Mass Quran reading in Malaysia to mark sacred date

Students gathered to observe day Muslims believe the beginnings of the Quran were revealed to Prophet Mohammed (pbuh)

This picture shows Muslim students reading copies of the holy Qoran to observe Nuzul Quran, when the beginnings of the Quran were revealed to the Prophet Mohammed (pbuh), in a mosque in Bentong. PHOTO: AFP

BENTONG, MALAYSIA:
Dressed in robes and chanting in Arabic, scores of Malaysian Muslim children read the Quran aloud in a mosque to mark a special date in the Islamic calendar.

About 80 people, mostly Islamic school students, gathered near the town of Bentong to observe Nuzul Quran, when Muslims believe the beginnings of the Quran were revealed to the Prophet Mohammed (pbuh).

The date falls during the holy month of Ramazan, when followers of Islam fast from dawn to dusk.

"The word 'Nuzul' means 'to come down'," said the students' teacher and principal Roslan Mohamad Esa as he led them in reciting on Wednesday.

Longest, shortest fasting times around the world for Ramazan


"Our Prophet Mohammed (pbuh) received the Quran, Allah sent down the Quran... to the Earth."

Student Nurul Atikah Syazwani Risyadi added: "The day of Nuzul Quran is an important day where it shows that we are confident in the revelation of the Quran."

It is celebrated in Malaysia on the 17th day of Ramazan, the anniversary of a date in the seventh century when the angel Gabriel is said to have appeared to Mohammed in a cave near Makkah and started revealing the Quran to him.

According to Muslim beliefs, the Prophet (pbuh) continued to have revelations over a period of more than 20 years.

Some sixty per cent of Malaysia's 32 million population are Muslim, although the country also has significant Hindu, Buddhist and Christian communities.
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