zumar, thus: "And when the
Trumpet shall be blown on that Day, all those who are in the heavens and the
earth shall fall down dead except those whom Allah may allow (to live). Then the
Trumpet shall be blown again and they will all stand up, looking around." (v.
68)
3"Some hearts", because, according to the Qur'an, only the
disbelievers, the wicked people and the hypocrites will be terror-stricken on
the Resurrection Day, the righteous believers will remain secure from this
tenor. About them in Surah Al-Anbiya' it has been said: "The time of great
fright will not trouble them at all; the angels will rush. forth to receive
them, saying: `This is the very Day which you were promised'." (v. 103)
4That is, when they were told that they would surely be raised back to life
after death, they started mocking it, saying to one another, "Well, if we have
really to be restored to our former state of life, then we would certainly be
doomed. "
5That is, "They are mocking it as an impossibility, whereas it
is not at all a difficult task for Allah for the performance of which He may
have to make lengthy preparations. For it only a single shout or cry is enough
at which your dust of ash will gather together from wherever it lay, and you
will suddenly find yourself alive on the back of the earth. Thinking this return
to be a return to loss, you may try to escape from it however hard you may, but
it will inevitably take place; it cannot be averted by your denial, escape or
mockery."
6As the denial of the Resurrection and Hereafter by the
disbelievers of Makkah and their mockery of it was not, in fact, rejection of a
philosophy but belying Allah's Messengers, and the tricks that they were
employing against the Holy Prophet (upon whom be Allah's peace) were not against
an ordinary man but were meant to frustrate the mission of Allah's Messenger,
the story of the Prophet Moses and the Pharaoh is being related before giving
additional arguments for the occurrence of the Hereafter so that they are warned
of the consequences of fighting with the Messenger and resisting the God Who
sent him.
7According to general opinion among the commentators "the
sacred . valley of 'Tuwa" means "the sacred valley which was named Tuwa". But,
besides this, two other meanings of it also have been given:
(1) "The
valley that was blessed and made sacred twice" . for it was first made sacred
when Allah spoke to Moses in it for the first time, and it was blessed and made
sacred for the second time when the Prophet Moses led the children of Israel out
of Egypt and brought them into it; and
(2) "called out to him in the
sacred valley in the night," and this is according to the meaning of tuwa in the
Arabic idiom.
8Here, one should understand a few things well:
(1)
The dialogue that took place between the Prophet Moses and Allah Almighty at the
time of appointing him to the office of Prophethood has been related at some
places briefly and at others in full detail in the Qur'an as the occasion
demanded. Here; brevity was the need; therefore, only a resume has been given.
Fuller details are found in Ta Ha: 9-48, Ash-Shua`ra': 10-17, An Naml: 7-12, AI-Qasas:
29-35.
(2) The rebellion of the Pharaoh referred to here relates to his
transgressing the bounds of service and rebelling both against the Creator and
against His creatures. As for his rebellion against the Creator, it is being
mentioned a little below when he gathered his people together and prolaimed: "I
am your lord, the supreme." As against the creatures his rebellion was that he
had divided his subjects into classes; he treated the weak classes tyrannically
and had reduced his entire nation to slavery as has been mentioned in Al-Qasas:
4 and Az-Zukhruf: 54.
(3) The instruction given to Moses was: "Go, you
and your brother Aaron, to Pharaoh for he has transgressed all bounds. Talk to
him gently; maybe that he is convinced by admonition or is imbued with fear."
(Ta Ha: 44). One model of the gentle speech has been given in these verses,
which shows what right method a preacher should adopt when preaching to a
perverted man. Other models are given in Ta Ha: 49-52, Ash-Shua`ra': 23-28, and
Al-Qasas: 37. These verses are of those in which Allah has taught the correct
methods of preaching Islam in the Qur'an.
