2. Daily Recitation:
If we wish to
fulfill
our
obligation of reciting
the Qur’an, the second thing we are required to do is to include the
recitation of the Qur’an in the daily routine of our life,
and each one of us should recite a certain portion of the Holy Book
regularly every day. The portion fixed for daily
recitation can be different for different people. The maximum
portion which has
the support of the
Holy Prophet
(SAW)
is one-third of the Qur’an. It means that ten parts should be recited each day
so
that the recitation of the whole Qur’an may
be completed in
three
days. A minimum
portion — and mind you, any thing less than
this bare minimum could not even be imagined till recent years — could be one para daily, so that the whole Qur’an could
be read in a month. In fact, this is the least
amount of recitation which should be done every day
and an amount less than this
would not be worth the name.
The middle position between the maximum and minimum is that one should read the whole Qur’an in a week. This, indeed, was the practice followed by the majority of the Companions (RAA) and the same according to a tradition was suggested to Abdullah Ibn Umar (RAA) by the Holy Prophet (SAW). It is for this reason that the Qur’an was divided into seven ahzaab (sections) in the time of the Companions (RAA).3 The first six of the ahzaab consist of three (excluding Surah Al-Fatiha), five, seven, nine, eleven, and thirteen Surahs respectively, and the seventh called Hizb-ul- mufassal consists of the rest of the Holy Book. Every hizb comprises of approximately four paras (parts), which can be recited quite satisfactorily in two hours.
The middle position between the maximum and minimum is that one should read the whole Qur’an in a week. This, indeed, was the practice followed by the majority of the Companions (RAA) and the same according to a tradition was suggested to Abdullah Ibn Umar (RAA) by the Holy Prophet (SAW). It is for this reason that the Qur’an was divided into seven ahzaab (sections) in the time of the Companions (RAA).3 The first six of the ahzaab consist of three (excluding Surah Al-Fatiha), five, seven, nine, eleven, and thirteen Surahs respectively, and the seventh called Hizb-ul- mufassal consists of the rest of the Holy Book. Every hizb comprises of approximately four paras (parts), which can be recited quite satisfactorily in two hours.
Persons of a devout nature and staunch
faith
should
do this amount of recitation daily. Both the common
people and intellectuals must depend upon the regular recitation of the Holy
Book for the
nourishment of their
souls.
To the average kind of men it will serve as an admonition or remembrance of God, and to the men of learning and intelligence, as a source of knowledge and food for thought. Even those who ponder over the meaning of the Qur’an day and night, who think deeply over its individual Surahs for years on end, and who pause for long over the subtle points in its text, cannot do without this regular recitation. Indeed, they require its aid all the more in the noble task they have set before themselves. Actually, constant recitation of the Holy Book will help solve many of their problems and will continuously open up new vistas of thought before their minds.
To the average kind of men it will serve as an admonition or remembrance of God, and to the men of learning and intelligence, as a source of knowledge and food for thought. Even those who ponder over the meaning of the Qur’an day and night, who think deeply over its individual Surahs for years on end, and who pause for long over the subtle points in its text, cannot do without this regular recitation. Indeed, they require its aid all the more in the noble task they have set before themselves. Actually, constant recitation of the Holy Book will help solve many of their problems and will continuously open up new vistas of thought before their minds.
Note-3: It may be noted that the present division of the whole text into thirty parts and of each part into smaller sub-parts called ruku‘, was made much later.
Note-4: It is a common experience of the devoted scholars of the Qur’an that when they are perplexed by an intellectual problem weighing upon their minds, they found that, during course of their recitation of the Qur’an, a clue to the solution of the problem suddenly struck their minds. They got the enlightenment from a passage of the Qur’an which they had read hundred times before, but as their mind was not preoccupied by the problem, the passage did not yield the interpretation relevant to its solution.
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