From Deseret News archives:
Quran now in 21st century English
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Compare that with Haleem: " . . . each soul will know what it has done and what it has left undone. Mankind, what has lured you away from God, your generous Lord who created you, shaped you, proportioned you, in whatever form He chose? Yet you still take the Judgment to be a lie!"
Another modern-language version by Majid Fakhry of the American University of Beirut, "An Interpretation of the Quran" (New York University Press), boasts of approval from Cairo's authoritative Al-Azhar University. This 2002 book is costly, because it includes both the Arabic and English texts, but an inexpensive paperback edition was issued this year.
Abdulaziz Sachedina of the University of Virginia, who till now has favored a 1955 translation by A.J. Arberry of Cambridge University, hasn't yet assessed Haleem's rendition but thinks it's "potentially very important for non-Muslims as well as Muslims."
That's only the beginning of the difficulties. Amila Buturovic of Toronto's York University says the Quran "is so rich, so complex, that even for Arabists and literary critics, it is a phenomenal challenge," making any translation "highly problematic."
Yusuf Ali's edition is especially influential due to its extensive commentary. Sachedina and Haddad say the 1989 edition made unwarranted changes in both Yusuf Ali's translation and the commentary to reflect the militant Saudi version of Islam.
Unlike Yusuf Ali, Haleem provides only brief introductions to the chapters and limits footnotes to the most essential matters. But his introduction stresses that the Quran must be understood in terms of the context of the words in Muhammad's own time, for instance on the pressing issue of violence. Examples:
- "Kill them wherever you encounter them" (2:191). Haleem says that meant only that Muslims had the right of self-defense, even if they were being attacked in the holy sanctuary of Mecca.
- "Wherever you find the polytheists, kill them, seize them, besiege them, ambush them" (9:5). Haleem says the context shows such action was taken against unbelievers who repeatedly broke treaties and wanted to expel Muslims or force them back into paganism.
- "Fight those of the People of the Book who do not (truly) believe in God" (9:29). Haleem says this applied only to Jews and Christians who broke treaties and refused to pay taxes.
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