(4) The Prophet Moses had not
been sent to Pharaoh only for the deliverance of the children of Israel as some
people seem to think but the primary object of his appointment was to show
Pharaoh and his people the right way, and the second object was that if he did
not accept the right way, the children of Israel (who in fact were a Muslim
people) should be taken out of his slavery and from Egypt. This thing becomes
plain from these verses too, for there is no mention whatever in these of the
deliverance of the children of Israel, but the Prophet Moses has been commanded
to present the message of the Truth before Pharaoh, and this is confirmed by
those verses also in which the Prophet Moses has preached Islam as well as
demanded freedom of the children of Israel, e.g. see Al-A`raf 104-105, Ta Ha:
47-52, Ash-Shua ara': 16-17, 23-28. (For further explanation, see E.N. 74 of
Yunus).
(5) Here, "to adopt purity" means to adopt purity of belief,
morals and deeds, or, in other words, to accept Islam. Ibn Zaid says: "Wherever
in the Qur'an the word tazakka (purity) has been use, it implies acceptance of
Islam." As an example of this he has cited the following three verses: "And this
is the reward of him who adopts purity", i.e. accepts Islam; "and what would
make you know that he might adopt purity", i.e. becomes a Muslim (`Abasa:3);
"And you would not be responsible if he did not adapt purity", i.e. did not
become a Muslim (`Abasa: 7). (Ibn Jarir).
(6) "That I may guide you to
your Lord so that you may have fear (of Him)" means: "When you recognize your
Lord and come to know that you are His slave, and not a free man, you will
inevitably have fear of Him in your heart, for fear of God is the thing on which
depends the right attitude of man in the world. Without the knowledge and fear
of God no purity of the self can be possible."
9"The great Sign" : the
turning of the staff into a serpent, as has been mentioned at several places in
the Qur'an. Obviously there could be no greater sign than that a lifeless staff
should turn into a living serpent right in front of the eyes of the people, that
it should devour the artificial serpents produced by the magicians out of their
staffs and cords, and when the Prophet Moses should pick it up, it should become
a walking stick again. This was proof that it was Allah, Lord of the worlds, Who
had sent Moses as a Prophet.
10According to the details given at other
places in the Qur'an, he summoned skillful magicians from all over Egypt and
made them produce serpents out of sticks and cords in front of the assembled
people so that they were convinced that Moses (peace be upon him was not a
Prophet but a magician, and that the miracle worked by him of turning a staff
into a serpent, could also be worked by other magicians. But this device of his
recoiled upon himself and the defeated magicians themselves admitted that what
Moses (peace be on him) had displayed was no magic but a miracle.
11This
proclamation of Pharaoh has been mentioned at several places in the Qur'an. On
one occasion he said to the Prophet Moses: "If you took another one as a deity
beside me, I would cast you in the prison." (Ash-Shua`ra': 29). On another
occasion he had addressed his courtiers, saying: "O chiefs, I do not know of any
other god of yours than myself. (Al-Qasas.: 38). By this Pharaoh did not mean,
nor could he ever mean, that he himself was the creator of the universe and he
had made the world, nor that he denied the existence of Allah and claimed to be
lord of the universe, nor that he regarded only himself as a deity of the people
in the religious sense. In the Qur'an itself there is a clear testimony that as
regards religion he himself worshiped other gods. Once his courtiers said to
him: "Will you leave Moses and his people free to spread chaos in the land, and
let them discard you and your deities?" (Al A`raf: 127). And in the Qur'an
itself this saying of the Pharaoh also has been cited: "Had Moses been sent by
Allah, why were not bracelets of gold sent down to him, or a company of angels
as attendants?" (AzZukhruf: 53). Thus, in fact, he called himself a god and
supreme deity not in the religious but in the political sense. What he meant was
that he possessed the sovereign rights: no one beside him had the right to rule
in his kingdom and there was no superior power whose orders could be enforced in
the land. (For further explanation. see E.N. 85 of Al-A`raf, E.N. 21 of Ta Ha,
E.N.'s 24, 26 of Ash Shua'ra', E-N.'s 52, 53 of Al-Qasas E.N. 49 of Az-Zukhruf).
