Tafsir
Tafsir
interpretations and explanations of Al-Qur'anul-Karim.
According to the Shariah (the Islamic Law), tafsir
is a body of knowledge, the study of which enables one to
understand the quran
revealed to hazrat
muhammad (Sm) and the instructions of Shariah.
Treatises on tafsir deal with issues such as the
structure of the Quran, its semantic and morphological
explanations and grammatical analysis, meaning of its
verses, causes of revelation of the verses, associated
events, and nasikh-mansukh (the authority that
abrogates and items abrogated).
In the
parts dealing with tafsir of the collection of the
hadith, especially in Al-J'ami by Imam Bukhari and
Imam Tirmizi, the verses of the Quran are presented along
with description of related Hadith. In many instances,
morphological explanations of terms are also given. In the
past, the words tafsir and ta'bil were
considered synonymous. Later, the word tafsir
gradually came to be applied in a wider sense with
semantic and theoretical notes while ta'bil used to
be applied for emphasising one of the many possible
interpretations of the essence of the verses.
Tafsir was
in currency from the time of the Prophet Muhammad (Sm).
His sahabis (companions) could understand the
literal meaning of the verses of the Quran. In case some
found it difficult to understand the inner meanings of
any, they looked to the Prophet (Sm), who gave the
explanations. Among the interpreting companions, the most
famous was Hazrat Abdullah ibn Abbas (R).
The full tafsir
of the Quran did not see the light of the day during the
time of the sahabis. Tafsir developed as a
discipline towards the beginning of the second century of
the Hegira calendar. The compilation of both vetted and
non-vetted tafsirs started during the Khilafat
regime of the Abbasides. Noted among the vetted tafsirs
are Jami'ul Bayan fi Tafsiril Qur'an by Ibn Zarir
Tabari (died 310 Hegira), Bahrul Ulm by Abul Layas
Samarkandi (died 327 Hegira), Ma'alimut-tanzil by
Ibn Masud Baghavi (died 510 Hegira) and Tafsirul
Qur'anil Azim by Ibn Kasir (died 774 Hegira). Worth
mentioning among the non-vetted tafsirs are Mafatihu'l
Ghayb by Imam Razi (died 606 Hegira), Anwarut-tanzil
by Kazi Nasiruddin Baydhawi (died 691 Hegira), and Madriku't-tanzil
by Imam Nasafi (died 710 Hegira). Some alims
(religious scholars) of the Sufi, Shi'ite and Mu'tajila
communities have written tafsirs in which they
depicted their own interpretations.
In
Bangladesh, as well as in most other Muslim countries, Tafsir
has a great role to play in the religious and day to day
life of Muslims. All educational institutions, including
the madrasahs and the maktabs that offer
education on Shariah, have arrangements for study of tafsir
along with the Quran and the Hadith. In sermons or public
gathering, Ulemas often use tafsirs to
describe and explain religious affairs and ways of life.
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