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Sale, 1734
[497]

CHAP. XCVII.

Intitled, Al Kadr; where it was revealed is disputed.


In the name of the most merciful God.
VErily we sent down the Koran in the night of Al Kadr [a] . And what shall make thee understand how excellent the night of al Kadr is? The night of al Kadr is better than a thousand months. Therein do the angels descend, and the spirit of Gabriel also, by the permission of their Lord, with his decrees concerning every matter [b] . It is peace until the rising of the morn.

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[a] The night of al Kadr.] The word al Kadr signifies power and honour or dignity, and also the divine decree; and the night is so named either from its excellence above all other nights in the year, or because, as the Mohammedans believe, the divine decrees for the ensuing year are annually on this night fixed and settled, or taken from the preserved table by God’s throne, and given to the angels to be executed [1] . On this night Mohammed received his first revelations; when the Korân, say the commentators, was sent down from the aforesaid table, entire and in one volume, to the lowest heaven, from whence Gabriel revealed it to Mohammed by parcels, as occasion required.
The Moslem doctors are not agreed where to fix the night of al Kadr; the greater part are of opinion that it is one of the ten last nights of Ramadân, and, as is commonly believed, the 7th of those nights, reckoning backward; by which means it will fall between the 23rd and 24th days of that month [2] .

[1] See chap. 44. p. 401.

[2] Al Zamakh, Al Beidawi, Jallal.

[b] See the preceding note, and chap. 44. p. 401.