12"...who fears": who fears the consequences of denying God's Messenger,
which the Pharaoh experienced in the past.
13Now arguments are being
given for the possibility of Resurrection and life after death and their being
the very demand and requirement of wisdom.
14Here, creation implies the
recreation of men, and the heaven the entire firmament which contains countless
stars and planets, and innumerable solar systems and galaxies. means to say:
"You think that your resurrection after death is something extremely improbable
and you express wonder saying: `How is it possible that when our very bones will
have decayed and become rotten the scattered particles of our bodies will be
reassembled and made living once again?' But have you ever also considered
whether the great universe is harder to create or your own re-creation in the
form in which you were created in the first instance? The God Who created you in
the first instance cannot be powerless to create you once again." This same
argument for life after death has been given at several places in the Qur'an.
For example, in Surah Ya Sin it has been said: "Is not He Who created the
heavens and the earth able to create the like of them (again)? Why not, when He
is the skillful Creator." (v. 81) And in Surah Al-Mu'min it was said: "Surely
the creation of the heavens and the earth is a greater task than the creation of
man, but most people do not know. (v. 57)
15The night and the day have
been attributed to the heaven, for the night falls when the sun of the heavens
sets and the day dawns when it rises. The word "cover" has been used for the
night in the sense that after the sun has set the darkness of the night so
spreads over the earth as though it has covered it from above by a curtain.
16"After that He spread out the earth" does not mean that Allah created the
earth after the creation of the heavens, but it is a style of expression just
like our saying after making mention of something: "Then this is noteworthy."
The object is not to express the sequence of occurrence between the two things
but to draw attention from the first to the second thing although both may exist
together. Several instances of this style are found in the Qur'an, e.g. in Surah
Al-Qalam it is said: "(He is) oppressive, and after that, ignoble by birth."
This does not mean that first he became oppressive and then he turned ignoble by
birth, but it means: "He is oppressive, and above all, ignoble by birth."
Likewise, in Surah Al-Balad it is said: "Should free a slave...then be of those
who believe." This also does not mean that first he should act righteously and
then believe. but that along with doing righteous deeds he should also be
characterized by belief. Here, one should also understand that at some places in
the Qur'an the creation of the earth has been mentioned first and then the
creation of the heavens, as in Al-Baqarah: 29, and at others the creation of the
heavens has been mentioned first and then of the earth, as in these verses.
There is, in fact, no contradiction in this. At no place the object is to tell
what was created first and what afterwards, but wherever the context requires
that the excellences of the power of Allah be made prominent, the heavens have
been mentioned first and then the earth, and where the context requires that the
people be made to appreciate and acknowledge the blessings that they are
benefiting by on the earth, the mention of the earth has been made before that
of the heavens. (For further explanation, see E.N's 13,14 of Ha Mim As-Sajdah).
17"Pasture" here does not only imply pasture and fodder for the animals
but all kinds of herbal produce suitable for consumption both by man and by
animal. An example of the use of rat'. which is generally used in Arabic for the
grazing animals, is found in Surah Yusuf: 12, signifying that this word is
sometimes used for man also. The brothers of Joseph said to their father: "Send
Joseph with us tomorrow that he may freely graze and enjoy sport. " Here, the
word grace (rat`) for the child has been used in the meaning that he may move
about freely in the jungle and pluck and eat fruit.
18In these verses
arguments have been given for the Resurrection and life after death from two
aspects: first, that it is not at all difficult to establish these for the power
of that God Who has made this vast and huge universe with such wonderful balance
and this earth with such provisions. Second, that the pointers to the perfect
wisdom of Allah which are clearly visible in the universe and the earth, point
out that nothing is happening here purposelessly. The balance that exists
between countless of the stars and planets and galaxies in the heavens testifies
that all this has not happened haphazardly but there is a well thought-out plan
working behind it. The regular alternation of the night and day is an evidence
that this system has been established with supreme wisdom and knowledge for
making the earth a home and place of settlement. On this very earth are found
regions where the alternation of the night and day takes place within 24 hours
and also those regions where there are longer days and longer nights. A very
large part of the earth's population lives in the first kind of the regions.
Then as the days and nights go on becoming longer and longer, life goes on
becoming harder and harder and population thinner and thinner. So much so that
the regions where there are six-month-long days and six-month-long nights, are
not at all fit for human settlement. Arranging both these types of the land on
this very earth Allah has provided the evidence that this regular order of the
alternation of night and day has not come about accidentally but has been
brought about with great wisdom precisely in accordance with a scheme to make
the earth a place fit for human settlement. Likewise, spreading out the earth so
that it becomes a fit place to live in, providing in it that water which should
be palatable for man and animal and a cause of growth for vegetation, setting in
it mountains and creating all those things which may become a means of life for
both man and animal- all these are a manifest sign that they are not chance
happenings of the purposeless works of a care-free person but each one of these
has been arranged purposefully by a Supreme, Wise Being. Now every sensible and
intelligent man can consider for himself whether the necessity and occurrence of
the Hereafter is the requirement of wisdom or its negation. The person who in
spite of seeing all this says that there is no Hereafter, in fact, says that
everything in the universe is happening wisely and purposefully, but only the
creation of man on the earth as a being endowed with sense and power is
meaningless and foolish. For there could be nothing more purposeless than
delegating to man vast powers of appropriation in the earth and providing him an
opportunity to do good as well as evil deeds but then failing to ever subject
him to accountability.
19This implies the Resurrection for which the
words at-Taammat alkubra have been used. Taammah by itself is a grievous
calamity which afflicts everybody. Then it has been further qualified by the
word kubra (great), which shows that the mere word taammah is not enough to
describe fully its intensity and severity.
20That is, "When man will see
that the same Day of accountability of which he was being foretold in the world,
has come, he will start remembering each one of his misdeeds done in the world
even before his records are handed over to him. Some people experience this even
in the world. if at some time they come across a dangerous situation suddenly
when death seems to be staring them in the face, their whole life-film flashes
across their mind's eye all at once.
21Here, in a few words, it has been
told briefly what shall be the criterion of the final judgment in the Hereafter.
One kind of the conduct of life in the world is that transgressing all bounds of
service man should rebel against his God and should make up his mind that he
would seek only the benefits and pleasures of this world in whatever way they
could be sought and achieved. The other kind of conduct is that while man passes
life in the world he should constantly keep in view the truth that ultimately
one day he has to stand before his Lord, and should refrain from fulfilling the
evil desires of the self only for the fear that if he earned an unlawful benefit
in obedience to his self, or enjoyed an evil pleasure, what answer he would give
to his Lord. The criterion of the judgment in the Hereafter will be which of the
two kinds of conduct he adopted in the world. If he had adopted the first kind
of conduct, his permanent abode would be Hell, and if he had adopted the second
kind of conduct, his permanent home would be Paradise.
22The
disbelievers of Makkah asked this question of the Holy Prophet over and over
again. By this they did not mean to know the time and date of the coming of
Resurrection but to mock it. (For further explanation, see E.N. 35 of Surah Al-Mulk).
23This also we have explained in E.N. 36 of Surah Al-Mulk above. As for the
words "you are only a Warner to him who fears it", they do not mean that it is
not your duty to warn those who do not fear, but it means: "Your warning will
benefit only him who fears the coming of that Day."
24This theme has
occurred at several places in the Qur'an and been explained in the corresponding
Notes. For it, see E.N. 53 of Yunus, E.N. 56 of Bani Isra'il, E.N. 80 of Ta Ha,
E.N. 101 of Al-Mu'minun, E.N.'s 81, 82 of ArRum, E.N. 48 of Ya Sin. Besides,
this theme has also occurred in Al-Ahqaf: 35 but we have not explained it there
for fear of repetition.